Wednesday, May 31, 2023

AN INTERVIEW WITH MULTI-GENRE AUTHOR MARLENE ANNE BUMGARNER

Today we sit down for a chat with cozy mystery author Marlene Anne Bumgarner, who also writes nonfiction and memoir. Learn more about her and her books at her website and blog.

When did you realize you wanted to write novels? 

When I was writing my memoir, I realized that I enjoyed the storytelling and wanted to do more.

 

How long did it take you to realize your dream of publication? 

I was fortunate with my first book, The Book of Whole Grains, which I pitched directly to St. Martin’ Press. They published it in 1976 and revised and republished it again in 1997 as The New Book of Whole Grains. I self-published my second book, Organic Cooking for (not-so-organic) Mothers, and my third, a textbook, was commissioned by Pearson. Back to the Land in Silicon Valley was published in 2020 by a small publishing house. I am looking for an agent to represent my cozy.

 

Where do you write? 

I do most of my writing on my laptop, sitting at the kitchen counter. I also like to write in coffee shops.

 

Is silence golden, or do you need music to write by? What kind? 

I often play classical music when I write, but sometimes I prefer silence. And sometimes I prefer the clanking of a busy coffee shop.

 

How much of your plots and characters are drawn from real life? From your life in particular? 

My characters and their names are definitely drawn from real life, but I usually combine characteristics from several different people into one character. I was born in England and raised in an ex-pat community in San Francisco. Harriet is a younger version of me.

 

Describe your process for naming your character? 

I wanted a main character whose name I would never forget as I wrote, so I named her after the midwife who delivered my youngest child. The real-life Harriet was a kind and gentle woman, a champion of women’s rights, and a joyous singer. She passed away in 2022. To the best of my knowledge, however, she was not an amateur sleuth.

 

Real settings or fictional towns? 

I enjoyed reading a series of mysteries by Lee Goldberg that he set in the community where he lives. I live in the same town and enjoyed knowing where the action was taking place, so I decided to set my mystery there also.

 

What’s the quirkiest quirk one of your characters has? 

My main character, Harriet Palmer, is a recent transplant from England. She keeps several tea bags in her handbag and is likely to request a cup of boiling water from whomever she is interviewing or being interviewed by.

 

What’s your quirkiest quirk

I have six granddaughters and enjoy purchasing art supplies or toys for them whenever I travel. Instead of buying typical souvenirs for my home, I brought a pink octopus puppet from Greece, Noddy and Big Ears books from England, a board book in Dutch from the Netherlands, and a handmade parcheesi game from India.

 

If you could have written any book (one that someone else has already written,) which one would it be? Why? 

What an interesting question! I wish I had written Little Women. It’s such a satisfying read, and I’ve re-read it many times.

 

Everyone at some point wishes for a do-over. What’s yours

I wish I had worked harder at saving my first marriage. Of course, that means I wouldn’t have married my second husband or met our two youngest daughters or their three daughters, and that would be very sad.

 

What’s your biggest pet peeve? 

Writers who self-publish books that haven’t been edited.

 

You’re stranded on a deserted island. What are your three must-haves? 

A copy of Henry David Thoreau’s complete works, a crisp new bound journal with pen attached, and a vibrator.

 

What was the worst job you’ve ever held? 

Working for the Villa Hotel in San Mateo, hand addressing envelopes by the hundreds. Or, equally awful, selling magazines by telephone. I did both to earn enough money to buy a wedding dress and host a reception.

 

Who’s your all-time favorite literary character (any genre)? Why? 

Jo in Little Women. She felt like my best friend the first time I read the book, then years later I realized I had fashioned myself after her in some ways. I still think of her as a real person.

 

Ocean or mountains? 

Both. That’s why I live in California.

 

City girl/guy or country girl/guy? 

Definitely a country girl.

 

What’s on the horizon for you? 

Finish my cozy and write a second one, then return to the trilogy I started many years ago but didn’t have the skills to finish.

 

Anything else you’d like to tell us about yourself and/or your books? 

I enjoy writing essays about my life and sharing recipes on my blog, but I only manage about one post a month because I also love spending time with my grandchildren and working in their classrooms. I spend hours each day walking with my Border Collie and thinking about my characters and the plot, then I go home and write. Even though I’m retired from teaching, there never seems to be enough hours in a day.

 

Back to the Land in Silicon Valley

We all worked together. Ate together. Sang together. Learned together. We had a good life. After living close to the natural cycles of the earth year after year, good and not good, we grew stronger and more resilient and learned to manage our occasional conflicts with tolerance and love.

