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Showing posts with label Esri Allbritten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Esri Allbritten. Show all posts

Sunday, July 15, 2012

THIS WEEK'S BOOK WINNERS + SIX SENTENCE SUNDAY

We had a busy week here at Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers. Special thanks to this week’s guest authors, Liz Lipperman, Mary Marvella, and Esri Allbritten, who graciously offered copies of their books to some lucky readers who posted comments this week. The winner of Liz’s Beef Stolen-Off is Nancy. The winner of Mary's The Gift is Tami Brothers. And the winner of either an ebook or paperback of one of Esri’s two titles (Chihuahua of the Baskervilles or The Portrait of Doreene Gray is Amber Polo. Ladies, please email me at anastasiapollack@gmail.com to make arrangements for receiving your books.

Today we’re also participating once again in Six Sentence Sunday. Today’s six sentences are from Hooking Mr. Right, the first of author Lois Winston’s Emma Carlyle romances. Hooking Mr. Right was a Romance Writers of America Golden Heart finalist and the winner of the PASIC, Great Expectations, Jasmine, Golden Gateway, and Heart of the Rockies awards.

“Cu!” Luke groaned. How the hell had his cat managed to get onto his neighbor’s balcony? And why did it have to be that neighbor? Cu, looking for all the world like feline royalty, sat ensconced in the center of a flowery cushioned wicker chair -- on Dr. Althea Chandler’s balcony! And damn if he didn’t look pleased with himself!

Want to read more? Click on over to Emma Carlyle’s website to read an excerpt.

Hooking Mr. Right is currently available for Kindle at Amazon.

Like the idea of Six Sentence Sunday? Other authors participating can be found at the Six Sentence Sunday website.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

BOOK CLUB FRIDAY - GUEST AUTHOR ESRI ALLBRITTEN


Our Book Club Friday guest today is Esri Allbritten, author of the Tripping Magazine mystery series, which covers the adventures of a low-budget travel rag that features destinations of paranormal interest. The trouble is, there always seems to be a crime behind the supposed supernatural event, making Tripping’s staff scramble to keep their story while they uncover the terrible truth. Chihuahua of the Baskervilles is now available in paperback or ebook. Book two, The Portrait of Doreene Gray, just came out in hardback and ebook. Critter from the Black Lagoon is in the works.

Esri likes nothing better than to have her characters visit real towns and wreak fictional havoc in them. You can read free chapters of her books and find out more at EsriAllbritten.com.

Esri is offering a copy of either of her current titles to one of our readers who posts a comment to the blog.
-- AP

Crafting a Local Legend

A lot of us grew up with stories of a local monster or ghost – creatures that thrilled our childhood selves and gave us a sense of shared lore. Maybe your current city lacks this vital spark. Never fear; you can “discover” your own questionable creature, and summer is the perfect time to do it. All the raw materials are there: spooky noises outside a tent, murky shadows in a sun-warmed lake, and the unspeakable sounds of mating raccoons. Throw in a twelve-pack of beer on a muggy evening and you’ve got yourself a receptive audience! So what are the right ingredients to make sure generations of kids run screaming from the woods?

An unusual method of locomotion. Your average supernatural creature does not amble through the woods like a teenager at the mall. No, it crawls, floats, creeps, slithers, flies on scaly wings, or bounds along the ground in twenty-foot leaps. It can also vanish suddenly, and almost always does.

A grab bag of physical features. Excessive hair is always in fashion. Goat horns or hooves were popular in the 1800s. Wings and scales are fine, but they’ve kind of been done to death. I’m just spitballing here, but I’m seeing empty eye sockets, albino skin, and tentacles. Lots of tentacles.

Glowing eyes. You must have glowing eyes, because there are tons of things that look like glowing eyes. Car headlights, driveway reflectors at weird angles, glints off windows and chrome – even the actual glowing eyes of an animal caught in the shaky beam of your flashlight.

A fondness for authority figures. If you want your story to be believed, make sure your monster is witnessed by a police officer, a reverend, or a “prominent businessman.” Rarely are these people named or still alive, but if they are, so what? Are you going to call up Officer Robert Cullough of Atlanta, Georgia and ask if he really saw a creature that looked like “a cross between a rabbit and a seahorse”? What I heard was that he was in his patrol car one night when he saw something hopping through the trees alongside the road. It had the body of a giant rabbit, but with gauzy fins on its back and a scaly, jointed tail. Sometimes it would leap up and use that tail to grab a tree branch and swing itself forward. Also, its eyes glowed.

Cullough’s friends called it Jumping Lizzy because Liz was the name of Cullough’s ex-girlfriend. When she found out, she hanged herself, and if you sit under the right tree at midnight, you can hear her crying and stomping her large, hairy feet.  

The most popular monsters are shy. Yes, they’re frightening in some way (large, toothy, made of ectoplasm) but they’re essentially harmless. Your average bear may rip off the arms of anyone who gets between it and a convenience-store dumpster, but Bigfoot is shy. Alligators might be tacky enough to jump for raw chicken, but the Loch Ness monster, like Garbo, wants to be alone.  Real supernatural creatures are sensitive in some way.  Those ghostly teens who ask for a ride to the nearest diner? They just want to do a quick review for Yelp before going back to the spirit world. Strike up a conversation about pie and they fade through the wall.

So there you have it, the elements of a local legend. If you do it right and do it quick, you could win $2,000. The blog io9 is offering a bounty for the best photo of a mystery creature. You can also tell them a story, but they won’t pay you for that. Words are cheap.

