Category Archives: Debbie Burke

AN AUTHOR’S JOURNEY – JANUARY 2026

“There is something delicious about writing the first words of a story. You never quite know where they’ll take you.” ―Beatrix Potter

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An Author's Journey with Debbie Burke on kaydibianca.com Share on X

Welcome back to another year on the CRAFT OF WRITING blog. 2026 is the year of An Author’s Journey.  I’ll post an interview each month with an accomplished author to learn how they started writing, what their average day is like, what advice they have for others, and more.

I’m thrilled that we begin the year with my good friend and colleague Debbie Burke. Debbie has a long history of writing and editing. In addition to her Tawny Lindholm thrillers, her non-fiction craft of writing book, The Villain’s Journey, is helping us all understand the antagonist at a deeper level.


 

All villains are not the same! Debbie takes a deep dive into the many flavors of villainy in her new book. Check it out at one of these links:


 

Since I intend to release the second book in the Lady Pilot-in-Command series in 2026, I decided to start the year with a giveaway of the first book in the series. Anyone who comments on the blog will have their name entered into a random drawing to receive either a paperback or ebook copy of Lacey’s Star. The winner must reside in the United States.

Since the interview posts on a Thursday, I’ll choose the winner around 9 pm Saturday night.


And now, the interview:

 

Welcome, Debbie, and thank you for joining us!

Thanks for inviting me again, Kay! Always a treat to visit with your readers!

Why did you decide to become an author?

I started writing stories in third grade but didn’t seriously go after a career until we moved to Montana in 1988. There, I discovered an active writing community, plunged in, and have been living the dream ever since.

How did you prepare to write your first book?

At first, I wrote short stories and magazine articles but didn’t think I had enough attention span to complete a novel until my critique group persuaded me to try. For years, I “practiced” with a dozen whodunit mysteries that received rave rejections but were never published.

Finally, an epiphany hit: I’d been so focused on the hero that I’d ignored the villain and the reasons behind the crimes. That’s why my plots weren’t compelling enough and fell short.

I switched to the thriller genre. That opened a whole new world. Instead of trying to hide the villain, I wrote scenes from his point of view. Whodunit was no longer the question because the reader knew from page one who he was. Going inside his head to discover the motives, desires, and fears driving him made the plots work better. Now questions and suspense lay in: was he going to get away with it? Can the hero stop him? Will she be killed trying?

Spoiler alert: she lives and has survived for nine books in the series so far.

When was your first book published? What was its title?

My goal had been a published novel before reaching Medicare age. Missed by a year. Oh well. Instrument of the Devil was published in 2017 and became a bestseller in women’s adventure. Overnight success only took 30 years!

What is your typical writing day like?

Get up early, drink coffee, and go to work. Since I have multiple projects going, there’s usually a deadline for articles and blog posts. Freelance editing jobs take priority because they pay the bills. Recently, my writing craft book The Villain’s Journey-How to Create Villains Readers Love to Hate has led to teaching jobs, so there’s prep for workshops and speaking appearances.

Sitting too long isn’t healthy so I break up writing sessions with zumba and long walks.

I’m most productive in the morning and try to save emails and reading for later in the day.

What do you find most rewarding about writing?

I love the creative drafting process as well as editing. When readers respond to something I’ve written, that’s always a thrill.

Teaching has turned out to be exhilarating. Students are there because they’re interested, not filling a requirement (like algebra). When someone’s eyes light up with discovery and realization, that’s the best feeling.

What is most difficult for you about writing?

Hands down, marketing. I’m lousy at self-promotion, advertising, and social media. I follow James Scott Bell’s philosophy that the best marketing is writing another book.

What advice would you give someone who is considering becoming an author?

If you can’t not write, you’re destined (doomed?) to be a writer so you might as well surrender.

Find a good critique group. They keep you accountable.

If you want to be published, learn the craft and develop a rhinoceros hide against rejections.

Writing is not like athletics where you peak at 25 or 30 then go downhill. The longer you live, the more experiences and knowledge you gain to enrich and deepen your stories.

Are you working on a book now?

Recently started #10 in the Tawny Lindholm Thriller series. I think each book will be the last, but readers keep asking when the next one is coming. That’s gratifying and strong motivation.

Of all the books you’ve written, do you have a favorite?

That’s like asking which is my favorite child!

The Villain’s Journey has led to wonderful connections and teaching opportunities. Nonfiction also sells better than fiction.

