Monday, April 30, 2012

Scene of the Crime with Author Patricia Stoltey!


Having been born and raised in central Illinois, when I saw a book titled The Prairie Grass Murders, I had to pick it up. Not only is most of the book set close to my roots, I discovered that the author grew up there, too. That's when I knew I had to contact Patricia Stoltey.

Patricia Stoltey
Patricia has written two mysteries featuring former Miami judge Sylvia Thorn and her brother Willie Grisseljon, a Vietnam veteran who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. Stop by tomorrow for my review of the second book, The Desert Hedge Murders which takes place in one of my favorite Arizona spots: Oatman.

Before we get to the interview, here are a few links just in case you'd like to learn more about this talented author:





What was the very first book you remember reading and loving? What makes that book so special?

I remember The Bewitched Caverns by Leona Train Rienow, which I probably discovered about 2nd grade in the library of the country grade school I attended 1st through 8th grades. I don't remember much about the story except it was about prehistoric cave dwellers, but there was something that stayed with me and still gives me a warm feeling when I think of the book cover. What I do remember is exactly the way the bookshelves looked in all the classrooms because that's where I spent so much of my "study" time.


Outside of your writing and all associated commitments, what do you like to do in your free time?

Reading for fun ranks very high on my list. I also enjoy "reality" television, movies (mostly on DVD), going out to breakfast or lunch at some of my town's wonderful restaurants with my husband or friends, crocheting, and watching Katie Cat's crazy antics. I also hope to get back into gardening this year, something I've neglected two summers in a row.


If I were to visit your hometown, where would you recommend that I go? (I like seeing and doing things that aren't in all the guide books.)

Sunrise, Cache la Poudre River
My hometown is back in central Illinois where I lived on a farm between Champaign and Mahomet. These days when I go back, I'm there to visit family or for a class reunion, so I'm a little out of touch. I'd recommend The Museum of the Grand Prairie near Mahomet's Lake of the Woods for those who are interested in Illinois history. The University of Illinois Arboretum and trial gardens is a perfect excursion for those with a green thumb.

If you ever travel to Northern Colorado where I live now, you'll find so much to do you won't ever want to leave. The sculpture gardens in Loveland, the Colorado State University trial flower gardens, and a drive west of Fort Collins along the Cache la Poudre River are high on my list of favorites.



You have total control over casting a movie based on your life. Which actor would you cast as you?

Sandra Bullock
I'd definitely choose actress Sandra Bullock.


Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

Probably Lee Child's Jack Reacher is first, although Sophie Littlefield's Stella Hardesty is so close behind it's practically a tie.










Name one book that you've read that you wish you had written. What is it about that book that made it come to mind?

I'm back to Sophie Littlefield again. I love Sophie's writing style and her main character so much, that I wish I'd written A Bad Day for Sorry. When an author can write that her protagonist "Stella Hardesty dispatched her abusive husband with a wrench shortly before her fiftieth birthday," and now helps other women by adjusting the attitude of their abusers, then you have the makings of a great series.


How did you celebrate when you first heard you were to be published? What did you do the first time you saw one of your books on a shelf in a bookstore?

I learned I'd sold The Prairie Grass Murders in late 2005, and I remember my writers' group took me out to dinner at a nice Italian restaurant. The first time I saw one of my books on a shelf in a bookstore was at my first book signing. I felt like crying (with joy, of course), but I smiled (big goofy smile) instead.

I don't know if you've seen it, but I love Parnell Hall's video about book signings. What is the most unusual experience you've had at a book signing or author event?

Parnell Hall has a wonderful sense of humor, doesn't he? I avoided a lot of the horrors of lonely signings by working with a panel of Colorado mystery writers in 2007-2009. At least when no one showed up, we had each other to talk to.