 

When Marlene Bumgarner and her husband moved to a rural plot of land in 1973, she thought of herself as simply a young mother seeking an affordable and safe place in which to raise her child.

 

By the time she left the land nearly a decade later, she had written two books and a weekly newspaper column, served as contributing editor to a national magazine, a college instructor, and a sought-after public speaker. Her natural food store The Morgan Hill Trading Post was the first one in her community.

 

Follow Marlene and her friends as they live on the land, coping with the challenges of rural life as Silicon Valley evolves into the high-tech center it is today, and the world in which they live transforms itself culturally, economically, and politically.

 

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Monday, May 29, 2023

BOOKCLUB FRIDAY ON A MONDAY--MYSTERY AUTHOR E.J. COPPERMAN'S NEW SERIES

E.J. Copperman is the author of thirty mystery novels. He advises you can count them if you like, but you’d have to count the first six under another name. Among them have been the Haunted Guesthouse, Agent to the Paws, Mysterious Detective and Asperger’s Mysteries, a collaboration between both those names. Learn more about E.J. and his books at his website. Today he joins us to talk about his newest series, the Fran and Ken Stein Mysteries.

Creating Characters from Scratch

Some years ago – and by “some” I mean a lot – the Haunted Guesthouse Mystery series was going strong and my publisher was interested in perhaps branching out a bit. (No, there aren’t going to be any more Guesthouse books and no, that wasn’t my idea.) Could I come up with something else that sort of touched on the paranormal without being, you know, scary?

 

Well, I wasn’t interested in frightening people so I started to think of things other than ghosts that could play into a mystery novel series. (My editor had been clear on one point: “NO ZOMBIES!” and I was more than okay with that.) Vampire detectives? It had been done. Werewolf detectives? Done. Invisible detectives? More than done. 

But one area of the Universal Pictures monster pantheon had not yet been written as a mystery series, in particular a traditional one without the horror theme, before. The idea struck me as perfect: Frankenstein, P.I.

 

Before you tune up and tell me Frankenstein was the scientist and not the creature, trust me, I know. But in this case, if the creation could be a person living in present times and in a familiar setting, there could be some fun to have with it. Suppose this was a descendant of the original creature, living generations later in New Jersey (I set everything in New Jersey in those days) and trying to solve crimes because his (the creature was male until Elsa Lanchester came along) ancestor had been so badly treated by the criminal justice system of his time. Suppose he had some mystery about his creation that he needed to solve over a series of books. Suppose I had a better idea than that.

 

I decided against the descendant thing. It was too complicated to figure out who the mother was, for one thing, because Elsa had been adamantly against such things. And I felt that over all that time, what made the creature special would have been diluted by genetics. Thawing him out from being frozen (which is closer to Mary Shelley) was a possibility but didn’t especially interest me.

 

But what if this creature was a woman? What if she was created outside the Frankenstein universe? What if…

 

Wait a minute. Frankenstein. Fran. Ken. Stein.

 

Suddenly I had a pair of siblings and that’s where it took off. Fran and Ken were (when the book opens) an adult brother-and-sister pair of investigators who had questions about how they were created, who the people were who created them (and to whom they refer as “our parents”) and why those people had abandoned them at an early age, reportedly due to concerns about the children’s security?

 

It took a while, but UKULELE OF DEATH, the first Fran and Ken Stein Mystery, was published on May 2, and it answers some, but not all, of the questions. The Steins have opened a detective agency that specializes in helping adopted people find their birth parents because Fran and Ken have some experience with growing up knowing very little of their lineage. When they stumble (or walk, more accurately) into a murder plot that seems to have something to do with their own situation, things get complicated in a hurry.

 

Years have gone by, but Fran and Ken are finally seeing the light of day. Their origin story is, let’s say, unique and their attitudes (not to mention their physical abilities) might be a little unusual as well. They know they’re different and they know why. But does that mean they’re not people?

 

It’s up to you to decide, but I’m glad you’re finally getting the chance. 


Ukulele of Death

A Fran and Ken Stein Mystery, Book 1

 

After losing their parents when they were just babies, private investigators Fran and Ken Stein now specialize in helping adoptees find their birth parents. So when a client asks them for help finding her father, with her only clue a rare ukulele, the case is a little weird, sure, but it’s nothing they can’t handle.

 

But soon Fran and her brother are plunged into a world where nothing makes sense – and not just the fact that a very short (but very cute) NYPD detective keeps trying to take eternal singleton Fran out on dates. 

