Writer, humanist,
dog-mom, horse servant and cat-slave,
Lover of solitude
and the company of good friends,
New places, new ideas
and old wisdom.
The world fell apart in March 2020. I was at a writers
conference in California on the opposite side of the country from home (Alabama). One day
after the start of the conference, I flew home. Two people in the airport wore
masks. The rest of us tried to follow the advice “don’t touch your face.” My nose has never itched so much.
Over the year, my grandson was born . . . without me. Another daughter had to
spend months in the hospital with her dying father . . . without me. Many
people suffered much worse. So far, I have not lost any family. Actually, I’m am
very close to the oldest in what’s left of my family. In the past year, I have
been inside exactly one public place. How bizarre.
My mind has done some kind of trick where I can now see the
death numbers posted on the side of the T.V. without feeling like I can’t
breathe. That’s a good thing, right? Maybe
not. I try to not to watch the tributes to individuals because then I can’t
breathe again.
Where lay the path of sanity? It was a windy one. The muse deserted
me. I could not put pen to paper except
to edit and to write this blog. Fortunately, I had a lot of material to edit,
but the more days that have turned into weeks and month, the drier the well of
creativity seemed. I had finished my police-witch trilogy (book two, House
of Stone) and the eight-year nonfiction project (Behindthe Magic Curtain: Secrets, Spies, and Unsung White Allies of Birmingham’sCivil Rights Days. I finished a rewrite of an old manuscript
and had no idea where to go next. I felt aimless, adrift. Everything had a surreal quality.
The first thing I did that gave me a little peace was plucking
debris and tiny plants from the green moss on the brick walk from the driveway
to the front door. It took hours; its
only purpose was to create a little temporary beauty, but doing it calmed
something inside me.
Then I took up the WW, the war on wisteria, a vine that had
eaten half my back yard and uprooted several trees. This took months of back-breaking
work. Wisteria sends vines out
underground that pop up yards away, making nodes along the way that each grow
deep roots straight down. You can pull up one section, but any piece that
survives can and will repopulate. I learned to know and love a tool called a mattock. Some days I could only do a tiny amount. But the harder I worked and the more exhausted I was, the better I slept and
breathed. But I don’t recommend this as a therapy. Never plant wisteria, at
least not the Chinese or Japanese variety.
The Wisteria War lasted through the summer and into fall. I
decided to let the back yard become a wildflower garden (except for wisteria)
and planted some old seeds that had been sitting out in my garage. We’ll see if they germinate.
One thing I really missed was my twice-weekly martial arts
class. Sometime in November, I decided to learn tai chi, which is practiced
solo. You have probably seen old people doing it in a park. I learned it from Youtube
videos, and whenever I felt trapped or anxious, I went through the movements.
I did it three or four times a day, and it focused me on the present.
Over the winter, I lost my mind and adopted two rescue
horses off the track, a Thoroughbred and a Standardbred—Foxy and Nickie Jones. I
bought Foxy sight unseen from a Facebook picture at a “kill pen” in Louisiana.
Her next step would have been dog food (in Mexico). She is a beautiful bay,
although we’ve been working on a skin infection that even affected an eyelid. It’s
all getting better. Nickie Jones was an older lady who traveled with her but
when she arrived in Alabama, her purchaser backed off because she was injured
and malnourished. So, we took her too. Preparation for their arrival took weeks
of cleaning out the old barn and working on the overgrown arena and round
pen. Focusing on preparing for them and
taking care of them has occupied me and my husband for several weeks now. But I
am smitten!
Then a good friend introduced me to a form of art called Zentangle. It is done on little 3×3 inch pieces of stock paper—tiny art. I
played with it and decided to add colors. Because it is so small, it is not
intimidating like a big canvas would be. I’ve never done any “art thing” beyond doodling, but I’ve always wanted
to. They may not be great masterpieces, but the world fades away when I am working on one.
But still fresh words eluded me. No stories pushing to be born.
