Featuring guest authors; crafting tips and projects; recipes from food editor and sleuthing sidekick Cloris McWerther; and decorating, travel, fashion, health, beauty, and finance tips from the rest of the American Woman editors.

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Sunday, February 9, 2020

#COOKING WITH CLORIS—GINGERBREAD COOKIES: THEY’RE NOT JUST FOR CHRISTMAS

Who says gingerbread cookies have to be confined to Christmas? For those of you who love gingerbread and are planning to make cookies for Valentine’s Day, why not switch out the heart-shaped sugar cookies this year for Valentine gingerbread people instead?

Basic Gingerbread Cookie Recipe
Yield: approximately 3 dozen cookies

Ingredients:
3/4 cup brown sugar (either light or dark)
1/2 cup butter, softened
2 eggs
1/4 cup molasses
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
1-1/2 tsp. baking soda
2 tsp. ground ginger
1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg
1/2 tsp. ground cloves
1/2 tsp. salt

Beat eggs and butter in stand mixer until light and fluffy. Add eggs and molasses.

Combine dry ingredients and add to wet ingredients.

Form dough into a ball. Wrap in plastic wrap and chill for 1 hour.

Roll dough to 1/8” thickness on well-floured surface. Cut out gingerbread girls and boys. 

Place cookies on greased baking sheet and bake 10 minutes at 350 degrees F.

Cool on wire rack.

Decorate using store-bought icing tubes or get really fancy by making your own royal icing in various colors and use icing bags and decorative tips.

Thursday, February 6, 2020

MEET AUTHOR CATHY PERKINS' AMATEUR SLEUTH HOLLY PRICE

Today we sit down for a chat with Holly Price from author Cathy Perkins’ Holly Price Mystery Series.

What was your life like before your author started pulling your strings?
Before this series of books began, I was climbing the ladder at Falcon, a top-notch, mergers and acquisitions firm in Seattle, when my author sent me tumbling back into Richland, my hometown in eastern Washington. My father had a mid-life melt-down, bailed on my mother, and then took off for Sedona with his yoga instructor. I ended up putting my career in Seattle on hold so my mother and I could get Desert Accounting, the family business, in shape to sell. 

I’m settling in again and amazed to find I actually enjoy the work, or should I say, getting to know the clients and their business. Now if I could get my family to settle down…

What’s the one trait you like most about yourself?
Hmm, I’ll ask for three things… No? Okay, let’s meet in the middle and I’ll tell you about two things. (I did tell you I like to negotiate.) First, I’m loyal to my friends and family. JC—I’m not sure what to call him right now, not-so-ex-fiancĂ©? Boyfriend sounds silly at our age—says I push that loyalty to extremes, but I don’t like it when they’re accused of wrongdoing. Plus, I know they’ll have my back if I need them. 

The other thing I like is perseverance. Whatever I set out to do, in business or helping my friends, I see it all the way through. Both of these traits can get me into tight spots, but I still think I’m on the right path. 

What do you like least about yourself?
Seriously, I’m not as uptight as Cathy Perkins occasionally makes me seem. And Rick, my chief manager at Desert Accounting and best ally, tells me I’m better with the staff than I think, but I do have to remind myself not to scare them. 

I may be a bit driven. I have a lot on my plate, what with Dad having his mid-life melt-down and bailing on Mom. Mom expects me to bring in new business, train the staff to handle the project work, and keep the rest of the practice running. Then these client and family disasters—whew!

I admit, I got involved in the investigation trying to clear Tate’s name and keep that ridiculous local reporter from destroying the businesses my client and I had built. But then it became figuring out…well…who was in it for the money?

What is the strangest thing your author has had you do or had happen to you?
Cathy’s thrown some crazy things at me before, but I’m not sure what’s stranger this time: participating in a Rockcrawler event—seriously, think monster trucks crawling up impossible slopes or over giant boulders—or breaking into a warehouse with an undercover DEA agent. 

Do you argue with your author? If so, what do you argue about?
We argue constantly about whether I should go back to Seattle and Falcon, or stay in Richland and take over Desert Accounting. 

