New Sleuth
on the Block
by Lois Winston
Is Westfield, NJ big enough for two amateur sleuths?
Hey, we’re talking New Jersey here—home to crooks, crime, and corruption. Mafia
and murder. Of course, it’s big enough! However, I wondered if Anastasia would
be willing to share the sleuthing limelight with another neighborhood sleuth.
When I posed the question to her, she didn’t exactly
mince words. “Are you kidding, Lois? You think I’d be upset to have you leave
me alone for a change while you pick on someone else and wreak havoc on her
life? Give me a break!”
Which is exactly what I did. So with Anastasia’s
blessing, I’d like to introduce you to Gracie Elliott, the protagonist of Definitely Dead, the first book in my
new Empty Nest Mystery series.
As Gracie puts it:
All I wanted to do was sit at my computer and write romance
novels while Blake sat across the room and two-finger pecked away at Pop Goes the
Culture, his epic tome on twentieth
century culture and counter-culture and its influences on the media. Or vice
versa. It was a real chicken-and-egg sort of thing as far as I was concerned,
even if it was my husband’s passion. Anyway, dead bodies weren’t part of our
empty nest blueprint.
When her career as a fabric designer is outsourced to
Asia, fledgling romance author and empty-nester Gracie Elliott realizes she
needs to find another job or she could very well wind up living above an auto
repair shop in Newark. With double college tuitions for their twins, she and husband
Blake can’t afford her penchant for designer shoes and handbags— the tie-in to Thursday fashion blog posts ;-) —much less
anything else, on his professor’s salary.
However, Gracie’s options are soon reduced to either retail
sales or asking, “Do you want fries with that?” So she decides to open Relatively
Speaking, an introduction service, becoming a wing woman to the senior set.
Since her clients need several hours each morning to find their teeth, lube their
creaky joints, and deal with lower GI necessities, and they always turn in after the early bird specials, she
has plenty of time to pen her future bestsellers.
Gracie deliberately avoids mentioning her new
business venture to Blake until she’s signed her first client. After a scene
best left to the reader’s imagination (this is, after all, a cozy mystery,)
Blake joins the company as a not-so-silent partner, tagging along to make sure
Gracie doesn’t cause a septuagenarian uprising.
All is going quite well until Gracie discovers Client
#13 murdered in the parking lot behind the Moose Lodge. She quickly realizes
that no matter how much Blake might protest otherwise, she can’t wait around
for the police to find the killer if she wants to save her livelihood. Along
the way she considers turning her contemporary romance into a romantic
suspense—if she survives her foray into sleuthing.
The Empty Nest Mystery series is a wink and a nod to
Dashell Hammet’s Thin Man movies with
Gracie and Blake as a modern day spin on Nick and Nora Charles. You can read an
excerpt here.
Ebook:
Look for more books in the Empty Nest Mystery series in the future, as
well as the next Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mystery, currently in the plotting
stage.
You didn’t think I’d leave Anastasia off the hook for long, did you?
9 comments:
Looks like you've carefully fashioned a delightful character in Gracie. She sounds delightful.
Your sample pages were great!
I must have gotten carried away, because I called her delightful twice!
Never to many delightfuls, Morgan! Thanks for stopping by.
Sending best wishes for success to "Lois" and "Grace."
Thanks so much, Angela!
You make living above an auto repair shop in Newark sound like a bad thing...just sayin'
I've lived in Newark. Believe me, you don't want to live there, especially above an auto repair shop.
Gracie sounds like a character I'm really going to enjoy. Thanks for the heads up.
Marja McGraw
Thanks, Marja! Hope you enjoy the new series.
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