Tag Archive for: Edith Maxwell

Baking Up Holiday Yummies

 

Baking Up Holiday
Yummies 
by Maddie Day

Thanks
for having me back to the Stiletto Gang! I’m celebrating the release of
Candy Slain Murder, my eighth Country Store Murder, and I’ll give
away a signed copy to one commenter. I had a two-release month in September,
and Linda kindly agreed to host me as a guest twice, once for each.

Can
you tell this new book is a Christmas cozy mystery? Robbie Jordan has her
country store all decorated for the holidays, and she and her assistants think
up fun Christmas-colored specials to serve, like a spinach-red pepper egg bake.

Of
course, quite a few Christmas cookies make it into the book, too. I grew up
making cookies with my mom, using recipes from both my grandmothers, and
continue to do a lot of baking in December every year. I still make Mexican
Bridecakes, English Butter Cookies, Red Sugar Cookies, red-and-green spiral
icebox cookies, Spritz cookies (otherwise known as Squeeze-Out cookies), and of
course, gingerbread people. Both my sons grew up baking with me, and I love
that the custom keeps getting passed down.

One
year recently my older son and I attempted a Buche de Noel. It was a lot of
work and a bit of a fail.That’s definitely one to buy from a bakery. A
successful non-sweet thing I baked was a cheesy Christmas tree, with
cheese-filled balls of biscuit dough arranged like a tree and sprinkled with
red peppers, parsley, and parmesan cheese. It’s a great holiday party
appetizer, or it was in the days when it was okay for multiple people to touch
the same piece of food (sigh).

Candy Slain Murder includes several recipes, including for
gingerbread people and for Holly Cookies, which are sugar cookies cut with a
holly leaf shaped cutter and dusted with green sugars. I hope you love a taste
of Christmas a couple of months 
early!

Readers: What’s your favorite holiday sweet? Do you bake family
recipes or prefer
to get your cookies at the bakery or at a cookie swap?


In
Candy Slain Murder, Country Store owner Robbie Jordan’s life
seems merry and as bright as the Christmas lights glistening around South Lick,
Indiana – until a man claims to be the long-lost half-brother of Robbie’s
assistant. A fire destroys the home of a controversial anesthesiologist,
exposing skeletal remains in his attic. The twin of the long-dead woman is
murdered. Unavoidably intrigued, all Robbie wants for Christmas is to stop her
winter wonderland from becoming a real nightmare.


Maddie Day
pens the Country Store Mysteries and the Cozy Capers Book Group Mysteries.
Agatha Award winning Edith Maxwell writes the historical Quaker Midwife
Mysteries and short crime fiction. With twenty-three mysteries in print and
more underway, Day/Maxwell lives with her beau and their energizer kitten north
of Boston, where she writes, gardens, cooks, and wastes time on Facebook. She
hopes you’ll find her on social media under both names, on WickedAuthors.com,
and at her
web
site
.

A Change of Scenery

For the next few months, while Linda takes a short break, watch for guest posts featuring new books and authors. 

A Change of Scenery by Edith Maxwell

Thanks so much Linda for having me on as a
Stiletto Gang guest!

I write wearing several hats, although never in
stilettos. My late-1800s
Quaker Midwife
Mysteries

are usually set in Amesbury, Massachusetts, with midwife Rose Carroll catching
babies, hearing secrets, and helping the police catch murderers.  It happens to be where I live, and I’ve done
lots of research about the town’s history.

But I – as Maddie Day – also write a
contemporary series set on Cape Cod. I often rent a Quaker retreat cottage
during the off season and spend a week alone furiously typing away at the work
in progress. The cottage is in West Falmouth, and over the years I have learned
that the town was a veritable hotbed of Friends during Rose Carroll’s era.

So I pretty much had to take her down there for
one of the books. We who set mysteries in small towns always want to try to
avoid Cabot Cove syndrome, where after a while the village gets a reputation
for being a dangerous place to visit because of all the murders.

My most recently released book is Nacho Average Murder, the 7th
Country Store Mystery (also written as Maddie Day). I took Robbie Jordan out of
southern Indiana for that story, having her return to her native Santa Barbara
for

a high school reunion. Regular readers don’t seem to mind, as long as the
author promises to return to the village for the next book.

Here’s the burb for Taken Too Soon, the 6th in the Quaker Midwife series (releasing September
8)
.

Quaker midwife Rose Carroll’s
maiden aunt calls Rose to Cape Cod with her new husband when Tillie’s teenage
ward is found dead. Rose and David’s modest honeymoon turns into a murder
investigation. A Native midwife and her family are among the suspects, as are
David’s own brother and a wealthy local Friend. With the help of the local
detective, Rose digs in the shifting sands of the case until the murderer is
revealed.