For fiction, probably Deep Fake Double Down because it predicted the timely, scary issue of false evidence created from deep fakes and used against innocent people. But Flight to Forever is the book of my heart because it was inspired by friends, a long-married couple separated because of Covid restrictions.

Where can we find out more about you and your work?

Visit my website debbieburkewriter.com and stop by The Kill Zone where I first met my good friend Kay.

Thank you, Debbie, for being with us!

Kay, always my pleasure to visit with you and your great followers!

 

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Meet Debbie Burke

 

Debbie Burke may look like a cookie-baking grandma but underneath that innocent appearance lurks a devious criminal mind. Her award-winning Tawny Lindholm Thriller series is known for fast-paced twisty plots, snappy dialogue, and villains whom readers call “deliciously evil.”

In addition to fiction, she is an internationally published journalist, freelance editor, and longtime contributor to the crime-writing site The Kill Zone. She also teaches popular classes and workshops based on her nonfiction craft-of-writing book THE VILLAIN’S JOURNEY – HOW TO CREATE VILLAINS READERS LOVE TO HATE.

 

 

THE CRAFT OF WRITING A BOOK ABOUT THE CRAFT OF WRITING – JUNE 2025

Welcome back to another episode of great writing advice on the CRAFT OF WRITING blog. This year we’re focusing on Genres. We’ll be looking at approaches to writing thrillers, mysteries, romances, and more. Each month I interview an accomplished author who writes in a particular genre, so get ready to learn from the experts!

Today’s guest is my good friend and award-winning author Debbie Burke who has taken on the task of writing a book about the craft of writing. Her new work, The Villain’s Journey, gives us insight into crafting a compelling bad guy for our stories. Click the image to go to the Amazon page.

 

The Craft of Writing a Book about the Craft of Writing with Debbie Burke Share on X

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Many thanks to my good friend and master craftsman Dr. Steve Hooley who has provided me with another unique and fabulous “Wilbur and Orville 1903” propeller pen. Hand crafted by Steve, the pen is made from Ash, one of the woods the Wright brothers used to build their first aircraft. The market value of this beautiful creation is around $80.00.

The name of each person who enters a comment will be put into the drawing for the pen. So join the conversation and earn a chance to win. I’ll post the name of the winner after 9 PM Central Time tonight. (Previous 2025 winners are not eligible to win.)

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Welcome back, Debbie, and thank you for being on the Craft of Writing blog!

Kay, it’s always wonderful to visit with you and your readers. Thanks for inviting me again.

 

I understand this is the first time you’ve dipped your pen into writing a book about the Craft of Writing. What made you decide to write The Villain’s Journey and how did you decide that particular topic?

It all started with a couple of posts I wrote for The Kill Zone (TKZ) about villains and how they, not the hero, drive crime fiction. Although a story is usually seen through the hero-sleuth’s eyes, the villain is the character who actually sets the plot in motion by committing a crime.

A regular TKZ reader mentioned she’d read a lot about the hero’s journey and asked if there was a comparable villain’s journey.

When I looked for an answer to her question, I was surprised there wasn’t a comprehensive guide about villains. So I decided to try to fill that gap on the writing reference shelf.

 

How did you go about getting source material for your book?

I read a lot of mysteries, thrillers, and suspense, and true-crime accounts.

Readers like to talk about their favorite villains, so I asked followers of TKZ, members of the Authors Guild, Mystery Writers of America, and International Thriller Writers; writing groups, and book clubs. I even pestered strangers reading books on planes and in coffee shops. They were always very good natured and answered my questions about why certain villains fascinated them.

Hannibal Lecter, Randall Flagg (Stephen King’s recurring villain), The Joker, and Lady MacBeth are often mentioned as GOATs (greatest of all time).

Additionally, I researched psychology texts to learn what motivates people to do wrong. What are the backgrounds of psychopaths, narcissists, and predators? What triggers them?

A few people are born malicious, but some are forced into desperate situations by circumstance. Others want to protect loved ones but instead become unwitting criminals. The variations are endless and fascinating.

  

Can you give us a brief outline of the process—from concept to completion—that you used to write The Villain’s Journey. How was it different from writing fiction?

I’m used to writing short nonfiction articles which are like chapters in a book. So I wrote a chapter about charming, irresistible villains, then one on serial killers, then Robin Hood villains, femme fatales, and so on.

Pretty soon I had a whole bunch of chapters about different types of villains, but they needed to be organized into a logical, interesting through-line. That took time, as well as compiling an index—not fun!