Then a friend I never met at that writer’s conference in California (we
were supposed to be on a Law Enforcement panel together) emailed me and asked
if I were interested in submitting a short story to an editor in Australia who
is putting together a crime anthology featuring law enforcement authors and wanted
some submissions from women. I am both of those things—an author and a cop, a retired
one anyway, a short, gray-haired old lady. I agreed to submit a story.
The catch is I had to write it. I had
to create it. I told myself—this is like the tiny art. It’s a short story, not a novel. Even so, I was
totally blank. But I promised, so I had to do it. One word at a time.
I was delighted and surprised that the words came. It’s about a short,
gray-haired old lady who is an ex-cop, a martial artist, and a horse woman who
witnesses a murder. I’ve sent it off. Maybe I’ll do another short story or maybe I have found a character who could support something longer?
I hope this helps you find your way through.
T.K. is a retired police captain who writes books, which, like this blog, go wherever her interest and imagination take her. More at TKThorne.com
COLOR Me Spring – Clicking Our Heels
/in Uncategorized/by DebraCOLOR Me Spring – Clicking Our Heels
Spring is
here! We’re putting away our winter clothing and looking at things in a new
light, so we thought we’d share our favorite colors and why we like them with
you.
T.K.
Thorne – I am attracted to intense colors. Bright yellow, like the
deep yellow daffodils or black-eyed susans, has always been a favorite (in fact
I wrote a children’s short story once about the color yellow that went
missing), but the best is the blue of runways lights and police lights. I have
to make myself look away from the latter, especially when I’m driving, because
they mesmerize me.
Debra Sennefelder – I don’t have a favorite color.
Though I do tend to navigate towards blue for decorating.
Kathryn Lane – I love vibrant colors, purple, red, and orange; yet when I
glance around my living environment and my clothes – I find a lot of blue, in
varying hues from turquoise to navy. There’s a vibrant new blue on the market,
called YInMn blue, that has a chemical makeup of Yttrium, Indium, and
Manganese, making it stunningly bright.
Dru
Ann Love –
Blue – I associate freedom with the color blue.
Saralyn
Richard –
Red. It’s the color of my stilettos!
Robin Hillyer-Miles – My favorite color is this greenish color that I can’t describe,
I only know it when I see it. A couple of years ago I was in the car with my
mom and I pointed to a building and told her that it was my favorite color, she
said that has been my favorite color since I was three years old.
Debra H. Goldstein – Blue. Any shade works for me as I find the color peaceful
whether it is the blue of a blouse or the sea-green blue of water at the beach.
Lois Winston – Black-because it’s so slimming!
Linda Rodriguez – Red and purple – can’t choose just one.
Mary Lee Ashford (1/2 of Sparkle Abbey) – Turquoise blue and I think it’s probably
related to my love of the ocean. I find the color so soothing and serene.
Anita Carter (1/2 of Sparkle Abbey) – I love purple. I also like red and blue,
but purple is my favorite.
Shari Randall – I’m in love with the color of David Austin’s Juliet roses – a
soft and warm peach/coral pink. My daughter and I had similar roses in our
bridal bouquets.
Cathy Perkins – I’m not sure I have a favorite color. Different ones appeal at different times and different situations. Yellow in the winter when the Pacific NW is painted in shades of gray. The vibrant green of spring leaves. Blue sky and water. The pop of power red in accessories…
I Dream in Science Fiction!
/in Uncategorized/by Kathryn LaneBy Kathryn Lane
Fiction
writers take ideas from everywhere, the reason a saying says, “Be careful what
you say around me – I’m a fiction writer.” To prove the point, I’ll paraphrase one of T.S. Eliot’s
quotes: “Good writers borrow; great writers steal.”
Dreams
offer me a favorite reservoir of ideas to borrow. I dream in full technicolor,
and in Spanish and English. Several short stories have come directly from stuff
obtained during my REM sleep.
However,
I was shocked when I had a science fiction dream, complete with language from
an Orwellian future. I read sci-fi, but I’ve never attempted to write it. I do
not have the grasp of physics, astrophysics, astronomy, chemistry, and artificial
intelligence to write convincing sci-fi, so I limit myself to simply reading
it.
Years
ago, I’d read a lot of Ray Bradbury, who said, “Anything you dream is fiction,
and anything you accomplish is science; therefore, the whole history of
humankind is nothing but science fiction.”
