
I love the title of your website, “It’s Not Always a
Mystery.” Your first two books—including the IPPY Award-winning Maze in
Blue—were mysteries. Do you have an alter-ego who’s writing in another genre?
For years, my alter-ego could be
found in the decisions I issued as Judge Debra H. Goldstein (much more boring
than my mysteries). I called my blog
“It’s Not Always a Mystery” because, under my own name, I write both mystery
and literary short stories and non-fiction essays, as well as my novels.
You grew up in New Jersey and Michigan and worked in New
York before moving to Atlanta to attend law school. Now you live in Birmingham,
Alabama. Was it an adjustment, a culture shock when you first moved to the
South?
For me, moving to the South was a
charming experience. I embraced it
although I came South by accident. I was working in New York and had been
accepted to several law schools. I got
on a plane to tour some of the ones offering me scholarship money. It was snowing when I left New Jersey,
snowing harder in Pennsylvania, snowing even harder at my next stop, but when
the plane broke through the clouds in Atlanta, I saw the red clay Margaret
Mitchell described in Gone With the Wind
and this English major was hooked. I
didn’t know it was the day after one of our terrible rainstorms when the air is
clear, the pollen washed away. At that point, I thought I would be here for
three years, but when I took my first job out of law school, it was in Michigan
during a winter which had thirty-four inches of snow. I moved back to the South the following year.