Friday, March 1, 2013

Presenting CHRIS KARLSEN WITH A MC inteview

Hello, Chris. I see you brought
Charlotte Dasheill with you today for an interview.

Why don't you both make yourselves comfy. Nice that you don't have to do any work today for this blog, Chris. So,you sit back and let's get right to Charlotte.






I understand,Charlotte,that you are the heroine in both books of Chris’s Dangerous Waters series: Golden Chariot and Byzantine Gold.
Yes, I'm so lucky.
Please tell us a little about yourself.
I grew up in Chicago. My father was a Chicago cop. He’s retired now and my mom was a housewife. Other than my parents divorcing when I was a teen, I had a pretty typical and happy childhood. I have one brother, Nick, who is a Chicago cop too. He’s with the SWAT team there. I love him to bits and worry about him. It makes me crazy to hear him tell some of his dangerous SWAT details.
Nick couldn’t care less about history but I can’t remember a time that I wasn’t fascinated with the subject. I knew as a young girl of twelve I’d be an archaeologist. I was a little girl when the Indiana Jones movies were popular. I wanted to be the female Indiana but without the snakes and people shooting at me.
While in college, I decided to specialize in nautical archaeology. I now have my PHD and look forward to working on the recovery teams of new shipwreck discoveries. I start getting excited in the spring knowing the next dive season is only weeks away.
Is that why you live in Turkey?
Yes and no. You can’t throw a rock and not hit something historical in Turkey. The waters off the coast are beautiful and there are so many wrecks filled with artifacts to bring to the surface. To me, each ship has a unique story to tell. I love trying to uncover that story through the relics and the wreck remains.
That said; the main reason I live in Turkey is because the love of my life, Atakan Vadim, is there.
How did you meet?
Atakan is an archaeologist also but he’s employed as an agent for the Turkish Ministry of Culture. We met last year when he assigned as my dive partner on the recovery team of a Bronze Age wreck site. I’d been a witness to the death of the government agent originally assigned to the project. It was Atakan’s job to quietly investigate me and make certain I had no involvement in the man’s murder.
It took some time but we developed a friendship and trust between us. From there, one thing led to another and we fell in love.
When he’s not in the field working an archaeological site, he conducts investigations of smugglers dealing in the sale of illegally obtained artifacts to the black market. He and his investigative team work out of an office in Istanbul.
When not in the field, what do you do to stay busy?
I do preservation work with artifacts at a lab in Istanbul. I clean, identify, tag, and catalogue the relics.
I’m also writing industry articles about the wrecks where I’ve participated on recovery teams.
You recently finished a project. Tell us about it.
A Byzantine Era warship was found off the coast of Northern Cyprus. The ship carried a cargo of gold, coins, jewelry, and religious objects. MIAR, the archaeological company I am associated with found this very curious. If it was a merchant ship, we’d expect that type of cargo but not on a Dromon, which is a ship meant for battle. Because it was so unique, the rich find received a good deal of publicity.  
The publicity caused a major problem and put the whole team at risk. A cell of a terrorist organization found it more than curious. They decided it was too tempting to ignore. The valuable relics would bring them much needed funds. Their leader stole the identity of a diver assigned to the project and infiltrated team. To make things worse, he was assigned as my dive partner.
Where was Atakan?
He was to be my partner but while we were on vacation in Paris, an old enemy of his, a man he sent to prison, came after Atakan. He shot Atakan as we walked down the street. Fortunately, it struck him in the shoulder. A few inches to the right and he’d have been killed. Atakan continued as the site’s Ministry representative, but the injury kept him from being able to dive.
Did you catch the man who shot him?
No, he escaped in Paris. Those months were a double nightmare for us both. We had reason to believe he followed us to Cyprus so Atakan’s life was at stake the entire time. Then, when we learned my partner was a terrorist, Atakan and another Ministry agent had to race the clock to capture the members of the cell before they could attack the camp.
When you’re not dodging danger, what’s life like for the two of you?
We like to travel. In the winter, we ski. In the warm months, right after the dive season, we enjoy staying places with lots of water sports.
At home we entertain fairly often. Atakan and I both are decent cooks so we have friends over for dinner a lot. We also have an apartment in a lovely location with a view of the Bosphorus. If the weather allows, we like to relax on the patio with a glass of wine and just watch the ferries as they come and go from the Asian side of the city to our side.
What would surprise people the most about you?
I belly dance and I’m not too bad at it. (Smiles)
What would surprise people the most about Atakan?
Outwardly, he appears stern and cold. But those who know him will tell you he is warm and outgoing with a wicked sense of humor.
Anything else you’d like to say?
I hope everyone will be intrigued to read about the dangers that surrounded this recovery project and Atakan, in Byzantine Gold.
 
