Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Hank Phillippi Ryan tours with 'The Murder List'


WORCESTER—Author Hank Phillippi Ryan, on-air investigative reporter for Boston’s WHDH-TV and bestselling author of 11 thrillers, came to the city with her newest book, “The Murder List,” on Sept. 7.


Ryan spent years as a television reporter before writing fiction. Her career has provided a rich well of familiarity with crime and motivation, leading to ideas for her novels.
Hank Phillippi Ryan
The latest is a twisting exploration of the conflict between defending and prosecuting attorneys, each dedicated to seeking justice from an opposing point of view. She does so skillfully. To personalize the plot, Ryan created a young law student, Rachel, who is torn between her defense attorney husband’s side of the fence and that of her temporary employer, a powerful district attorney. There’s a fascinating pull between the two forces as Rachel observes them, but there’s also a sucker-punch conclusion that unites her with both sides of the legal question. 


The author has an impressive resume. She’s collected numerous top writing awards from mystery organizations, including five Agatha Awards and a Mary Higgins Clark Award. Her novels have been listed in Library Journal's Best of 2014, 2015, 2016 and her recent novel, “Trust Me,” made it to numerous “Best of 2018” lists. About her newest, “The Murder List,” the Library Journal says, “Masterly plotted—with a twisted ending—a riveting, character-driven story” and “a must-read for fans of legal thrillers.”
It is. The final chapter is a mind-blower.

Ryan says the book is a study, really, of “how defense and prosecuting attorneys compete, each with the goal of winning a murder trial.” Her thought process in creating the book is in itself a study in fiction writing:
“I was listening to my criminal defense husband discuss a murder case one day. One track of my mind was listening to his narrative, and the other track was thinking, ‘Wow, what a good guy he is.’ The authentic real thing—standing up for the little guy, protecting the rights of the individual against the vast power of the state and the prosecution, making sure the prosecution plays by the rules and that the trial is fair and just.”

Using her writer’s imagination, she twisted the notion a bit: “I thought, ‘what does the prosecutor’s wife think about her husband?’ Certainly, she thinks he’s a good guy—protecting the public, putting miscreants behind bars, keeping criminals off the streets, standing up for law and order.

 “So how, I thought, can everyone be a good guy? And I started thinking about ‘good,’ especially when it comes to the justice system, and realized that everyone involved chooses the side they think is the good side. And then they fight it out to see which ‘good’ wins.”
She had the basis for a book, then and there, but kept thinking:
“Added to that, the obsession with lawyers to win. You ask a lawyer, ‘What’s a good case?’ And they’ll say ‘winnable.’ So, given that they all think they’re good, and that they all want to win—and they’re always always in a battle with each other—doesn’t that set up perfect conflict? And the question of how far someone might go to win?”

It certainly could. But she needed characters to manifest the differences and interact. Hence, Rachel Stone.  “Add a newbie—a young lawyer wannabe who has to choose a side. So I created law student Rachel, trying to figure out her legal life.”

Alongside, she created two influences—Rachel’s brilliant defense attorney husband and her new employer, a powerful DA whom he despises. “Two sides, battling for the legal soul of this novice attorney, she said. “At least, that’s what they think they’re doing.” 

Insert a murder and a war ensues, with Rachel experiencing the warring viewpoints toward justice and more than a little trouble on the domestic front. In fact, no one is exactly as the reader expects in this book.

During her years with WHDH, Ryan saw enough criminal behavior and courtroom performance to draw conclusions about that niggling little flag of truth waving for all its worth under the weight of battling winds.

“I have been a television reporter for 43 years,” she said. “I have wired myself with hidden cameras, confronted corrupt politicians, chased down criminals and gone undercover and in disguise.” … I have covered court proceedings from the Claus Von Bulow murder to the Boston mobs, to the case that became ‘A Civil Action,’ and dozens of murder cases. So people ask, ‘Do you do research?’ and I say—I’ve been doing research for 40 years.”
The underlying competition is used to elevate suspense in this thriller. 

“To get ahead in a cut-throat business, people use whatever tactics they can devise and sometimes wind up doing things they might not have predicted they were capable of,” she said.
Despite the book’s contrivances, Ryan doesn’t use an outline as she crafts her story. “That’s what gets me to the computer every day,” she said. “I have to find out what happens next. So, when people say ‘Wow, I never saw that ending coming,’ I say, yeah, wasn’t that a surprise? I surprised myself! That’s part of the magic of writing. And that’s what makes it a joy every day.”

She’s not kidding. Ryan derives the energy she needs for a schedule pivoting from a reporting assignment for her editor to writing and, quite often, author appearances across the country. She has kept up with a very busy schedule, one that puts her on planes—writing.

“My goal is to make my books be realistic and authentic, so if I need to check facts of course I do—that’s part of the fun. But my stories, being fiction, rely on my experience in the real world, and are shaped by that. My thrillers are not my TV reporting turned into fiction, but all that deep experiences translates into making genuinely believable stories.”

She’s been pleased by reactions from those in the criminal justice field. “I’ve gotten so many emails from lawyers who have read ‘The Murder List,’ saying how pleased they were to read a book that not only nails the justice system, but also nails the relationships that attorneys have with each other, and their psychological drives and motivations.”

Ryan loves her life, despite her busy schedule. (She visited six or seven states during the first week of her current book tour.) Participants ask her all kinds of questions, including this uncommonly known fact: her name. “I get asked about my name, and where my story ideas come from, and whether I know the endings of my books before I start writing. The answers are: It’s a nickname for Harriet (which someone made up my first day of college); I have no idea, and No!”

“Having these successful novels is a dream come true, ever since I was a little girl reading Sherlock Holmes under the covers. I challenge myself to be better and better every time, to be a better writer, to make my books be more compelling and surprising—I want people to miss their stop on the T because they are so riveted by the book.”

Her goal must be in reach. CNN named “The Murder List” an ultimate beach read this year.
Consequently, she travels a lot, and her appearances are often before packed audiences. “It’s exciting and rewarding, and actually inspirational, to meet all the people who come to my signings or write me emails and want to chat about thrillers and the book world.,” she said. “There are very few vacations, and I have basically given up cooking. Don’t tell. Luckily, I have a very supportive husband.”

Would she change anything? “If we could possibly make the days have more hours, that would be very nice,” she said. “Other than that, I am the happiest and luckiest person ever.”