

The Radio Murders People and Places
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"Sometimes you gotta be dead before anybody knows you’re alive."
- Gene Minues,
Talk Radio Caller
Entropy: A measure of the disorder or randomness in a closed system.
That is one definition that guides my process of creating and sharing The Radio Murders. The randomness begins the process, or at least what appears to be randomness. Crash Kradich’s production assistant is in the middle of a vicious murder. Crash’s sister is a survivor of the attack, yet is implicated in the murder of her husband. Crash’s executive producer seems to know more than she is letting on about the crime. And all the while, the victim, Peter Janich and his deadly dealings bring disorder to all involved.
That is the essence of The Radio Murders: The Caller, the next installment in this fast-paced mystery thriller. More randomness? The Caller is actually the beginning of the saga explored by the author’s first novel, The Radio Murders: The Collectors, now available in hard back and ebook and soon in a pocket paperback edition.
The world of KCI Radio Chicago is soaked in the desperate dealing of one talk show host trying to find a stage. Bill Crash Kradich may have taken the pursuit of fame to a new level, and dragged anyone near him into a spiral of deadly events.
The Radio Murders: The Caller, available Spring 2012, will bring this Talk Radio show to its logical conclusion, and it is not pretty.
After getting The Radio Murders: The Collectors in the libraries and in the hands of many readers, the clock has started on the next book. The Radio Murders: The Caller was my first effort and began in the late summer of 2002. It was inspired by a simple news story on WKYC-TV3. A home invasion was reported, but the victim refused to show her face, we just heard her claim and a description of the events.
I have been in a business that is audio driven and voice driven for a very long time. There is something about listening to a person's voice without seeing the body language and other emotional attachments that serves as a lie detector. It is not perfect, but to the trained ear it is significant. I was convinced that the woman, the victim of the crime was lying. She was covering up something. Read more...
“Young lady, I could lift you from the ground with my palm between your thighs. I could send you to different worlds and give new meaning to ecstasy.” Barbicas stood and handed the girl back her phone number. “But not today.”
Elias shook his head and picked up the phone. “Such intrigue.” He mumbled. It was necessary for his safety, and that of the mission, he supposed, but costly and sometimes comical. From here he knew what to do, they would take care of the foolish girl's improvising and he may be the last to see her alive. Barbicas pressed the 'send' button.
The passage you have just read is part of the introduction to one who has been called "the most interesting person," in The Radio Murders: The Collectors and The Radio Murders: The Caller, excerpted below. It was not my intension to make a killer and clearly the antagonist in this story someone with such attraction. But as many mystery writers will tell you, it often happens this way.
Barbicas will play a very different role in The Radio Murders: The Caller. In The Radio Murders: the Collectors he was searching his soul. In Caller he discovers that he just might have one. It is not a pleasant revelation.
The Radio Murders: The Caller is in the writing lab now and will be ready for you to visit by Spring 2012. Thanks again for your support.



"You're only as good as your last show." Bill Crash Kradich told his niece Sue Janich.
Excerpt
"I heard. Honestly, it sucked to know my mom’s murder was on the radio. Hearing it on your show made it ten times worse."
Kradich could not help wondering whether Sue was talking about the murder Lani Janich had been attempting or the one that had been prevented by the stranger. " Right. But we did air it, and, well, let me just level with you, Sue. My business is changing a lot. I need an angle, a hook to keep an audience. It’s like, did you ever hear that Rolling Stones song, ‘It’s Only Rock ‘n’ Roll’?" He was losing Sue, but it was too late to turn back. " Jagger sings about sticking a knife in his heart, blood all over the stage. ‘Would that get you excited’ the audience, I mean. Something like that?"
"What are you talking about, Billy?" Sue folded her arms across her chest. "Are you telling me you are going to put that horrible night on the radio again?"
"Might have to." Kradich could not help but notice how much Sue’s body language resembled that of his sister." Bullshit! You don’t have to do anything!

The Radio Murders: The Collectors is avaiable in Audiobook/Podcast form. Listen for free and signup for updates at iTunes.

The Radio Murders: The Collectors has plenty of victims. But this is just a story, drawn from the imagination of a writer, nothing more. Sadly, there are real victims in our society because there is real evil. With that in mind the author and publisher of The Radio Murders: The Collectors have agreed to donate a dollar of every hardback and half that for trade paperback sold.

The Radio Murders is a simple idea; a radio talk show about real-time murder, As It Happens with a deadly twist. How could such a thing exist? More importantly, how could it become an entertainment vehicle?
The latter is not so difficult to conceive. We have a bloodlust evident from the beginning. It took four short chapters of The Bible before we had our first murder mystery. It was predicated only by sex and betrayal. Sex has been regulated almost out of radio except in the most nuanced terms. Betrayal is a side dish at best.
So what’s left?
The Radio Murders: The Collectors vividly illustrates how greed, revenge and vanity deconstructs a suburban Chicago family, and draws a relative, a Chicago talk show host, into their deadly pursuits. As a result a home invasion and murder is actually aired, live during Bill "Crash" Kradich’s broadcast. The event is a ratings winner and sends some staff at radio station KCI on a mission to create and "own" the concept.
As part of the Janich family’s near demise, another group of men become involved. Known only as The Collectors, these men take greed to epic heights and will not stop until they acquire some very special items. The Radio Murders: The Collectors tells both stories as they move along parallel runaway courses only to collide in a stunning climax.
The Radio Murders is not for everyone. There is plenty of action in this story and it is adult in nature.

The Collectors is not a Romance, not a Cozy Mystery or light reading. "This is not a two-dimensional story," said one reader. "There are layers, each more interesting than the last." The Radio Murders is at times a story about desperate people doing desperate things. And the people you find here do what people do. There is sex, harsh language and graphic scenes of crime and murder.
If you enjoy the work of James Patterson, Michael Connelly, Tami Hoag, Jeffery Deaver, Patricia Cornwell and others who are not affraid to tell a difficult story, then you are exactly the person I am writing for. The Radio Murders: The Collectors is not a story for the easily offended.
Just thought you should know.
-Chuck Collins

The Radio Murders will debut at on-line stores everywhere in December.
So Who Wrote TRM?
Sitting down and writing a full-feature mystery novel, or anything for the public, takes certain assumptions.
We are all storytellers in one way or another. But what makes this storyteller think this tale is worth your time?
Read More