 

All Fran wants to do is find the ukulele and collect their fee, but it’s hard to keep your focus when you’re stumbling over corpses and receiving messages that suggest your (dead) parents are very much alive.

 

Ukuleles aside, it’s becoming clear that someone knows something they shouldn’t – that Fran and Ken Stein weren’t so much born, as built . . .

 

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Friday, May 26, 2023

HAVE YOU REGISTERED FOR THE MURDER AND MAYHEM ONLINE PARTY YET? THERE'S STILL TIME

PARTY! PARTY! PARTY!

Time is running out to register. On Tuesday, May 30th at 7:30-9:30pm EDT, grab your favorite beverage, settle into your comfiest chair, and hop online for a fun evening of laughs, Q&A, games, prizes, and more with 45 of your favorite mystery and suspense authors. All are welcome. And best of all? It’s FREE! All you have to do is register.

 

My author, Lois Winston, is taking part in this fun evening. You’ll be able to roam the various “rooms” at this Zoom event where you’ll find dozens of authors happy to chat with you. Lois will be pairing up in one of the rooms with her fellow Booklover’s Bench blogger Maggie Toussaint (appearing under her new Valona Jones pen name for this event.) You can find a list of other attending authors here. Scroll down the page for the registration form.

 

Don’t miss out on what will be a fabulous, fun-filled two hours!

Wednesday, May 24, 2023

AN INTERVIEW WITH MULTI-GENRE AUTHOR PHILLIP L. LEVIN, MD, AUTHOR OF YA FANTASY AND SO MUCH MORE

Today we sit down for a chat with multi-genre author Philip L. Levin, MD. Phillip has written seven children’s books. He’s edited four anthologies of short stories, biographies, coastal histories, and memoirs. His novels include cozy mystery, contemporary romance, young adult fantasy, science fiction. He’s also writtena memoir about his time as a medical missionary in Kenya and a poetry collection. Learn more about him and his books at his website and blog. 

When did you realize you wanted to write novels? 

Both my parents wrote, one a teacher and novelist, the other a scientist who published several scientific articles, edited a magazine, and later in life became a poet.

 

I’ve been a writer my whole life, from elementary school where I created comic strips, through high school as the paper editor, as a publisher in my college dorm, to medical school, where I sold articles to pay my tuition. 

 

How long did it take you to realize your dream of publication? 

My first work was published in my high school paper, followed by dozens, then scores, and now hundreds of pieces in newspapers, journals, anthologies, and online. My first novel was published in 2007 when I was 53 years old. 

 

Are you traditionally published, indie published, or a hybrid author? 

Most of my articles and stories are traditionally published, as is one of my novels. After a negative experience with the novel publisher, I decided to self-publish. 

 

Where do you write? 

My favorite place to write is on my back porch, overlooking the forest and river, the birds in the bath and at the feeder, and the glorious sunsets of Biloxi. I often write at work during downtimes and also write on vacations.

 

Is silence golden, or do you need music to write by? What kind? 

I prefer writing with light Jazz in the background. I can’t concentrate on my work when there are lyrics.

 

How much of your plots and characters are drawn from real life? From your life in particular? 

My first novel was set in the town where I lived. A few of the subplots were drawn from the news around me, but mostly the plots and characters were fictitious, or at best amalgamations of many people.

 

My second novel was based heavily on my own life. Its plot tells of a father who, following a personal tragedy and divorce, brings his 16-year-old son from the north to the Mississippi Coast to remake their lives.

 

Describe your process for naming your characters? 

Names identify a person’s gender, age, and culture. I often search the Internet for appropriate names.

 

Real settings or fictional towns? 

In general, I use real towns and settings. In Underwater Gods, I created the underwater city of Atlantis, which is, of course, totally fictional. However, the human lives in Southport, North Carolina.

 

What’s the quirkiest quirk one of your characters has? 

The merfolk of Atlantis are alien creatures who have adopted much of the DNA they’ve created in their biosphere work into their own structures. They can choose to manifest these genes, so many of them look like foreign beasts, or have at least some of their characteristics. They have Beaver genes in their eyes to create a second eyelid to see under water. My merman pilot has hawk eyes. A cook has a bear’s nose. All the merfolk have both gills and lungs and, perhaps the quirkiest, telepathy.

 

What’s your quirkiest quirk? 

As a resident, I often worked thirty-six, forty-eight, or even sixty-hour shifts. I learned to take naps anywhere and anytime, even in the elevator, standing up and leaning into the corner. Ever since, I can sleep under any lighting, with any background noise, and in any position, including sleeping standing up. It takes me seconds to minutes to fall asleep, and I can wake up fully alert.

