Deadly Gold Rush by Landis Wade #AuthorInterview

Deadly Gold Rush by Landis Wade Banner

DEADLY GOLD RUSH

by Landis Wade

May 18 – June 26, 2026 Virtual Book Tour

Synopsis:

Deadly Gold Rush by Landis Wade

THE INDIE RETIREMENT MYSTERY SERIES

 

Murder, mines, and missing millions—retirement just got interesting.

When a shady real estate developer is found murdered beneath Harriet Keaton’s family home—shot, stabbed, and surrounded by rare 1830s gold coins—her estranged twin brother Joey is the prime suspect. He insists he’s innocent…but won’t name the real culprit.

With Joey refusing to talk and millions missing from the retirement accounts, the future of the Independence Retirement Community is suddenly on the line. Now, whip-smart Harriet and her sleuthing partners—Craig Travail (savvy lawyer, reluctant romantic) and Yeager Alexander (conspiracy theorist, resident rabble-rouser)—must dig into the past to solve the crime.

Their best lead? A decades-old memoir from Harriet’s treasure-obsessed father and whispers of a long-lost gold hoard.

But treasure has a way of attracting trouble. As fortunes vanish and suspects multiply, the trio must untangle two decades of betrayal—before the killer strikes again.

Murder, mayhem, and the Carolina gold rush: welcome back to the Indie, where retirement is anything but quiet.

Praise for Deadly Gold Rush:

Deadly Gold Rush is a satisfyingly complex entwining of events and personalities that proves hard to put down.”
~ Midwest Book Review

Deadly Gold Rush caught my attention from the first sentence and kept me transfixed to the very end. Couldn’t put it down.”
~ Readers’ Favorite Reviews

“Lively mystery bubbling with unforgettable characters and historical spirit.”
~ Booklife Reviews

“Mystery fans who love Richard Osman’s cozy Thursday Murder Club books will enjoy the similarly energetic take on mystery-loving retirees.”
~ Kirkus Reviews

DEADLY GOLD RUSH Trailer:

Book Details:

Genre: Mystery, Legal Thriller, Historical
Published by: Lystra Books & Literary Services, LLC
Publication Date: March 3, 2026
Number of Pages: 378 pages, Paperback
ISBN: 979-8992136357, Paperback
Series: The Indie Retirement Mystery Series, Book 2 | Each is a Standalone Mystery
Book Links: Amazon | KindleUnlimited | Barnes & Noble | BookShop.org | Goodreads | BookBub

Read an excerpt:

Chapter One

Death in the Passage

The narrow alleyway walls muffled the gunshot as uptown Charlotte slept. It was one thirty in the morning on Tuesday, April 1.

The phone call didn’t last long.

“It’s me,” the caller said. “I need your help.”

“I’m listening.”

“I have a body.”

“Whose?”

“Chance Landry.”

“Where are you?”

“Lincoln Street. Inside the Rivafinoli Passage in South End. Next to the Queen Charlotte mural.”

“Anyone with you?”

The caller explained who else was still there.

“You leave. Tell them to stay with the body and wait for my call. I need to think.”

Three minutes later, the call was made to the only living person remaining in the passage who could help.

“I am going to text you an address.” Next, they explained what to do with Landry’s body when they got to the address.

“Are you kidding? He’s already dead.”

But the person giving instructions had no sense of humor. “Just do it.”

A text message followed with the address.

The person who received the message knew how to follow directions and did as they were told.

Chapter Two

Vengeance is Sweet

The 11:15 p.m. email on Craig Travail’s phone read: Your friends are about to suffer financial ruin, untold heartbreak, and trials and tribulations. You have only yourself to blame.

What?

Travail read the email again, slower this time. He read it twice more. There was no author name. Just an unknown vengeanceissweet email address.

Travail exhaled. His email checking practice was a bad habit, a routine held over from his career when clients expected their lawyers to be available 24/7.

Nothing good ever came of his itch to scratch his email in-box for late-night messages, like now, when it would be twice as difficult to sleep after watching the late night local news—with its smorgasbord of crimes, collisions, and natural disasters—and reading this email.

One news story was about elder fraud, a reminder of how susceptible retirees are to financial fraud schemes. Was that what was coming for his friends at the Independence Retirement Community, which everyone called the Indie? Were the residents about to suffer financial ruin because of risky investments? If so, he’d be angry at the perpetrators for their heartless guile and frustrated with his friends for being so gullible.

The television show made the point, though, and he agreed, that adults spend most of their lives collecting assets to make retirement possible and the rest of their days worried if their accumulated treasure will last as long as they do, leading some retirees to make risky and uninformed choices with their nest eggs. Was that what his friends had done? Made bad choices with their money? Is that what the emailer taunted him about?