Since The Villain’s Journey is a how-to guide, I created “Build-a-Villain” worksheets to help writers drill deep into their character’s motives, desires, and rationalizations. Scattered throughout the book are useful tips and techniques I learned in 35+ years of writing, critiquing, and editing.

Fiction is making stuff up. Nonfiction is backing stuff up because it needs to be factual and accurate.

I enjoy both because they challenge different parts of the brain. I’m always learning.

  

Did you run into any unexpected issues while writing The Villain’s Journey?

Because I cite many examples from books, films, and TV shows, I wanted to be sure not to inadvertently violate any creator’s copyright. So I had an intellectual property attorney review the manuscript to be sure everything fell under the doctrine of fair use.

 

What qualifications do you feel an author should have before attempting to write a book about writing?

A book about writing is essentially teaching. I’ve known authors who were gifted wordsmiths and storytellers but lousy teachers. Conversely, I’ve learned from exceptional teachers who never published a book.

The ability to communicate abstract concepts in an understandable way is the key to good teaching. And writing is full of abstract concepts that are difficult to grasp.

An author can practice by writing articles for magazines, journals, blogs, newsletters, Substacks, etc. Establish credibility with respected publications. If you discover a fresh concept or way to explain craft skills, test it out by writing short pieces. If the message resonates with readers, you might have a solid book idea.

  

In your opinion, why is it important for authors to read books about their craft?

Nobody knows everything. There is always more to learn. Sometimes you read a craft book and shrug because it doesn’t apply to what you’re working on at the time. However, a year from now, that same book might have exactly what you need to learn.

 

What are your favorite craft of writing books?

Anything by James Scott Bell and Jack Bickham; H.R. D’Costa’s series; the Thesaurus series by Angela Ackerman and Becca Puglisi.

And of course, Christopher Vogler’s The Writer’s Journey that led me to write The Villain’s Journey.

  

Where can we find out more about you and your writing?

Visit my website: https://www.debbieburkewriter.com/

Every other Tuesday, you’ll find me at The Kill Zone.

The Villain’s Journey – How to Create Villains Readers Love to Hate will be published July 13, 2025. It’s available now for preorder at this link.

  

Thanks, Debbie, for being with us today.

Kay, it’s always my pleasure!

 

The Craft of Writing a Book About the Craft of Writing with Debbie Burke Share on X

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Meet Debbie Burke

 

 When readers meet Debbie Burke in person, they often say, “You look like such a nice lady but you’re always killing people!” She reminds them her murders only happen on the page. Her award-winning Tawny Lindholm Thrillers feature twisty plots, quirky characters, and breakneck pacing. She lives in northwest Montana near Glacier Park where she can be found scouting locations for her next crime.

 

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Another Side of Sunshine

 

A Middle Grade Mystery featuring those two irrepressible detectives, spunky 10-year-old Reen and her shy 9-year-old cousin Joanie. And yes! There’s a villain.

“The story excels at honoring the emotional realities of childhood without veering into sentimentality. It’s a smart, well-constructed mystery that values relationships over rivalry, process over prizes, and growth over glory.” —Prairie Book Reviews

Click the image to go to the Amazon book page.

THE CRAFT OF WRITING — DECEMBER 2024

 

2024 has been a special year on the Craft of Writing blog. The theme of this year’s blog posts was Aspects of the Novel, and each month I interviewed an extraordinary author on a different subject. The results were so full of writing wisdom, I decided to present a snippet from each interview in this, the last post of 2024.

Walking with the Wise - A summary of wisdom from the Aspects of the Novel blog posts Share on X

 

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The name of each person who enters a comment will be put into the drawing for a $10 Amazon Gift Card.

So join the conversation and earn a chance to win. I’ll post the name of the winner after 9 PM Central Time tonight, so be sure to check back to see if you won. (Previous 2024 winners are not eligible to win.)

 

Now, sit back and enjoy walking with our wise friends through Aspects of the Novel. To see the entire interview for any of the choices below, click on the link.

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VOICE (James Scott Bell)

How does an author go about developing his/her own voice?

It’s really a matter of learning ways to let the voice run free. Let it come out naturally as you, the author, are concentrating on the emotion and action and internal lives of the characters. There are various exercises I give in my book on voice, such as the page-long sentence. When I come to a place of high emotion in a scene, I like to start a fresh document and write a single, run-on sentence of at least 200 words. It is free-form, wild text in the character’s voice, not thinking about grammar or structure. It’s just pouring out the emotion as fast and intensely as possible.