What is your greatest fear?
Up until the past few weeks, I’d have said spiders. I hate spiders. And spiderwebs. But now? My biggest fear is either falling in love with JC again or someone shooting me. 

What makes you happy?
I love hanging out with my friends, going to dinner or one of the great local wineries. Don’t tell anybody, but I have fantasies about having time to curl up on the sofa—did I tell you I was renovating a house? I can see a soft leather sofa in front of the fireplace, a cashmere throw, a fire and a book. Yeah, that isn’t happening.

If you could rewrite a part of your story, what would it be? Why?
My cousin’s debut product wouldn’t have made a disastrous launch and Danny Shaw would not be dead. I get that there wouldn’t be a book if there wasn’t a crime, a mystery to investigate, but Tate and Danny really didn’t deserve what happened to them. 

Of the other characters in your book, which one bugs you the most? Why?
I really like the people I work with at Desert Accounting, but there’s a new associate who’s driving me crazy, not taking responsibility for her actions. 

Hmm, I could say the same thing about a couple of family members, I mean people, I mean characters

Of the other characters in your book, which one would you love to trade places with? Why?
I’d trade places with Laurie Gordon, my best friend. Sure, it’s hard to tell what’s really going on in someone else’s life, but she always seems to have her act together. Plus, she does a great Yoda impersonation.

Tell us a little something about your author. Where can readers find her website/blog?
Cathy has written a lot of books. Of course, the best ones are about my friends, family, and me, but that’s just my opinion. Check out her website for more about her and her books and to see which you like better - her amateur sleuth stories or the suspense ones.

What's next for you?
I hear there’s a new book in the series, Calling for the Money! I really need to see where things are going with JC. My author tells me there’s also a new novel under way about my half-sister. Somehow, I get dragged into her drama. What is it with me and my family?

In It for the Money 
A Holly Price Mystery, Book 4

Holly Price traded professional goals for personal plans when she agreed to leave her high-flying position with Falcon, the Seattle-based mergers and acquisition team, and take over the family accounting practice. Reunited with JC Dimitrak, her former fiancĂ©, she’s already questioning whether she’s ready to flip her condo for marriage and a house in the ‘burbs. 

When her cousin Tate needs investors for his innovative car suspension, Holly works her business matchmaking skills and connects him with a client. The Rockcrawler showcasing the new part crashes at its debut event, however, and the driver dies. Framed for the sabotage, Tate turns to Holly when the local cops—including JC—are ready to haul him to jail. Holly soon finds her cousin and client embroiled in multiple criminal schemes. She’s drawn into the investigation, a position that threatens her life, her family and her already shaky relationship with JC. 

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

AUTHOR CORNELIA AMIRI ON DRUIDS, UNICORNS & THE SUMMER SOLSTICE IN WINTER

Today we welcome back Cornelia Amiri who says her superpower is turning her imagination into thirty-seven published sci-fi/fantasy romance books. Learn more about Cornelia and her books at her website.

Experience The Summer Solstice In Winter
In many parts of the US and the world, it’s still bitterly cold, and what better way to warm up than to think of summer, specifically the Summer Solstice. This was an important day in ancient times. The Neolithic tribes and later the Bronze Age and Iron Age Celts lived off the land, so the sun's heat and light were vital to survival. The Neolithic British built monuments, such as Stonehenge, that framed the rising or setting of the Sun on the solstices. And, the Celts celebrated the sun’s movements on the shortest day of the year in winter and on the longest day of the year in summer with Solstice Festivals. 

The word Solstice comes from the Latin sol meaning sun and sisto which means to stand still. But Alban Hefin, the name the Druids gave to the Celtic Summer Solstice means the Light of the Shore or Light of Summer. The shore because it’s where the elements of land, water and sky meet, which the druids considered a place that’s in-between worlds, and the light of the summer because that’s when it shines at its broadest.