The best experience I had was at a two-day holiday craft fair right after Thanksgiving 2010. A regional rural electric coop had just favorably reviewed The Prairie Grass Murders in their magazine and a lot of shoppers remembered. It was amazing timing and resulted in excellent sales for the two days. The worst experience was one of my few solo signings when I sat for two hours with no one to talk to and a bowl of Hershey's Kisses in front of me. I ate all of them, just like a kid at Halloween, and then felt very sick.


What's the best thing about eBooks? What's the worst?

The best thing is being able to carry a whole library in my purse when I travel. I have my Kindle loaded up and ready to go. The worst thing? I'm not sure there is a worst thing...unless the airlines forbid use of an e-reader during flight (although I don't really know since I haven't checked yet). I also would tend to want a print book for nonfiction, especially when doing research. I like the ability to flip back and forth, read chapters out of order, and mark pages with Post-It notes in different colors.

On Sale Now!



Thank you so  much for spending this time with us, Patricia. We certainly appreciate the opportunity to get to know you a little better!

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Patricia gave me this information about her books:

"Five Star and Harlequin have declared The Desert Hedge Murders out of print, but there are still copies available through online booksellers. I also have hardcovers plus a few paperbacks for sale. The novel will be available as an ebook for Kindle and Nook later this year.

Readers can contact me through my blog if they wish to order a signed copy of The Desert Hedge Murders or The Prairie Grass Murders. My e-mail contact is on my blog's profile."

The link for Patricia's blog is at the beginning of this post, and I can testify to the fact that, although the publishers may say her books are out of print, they are easily obtainable-- and well worth it!

Don't forget to stop by tomorrow when I'll be reviewing The Desert Hedge Murders!

Sunday, April 29, 2012

May 2012 New Mystery Releases!

I love this time of year. Everything seems to be blooming, I get to sit in my back garden and watch baby birds learn the ropes, the pool water's warming up.... Bliss!

The only trouble I have is in trying to figure out where the time went. Any of you have that problem?

I also have a problem narrowing down my list of new mystery releases to twelve. It hurts to cut any out, yet I don't want a post that's five miles long. (2¾ miles will do nicely, thank you!)

Here is my May list of the books that I can't wait to get my hands on. As usual, the books are grouped by release dates, and I've included the information you'll need to find them at all your favorite book spots. Hopefully I've chosen a title or two that you just can't do without. (I don't want to be alone....) Happy reading!


=== May 1 ===


Title: Getaway
Standalone
ISBN: 9781616952402
Publisher: Soho Press
Hardcover, 320 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books!

From the back cover: "Michelle Mason tells herself she’s on vacation. A brief stay in the Mexican resort town of Puerto Vallarta. It’s a chance to figure out her next move after the unexpected death of her banker husband, who’s left behind a scandal and a pile of debt. The trip was already paid for, and it beats crashing in her sister’s spare room. When a good-looking man named Daniel approaches her on the beach, the margaritas have kicked in and she decides: why not?

But the date doesn’t go as either of them planned. An assault on Daniel in her hotel room, switched cell phones and an encounter with a “friend” of Daniel’s named Gary gets Michelle enmeshed in a covert operation involving drug runners, goons, and venture capitalists. Michelle already knows she’s caught in a dangerous trap. But she quickly finds that running is not an option. If she’s not careful, she’ll end up buried in the town dump, with the rest of the trash. Now she needs to fight smart if she wants to survive her vacation."


Series:#1 in the Vintage Kitchen mysteries set in Michigan
ISBN: 9780425248010
Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime
Mass Market Paperback, 304 pages

From the back cover: "When vintage cookware and cookbook collector Jaymie Leighton spies an original 1920s Hoosier brand kitchen cabinet at an estate auction, it’s love at first sight. Despite the protests of her sister that the 19th-century yellow-brick house they share in Michigan is already too cluttered with Jaymie’s “junk,” she successfully outbids the other buyers and triumphantly takes home her Hoosier.