I love that I can research two series at once! I
wander around the beaches and the back roads. I smell the air, watch the
ospreys and egrets, see what’s growing and blooming at a certain time of year,
and of course sample locally caught seafood. Who knows, maybe Mac Almeida from
the
Cozy Capers Book Group
Mysteries

will have to get out of town and venture up to Amesbury one of these books

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Agatha
Award winning author Edith Maxwell writes the Quaker Midwife historical
mysteries, the Local Foods Mysteries, the Lauren Rousseau Mysteries, and
award-winning short crime fiction. As Maddie Day she pens the Country Store
Mysteries and the Cozy Capers Book Group Mysteries. Maxwell lives with her beau
and their Energizer kitten in Amesbury, where she writes, gardens, cooks, and
wastes time on Facebook. Find her at
edithmaxwell.com and on
social media.

 

Celebrating the Short Story: the 2016 Agatha Short Story Nominees

by Paula Gail Benson

Malice Domestic has become a wonderful homecoming for me each
year. Held in late April or early May near Washington, D.C. (for the last
several years in Bethesda, Maryland), it celebrates the best in the “traditional
mystery,” written in the style of Agatha Christie, where the emphasis is on
resolving the puzzle of the crime rather than delving into the more gruesome
aspects of the deed.

Excellence is recognized at Malice Domestic by the annual Agatha
Awards, given to living authors for works published during the previous
calendar year. Short stories are included in the nominated categories and this
year’s group of nominees features a group of outstanding writers. Not only are
the authors well-respected and prolific, but also the publications demonstrate
how short fiction is experiencing a new golden age for mystery readers’
enjoyment.

Following are the nominees and links where you may read the
short stories:

Best Short Story:
“Double Jinx: A Bellissimo Casino Crime Caper Short
Story”
 by Gretchen Archer (Henery Press)
“The Best-Laid Plans” by Barb Goffman
in Malice Domestic 11: Murder Most Conventional (Wildside Press)
“The Mayor and the Midwife” by
Edith Maxwell in Blood on the Bayou: Bouchercon Anthology 2016 (Down & Out
Books)
“The Last Blue Glass” by
B.K. Stevens in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine
“Parallel Play” by Art Taylor in
Chesapeake Crimes: Storm Warning (Wildside Press)

Gretchen Archer, who writes the Davis Way Crime Caper series for Henery Press,
uses the setting for her novels,
the Bellissimo Resort and Casino in
Biloxi, Mississippi, for her short story about a holiday host investigating the
death of a slot machine tournament player. Henery Press issued the story in
electronic format on Amazon. Gretchen is a Tennessee housewife, who lives on
Lookout Mountain with her husband, son, and a Yorkie named Bently. Her first
Davis Way Crime Caper, Double Whammy, was a finalist
for the Daphne du Maurier Award and appeared on the USA TODAY Bestsellers List.

Barb
Goffman has won the Agatha, Macavity, and Silver Falchion awards for her
mystery short stories. She received the Silver
Falchion was for her collection, Don’t Get Mad, Get Even. She also has
been nominated for the Anthony and Derringer.
Her nominated story was
published in  Malice Domestic 11: Murder Most
Conventional
. It’s a great joy to see Malice Domestic resume its
practice of issuing short story anthologies, particularly this volume that
concentrates on mysteries at conventions. Barb’s story reveals how the best
laid plans of two honored guests at Malice Domestic can take a bad turn for the
worse.

Edith Maxwell, an Agatha nominated and Amazon bestselling author,
writes two series under her own name (the Quaker Midwife and Local Foods
Mysteries), two under the name Maddie Day, and previously wrote the Lauren
Rousseau mysteries as Tace Baker. Her nominated short story appeared in the
Bouchercon anthology,
Blood on the Bayou:
Bouchercon Anthology 2016
 edited by Greg Herren (Down
& Out Books), and featured her Quaker midwife protagonist, who must solve
the mystery of a death in a New Orleans’ family that has come to Amesbury in
1888.

B.K.
Stevens has published over fifty short stories, most appearing in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine and eleven of which have been collected in Her Infinite
Variety: Tales of Women and Crime
, published by Wildside Press. In
addition, she has written a novel featuring a deaf interpreter, Interpretation
of Murder
(Black Opal Books), and a young adult martial arts mystery, Fighting
Chance
(Poisoned Pen Press). She has won a Derringer and has been nominated
for Agatha, Anthony, and Macavity awards. Her nominated story, published in
Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, was
described by editor Linda Landrigan as: “A young wife finds her life’s
disappointments measured in broken glass.”

Art Taylor, associate professor of English at George Mason
University and frequent contributor to the Washington Post, the Washington
Independent Review of Books
, and Mystery Scene Magazine, won the
Agatha Award for Best First Novel for On the Road with Del & Louise: A
Novel in Stories
. For his short stories, he has won two Agatha Awards, two
Anthony Awards (one for his own short fiction and the other for editing Murder Under the Oaks: Bouchercon Anthology 2015),
a Macavity Award, and three consecutive Derringer Awards. His nominated story,
about a parent’s efforts to protect her child, was published in Chesapeake
Crimes: Storm Warning
.

If
you haven’t already discovered these extraordinary authors, I hope you’ll take
this opportunity to read their nominated work. And, if you already love their
writing, as I do, enjoy these wonderful nominated selections!

