I’m late with not much to say.

So, instead of a blank page, I’ll just ramble on.

  • I attended a book signing with Clea Simon this past week. It was a fun affair at the Mysterious Bookshop.
  • I’m looking forward to hanging out with several authors in the coming weeks. It will be a fun time for all.
  • I’m having a Book Blast Giveaway on dru’s book musing FB page in November.
  • I will be without this laptop for at least a week. Something is amiss with the motherboard and the fan. 
  • I’m running out of steam.

Do you have any ramblings to tell me?

Dru

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Perfect Thanksgiving Diet Discovered! 
by Debra H. Goldstein

A perfect Thanksgiving Diet has been discovered! No starvation! Not impossible to follow! The Killer Wore Cranberry:  A Fourth Meal of Mayhem guarantees not a pound will be gained this holiday season.

The Killer Wore Cranberry: A Fourth Meal of Mayhem contains recipes from Lisa Wagner and short stories by Big Jim Williams, Lesley A. Diehl, Sandra Murphy, Earl Staggs, Barbara Metzger, Steve Shrott, Rob Chirico, Laird Long, Barb Goffman, and Debra H. Goldstein. I’m thrilled to be in the company of these writers.  Many of them had stories in each of the first three successful The Killer Wore Cranberry books, but three of us are newbies to the series.

Writing my story, Thanksgiving in Moderation, was pure joy with a touch of madness.  The call for submissions required a story that had a Thanksgiving theme and incorporated a Thanksgiving food. Thanksgiving wasn’t an issue, but as you know from my prior blogs, I love to eat and be a dinner guest but I don’t know my way around the kitchen.  Consequently, the first thing I researched was what different dishes are served at Thanksgiving besides turkey.  I was amazed at the possible menu variations.

Living in the South, I gravitated toward greens-especially when I realized “greens” could be any leafy vegetable including spinach, kale, collards, cabbage, broccoli, brussel sprouts, and parsley. Once I had my food, my mind focused on family dynamics. I long ago concluded that no matter how serious a situation is, family dynamics bring humor to it. From that point, the story flowed.  My critique group pointed out a few rough spots and then the story was ready for submission.  I crossed my fingers and looked around for a wishbone. Happily, Jay Hartman’s e-mail accepting Thanksgiving in Moderation granted me two wishes:  inclusion in The Killer Wore Cranberry: a Fourth Meal of Mayhem and a celebratory reason to avoid my kitchen.  

The stories in The Killer Wore Cranberry: a Fourth Meal of Mayhem prove laughter is the best medicine by including, as its blurb explains, “what happens when sisters are pushed over the edge, dentists dine with crime bosses, 1950s private detectives deal with dames and sweet potatoes and a family has a bit of a problem with their future son-in-law.”

The anthology is available from The Untreed Reads Store: http://goo.gl/jl7gCO (best discount), from any store or library ordering from Ingram using ISBN 9781611877403, or from Overdrive as a November promotion.  TKWC truly offers a way to enjoy Thanksgiving food without gaining a pound.  Now, put your fork down and read every word of this Thanksgiving short story and recipe anthology.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~





Debra H. Goldstein’s debut novel, Maze in Blue, received a 2012 IPPY Award. In addition toThanksgiving in Moderation in The Killer Wore Cranberry: a Fourth Meal of Mayhem, her short stories and essays have appeared in Mardi Gras Murder, It Was a Dark and Stormy Night, The Birmingham Arts Journal, Mysterical-E, Kings River Life (November 1, 2014), Bethlehem Writers Roundtable, MORE Magazine online and www.Alalit.com.

The Quantum Relativity Theory of Book Time

by Bethany Maines

Yesterday, Marilyn Meredith discussed why she keeps writing and how her characters keep moving forward which keeps her writing.  As a Great-Grandma and writer she as a unique perspective on the longevity of characters. But I’m only a first time mom and I’m only on my third sequel.  I’m at the start of that journey.  But her post did get me to wondering: how do my characters age?

I solved this problem in with Ariana Grace, my heroine in paranormal noir series, Tales from the City of Destiny, by the simple fact of not having her age.  Welcome to the glory of magic! Solving aging problems since Shakespeare!  And so far my Carrie Mae Mystery heroine, Nikki Lanier, has aged fairly realistically, but sometimes books cannot be written fast enough for a character to keep up with real life. What should I do with her in the future?