What happens inevitably, like panning for gold, is you get a few glistening nuggets. It may even be only one sentence, but that sentence will be choice.

There are other methods, but the great point is that doing this begins to develop a strong “voice muscle” in your writer’s brain, and you get better and better at it the more you exercise it.

 

PLOTTING (DiAnn Mills)

What makes a good plot? Do you advise authors to write to specific plot points (e.g., inciting incident, first pinch point, dark night of the soul)?

This depends on the type of plotter and the method the writer’s brain functions. I’d like to emphasize that the writer must work according to how their brain processes and analyzes story. With that said, I write toward:

  1. The first open doorway which is 1/5 to ¼ of the way into the novel. This is where the POV character determines to go after the goal.
  2. Mid-point, I toss in a wrench. In other words, something about the plot changes the story.
  3. End of middle, the climax.
  4. Resolution

 

ANTAGONISTS (Debbie Burke)

How does a good writer approach creating the antagonist character? Are there exercises a writer can use to develop their villain-creating talents?

A technique I like to use is James Scott Bell’s voice journal. Let the antagonist write out their thoughts, feelings, and beliefs. What are their deepest, most secret desires? Give them the opportunity to express their frustration, anger, and hatred. Putting their emotions into words helps the author get inside their skin and understand why they feel their behavior is justified.

Interview the villain/antagonist. Ask questions. What is their background? How did their parents treat them? Were they bullied or abused? What early losses or failures scarred them?

Another Jim Bell tip: have villains argue their case before the jury that will decide their fate. What compelling arguments can they offer to save themselves from the death penalty?

 

SCENE (Randy Ingermanson)

You also say every scene in a book is a miniature story. Explain that.

Every scene in your book needs to work as a short story. Every single scene. It must have a viewpoint character that the reader can root for (or root against). And it must have a single conflict that gets resolved by the end of the scene.

If you have even one scene that doesn’t work as a story, you’re going to lose readers at that scene. They’ll put the book down. And they’re done with that book.

So you need every scene in your novel to be pulling its weight. If a scene doesn’t work, then you have some options. You can kill the scene—just shoot it right in the head and throw its carcass to the wolves. Or you can fix the scene—figure out why it’s broken and solve the problem.

I have killed a few scenes in my life, but 95% of all scenes can be fixed. If you know how. And my book shows you how. One of the main reasons I wrote my book is to teach authors how to diagnose and fix a busted scene. (And also how to recognize a scene that works so you can leave it alone.)

 

EMOTION (Angela Ackerman and Becca Puglisi)

What part does emotion play in novel writing?

In some ways, emotion is the novel, because the words we choose will steer readers toward what we want them to feel. Is the noise emanating from that dark room a sing-song hum, a melody whispered to a child at bedtime? Or is it a slow, heavy scrape, conjuring the image of a monstrous axe blade being dragged across the floor? As the writer, we choose what we intend readers to feel, and shape our description accordingly. When we do this well, reading becomes an immersive, powerful experience.

To ensure readers are drawn in, though, we must make sure they emotionally connect to our characters first and foremost. We do this by revealing their human layers as they navigate the world around them, showing how they feel, what they need, want, fear, and think. When we do this well, readers connect to our characters because life is an emotional journey, and they find common ground. When we show what’s going on within a character, readers come to see them as someone real. They begin to empathize and become invested in what happens next.

 

DIALOGUE (Larry Leech II)

How does dialogue bring characters to life?

Individuality. Much has been taught about plot, structure, character arc, etc., but I believe readers love to hear a character speak. First, each character must have a distinctive voice. A fifty-year-old white male should not sound like a twenty-two-year-old female person of color. Even two teenage boys should not sound the same. Each has a backstory and moral center that dictates how they speak.

Think of the cinematic voices we know well. Whenever someone says, “Life is a like a box of chocolates,” we hear Forrest Gump. Or “No, I am your father,” we hear Darth Vader. Or “You’re gonna need a bigger boat,” we hear Chief Brody in Jaws.

Also, along with what I mentioned above about the importance of dialogue in story, dialogue also reveals worldview, syntax, and what I call “industry language.” For example, law enforcement and military personnel often say, “I’ve got your six (your back).” A plumber wouldn’t say that.

Along with action, dialogue helps the reader understand the character. And if done effectively, allows the reader to “live” the story instead of reading it.