Meet the Authors of the 2015 Agatha Best Short Story Nominees!



Each year at Malice Domestic,
writing excellence is recognized by the Agatha awards. This year’s nominees for
Best Short Story are:
“A Joy Forever” (PDF)
by B.K. Stevens (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, March 2015)
“Suffer the
Poor” (PDF)
by Harriette Sackler, History & Mystery, Oh My (Mystery
& Horror, LLC)
“A Killing at the
Beausoleil” (PDF)
by Terrie Farley Moran (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine,
Nov. 2015)
“A Questionable Death” (PDF) by Edith Maxwell, History
& Mystery, Oh My
(Mystery & Horror, LLC)
“A Year Without Santa
Claus?” (PDF)
by Barb Goffman (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine,
Jan./Feb. 2015)



Please enjoy the opportunity to read
these stories, if you haven’t already. We are so fortunate to have with us
today B.K. Stevens, Harriette Sackler, Terrie Farley Moran, Edith Maxwell,
and Barb Goffman.
All are not only fabulous writers, but also delightful people. Thanks, Bonnie,
Harriette, Terrie, Edith, and Barb for stopping by to share your work and
thoughts with us!
Paula Gail Benson
What are your writing habits?
B.K. Stevens
B.K. STEVENS:         Usually,
I spend a lot of time planning, especially if I’m working on a whodunit and
have to make sure all the evidence will come together. I may or may not make some
sort of outline, but I almost always take a lot of notes on the
computer—exploring various plot possibilities, planning clues, writing profiles
of characters and describing their backstories, and so on. Usually, my notes
are much longer than the final story; for the last story I submitted to Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine,
they’re over three times as long. I like to have a clear idea of where I’m
headed before I begin to write, even though I usually end up making lots of
changes during drafting and revising. I draft fairly quickly and try (often not
successfully) to resist the temptation to revise while I’m drafting. Once the
first draft is done, I put it aside for at least a week and then spend a long
time revising and editing. For me, revising always involves a lot of cutting—my
first drafts are always much too long. I try to have at least two projects in
progress at all times. That way, if I get stuck on one, I can put it aside for
a while and focus on the other.
HARRIETTE SACKLER:      Since
I’m involved in many different projects, I write when I can. Once I have a
kernel of a story idea in my mind, I put it down on paper. I do seem
to accomplish more when I’m under deadline. I’m a great procrastinator.
Terrie Farley Moran
TERRIE FARLEY MORAN: I write
seven days a week. I get up every morning leave the house and do some kind of
exercise (walking, visit the gym, water aerobics or bike ride) then I come home
and sit at the keyboard. I write until I break to eat lunch and watch a few
minutes of news. Then I go back to the keyboard until about six o’clock when I go
out for a walk or a bike ride. If I am falling behind on a deadline I write
after dinner until bedtime. Under the heading “writing” I include all writing
related chores: editing, research, website, blog posts, etc. And, of course, I
still try to have an actual life!
EDITH MAXWELL:  I am a full-time
fiction writer now and I treat it like a job. I’m always up by six AM and am
working by seven. Whether I’m working on the first draft of a book, a short
story, or revision, I do my creative work before noon. Then I head out for my
brisk long walkoften plotting the next day’s
scene as I go – and reserve the afternoon for admin jobs like writing blog
posts, arranging author events, and other items of author business. So far it’s
workingI have three multi-book contracts, so
I have to write three books a year, plus one or more short stories.
Barb Goffman
BARB
GOFFMAN:    When I come up with a story
idea—be it organically, or more often, in response to a story call—and don’t
have the time to write the story immediately (that’s ninety-nine percent of the
time), I’ll write some notes about the idea: the beginning, the end, maybe a
bit of dialogue or the voice I hear in my head. Then those notes will sit,
sometimes for a long time, until I find the time to write that story. I prefer
to write in large chunks rather than a few minutes a day, so I can go a long
time between writing stretches when my day job keeps me busy.
Once I
start writing, I’ll write a few paragraphs, then read them out loud, revising
them before I go forward. Any time I take a break or get stuck, I’ll re-read
the last few paragraphs out loud, trying to get a feel for what comes next
(and, of course, revising as I go). While I’m writing a story, I may also sleep
on it, take a short drive, or a hot shower, trying to think on it—consider if I
have plot holes, how I could spice up the dialogue, create a plot twist, and
more. Once I finish, I try to let the finished story sit for a few days (or
longer if I have the time) before I read it again and try to spot and fix any
problems. And then I send the story out to a trusted friend or two for feedback
before I revise once more and then send the story out for submission. (Though I
must admit I’m often so eager to see what my friends think that I may send a
story to them before I’ve cleaned it up perfectly. Letting the story sit for a
few days is hard, even though I know that’s the best way to proceed. I keep
trying to reign myself in. It’s a work in progress.)
