Hi everyone! I‘m Caroline Donahue, an American writer living in Berlin since 2018. I finished a literary novel last year, and decided to start a substack to explore my other passion: mystery.
I have a pen name for mystery, M.C. Williams, and I‘m writing about the process of creating a mystery series over at Oh! Murder. I‘ll release the b…
Hi everyone! I‘m Caroline Donahue, an American writer living in Berlin since 2018. I finished a literary novel last year, and decided to start a substack to explore my other passion: mystery.
I have a pen name for mystery, M.C. Williams, and I‘m writing about the process of creating a mystery series over at Oh! Murder. I‘ll release the book serially as it‘s written- still sorting out the paywall choices at this point.
Wonderful to be here. I love what Fictionistas is doing and am excited to explore everyone‘s work.
Hi Caroline. I'm writing my second novel, which I plan to bring out in May or June. Has several German characters and some of the chapters take place in Berlin and especially Frankfurt. What are you doing in Berlin? Do you like it there?
How fun! I haven’t been to Frankfurt, other than to travel through it, but I always love stories set in Berlin. We‘ve lived here nearly five years. I‘m a writer and teach writing classes online. My husband works for a gaming company here- we moved in 2018 because we were tired of the expensive rat race in LA. I learned German in school and it‘s been the perfect city for us. ❤️ Where are you based?
I'm in Albuquerque. Have traveled in 44 states and lived in 13, but I'm most at home in my hometown. I lived in L.A. for 3 years in my twenties. Technically, only one chapter of this novel is set in Berlin, with four set in Frankfurt or nearby -- in the late 1950s. The story transpires almost entirely in Denver. But there are nine German characters out of about thirty total, six of the Germans come over to Denver, and two of them are major characters.
Well, I'm writing five novels that focus on five generations from the Jazz Generation to GenX. The second novel focuses on the World War II Generation, and I realized / concluded a couple years ago that what we can most learn from them now was how Germans put the Third Reich behind them. That's the main theme, and what the characters are still wrestling with in 1958, and so it ends up delving into German culture (and psychology).
Hi everyone! I‘m Caroline Donahue, an American writer living in Berlin since 2018. I finished a literary novel last year, and decided to start a substack to explore my other passion: mystery.
I have a pen name for mystery, M.C. Williams, and I‘m writing about the process of creating a mystery series over at Oh! Murder. I‘ll release the book serially as it‘s written- still sorting out the paywall choices at this point.
Wonderful to be here. I love what Fictionistas is doing and am excited to explore everyone‘s work.
Hi Caroline. I'm writing my second novel, which I plan to bring out in May or June. Has several German characters and some of the chapters take place in Berlin and especially Frankfurt. What are you doing in Berlin? Do you like it there?
How fun! I haven’t been to Frankfurt, other than to travel through it, but I always love stories set in Berlin. We‘ve lived here nearly five years. I‘m a writer and teach writing classes online. My husband works for a gaming company here- we moved in 2018 because we were tired of the expensive rat race in LA. I learned German in school and it‘s been the perfect city for us. ❤️ Where are you based?
I'm in Albuquerque. Have traveled in 44 states and lived in 13, but I'm most at home in my hometown. I lived in L.A. for 3 years in my twenties. Technically, only one chapter of this novel is set in Berlin, with four set in Frankfurt or nearby -- in the late 1950s. The story transpires almost entirely in Denver. But there are nine German characters out of about thirty total, six of the Germans come over to Denver, and two of them are major characters.
Cool- what inspired you to include Germany? There's certainly a lot to dive into here.
Well, I'm writing five novels that focus on five generations from the Jazz Generation to GenX. The second novel focuses on the World War II Generation, and I realized / concluded a couple years ago that what we can most learn from them now was how Germans put the Third Reich behind them. That's the main theme, and what the characters are still wrestling with in 1958, and so it ends up delving into German culture (and psychology).
Wow- that‘s a huge project- sounds very cool!