From the author's Q & A with Jordan Foster at Publishers Weekly:
Where did you get the idea for a 50-year-old widow who runs a sewing shop and also tracks down abusive spouses?Visit Sophie Littlefield's website and blog.
I tend to work out all my issues through my stories, a common affliction among us writers. When I found myself struggling with everything from annoying little physical ailments to feelings of invisibility, I created a badass female character who could act out all my fantasies of regaining control of my life. On a more serious note, my decision to have Stella battle domestic violence stemmed not from personal experience but from a lifelong relationship with a woman I adored who was verbally abused for many decades. My treatment is lighthearted and not at all realistic, but at the heart of it is a recognition that this problem plagues far too many women and a wish that I could do something about it.
A thread of violence runs through your series, often intersecting with the humor.
I have a goofy taste for vigilantism. It's probably not appropriate for the daughter of a constitutional scholar, but I've always loved tales and movies where the underdog prevails in spectacular bursts of righteous ass kicking. When you make the hero middle-aged and female, however,...[read on]
Aftertime is the first installment in a new dystopian series.
Littlefield's crime novels include A Bad Day for Sorry and A Bad Day for Pretty.
The Page 69 Test: A Bad Day for Sorry.
Writers Read: Sophie Littlefield.
The Page 69 Test: A Bad Day for Pretty.
My Book, The Movie: A Bad Day for Pretty.
The Page 69 Test: Aftertime.
My Book, The Movie: Aftertime.
--Marshal Zeringue