Tag Archive for: Luck

Ready to Double Down?

“Double Down” used to
mean a calculated gamble – and maybe it still does. The technique certainly can
increase the odds of winning. These days the term can mean anything from a bold
decision to an increased resolve to stick to a position. Of course, it can also
be a media euphemism with huge political overtones about certain
statements, but that’s a different discussion.

What do the words have to do with books?

Lots!  DOUBLE DOWN, a story set in the Holly Price mystery series world, is my newest release.


While this story was fun to write, I have a couple of confessions to make:  
People always ask authors where we get our story ideas. Confession #1 – The premise for this story was a given. A group of us challenged
each other to write a story where luck changed the protagonist’s life.  Of course, for a mystery writer this means someone is likely to die. That isn’t the life changing event. 

Really. 
Characters are as
important as the plot in my stories. My heroine, Maddie Larsson, leapt onto the page. The
inspiration for Maddie came from a friend’s daughter—a single parent who works
in a casino as a blackjack dealer. Maddie’s determination to forge a stable
life for herself and her son draws the admiration of one of the casino’s gamblers, attention that
changes her life for the better but also threatens to ruin—or end—it.
I wrestled a bit with the male lead character. So many readers
wanted to see JC Dimitrak’s side of events (JC is the hero in So About the
Money
, book 1 in the series) I decided to put him in charge of the
investigation. Maybe he was a little too charming since my beta readers …well, telling you would be a spoiler.


Confession #2 – I
didn’t know anything about gambling. Honestly, I don’t understand the
attraction but clearly it’s a popular pastime. Fortunately I had a willing
“resource” (aka my friend’s daughter) to teach me the basics and give me
insight into the dealers’ world.

Take all that and place your bets – DOUBLE DOWN releases
October 23
rd
Murder isn’t supposed
to be in the cards for blackjack dealer Maddie Larsson. Busted takes on a new
meaning when her favorite customer, a former Poker World Tour champion, is
murdered. His family claims—loudly and often—Maddie is the gold-digging
murderer. She better prove she’s on the level before the real killer cashes in
her chips. 
If the victim’s body
had been dumped five hundred yards up the road, Franklin County Sheriff’s
Detective JC Dimitrak wouldn’t have been assigned to the Tom Tom Casino murder
case. Instead, he’s hunting for suspects and evidence while dealing with a
nemesis from the past and trying to preserve his own future. He better play his
cards correctly and find the killer before an innocent woman takes the ultimate
hit.
Special release week pricing! 
Amazon       B&N      Kobo      iBooks  
An award-winning author of financial
mysteries, Cathy Perkins writes twisting dark suspense and light amateur sleuth
stories.  When not writing, she battles with the beavers over the pond
height or heads out on another travel adventure. She lives in Washington with
her husband, children, several dogs and the resident deer herd.

Find out more or sign up for her newsletter at http://cperkinswrites.com 

The Box Set Funeral

Box sets have been a marketing staple in the publishing
industry, but a lot of people are ready to call the technique dead and bury it.
Queue the band and plan the funeral.
Or not.
The opportunities presented by setting up a box set remain
as numerous—and practical—as ever. The sets offer a chance to collaborate with
other authors to reach a different group of readers. 
In well run ventures, many
hands mean a combined promotional effort that expands the reach of an
individual. And on a practical level, the book is already written, so the set
adds another potential income stream.
Genres sets tend to perform better than literary sets,
especially if the books share a similar audience. Many of the current box sets
share a theme, setting, or type of hero/heroine.
Does that mean you should dive into the next set you hear
about? 
Probably not. 
From the author’s perspective, understand why you’re joining
the set and who you’re teaming with. Are their readers potentially your
readers? On a more personal level, will the other members of the team pull
their weight and take responsibility for their marketing or preparation tasks? Other
decisions include financial management of royalties and/or required buy-in of advertising
dollars.
Let’s say you’ve considered the options and assembled a
team, chosen a theme and established a time line. What’s not to like about this decision?

The biggest criticism of the box sets is the same disdain leveled
at other forms of “cheap marketing”—i.e. free or very inexpensive books. 
“They
devalue the written word.” 
“They’re destroying the industry.
Yeah, yeah, the sky is falling.
There’s also the naysayers’ claim the book hoarders simply
snap up the inexpensive sets and place them on their e-reader, where they
disappear among the pixels. 
That may happen. But there are also readers who dip
and sample through the set (or even better, voraciously read all the stories).
And they just might tell their friends about a new –to-them author (you!).
Because word of mouth marketing is still the best kind.
I’m sure you’re surprised to hear I joined a box set that
released this week. LUCK OF THE DRAW features thirteen brand new stories centered
on a life-changing stroke of luck. (Special release week price at Amazon
My contribution to the set is DOUBLE DOWN. Murder isn’t supposed to be in the cards for blackjack dealer
Maddie Larsson. A single mom, struggling to make ends meet, dealing
at the Tom Tom Casino pays better than anything else she’s currently
qualified to do. Busted takes on a new meaning, however, when her favorite
customer, a former Poker World Tour champion, is murdered. His family
claims—loudly and often—that Maddie is a gold-digging murderer. She better
prove she’s on the level before the real killer cashes in her chips.
If the victim’s body had been dumped five hundred yards up the
road, Franklin County Sheriff’s Detective JC Dimitrak wouldn’t have been
assigned to the Tom Tom Casino murder case. Instead, he’s hunting for suspects
and evidence while dealing with a nemesis from the past and trying to preserve
his own future. He better play his cards correctly and find the killer before
an innocent woman takes the ultimate hit.

Feeling Lucky – Friday the 13th by Debra H. Goldstein

FEELING LUCKY – FRIDAY THE 13TH by Debra H. Goldstein

Walk under a ladder, admire the black cat that runs across my path, and not carry a lucky penny, rabbit’s foot, or charm are all things I’m going to do today. It’s Friday the 13th, probably one of the most feared and safest days when it falls. This year, 2015, the 13th day of the month falls on Friday in February, March and November.

According to Wikipedia, my main source of factual information for today’s blog, there is dispute as to when it truly became such a superstitious day. Some say the Middle Ages, others the 19th century, but all agree that it became a popularized day of fear through literature. Although it was mentioned in an earlier published biography, the 1907 book Friday the Thirteenth by Thomas W. Lawson, in which a broker uses the superstition of the day to create a Wall Street panic, was the first bestseller to dwell on the date. More modern books to capitalize on Friday the 13th include John J. Robinson’s Born in Blood: The Lost Secrets of Freemasonry (1989) and The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown (2003).

Wikipedia references a study by the Ashville, North Carolina Stress Management Center and Phobia Institute as estimating seventeen to twenty-one million people in the United States are impacted by fear when the 13th falls on a Friday. These people avoid normal business activities, traveling, “or even getting out of bed.”

Not me. I have enough things happen on other days that Friday the 13th is simply one more day – good or bad. Hopefully, because of everyone else’s fears, I can get a discount on an airline ticket, be safer on the roads because people tend to drive more carefully on Friday the 13th, and not worry about a bucket of paint dropping on me when I walk under that ladder because my painter opted to stay home. I know already that I’m lucky – you’re reading this blog.

Tell me, are you afraid of Friday the 13th? Have any Friday the 13th experiences to share?