Connecticut Book Festivals Podcast

Angels, Demons and Detectives

22 min · 15 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Angels, Demons and Detectives

Descripción

Lee Driftwood joins the Connecticut Book Festivals podcast to talk about his dark urban fantasy series, Forgotten Flame, and the unforgettable city that shapes it—New York. Lee shares how, as a third-generation former New Yorker, he couldn’t imagine setting his fantasy anywhere else. For him, the city is more than a backdrop; it’s a living, listening character that’s always present in the story. We learn about the first two books in the series, When She Walked In and What Was Lost, and meet the central duo: Michael, a private investigator, and Gabby, an NYPD detective who shows up at his door with a life-changing secret—she’s lost her memory. While angels and demons lurk in the shadows of this world, Lee explains that they’re really a metaphor for the spectrum of human nature, not literal supernatural beings. Lee talks us through his decision to craft a five-book arc, inspired by Roger Zelazny’s Nine Princes in Amber. He planned Michael and Gabby’s journeys in advance, but let secondary characters surprise him—some he meant to “knock off” ended up surviving and thriving because he liked them too much to let go. We also hear about Lee’s roots in corporate satire, how frustration with corporate life pushed him to write his first book, and how that experience rekindled his passion for fantasy. Away from the noir-tinted streets of New York, he’s a dad of eight-year-old twins, dreaming up a photography book for kids and wrestling with the challenge of introducing them to classics like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

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episode Angels, Demons and Detectives artwork

Angels, Demons and Detectives

Lee Driftwood joins the Connecticut Book Festivals podcast to talk about his dark urban fantasy series, Forgotten Flame, and the unforgettable city that shapes it—New York. Lee shares how, as a third-generation former New Yorker, he couldn’t imagine setting his fantasy anywhere else. For him, the city is more than a backdrop; it’s a living, listening character that’s always present in the story. We learn about the first two books in the series, When She Walked In and What Was Lost, and meet the central duo: Michael, a private investigator, and Gabby, an NYPD detective who shows up at his door with a life-changing secret—she’s lost her memory. While angels and demons lurk in the shadows of this world, Lee explains that they’re really a metaphor for the spectrum of human nature, not literal supernatural beings. Lee talks us through his decision to craft a five-book arc, inspired by Roger Zelazny’s Nine Princes in Amber. He planned Michael and Gabby’s journeys in advance, but let secondary characters surprise him—some he meant to “knock off” ended up surviving and thriving because he liked them too much to let go. We also hear about Lee’s roots in corporate satire, how frustration with corporate life pushed him to write his first book, and how that experience rekindled his passion for fantasy. Away from the noir-tinted streets of New York, he’s a dad of eight-year-old twins, dreaming up a photography book for kids and wrestling with the challenge of introducing them to classics like Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

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