What’s your favorite local legend? Tell us that, or anything. One lucky commenter will win a copy of Chihuahua of the Baskervilles or The Portrait of Doreene Gray, your choice. -- AP

Saturday, September 3, 2011

THIS WEEK'S BOOK GIVEAWAY WINNER

Thanks to all who stopped by this week at Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers. We hope you'll come back often and also tell your friends about us. We have lots of exciting posts and guests planned for the months ahead. I’d also like to thank Esri Allbritten for being our Book Club Friday guest and offering a copy of Chihuahua of the Baskervilles to one of our readers who posted a comment this week. The winner this week is Jackie Houchin. Jackie, please email your mailing address to me at anastasiapollack@gmail.com. I’ll forward the information to Esri, and she’ll mail the book to you.

Thursday, September 1, 2011

BOOK CLUB FRIDAY -- GUEST AUTHOR ESRI ALLBRITTEN

Today’s guest author is Esri Allbritten. Esri is the author of Chihuahua of the Baskervilles, first in the Tripping Magazine mystery series. Tripping is a very low-budget travel magazine that covers destinations of paranormal interest. Unfortunately, whenever the three-person staff chases a story, they find a crime behind the supposedly supernatural event.

In Chihuahua of the BaskervillesTripping hears about a ghostly Chihuahua seen by Charlotte Baskerville. Charlotte is the rich founder of Petey’s Closet, a clothing catalog for small dogs. Editor Angus MacGregor, photographer Suki Oota, and writer Michael Abernathy travel to Manitou Springs, Colorado, where the ghost howls advice and spells out threats in tiny paw prints. Is the glowing apparition really Petey’s ghost, or is someone in Charlotte’s household trying to teach a dead dog new tricks – like murder? It’s up to Tripping Magazine to save Charlotte Baskerville, preferably without losing their story. To read more about Esri and her series and read an excerpt, visit her website 

Esri is giving away a copy of  Chihuahua of the Baskervilles to one lucky reader who posts a comment this week. -- AP

Hi! I’m Esri Allbritten, author of Chihuahua of the Baskervilles, first in the Tripping Magazine mystery series. Since the readers of American Woman enjoy cooking and crafting, I thought I’d introduce you to the somewhat eccentric world of Writer Crafts and Cuisine. Let’s get started!

Crafting with Esri!
 Writers are mostly associated with whipping up websites and bookplate stickers, but we’re also great at repurposing the tools of our trade in fun and creative ways. It helps if you’ve picked up a lot of beautiful, overpriced office supplies to make up for the fact that you have no coworkers, benefits, or regular salary.

Post-It Purse!
Have a vinyl purse that’s seen better days? Layer sticky notes on the sides for a fun, fluttery look. To get them to curl, spray cut notes with a fine mist of water and let dry. Bonus points if you have non-internet friends who will write cute sayings on some of them.



Spiro-Gyra Jewelry!
Spiral paperclips can be strung together to make necklaces and bracelets. Coordinate them with the color of your editing pen for a workday pick-me-up!

Fun with Cover Flats!
I’m not sure why publishers send authors flat versions of their book covers, but I do know they make fantastic coasters, Christmas ornaments, and cat toys. Have an entire series of paperback books? Decoupage a coffee table!




Cooking with Esri!

Writer Food is a little-known but fascinating cuisine. Let’s move to the kitchen, where I’ll introduce you to the quick and easy meals that keep me from starving to death.
Huh. There’s not a lot of food in here. I meant to go shopping, but what with radio interviews, editing Portrait of Doreene Gray and trying to come up with a plot for Critter from the Black Lagoon, I guess I haven’t been to the store for a while. But that’s perfect, because Writer Food relies mostly on non-perishable staples.

Rice Cakes A-Go-Go!
Rice cakes are wholesome, low-cal snacks that keep for-frickin-ever. Plus, they’re gluten free! Team a couple of Lundberg Wild Rice cakes with any of the following toppings for a fast meal. All but the first suggestion benefit from being toasted under the broiler.

Peanut butter and jelly
Tomato sauce and sliced cheese
Canned refried beans, salsa
Any leftovers that still look okay. Drain well and top with grated cheese.

Note: “A-Go-Go” is slightly misleading, as rice cakes can be constipating. I keep plenty of coffee and prunes on hand, to counteract that effect. This also ensures that I occasionally get up from the computer.

Red, White and Blue Spud
1 potato
mayonnaise
salsa

Wash potato and stab a few times with a fork to keep it from exploding. Bake it if you think that far ahead, or put it in your microwave on a paper towel. Four minutes in the nuker is good for a medium-sized spud. Turn it over halfway through microwaving.
When cooked to your taste, cut your potato in half and hack at it a little, so the toppings soak in. Smear both cut sides with mayo. Glop salsa on top and voila! You now have protein and beneficial fats from the mayo, energy-providing carbs from the potato, and bioflavinoid-packed vegetables from the salsa. There isn’t actually a blue component to this recipe unless your mayo or salsa has mold, in which case, scrape it off while whistling The Star-Spangled Banner.

Other must-have kitchen staples are cereal (doubles as lunch or dinner), fruit popsicles (double as breakfast), and chocolate (doubles as emotional validation.)
I hope you’ve enjoyed this peek into a writer’s life. Sadly, there are no crafts or recipes in Chihuahua of the Baskervilles, although the Tripping crew does make waffles at one point.

Thank you, Esri, for one of the funniest guest posts we’ve ever had here at Killer Crafts & Crafty Killers! I laughed until my sides hurt! Readers, want to win a copy of 
Chihuahua of the Baskervilles? Post a comment to enter the drawing. And be sure to check back on Sunday to see if you're the lucky winner. -- AP