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'Renaissance man' R. Murrey Haist launches mystery novel series

Innisfil man pens first book in a series, Tuoyawon
RMurreyHaistMK
Ron Murrey Haist, author and artist, with first book in his mystery trilogy. Miriam King/Village Media

Ron Murrey Haist has been described as a “Renaissance man.” Airbrush artist, painter, poet, photographer, author - there’s not much in the field of creativity that he hasn’t tried, and mastered.

He’s an award-winning pyrographer, creating stunning burned-wood images of wildlife that have been seen around the world.

His poetry has been published in magazines, his photographs and paintings featured at the Peel Art Gallery and the Innisfil Studio Tour.

And he has used his own artwork to create bookmarks for the Innisfil ideaLAB & Library, and even a line of tote bags, apparel, greeting cards and notebooks.

With all of that under his belt, he has also branched out to write fiction, and recently published the first book in a mystery trilogy: Tuoyawon.

The story is simple: Chrissy is on the run, leaving behind her loving family and her life as an accountant, after becoming entangled with the ‘boy next door’ and his financial schemes.

Realizing that she was blinded to reality and the impact of her own actions, she struggles to determine the right thing to do – only to find herself mired deeper in nightmare.

The book ends with a twist, reminiscent of The Twilight Zone.

Haist admits he’s always been a fan of Twilight Zone, a television series that originally ran in the 1960s, and the idea that a book should end with a twist that catches a reader off-guard.

In part, it’s a reflection of how he writes. “You know the end, the message that has to be there, and you write the road way to reach that end,” he said. “You like to put in a few bumps and detours, without taking it off-track.”

With its life lessons, positive message, and eerie, unsettling sense of menace, Tuoyawon has now been picked up by Peel Region District school board, as a recommended work of Young Adult fiction – but, Haist said, “It’s really about me and my life, things I have learned in my life.”

Haist has studied psychology. “To make things flow in a positive manner, you have to live in a positive manner,” he said, which is just one of the underlying messages in the book.

Tuoyawon is short enough and gripping enough to be finished at one sitting, although Haist admitted that, as his first book, there are passages that he would change if he was writing it now. “I tend to become wordy, which I don’t mind, because I feel that’s a way to explain things,” he said, but his writing is now more assured, more polished.

In the second book in the trilogy, Escape from Tuoyawon, he has become a “more mature writer” and a stronger wordsmith, he said, and the twist at the end is even more shocking.

Tuoyawon, published by Christian Faith Publishing, is available at Barnes & Noble, Amazon.com, and Walmart.com. Escape from Tuoyawon will be published in Canada by FriesenPress, as soon as the final edit is completed.

“It’s been fun. I can’t believe how much fun I’m having editing this book,” Haist said.

He not only wrote the books, he designed the cover art, and prepared his own video trailer for Tuoyawon, when he was dissatisfied with what his publisher had created.

“I don’t know where any of that comes from,” he admitted. Haist found himself able to draw and create from an early age, holding a mental image and using that interior vision as a template for his work.

Writing is different. He keeps a pen by the bedside, for those 3 a.m. moments of inspiration – and, he says, “I do it for me.”

Haist has already started writing the third and final book in the mystery series, Beyond Tuoyawon, which wraps up the storyline with “another huge twist.”

And once it’s written, what next?

“I can’t answer that until I finish this next book,” Haist said. “One project at a time, then a door will open to something else…. I don’t know what that is!”

It may be poetry, it may be a song  – Haist is a fan of Gord Lightfoot’s story-telling kind of ballads – but whatever it is, he said, “The important thing is to leave a positive impact, whether it be with my art, my poetry, my writing.”

For more information, check out Haist's Facebook page, here


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Miriam King

About the Author: Miriam King

Miriam King is a journalist and photographer with Bradford Today, covering news and events in Bradford West Gwillimbury and Innisfil.
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