Mystery Mondays: Darlene Foster on Writing Inspiration

This week, it is my pleasure to have Darlene Foster for the second time on Mystery Mondays. In her first post she wrote about Location, Location, Location. And you’ll see location is very important to the Amanda series Darlene writes. But just as important is inspiration. So over to Darlene.

Inspiration by Darlene Foster

I am happy to announce the launch of the fifth book in the Amanda Travels series, Amanda on the Danube – The Sounds of Music. This book was inspired by a magical trip I took down the Danube a few years ago. I recall thinking that Amanda would enjoy this as I passed amazing scenery and walked the cobblestone streets of medieval towns. The thing is when you are a writer, you are always thinking of your next book, especially if it is a series. My character, Amanda Jane Ross, is as much a part of my life as my family and my dog.
I enjoyed writing this book as I wrote much of it while in Spain, so it felt more European. I used my photographs to remind me of things I saw and experienced and did a lot of research. My family background is German so it was fun to include a few German words. I also used to sell Stieff toys so it made sense to include a store that sold them.
In this book, the friendship between Amanda and Leah is tested. This is the first book in which all the parents are included and we learn more about the relationships, especially that of Amanda and her mother. Family is important to me and you will see that it is an integral part of this story.
I guess you could say this book is close to my heart on many levels. I hope everyone loves it as much as I do. As my aunt would say, your fifth baby is just as special as the other four. And before you ask, I am busy working on the sixth book.

Amanda On The Danube: The Sounds of Music

9781771681025Twelve-year-old Amanda Ross finds herself on an elegant riverboat with her bestie, Leah, cruising down the beautiful Danube, passing medieval castles, luscious green valleys and charming villages. When she is entrusted with a valuable violin by a young, homeless musician during a stop in Germany, a mean boy immediately attempts to take it from her.

Back on their cruise, Amanda struggles to keep the precious violin safe for the poor prodigy. Along the way, she encounters a mysterious monk, a Santa Claus look-alike, and the same nasty boy.

Follow Amanda down the Danube, through Germany, Austria and Hungary, as she enjoys the enchanting sounds of music everywhere she goes. She remains on the lookout, wondering just who she can trust.

Who is Darlene Foster?

profile-photoDarlene Foster was brought up on a ranch in southern Alberta, Canada, where she dreamt of writing, travelling the world and meeting interesting people. Following her dreams, she’s now an award-winning author of the exciting Amanda Travels series featuring spunky 12-year-old Amanda Ross who has adventures in unique places.Her books include Amanda in Arabia – The Perfume Flask, Amanda in Spain – The Girl in The Painting, Amanda in England – The Missing Novel and Amanda in Alberta – The Writing on the Stone. Readers of all ages enjoy travelling with Amanda as she unravels one mystery after another.  She is also the author of a bi-lingual book, Pig on Trial/Cerdito a juicio. Darlene divides her time between the west coast of Canada and the Costa Blanca, in Spain. She believes everyone is capable of making their dreams come true.

Mystery Mondays: Christine Verstraete on Entertainment and the Big Crime

Just under two weeks ago, Lizzie Borden, Zombie Hunter was released, and now I have the pleasure of hosting the author, Christine  (C.A.)Verstraete on Mystery Mondays.

Entertainment (and the Big Crime) of 1892 By Christine (C.A.)Verstraete

Developing and fleshing out a character means researching what their life would be like: where and how they lived, what they liked, what they wore or ate, and even the music they listened to or their entertainment interests.

It’s a bit different when your character is based on a real person, especially one as well known as accused murderess Lizzie Borden, lizzie-sm2who was arrested, tried and then declared not guilty of murdering her father and stepmother in August, 1892.

The problem is that even though much is known about her via newspaper reports and crime information of the day, most of it isn’t too personal. There are a few snippets which have come out or can be gleaned from blogs or publications, but much of it is based on conjecture or distant observation, not on first-hand knowledge.