Travail’s instinct was to fire off a harsh response to the email with some choice lawyer-like words and warnings, but he ignored the bait—he suspected they wouldn’t respond anyway—and he punched the remote control instead.

The television screen faded to black, and his den fell silent, save for Blue’s rhythmic snores and his jerking legs. Travail’s black and tan coonhound must be dreaming, chasing ducks along the lake behind Travail’s cottage, as he was apt to do in real life, and as usual, failing to catch the waterfowl before they darted back into the water. Travail leaned over his club chair’s arm and let his free hand graze on Blue’s back until his pet stopped running in his sleep.

Maybe the email was a prank. Maybe, like him, a friend had become bored with life at the Indie. And yet, the email bothered him.

Whose lives—which friends’ lives—were about to be shattered? And how? And for that matter, why? And what did he have to do with it?

Since moving a year earlier into the Independence Retirement Community, Travail had made two best friends, Harriet Keaton and Yeager Alexander, and several other good friends. He’d met many other retirees, some whose company he tolerated and some whose company he could do without. Either way, he didn’t want to see anyone hurt. He certainly didn’t want his close friends to suffer, and he didn’t want to be the person responsible for their pain.

The flame on the candle he’d lit this morning was down to the base of the wick. He turned away from it, detesting the severe loneliness of March 31.

There was no logic for feeling so alone—what with all the crimes, court cases, and historic mysteries Harriet, Yeager, and he navigated since he arrived at the Indie and the time they spent together—but it was hard to control his feelings, especially the feeling of being by himself. A Jewish resident told him about the tradition of lighting a candle on the anniversary of a loved one’s death. It felt loving to strike the match in Rachael’s honor, but as day became night, Travail’s mood shifted. It had been three years to the day.

The flickering light had a strobe-like effect on the things that reminded him of Rachael: her furniture, her quilts, her artwork, her pictures. Travail missed Rachael’s kindness, her playfulness, her creativity, and the rituals they shared. The flicker made the past too present, making him long for another night and morning and day together. She was here, there, and everywhere, but nowhere at all.

Assertive is what he’d needed to be in the moment that changed everything. He and Rachael were in the mountains at a high-elevation rental for a getaway when a freak storm rolled in and dumped six inches of snow on the ground. Rachael decided to drive to the local general store to stock the pantry for their cozy weekend together. He had a work call and offered to go with her after he finished.

“It’s just snow,” she’d said.

“Okay, but be careful,” he’d responded.

“Always, dear.” Then she kissed him on the mouth, patted his bottom, and walked out of his life forever.

The news came in a phone call from the local police. First came the shock, then the grief, and then the Monday-morning quarterbacking. He should have insisted Rachael let him drive her. He should have done more to protect her. If he had, maybe she would still be here. Maybe the out-of-control delivery truck that hit the black ice would have killed him instead of her, or maybe Travail could have prevented the accident.

Spring in North Carolina was supposed to be about new beginnings, not endings, with the dogwoods and azaleas in bloom, but his eyes grew wet from the memories, and he felt a sudden heaviness in his body.

He looked at the email again and became resolute. For sure, he would not make the same mistake twice with the people he cared about. He would protect them.

But who was behind the email?

Whoever wanted sweet vengeance against his friends wanted vengeance against him too, because their pain would be his pain. The question for his lawyer brain—used to solving riddles for years—was: who despised them and him that much?

Like an unexpected electric shock, the answer startled him. This email was exactly the kind of plot his nemesis, Robert Elkin, would conjure. If Elkin hurt Harriet, Yeager, and his other close friends, he hurt Travail worse.

But wasn’t Elkin no longer a threat? They’d exposed his concealment of the truth about the Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence, avoided death at the hands of his father, pushed him out of his Big Law leadership position, and seen to it that the state bar took his law license. Elkin no longer had big-time lawyer power. The only thing he had was anger, resentment, and a low-paying job as a paralegal with a former client, though Travail didn’t know the client’s name or their business. It was a sharp drop from the level of influence that had made the man dangerous, and yet, there was reason to be cautious. Elkin was cunning and would hold a grudge till death do they part.

Travail leaned his head back in his chair, looked up at the ceiling, and pondered the text again: financial ruin, untold heartbreak, and trials and tribulations.

Harriet was too smart to get caught up in a financial scam. Not so with Yeager. He was impulsive, likely to jump at the chance to possess something shiny because it might become shinier.