How long does it take to plan and complete
a short story?
B.K.
STEVENS:         Generally, it takes a
long, long time. Once in a while, I’ll get an idea, do only a little planning,
and sit down and write the story straight through. That doesn’t happen often,
though—maybe four or five times in the last thirty years, usually for flash
fiction stories, and even then I’ll spend days cutting and revising. Most of
the time, depending on the length and complexity of the story, the whole
process takes several weeks or several months. (But remember, I work on more
than one project at a time.) If I’m not satisfied with a story, I may put it
aside for months or even years until I think of a way to fix it. Right now,
I’ve got a half-written story that’s been sitting in a folder for at least
three years, waiting until I come up with a better murder method.
Harriette Sackler
HARRIETTE
SACKLER:      I’m not one to churn out
stories in a short time. It takes me a while from conception to finished story.
But that feels fine to me.
TERRIE FARLEY
MORAN: I am a very slow writer and writing
is a very contrarian occupation. If I think a story is going to take a long
time to write, it usually gets itself down on paper without a problem. If I
expect the story to be a quick slam dunk, it generally turns out to be
torturous to write. Basically when I see a call for submissions that interests
me, or when I get an idea for a potential story, I tend to think about it for a
good long while. Once I think of a direction the story could take, I begin to
research anything that could possibly relate. I do far more research than
necessary because…I love research. Then I think some more. While all this
thinking and research is going on I am generally working on another project or
two. Eventually I write the story. I don’t outline, I just plunge into it. Of
course if there is a deadline that sets the time frame.
Edith Maxwell
EDITH
MAXWELL:  That really varies. Once the
story emerges in my head, sometimes I can talk it through on my hour walk (see
previous question, and yes, I’m the crazy author lady who talks out loud to
herself on the rail trail). Then I take a day or two to write the first draft.
But the finishing, editing down, and making sure it works can take a lot
longer. And with historical stories set in a real location, there’s always more
research to be done, too.
BARB
GOFFMAN:    It varies. If I get a detailed
idea, I might finish the first draft in a few days. (That’s how I prefer to
proceed. I like to know the beginning, a few high points, and the end before I
start writing. It makes the process easier.) But sometimes I’ll hear a voice in
my head—a story’s beginning—and I’ll start writing. I might write a couple of
paragraphs or a page or two, and then I’ll get stuck, really stuck, because I
have no plot to go with the voice. Those stories can become big problems
because I’ve found my writing flows best when I come up with conflict first and
let character react to it, and the plot unfolds from there. When characters
show up first without the conflict—those are my problem children.
That’s
what happened with my nominated story “A Year Without Santa Claus?” I saw a
call for whodunit stories set in New Jersey. I woke up soon thereafter with the
main character’s voice in my head. I wrote the first page, and that was all I
wrote on that story—for years. Whodunits are hard to write (at least for me). I
needed a mystery and suspects and all that good stuff. I needed a plot in which
my character could solve the crime when the police couldn’t. And I had none of
that. Perhaps three years later, one morning out
of the blue, I had an idea in the shower—a plot that worked. I hurried to my
computer (thank goodness I had the time to write that day and week) and banged
out a solid draft within a few days. So sometimes it takes a few days to come
up with an idea and write a story. Sometimes the planning can take a few years
and then the writing a few days. It’s nice when it all comes together fast.
What shoes would you, your protagonist, or another character from
your story wear to the Agathas banquet?
B.K. STEVENS:         I’ll wear boring,
sensible shoes, because I always wear boring, sensible shoes. Gwen seems like
the type to wear boring, sensible shoes, too. Considering the way the story
ends, though, this time she might just wear stilettos.
HARRIETTE SACKLER:      I’m at the age when comfort is my most
important priority. Gone are the days of high heels and pointed toes.
I’ll be at the banquet in a pair of
strappy and low-heeled shoes.
TERRIE FARLEY MORAN: I intend to wear this pair of MUNRO AMERICAN bright
red shoes. I think Sassy and Bridgy would wear similar bright red shoes but with
fewer straps and a higher heel.
EDITH MAXWELL:  I’m SO not a shoe person. And my Quaker
midwife Rose Carroll from “A Questionable Death” would wear something very
modest, as well. But her unconventional friend and co-conspirator, postmistress
Bertie Winslow? She loves fancy hats and colorful clothes. She’ll wear these
satin embroidered evening slippers to the banquet.
BARB GOFFMAN:    Kyle Coyote, my main character’s security chief, would wear
rocket skates from the Acme Company because when something goes wrong, he needs
to reach his destination fast. Plus, he loves Acme’s innovative products (how
many companies are selling rideable rockets?), despite his boss’s concerns
about defects.
I’ll be wearing open-heeled black
shoes with a tiny heel because I believe in comfort.

