Deborah Goodrich Royce, author of literary psychological thrillers and a former actor, unpacks how she builds tension without forcing the outline. You will hear how sensory observation from her New York Botanical Garden work feeds scene-level detail, why she prefers a "reveal" that feels earned over a twist that feels gimmicky, and how an actor's training translates into characters with layered motives and believable self-deception.
What you will learn
How to pace a psychological thriller so the reader feels pulled forward, not pushed.
Character-first plotting: letting voice, backstory, and contradictions shape the turns.
Designing "good reveals" and planting signals that pay off cleanly later.
Key topics
Botanical observation as a storytelling skill (attention, pattern, detail).
Character development through lived experience and emotional memory.
Organic plot development: earning twists through setup, not shock value.
Chapters
00:00 Introduction and Deborah's background
01:00 Why the New York Botanical Garden matters to her creative life
01:57 Creative growth through lived experience
03:09 The Lincoln quote and what it signals in the book
03:37 Identity, deception, and what thrillers let us examine
04:55 Using "signals" from real life to build believable turns
05:46 The actor's lens on role, emotion, and subtext
07:10 Writing thrillers in a fast-paced media environment
07:48 "Organic" plotting: how reveals get earned
09:18 Creative community and collaboration
12:31 Openings, pacing, and keeping readers in the scene
14:59 Starting a new project: practical tools and habits
17:30 Visualizing the story with notes and systems
18:09 Readers, book clubs, and what she learns from conversations
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