Now back to my sci-fi
dream. I was at a
party, complete with fireworks, set in futuristic surroundings. An older couple
left the party and drove away in a self-driving car. In the amorphous
environment of dreaming, I was concerned about them so I called to make sure
they were okay.
I heard an automated voice inform me
through my implanted earphone that “Public driver 00Z1921 was detained by a
squadron of public protectors for bypassing the self-driving controls of
00Z1921’s auto.”
“What’s
the accusation,” I asked.
“Reckless
speeding and endangering the disciples,” the automated voice responded. The voice further instructed me to
locate 00Z1921 at the hostile crisis center.
Still dreaming, I arrived at the center and found the small
self-driving car surrounded by ten hostile-looking storm trooper types.
Then I woke up! Unfortunately,
the dream ended before I learned the outcome of poor old 00Z1921.
Guess I’ve been reading too many futuristic articles
on the speeding up of technological advances resulting from our lockdown, and
those ideas zoomed me into a future time zone!
Or
maybe, as Ray Bradbury might have said, we are all living in a science
fictional world.
***
Do you dream in technicolor?
Do you have dreams set in a sci-fi future?
Kathryn Lane started out as a starving
artist. To earn a living, she became a certified public accountant and embarked
on a career in international finance with a major multinational corporation.
After two decades, she left the corporate world to plunge into writing mystery
and suspense thrillers. In her stories, Kathryn draws deeply from her Mexican background as well as her travels
in over ninety countries.
https://www.kathryn-lane.com
https://www.facebook.com/kathrynlanewriter/
The Nikki Garcia Mystery Series: eBook Trilogy https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08GZNF17G
Photo Credits:
Fireworks: “Looks like the Sky will
bleed with Colors tonight. Wishing everyone a wonderful evening of fun &
excitement!” by williamcho –
licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0
Waymo
self-driving car front view by Grendelkhan – licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0
Storm
Trooper at Oxford by Sheng P. – licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0
Kathryn’s books – designs by Bobbye
Marrs
A blog tour, a sale and a cover reveal!
/in Uncategorized/by Debra Sennefelderby Debra Sennefelder
Happy Monday! Today I have a few things to share with you.
I’m thrilled to share that I’m currently on a blog tour for THE CORPSE WHO KNEW TOO MUCH. I spent last month preparing for the two-week event by writing guest posts, answering Q&As, creating social media graphics and mailing print books to reviewers. For the past few days, I’ve been checking in with each blog that has signed up for the tour to read and answer comments. It’s fun connecting with new readers and answering any questions that pop up. For information about the tour please click here and you’ll be directed to the tour’s main page.
This month my novella, WHAT NOT TO WEAR TO A GRAVEYARD, is on sale for only $0.99. I had such a blast writing this book since it had so many of my most favorite elements – ridiculously high=heeled boots, Halloween and a pup named Billy. Grab your copy today for a fashionably spooky read. 🙂
The fifth book in my Food Blogger series has a cover! Isn’t it beautiful? It’s currently on pre-order and will be released on Sept 28, 2021.
A little about the book:
Food blogging is turning Hope Early into a household name. But the dead body down the block makes her a #1 suspect…
It
seems everyone loves Hope’s blog these days, and she’s busier than ever
volunteering to help other women create their own paths to success. So
she’s shocked when a neighbor petitions to run Hope right out of her
small Connecticut town! Set in her ways, apparently Birdie Donovan
doesn’t like the chaos Hope’s sleuthing creates, the police activity and
crime scenes, and it’s happening way too often lately. Eager to make
amends, Hope bakes Birdie a batch of her best muffins. The delicious
treats might have smoothed things over—until Hope discovers Birdie dead
in her gazebo the very next day…
Now
instead of worrying about holding on to her beloved home, Hope is trying
to stay out of jail. Because suddenly she’s the lead suspect in the
case. Not even her boyfriend, Police Chief Ethan Cahill, is promising he
can clear her name, much less discuss the investigation with her. It’s
up to Hope to get to bake new ground on the case before the lifestyle
brand she’s created—and her whole life—crumbles…
I’m running a pre-order giveaway!