Since part of my premise for the book is that her character must evolve and grow, I think it’s a given that she will age.  But should she age at an absolute year for year rate with real life?  I don’t think I can do that.  She’ll be too old for my plots by the time I get around to writing all of them!  Should I work out some sort of complicated formula for aging?  Maybe she ages in reverse dog years?  Or maybe I should just wing it?  Who knew when I had a simple little plot idea about an undercover make up lady that I’d be involved in higher math…

Bethany Maines is the
author of the Carrie Mae Mystery series and 
Tales from the City of Destiny. You can also view the Carrie Mae youtube
video or catch up with her on 
Twitter and Facebook.

When Will I Stop Writing? by Marilyn Meredith

This question has been discussed recently on the DorothyL list. And to be perfectly honest, I’ve had people ask me that question too. Probably because I am old.

Yes, I’m the ancient one of this group. I’ve been around since the beginning of this blog. I’ve been writing nearly all my life, but didn’t get published until 1982 and yes, I was already a grandmother then.

So, now, onto the answer of my question. I can’t imagine not writing. As long as I’m able to sit in front of my computer and new ideas pop into my head I’ll be writing.

One of the reasons I keep on is because the only way for me to find out what is happening to the characters I’ve created is to write the next book.

In the case of Deputy Tempe Crabtree, who is also getting older–though certainly at a slower rate than I am–I want to know when she might consider retiring from the sheriff’s department. And when she does, what will she do next? Will she remain in the small mountain community of Bear Creek or move somewhere else? If she moves, will that mean the end of her interacting with the Indians on the Bear Creek Reservation?

I’d also like to know more about her son, Blair, now that he’s working for the Morro Bay Fire Department. And of course there’s her husband, Pastor Hutch. Moving would mean Hutch giving up his church. Would there be another in his future.

And I’ve got a whole other series about the Rocky Bluff P.D. Those characters are aging much slower than I am, though there have been major changes in nearly everyone’s lives. Am I ready to quit writing about them? Not in the near future, in fact I’m nearing the end of the next book.

I also enjoy the other things that go along with writing. I like interacting with my readers. I enjoy some of the promoting that’s expected. I have cut down a bit on some of the in-person events that I do. I only participate in book and craft fairs where I don’t have to put up a tent and haul a table and chairs. I’ve cut down on the mystery and writers cons if they are too difficult for me to get to–and frankly, I miss seeing the people who attend.

For me writing is a part of who I am, so while I’m still of sound mind I’ll continue.

My latest, of course is in the Deputy Tempe Crabtree mystery series: River Spirits.

It’s available in all formats from the publisher at http://mundania.com/  and all the usual places.

Marilyn

Happy

By Laura Bradford

As the holiday months draw closer, I can’t help but find myself thinking about all of my “can’t-waits.” You know, the decorating, the baking, the wrapping, the music, and on and on.

It all makes me happy. Really, truly happy.

But as much as I adore the holidays and everything they mean, there are lots of things–simple things–that make me happy…

I love the sound of a baby laughing.

I love the sound of a cat’s purr.

I love that very first taste of frozen yogurt.

I love the feel of the sun on my face with the ocean as a backdrop.

I love hearing my children say, “I love you.”

I love photographs.

I love neatness.

I love applesauce muffins fresh from the oven.

I love long walks.

I love the way the song, “And We Danced” by the Hooters makes me smile–instantly.

I love time with my friends.

I love unexpected phone calls from special people.

I love Disney World.

I love that moment when an idea strikes…and you know it can work.

There are so many simple things that make me happy.

What are some of yours?

~Laura

Holiday Gift Giving, the Beatles and Joni Mitchell

By Kay Kendall

Yes, of course, I admit
to rushing the season. Christmas, Hanukkah, and Kwanza are all more than two
months away and here I am, discussing holiday gifts. Although on the one hand I’m
irked at the Christmas decorations going up so early all around Houston, on the
other hand I shopped online today for gifts. It was such a snap that I bought more than half of my Christmas gifts in less than two hours.

Ah, the ease of the
online wishlist. I have battled against the wishlist concept for several years.
Now I’ve succumbed. I give up. I’m going with the times.


