Showing posts with label behcet kaya. Show all posts
Showing posts with label behcet kaya. Show all posts

Sunday, April 12, 2015

Book Review - Road to Siran: Erin's Story


Road to Siran: Erin’s Story

By: Behcet Kaya
Publisher: CreateSpace
Publication Date: February 2014
ISBN: 978-1-4954-8464-3
Reviewed by: Amy Lignor
Date: April 2015

For those who are unaware, this is the sequel to the outstanding book Voice of Conscience, which first introduced this family to the literary world. And although there is a lot in regards to getting back to one’s roots in Erin’s Story, the author also offers up a full package of romance, drama and suspense.

Erin is a young woman who is headed – for the first time – to her father’s birthplace. But she is not only going there in order to take a look around; she is also going there because her father has a true mystery in his background that she wishes to investigate. Not only will she end up learning far more about him, but she will also learn about her own background and the way life exists far away from what she knows and understands.

We begin right away with Erin on the plane headed to Turkey, to her eventual arrival at the small village where her father, Ramzi Ozcomert, Jr., came from. Atamkoy is the village; however, in this village, Erin is more than a bit anxious to uncover the stories and perhaps truths about her father that have been kept quiet. She doesn’t know much regarding these mysteries. What she does know is the fact that people have said her father actually witnessed the violent murder of his own family members in his past. But those are doors that also open on the power of revenge, with a true family unit using vengeance in order to bring about justice.

The world Erin lands in is almost too amazing to behold. This is a girl who has graduated from UCLA, so seeing a mad rush is not exactly a big thing for her; L.A. is certainly no small town in Maine. But her first impression when landing in Turkey is total chaos. Side streets are filled with market stalls and people walk the streets dressed in some of the brightest and most beautiful wardrobes possible. Modern day Turkey certainly offers her modern amenities, but Erin finds it incredible (as will the reader) to note that she’s standing in a place where the most important civilizations of all time (Greeks, Romans, the Ottoman Empire and more), played a very important role.

The author delves a bit into modern-day politics and life there, but the true thrill is when Erin faces such a new climate. And when she receives the diary/journal of her grandmother, the old “ways” and the traditions (some good, others bad), come to light. Stumbling across one of her very own professors in Turkey (one she truly finds dreamy), Erin gets wrapped up in a love that she hopes will grow. But as Erin discovers more and more about the tragedies and mysteries in her father’s past, she soon learns of the fact that this archaeology professor may somehow be intertwined in the whole mystery.

With each step, Erin is led into a world she most definitely does not understand, and as she puts pieces together regarding the past, the story becomes one that grips the reader and will not let go.
Quill says: The beauty of the scenery, the darkness of the past, and the mystery tied up with the romance…all of these facets come together to create an unforgettable read.

For more information on Road to Siran: Erin’s Story, please visit the author's website at: www.behcetkaya.com








Monday, August 4, 2014

Interview with Author Behcet Kaya

Today we're talking with Behcet Kaya, author of Murder on the Naval Base

FQ: This book starts with an unexpected murder leaving the reader almost as confused as Anderson. Was this how you had planned to open this story from the beginning?

KAYA: Absolutely! My belief is that if I can’t get your attention in the first page or first chapter; you are not likely to continue to read the novel. It’s not always easy to capture the reader’s attention in the first page but, in this book, I think it worked very well. So much so that, because I shocked the reader with the murders happening in first page, and because the main character (Anderson) had motive, but no alibi, I decided in Part I to tell their story in flashbacks and everything that led up to the point where the murders took place.

FQ: Both Anderson and Bevin have similar goals in that they both want to overcome difficulties in their past. Did you always intend to make them so similar?

