Chris Culver

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Chris Culver
BornTulsa, Oklahoma
OccupationNovelist
NationalityAmerican
GenreHardboiled crime fiction, thriller
Website
www.indiecrime.com

Chris Culver is the pen name of an American author of crime fiction and thrillers. His books are set in and around the Midwestern United States. He is well known for his works featuring IMPD Detective Ashraf (Ash) Rashid. His debut novel, The Abbey, was on The New York Times bestseller list for 16 weeks. He has since gone on to write several stand alone books and is currently working on a new series set in St. Louis.

Background[]

Chris Culver was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma and moved to Chickasha, Oklahoma shortly thereafter. He and his family moved to Newburgh, Indiana when he was seven years old.

Chris Culver read a lot as a child in elementary school. His favorite authors at that time were J. R. R. Tolkien and Stephen King. His love of books extended to the classroom where he even sneaked extra books beneath his desk and read during class. In fifth grade, he did a book report on Michael Crichton’s The Andromeda Strain since the assignment was to read something scary and report what made it so. While his fellow classmates chose to write about ghosts and things that go bump in the night, he wrote about the horrors of biological warfare.[1]

He first became interested in writing crime fiction after picking up a dog-eared, coffee-stained paperback copy of Mickey Spillane's I, the Jury in a library book sale.[2]

Chris Culver completed his undergraduate studies at a private liberal arts college in southern Indiana. There he majored in philosophy and met his future wife. Afterwards, he attended law school. He then enrolled in a PhD program in philosophy at Purdue,[3] but left before completing his full degree when his wife was offered a faculty position in Arkansas.[1]

After graduate school, Chris Culver taught classes in ethics, the philosophy of religion, and religious studies at a small university in Arkansas. It was during this time that he wrote his first Ash Rashid novel. He credits his inspiration for the character creation to his students and their hardships. About Ash Rashid, he writes, "In a lot of ways, he's my idea of a hero. He doesn't have special powers or abilities, but he tries his best to do what's right. People occasionally ask me if he's based on a real person. He's not, but I hope there are people like him out there. The world needs people like that."[1] He chose to write Ash Rashid as a Muslim detective partly to add depth to his background and make him seem more human[4] and partly because he was "tired of reading books and seeing movies that portray all Muslims as terrorists of zealots."[5]

He currently lives near St. Louis, MO with his family.[6]

Career[]

The Abbey was the fourth novel Chris Culver wrote, but the first he considered good enough to publish. He wrote ten query letters to literary agents. They either did not have interest in the book, didn't respond, or were unsure of its potential on the market.[7] He then decided to self-publish The Abbey in February 2011. He was pleased and surprised that he sold so well on his own.[5] As of early 2013, his e-book sales totaled more than 750,000 copies.[8] The early success attracted the attention of a literary agent[7] and publisher, Hachette Book Group with whom he sold three Ash Rashid series books.

He published two books, Just Run and Nine Years Gone without a publisher in 2011 and 2014, respectively. In December 2014, Chris Culver announced on Facebook that Hachette is no longer publishing the Ash Rashid series. However, he continued to publish the series on his own.

Interviews[]

Works[]

Series[]

  • Ash Rashid Series - The novels in the popular Ash Rashid series follow the career of a former homicide detective, who now works for the prosecutor's office. Detective Ashraf Rashid tries his best to do what is right, but often acts unscrupulously in the pursuit of justice.[3][9] Though he is a practicing Muslim, he is an alcoholic. He justifies drinking as a necessary way to cope with what he has seen on the job.[10] As the series progresses, he focuses more on his family and working on his problems.[11]
  • Gabe Ward Series - Detective Gabriel Ward is a former Army intelligence officer with degrees in computer science and physics. As his department's computer crimes expert, he uses computer forensics to solve crimes as much as his street sense. The first book in the series starts with a personal matter when Detective Ward must identify the remains of his brother-in-law at a crime scene.[12]
  • Joe Court Series - From Chris's website; The Girl in the Motel: "Detective Mary Joe Court sleeps with a shotgun beside her bed and a loveable bullmastiff at her feet. For the past twelve years, she’s hidden from a nightmarish past, but with every passing day, her scars fade, and her heart grows lighter. Now, for the first time in her life, she looks forward to her future. She’s happy. Then she finds the body. Someone shot the victim in her chest and left her to die in a cheap motel. Joe knew her well. She grew up with her. They were sisters, of a sort. Twelve years ago, the victim put a gangster in prison. Now that gangster’s out, and he’s looking to settle scores—Joe included. Joe has fought to leave her past behind. Now, she has to face it or lose everything she cares about. Because the killer hunting her will tear apart her carefully constructed life piece by piece until there’s nothing left. Unless Joe gets him first."[13]
  • Hannah Blackwood Series - From Chris Culver's website: Hana Blackwood is a woman without an identity. Once, she was a combat medic in the US Army. Now she’s a civilian. Then she was a decorated detective with the St. Louis county police department. Now, she’s not. She had a family once, but she lost them to a civil war most of the world has forgotten. She’s adrift. Then she meets the Romero family. Someone murdered their son three years ago. The police never even found a suspect. Hana doesn’t know the victim or his family, but she understands loss. She can’t bring the victim back, but maybe she can help a family understand their son’s death. Only, the victim was hardly innocent. And his killers haven’t gone far. As Hana investigates and draws closer to the truth, dangerous men draw closer to her. But Hana’s no damsel in distress. She’s smart, capable, and absolutely lethal. Unfortunately, so are the men she’s hunting.[14]