Pre-order
THE CORPSE IN THE GAZEBO between now and Sept 27th and with your
receipt, you will be entered into a giveaway for a Food Blogger apron
and a $10 gift card to either Amazon or Barnes & Noble. Two winners
(shipping to US addresses only & one winner per household) will be
randomly selected.
Email your receipt to:
Preorderthecorpseinthegazebo@gmail.com
That’s all my news! I’d love to know what’s going on with you? What’s your current read? What are you writing? What are you watching?
The Wild City–A Poem for National Poetry Month in a pandemic
/in Uncategorized/by Linda Rodriguezby Linda Rodriguez
As we move beyond the one-year anniversary of our pandemic lockdown and the beginning of National Poetry Month, I’m posting a poem to remind us all that, even if we’re isolated from our social circles, we have companions if we can get outside–even in large cities.
THE WILD CITY
Sprawling across the Kansas and Missouri
River confluence, network of tributaries
woven around bluffs and glaciated hills,
crow-blue in the distance but green, green
as the hearts of trees in the walking,
even today, Kansas City has still-wild parks,
large, well-treed lots, and wooded streams,
homes for foxes, wild turkey, deer, coyote,
interrupting traffic patterns with flight
paths of herons, hawks, and eagles,
a metropolis of small towns linked
by the scent of water and new growth.
Smaller rivers fill out the web
of water that holds the landscape
together, leaf veins feeding surfaces
of green—Blue River, Platte River,
Little Blue River, Little Platte River,
Marais des Cygnes River.
Creeks like Indian Creek, Brush Creek,
Line Creek, First Creek, Second Creek,
Shoal Creek, Willow Creek,
Mill Creek fan out, capillaries
for the breathing system that is the city.
Once, driving along the Little Blue,
I startled at the sudden appearance,
slow flap of huge white wings
banded with black, bright red cap
leading the way ahead of stretched-out
snake neck, legs trailing behind, a legend
rising next to me and taking flight,
whooping crane on migration,
resting and feeding a day or two
in the heart of the city.
When we humans go at last,
by bomb, virus, famine,
disaster, natural or otherwise,
the wild will reclaim Kansas City
in short order, never having completely
released its original hold.
(Published in Cutthroat, a Journal of the Arts, 2016)
The Path to Sanity—T.K. Thorne
/in Uncategorized/by TK ThorneWriter, humanist,
dog-mom, horse servant and cat-slave,
Lover of solitude
and the company of good friends,
New places, new ideas
and old wisdom.
The world fell apart in March 2020. I was at a writers
conference in California on the opposite side of the country from home (Alabama). One day
after the start of the conference, I flew home. Two people in the airport wore
masks. The rest of us tried to follow the advice “don’t touch your face.” My nose has never itched so much.
Over the year, my grandson was born . . . without me. Another daughter had to
spend months in the hospital with her dying father . . . without me. Many
people suffered much worse. So far, I have not lost any family. Actually, I’m am
very close to the oldest in what’s left of my family. In the past year, I have
been inside exactly one public place. How bizarre.
My mind has done some kind of trick where I can now see the
death numbers posted on the side of the T.V. without feeling like I can’t
breathe. That’s a good thing, right? Maybe
not. I try to not to watch the tributes to individuals because then I can’t
breathe again.
Where lay the path of sanity? It was a windy one. The muse deserted
me. I could not put pen to paper except
to edit and to write this blog. Fortunately, I had a lot of material to edit,
but the more days that have turned into weeks and month, the drier the well of
creativity seemed. I had finished my police-witch trilogy (book two, House
of Stone) and the eight-year nonfiction project (Behindthe Magic Curtain: Secrets, Spies, and Unsung White Allies of Birmingham’sCivil Rights Days. I finished a rewrite of an old manuscript
and had no idea where to go next. I felt aimless, adrift. Everything had a surreal quality.
The first thing I did that gave me a little peace was plucking
debris and tiny plants from the green moss on the brick walk from the driveway
to the front door. It took hours; its
only purpose was to create a little temporary beauty, but doing it calmed
something inside me.