But that night on the summer porch where they’ve left the Hoosier to be cleaned up, a man is murdered, struck on the head with  the steel meat grinder that is part of the cabinet. Who is this stranger—and what was he doing on their porch? Does his death have anything to do with the Hoosier?

As the police struggle to determine the man’s identity, Jaymie can’t help doing a little digging on her own, accompanied by her three-legged Yorkie Poo, Hopalong. But in her bid to uncover the truth about the hidden secrets of the Hoosier, Jaymie may be the one who ends up going, going…gone."


Series: #2 in the Professor Bradshaw mysteries set in Seattle in the early 1900s
ISBN: 9781590586143
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press
Paperback, 250 pages

*Upcoming review of the first in the series, A Spark of Death, on Kittling: Books!

From the back cover: "Seattle, 1901. The race to win an electrical competition incites Professor of Electrical Engineering Benjamin Bradshaw's obsession for invention in the second entry this exciting historical series. The contest winner's telephonic system will deliver music from the Seattle Grand Theater to homes throughout the city, and Bradshaw is confident he can win.

The contest is in full swing when President McKinley is assassinated, casting Bradshaw and the entire nation into shock. Then Bradshaw uncovers a crime closer to home: a gypsy peddler's cart is suddenly abandoned behind his house. What happened to the father and child who lived in this cart? When Bradshaw discovers the peddler's child may have witnessed a murder, he follows the girl's trail, plunging into a seedy underworld of bars and brothels.

Frustrated by the police department's apathy and caught between power struggles, he doesn't know whom to trust. Each step of his investigation entangles him deeper in crime and corruption until he realizes that to save the child, he must transform his contest entry into a trap to catch a killer and to protect his own household.

Bradshaw's electrical forensic and investigative skills, combined with a keen understanding of human nature, bring the Seattle police—and murder—to his doorstep during the social and scientific turmoil of the early twentieth century."


Series: #1 in the Rosie the Riveter mysteries set in 1942 New York City
ISBN: 9780758267580
Publisher: Kensington
Mass Market Paperback, 288 pages

From the back cover: "Life is definitely not easy for 32-year-old Rosie O'Doyle Keefe, but she can handle working in New York City's World War II shipyards - until her foreman winds up dead - right after she rebuffed his 'requirements' for a promotion. Never one to sit back and hope for the best, Rosie discovers that everyone who knew the foreman had good reasons to kill him off. She also finds that she has a surprise ally in the darkly handsome police lieutenant Jack Riordan. But Jack also has to produce a viable suspect for his captain in five days - even if it has to be Rosie. Before long, the mystery spirals onto the streets of wartime New York. With the clock ticking and her freedom on the line, Rosie and Lieutenant Riordan will need to join forces to find the truth and catch the now very desperate killer ...who may be much closer then they think."


Title: Fun House
Series: #7 in the Ceepak and Boyle series set in New Jersey
ISBN: 9781605983363
Publisher: Pegasus
Hardcover, 336 pages

From the back cover: "What if a reality TV show like Jersey Shore set up production in the fictional seaside resort Sea Haven? What if hitting the gym, tanning, and doing a little laundry aren't the only things the contestants get into?

By-the-book officer John Ceepak and his wisecracking young partner, Danny Boyle, have to babysit the buff and boozy kids partying it up in a Jersey shore rental house for TV’s summertime hit Fun House while simultaneously trying to stop the rowdy kids from breaking the law up and down the beach.

But even Ceepak and Danny can’t stop one young cast member from being murdered—and others from being threatened with the same fate."


=== May 8 ===


Standalone
ISBN:  9781250005533
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Hardcover, 336 pages

From the back cover: "Five years ago, while William Rees was still recovering from his stint as a Revolutionary War soldier, his beloved wife died. Devastated, Rees left his son, David, in his sister’s care, fled his Maine farm, and struck out for a tough but emotionally empty life as a traveling weaver. Now, upon returning unexpectedly to his farm, Rees discovers that David has been treated like a serf for years and finally ran away to join a secluded religious sect—the Shakers.