Writing fiction, however, gives you more leeway. After all, giving Lizzie a new life as I did in my book, Lizzie Borden, Zombie Hunter, is certainly far from real. Yet, I did try to stay within the guidelines of her real life situation and the crime. The rest—her actions, likes, personality, even some supposed romantic interests, and of course, the zombies—came from my own imagination.

The interesting part of doing a project like this is researching the time period. There was plenty going on, with crime then as now, deaths (many from morphine abuse), and scandals (Lizzie’s trial becoming the OJ trial of 1892.)

But there also was a big interest in entertainment. Lizzie, of course, is mostly tied up with her trial—and avoiding the gallows—during this time period. But I imagined her also being a big newspaper reader, as most people of the time were then with no other way to get the news.

She not only follows the local papers like the Fall River Herald, but I imagined her reading reports from the nearby Boston Globe. She especially is incensed with the lewd attempts in some publications to heighten publicity about her and her trial. After all, this was “the” story and crime of the day (and the century), and newspapers followed it with a vengeance, seeing it as circulation bonanzas. Readers, if you will, devoured every detail they could get. It was sensationalism at its height. Even nationally, readers couldn’t get enough.

220px-daisybellFor entertainment, sheet music was big with families playing and gathering around the piano. Most everyone knew the words or the tune to songs like Daisy Bell (A Bicycle Built for Two), a big hit in 1892. And it still is a fun song, reminiscent of a much sweeter age, isn’t it?

The lively marches of composer John Philip Sousa had many toes a tapping. What always struck me about older music were the fun titles. You have to wonder what Daddy Wouldn’t Buy Me a Bow-Wow sounded like. (See more musical titles from 1892.)

Live theatre also was a popular pastime for those in better economic positions to buy tickets, just as vaudeville was the entertainment of the everyday person. By 1893, with Lizzie free from jail if not still untainted by scandal, she reportedly did find some solace and freedom in travel and supposedly enjoyed going to the theatre.

In my book, I’m guessing that one play I mentioned , Lady Windermere’s Fan, written by Oscar Wilde, may have hit Lizzie a certain way (or hit too close to home) since it satirized the morals of society. It continues to be produced even now.

Another big theater hit of the time was Charley’s Aunt, which involved an unexpected visit from a rich aunt. It opened in London, had a long Broadway run and enjoyed success worldwide. It still is put on today. (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charley%27s_Aunt and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lady_Windermere%27s_Fan.)

That’s the real fun of writing such a story, I think. It’s learning about, and getting lost in, the details of the time.

Where can you find out more about Christine  (C.A.)Verstraete?

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Add it on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/31553183-lizzie-borden-zombie-hunter

Website: http://cverstraete.com

Blog: http://girlzombieauthors.blogspot.com

Amazon: http://getbook.at/LizzieBordenZombieHunter

About Lizzie Borden, Zombie Hunter by C.A. Verstraete

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Every family has its secrets…
One hot August morning in 1892, Lizzie Borden picked up an axe and murdered her father and stepmother. Newspapers claim she did it for the oldest of reasons: family conflicts, jealousy and greed. But what if her parents were already dead? What if Lizzie slaughtered them because they’d become zombies?
Thrust into a horrific world where the walking dead are part of a shocking conspiracy to infect not only Fall River, Massachusetts, but also the world beyond, Lizzie battles to protect her sister, Emma, and her hometown from nightmarish ghouls and the evil forces controlling them.

Farley’s Friday: Off Leash Dog Play

Farley here,

I’ve got a new friend! Murphy is a big dog who loves to run. He’s pretty young, so he kinda tired me out.

But wow, he was fun in the park. Now that I see his photo, he looks like a black wolf. I saw one once, so I know what they look like. But I wasn’t afraid. I charged forward and tackled him.

Farley Muphy playing

After playing hard, we found a cool spot to relax in the shade. Kristina and Mathew wanted to keep going, but the three of us (Murphy, Piper, and I)  just said no. We needed time to recover from the big run, so they would just have to wait.