WRITING MULTIPLE SERIES: Featuring Edith Maxwell


With this post, I’m beginning to interview authors who write multiple mystery series. My first guest is Edith Maxwell, also known as Tace Baker and Maddie Day, who writes the Lauren Rousseau, Local Foods, and Country Story Mysteries. Her newest series, featuring an 1880s Quaker midwife debuts in April. Welcome, Edith!
Paula, thanks
so much for having me on the blog, and for asking such intriguing questions! I’m
delighted to be here again.
How did you initially decide to write
fiction?
I wrote stories
as a child and then pretty much gave up creative writing for a few decades. It
was my now ex-husband who said, when our younger son had gone off to
kindergarten and I had every morning to myself for the first time in five
years, “You like to read mysteries so much. Why don’t you write one?” Bingo. I
had a small organic farm but didn’t grow anything in the winter, so I set to
work writing a mystery set on an organic farm.
You have published short stories. How
did those help and continue to influence your career?
After I spent
about nine months writing about two-thirds of a mystery novel (which ended up
being my first Local Foods mystery nineteen years later), I reentered the paid
work force. I had a full-time job as a technical writer, with a commute, and
two little boys to raise. I couldn’t really carry a plot and all the characters
of a novel around in my head and write about them during the few snatches of
time I had to myself. Instead I started writing short stories and kept honing
my craft with those until my life opened up enough to write novels again
fifteen years later. Several of my short stories were published in juried
anthologies, and that gave my resume a boost when I proposed a cozy series to
my agent. “Just Desserts for Johnny,” which was inspired by a bad encounter
with a fraudulent press, was published in Kings River Life Magazine and then
was nominated for an Agatha Award for Best Short Story this year!
Who publishes each of your series and
how did you begin writing each series?
When I was laid
off my tech writing job, I started writing my first Lauren Rousseau mystery, Speaking
of Murder
. Barking Rain Press published it almost four years later, and
then published Bluffing is Murder, too.
The Local Foods
Mysteries came about when John Talbot contacted our New England Sisters in
Crime chapter and said he wanted to work with authors to develop cozy mystery
proposals. I queried him about a series set on an organic farm (see above). We
worked on the proposal together and he sold it to Kensington within a week in a
three-book deal. After I wrote Book Three (Farmed and Dangerous), I
proposed the Country Store Mysteries to my Kensington editor. He not only
bought it, also in a three-book deal, but renewed the Local Foods series for
two more books.
I live in an
historic New England town and am a Quaker, and I felt a real calling to write a
series with a Quaker midwife set in the late 1880s. Somewhere in between other
books, I wrote the first in the series, Delivering the Truth, plus a
three-book proposal, and we sold that to Terri Bischoff at Midnight Ink.
How many books do you write in a year
and what is your publication schedule?
I am letting
the small-press Lauren Rousseau Mysteries go dormant, so I now write three
books a year. Two are on a yearly schedule, due January 1 and May 1, but the
Country Store series are on a seven-month schedule. If you think you just heard
a little scream of panic, you are correct, because the due dates sometimes get
kind of nuts. For example, in 2016 I have books due in January, March, and May.
To cope with this I write ahead and work as hard as I can. The January book, Breaking
the Chain
, is all done and I’m halfway through the March book, When the
Grits Hit the Fan
. And I try to remember to breathe! I did leave my day job
two and a half years ago, which is the only way I could pull this off.
Do you write under more than one name?
If so, was that by your choice or a publisher’s request?
The first
Lauren Rousseau mystery was almost accepted by Barking Rain Press when I was
reading my first Kensington contract. It stipulated essentially that I couldn’t
publish any other mysteries as Edith Maxwell, so I convinced them to let me use
a pen name, Tace Baker.
When they
offered me the Country Store Mysteries contract, Kensington said they wanted me
to use a pseudonym. Not my choice, but I wasn’t about to turn down the contract
only for that, so Maddie Day was born. Luckily, the Quaker Midwife Mysteries
are coming out written by Edith Maxwell.
What “relationship” do you have as an
author with each of your series’ protagonists?
Each of my protagonists
have traits, practices, or skills that come from a piece of me or my past. I
love resurrecting some of the things I used to do and now either don’t or can’t.
Lauren is a contemporary Quaker, a linguistics professor, and a runner, the
latter two both things I did in the past. Cam Flaherty is an organic farmer,
and now I get to be back in that world without doing all the hard work of
digging, planting, and harvesting. Robbie Jordan lives in southern Indiana
where I lived while earning a PhD in linguistics, and she’s originally a
Californian, like me. And Rose Carroll, my 1888 midwife, lets me back into the
world of pregnancy and childbirth, which I used to teach to expectant parents
in my living room. She and John Greenleaf Whittier worship in the same lovely
simple Meetinghouse where I walk to worship on Sunday mornings, and Rose lives
in my house, built 1880. I am fond of each of these gals and I get excited when
I can jump back into their lives and start a new story.
Setting has an important role in each
series you write. What is your approach to developing a setting that fuels the
story and draws in readers?
You’re right
about the importance of setting. Whether the 1888 mill town and Carriage
Capital of the World, the academic campus and coastal town of Lauren Rousseau’s
world, the organic farm and small rural Massachusetts town it’s in, or the
scenic hills of Brown County with the local dialect more Kentucky than Indiana
– they each inform the stories and govern how my protagonist acts. These are
all places I either live in or have lived in, although the town of South Lick,
Indiana is entirely fictional. Each of my series would be very different if it
were set elsewhere.
Is it a challenge to keep coming up with
original and inventive plots? How do you do it?
So far plots
have just sort of come to me, and I sure hope that keeps happening. I often
envision the victim and the murder weapon first, and then think about how I can
make that work. Sometimes I don’t know which of the several suspects is the villain
until well into first draft. I will say that attending talks by the Poison
Lady, Luci Zahray, has been instrumental in giving me ideas for murder weapons.
<grin>
Since at the Stiletto gang we like to
delve into shoes and accessories, what are your protagonists’ favorite foot or
carrying apparel?
Cam wears work
boots on the farm, of course, but when she cleans up she likes to put on her
turquoise cowboy boots. She carries a messenger bag decorated with
hand-stenciled crows. Robbie wears sneakers when she cooks breakfast and lunch
in her restaurant, and pairs fun ankle boots with a swirly skirt when she goes
to a party or knee-high leather boots in winter. And Rose wears simple lace-up
shoes (what we would call boots today) and nearly always has her birthing
satchel with her when she goes out (which you can see on the gorgeous cover of Delivering
the Truth
– out in April!).