 

Everyone at some point wishes for a do-over. What’s yours? 

I presume this refers to my writing because I’m twice divorced. As I mentioned before, my traditionally published book was a disaster, economically and artistically. Yet I suppose it was a learning adventure. My first novel publication was awful, too, and I rewrote with a new cover and republished within a few months. So, in both cases, I did take a do-over.

 

What’s your biggest pet peeve? 

Dirty dishes in the sink. From a writing aspect, not identifying characters in the opening page. 

 

You’re stranded on a deserted island. What are your three must-haves? 

From a physician’s perspective, I’d need water, food, and clothing/shelter. From a novelist viewpoint, I’d want my laptop, access to the Internet, and electricity. From an imaginative concept, I’d like a Star Trek replicator, mermaids, and eternal youth pills. 

 

What was the worst job you’ve ever held? 

The time I worked as a microfilm operator was the most boring, with little intellectual, emotional, or ego-strengthening time.

 

Who’s your all-time favorite literary character (any genre)? Why? 

The scarecrow from the Wizard of Oz was clever, loyal, kind, and gentle. He led his companions on a rescue of Dorothy and never faltered in his determination.

 

Ocean or mountains? 

I love them both. I live on the beach and enjoy travels to the mountains.

 

City girl/guy or country girl/guy? 

Suburban. I enjoy vacations to either but wouldn’t want to live in either environment – too crowded or too isolated.

 

What’s on the horizon for you? 

I am seventy years old, after all. I still enjoy writing and editing and YouTube creation and anticipate continuing my creativity into the foreseeable future.

 

Anything else you’d like to tell us about yourself and/or your books? 

I never expected to be a bestselling author, not that I’d object. My bit of modest success, selling 1000 books a year, helping other authors, and my myriad of other writings, has been truly joyful and fulfilling.

 

Underwater Gods

While searching for his lost father, 18-year-old Michael finds Atlantis, the air-filled underwater world of the merfolk. An alien race that came to Earth 3 billion years ago to create a biosphere, they’re considering wiping out humanity due to our destruction of the planet with our climate change. Mermaid Kaphia and Michael fall in love and must work together to rescue Michael’s father and find a way to reverse climate change. 

 


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Monday, May 22, 2023

AUTHOR SHERYL C.D. ICKES ON WRITING A LETTERBOXING MYSTERY

Letterboxing in the Woods
Sheryl C.D. Ickes was born and raised in south-central Pennsylvania where she currently lives with her husband, daughter, and two dogs. She writes what she knows and uses her past experiences in cake decorating and truck driving to create her two different cozy mystery series. Learn more about her and her books at her website. 

The Woods Have Secrets

Like nature? Do you go for walks anywhere outside your house? Have any bored children? Like treasure hunts or books about them? Try letterboxing! It is relatively inexpensive, and you doesn’t need to learn a bunch of new skills. The “treasure” you find will not bring you financial wealth but can make you a happier, and perhaps more relaxed, person. There are two free websites, www.letterboxing.org and www.atlasquest.com , that you can access to guide you through this activity and answer most, if not all, questions you may have.

 

Letterboxes exist in every American state and in some other countries, like Scotland and England. I enjoy checking out the websites and finding out how many boxes are located in my area or the areas that I will be traveling to. I always print out or take screenshots of the clues, because cell reception may be nonexistent. New boxes may be added at any time, old ones retired, damaged or stolen. I found one box that had not been located for twelve years! 

 

And this is the part of the blog, where I give you a warning, maybe not about dragons, but about things that can bite or sting. I suggest carrying a walking stick for poking gently into holes before you reach your hand into a dark spot. Safety is something to keep in mind. I usually have a friend or family member along. Also, if clues trip me up, another set of eyes is always helpful. If I misread my compass, which has occurred in the past, someone can point out the error of my ways.

 

You can also learn from letterboxing clues, whether it’s random fun facts or something historical, like where a famous person lived or was buried. You may learn to look at objects with a different perspective and find fantastic things in nature: like three “golden” rings that naturally grew high up on a tree’s trunk, or that the top of one tree in the winter timeframe could look like a human fist thrust into the air. 

 

Anyone can hide a box. Some box planters choose clues from popular tv shows or movies.

 

If you choose to accept these fun missions, you’ll need your own personal letterboxing kit. My kit consists of a rubber stamp, a black ink stamp pad, a pen, and individual cardstock cards (instead of a tablet or journal). Once you assemble a kit and get your clues, you follow the clues to find the hidden letterbox. 