Farley laying in grass

Piper even kept up with us. Piper is one week younger than me and was born a block from where I was born on Vancouver Island, so we are literally life long friends.

Woof Woof.

Mystery Mondays: Winter is Coming: My Top 5 Chilling Reads by Elle Wild

strangethingsdone-finalThis week on Mystery Mondays it’s my pleasure to welcome Elle Wild,  winner of the Arthur Ellis 2015 for Best Unpublished Mystery and author of Strange Things Done.

First, congratulations to Elle. Strange Things Done will be released by Dundurn Press on September 24th, so if you’re looking for something noir to read, need a new thriller in your life, check below for the details on her book.  She’s generously shared her top five chilling reads, and didn’t include her own 🙂

Winter is Coming: My Top 5 Chilling Reads by Elle Wild

 This is my favourite time of year: the snap of crisp air, the lingering scent of wood smoke, and the lengthening of shadows. Winter is coming, and I don’t mean that in a Ned Stark kind of way. It’s the season for books, and I can’t wait to stoke the fire and get cosy with a new mystery or a killer thriller.

I just finished The Unseeing by London-based Anna Mazzola, an elegantly written historical mystery in the vein of Atwood’s Alias Grace. I don’t think it’s out in North America yet, but I highly recommend when it is. I’m currently approaching the third act of With Malice, a blisteringly-fast read by Canadian writer Eileen Cook, with echoes of the Amanda Knox story. Next up in my line of spines: Edgar Allan Poe and the London Monster by Karen Lee Street, which looks to me like a perfect fall read. I’ll let you know how it goes.

In the meantime, I thought I’d share my all-time favourite Top 5 Chilling Reads to usher in the cooler weather reading season.

Top 5 Chilling Reads

#1: Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow by Peter Høeg (Smilla’s Sense of Snow in the U.S./Can)

There had to be at least one Nordic noir on the list, right? I love this story about Smilla, a young woman in Copenhagen who becomes involved in the investigation of the death of her neighbour, Isaiah, a child who lived in her building. Smilla is originally from Greenland and is a trained glaciologist, and therefore knows a lot about snow. By looking at the footsteps on the roof of her apartment building, she understands that Isaiah was running away from something, or someone, when he fell from the roof. In short: it wasn’t a suicide, despite what the police might say and the absence of other footprints. I love how moody and evocative Hoeg’s writing is, and the tension between the characters — that sense of hidden turbulence beneath surface conversations, like water under ice.

#2: Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood

This Giller-prize winning novel tells the fictionalized true story of Grace Marks, the 16-year-old servant accused of killing her employer and his housekeeper in Toronto, 1854. The story alternates between Marks’ perspective and that of Dr. Simon Jordan, the physician asked to determine her state of mind, as well as her guilt or innocence. Atwood is a master of shifting perspectives and voices, and I am inspired by her careful layering of character in this work. Marks haunts you long after you’ve stopped reading.

#3: The Luminaries by Eleanor Catton

This sparkling tale won the Man Booker Prize in 2013. The novel takes place in a small, gold-rush town in New Zealand in 1866, and has been described as “Dickens meets Deadwood”. At the outset of the story, a young fortune seeker called Walter Moody unwittingly stumbles into a clandestine meeting in a bar, where locals are trying to solve a series of crimes, including the disappearance of the town’s wealthiest miner. Each character contributes a piece of the story while Moody is tasked with the job of fitting the sections together to make sense of the whole. The trouble is, each character is keeping secrets, holding back parts of the tale. I love the hushed tone of the opening that begins in whispers and steadily builds into the crescendo of loud accusations at the conclusion. Although this novel was 832 pages in length, I felt myself sucked in with Walter Moody and barely noticed the time pass. Others have described how Catton structured the characters as planets rotating in a carefully plotted universe, but for me, I came away with the sense that I had stumbled into the calm eye of a storm and had then been caught up in a tornado of storytelling, spinning along with the other characters. I loved the cold, rain-soaked locale and the prevailing atmosphere of suspicion.