If you happen to be over—let’s
pick a number—forty (as I am), then you recall when things were different. You
tried to surprise the gift recipient—surprise and delight. I picked up my joy of
gift giving and wrapping from my maternal grandmother who reveled in every
aspect of gifting. 

In the decades of my boomer youth, I watched her
decorate packages so imaginatively. She could have hired on for Neiman Marcus—a
store back in the day that did elegant gift wrapping. (Their efforts today are
a sad, pale imitation, fie!) What my grandmother could not do—not to save her
very soul—was to keep her gifts a secret. She got so excited that she just had
to give you hints–hints so major you could easily figure out what
your gifts would turn out to be. I took such pleasure in her enjoyment that I
didn’t mind.

Perhaps the idea of
telling Santa what you wanted for Christmas grew into the concept of wishlists.
But the wishlist of today has more power. Woe be to you if you give your under-forty
offspring something that is not on his or her wishlist. I fought against using
wishlists until a few years ago a dear friend said she had given up trying
to surprise her offspring with delightful gifts. Instead she chose from
the dreaded wishlist or gave gift cards. There was no pleasing her
grandchildren or children otherwise. 

This friend’s example was my first glimmer hinting at a mass societal change. A generational difference, clear and simple. And
that’s when I threw in the towel.

But I remember a different
time. I recall a December when I was a graduating high school senior. How I
wanted several Beatle albums and 45s to add to my collection. When any grownup
relative asked what I wanted for Christmas, “Beatles please” was my instant answer.


Meantime my mother and grandmother
would sit in the kitchen making cranberry loaves, fudge, and mounds of cookies…all the while talking about the Christmases of their youths. My mother said she’d been
pleased with mandarin oranges and pecan nuts in the toe of her Christmas
stocking, back in the 1930s. My grandmother recalled helping her mother go into
the farmyard in Ohio and select a goose for neck twisting, in the first decade
of the twentieth century–the holiday meal to be! I loved their quaint tales of
the good old days. (Probably these stories helped grow my lust for history.)

The following week saw
the morning of December twenty-fifth dawning. I went into the living room with
my parents (I, an only child, admittedly a tiny bit or more spoiled). I had expected
to call this my very own Beatles Christmas. But it was not to be. Arrayed in
front of the brightly lit tree was a set of three luggage pieces.

“You’re going off to
college next year,” Mother explained, delight shining in her eyes. “We knew you
could use some nice suitcases.” I murmured what I hope sounded like a sincere
thanks but kept eyeing other presents, looking for the telltale signs of even
one 33-long-play album lying under the tree branches. But John, Paul, George, and
Ringo were nowhere to be found.  

All was not lost however.
My paternal grandparents sent a check that I promptly cashed and turned into
the longed-for Beatles albums. But, oh, the rush of emotion, up and down, the
dramatic upheaval.

Things are so different
now in the high season of gift giving. Well
something’s lost but something’s gained in living every day.
That’s the way
the song goes, Joni Mitchell’s beloved “Both Sides Now.”

So then, what’s your
opinion of the wishlist phenomenon? What do you remember about gift giving and
receiving in the “good old days?” What’s the routine at your house? I’d sure love
to know.

*******
Kay Kendall set her debut novel, Desolation Row—An Austin Starr Mystery,
in 1968, in an 
anti-war group. The sequel is Rainy
Day Women
, set for 2015, and this time her amateur sleuth Austin Starr must
convince police her best friend didn’t murder women’s liberation 
activists in
Seattle and Vancouver. A fan of historical mysteries, Kay wants to do for the
1960s what novelist Jacqueline Winspear accomplishes for England in the
perilous 1930s–write atmospheric mysteries that capture the spirit of the age.
Kay is also an award-winning international public relations executive who lives
in Texas with her husband, three house rabbits, and spaniel Wills. Terribly
allergic to the bunnies, she loves them anyway! Her book titles show she’s a
Bob Dylan buff too. 
*******

Behind the Stone Face

by Marjorie Brody






Dull brown rocks over dusty, dry sand. That’s what you see from the outside.





But if you take the time to get to know her, to see what she’s like on the inside, behind the rough, hard, monochromatic facade and really explore who she is, you’ll be able to see her beauty. 





Tsé bighánílíní, the Navajo name for this part of Antelope Canyon, Arizona, means “the place where water runs through rock”. 