KAYA: I did, but Bevin and Anderson go in two completely different directions to reach their ultimate goals. Bevin is a smart, beautiful, ambitious girl; a gold digger who lets nothing stop her from reaching her goals. She hates her boarding school, the authority over her, and makes demands of herself to have a better life. “The outward happiness and the superior advantages of the young women around her gave Bevin inexpressible pangs of envy. ‘What airs that girl gives herself and all because she is the granddaughter of Warren Beauford!’ She wasn’t ashamed to make the remark out loud to one of her roommates.” {Murder on the Naval Base, Chapter 11, page 78}

On the other hand, Anderson accepts the misfortunes life has thrown at him and continually struggles to better himself. His one flaw is that he is so ashamed of his mother being a prostitute that he tells lies to perpetuate the position that he is from an honorable family.

FQ: Do you have a background with the Navy or any branch of military?

KAYA: No, I do not and I must add here that there are two reasons why I wrote this novel. First, I have had in mind to write a military novel for many years. I was influenced by the movie, Conduct Unbecoming, (produced in 1975), starring many famous British actors and the American actor, Stacy Keach. I wanted to make my protagonist a military person who had reached the highest standards of his career and then took his own life due to the fact that a hidden shame surfaced on the day he was awarded his highest merit. My other-half warned me that if I wrote another tragedy; my readers will type cast me a tragedy writer. My wife also kept urged me to write the sequel to Voice of Conscience, but I did not want to waste time before I was sure I could write something entirely different. I also chose the military because in my childhood I wanted to go to the military academy, but circumstances did not allow that to happen.

Second, my first novel received an award from Writers Digest, but my reviewers thought that the novel was my own biography. In reality, I did include the main character’s life choices very similar to my own, but the actual tragedy was fictional. In several interviews, including yours, I was asked questions such as, “Are your parents still alive?” (If you remember my first novel, “Voice of Conscience,” reviewed and interviewed by Feathered Quill.) After my debut novel, I began to believe that my readers thought that I could only write novels about what I knew personally. The voice on my shoulder shouted, “Okay, you can write a novel based on your life experiences, but can you write anything besides that?” I needed to know if I really was a writer and so I decided to write something totally not me.

FQ: What research did you have to do in regards to the Navy and its code of conduct shown in this story?

KAYA: Oh my God! Where do I start? I have read numerous biographies about famous military persons, such as John McCain, Eisenhower, Bogeys and Bandits, The Making of a Fighter Pilot, by Robert Gandt, Fearless, by Eric Blehm, Tennessee Patriot, by William P. Lawrence and Rosario Rausa, and many, many more. I am also a big fan of Brain Haig, whose military novels fascinate me and I have read just about every one of his books. I wish I could write like he does, but he has a military education. I have visited the Pensacola Naval Museum numerous times. In addition, I have been to the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsfield Alabama, and the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum in DC. Also, in my younger years when I was in high school in London, I visited the Imperial War Museum countless times simply because I was fascinated with the aircraft the British flew. While in high school I also used to collect WWII war magazines and had a collection of sixteen volumes each containing sixteen magazines.

I believe that if you are a true writer you can write anything, but you have to do thorough research. And, you have to know how to search. This novel was my challenge and I wanted to know whether I could write a novel different from my debut novel. As I said, my wife helped research court martial procedures. With the research my wife and I did, over 2500 pages just on court martial procedures, I could have written a book just about that.

FQ: Military jets and flying techniques are mentioned frequently in this book, what research had to be done for that particular element?

KAYA: Here again, because I am a fighter plane junky, I bought “Jane’s Aircraft” magazines and read whenever I could get my hands on. I am fascinated by the FA-18 Hornets and Russian Migs. I read and read about aircraft simulators; it’s all on-line; even today’s fighter plane training is on-line. I bought several pilot training documentaries and watched them as well as documentaries about carriers and life onboard and researched how the British steam-catapulted takeoff and landing system leveling lights work.

FQ: There are many twists in this book, how do you decide when and how to reveal these twists when you are writing?

KAYA: A very good question. Although, this may seem off topic, I must first tell you that I am a mechanical engineer and I build prototype machines for production use. What that means is, I build machines which are used for just one particular function. First, I find the core idea of what that machine is to do, and then I build around it. This is exactly the same process I use to I write my novels. I know the beginning, the middle and the end; how I arrive at the complete story is my challenge. For example, I know the character of Anderson inside and out. Being brought up in a not very stable or honorable home he is fascinated by those who are noble, and then he meets McPhearson at Annapolis Naval Academy and finds out that McPhearson’s father is an admiral. It occured to me, why not make Anderson the admiral’s illegitimate son. Call it Karma, or cause and effect. That was one of the twists.