#4: The Dinosaur Feather by S.J.Gazan

Yet another great Nordic noir – this one winning the Danish Crime Novel of the Decade. The story follows the plight of PhD student Anna Bella Nor as she learns that her academic supervisor, Dr. Lars Helland, has been murdered – just before she has to defend her PhD thesis. To make matters worse, a copy of Nor’s thesis was discovered on Helland’s lap when the body was found, drawing the attention of Police Superintendent Soren Marhauge. I love that the noir setting for this story is the dark, twisted labyrinths of academia and the shadowy hallways of the “ivory tower”. Gazan’s artfully constructed characters are both vulnerable and lost, and so terribly self-absorbed that they are barely able to acknowledge one another as human beings. Then there’s the wonderful conflict between scientific process and human emotion

*A word of warning, however: I was completely unable to bring myself to eat meat for a long time after reading this book. Perhaps not ideal for Thanksgiving. Still worth it, though – a pleasingly spooky fall read.

#5: The Little Friend by Donna Tartt

I know that, when it comes to Donna Tartt, most people are all about The Goldfinch and The Secret History, which I also love, but my Tartt favourite is still The Little Friend. Set in the American south, a young girl, Harriet Cleve Dufresnes, sets out to solve the murder of her brother, Robin, who was found hanging in a tree in the backyard of the family’s home ten years earlier, on Mother’s Day. Tartt hooks the reader with her atmospheric opening: you can almost feel the static electricity of the coming storm as poor Robin skips down the steps in flashback to meet his doom. Harriet’s vivid flashes of memory feel like lightning illuminating pieces of an impossible puzzle for the reader, as Harriet sets out to impose a narrative on the chaotic jumble of her memories. The story is a moody exploration of childhood, but one that is haunted by strains of the nursery rhyme, “Who Killed Cock Robin?” This is a perfect read to curl up with during the coming storms.

 So, that’s my five “Big Chills” – but I wish I could have squeezed in a little of Karen Russell’s wickedly absurd Swamplandia (pairs well with a fall paddle around the lake, though it’s more “mysterious” than “mystery”), given a shout out to Michael Chabon’s 40s-nostalgic noir, The Yiddish Policeman’s Union, and served up a slice of Alan Bradley’s outrageously witty mystery, The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, a tasty and autumnal note to end on.

What are you reading this fall?

WHO IS ELLE WILD?

elle_wildELLE WILD grew up in a dark, rambling farmhouse in the wilds of Canada where there was nothing to do but read Edgar Allan Poe and watch PBS mysteries. She is an award-winning short filmmaker and the former writer/host of the radio program Wide Awake on CBC Radio One. Her short fiction has been published in Ellery Queen Magazine and her articles have appeared in The Toronto Star, Georgia Straight, and Westender. Wild’s debut novel, Strange Things Done, won the Arthur Ellis Award 2015 for Best Unpublished First Crime Novel, and was shortlisted in multiple contests internationally. Recently returned from the U.K., Wild currently resides on an island in the Salish Sea named after the bones of dead whales.

 

Strange Things Done

strangethingsdone-final2015 Unhanged Arthur Award for Best Unpublished First Crime Novel — Winner
2014 Telegraph/Harvill Secker Crime Competition — Shortlisted
2014 Southwest Writers Annual Novel Writing Contest — Silver Winner
2014 Criminal Lines Crime-Writing Competition — Shortlisted
2014 Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award — Longlisted

A dark and suspenseful noir thriller, set in the Yukon.

As winter closes in and the roads snow over in Dawson City, Yukon, newly arrived journalist Jo Silver investigates the dubious suicide of a local politician and quickly discovers that not everything in the sleepy tourist town is what it seems. Before long, law enforcement begins treating the death as a possible murder and Jo is the prime suspect.

Strange Things Done is a top-notch thriller — a tense and stylish crime novel that explores the double themes of trust and betrayal.