Overwhelmed by guilt and hoping to reconcile with his son, Rees immediately follows David to the Shaker community. But when a young Shaker woman is brutally murdered shortly after Rees’s arrival, Rees finds himself launched into a complicated investigation where the bodies keep multiplying, a tangled web of family connections casts suspicion on everyone, and the beautiful woman on the edge of the Shaker community might be hiding troubling ties to the victims. It quickly becomes clear that in solving Sister Chastity’s murder, Rees may well expose some of the Shaker community’s darkest secrets, not to mention endanger his own life."


Title: The Boy Who Stole the Leopard's Spots
Author: Tamar Myers
Series: #3 in the Amanda Brown series set in the 1950s Belgian Congo
ISBN:  9780061997730
Publisher: William Morrow Paperbacks
Paperback, 304 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books!

From the back cover: "A decades-old murder, a strange superstition, an enormous snake, and one giant secret are about to rock the beautiful Belle Vue to its core.

It is a time of great upheaval for the Belgian Congo and Belle Vue is not safe from the changes. But there are more pressing problems as an unsolved disappearance brings up issues for some of the denizens of the village. Add to that a sudden influx of strangers and a horrible storm that literally divides the village in half, and suddenly danger seems to be everywhere.

The lovely young American missionary Amanda, the police chief Captain Pierre Jardin, and the local witch doctor and his wise-woman wife, Cripple, all become embroiled in the mystery as evil omens and strange happenings at every turn suggest that more lives will be lost before the true killer is unmasked."


=== May 15 ===


Author: Craig Johnson
Series: #8 in the Sheriff Walt Longmire series set in Absaroka County, Wyoming 
ISBN:  9780670023516
Publisher: Viking Adult
Hardcover, 320 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books!

From the back cover: "Embarking on his eighth adventure, Wyoming Sheriff Walt Longmire has a more important matter on his mind than cowboys and criminals. His daughter, Cady, is getting married to the brother of his undersheriff, Victoria Moretti. Walt and old friend Henry Standing Bear are the de facto wedding planners and fear Cady’s wrath when the wedding locale arrangements go up in smoke two weeks before the big event.

The pair set out to find a new site for the nuptials on the Cheyenne Reservation, but their scouting expedition ends in horror as they witness a young Crow woman plummeting from Painted Warrior’s majestic cliffs. It’s not Walt’s turf, but the newly appointed tribal police chief and Iraqi war veteran, the beautiful Lolo Long, shanghais him into helping with the investigation. Walt is stretched thin as he mentors Lolo, attempts to catch the bad guys, and performs the role of father of the bride."


=== May 22 ===


Author: Anne Cassidy
Series: #1 in the Murder Notebooks series set in the UK
ISBN:  9780802723512
Publisher: Walker Childrens
Hardcover, 352 pages

From the back cover: [Ages 12 and up] "When Rose was twelve, her mother and stepfather went out for dinner and never came back. Now seventeen, she lives with her grandmother and goes to school in London. She’s always wondered about her stepbrother, Joshua, whom she only lived with briefly and who was also relocated after their parents’ disappearance. When Rose and Joshua meet again, they find they have much in common, including a desire to uncover the mystery surrounding their parents’ disappearance . . . and a mutual attraction to each other. But when Rose witnesses the murders of not one but two of her classmates, she must uncover who is behind these violent crimes. And when she and Joshua discover that a much larger conspiracy is underway, both of their lives will be in danger."


=== May 29 ===


Title: The Watchers
Author: Jon Steele
Standalone
ISBN:  9780399158742
Publisher: Blue Rider Press
Hardcover, 592 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books!