Thanks again
for having me. I’d be delighted to give away a copy of Flipped for Murder
to one commenter here.
Artist depiction of Edith writing with a scene from one of her novels in the background
Amazon-bestselling and Agatha-nominated author Edith
Maxwell writes four mystery series, as well as award-winning short stories.
Maxwell’s Country Store
Mysteries, written as Maddie Day (Kensington Publishing), debuts with Flipped
for Murder
in October, 2015. Farmed and Dangerous is the latest in
Maxwell’s Local Foods Mysteries series (Kensington Publishing, 2015). The
latest book in the Lauren Rousseau mysteries, under the pseudonym Tace Baker
(Barking Rain Press, 2014), is Bluffing is Murder. The first in Maxwell’s
historical Quaker Midwife Mysteries series, Delivering the Truth, will
debut in April, 2016 (Midnight Ink).
Maxwell lives
in an antique house north of Boston with her beau and three cats. She blogs
every weekday with the other Wicked Cozy Authors (wickedcozyauthors.com), and
you can find her at
www.edithmaxwell.com, @edithmaxwell, on Pinterest, and at www.facebook.com/EdithMaxwellAuthor.

Meet the Authors of the 2014 Agatha Best Short Story Nominees!


Each
year at Malice Domestic, writing excellence is recognized by the Agatha awards.
This year’s nominees for Best Short Story are:
“The Blessing
Witch” (PDF)