Travail pulled an olive-colored sweatshirt over his t-shirt, woke Blue, and took him into the backyard to do his business under the stars. While he waited, Travail glanced across Lost Cove Lake to Harriet’s cottage. He inhaled the fresh night air, and he marveled at the main building’s reflection on the lake’s surface. Harriet’s lights were out. She, an early riser, must be asleep.

Seeing Harriet’s peaceful cottage raised a question he’d been pondering. Should he ask her on a date? Carrie Roberts, the Indie Gossip Queen, thought so and often shared her opinion.

Most days, it seemed like the right decision not to ask Harriet—or anyone else, for that matter—on a date. Three years wasn’t that long, really, since Rachael died. And yet, here he was, caught in a web he’d spun for himself, trapped somewhere between what he no longer had and the companionship he wanted but resisted. Harriet was his friend. Should he keep it that way?

Harriet would most likely turn him down anyway. He was a project, and he knew it, starting with the lesson she’d had to teach him last year that retirement living is not life’s dead end but a fresh path forward. And now, with him being a sixty-six-year-old widower afraid to address his feelings, she’d be quick to beg off.

Blue finished up, and the two headed inside. His watch told him it was a new day. He blew out the dwindling flame on the candle and headed to his bedroom, where Blue was already curled up on the end of Travail’s queen-size bed. Wearing only striped boxers and a white cotton t-shirt, Travail pulled the covers up to his chin. With a good night’s sleep, he’d be fresh in the morning to put his effort into stopping Elkin. He still had his law license, after all, and as Yeager would tell him from time to time, “You ain’t dead yet.”

He closed his eyes and imagined tying a dry fly rig with two nymphs on a dropper line, the key to catching river trout on and below the surface at the same time. This falling-asleep system was better than counting backward from three hundred by threes. It worked its charm in less than five minutes.

Travail didn’t know when he dozed off that the murder train had left the station. He didn’t know when he began to snore that someone had already set the trap for his friends. And he didn’t know when he fell into a deep sleep that when the sun came up, he would ponder, and not for the first time, how he could have been so wrong to believe retirement living would ever be boring or lonely.

***

Excerpt from Deadly Gold Rush by Landis Wade. Copyright 2026 by Landis Wade. Reproduced with permission from Landis Wade. All rights reserved.

 

 

Author Bio:

Landis Wade

Landis Wade is a recovering trial lawyer turned author who writes award-winning mysteries and legal thrillers with a historical bent. His publication credits include six works of fiction, eight non-fiction writing books, many short stories, and a podcast that produced 400 episodes of author interviews and writing discussions. His first novel in his Indie Retirement Mystery series, Deadly Declarations, won ten awards and Kirkus Reviews said of his second in the series, Deadly Gold Rush, that “Mystery fans who love Richard Osman’s cozy Thursday Murder Club books will enjoy the similarly energetic take on mystery-loving retirees.” Landis splits his time between Charlotte, Durham, and the North Carolina mountains. He is the recipient of the 2025 Founders Award for service to the Charlotte Writers Club and the literary community.

Catch Up With Landis Wade:

LandisWade.com
Amazon Author Profile
Goodreads
BookBub – @LandisWade
Instagram – @landiswrites
Threads – @landiswrites
YouTube – @authorlandiswade
Facebook – @authorlandiswade

 

Q&A with LANDIS WADE

Can you tell us a little about yourself and your background?
I grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina, where my Indie Retirement Mystery series is set. After law school, I came back to Charlotte and practiced law for 35 years handling commercial and employment disputes in federal and state court. I was a private judge arbitrator and mediator for twenty of those years and I argued cases in state and federal appellate courts, including the North Carolina Supreme Court. I did extensive writing in my law practice, but the letters, emails, contracts, settlement agreements, and legal briefs were not as exciting to read as thrillers and mysteries. In my spare time, I volunteered as a Little League baseball coach and Commissioner of Pop Warner Youth football. When my children went to college, I took up fiction writing in my spare time, hoping this old dog could learn a new trick.

What was the biggest challenge you faced in beginning your writing career?
The biggest challenge at the start of my fiction writing career was learning how not to write like a lawyer. Lawyers have a tendency to use a 25 cent word when a 5 cent word will do. They also like to write in passive voice and are prone to use run on sentences in long paragraphs. Short and crisp is better in fiction and short paragraphs are helpful to readers. Lawyers also think they know more than they do and they resist feedback. As a lawyer turned fiction writer, I learned that critique of my writing is not personal but part of the writing process that improves the work.