 

Letterboxes are hidden, not buried. Finders need to keep open minds as they follow clues to find a “box” that may not be a box, but a container of various shapes. An important part of letterboxing is to keep an eye out for others. You want to keep the location of the boxes a secret. 

 

Once you find your “treasure,” move slightly away and have fun. One tip I try to keep in mind when I first open the box is to study it and try to remember how it is packed, so I can repack it later. You stamp your stamp in the provided tablet or journal. I add my letterbox name, the town where I’m from, and the date. I always take a few minutes to flip through the box’s journal to see who else has found the box and where they hail from. 

 

I live in Pennsylvania and have seen some from as far west as California and Hawaii, others as far south as Florida, and many from my local area and in-between. Then, I stamp the box’s stamp on one of my cardstock cards and add the date and the stamp’s letterbox number (it will be listed by the box’s name at the top of the clues.) I repack the box and return it to where I had found it, again without others seeing. Being stealthy is part of the fun!

 

In the second book of my Slice of Life cozy mystery series, Murder in the Woods, the main character Alexandra letterboxes at a campground. She introduces some young friends to letterboxing and it plays a big part in the story. 

 

I hope you not only enjoy reading my book, but give letterboxing a try, and have a lot of fun!

 

Murder in the Woods

A Slice of Life Mystery, Book 2 

Alexandra and Caitlin go to a campground to participate in a friend's wedding and to make the cake. They are looking forward to visiting their old friend and her family. After the caterer is found dead, Alex and Cat are accused of the deed. As more friends and guests arrive, they work to clear their names and to make sure their friend's wedding goes off without a problem. But after more attacks and an attempted murder, they realize that not only their goal, but their very lives are in peril.

 


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Saturday, May 20, 2023

MYSTERY AND MAYHEM ONLINE PARTY REMINDER

Party Time! Have you registered yet? There's still time to get in on all the fun. 

On Tuesday, May 30th at 7:30-9:30pm EDT, grab your favorite beverage, settle into your comfiest chair, and hop online for a fun evening of laughs, Q&A, games, prizes, and more with some of your favorite mystery and suspense authors. All are welcome. And best of all? It’s FREE! All you have to do is register.

 

My author, Lois Winston, is taking part in this fun evening. You’ll be able to roam the various “rooms” at this Zoom event where you’ll find dozens of authors happy to chat with you. Lois will be pairing up in one of the rooms with her fellow Booklover’s Bench blogger Maggie Toussaint (appearing under her new Valona Jones pen name for this event.) You can find a list of other attending authors here. Scroll down the page for the registration form.

 

Don’t miss out on what will be a fabulous two hours!

Friday, May 19, 2023

AN INTERVIEW WITH MYSTERY AUTHOR ANNE LOVETT'S DAISY HARRISON

Today we sit down for a chat with Daisy Harrison from author Anne Lovett’s Snakes and Lovers.

What was your life like before your author started pulling your strings? 

I was having a great time in my job serving cocktails at a beach bar and getting a tan during the day. I was through with responsibility after practically killing myself at work and trying to make the best of two bad marriages. 

 

What’s the one trait you like most about yourself? 

Loyalty

 

What do you like least about yourself? 

A habit of choosing the wrong men.

 

What is the strangest thing your author has had you do or had happen to you? 

Well, it’s when she made my best friend disappear and leave me with her python and her young son. That was horrible for an author to do! 

 

Do you argue with your author? If so, what do you argue about? 

I really gave her a hard time when she made me travel to New Orleans with the creep who broke my heart in high school! 

 

What is your greatest fear? 

It’s not snakes. Really. It’s getting my heart broken again. Or my mom and dad getting a divorce. They’re the only steady thing in my life. And then Dad had his midlife crisis…

 

What makes you happy?  

When the story started out, it was having no responsibilities. But in the end, it was a little different… 

 

If you could rewrite a part of your story, what would it be? Why? 

I would have taken better care of my van, then it wouldn’t have broken down and we might have gotten to New Orleans sooner. Then maybe those bad things wouldn’t have happened. 

 

Of the other characters in your book, which one bugs you the most? Why?

It has to be that nasty jewel thief who ruined my friend’s life. What she saw in him I don’t know. They never should have let him out of jail.

 

Of the other characters in your book, which one would you love to trade places with? Why?

Maybe it’s my mom, Moo. She rolls with the punches and can conduct seances. And is really good with kids. And making cookies.

 

Tell us a little something about your author. 

