Lydia and the Role of Women

Guest post by author Eleanor Kuhns 

Lydia Rees, wife of my detective Will Rees, is an opinionated
and outspoken woman and an equal partner with her husband as they investigate
murders and other crimes. This is not so surprising for modern times but during
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries a woman had no legal status. She owned
nothing and in fact she herself was chattel, belonging first to her father and
then to her husband. The portion she brought to her marriage belonged to her
husband and literally everything she had, including her children and the
clothes on her back, belonged to him. In one of the primary sources I read a
woman divorced one man for another and had to marry in her shift. The clothing
she wore belonged to husband number one and he wanted it back. Fortunately, husband
number two had clothing waiting for her and as soon as they were married she
dressed. 

A woman could not inherit the family home unless her husband
specifically named her in the will. If he did not, she became the burden of her
eldest son. If they had a bad relationship he could, and did, at least
according to some of the histories I’ve seen, put her out to make her own way
on the road.  

This did not mean that women did nothing. Oh no. This was an
agrarian world and a man could not run his farm without his wife’s labor. Farm
wives kept a garden, made butter and cheese, cooked, sewed clothing, cleaned –
and all of this at the same time they dealt with pregnancy and minded their
children. Wives of printers and other professional men frequently helped in the
shop. It is no wonder that many men from this time are buried with two, three
or sometimes more wives. 

Lydia is a former Shaker (or The United Society of Believers
in Christ’s Second Coming to give them their proper name. Shakers was at first
a derogatory nickname based on their physical services – it is a combination of
‘Shaking Quakers’.) The Shakers were a faith begun by a woman, Mother Ann Lee,
and the Shaker Sisters have equal authority with their male counterparts. There
are two Elders and two Eldresses, two Deacons and two Deaconesses for every
Family. Although the work was assigned along traditional gender roles, women
and their labor were considered of equal importance. And in a time when
illiteracy among woman was high (even among men it was almost 50%), the Shakers
educated the girls equally with the boys. (Girls went to school during the
summer, boys during the winter.) So Lydia expects to have a say. 

In Simply Dead, one of my women characters flees to
the Shakers to escape a life of servitude to her family.  Obedience to the rules and celibacy, however, both come with
membership in this faith. When Lydia secretly marries her first husband,
Charles Ellis, and bears a baby she is immediately expelled from the Shakers.
Ellis’s unexpected death causes further legal complications.  

When a person joined the Shakers, he or she signed a
document called the Covenant. In it, they agreed to surrender all their worldly
goods to the community. Charles Ellis is almost a member of Zion; he has not
yet signed the Covenant, but everyone is expecting him to. Then he dies. Because
Ellis leaves his farm to Lydia in his will, the farm the Shakers were expecting
to own, she inherits.  When she marries
Will Rees, the farm immediately becomes his. 

Although Lydia wishes to abide by her first husband’s wishes
and surrender the farm to the Shakers, Rees hesitates. Fortunately for the
family. When they are forced to flee their home in Dugard, they take refuge in
the farm near Zion. (The Devil’s Cold Dish).  In Simply Dead and in the next few books after, the
situation is still not resolved.  I find this a
fascinating problem – and it all revolves around Lydia and her status as wife
(twice), Shaker and widow.
 
~~~~~~~

Eleanor
Kuhns is the 2011 winner of the Minotaur Books/Mystery Writers of America First
Crime Novel.           A lifelong librarian, she received her Masters from Columbia
University and is currently the Assistant Director of the Goshen Public Library
in Orange County New York.

Website URL:
www.eleanor-kuhns.com

Blog URL:
www.eleanor-kuhns.com/blog

Facebook URL:
www.facebook.com/Eleanor-Kuhns

Twitter:
#EleanorKuhns

LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/eleanor-kuhns-36759623

 

 

Your Brain on Words –by T.K. Thorne

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.

Human beings were not designed to read.

When you think about it, the act of reading is an astonishing accomplishment. It’s a complex mix  that involves:

•    Recognizing symbols
•    Relating them to sounds and spoken language
•    Extracting meaning

And we’ve only been reading for a short time (5000 years)—too short for the brain to have evolved for that purpose. The conclusion of scientists is the area of the brain (the left occipital-temporal cortex, if you’re interested) that seems to coordinate this amazing process has reorganized itself to take on the task.

We’ve known from people who have experienced brain damage, such as from a stroke, that the brain can rearrange itself, a process called  neuroplasticity. When one area is damaged, new areas can take on a task that was previously relegated to another area. Researchers have long thought that this flexibility lessens with age. But this region changes even in adults who learn to read, showing that “this area is responsive to learning throughout life.”[Italics mine.]