Then I took up the WW, the war on wisteria, a vine that had
eaten half my back yard and uprooted several trees. This took months of back-breaking
work. Wisteria sends vines out
underground that pop up yards away, making nodes along the way that each grow
deep roots straight down. You can pull up one section, but any piece that
survives can and will repopulate. I learned to know and love a tool called a mattock. Some days I could only do a tiny amount. But the harder I worked and the more exhausted I was, the better I slept and
breathed. But I don’t recommend this as a therapy. Never plant wisteria, at
least not the Chinese or Japanese variety.
The Wisteria War lasted through the summer and into fall. I
decided to let the back yard become a wildflower garden (except for wisteria)
and planted some old seeds that had been sitting out in my garage. We’ll see if they germinate.
One thing I really missed was my twice-weekly martial arts
class. Sometime in November, I decided to learn tai chi, which is practiced
solo. You have probably seen old people doing it in a park. I learned it from Youtube
videos, and whenever I felt trapped or anxious, I went through the movements.
I did it three or four times a day, and it focused me on the present.
Over the winter, I lost my mind and adopted two rescue
horses off the track, a Thoroughbred and a Standardbred—Foxy and Nickie Jones. I
bought Foxy sight unseen from a Facebook picture at a “kill pen” in Louisiana.
Her next step would have been dog food (in Mexico). She is a beautiful bay,
although we’ve been working on a skin infection that even affected an eyelid. It’s
all getting better. Nickie Jones was an older lady who traveled with her but
when she arrived in Alabama, her purchaser backed off because she was injured
and malnourished. So, we took her too. Preparation for their arrival took weeks
of cleaning out the old barn and working on the overgrown arena and round
pen. Focusing on preparing for them and
taking care of them has occupied me and my husband for several weeks now. But I
am smitten!
Then a good friend introduced me to a form of art called Zentangle. It is done on little 3×3 inch pieces of stock paper—tiny art. I
played with it and decided to add colors. Because it is so small, it is not
intimidating like a big canvas would be. I’ve never done any “art thing” beyond doodling, but I’ve always wanted
to. They may not be great masterpieces, but the world fades away when I am working on one.
But still fresh words eluded me. No stories pushing to be born.
Then a friend I never met at that writer’s conference in California (we
were supposed to be on a Law Enforcement panel together) emailed me and asked
if I were interested in submitting a short story to an editor in Australia who
is putting together a crime anthology featuring law enforcement authors and wanted
some submissions from women. I am both of those things—an author and a cop, a retired
one anyway, a short, gray-haired old lady. I agreed to submit a story.
The catch is I had to write it. I had
to create it. I told myself—this is like the tiny art. It’s a short story, not a novel. Even so, I was
totally blank. But I promised, so I had to do it. One word at a time.
I was delighted and surprised that the words came. It’s about a short,
gray-haired old lady who is an ex-cop, a martial artist, and a horse woman who
witnesses a murder. I’ve sent it off. Maybe I’ll do another short story or maybe I have found a character who could support something longer?
I hope this helps you find your way through.
T.K. is a retired police captain who writes books, which, like this blog, go wherever her interest and imagination take her. More at TKThorne.com
Sixty-Four by Juliana Aragon Fatula
/in Author Life, Uncategorized/by Juliana Aragon FatulaSixty-four years ago, my mother was snowed-in, nine months pregnant with me, and was surrounded by family. My cousins shoveled the driveway for my mom twice and drove her to the hospital or I would have been born at home like my ancestors.
My father worked in Colorado Springs for the Federal Government at Fort Carson as a civilian employee. He carpooled with several men and women from our home town. In 1957 on April 2, my journey began and what a long, strange trip it’s been. My father convinced the State Patrol who were turning traffic around to let his vehicle pass the roadblock on Highway 115. He told the trooper his wife was having their first baby. He had three children from his ex-wife, and my mom had three children from her ex-husband. I was my parents first child together. I’ve always been loved.
