
Siger applied the Page 69 Test to his latest Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis mystery thriller, Not Dead Yet, and reported the following:
Here is page 69:Visit Jeffrey Siger's website.“Yes, why should you?” She giggled again.In all the years I’ve taken the Page 69 Test, never before has that bellwether test so perfectly captured my book’s central plot elements as it does when applied to Not Dead Yet, my 14th Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis mystery-thriller.
Andreas exhaled. “Okay, so what did he have to tell you relevant to the crash?”
Lila took a sip of wine. “He’s gone over all the documents provided to him by my company and asked the AAIASB for additional documents. So far, all the maintenance records and logs he reviewed show nothing out of the ordinary and everything to be in working order. But unless the black boxes are found, we may never definitively know what happened.”
“How about a non-definitive opinion or even a wild-ass guess on what brought down the plane and how Onofrio managed to be the only one who survived?”
“According to Niko, every crash is unique in its own way. In this case, it’s the rarity of not one, but at least two passengers surviving a high velocity impact at sea.”
“Two?”
“Yes,” nodded Lila. “Presumably an autopsy will determine that Onofrio’s wife was alive after the crash, and with the bodies of the four other known occupants still unaccounted for, he can’t rule out more survived for at least some period after the crash.”
“That seems hard to believe.”
“I had the same reaction. He said some years back, a commercial jetliner flying empty except for a crew of four—two pilots and two flight attendants––were on a mission to rescue a hundred fisherman stranded in a remote Alaskan village. Three of the crew sat in the cockpit, while one flight attendant sat in the back of the plane reading. Descending through thick fog on what the pilots mistakenly thought the correct flight path for landing on a rural airstrip, the plane crashed into a sloping hillside miles before the runway. The careening impact ripped off the tail section, including the last two rows of seats, as the fuselage continued tearing across the hillside to a stop. Miraculously all survived, including the flight attendant who’d been sitting in one of the last two rows torn off the plane along with the tail section. When the three from the cockpit found their crew mate, she was injured, but alive; still strapped into her seat sitting off by itself away from the remains of the rest of the plane.”
Andreas shook his head. “I’d call that crazy luck or a downright miracle.”
The page begins with a conversation between Andreas and his wife, Lila, regarding the details of an unofficial investigation into the crash of a private jet resulting in the apparent deaths of all onboard but Dimitris Onofrio, a powerful, influential and ruthlessly corrupt mega-rich Greek businessman. Paranoid and vengeful to the core, one dares not offend Onofrio and witnesses prepared to testify against him mysteriously die before they have the chance to do so.
Onofrio’s wife is thought to have died from the crash, and though Onofrio now lies comatose in a hospital room, Kaldis has no doubt that once conscious he’ll seek vengeance against anyone he suspects responsible for the death of his beloved wife. Chief among those suspects is Andreas’ own wife who’s more mixed up in the accident than Andreas ever suspected.
At the heart of Not Dead Yet is an ex officio effort on the part of Andreas and his team to determine what caused the crash, how Onofrio’s wife died, and who was responsible––before Onofrio awakes and begins seeking his revenge. All of those plot points are at play on page 69.
All that’s missing is the role glorious Greece plays in all my books. Here’s a bit of that.
Set largely along Greece’s southwestern Peloponnesian coastline with the Ionian Sea, the plot moves north from where Greek mythology places the entrance to Hades, to search for clues along the coastal perimeter of the historically and agriculturally rich Messinian Bay region. From there it’s on to Navarino where Greeks fought the most important sea battle of their 1821 War for Independence and today is home to Costa Navarino, one of the world’s most luxurious and celebrated golf resorts.
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Q&A with Jeffrey Siger.
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--Marshal Zeringue