What was the inspiration for this book?
The inspiration for Deadly Gold Rush was the Carolina Gold Rush of the 1800s, the first gold rush in the US. I focused on Charlotte, North Carolina because Charlotte was the site of the first branch of the US Mint in 1837, and Charlotte had more gold mines than any other county in North Carolina. I also learned that abandoned gold mines have a tendency to collapse. This gave me the idea for an early scene in the novel where we find a body in a collapsed gold mine covered in 1830s gold coins.

How did you come up with the title?
The first book in the series is Deadly Declarations. I stuck with the “Deadly” theme for book 2. Because the novel focuses on the 1830s gold rush, it naturally became Deadly Gold Rush.

Can you give us a glimpse into the research that went into writing this story?
I met with local Charlotte historians, librarians, archivists, and others familiar with Charlotte’s Gold Rush history, including a Charlotte expert in rare gold coins. I walked the land once minded for gold and reviewed sketches and maps of old gold mines in uptown Charlotte. I spoke with members of Charlotte’s Gold District where the major underground abandoned mines are located and I read books and stories about the Carolina gold rush, gold coins, gold mining, gold fraud, and the interesting foreigners who came to mine gold in Charlotte in the 1830s.

Excluding the main character, who is your favorite character from the book, and why?
One of the supporting characters at the retirement community is Carrie Roberts. She goes by the nickname The Gossip Queen because she knows everything about everybody. In this novel, she courageously battles cancer while remaining intent on helping the main characters solve the mystery. She adds humor to the page but more than that, she doesn’t let her circumstances get her down and becomes an inspiration to her friends.

What’s an interesting or fun fact about the book that readers might not know?
Old gold mines still exist under the tall skyscrapers of Charlotte, and every now and then, when a new building is constructed, the construction crew finds the remains of an old gold mine from the 1800s. When a construction crew came across an old gold vein in the 1990s, workers used hammers on their lunch break to chip away at the gold vein.

Tell us why readers should pick up your book—what makes it stand out?
This novel includes endearing amateur sleuths who get caught up in a fast paced mystery with twists and turns but with the added benefit of interesting facts about the first US Gold Rush, the first branch of the US Mint, and 1830s gold coins. The history in the mystery compliments rather than slows the pace of the story.

What does your typical writing routine look like? Any idiosyncrasies or rituals?
My formula for a novel is this: 1. Idea; 2. Research; 3 Writing; and 4 Editing. Each part of the process is important to me, so my “writing routine” initially includes a lot of thinking about the idea for the novel. I then shift to the research and after I compile enough information, I write a few chapters and think about a soft outline for the story. I don’t write every day. I am more of a binge writer who enjoys immersing myself in the world for long chunks and taking breaks to play golf, play with my grandson, travel, read, and fish. When I have a complete draft, I invite beta readers to offer feedback, I work with an editor, and then I finetune the story until I have a novel.

What do you absolutely need around you while writing?
I like quiet and good light when I write.

Are you currently working on your next novel? If so, can you share a little about it?
Yes, I am in the thinking stage for the idea and doing some soft research.

If your novel were made into a movie, who would you cast in the main roles?
Tom Hanks as retired lawyer Craig Travail. Susan Sarandon as retired business woman Harriet Keaton. Jeff Bridges (with his scruffy beard) as retired rabble-rouser Yeager Alexander.

What’s next for you—what can readers look forward to?
Another mystery for the amateur team at the Independence Retirement Community.

What are some of your favorite leisure activities or hobbies when you’re not writing?
Reading, walking, playing with my grandson, playing golf, visiting history sites, and travel.

What are a few of your favorite foods?
Eastern style chopped barbecue, Shepherd’s Pie (with ground beef, cheese, and mashed potatoes like my mother used to make it), pepperoni pizza, and my wife’s pineapple and cheese casserole.

Do you have a message or anything specific you’d like to say to your readers?
I am grateful to you for spending time with my characters. I hope you get as much joy reading the stories as I did writing them.

Tour Participants:

Click through the other tour stops for can’t-miss reviews, insider interviews, exclusive guest posts, and more chances to win!

Click here to view the Tour Schedule

 

 

Take a Chance, Strike It Rich in Reads

This giveaway is hosted by Partners in Crime Tours for Landis Wade. See the widget for entry terms and conditions. Void where prohibited.
Deadly Gold Rush by Landis Wade | Gift Card & Audiobooks

Can’t see the giveaway? Click Here!

Get More Great Reads at Partners In Crime Tours

1 thought on “Deadly Gold Rush by Landis Wade #AuthorInterview

  1. Great interview! Great choices for your movie actors! LOL
    This book sounds so interesting to me!

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.