In Daniel’s Own Words

Photo by Helen Abston

When Central Ohio police chief “Daniel Boyd” retired from his career in law enforcement, he became a driver for the Red Cross, transporting elderly and disabled persons to medical appointments. He also began writing crime and adventure novels.

His first book, ‘NADA (2010), was nominated for the Spur Award for Best First Novel by the Western Writers of America and was reissued in 2023. As one reader put it, “The story blends Nazis, greed, mayhem and gold into a satisfying mix.”

Since ‘NADA was first published, Boyd has penned EASY DEATH (2014), THE DEVIL & STREAK WILSON (2020), AESOP’S TRAVELS (2023) and GONE TO GRAVEYARDS: A Streak Wilson Story (2023). He’s currently writing the third book in The Streak Wilson Series. Boyd writes daily, including contributing book and movie reviews to MysteryFile.

As a graduate of The Ohio State University, Boyd switched majors from English to Communications because, “Having to read assigned books is like being told to eat my vegetables.” He has been a fan of old movies since childhood (his wife calls him a paleo-cinephile). He is also a HAMLET scholar and has a unique hobby of making tobacco pipes from found and upcycled objects.

Boyd and his wife currently live in their 1950s home and enjoy the lifestyle offered in the Columbus area, from the arts and food to metro parks and hiking trails.

Q&A with Daniel

WHAT MADE YOU DECIDE TO BECOME A WRITER?

You put your finger on it with the word “Made.” It’s not so much a decision as a compulsion. And I think of myself as more of a story-teller than a writer.

DO YOU WRITE ABOUT REAL CASES YOU WORKED ON AS A POLICE OFFICER?

No. Not once, not ever. But my years in that job gave me an understanding of guns and the psychology of people who use them, and I try to bring that to my writing. Anyone can write a scene where someone gets shot, but sometimes it’s more interesting to see how it affected the shooter.

WHAT INSPIRED YOU TO WRITE ‘NADA?

I’ve read a lot of books, and seen a lot of movies where the hero or leading man has to recover something valuable and get it to its rightful owner—they never seem to do it just to get rich. Anyway, the hero generally hooks up with a shifty character, necessary to get the job done, but not to be trusted. And at the end, this character always tries to double-cross the hero, and he gets shot dead for his efforts, and the hero says something like, “He was a nice guy. Too bad he got greedy.” Gets on his horse and rides off into the sunset. And I started wondering. “What would the story be like if this shifty guy were telling it?” ‘NADA is the result.

HOW DO YOU GO ABOUT WRITING A BOOK?

I like to map out the action in my mind, figure out where I want the story to go, then let the characters get there on their own. When it works, I can immerse myself in a character the way a method actor studies a part. When it doesn’t work, I know I’m doing something wrong. And at its best, a character will do something I wasn’t expecting.

WHAT WRITERS INFLUENCED YOU?

Mostly ones who went out of fashion before I was born. Dashiell Hammett taught me how to write a lean, fast-moving story with a minimum of prose. Raymond Chandler showed me a narrator who tells us about himself without talking about himself. Joseph Conrad demonstrated that action must have meaning. Somerset Maugham charmed me with the richness of his characters, and PG Wodehouse laughed it all off.

WHAT ADVICE WOULD YOU GIVE TO ASPIRING WRITERS?

Don’t do it. I can’t stand the competition.

But seriously, folks, a lot of people read my books and say, “Well how hard can this be?” And they’re right. But writing a book isn’t even half the battle. It took me a year to write ‘NADA and seven years to get it published. Two firms contracted for it and folded before they could print it. And when you get a book published, it takes enormous effort and creativity to publicize and market it.

So I guess what I’m saying is, have a lot of patience first, and it’s a lot of work after getting published. And if you’re lucky enough to hook up with a good publicist, as I did, make the most of it.