If you are–[clearing throat]–beyond the stage of youth, as I am, that is very cool news!

But wait, there’s more!

Reading, according to cognitive neuropsychologist David Lewis, is not just a distraction and entertainment. It’s “an active engaging of the imagination as the words on the printed page stimulate your creativity and cause you to enter what is essentially an altered state of consciousness.” In other words, when you read a novel, you become the person you are reading about in a very physical way.

Photo by iam Se7en on Unsplash

Another neurologist Gregory Berns, says, “neural changes associated with physical sensation and movement systems [happen while people are reading and] suggest that reading a novel can transport you into the body of the protagonist. . . . We already knew that good stories can put you in someone else’s shoes in a figurative sense. Now we’re seeing that something may also be happening biologically.”

So there’s a reason why when you’re reading that good book, you loose awareness of the present. Your mind is putting you in the world of the story!

Studies have found that learning new skills, including reading or a second language creates new white matter in the brains of children and adults. White matter acts as a kind of fast neural subway, connecting different regions of the brain to one another. It plays a role in language ability, memory, and visuo-spatial construction.  Diseases of white matter are linked to cognitive and emotional difficulties. (By the way, other activites also result in increases in white matter functioning, including meditation, weight-resistance training, and practicing a musical instrument.)

Since the beginning of time, stories have allowed us to test run situations and experience emotions without the real consequences of living them. Reading may even make us more human, enriching our skills of empathy. One study found that readers of literary fiction excelled at tests involving understanding other people’s feelings.

Reading makes us generally more intelligent. In fact, recent scientific studies have confirmed that reading and intelligence have a relationship so close as to be symbiotic. Reading  increases fluid intelligence)—the ability to solve problems, understand things and detect meaningful patterns. It also helps with reading comprehension and emotional intelligence.

“Reading helps you make smarter decisions about yourself and those around you.”

And here’s a final thought, going back to the idea of the human mind figuring out how to see and process written words by rearranging the organization of our brain. I don’t know about you, but that puts brains pretty high on my list of amazing things. But here’s the mind-blowing part, courtesy of scholar Maryanne Wolf—that reorganization, in turn “expanded the ways we were able to think, which altered the intellectual evolution of our species.

I feel the honor and responsibility of writing something like Last Chance for Justice, the nonfiction story of the Birmingham church bombing case, an incident that changed the path of civil rights around the world. But sometimes I wonder if I am making any kind of difference when I write fiction, and perhaps fellow novelists feel this too. Now we know. As a writers and storytellers, we are helping to make minds healthier, humans more human, and advancing the intellectual evolution of our species.  That’s good enough for me!

T.K. Thorne’s childhood passion for storytelling deepened when she became a police officer in Birmingham, Alabama.  “It was a crash course in life and what motivated and mattered to people.” In her newest novel, HOUSE OF ROSE, murder and mayhem mix with a little magic when a police officer discovers she’s a witch. 

Both her award-winning debut historical novels, NOAH’S WIFE and ANGELS AT THE GATE, tell the stories of unknown women in famous biblical tales—the wife of Noah and the wife of Lot. Her first non-fiction book, LAST CHANCE FOR JUSTICE,
the inside story of the investigation and trials of the 1963 Birmingham
church bombing, was featured on the New York Post’s “Books You Should
Be Reading” list. 


T.K.
loves traveling and speaking about her books and life lessons. She
writes at her mountaintop home near Birmingham, often with a dog and a
cat vying for her lap. 

More info at TKThorne.com. Join her private newsletter email list and receive a two free short stories at “TK’s Korner.

Finishing my manuscript by Juliana Aragon Fatula

Dear Reader,

I’ve been studying herbal medicine and reading books on holistic healing. I want to learn as much as I can about indigenous plants where I live. I use everything I learn from reading to develop my characters. In my manuscript, The Colorado Sisters, my private investigator, LA, learns from her abuelita, her grandmother, how to use plants to make medicine. I’m learning about dosages and experimenting on myself.

I am a lifetime learner and love to read books about astronomy, climate change, politics.

I believe to write well, a person should read lots of books.

I also read books by authors on writing.

I’ve learned a great deal about writing from studying master writers.

Someday, I hope to be a master writer and crank out mysteries.

I feel like an amateur mystery writer and my confidence needs boosting.

I want to go on a writing vacation. I’ll write all day and read all night, undisturbed.

At home, I’m picking grapes, apples, peaches and spending time in my kitchen processing my harvests.