Today I’m a mother and wife. My son is 48. My husband is 59 and we’ve been married almost thirty years. Yes, it’s been a long strange trip. I had my son when I was fifteen. I married my husband when I was 34 and he was 31. I’m content to stay home and write and read and study and garden and bake and create herbal remedies.
In the seventies, I wore the label of hippy. Today in twenty-twenty-one, I’m a hippy again being myself and loving life. Just happy to be alive. But I have struggled all of my life with severe depression, so I’m mentally ill, not insane, well a little insane, not dangerous to others or myself, but I get the blues real bad and the only thing that helps me, beside anti-depressants: music therapy. Oh, and puppy therapy, of course. My puppies and kittens keep me feeling loved unconditionally. Even though my parents have been gone for many years, I still feel their presence in my life. My dad lived to be 76. My mom 86.
This year is the last year I can say I’m in my early sixties. Next year I’ll qualify for Medicare and Social Security and will be officially a vieja. A viejita. Although I don’t have any grandchildren, I do have nieces and nephews with children, so I’m technically what is known as a tia abuela, or tia abuelita. Juliana la tia abuelita. I like that label, it fits me.
I wear my hair in waist length braids wrapped in otter furs and leather. Often I wear a beaded headband and silver, copper and turquoise jewelry, I wear moccasins because I like them, always have. I make my own shampoo, conditioner, hair rinse, salve for my arthritis, and medical edibles. I admit it, I love the ganja. I’ve been documenting my journey as an herbalist and a cannabis farmer and it’s legal now.
My father would call me a marijuana. Feminine noun for a woman who likes to smoke, vape, eat cannabis. He wouldn’t understand that I grow it for my aches and pains and depression and fatigue. He grew fruit trees and vegetables. Mom grew flowers, houseplants. Their yard was the garden of Eden. Seriously. Today, my backyard is the sanctuary that keeps me sane and peaceful. I mind my own business, garden, sing, dance, cook, and celebrate my ancestors by telling their stories.
Si se puede. We can do it. We can beat this virus and political nightmare and begin to let the diversity and magic of cultures blend into harmony and healing. I pray for love instead of hate. Wisdom instead of ignorance. Peace instead of war. One world One Love.
This is the year twenty-twenty-one and it’s speeding by like a rocket on its way to Mars. I watch the days zip past and I wonder where all the time has gone. I was once young and vibrant and sexy and silly and scary. I’m still those things only now I can add wise to that list. I’ve learned a few things about life. I’m a survivor and I have a new goal. My goal is to finish The Colorado Sisters and the Atlanta Butcher and then I can feel I’ve accomplished something spectacular. I write poetry. I’m a confessional poet. But my mystery/love story is something different. It tells a story about women fighting for equality in a world dominated by some men who sometimes don’t see women as their equals. But as RGB said, “All I ask is that you take your foot from my neck.”
Wish me luck with my first mystery. I’m determined to write a great story, not a good story, but a great one. Otherwise, why bother, que no?
From Broadway to the Grand Old Opry?
/in Uncategorized/by Lois WinstonBy Lois Winston
Two years ago my younger son, his wife, and their two little boys moved to Nashville when my daughter-in-law’s company decided to transfer their corporate headquarters from Manhattan to Nashville. When that happened, my husband and I no longer had any family we could rely on in the NY Metro area. What would we do if one of us became ill or infirmed? That was a sobering thought.
When I was in my thirties, I helped care for a good friend who had developed Lou Gehrig’s disease. I know all too well what it’s like to single-handedly maneuver a six-foot man from a wheelchair into a car. I could barely manage the feat back then. I’m quite a bit older now, and I know there’s no way I could do what I did back then at this stage in my life.
When we moved to our current downsized house twenty-three years ago, we thought we’d live out the remainder of our days here, but we were now confronted with the prospect of moving out of state. We have two sons—the one in Nashville and his older brother, who lives with his family in the San Francisco Bay area. Real estate dollars go much further in Tennessee than they do in California.