People think writing is her second career, but she’s always done it on the sly. Imagine living only in Georgia, but that’s where all the books are set. In fact, my mom’s house is like the one she grew up next door to. I wish she would write more mystery and less history, but she says she likes both and one on the drawing board combines them both. She ought to write one about trains because her guy is a model railroader. She likes to go for walks, take photos, and dig in the garden. I hope she doesn’t find a corpse down there. Readers can find her at her website.

 

What's next for you? 

I’d really like to go to India, but I don’t think I can convince Anne to write it. She’s too busy with this new mystery about a woman with husband problems and a quirky retired detective, and they team up to solve a murder. And Anne might make it into a series? Phooey. It’s coming out this summer. I think.

 

Snakes and Lovers

She’s done with commitment. Until a whole pile of complications coils its way around her life.

 

Daytona Beach, 2005. After two failed marriages, Daisy Harrison enjoys a carefree existence. Deciding that love is for losers, the thirty-something serves cocktails by night and soaks up the sun by day. But when her best friend vanishes without a trace, Daisy’s left to care for her young son… and a five-foot python.

 

Vowing to find the missing snake-dancer and reunite the family, Daisy heads off on a crazy quest across the country in her less-than-reliable purple van. But as the wheels fall off her search and she discovers the boy’s mother has slithered into danger, she’s horrified when the only person who can help is the guy who broke her heart.

 

Can Daisy follow a serpentine path out of trouble and into happiness?

 

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Wednesday, May 17, 2023

AUTHOR ANNE LOUISE BANNON ON JUGGLING GENRES AND THE VOICES IN HER HEAD

Author Anne Louise Bannon’s husband says that his wife kills people for a living. Bannon does mostly write mysteries, including the Old Los Angeles Series, the Freddie and Kathy series, and the Operation Quickline series. She has worked as a freelance journalist for magazines and newspapers, including the Los Angeles Times. She and her husband, Michael Holland, created the OddBallGrape.com wine education blog, and she co-wrote a book on poisons. Learn more about Anne and her books at her website.

Switching It Up

I am writing the final book in a time travel trilogy. I am thinking about a new cozy mystery series, and a new historical mystery series. I’ve also got my cozy spy series currently running on my blog. Not to mention a new tech thriller coming out in June.

 

What?

 

Am I crazy?

 

Well, yeah. Of course, I am. But I don’t read only one type of fiction. Why would I write only one type?

 

How do I keep all these different projects straight? That is harder to answer. Some of it is my native creative process. Since I tend to “hear” my writing before putting anything on the screen, my characters all sound very different to me. Jannie Miller, the protagonist in the thriller, Running Away to Boston, sounds nothing like Lisa Wycherly, who is the protagonist of the Operation Quickline series, book ten of which, From This Day Forward, is the serial currently running on my blog. Even more distinct is Maddie Wilcox of the Old Los Angeles series (the most recent release there is Death of an Heiress).

 

Even when I’m writing in third person, as I do in the time travel trilogy, it all sounds different to me.

 

Then there are the different tools I use to keep everything straight. Most of them are apps, such as Evernote, Aeon Timeline, Scrivener. But I still have plenty of paper on my desk, along with pens (including several dip pens that I use for the fun of it.)

 

Ultimately, I am telling a story, and the genre that the story happens to fall into is not usually what I’m thinking about when the characters are busy acting out their scenes in my head. The recently released Time Enough, the second in the time travel trilogy isn’t about time travel, per se. It’s about Robin Parker and Roger York and all the other characters that populate this world that I made up. From This Day Forward isn’t really about the spy business. It’s about Lisa and her new husband Sid Hackbirn and how they’re figuring out what being married is. The spy part is what they do for their jobs. Running Away to Boston isn’t about computer viruses and man-in-the-middle attacks. It’s about Jannie Miller and how she and her friends go up against this evil corporation creating a nasty virus.

 

The trick is marketing these different stories. People want to know what genre a story is to make it easier to decide what to read and what not to read. I get that. So I tell people about what kind of book a given story is and hope that it comes through. Because, trust me, no one knows what a cozy spy novel is. But that’s the story my brain wanted to tell, and I went with it.

 

So if I ask you to kindly consider reading the Operation Quickline series, please understand that Lisa and Sid are a lot of fun, and hopefully, people that you might recognize doing some pretty scary things. Same with Jannie Miller. And Robin and Roger, and all the other people in my head.

 

Because there is a real blessing to switching things up, writing-wise. I’m seldom bored with what I’m writing, which means my stories get more interesting as I go on. And I hope, more interesting for you.