FQ: Having part two showcase the complete trial was intriguing for me to read, was it always intended to split this book into two parts?

KAYA: Yes, that was my intention. And, there seemed no other logical way to have the book progress. There are the murders, and then how do I resolve this? It just seemed natural to have the murders, the flashbacks, and then resolve the story through the court martial.

FQ: The character of Elizabeth was quite complex, where did the inspiration for her character come from?

KAYA: I have always enjoyed James Bond movies and I have often asked myself why his movies are so exciting? I believe it is because the antagonist is as smart as James Bond, and beyond that evil and ingenious. I wanted my murderer to be smart, cunning and beautiful. Elizabeth was the most colorful character for me to create. Although she does not appear that often in the book, she carries a powerful presence. I researched about psychopaths and sociopaths and learned the difference between the two. Both psychopaths and the sociopaths are basically the same when inflicting pain on their victims; they do not have empathy and enjoy their deeds. The difference is that sociopaths are sloppy and careless, leaving clues behind, and are generally caught very quickly. However, psychopaths are much more clever and secretive, therefore harder to catch.

To learn more about Murder on the Naval Base please read the review at: Feathered Quill Book Reviews.


















Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Book Review - Murder on the Naval Base


Murder on the Naval Base

By: Behcet Kaya
Publisher: CreateSpace
Publication Date: February 2014
ISBN: 9781495478598
Reviewed By: Kristi Benedict
Review Date: July 31, 2014

Lieutenant Anderson Garret is devastated when he realizes his wife Bevin has been having an affair with a man he considered one of his greatest friends, Charles McPhearson. Bevin was the only woman Anderson had ever felt comfortable enough with to share his life, while many great memories were made with Charles and his family spending countless vacations together, but now Anderson is feeling betrayed by the two people he trusted most in this world. Not only has this affair been going on for a while but it adds salt to the wound when he finds out they were together briefly even before Anderson and Bevin were married. Yes, Anderson was upset and thought about confronting the two of them about this situation but committing murder was not an option he was considering. However, when both Bevin and Charles are shot and killed in broad daylight at the Officers’ club, all evidence and eye witness accounts points straight to Anderson. With no knowledge of what just happened Anderson is apprehended by the local police and charged with the murder of his wife and former friend.

When the trial begins the prosecuting team throws every detail out that they can, trying to convince the jury that the anger Anderson felt about the affair was enough to brutally kill the two people who were closest to him. Even though Anderson knows he did not do anything of the sort he begins to feel that proving his innocence will be next to impossible. The odds become better however, when an anonymous person pays for Anderson to have one of the best defense attorneys in the nation to represent him. Will it be enough, however, to convince the jury to decide Anderson is not guilty? Anderson’s freedom is on the line but with no other obvious suspects the defense team will have to dig deep in order to uncover the truth about this murder.

From the very first page this book had me hooked as it begins with a bang by laying out and describing the murder which had me instantly turning pages as quickly as I could. I was intrigued as I continued to read about the background of each character and the events leading up to the pivotal murder, and with a mystery book I think that is the greatest part. It is so much fun for me as a reader to feel as if I am putting together clues and facts just as the characters are but still be in the dark on a few secrets. That is exactly what Behcet Kaya did with this book as he included little details that help the reader put together pieces of the puzzle, but not enough to give anything vital away. In addition, while the opening to the story was definitely exciting, the ending had me biting my nails as there were so many unexpected twists that I completely did not see coming. This made for an amazing conclusion!

Quill says: A thrilling murder mystery that delivered non-stop secrets from beginning to end.
For more information on Murder on the Naval Base, please visit the author's website at: www.behcetkaya.com





Friday, July 18, 2014

Books in for Review

It's certainly not slowing down here at Feathered Quill.  More books arriving every day for review.  Here's a sampling of what has just arrived.  Check them out and then stop by in a few weeks to read the reviews!