We had decided we’d put our home up for sale once we both had secured vaccinations and the pandemic was behind us. The universe laughs at me at lot, though, and this was one of those times. The first week in March saw multiple news stories about the booming real estate market in towns with good schools and an easy commute into Manhattan. We live in such a town. Demand is high, especially for smaller homes like ours, and inventory is extremely low. Multiple offers and bidding wars are now the norm. The next thing I knew, we were getting our home ready to put on the market.
I’m a Jersey Girl, born and bred. Other than a stint in Philadelphia and its suburbs, I’ve lived my entire life in the Garden State. I love Broadway theater and spending hours wandering through Manhattan’s many museums. I much prefer the Metropolitan Opera House to the Grand Old Opry. Don’t get me wrong, Nashville is very nice. We’ve visited quite often the last two years. But it’s just not where I’d prefer living if I had my druthers.
And then there’s Anastasia. What am I going to do about her? She’s also a Jersey girl. All of the Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mysteries are set in New Jersey and Manhattan. Will she and her family make the move to Nashville? Personally, I think she’s going to dig in her heels and demand to stay put. However, I have time to figure that out. I’m not quite halfway through writing the tenth book in the series. For now, unlike her author, Anastasia doesn’t have to worry about becoming a southern transplant.
~*~
USA Today and Amazon bestselling and award-winning author Lois Winston writes mystery, romance, romantic suspense, chick lit, women’s fiction, children’s chapter books, and nonfiction under her own name and her Emma Carlyle pen name. Kirkus Reviews dubbed her critically acclaimed Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mystery series, “North Jersey’s more mature answer to Stephanie Plum.” In addition, Lois is a former literary agent and an award-winning craft and needlework designer who often draws much of her source material for both her characters and plots from her experiences in the crafts industry.
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Reading with Your Ears–Hooray for Audiobooks!
/in Uncategorized/by The Stiletto GangBy Lynn McPherson
I have to talk–gush–about audiobooks because I’ve been obsessed with them since the beginning of the pandemic. Many of you may be familiar and well-versed on the many wondrous things about them, but for those of you who haven’t yet indulged, I’m here to encourage you to give them a try.
The books in my Izzy Walsh series aren’t available as audiobooks (at least not yet) but some of my Stiletto Gang sisters are, like Debra H. Goldstein. Her Sarah Blair Mystery series is a whole lot of fun and I highly recommend it!
Today, I’m going to share my top three reasons why audiobooks are fabulous.
1. They are a great reason for a walk! I’m always ready to head outside when I’m deep into a fun new mystery. My dog is a fan too because whenever she sees me pull out an earphone it’s guaranteed to be an extra long outing. As soon as I get back inside I inevitably get busy with something else, but walks are my time to dig in. If I had to rely on traditional reading, I’d get through way fewer books!
2. It’s a great way to travel around the world. I’ve devoured all the Carlene O’Connor mystery books I could get my paws on and have been delighted to listen to the lyrical Irish accent in her Irish Village Mystery Series. So much fun!
3. You can listen anywhere, anytime. I mentioned walking but that’s just the beginning. I listen to audiobooks when I’m driving, cooking, and even in the pool!
Hot tip: libraries are an excellent place to discover new authors and/or new series to discover!
Have you been a longtime listener, are you a new fan, or have you yet to try?
Lynn McPherson has worked for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, ran a small business, and taught English across the globe. She has travelled the world solo where her daring spirit has led her to jump out of airplanes, dive with sharks, and learn she would never master a surfboard. She now channels her lifelong love of adventure and history into her writing, where she is free to go anywhere, anytime. Her cozy series has three books out: The Girls’ Weekend Murder and The Girls Whispered Murder, and The Girls Dressed For Murder.
Short Story Anthologies and Markets
/in Uncategorized/by Paula Bensonby
Paula Gail Benson
First,
for short story readers, here are two new anthologies:
The Great
Filling Station Holdup: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Jimmy Buffet (released
February 22, 2021, by Down & Out Books, edited by Josh Pachter) featuring
sixteen stories by
Leigh
Lundlin, Josh Pachter, Rick Ollerman, Michael Bracken, Don Bruns, Alison
McMahan, Bruce Robert Coffin, Lissa Marie, Redmond, Elaine Viets, Robert J.
