16 February 2026
23 February 2024
Roman à Clef? Murder, Neat: A Former Model Confesses
MURDER, NEAT… and a little bit twisted.
Who could guess that my past would be all over the short story, ‘The Mob, The Model and The College Reunion’, in the anthology MURDER, NEAT?
A few years ago, I was on stage for a book event, hearing happy applause. A hand went up, and a young gal with somewhat questionable social skills said, "You don't look anything like your protagonist."
I swallowed my wounded pride, dug deep into the wit-basket and quipped: "Not only that, I don't look anything like my author photo!" That brought the biggest laugh of the evening, of course.
But the incident prompted me to rethink a related question I get asked frequently. How close is the protagonist to the real me?
I've written 18 books and over 60 short stories. If the protagonist was me in all of those, it would be a pretty boring adventure for readers. And for me, as well. Part of the fun of being an author is putting yourself into the skin of others. Becoming the character you are writing, for just a little while. Leaving yourself behind.
However, sometimes I just want to write myself into a fun story (always a fun one...never a fearful one!)
So in ‘The Mob, The Model and The College Reunion’, I let the real me show through. Okay, I may be older now than Donna di Marco, the protagonist, is in this tale, but she carries my background, my on again – off again modeling career, my outlook on life, and definitely my wit. She even looks surprisingly like me.
Have you ever wanted to write a character who says what you're thinking? The things you don't actually say out loud?
Donna does that for me! And oh, it was fun to write them.
College reunions? I'm not a big fan. There were few women in my Commerce program, and the misogyny at the time was pretty brutal. Competition was savage between the young men, and my memories are mixed at best. Sometimes I was the bone to be fought over.
But I've discovered an interesting thing. Reunions sure are good for setting conflict. Old grievances resurface, even among the bank executives and corporate buccaneers of my class that have done so well financially. They don't forget the old days.
So I had a bit of sport, writing what might have happened if I had gone to our last reunion. In fact, I didn't go. Maybe self-preservation? Maybe I was too busy celebrating my recent marriage to an old college classmate?
Yes, the John of this story is the John Michael O'Connell who persuaded me to the altar not long ago. And yes, our classmates were shocked. So you can see how easy it might have been to concoct such a tale, and to lace it with the loopy humour I just can't seem to leave behind.
Not to mention the mob elements that always seem to sneak into my work.
Roman à clef? I'll leave that to your imagination.
The author at college:
The author today:
• Buy link for MURDER, NEAT
26 August 2017
Burglars Beware! (more silly stuff from my standup days)
I write about the mob. This might lead some people to believe I am an expert in crime. As there may be law enforcement officers reading this post, I'm not going to write about that. Instead, I'm going to talk about crime prevention. (*Waves* to relatives in Palermo.)
Somebody who didn't know about my alleged area of expertise tried to sell me a home security device the other day. Apparently, this device is rigged so that it would alert me when someone was breaking into the house. This amazed me, in that - if I am home - I usually know when someone is breaking into my house. Rather than announce his presense ("A Burglar, Madam") it would seem to me a lot more useful if someone would invent something that would bog the intruder over the head.
But I don't need fancy home security systems because there is no possible way a burglar could get past my secret weapon. It's cheap and it's foolproof. It's so fiendish, I expect it will soon be outlawed at the next Geneva Convention.
Let me put it this way: if the Spanish Inquisition had known about it, everyone would have confessed to everything.
To wit:
LOCATION: Madrid, 15 something-or-other, in a damp dungeon (not even a three-star)
"Stubborn, eh? Still won't confess? Okay, Cardinal Wolsey - bring out the secret weapon!"
(horrified gasps all around)
"Not the (gulp) not the..."
"Yes! (fiendish giggle) Get the little pieces of LEGO!"
"ARGH! No please! No! I confess!"
It works like this: You step on the itty bitty piece of Lego, whereupon it pierces your bare foot, sending searing needles of agony all the way up to your brain. This in turn causes all of your bones to suddenly melt and turn you into a pain-filled gibbering mass of jelly on the floor.
I don't know if you have ever walked barefoot across a minefield of individual Lego bits, but believe me, our intelligence agencies have missed out on a good weapon. Marbles have a similar effect, but those little plastic Lego corners kind put the icing on the proverbial meatcake (man, am I mixing comedy sketches here.)
Methinks the Lego people have missed a terrific marketing opportunity here. In fact, right after this column is done, I'm going into business. "Killer Lego" should be on the shelves by Christmas, ready to be scatter on floors everywhere. Hopefully, before relatives arrive.
Actually, if you really want to keep burglars away, it's simple. And yes, I actually heard this from the horse-er-relative's mouth. Throw a few ride-um toys on the front lawn of your home - preferably boy ones. Then everyone will know you have kids, so there couldn't possible be anything of value left inside your house...
Melodie Campbell writes funny books about the mob. But she denies that THE BOOTLEGGER'S DAUGHTER is a roman a clef. You can judge yourself.
on AMAZON
09 May 2015
How to Write Mob Comedies in your own Home Town, and not get Taken Out by the Family
03 January 2015
Mess with me, Darlin'? Watch me Kill You with Words
Here’s some news for all you sociopaths out there, and just plain nasties: Don’t mess with a crime writer. We know at least twenty ways to kill you and not get caught.
On paper, of course <insert nervous laughter>. We’re talking about fictional kills here.
Or are we?
My name is Melodie Campbell, and I write comic mob capers for a living. And for the loving. So I know a bit about the mob. Like espresso and cannoli, you might say they come with my Sicilian background.
This should make people nervous. (Hell, it makes ME nervous.)
But I digress. To recap: the question offered here was:
Do you ever take out real life rage on fictional murder victims? Are any of your victims based on people who pissed you off in real life?
Oh sweetie, don’t I ever.
One of the joys of being a writer is playing out scenarios in your fiction that you dream about at night. One of these is murder. (The other is sex, but that would be my other series, the Rowena Through the Wall fantasy one.)
Back to grievous bodily harm. Like in Gilbert and Sullivan’s Mikado, I have my little list.
To the covert colleague who made out to be friends and then bad-mouthed me to the board at a previous job.
Yes, you got caught red-handed. I called your bluff. But better than that, I made your mealy-mouthed sorry hide a star of THE GODDAUGHTER’S REVENGE. Goodbye, Carmine the rat. You live forever in fictional history.
He never will be missed.
To the sociopathic boss who undermined an entire department and got a kick out of making my sweet younger colleague cry: may you age like a hag and end up alone. Oh wait – you did. And not just in A PURSE TO DIE FOR.
She never will be missed.
Oh, the joy of creating bad guys and gals from real-life creeps! The crafty thing is, when you design a villain based on people you have met in person and experienced in technicolor, they sound real. Colourful. Their motivations are believable, because they actually exist. No cardboard characters here!
Of course, I may fudge a few details to keep out of jail. Names and professions change. Males can morph into females.
But fictional murder can be very satisfying. (Definitely more satisfying than fictional sex. Oops.)
Revenge is sweet, when coupled with royalties.
You can ignore that crack about 'fictional kills only.' Of course we’re only talking books; in my case, light-hearted murder mysteries, and mob crime capers.
That’s right: mob capers. Like I said: never mess with a Sicilian Goddaughter.
Melodie Campbell achieved a personal best when Library Journal compared her to Janet Evanovich. Her fifth novel, THE GODDAUGHTER’S REVENGE, won the Derringer and the Arthur Ellis. www.melodiecampbell.com