The Druids saw the Summer Solstice as a time to open up a path towards light and abundance and banish evil spirits through the light of the sun. They’d pray for a good harvest, as it was halfway through the growing season. Also, as the Summer Solstice was seen as a time of change, nature, and new beginnings, it was associated with fertility. Feasting and dancing took place and bonfires were lit in celebration. And lovers traditionally clasped hands and leaped over bonfires. Some believed the higher the couple jumped, the higher their crops would grow. 

The ancient Celts also told and acted out the legend of the Oak King versus the Holly King. On the 21st of June the Oak King is at his strongest. But his power gradually weakens until the Winter Solstice on December 21 when the Holly King reins again.

In many regions (especially Europe), June 24 marks the midpoint of the growing season, halfway between planting and harvest, and is called Midsummer. People also have festivals for Midsummer where they feast, dance, and sing.

In 2020 the Summer Solstice takes place in the Northern Hemisphere on Saturday, June 20th at 5:44 eastern time. The Farmer’s Almanac has a sunrise and sunset calculator to calculate  how many hours of sunshine you’ll get in your location on the solstice.

My latest book, The Unicorn and the Druidess, is set in Iron Age Britain during the Summer Solstice. With it you can experience the Summer Solstice even now, in winter. 

The Unicorn and the Druidess
Dridry and the Beast, Book 4

At Summer Solstice people aren’t what they seem—they could be…a unicorn…a god…or someone you fall in love with.

Druidess Maelona pursues a unicorn into the woods and returns with a runaway slave boy she takes under her wing. Before she can go back to look for the unicorn, a handsome stranger ignites a fiery attraction within her. But she can tell he’s keeping something from her. She suspects that he may be a Roman spy.

God Epon’s blood burns at first sight of the gorgeous Druidess. Goaded by his desire for her he passes through the portal from the otherworld as a unicorn. Then he runs into the forest and she gives chase. There he shapeshifts into human form so he can get to know her better. Plus, to win her trust, he fights the Romans and saves her tribe. But even then, will he and Maelona be able to overcome the surmountable odds of a romance between a mortal and immortal being anything more than a summertime tryst?

Sunday, February 2, 2020

#CRAFTS WITH ANASTASIA—VALENTINES FOR THE CRAFT-CHALLENGED

Have you noticed how expensive greeting cards have become over the last few years? Valentine’s Day is less than two weeks away. I don’t know about you, but I cringe whenever I turn over a greeting card at the store to see the price. The average store-bought Valentine now costs as much as I once paid for a Valentine’s Day box of candy or cute pair of heart socks or boxers. And really, how special is that special greeting card when thousands and thousands of others will receive the same one on one Valentine's Day?

So why not harness your inner crafter and make a special card for your loved one?

Okay, I see all of you cringing out there. Sure, you say, once again the crafter is telling all of us non-crafters how easy it is to craft when you know you can’t draw a straight line. Well, guess what! To make these Valentines you don’t need any more skill than the average pre-schooler.

You’re not going to let a four-year-old show you up, are you? Of course not! So let’s get started. All you need for these Valentines are a few basic supplies you probably already have around the house.

Rainbow Hearts
Remember back when you were in nursery school and played with finger paints? Channel your inner three-year-old for this Valentine. Dip your finger into some paint. On a piece of paper or cardboard make a slash from upper left to lower right. Then make another slash from upper right to lower left, meeting at the bottom of the first slash. Voila! A heart! You can make rows of different colors as shown in the sample above or create a more freeform design with as many colors as you like.

 
Concentric Crayon Hearts
Color one piece of white paper with a pink crayon and one with a red crayon, scribbling randomly. Fold the paper in half and cut out a large heart. Don’t worry about making it perfect. No drawing is necessary. Just begin cutting at the bottom fold, curving around and down as you make your way to the top fold. Keep cutting out smaller and smaller hearts.

When finished cutting, glue the hearts onto another piece of paper or cardboard. Leave some heart halves unglued for a three-dimensional effect if desired.