But this winter when the snow flies, I’ll be locked down, writing. I’ll ignore the laundry, the dishes, the cooking and just write. I’ll escape to my room of my own, my friend, Dr. Noel, lets me hide out at her house and leaves me to write. At home, I get distracted by chores.

I know I’ve written about this before. I apologize. I’m trying to work it out by writing about why I put off writing to garden, harvest, process the bounty from my Chicana Garden.

I could just let others pick it and haul it off and do all the work. So I’ve compromised and let my son and his girlfriend pick the apples. If they take the apples and bake pies for me that would be great, but I have a feeling they are too busy to do the real dirty work. So I’ll be peeling, slicing, dehydrating and storing apples for the winter.

My husband is off hunting this month. He provides our meat: elk, deer, moose, that I then have to cook. I can’t just let it go to waste. I have to cook every night because we have a freezer full of game.  Maybe I should just let my husband cook it since he killed it. Sometimes I feel overwhelmed with the amount of work I do to keep him fed and happy.

I’ve decided to leave home when he returns from hunting and let him deal with the apples. I’ve made grape juice, peach juice, pies, zucchini bread…

I’m pooped and I need a vacation. A working vacation where I can write all day, undisturbed. I’ve earned it and I’m going to do it.

My husband and son are going to have to fend for themselves and learn that mom has other priorities besides taking care of them.

I advise my students not to learn to cook so they don’t get stuck in the kitchen. I realize it is my own fault that I’m stuck in the kitchen because I’m a good cook. Y, que?

This mystery isn’t going to write itself. I have a book waiting to be born and my dedication to my craft has to have precedence. I have to set goals and deadlines and finish my story.

This is my life and I am setting boundaries.

Just saying.

All the News!

by Bethany Maines

The last few years have been extremely busy for me in terms of writing and that means that in 2020 all of you will be seeing the results. So I thought we should do a little re-cap of everything that’s happening.  Here is an update on all things Bethany.


THE SECOND SHOT- Release Date: 10.24.19

My romantic suspense novel was named a Pacific Northwest Writer’s Association 2019 Finalist in the Romance category! Although, I have to admit, my love story shares it’s DNA with a mystery-thriller I’m extremely excited and proud of this award.  It was also featured in Frolic – the online magazine for people who love love-stories.  And it has made it onto the Goodreads “Most Anticipated Release for October” List.  This list is voted on by Goodreads readers, so if you’re on Goodreads, please go vote The Second Shot!  AND, last but not least, there’s a Rafflecopter Giveaway for a $25 Amazon Giftcard.  Entering is easy, just go click a few things and follow me on social media and you’re entered!


COMING 2020!

An Unfamiliar Sea – Book 3 of the San Juan Islands Mysteries will be released in January.  
Tish and Tobias Yearly are back to business finding bodies, solving mysteries and delivering death pie to the bereaved.
Shark’s Fin & Peregrine’s Flight – Book 4 of the Shark Santoyo Series, along with a Peregrine Hays centered novella, will be released in late April of 2020. 
Shark and Peri are finally facing down mob-boss Geier and no one is safe.
The Cinderella Secret – Book 2 of The Deveraux Legacy will be released in October.
Aiden Deveraux has a secret – he’s not the Prince Charming he pretends to be and the Deveraux enemies are about to find that out.


PENDING

Short Stories – I have two out on submission – stay tuned for whether or not they get accepted into their respective publications!
Galactic Dreams Volume 3 – After taking a hiatus for 2020, Galactic Dreams, the Blue Zephyr Press Sci-Fairy Tale anthology, will be back in 2021!


Bethany Maines is the award-winning author of the Carrie Mae Mysteries, San Juan Islands Mysteries, Shark Santoyo Crime Series, and numerous
short stories. When she’s not traveling to exotic lands, or kicking some
serious butt with her black belt in karate, she can be found chasing her
daughter or glued to the computer working on her next novel.
You can also catch up with her on Twitter, FacebookInstagram, and BookBub
.

Move Over, Partner!

By Lynn McPherson

I’m in the process of developing a new cozy mystery series.
Part of that is figuring out all the characters. I’ve known for a while who the
protagonist is. But now I need an ally —someone trustworthy enough for her to
share secrets with. How else am I going to bounce ideas off about who the
murderer could be with the readers?

Today I’ve decided to share my top three characteristics in
a sidekick. I’m sure there are lots of ideas. Here are mine:
1.    
Good
Listening Skills!
What is the point of having great insight
if there is no one around to share it with? A sidekick in a mystery must be
willing to indulge the protagonist no matter what they are prattling on about. It
goes beyond the passive ability to hear. The character must absorb what the
sleuth is saying and sometimes even help progress ideas along so they are not
mere musings. The amateur sleuth can either turn them into coherent theories,
or pass them off as sheer observations.