It’s pure. Unadulterated. Unique. Breathtaking. A gift from Mother Nature to teach us about looking beneath the surface. 

How often do we make judgments about individuals based on exterior appearances—it’s just a rock, a hill of dirt? How often do we make judgments based on classifications and stereotypic labels–they’re a Muslim, a Jew, an African American, a democrat, an environmentalist, a homosexual. The list can go on . . . and on . . . and on. 

In fiction, authors may hide what’s beneath a character’s facade for a little while, but eventually, they will point their flashlight into the cracks between the boulders and direct readers toward concealed mysteries. We readers leap into that abyss eager to discover the subtle lights and darknesses of the character’s inner life. We value delving beneath surface actions. We yearn to uncover, to understand, the complex motivations that form the bedrock of the character’s personality. When we meet a persona on the page, a view of his or her external life, by itself, is not sufficient. We demand to experience, with all our well-tuned senses, the character’s heart and soul.

Why can’t we do the same when we meet someone off the page?

Let’s not miss the opportunity to look beneath the surface of our fellow human beings. Sure, we may not always like what we see, but often we’ll find something we can value and/or admire. And just perhaps, looking beneath the surface will enrich our own lives.


Marjorie Brody is an award-winning author and Pushcart Prize Nominee. Her short stories appear in literary magazines and the Short Story America Anthology, Vols. I, II and III. Her debut psychological suspense novel, TWISTED, was awarded an Honorable Mention at the 2013 Great Midwest Book Festival and won the Texas Association of Authors 2014 Best Young Adult Fiction Book Award. TWISTED is available in digital and print at http://tinyurl.com/cvl5why or http://tinyurl.com/bqcgywlMarjorie invites you to visit her at www.marjoriespages.com. 

Circling Back to the Beginning

By Evelyn David
It’s hard to believe, but it’s been almost seven years since
we began The Stiletto Gang. In Evelyn David mystery terms, that’s four books
and eleven novellas. Hard to find the words to say how important it’s been to
us to be in such a warm, supportive community of mystery lovers: authors and
readers. You’ve cheered for us when we’ve had good news to share, listened to
us when we felt the need to rant, and been there when the going got tough. But
the press of family and day jobs has seriously cut into our writing time, so we
made the painful decision to cut down on some of our obligations. This is our
last regularly scheduled blog for The Stiletto Gang.
In that first blog, we drew upon the wisdom of Carolyn Hart,
mystery writer extraordinaire. As she explained, “In my books, the good
guys always win.” So true for us too. Perhaps more than ever, in the
craziness of the real world, we need a space where we know that good triumphs
over evil. So we end as we began. Our wish for you all: a world where the men
are good looking; the women are brilliant and beautiful; the dogs are loyal and
loving … and where the good guys always win.
With much gratitude,
Marian and Rhonda, the collective Evelyn David

Brianna Sullivan Mysteries – e-book series
I Try Not to Drive Past CemeteriesKindleNookSmashwords
The Dog Days of Summer in Lottawatah KindleNookSmashwords
The Holiday Spirit(s) of LottawatahKindleNookSmashwords
Undying Love in Lottawatah- KindleNookSmashwords
A Haunting in Lottawatah – Kindle – NookSmashwords
Lottawatah Twister – KindleNookSmashwords
Missing in Lottawatah – KindleNookSmashwords
Good Grief in Lottawatah – KindleNookSmashwords
Summer Lightning in Lottawatah – Kindle NookSmashwords
Lottawatah Fireworks – KindleNookSmashwords
Leaving Lottawatah – KindleNookSmashwords

The Ghosts of Lottawatah – trade paperback collection of the Brianna e-books
Book 1 I Try Not to Drive Past Cemeteries (includes the first four Brianna e-books)
Book 2 – A Haunting in Lottawatah (includes the 5th, 6th, and 7th Brianna e-books)
Book 3 – Lottawatah Fireworks (includes the 8th, 9th, and 10th Brianna e-books)
Book 4 – Leaving Lottawatah (includes the 11th Brianna e-book and some special features.)