 

From This Day Forward

An Operation Quickline Story


Come, share the joy…


It’s The Big Day. Sid Hackbirn and Lisa Wycherly are getting married. But in the days and weeks before the wedding, the pair discover that there is something very strange going on with their work as ultra-top-secret counter-espionage agents. Courier drops are coming in without the usual processing. The bad guys tailing them are unusually persistent.

 

Then Sid and Lisa take off for their honeymoon only to find that the nice, relaxing vacation in England that they had planned will be anything but. They’re being trained for their new job and will be touring the European continent, instead. Skiing in Gstaad, Switzerland, touring Venice, Italy, doesn’t sound so bad, except that the two get sucked into a dangerous plot, with bad guys trying to kill them. Still, trying to figure out what the potential killers are planning might actually be easier than trying to figure out how to be married.

Monday, May 15, 2023

#COOKING WITH CLORIS--MYSTERY AUTHOR CHRISTINE KNAPP ON MODERN MIDWIVES AND HOT FUDGE SAUCE

Christine Knapp practiced as a nurse-midwife for many years. A writer of texts and journal articles, she is now thrilled to combine her love of midwifery and mysteries as a fiction author. Christine currently narrates books for the visually impaired. Learn more about her and her books at her website where you'll find links to her other social media.

Modern Midwife Mysteries

Hello! I am a nurse midwife who loves reading mysteries. I had written textbooks in the past but wanted to try my hand at fiction and bring to life a modern-day midwife who solves crimes. So, I decided to combine my passions by writing the Modern Midwife Mysteries. 

 

For many years, I felt that the Midwifery profession was not fully understood and thus not accurately portrayed in fiction. To try to remedy this, I included many current obstetrical vignettes within my series. I wanted readers to see the various areas where midwives provide care. Each chapter starts with an epigraph about the birthing process.

 

Maeve O’Reilly Kensington, my literary midwife has a full plate. She provides excellent care for her patients, struggles with fertility issues, and navigates the upper crust world of her in-laws, all while trying to bring murders to justice.

 

Even though she is married to an amazing chef, she continuously strives to be a good baker. Although cookies are not Maeve’s forte, she eventually manages to bake a culinary delight or two. I particularly love dishes that look complicated but are in fact very easy. Recipes are included in each mystery.

 

This is Maeve’s mother’s recipe for the ultimate hot fudge sauce.

 

Mary Margaret Callahan O’Reilly’s Hot Fudge Sauce

 

Ingredients:

12 ounce can evaporated milk

2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips

1/2 cup sugar

1 tablespoon unsalted butter

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

 

Add evaporated milk, chocolate chips, and sugar to a saucepan over low to medium heat. Stir constantly until it starts to boil. Remove from heat. Stir in butter and vanilla. Cool for 30 minutes. Serve warm. Makes 2-1/2 cups.


 

Murder at the Wedding

A Modern Midwife Mysteries, Book 1

 

Maeve O’Reilly Kensington loves her job as a nurse-midwife at Creighton Memorial Hospital in the quintessential New England seaside town of Langford. Nothing could bring her more pleasure than helping women usher new life into the world... except possibly having a child of her own with her husband, Will. In the meantime, she's happy to celebrate the families of those she treats, and content to support her husband in his newly formed catering business.

 

However, when Creighton Memorial's Chief Obstetrician suddenly drops dead at his daughter’s extravagant wedding reception, catered by Will, Maeve's two worlds collide in the worst possible way. Suddenly murder is on the menu, and Maeve is desperate to help her husband by finding out who killed the doctor.

 

With the help of her wealthy, acerbic sister, Meg, and her quick-witted Boston Irish mother, Maeve sets out to solve a murder and clear her husband's name. But can she stay one step ahead of the killer? Or will they strike again...this time closer to home?

 

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Saturday, May 13, 2023

MYSTERY AND MAYHEM READER EVENT REMINDER

Party Time! Have you registered yet? There's still time to get in on all the fun. 

On Tuesday, May 30th at 7:30-9:30pm EDT, grab your favorite beverage, settle into your comfiest chair, and hop online for a fun evening of laughs, Q&A, games, prizes, and more with some of your favorite mystery and suspense authors. All are welcome. And best of all? It’s FREE! All you have to do is register.

 

My author, Lois Winston, is taking part in this fun evening. You’ll be able to roam the various “rooms” at this Zoom event where you’ll find dozens of authors happy to chat with you. Lois will be pairing up in one of the rooms with her fellow Booklover’s Bench blogger Maggie Toussaint (appearing under her new Valona Jones pen name for this event.) You can find a list of other attending authors here. Scroll down the page for the registration form.