An even easier way to make this card is to use colored paper and skip the crayoning.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

BOOK CLUB FRIDAY--AN INTERVIEW WITH MYSTERY AUTHOR F.M. MEREDITH'S SERGEANT RYAN STRICKLAND

Today we sit down for a chat with Sergeant Ryan Strickland from author F.M. Meredith’s
Rocky Bluff P.D. series.

What was your life like before your author started pulling your strings?
As a police officer, I was pretty carefree, and didn’t make the best choices for my life—resulting in dire consequences for others. I was what they called a publicity hound, loved to get myself into the news. 

What’s the one trait you like most about yourself?
That I had the capacity to change—though I have to give most of the credit to my wife Barbara. Being married to her has made me see things in an entirely different way. 

What do you like least about yourself?
The fact that I’ve kept a huge secret for all these years, a secret that I’ll never tell anyone.

What is the strangest thing your author has had you do or had happen to you?
Becoming a father to a beautiful little girl with Down Syndrome. I had no idea I could love someone so much as my daughter Angel.

Do you argue with your author? If so, what do you argue about?
Though at times I’d like to have a bigger role in each book, when what happened to me was the major plot, it wasn’t at all pleasant.

What is your greatest fear?
My greatest fear is that something bad might happen to Angel. I don’t want anyone to make fun of her, either.

What makes you happy?
Though I love my police work, being with my wife and family is the best part of my life—something I never imagined could be true.

If you could rewrite a part of your story, what would it be? Why?
Definitely, I would like to change what happened in the first book, Final Respects, but if I did, I wouldn’t be in the life I am today.

Of the other characters in your book, which one bugs you the most? Why?
For a long time it was Gordon Butler, a go-by-the book cop and one who managed to get himself into all sorts of awkward, dangerous, and sometimes funny situations. He’s now married, and he’s matured a lot.

Of the other characters in your book, which one would you love to trade places with? Why?
I wouldn’t want to trade places with any of the characters. Right now I’m at the best place in my life I’ve ever been as a husband, father, being a sergeant on the RBPD, and my job as public information officer. 

Tell us a little something about your author. Where can readers find her website/blog?
F.M. Meredith (who is also Marilyn Meredith) has been writing the Rocky Bluff P.D. series and the Deputy Tempe Crabtree series for many years. She once lived in a small beach community like Rocky Bluff and that’s where she first became interested in writing about law enforcement. She’s also a member of two chapters of Sisters in Crime and on the board of the Public Safety Writers Association, and claims many of the law enforcement members as friends and research sources. Learn more about her at her website and blog.

What's next for you?
I have no idea what will be happening with Ryan Strickland in the months to come. Hopefully, I’ll be involved with an interesting case. Something unusual is always happening in Rocky Bluff.

Bones in the Attic
In a small town like Rocky Bluff, personal and professional often overlap, so Detective Doug Milligan is not surprised when his daughter Beth is the one who informs him a body has been discovered.

What is surprising is that the body is in a long-abandoned home that Beth and other students are turning into a haunted house as a fundraiser. The city granted permission for the project as long as it was limited to the downstairs for safety reasons. But one student, Mike Patterson, couldn't resist the temptation to look in the attic.

Detective Milligan stepped carefully a trunk and peered inside. Only a musty unpleasant smell emanated from the contents, not the noxious decomposition odor he'd expected. The skeleton crammed inside was still clothed in the remnants of what may have been pajamas.

Buy Links

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

CHARACTER INTERVIEW--AMERGIN FROM AUTHOR M.L. FOXX'S CELTIC MYST TRILOGY

The Irish Countryside. Close your eyes and imagine the dragons of yore.
Today we sit down for a chat with Amergin from M.L. Foxx’s Celtic Myst Trilogy. 

What was your life like before your author started pulling your strings?
I had a lot of responsibility with the de Dannan clan. It all started thousands of years ago, before the measurement of time.... We lived in Inis Fail, which is Ancient Ireland. Then my author wanted me to tell my story. And so I did, and it took three books to tell all.