 

 

 

Mystery Mondays: Call For Guest Blogs

Promoting Reading – Promoting Authors: Take Two

Yesterday, the little computer demon got the better of me. Somehow this post went out and then disappeared. My apologies to anyone who tried the link and it didn’t work 🙂

So, one more time…

Promoting Reading – Promoting Authors

Mystery Mondays began in July 2015. Authors from many genres who write with a hint of mystery have told you about their books, answered your questions about writing and shared their thoughts with you. Every Monday, you’ve be introduced to another author and maybe discovered someone you’re not familiar with.

Are you interested in guest blogging?

I am now accepting guest blog requests for the remainder of 2016 starting on October 24th so if you’re interested contact me here.

If you’d like to participate, here’s what you need to qualify:

  • you are a published author – traditional or Indie or any other way that I don’t know about,
  • you are about to publish and have a launch date within a week of blog post,
  • you want to promote other authors and spread success,
  • you write novels with a hint of mystery,
  • you are willing to engage in the comments section when readers comment on your post.

All I ask from you is that your post is family friendly, you follow my blog, comment on author’s posts and help share via Twitter and Facebook.  If you’re interested send me a message via my contact page.

The Guidelines:

You’ll have to send me your bio, back text of your novel, author photo and book cover. I’d like you to write something about yourself, your novel, your research, a writing tip or a publishing tip. Please keep in mind I am a family friendly blog. I do reserve the right to edit anything I think might be inappropriate for my audience, which I will discuss with you first. I think anything under 700 words is great, but it’s your book so up to you.

I’m looking forward to hearing from you and sharing your novel with the Internet world.

Farley’s Friday: Early Morning Beach Run

Farley here,

Did you know older dogs sometimes don’t like to play with puppies? I don’t understand that.

Check out this puppy I met at the beach. The thing you have to understand about puppies is they jump on you, bite you, paw at you and chase you.

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Their sharp teeth can sting a little, but there’s not much power in the bite. That’s the down side. The fun comes with the excitement a puppy exudes when playing. I can’t resist.

The humans standing around always praise me and comment on how patient I am. I love the praise, so a nip here and there are worth it.

Bring on the puppies!

Woof Woof

Mystery Mondays: Garry Ryan on Being There

Today on Mystery Mondays we welcome award-winning author Garry Ryan of the Detective Lane Mysteries and Blackbird Trilogy. This is Garry’s second time on Mystery Mondays sharing advice.

Being There by Garry Ryan

Nearly everything we experience can become research. This July we drove just over two thousand kilometres to a wedding in Yorkton, Saskatchewan. The driving time became a luxury of boredom. After a while, the imagination gets starved, begins scanning for stimulation.

It gave me time to think about this character (Lauren) I’ve been working on. What makes her tick? As I was driving to ­– then walking around – Yorkton, it got me wondering where Lauren comes from, seeing the world through her eyes.

I found the house she grew up in.

GR1.jpg

There were the railway tracks running through town. The sound of the train horn, the pounding of the locomotives rumbled through her life.

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I sat in a park out back of the RCMP detachment …

GR4

 

… and was able to see the place through her eyes.

GR5

 

In the alley, behind a brick building, I spotted chrome exhaust pipes. A quick walk revealed this barbecue/smoker. Lauren’s character began to form. In some inexplicable way I understood why she is tied to this place, and why she leaves.

When we stopped for gas at the Co-Op on a Friday evening, a young man pulled up in a green Dodge diesel pickup. He revved the engine, creating a noxious black cloud of smoke. Lauren had a strong reaction to his rolling coal. Now I think it might be possible to get back to the novel and react to events as she would.

Over and over again, travel becomes a rich environment for ideas.

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It provides opportunities to breathe life into characters and settings. If you’re sensitive to that kind of thing, Saskatchewan has a definite `feel’. That fact became obvious when I saw these clouds gathering into a storm, it created a real sense for the way the air cools just before, and the way it smells just after. You can only write a scene like that when you’ve been there.

WHO IS Garry Ryan?