 

Don’t miss out on what will be a fabulous two hours!

Friday, May 12, 2023

HOW HOMES OF THE PAST INSPIRED MYSTERY AUTHOR R.J. KORETO'S NEW SERIES

Federal Room
R.J. Koreto’s fascination with the Edwardian era has led him to write two historical mystery series: The Lady Frances Ffolkes Series and the Alice Roosevelt Series. He’s now turned his attention to the residences of the past with his Historic Homes Mystery Series. Learn more about him and his books at his website.

My protagonist/sleuth, architect Wren Fontaine, is happiest when she's busy renovating the historic homes she specializes in. Of course, it's not just about the homes—the furniture, and the clothing of the owners, must be coordinated.

 

Take the Federal style. This was during the "Pride & Prejudice" era, and simplicity was the order of the day. Wren knows her history: Europe was taking a fresh look at the beauty of ancient Roman design, and the French Revolution had made conspicuous consumption unfashionable—and unwise. The beauty of the Federal style came from the perfection of the proportions, the cleanliness of the lines--a surprisingly modern look. 

 

Clothes went along with this. First Lady Dolley Madison was a standard setter in fashion, but her dresses are marked by the elegance of the tailoring, not elaborate festoons of silk. She had a style that befitted the American ideal of egalitarianism.

Gilded Age Room

Jump ahead a century to the Gilded Age. Wren is working on one of the great mansions of the "Upstairs, Downstairs" era. The world had moved on—a new generation of robber barons had made a LOT of money and wanted homes that were practically palaces, from which they could "rule." Elaborate displays of wealth were the order of the day, and Wren concerns herself with the ornate furniture and fixtures that showed the world just how powerful these families were. Costly fabrics and woods, and extravagant designs, were essential, and skilled artisans were practically guaranteed full employment. 

 

And the clothes matched! Women's dresses have rarely been so elaborate before or since, and the wealthy employed an army of maids to help them change clothes several times a day. Indeed, houses now sported special small rooms just for storing clothes, called "closets." Until the mid-19th century, even the wealthy didn't own enough clothing to make this necessary.

 

Modernist Room

In a future book, Wren is going to turn to modernist homes—the post-war "Mad Men" era. We're back to a plainer style—but deceptively so, as there was a lot of philosophy behind this simplicity, such as "form follows function." That is, "purpose" took precedence over "beauty," but the move to exciting new materials lent these homes a beauty all their own. Architects became concerned with how homes were furnished and worked closely with designers.

 

Here is a modernist room with the famed Eames recliner, designed by Charles and Ray Eames. They worked closely with leading modernist architect Eero Saarinen—indeed, Saarinen named his son "Eames" after them! 

 

Once again, clothes worked in harmony with homes. Have a look at the dresses Betty Draper wore in "Mad Men"—elegant but not overwhelming, they neatly complemented the bright and shiny new aesthetic. And Don Draper made have started with a suburban look, but when he moved into Manhattan, he connects with a cool 1960s vibe.

 

Even now, architects and furniture and clothing designers are creating the next big thing. What will it be?

 

The Greenleaf Murders

A Historic Homes Mystery, Book 1

 

Young architect Wren Fontaine lands her dream job: restoring Greenleaf House, New York's finest Gilded-Age mansion, to its glory days. But old homes have old secrets: Stephen Greenleaf—heir to what’s left of his family’s legacy—refuses to reveal what his plans are once the renovation is completed. And still living in a corner of the home is Stephen's 90-year-old Aunt Agnes who's lost in the past, brooding over a long-forgotten scandal while watching Wren with mistrust.

 

Wren's job becomes more complex when a shady developer who was trying to acquire Greenleaf House is found murdered. And after breaking into a sealed attic, Wren finds a skeleton stuffed in a trunk. She soon realizes the two deaths, a century apart, are strangely related. Meanwhile, a distraction of a different kind appears in the form of her client's niece, the beautiful and seductive Hadley Vanderwerf. As Wren gingerly approaches a romance, she finds that Hadley has her own secrets. 

 

Then a third murder occurs, and the introverted architect is forced to think about people, and about how ill-fated love affairs and obsessions continue to haunt the Greenleafs. In the end, Wren risks her own life to uncover a pair of murderers, separated by a century but connected by motive. She reveals an odd twist in the family tree that forever changes the lives of the Greenleafs, the people who served them, the mansion they all called home—and even Wren herself.

 

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