Amergin
What’s the one trait you like most about yourself?
I am Amergin, a druid and I am a descendent of the original wise one that placed the elemental power of the lands in the hands of the Tribe of Danu. I'm a wizard charged with the task of providing wisdom and protection for the descendants of the Tuatha de Danann.

What do you like least about yourself?
My liege does not always take my ideas seriously. Though the Danu come from a long line of faeries, my liege is not one. And so he does not always take me at my word and it can take a lot to convince him. And sometimes I have to lower myself to begging for the good of the clan. I do not enjoy that at all. 

What is the strangest thing your author has had you do or had happen to you?
Well, I created a dragon. That was a challenge I tell you. But I was up to the task and Palriad the Magnificent was able to take on the dark dragon of the witch and come out victorious.

Do you argue with your author? 
Not very often, but yes I did. 

If so, what do you argue about?
I wanted to have a mate going through eternity and she said no. So I am a lonely wizard, but I do have my Aibell Brid and her loved ones to watch over and mentor. 

What is your greatest fear?
That Mourdra (that is the witch) will win and I will have lost that which the Gods and Goddesses tasked me with. The protection of the de Dannan’s. 

What makes you happy?
Watching Aibell Brid and her daughter Derdriu dance and play their fiddles. 

If you could rewrite a part of your story, what would it be? Why?
Because it is a trilogy, it is a continuation of the story. I cannot tell what I would like to change because it would be a spoiler for the end of the first book, and it would also end the story before the completion of prophecy. 

Of the other characters in your book, which one bugs you the most? Why?
The fact that Mourdra can see what the de Dannan’s are doing in her Cauldron. And the clan and villagers have no idea when she is going to attack. 

Of the other characters in your book, which one would you love to trade places with? Why?
Cuchulain DubhshlĂ ine because he is a warrior and mortal. He does not have to live forever and protect those from evil forces. He protects his loved ones in battle not through spells and magic.

Tell us a little something about your author. 
Author, M.L. Foxx has lived her life in Utah. She loves the mountains. Someday she’d like to move to Ireland, home of her ancestors. She and her hubby love to travel anywhere. As long as they’re together and it’s an adventure. Her favorite places she has visited is Ireland, Scotland, and Tuscany, Italy.

She loves to hear from fans. This is her first jaunt into Fantasy and Sci-Fi. She loves it. It gives her freedom of choice. She also loves to go to the movies and you got it… Watch The Avengers and Dead Pool, among others.

When not writing or traveling, she is hanging out with family.

PS: She also writes under her own name, Mary Martinez.

Where can readers find her website/blog?

Find M.L. at her website where you can find links to her other social media. 

The Cupán of FlĂşirse 
Celtic Myst Trilogy, Book 1

Forged by the gods, the Cupán of Flúirse is born under the thunder of Taranis, fashioned with symbols of the elements to bring peace and abundance to the clans.

Element of the air, Amergin is a faithful protector and guardian. Through the years, he’s guided the other elements and reigned over times of peace, prosperity, and royal births.

However, the witch Mourdra, is plagued with jealousy over the clans. They hold dear all she desires…and has been denied. The fire dragon and Klenidalf, an evil wizard are tasked to do her bidding, to plunder the clans…and steal the Cupán of FlĂşirse.

Without the sacred chalice, Amergin is condemned to wander the Earth, those he’s vowed to protect out of his reach.

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Sunday, January 26, 2020

CRAFTS WITH ANASTASIA--ZOOLUMINATION AT THE NASHVILLE ZOO


During a recent holiday trip to visit family in Nashville, I had the chance to go to the Nashville Zoo's Zoolumination: Chinese Festival of Lights


This massive lantern event spans more than sixty acres and features more than 500 custom-designed lanterns, along with a life-size North Pole holiday village, acrobats from Zigong, China, and artists who practice traditional Chinese crafts. 


Here are just of few of the incredible exhibits on display. Some of the lanterns are as tall as a four-story building. The dragon is nearly the length of a football field. 


The festival runs through February 2nd. If you’re within a drive of Nashville, you won’t want to miss this extraordinarily breathtaking event.