Sullivan Investigations Mystery series
Murder Off the Books KindleNookSmashwordsTrade Paperback
Murder Takes the Cake KindleNookSmashwords Trade Paperback 
Murder Doubles Back KindleNookSmashwordsTrade Paperback
Riley Come Home (short story)- KindleNookSmashwords
Moonlighting at the Mall (short story) – KindleNookSmashwords



Mind Over Murder – KindleTrade Paperback


Zoned for Murder – KindleTrade Paperback


Audiobooks 
I TRY NOT TO DRIVE PAST CEMETERIES

THE DOG DAYS OF SUMMER IN LOTTAWATAH
THE HOLIDAY SPIRIT(S) OF LOTTAWATAH
UNDYING LOVE IN LOTTAWATAH
A HAUNTING IN LOTTAWATAH
MURDER OFF THE BOOKS
MURDER DOUBLES BACK

Free Prizes – 105 Authors – Bake, Love, Write — Cooking, Writing and Me

Free Prizes – 105 Authors – Bake, Love, Write – Cooking, Writing and Me

Even the words themselves make me tremble. Cooking!?   Cookbook!!!!

There are a few things you can always count on from me:  I shoot straight, I have an emotional side but I’m not touchy-feely, and the kitchen is the last room in the house you’d ever expect to find me in.  So, how is it that my most recent published piece is related to cooking?

In fact, who would ever expect me to be telling you how to cook/bake?  And yet, here I am, one of 105 authors in a cookbook. Bake, Love, Write was the brainchild of author Lois Winston. After noticing how often authors and food go together, Lois invited writers to submit dessert recipes and their thoughts on romance and writing. Somehow, she accepted mine and 104 more [including recipes from fellow Stiletto Gang members Kay Kendell and Lynn Calhoon] and edited them into a cookbook.

The recipes in Bake, Love, Write are special, often handed down from generation to generation. My chocolate velvet nut pie recipe has a history, too.  I stole it from a friend of my mother’s and added my own nutty twist. Easy and delicious, it epitomizes the smoothness and richness I find in relationships and good writing.

Speaking of relationships, 30+ of the Bake, Love, Write authors have joined together to sponsor a scavenger hunt giving away over 60 prizes as Halloween treats treats to our readers. Like any good scavenger hunt, from now to Halloween, you’ll race to find Halloween icons on our websites and then report your findings to the master site from which prizes will be awarded daily using rafflecopter.

To start, visit Sloan McBride’s blog at http://sloanmcbride.blogspot.com/  for a list of the prizes and authors and to download the answer sheet.  Visit the live websites shown, find the Halloween graphic and then e-mail your answer sheet to sloanmcbride@gmail.com . Remember, the more authors’ websites you visit, the more prizes you can win.
 
Good luck!   Good eating!

How do you write a mystery?

by Bethany Maines
As I approach the end of my third Carrie Mae Mystery
manuscript (60,000 words and climbing!), I find myself more impressed now by a
basic Nancy Drew, than I was when I was ten. 
My characters are better than when I started writing.  My plotting is infinitely stronger. My grasp
of grammar, may actually have gotten worse, but I do use less adverbs (and I
actually know what they are), but it’s this business of “mystery” that still
perplexes me.  Clues? There should be
some.  But how many? How obvious should
be?  Is that too obvious? Too subtle? How
many suspects are required? Is there a manual somewhere? I could really use a
manual.
Partially, I’ve been avoiding this trouble by not
writing standard mysteries.  I call them
women’s action adventure because I think more mysteries could use a good car
chase.  If you’ve seen Bullitt then you
know that’s a movie that is holding onto its classic status simply on the
strength of its car chase.  (It’s
certainly not the strength of the jazz flute scene.)  But in April my first regular mystery, A
Yearly Murder (working title), will be released and I find myself nervous that
all the mystery aficionados will judge me. 
What if I didn’t put in enough clues?  What if the bad guy is too obvious?  What if I didn’t kill of Reginald creatively
enough?  Serial killers and mystery
writers – the only people who worry about being judged by their dead bodies.
And I would worry about the psychological implications of that if I weren’t too
busy worrying about whether or not I got my forensic research right. 

I hope that you’ll check out A Yearly Murder in April,
and let me know if I got the clue quotient right!



Bethany Maines is the
author of the Carrie Mae Mystery series and 
Tales from the City of Destiny. You can also view the Carrie Mae youtube
video or catch up with her on 
Twitter and Facebook.