Randisi, Laura Oles, Isabella Maldonado, Jeffrey Hess, Neil Plakcy, John M.
Floyd, and M.E. Browning.
Masthead: Best New England Crime Stories (released December 18, 2020, by Level Best Books, edited by Verena
Rose, Harriette Sackler, and Shawn Reilly Simmons) is the 18th
anthology containing stories set in the New England states and including the Al
Blanchard Award Winner, Mary Dutta’s “The Wonderworker”. Other featured authors
are: Shannon Brady, Marlin Bressi, Chris Chan, R.M. Chastleton, John Clark, Bruce
Robert Coffin, Sharon Love Cook, Tina deBellegarde, Brendan DuBois, Patricia
Dusenbury, Gerald Elias, John M. Floyd, Debrah H. Goldstein, Judith Green, Maurissa
Guibord, Margaret S. Hamilton, Steve Liskow, Michael Allan Mallory, Jason
Marchi, Ruth McCarty, Adam Meyer, Jen Collins Moore, Lorraine Sharma Nelson, Erica
Obey, Alan Orloff, Olive Pollak, Tonya Price, Michele Bazan Reed, Pat Remick, Harriette
Sackler, Lida Sideris, Shawn Reilly Simmons, Clea Simon, M.J. Soni, Cathi
Stoler, Anne Marie Sutton, Larry Tyler, Bev Vincent, and Cathy Wiley.
Second, for short story writers, here’s a new
publishing source:
Red Penguin Books offers a number of services
for authors: publication, editing, website construction, and marketing. In
addition, Red Penguin Books has a series of anthologies, for mysteries, non-fiction,
fantasies, histories, children’s books, poetry, plays, and paranormals.
Here’s the link to check out deadlines for
upcoming publications:
https://redpenguinbooks.com/upcoming-publications/
Twins and Other Things That Are Born
/in Uncategorized/by CathyPI woke this morning with no clue it was Thursday, much less the third Thursday of the month.
Oops.
Covid-brain, you ask?
Well, the days have certainly run together this year/decade/eternity of a pandemic. But it’s simpler–and tougher–than that. Backing up a moment, my daughter and her husband had twins in December. Talk about a Christmas surprise! Twins don’t “run” in either family, so R & E were a (delightful) shock and were quickly labeled Double Trouble.
(Not my grandchildren, but aren’t they cute? =>)
For the past three months, writing has been especially sporadic, since we’re spending our days tending babies. At first, it was simply they needed more hands. (How on earth did moms do this in the 50s when they were expected to handle all domestic chores alone???) Now, they have to work and even after a year on the waiting list, their day care doesn’t start until July. Yikes!
While I’m the first to say, you have kids when you’re young for a reason, it’s been interesting (the only all encompassing word I can come up with on one cup of coffee) to see all the ways things have changed. Part of me laughs about it, the rest says, seriously, I’m not that old a dinosaur. Of course, snuggling babies and the eternal maternal rock are the same, but now there’s probably an app for everything else. Seriously, there are lactation coaches, sleep assistants on call (but not at 2 AM when you need them), heated cleansing cloths, and an app to track every soiled diaper – including the relevant degree and color of the poop.
I wouldn’t miss this time with my grandchildren. R is a charmer who already knows how to use her engaging smile and bright eyes to entice you to pick her up and play. E – aka Little Man – is more serious, loves jazz as much as I do, and puts much more effort into capturing fingers and toys with his lovely long fingers. (Yes, I’m getting him a keyboard as soon as he can sit up.)
I promised both my daughters I’d never post pictures of their children on social media, a decision I whole-heartedly support. But the coos from the other room says it’s time to load up the stroller and head out.
An award-winning author of financial mysteries, Cathy Perkins writes twisting dark suspense and light amateur sleuth stories. When not writing, she battles with the beavers over the pond height or heads out on another travel adventure. She lives in Washington with her husband, children, several dogs and the resident deer herd. Visit her at http://cperkinswrites.com or on Facebook
She’s hard at work on Peril in the Pony Ring, the sequel to The Body in the Beaver Pond, releasing May 2021!) which was recently presented with the Killer Nashville’s Claymore Award.