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    Home»Books»Interview with George Robstad, Author of The Lies in the Lefse
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    Interview with George Robstad, Author of The Lies in the Lefse

    AdminBy AdminMay 17, 2026
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    Interview with George Robstad, Author of The Lies in the Lefse

    What’s the story behind the story? What inspired you to write this book?

    I wanted to write a cozy mystery that felt warm and familiar on the surface, but was more reflective of the community and identity I live in. The Cash Kristiansen books are built around the things I love in the genre: a tight-knit group, food, secrets, found family, and a main character who is still figuring himself out while getting pulled into things he probably should have left alone. With The Lies in the Lefse, I wanted to lean further into Salt Cliff Isle as a place where everyone knows each other, but not everyone knows the truth. The book grew out of that tension: what people hide to protect themselves, what they hide to protect others, and what happens when those lies start to unravel. There’s food, there’s community, there’s small-island charm, but there’s also the undercurrent that everybody can be hiding something.

    If you had to pick theme songs for the main characters of your book, what would they be?

    I like to think of Cash as very cringe in all the best possible ways. He’s quirky, a little cheesy, and is not a big fan of attention. So I’m going to take a big Millennial swing here and say “Unwritten” by Natasha Bedingfield.

    What’s your favorite genre to read? Is it the same as your favorite genre to write?

    I love mysteries, especially ones that are character-driven with a strong sense of place and environment. I also enjoy stories about community and the ways people reinvent themselves. So yes, there’s definitely overlap between what I like to read and what I like to write. That said, I’ve recently dabbled in writing some fantasy work, which I grew up reading, and am excited to see where that takes me. Cozy mystery gives me a lot of room to play with the things I enjoy most: atmosphere, food, relationships, small-town politics. I like that cozies can be comforting without being simple. They can be warm and funny and still have real stakes with characters that readers come to care about.

    What books are on your TBR pile right now?

    The TBR pile is always so long! I’ve pared it down to what I’m actively reading right now: For commercial fantasy, I’ve been enjoying the ACOTAR series, House of Frost and Feathers, and Katabasis. For cozy mysteries, I’ve been reading the Coffee Lover’s Mysteries by Tara Lush and The Crescent Moon Tea Room by Stacey Sivinski.

    Do you have any quirky writing habits? (lucky mugs, cats on laps, etc.)

    I have to have a clean desk with nothing on it, typically three different beverages: a hot, a cold, and water. I don’t know if it’s quirky, but it works!

    Do you have a motto, quote or philosophy you live by?

    In another life, when I worked as a banker, there was a big emphasis on building a sales culture around the phrase “be curious.” That may not have been exactly how they intended it, but I took it personally outside of the office.

    I want to know things. I want to learn. I want to understand people, places, stories, and the choices that shape them. And if I can do that alongside people I care about, even better.

    If you could choose one thing for readers to remember after reading your book, what would it be?

    First, I would be squandering this opportunity, not to mention that there is a first book in the Cash Kristiansen Mysteries, Sandbakkels and Sin – a shameless plug, but an important one. Beyond that, I’d like readers to remember Cash. He’s not perfect, and he doesn’t always know what he’s doing, but he cares. He keeps showing up. He keeps asking questions. He keeps trying to build a life and a place for himself, even when the island makes that difficult. And I hope readers remember that cozy doesn’t have to mean soft. A cozy mystery can have warmth, humour, food, and community while still looking at secrets, grief, fear, and the messy reasons people make the choices they do.


    Originally Published Here.

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