Surviving 26th Street by Carol June Stover The year is 1954, and Laura Justice's ambitious husband, Winton, makes a decision that shocks family and friends. He moves his Memphis family North, vowing to strike it rich on Madison Avenue and savor the pleasures of suburban life. This does not happen. The southern family is a poor fit in their New Jersey neighborhood, and loyal wife Laura feels ostracized. What's more, Winton's advertising agency soon fails, and he becomes depressed and combative. 1950s women are supposed to obey, but Laura Justice refuses to stay mute. She dares to complain when Winton launches a new business selling wire recorders (the very latest technology!) from their basement. Incensed at his uncooperative wife, Winton persists, bringing chaos to their family, including his strange parents, a creepy employee and a sexy neighbor, not to mention financial disaster. A tireless fixer, Laura tries to stem Winton's antics and stop the cash drain, to no avail. Meanwhile, the couple's children are caught in their parent's cross fire, drifting around the neighborhood and depending on neighbors for fun and attention. When 9-year old daughter Jane rises above the crisis to help police solve the crime, Laura is inspired to take action too. Defying 1950 taboos, she struggles to make a life-changing decision: Should she rein in husband Winton and his maddening life style...or at long last cut bait?

A Pinch of Ohh La La by Renee Swindle Abbey Ross, who runs her own bakery in Oakland, California, is known for her visually stunning wedding cakes. But lately, Abbey’s own love life has become stale. According to her best friend, Bendrix, Abbey’s not the spontaneous young woman she was when they were teenagers listening to the Cure and creating attention-grabbing graffiti. Of course, her failed relationship with a womanizing art forger might have something to do with that. Nevertheless, it’s time for Abbey to step out of the kitchen—and her comfort zone—and Bendrix has even handpicked a man for her to date. Samuel Howard is everything Abbey’s dreamed of: handsome, successful, and looking to raise a family. But a creamy icing might be needed to hide a problem or two. When Samuel complains about disrespect for the institution of marriage, Abbey’s reminded of her nontraditional family, with thirteen children from various mothers. And when Samuel rails about kids having kids, Abbey thinks of her twenty-year-old sister who’s recently revealed her pregnancy. Soon Abbey is facing one disaster after another and struggling to make sense of it all. Her search for love has led her down a bitter path, but with the help of her unique family and unwavering friends, she just might find the ooh la la that makes life sweet.

Small Blessings by Martha Woodroof Tom Putnam has resigned himself to a quiet and half-fulfilled life. An English professor in a sleepy college town, he spends his days browsing the Shakespeare shelves at the campus bookstore, managing the oddball faculty in his department and caring, alongside his formidable mother-in-law, for his wife Marjory, a fragile shut-in with unrelenting neuroses, a condition exacerbated by her discovery of Tom’s brief and misguided affair with a visiting poetess a decade earlier. Then, one evening at the bookstore, Tom and Marjory meet Rose Callahan, the shop's charming new hire, and Marjory invites Rose to their home for dinner, out of the blue, her first social interaction since her breakdown. Tom wonders if it’s a sign that change is on the horizon, a feeling confirmed upon his return home, where he opens a letter from his former paramour, informing him he'd fathered a son who is heading Tom's way on a train. His mind races at the possibility of having a family after so many years of loneliness. And it becomes clear change is coming whether Tom’s ready or not.

Discovery Snakeopedia: The Complete Guide to Everything Snakes--Plus Lizards and More Reptiles Snakeopedia tells the whole story of these amazing creatures. From the enormous Green Anaconda to the tiny Zootaxa, the book includes hundreds of snakes and all 12 families. You an learn about identifying features, habitats, their dangerous venom, how they can swallow such large prey, and unusual snake behaviours. Along the way, colourful callouts offer tons of cool facts. You can meet pythons that can survive as long as a year between meals, spitting cobras that can squirt venom eight feet away, and even flying snakes, which can sail from branch to branch to catch lizards! From vipers to rattlesnakes, boas to cobras, Discovery Channel Snakeopedia is the ultimate encyclopaedia for snake fans of all ages.