by Kathy Lynn Emerson, Best New England Crime Stories 2015: Rogue Wave
(Level Best Books)
“Just
Desserts for Johnny” (PDF)
by Edith Maxwell (Kings River Life Magazine)
“The
Shadow Knows”
by Barb Goffman, Chesapeake Crimes Homicidal Holidays
(Wildside Press)
“The
Odds are Against Us” (PDF)
by Art Taylor, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Nov.
2014
“Premonition” by Art Taylor,
Chesapeake Crimes Homicidal Holidays (Wildside Press)
Please
enjoy the opportunity to read these stories, if you haven’t already. We are so
fortunate to have with us today
Kathy Lynn Emerson, Edith Maxwell, Barb Goffman, and Art Taylor. All are not
only fabulous writers, but also delightful people. Thanks, Kathy, Edith, Barb,
and Art, for stopping by to share your work and thoughts with us!
How do you compare short story writing with
novel writing?
KATHY:
Writing short stories is much
harder. In quite a few cases, it took me longer to finish a short story than it
did to write an entire 80,000 word novel. With at least one story, it took me
years to get it right. When I write novels, they get longer with each revision.
When I revise a short story, it almost always ends up even shorter.
EDITH:
A heck of a lot shorter, for one thing!
When I had two-thirds of a novel in the drawer twenty years ago and then
reentered the paid work force while raising two sons, there was no way I could
carry the plot and characters of a book around in my head and fit them into the
tiny snatches of time I had available to writer. But I could manage a short
story, and wrote nearly a dozen, five of which were eventually published in
juried anthologies. Short stories are simpler. They’re not necessarily easier,
but they don’t take as much time or brain space to complete.
BARB:
For me, writing a novel is like the
long con. I start in one place, and I know that eventually I’ll bring the
reader to another place. But in the middle there will be detours and red
herrings and subplots. I want to keep readers from seeing where we’re going. I
want to fool them. To surprise them. I might set something up in chapter two
that will pay benefits three hundred pages later. That’s the long con.
With a short story, there’s no space
for the long con. I’m writing the equivalent of a bank robbery. I get in, get
the cash, and get out. No detours. No subplots. It’s a quick ride. Sure, short
stories and novels both should have a great beginning and ending and hopefully
a surprise or two, but the way I approach the middle is different.
ART:
Each time I’ve tried to write a full
novel, I’ve struggled with structure and pacing to the point that the results
have always been bumpy at best, dismal at worst—and none of them has seen the
light of day. With my upcoming novel-in-stories, On the Road with Del and
Louise
(coming out this September from Henery Press), I’ve tried to
capitalize on what I think I do well: manage the narrative arc—the structure
and pacing—of a short story, and link those stories together in contribution to
a larger narrative arc featuring the bigger story of these characters. To some
degree, I think I just understand short stories better, for better or worse.
What advice would you give to short story
writers?
KATHY:
Keep it simple. In a short
story there is no room for subplots, information dumps, or complicated
relationships. I’d say limit the number of characters, but that would be a tad
hypocritical since I’ve never managed to follow that piece of advice myself.
EDITH:
Don’t send it in too early. Get the
first draft done and let it stew for a while. Then work to eliminate everything
unnecessary, whether a description that doesn’t move the story forward or a character
you can do without. And then work it over again, polishing, trimming. I’ve seen
a couple of beginning writers dash off a short and send it in (well, I did the
same myself when I was starting out) when it wasn’t quite ready.
BARB:
Read. Read novels. Read short stories.
Read, read, read. It gets your brain moving. It teaches you technique, even if
you don’t realize it as it’s happening. It helps you learn what works and what
doesn’t.
And when you write, keep two things in
mind: (1) Everything in the story should move the plot forward. If a scene or
character can come out without affecting the plot, it doesn’t belong in the
story. (2) But don’t make your plot move so quickly that your main character
doesn’t have the time to react to what’s happening. Reactions are interesting.
They bring the character to life and add richness to the story. So show us her
thoughts, and then move that plot along.
ART:
Write the biggest story you can and
then cut and fold, cut and fold, cut and fold until the only words left are
those that are key to the story—that’s the ideal for me, even I personally feel
like I’m always falling short of that goal. The novelist’s art strikes
me generally as one of accumulation, where the short story writer should
ideally focus on subtraction—the most effect in the fewest words—and training
yourself to see where to cut and combine and condense is a challenge. Beyond
that, read widely in the short story form. There are so so many great
short story writers out there, each of them with different stylistic and
structural approaches, and there’s so much to learn from them and then maybe
apply in your own way to your own craft.
For the Agatha banquet, what kind of shoes would you (or if
you prefer, your protagonist, a character from your story, or your spouse)
wear? [This is, after all, The Stiletto Gang!]
KATHY:
The same ones I wear every
year—black SAS sandals with one-inch heels. Definitely no stilettos. I have
trouble enough walking in the sandals. By rights I should be wearing old-lady-with-arthritis
orthopedic lace-ups!
EDITH:
I’m so shoe impaired in terms of what’s
conventional. I’m trying to come up with a pair of party shoes that aren’t
either stilettos or some version of little-girl shoes. I have short wide feet
and refuse to wear heels, so it isn’t easy! You’re going to have to wait and
see what I find. Maybe we can do a follow up post with a picture of all our
Agatha banquet shoes…
[Edith sent her picture early, so I
wanted to share it. I’ll see if I can get shots of the shoes actually worn at
the banquet!—Paula]
BARB:
Gus, my main character from my
Agatha-nominated story “The Shadow Knows,” wouldn’t go to a banquet. It’s way
too fancy for him. But if he were forced, Gus would wear plain, comfortable
shoes. I’m similar in that respect. My shoes will be black and nearly flat and
above all else, comfortable. I want to enjoy the evening, which means doing
what I can to avoid aching feet.
ART:
I’ve got a pair of suede saddle shoes that
I regularly want to wear (khaki green panel over off-white), but my wife Tara
says they don’t ever match what I put them with, so…. We’ll see if I can ever
come up with a good combination! [Here are Art’s shoes for your viewing pleasure!—Paula]

No High Heels!–Guest blog by Edith Maxwell


Hi, Linda Rodriguez here! Today, I’d like to introduce you to my friend, Edith Maxwell, who writes three wonderful mystery series,  the Speaking of Mystery series (as Tace Baker), the Carriagetown Mysteries, and the great Local Foods Mystery series. Her newest book in that last series, ‘Til Dirt Do Us Part, is out right now.

The
produce is local–and so is the crime–when long-simmering tensions
lead to murder following a festive dinner on Cam Flaherty’s farm.
It’ll take a sleuth who knows the lay of the land to catch this
killer. But no one ever said Cam wasn’t willing to get her hands
dirty.
..


Even
an amateur detective like Cam can figure out that one of the resident
locavores went loco–at least temporarily–and settled a score with
Irene. But which one? With the fall harvest upon her, Cam must sift
through a bushelful of possible killers that includes Irene’s
estranged stepson, her disgruntled auto mechanic, and a fellow CSA
subscriber who seems suspiciously happy to have the dead woman out of
the way.
The
closer she gets to weeding out the culprit, the more Cam feels like
someone is out to cut her harvest short. But to keep her own body out
of the compost pile, she’ll have to wrap this case up quickly.


No
High Heels!