2.   
Loyalty
Of all the qualities in a friend, this one
always tops of the charts. The main character in a cozy needs someone to rely
on through thick and thin. This is especially important in the business of
amateur sleuthing since the protagonist is almost always mixed up in murder!
It’s important for the reader to have faith in the friendship, as well. With so
many suspects on the loose, there should be at least one dependable friend at
all times—someone who will always be there, even when things go awry.
3.   
Humor
Part of the charm of mysteries is the
knowledge that a solution lies at the end of the book. The puzzle will be
solved, order will be restored. Light mysteries require an element of joy that
is brought about through close relationships within the surrounding
community—most notably, with her ever-present true friend and confidante. Why
not make them a funny? It’s a great way to lighten the mood and show the sleuth
doesn’t take herself too seriously all of the time.
So there you have it, folks. My take on what
makes a good sidekick. Agree? Disagree? I’d love to hear your thoughts.
Until then, happy reading! 

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.  


Bethlehem Writers Group

by Paula Gail Benson

Since 2006, the Bethlehem Writers Group has been showcasing short fiction through its online literary journal, the Bethlehem Writers Roundtable (now a paying publication — $20 for featured stories, $10 for other stories, and $5 for poetry — issued quarterly), and through its terrific anthologies, which include:

Each year, the Group holds a short story contest with a celebrity writer judge. Three winning stories receive cash prizes. First place is usually published in the Group’s anthology and the other winners and honorable mentions often are included in the online journal.

I’m proud to say that my story, “Long in the Tooth,” was a third place prize winner the year that Hank Phillippi Ryan was the celebrity judge. It’s also included in the Let It Snow anthology.

If you haven’t already discovered the Group or its Roundtable, please check it out. You’ll discover some delightful reading.

Downton Is Here!

by Shari Randall


It’s here! September 20 – the release date of the new Downton Abbey movie!
How I adored the original series, especially the first episodes. The dishy debut season, complete with scheming Thomas and O’Brien, the Titanic disaster, Lady Sybil’s shocking modernity, and Lady Mary’s “incident” the Turkish ambassador was an Edwardian delight. 
The new movie already has a 79% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, but we’re not going for the story – we’re going because everyone at Downton became our very gossip-worthy friends.
The trailer has many of the faces we’ve come to know and love and be irritated by (I’m looking at you, Mr. Bates) but I’ll still be there, sighing over the clothes, coveting the castle, and laughing as Lady Violet gets in a good dig at Mrs. Crawley.
Are you going to see the Downton Abbey movie?

Gathering

We recently returned from a week at the beach (Pacific NW style – no, it does not include bathing suits!) with our kids and granddaughter.

Whew, what a whirlwind! I did, however, edit all 320 pages of my latest novel.

One of the many things we discussed last week was the upcoming holidays and the chaos of coordinating many, many people’s schedules.

It gets more complicated as we get older, doesn’t it?

But as the holiday season rolls toward high gear, rather than gathering
with my family or writing buddies, this week I’m gathering with my day job peers.
I’m stuck in an Orlando conference center, spying an occasional palm tree
through the window, and trying not to find the Christmas carols, oversized
gingerbread houses, and 80 degree weather too weird.

Between the day job, building a house, dealing with the
flood, keeping an eye on my latest release and promotion–and oh yes! the holidays—writing time
has evaporated. Instead of becoming frustrated, I’ve decided to consider it a
chance to gather my thoughts. To allow the plot points of the next Holly and JC book to simmer. To let the
characters nag at me to tell their story.
Strange as it may seem, I’m looking forward to the six hour
flight back to Washington state when this conference ends. Six hours without
email or a ringing phone. Sounds like writing heaven to me.
What about you, my
writing friends? Are you finding time to write? (Do share how you manage that!)
My reading friends?
Is curling up with a book a respite or a vision as fleeting as a Thanksgiving turkey’s lifespan or a sugar plum
fairy?

Learning about the DAR and the Constitution

by Paula Gail Benson

I remember hearing about the DAR or Daughters of the American
Revolution most of my life. While I had no family who were members, I grew up
in South Carolina, the location of 200 Revolutionary War battles. As a child,
my parents took me on a trip to Washington, D.C. and Virginia to see Monticello, Williamsburg, and Mount Vernon, which was
restored by a South Carolinian, Ann Pamela Cunningham, in the 1850s.