 

DEEP POINT OF VIEW (Terry Odell)

Now, on to Deep POV:

Deep POV can be thought of as writing a first person book in third person. You are deep inside the POV character’s head, providing the reader with not only the character’s five senses, but also their thoughts and feelings. Because you’re deep into their heads, your readers should feel closer to the characters than if you have an outside narrator, as is the case in shallower third person POV. A test. You should be able to replace he, she, or the character’s name with “I.”

When writing in Deep POV, it’s also important to be true to the character. What would they notice? Two characters walk into a room. (No, that’s not the start of a joke.) One’s a cop; the other is an interior designer. They’ll focus on very different things.

 

ANTI-HEROES (Sue Coletta)

How do you define an anti-hero?

An anti-hero is the protagonist of the story, who straddles the law. Good people doing bad things for the right reason. Nothing is black and white. Anti-heroes thrive in shades in gray.

 

ROMANCE IN CHRISTIAN FICTION (DiAnn Mills)

Toss aside your thoughts about simple themes and tepid emotions that water down the love relationship between a man and a woman, Instead, think about how to include “real” elements and write an authentic and believable story.

  • The joy of true romantic love is real.
  • The emotions are real.
  • The physical, mental, and spiritual challenges are real.
  • The heartbreak of broken relationships is real.
  • The struggle of adhering to God’s way of honoring each other until marriage is real.
  • The blessings of obedience and a Christ-filled relationship are real.

Dipping our toes into the waters of writing Christian romance doesn’t mean we swim in shark-infested waters. According to the American Heritage Dictionary romance is “a feeling of excitement and mystery associated with love.” Love is “an intense feeling of deep affection.”

 

DESCRIPTION (P.J. Parrish)

How would you define descriptive writing?

Wow. That’s a toughie. Well, let’s start with a distinction. There’s explanation and then there’s description. Explanation is you, the writer, just dealing with the prosaic stuff of moving characters around in time and space. Explanation example: The man walked into the room. Simple choregraphy. Gets the job done but pushes no emotional buttons.

But description? That’s where the magic happens. When you work your descriptive powers, you engage the reader’s senses and imagination, maybe tugging on their memories and experiences. The man didn’t just walk into the room.  Rewrite:

The old man stopped just inside the door of the café. He was in his eighties, that much was clear. But as he stood there, erect and with a small smile tipping his lips, heads turned to him. It wasn’t just the panama hat or the seersucker suit. Because the hat was yellowed and his sleeves were frayed. No, we were staring at him because the air around him seemed to vibrate with an aliveness. He caught my eye and started toward me, and my throat closed. It was like looking at my father, the one I had seen only in photographs.

See the difference? The main purpose of descriptive writing is to show the reader a person, place or thing in such a way that a picture is formed in their mind. It means paying close attention to the details by using all of your five senses. Explanation vs description. When you explain something, you try to make it clearer and easier to understand. But when you describe, you’re tugging on their emotions.

 

FAITH IN FICTION (Chautona Havig)

For authors who are interested in including some faith element in their works, what advice would you give them?

I think the key is to reframe the idea of “putting faith into a book.” Instead, look at ways faith might naturally emerge from a character or situation.  That makes all the difference. Jesus talked about insides and outsides of cups. Polishing up the cup of your book to reflect Jesus doesn’t have the power that allowing Him to spill out onto the page naturally does.

The best way I know to make that happen is to fill yourself with Jesus. You can’t write what isn’t in you. Get into the Word. Study it. Talk about it with other Christians. Listen to godly teachers and then go compare what they said with what the Bible says.  I firmly believe that if you fill yourself with Scripture, it’ll come out in your writing and in your reading. You’ll get spiritual lessons from books that the authors never intended.  I know this because I can’t count how many times I’ve told an author, “When I read this and remembered that Scripture, I realized that this other thing was true.” MANY times the author says, “I never caught that connection.”  I got it because of what I was studying at the time. And God used that.  And that is the beauty of Scripture.

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A NOTE FROM KAY

I’m deeply grateful to all the authors who agreed to be interviewed on my blog in 2024 and to all the folks who dropped by to read and/or comment on the interviews. Best wishes to you all for a Merry Christmas and a safe and healthy New Year!

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If you’re looking for a last-minute gift, each of my ebook mystery novels is on sale in December for 99¢. Click on the image of a book to go to the Amazon sales page.

        

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