I’m
coming out, right here, right now. Get ready for it: I do not wear stiletto
heels. I do not wear high heels. I do my best to avoid wearing any heels at all
if they aren’t
flat! 
I hope this wont disqualify me from
writing a guest post here, on this blog with so many authors I respect and call
friends (waving to my buds Debra, Linda, Dru Ann, Marilyn, the Sparkles!). I
love you guys. 
But it became clear to me many decades ago that,
despite being less than five feet, two inches tall, heels were not for me. One
reason was comfort. I have wide little feet and hate having my toes pinched.
Another was safety. I want to be able to run if I need to, whether its from threat of
tornado or attacker, whether Im running toward an approaching train or
sprinting away from a falling tree.
Probably the most important reason was my natural
trend toward things, well, natural. We have bodies with feet that rest on the
ground. We are meant to walk heel-toe-heel-toe. Of course I do wear shoes kinda have to for half
of the year in New England (even though Im a native southern
California) and I drive a car, and so on. But I just dont believe in high
heels. For me.  

Im also a long-time Quaker, and we have this
thing called the Testimony of Simplicity, which totally suits my personality.
My path of least resistance is to own one pair of Birkenstock sandals, one pair
of tennies, and one pair of lace-up black suede shoes. Okay, and a pair of fun
knee-high leather boots. Flat-soled boots. And then replace with exactly the same
model every couple of years when a pair wears out. 
Now that Im a published author,
though yikes. I have author events at libraries and
bookstores. Im on panels at conferences. I havent snagged a major award
nomination yet, but hope to, and then Ill be visible at an
awards banquet. And I want to look nice. Respectable. My professional
compromise to date is pair of black clogs, which boost me a hair higher off the
ground but are still almost flat. And Ill confess to ordering
a pair of nearly flat silver sandals for my 
nieces fancy wedding today. But Hank Phillippi
Ryan Im not!

All this non-stilettoing, though? It leaves me more
time to write, which is what makes me happy.

Readers: Are any of you all non-heel wearers? Or do
you prefer to go shoe shopping for the latest stilettos?

 

 

Edith Maxwell writes the  Local Foods Mystery series (Kensington
Publishing), the Speaking of Mystery series under the pseudonym Tace Baker, featuring Quaker linguistics professor
Lauren Rousseau (Barking Rain Press), and the historical Carriagetown
Mysteries, as well as award-winning short crime fiction.

A mother, world traveler, and former technical
writer, Edith lives north of Boston in an antique house with her beau and three
cats. She blogs every weekday with the Wicked Cozy Authors. You can find her
here: 

@edithmaxwell

My Writing Vacation – Or Books I Enjoyed When I Let Myself Read for Fun by Debra H. Goldstein

Many of you know I stepped down from the bench a year ago to give myself the freedom to write during the day.  The results were mixed.  In the beginning, I couldn’t get disciplined enough to do much more than organize my daughter’s wedding, travel, and watch every possible episode of How I Met Your Mother and NCIS. I finally found my writing “legs” and finished a novel that beta readers are now reviewing and wrote and submitted a number of short stories.  Four of them, “A Political Cornucopia,” “Who Dat? Dat the Indian Chief!,” “Early Frost,” and the “Rabbi’s Wife Stayed Home,” were published by Bethlehem Writer’s Roundtable (November 2013), Mardi Gras Murder (2014), The Birmingham Arts Journal (April 2014) and Mysterical – E (April 2014), respectively. At the same time, my 2012 IPPY Award winning mystery, Maze in Blue, was re-released by Harlequin Worldwide Mystery as a May 2014 book of the month.

When I received notice that Maze was reissued and the fourth story had been accepted for publication, I

decided to take a two week vacation from writing and rejoin the world of being a reader.  Some of the books I could have done without (diet books – I’ve gained weight since I decided to write), some were simply okay (a biography of Barbra Streisand), but some proved to be pure fun.  One of the exciting things to me, is that many of the books I really enjoyed were written by authors I have met at various conferences and who, in many cases, have written guest blogs for “It’s Not Always a Mystery.”(http://debrahgoldstein.wordpress.com)

For a good suspense read, let me recommend Hank Phillippi Ryan’s Agatha winning The Wrong Girl.  I read her Mary Higgins Clark MWA winning The Other Woman last year and eagerly was awaiting this book.  Then, I picked up the third book in the Skeet Bannon series written by Linda Rodriguez.  Every Hidden Fear was published the week I took my reading vacation, I couldn’t put it down – each book only has hooked me on Skeet since Linda won the Malice Domestic Best First Traditional Mystery Novel Competition for Every Last Secret.

I wanted to get a little food and farm reading in so I turned to Edith Maxwell’s A Tine to Live, A Tine to Die which I followed with Leslie Budewitz’s Agatha winning Death al Dente. Food wasn’t my only companion during my reading excursion.  I added a little comedy and romance with Kendel Lynn’s Board Stiff.

Much as I enjoy mysteries, I needed to spice up my life with a few good looking men so my bedtime reading was Robert Wagner’s Pieces of My Heart.  Tonight, I’m snuggling up with Rob Lowe’s book, Love Life.  I plan to read fast because tomorrow I’m giving myself back to writing.