Ann Pamela Cunningham
Cunningham grew up in Laurens, South Carolina. As a
teenager, she was crippled from a riding accident. She never married. During a
time of mounting discord between the states, she devoted herself to raising
money and awareness about the condition of the first President’s home and appealed
to women throughout the nation to help in the restoration effort. With help, she
raised the funds to buy the property and established the Mount Vernon Ladies
Association, the oldest historical preservation society in the United States.
For more information see:
https://www.womenshistory.org/education-resources/biographies/ann-pamela-cunningham

Theodosia Burr
Last week, a dear friend, Gini Abee, invited me to
attend a meeting of her DAR chapter, located in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and
named after Theodosia Burr, the daughter of Aaron Burr and wife of South
Carolina Governor Joseph Alston. (Musical theater enthusiasts will recognize the name
from a beautiful song in Hamilton.)

The
chapter’s projects include historic preservation, education, and commemorative
endeavors. Their program had a “Conservation Minute,” endorsing a “no straw
September” campaign to help eliminate the environmental effect of discarded
plastic straws, and a “National Defense Minute,” highlighting the forever
stamps to be released in February to honor military working dogs. Please check
out the chapter’s activities on their website:
https://www.myrtlebeachdar.org/

I particularly enjoyed the presentation given by
author and constitutional scholar Ron Gragg, who spoke about the work of the
Constitutional Convention and the concerns arising from incorporating the principles of
the Declaration of Independence into the Constitution with care in order to
balance the power of the government with the rights of the individuals. He described George Washington, aged fifty-six when elected President, taking the
oath of office. Gragg said that Washington added the words “so help me God” and, at
the end, bent to kiss the scriptures where he had placed his hand.

What I did not realize was that the Constitution Convention
met for the last time and signed the draft Constitution on September 17, 1787. In
recognition of this anniversary, the Myrtle Beach Chapter will gather to ring a
bell thirteen times, for the original thirteen colonies.


The meeting was a
delightful celebration of the Constitution combined with efforts to help future generations understand the importance of that
document and the history that created it. I’m very grateful to Gini and the
members who welcomed me so warmly. And, this week, I’m proud to join with them
in remembering the signing of the Constitution of the United States.

Gini Abee and Paula Gail Benson (Photo by Michelle Cox)


Countdown to a Joyful Form of Insanity

Countdown to a Joyful Form of Insanity by Debra H. Goldstein

Two things I’ve noticed reading the Stiletto Gang blogs for the past few years is that we are a diverse group of women in terms of ideas and lifestyles and we are a group of overachievers. There isn’t anyone in the group who isn’t over-extended in terms of family, writing, volunteering, handling health issues, teaching, or things I’m not even aware of.  Occasionally, in a post, we bemoan our status or announce we are prioritizing our lives, but the fact is there isn’t anyone whose picture appears on the side panel who ever fully has changed her lifestyle. While there might be some who have learned to balance better than others, the truth is we’re all some version of a Type A personality.

Periodically, I say I’m going to slow down and smell the proverbial roses, but I don’t. Right now, I’m in a countdown to true insanity. As you know, One Taste Too Many, the first of the Sarah Blair cozy mystery series, was published in January 2019. Although it already is up for pre-order, the second book in the series, Two Bites Too Many, will be in stores on September 24. Because of the close sequence of these books, I’ve been feeling mildly pressed.

In the past two months, I’ve turned in the final copy of the third book in the series, celebrated the birth of a grandchild, attended festivals and conferences as I continued promoting One Taste Too Many (btw, Kensington has reduced the e-book to $1.99 through October 1), and started writing blogs and other promotional pieces in anticipation of the release of Two Bites Too Many.

It sounds like a lot, but it works because I do one thing at a time, but even I’m a little nervous about

the next three months. The reality is I’m not good at balancing promotional activities with the other things I need to do. Somehow promotion always takes longer than I anticipate or when I finish a public speaking engagement or attending a conference, I have an adrenaline drop that makes me only want to do laundry or veg out in front of the television.

So what’s on my agenda for the next three months? Family obligations, which always come first; Kensington cozy cons, conferences, speaking engagements; my Birmingham book launch at Barnes and Noble at the Summit 2-4 p.m. on Sunday, October 6 and at Little Professor on October 17 from 4:30-7; the writing of blogs and other promotional pieces tied to the new book or that I write on a monthly basis; trying to make time to work out; and, beginning to write the fourth book in the series (yes, Kensington has contracted for a fifth and sixth book in the series which means there will be more Sarah Blair in 2020, 2021, and 2022).

I don’t think I’ll see daylight until December, but I’m not complaining. In some ways, I thrive on this type of insanity. What about you? What tips you into feeling insane? What makes you happy?