Thank you, Charlotte. Good luck to you in the books.
 
 
Chris, since you are here, why not give us a little excerpt from Bysantine Gold.
 Excerpt
       Charlotte answered on the fourth ring. Caller I.D. showed “restricted.”
 
       “Hello.”
“They are called, Angelique tulips. You admired them in the hospital garden in Paris.”
Charlotte froze, holding her breath as she listened to the nightmare voice, remembering how his Eastern European accent rounded certain sounds and how he stressed the last syllables in his words. Called became cawl-d.
Tischenko.
“Everything in time,” he said and hung up.
Charlotte dropped the phone on the table. She turned to Atakan.
The shock must’ve shown on her face. “What is wrong?”
“That was Tischenko,” she said, finding her voice. “The flowers are from him. He was watching me in Paris when I was at the hospital. He—”
Atakan didn’t wait for her to finish. He rushed into the living room, grabbed his gun from the bookshelf, and ran out of the apartment.
Charlotte followed as he flew down the four flights of stairs to the street.
“Stop.” Catching up to him on the sidewalk, she hooked his elbow with her hand. Fearful an armed Tischenko hid nearby, she positioned herself in front of Atakan, thinking to shield him. “We can’t stand here. He could be anywhere taking aim at you right now.”
“Go back inside.”
“Not without you.” She tugged on his shirt, pulling him toward their building. “Atakan please, let’s leave. Call the Director.”
Atakan shoved her behind him. Silent, his eyes searched the dark doorways of neighboring apartment buildings and parked cars.
“Atakan please.”
“Get inside.”
She stepped in front of him again. “We stay here together or we leave together.”
An eternity of seconds passed. Neither moved or blinked.
They both jumped and turned at the bellow from the horn of a passing truck. Thankfully, the driver was waving to another coming the opposite direction. He never saw the man in the sling pointing a gun at him.
“Please,” she repeated.
Atakan nodded. He stopped at the building’s entry door and took a last look, surveying the street. “He moves us around like pawns in a private game.”
~~~
 
Wow, sounds like an exciting adventure, Chris. I can't wait to get my little paws in it.
 
Leave a comment for Chris and Charlotte, readers.
I'm sure they would love to hear from you.
 
 
 

 
 

 


 

5 comments:

  1. Sounds like a great book for a movie. Intrigue, archaeology, a little romance. What's not to like?

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    Replies
    1. Hi Marva,
      I would dearly love to have it made into a movie. What fun. I'd like to see who Hollywood cast as the different characters, especially Charlotte and Atakan. I like Stana Katic for Charlotte and Oded Fehr for Atakan. I have my "dream" cast in a book board on my pinterest page: http://pinterest.com/chriskarlsen

      Chris

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  2. I want to thank Lorrie for hosting my heroine, Charlotte today.
    Best regards,
    Chris Karlsen

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  3. I'll speak for Lorrie to say she's really happy to have Chris Karlsen and her MC, Charlotte, on her blog today. Unfortunately, Lorrie is under the weather and, thus, her unintended absence from the comments.

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  4. Great insight into Charlotte, I love her. I think that we would be great friends, we have the same naughty sense of humour.

    I'm halfway through this novel and love it so far. I wish I was a quick reader but I tend to savour every word which is why I read so slow!

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