My Fingerpaint Masterpiece by Sherrill S. Cannon Have you ever seen a "work of art" worth millions, which looks like something your child just brought home from school? The dual perspective of "Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder" and just a little bit of "The Emperor's New Clothes" is evident in this clever artwork story of a child who paints a fingerpaint print in class and then loses it in the wind on the way home. Illustrated from the point of view of a child, whose identity is left to the imagination of the reader since all of the illustrations are what the child sees, the fingerpaint print is interpreted by official "judges" as well as by bystanders. Should people be influenced by what others see, or use their own self-esteem to make their own judgments?

Murder on the Naval Base by Behcet Kaya Murder on the Naval Base begins with a blurry account of a cold-blooded shooting of a couple, singled out while having dinner at an Officer’s Club. The prime suspect is apprehended hours later while apparently attempting to flee the state. With over a dozen eye-witnesses collaborating the incident, little was left in the puzzle for the military investigators to piece together; especially once it was determined the two victims were in fact the perpetrator’s wife and the man she was having an on-going affair with. Transporting the reader into the supersonic fighter jet world of Naval Aviation, with aircraft carrier scenes, the novel brings the reader close to the egos and confidence of those commanders that fly our warplanes. Combined with a steamy undercurrent of lust, love, sexual fulfillment, jealousy and primordial desires of the protagonist, the human condition of married life versus the structure and demands of military careers are juxtaposed against the strength and will of personal upbringing and ethical behavior of the characters. Offering the reader a page-turner of excitement, legal intrigue, psychologically thrilling moments, steamy sex and military honor - complete with a surprise that is foreshadowed so brilliantly, even the most seasoned reader will raise an eyebrow at the end with humble acknowledgement of the literary mastery contained herein.  

The Second Coming: A Love Story by Scott Pinsker In "The Second Coming: A Love Story," the devilish new novel by Scott Pinsker, the culture war between Red America and Blue America turns shockingly real when two self-declared saviors appear on earth. The first “messiah” attracts legions of liberal and secular-progressive followers with his message of New Age brotherhood, quickly becoming the darling of the left. The second “messiah” preaches fire-and-brimstone traditional Christianity, gaining a grassroots army of conservative worshipers ready to battle to the death. It’s finally happened: Red America and Blue America are headed for Armageddon! Novelist Scott Pinsker is a Tampa Bay-based celebrity publicist who has also written for FOXNews.com as a marketing expert. As Pinsker tells it: “Late one night I had an unsettling thought: If the Devil truly wanted to con mankind, he wouldn’t have a pitchfork and horns. All those horror movies have it wrong; a pitchfork and horns are bad marketing. Instead, his smartest strategy for activating new followers would be to appear as a holy man – and claim the faith of his target audience. Because if I were Satan’s publicist, that’s what I’d recommend.” Scott Pinsker has worked with a long list of athletes and entertainers, ranging from scandal-plagued NFL stars to Saturday Night Live alums to Grammy-winning icons. While he insists that his story’s characters are wholly fictional, he freely admits that the Red America / Blue America political divide is directly ripped from the headlines: “We’ve become so polarized that we automatically assume the worst about our opposition. The most sinister explanation becomes the dominant narrative – and each side is skilled at exploitation. So in "The Second Coming: A Love Story," you have conservatives firing-up the Tea Partiers on talk-radio shows, and liberals decrying their ‘extremism’ and ‘lack of inclusion.’ You have evangelicals, businessmen and born again Christians waging a multimedia Holy War against secularists, urbanites and liberal activists – and neither side will cede an inch. Sadly, none of this was a stretch: Since we’re already predisposed to believe that the other side is evil, an all-out apocalypse is simply the natural progression.”  

Beetle Boy by Margaret Willey When his mother walked out on the family, seven-year-old Charlie comforted his inconsolable father by sharing the silly beetle boy stories his mother told him. Years later, these stolen stories still haunt Charlie's dreams.