Standalone Novels[]

  • Just Run - This standalone thriller follows mathematician Renee Carter and Detective Trent Schaefer from the Ohio Attorney General's office. Renee Carter and a colleague uncover a corrupt online poker site, which makes them a target. Detective Schaefer shows his knowledge to be more than that of the average detective and hints at a much deeper background. "The book’s ending, along with much of the storyline and character development, is quite unexpected and wholly satisfying."[15] Just Run was listed on the USA Best Selling Books in October, 2011.
  • Nine Years Gone - This standalone psychological thriller is set in St. Louis, Missouri. Crime novelist Steve Hale is haunted by a decision he made nine years ago to save his girlfriend from her abusive stepfather by framing him for murder.[16] When his former girlfriend comes back to town after her stepfather is executed, Steve Hale realizes she could ruin the happy life he has created. Her lies, demands, and psychopathic tendencies give the reader a memorable villain.[7]

Novels[]

Title Original Publication Date Featuring Series/Number
The Abbey 2011, March Ash Rashid Ash Rashid, Book 1
Just Run 2011, September Trent Schaefer, Renee Carter n/a
The Outsider 2013, April Ash Rashid Ash Rashid, Book 2
By Any Means 2014, May Ash Rashid Ash Rashid, Book 3
Nine Years Gone 2014, June Steve Hale, Tess Girard n/a
Measureless Night 2015, May Ash Rashid Ash Rashid, Book 4
Pocketful of God 2016, January Ash Rashid Ash Rashid, Book 5
No Room for Good Men 2017, January Ash Rashid Ash Rashid, Book 6
Counting Room 2017, September Gabe Ward Gabe Ward, Book 1
Sleeper Cell 2018, March Ash Rashid Ash Rashid, Book 7
The Girl in the Motel 2018, December Joe Court Joe Court, Book 1
The Girl in the Woods 2019, February Joe Court Joe Court, Book 2
The Boys in the Church 2019, April Joe Court Joe Court, Book 3
The Man in the Meth Lab 2019, July Joe Court Joe Court, Book 4
The Woman Who Wore Roses 2019, September Joe Court Joe Court, Book 5
The Man in the Park 2019, December Joe Court Joe Court, Book 6
The Girl Who Told Stories 2020, March Joe Court Joe Court, Book 7
The Men on the Farm 2020, June Joe Court Joe Court, Book 8
The Man in the River 2020, September Joe Court Joe Court, Book 9
Night Work 2021, August Hannah Blackwood Hannah Blackwood, Book 1
The Lost Ones 2021, November Hannah Blackwood Hannah Blackwood, Book 2
Throwaways 2022, February Hannah Blackwood Hannah Blackwood, Book 3

[17][6][18][19]

Readers Advisory[]

If you like Chris Culver, you might like these other authors as well.

References[]

  1. ^ a b c "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-02-15. Retrieved 2015-03-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ^ "Website of New York Times' bestselling author Chris Culver". indiecrime.com.
  3. ^ a b "Ash Rashid (Chris Culver)". www.detecs.org.
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-02-15. Retrieved 2015-03-09.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ a b "NTN: Chris Culver interviewed | Crime Fiction Lover". crimefictionlover.com. November 15, 2012.
  6. ^ a b "Chris Culver". www.amazon.com.
  7. ^ a b c Frenzy, The Reading (July 31, 2014). "The Reading Frenzy: Interview with author Chris Culver - Nine Years Gone".
  8. ^ "Fiction Book Review: The Abbey by Chris Culver. Grand Central, $9.99 trade paper (300p) ISBN 978-1-4555-2741-0". PublishersWeekly.com.
  9. ^ "Fiction Book Review: By Any Means by Chris Culver. Grand Central, $15 trade paper (400p) ISBN 978-1-4555-2598-0". PublishersWeekly.com.
  10. ^ "Review of "The Outsider" by Chris Culver". January 8, 2014.
  11. ^ Culver, Chris. "Pocketful of God" – via Amazon.
  12. ^ "Counting Room". Amazon.
  13. ^ "The Girl in the Motel by Chris Culver". indiecrime.com.
  14. ^ "Night Work by Chris Culver". chrisculver.com.
  15. ^ "Just Run".
  16. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-02-15. Retrieved 2015-03-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ "Log into Facebook". Facebook. {{cite web}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  18. ^ "Website of New York Times' bestselling author Chris Culver". indiecrime.com.
  19. ^ "Chris Culver's Hana Blackwood books in order". www.fantasticfiction.com.

External links[]

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