Garry  PhotooSince 2004 Garry Ryan has published nine novels with NeWest Press. The second, The Lucky Elephant Restaurant, won a 2007 Lambda Literary Award. In 2009, Ryan was awarded Calgary’s Freedom of Expression Award.

http://www.garryryan.ca

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Mystery Monday: Views From a Reviewer (Michelle Dragalin)

Today on Mystery Mondays we are doing something a little different. Michelle Draggling is here to gives us her views on reviewing novels.

Mystery Book Reviewer

My name is Michelle Dragalin. I am a writer first and foremost, but I love to read mysteries, of any type. Many years ago I learned that one way to get new books, learn about new authors and read different genres within the mystery realm was to review books. This gives me a way to review the book and to learn how various authors write really great books.

Mystery books fall into several categories, my favorites are cozy mysteries, mysteries written by two authors that I like, thrillers and young adult mysteries. Now if you go to wikipedia or a publication site, they will divide mysteries into various different and diverse categories. Their categories are completely different, but this is how I define my categories.

As a result, I review mystery books for a few publications that deal with different sites, authors and categories. Some publications have public relations individuals whose primary job is to deal with reviewers so that they can promote their authors on various sites, blogs and within a reviewers’ social media followers. In addition to reviewing books on my site, I also assist authors in launching their books. In that case I work directly with the author and receive a hard cover book (advance review copy). I set up a site, a feed and sometimes I have set up a Facebook page for the book and then close it once the launch is concluded.

Mystery books are great! I enjoy them for the most part, but occasionally I read a book that it takes forever to go through, even if I liked the author’s previous book. In this case, there are four main reasons I don’t like the book:

  1. The story is s .. l .. o .. w. The movement of the book doesn’t move and the action is so typical that I could write the book.
  2. The main character is the exact same as another character or it is so obvious that                                 this character could not find their way out of a paper bag.
  3. The whole story has been written before or there is not a hook to keep me                                          interested.
  4. I don’t like the book.

If a book falls into one of these categories, I hate to write a review because I know how hard the author and publisher has worked to get the book to this point of completion. For this reason, I rarely review self published books, unless I know the author personally. Most books that go through a publication have several stages before they are published and as a result tend to read better. However, there are authors that are self published that I do review and like very much. So it sometimes a toss up as to how much I will like a book.

Another aspect is that I learn about new authors in the mystery genre. These authors are new, but they write mysteries with a new twist. Consequently, I get really excited because I know that I am one of the first people to get to know their work.

Sometimes, I get to know authors because they will follow me on Goodreads, Amazon or one of my social media sites. There are authors who will not let individuals review their books, again for a variety of reasons. They usually include, they are so well known that they don’t need the exposure, other reviewers have sold their books or they have been burned by a reviewer. Some well know authors who are trying to break into a new genre or style will try to have a reviewer read and then post the review so they can sell the book. Thus convincing the publisher to give them a contract for more books in that genre.

Finally, I have never received payment for reviewing book, other than to get a copy of the book. This is a very hot button for authors and public relation people. Something that I am not going to get into within this post. However, I do like reviewing books and there are some that I really enjoy.

WHO IS Michelle Dragalin?

MDA Christian, writer and a teacher.   All of my interests wrap around, intersect and mesh with these areas of my life.   I have linked (almost) all of my social media sites so we can share our opinions.  I like to write about educational technology, education, do book reviews, and the great outdoors.

You can find Michelle at  her site.

 

 

Farley’s Friday: Can a dog help a human write?

Farley here,

Did you know it takes a human a long time to write a novel?

Kristina is working on a novel she’s calling EVOLUTION. She says there are several dogs in this book. One of them is a wheaten terrier, just like me.

“Is his name Farley,” I woof.

“Nope,” Kristina says. “Farley was in BLAZE, so he can’t be in EVOLUTION. The dog’s name is Jasper.”

I sigh. I don’t see why my name can’t be used in all her books and not just BLAZE.

She’s typing words, but I want to go for a walk. I figure if I sit on her, she’ll work faster.

Farley on lap

Not sure my theory is working…

Woof Woof