From the back cover: "Lausanne, Switzerland. In the cathedral tower lives a strange boy with a limp who talks to the bells. In a luxury penthouse lives a high-class prostitute who's in mortal danger. And in a low-rent hotel lives a private investigator who has no idea how he got there. Jay Harper finds himself in Switzerland on the trail of a missing Olympic athlete. A hard drinker, he can barely remember how he got home last night, let alone why he accepted this job. When he meets the stunning but aloof Katherine in a hotel bar, he quickly realises that he's not the only one in town who's for hire. She's a high-class hooker who can't believe her luck. Which is about to change. For the worse.In the meantime, Marc Rochat spends his time in the belfry talking to the statues, his cat and the occasional ghost. His job is to watch over Lausanne at night and to wait for the angel his mother told him he'd one day have to save. When he sees Katherine, he thinks his moment has come. Which indeed it has. But not in a good way…."


Title: The Yard
Author: Alex Grecian
Series: #1 in the Murder Squad series set in Victorian England
ISBN: 9780399149542
Publisher: Putnam Adult
Hardcover, 432 pages

From the back cover: "Victorian London is a cesspool of crime, and Scotland Yard has only twelve detectives—known as 'The Murder Squad'—to investigate countless murders every month. Created after the Metropolitan Police’s spectacular failure to capture Jack the Ripper, The Murder Squad suffers rampant public contempt. They have failed their citizens. But no one can anticipate the brutal murder of one of their own . . . one of the twelve . . .

When Walter Day, the squad’s newest hire, is assigned the case of the murdered detective, he finds a strange ally in the Yard’s first forensic pathologist, Dr. Bernard Kingsley. Together they track the killer, who clearly is not finished with The Murder Squad . . . but why?

Filled with fascinating period detail, and real historical figures, this spectacular debut in a new series showcases the depravity of late Victorian London, the advent of criminology, and introduces a stunning new cast of characters sure to appeal to fans of The Sherlockian and The Alienist."


=== May 31 ===


Title: Kissing the Demons
Author: Kate Ellis
Series: #3 in the DI Joe Plantagenet series set in North Yorkshire, England
ISBN: 9780727879844
Publisher: Severn House
Hardcover, 336 pages

From the back cover: "Thirteen Torland Place is a house with a disturbing past. When a student living there is found murdered, DI Joe Plantagenet wonders whether her death has anything to do with its grim history. Then other, similar deaths come to light and he fears that a ruthless serial killer is at work. Could the deaths be connected to Obediah Shrowton, an executed murderer whose presence still seems to linger in the house? Or is there a yet more sinister and dangerous explanation?"


Whew, that was quite a list! Which books tickled your fancy? 'fess up!



Saturday, April 28, 2012

One-Stop Shopping for Saturday Snapshot



Saturday Snapshot is a fun meme hosted by Alyce on her blog, At Home With Books. If you'd like to see the goodies that other participants have posted, or if you'd like to join in the fun, check out the rules and regs.



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This week, I thought I'd share some photos from one of my favorite Arizona trips with Denis. If you head up to northern Arizona, you can do some one-stop shopping by traveling up US 89, and taking the turn-off on the right to Wupatki National Monument and Sunset Crater. (Actually traveling US 89 from one end to the other would be a wonderful trip. It links seven National Parks and fourteen National Monuments!)

Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument is the youngest in a string of volcanoes in the San Francisco volcanic field. Flagstaff, Arizona, lies at the foot of the San Francisco Peaks, which are an extinct stratovolcano complex. Here's a bit of trivia for anyone who's interested: Arizona has two of the three largest  volcanic fields in the continental United States, the San Francisco (#2) and the Springerville (#3) volcanic fields. Depending on the time of day and the light, Sunset Crater can glow orange or plum, and when Denis and I visited, it was deep plum laced with snow.

But before you can get to Sunset Crater, you have to drive through the Wupatki National Monument-- one of my very favorite places in Arizona. The Sinagua people lived here before, during and after Sunset Crater erupted. From various vantage points throughout the land, you can see the Painted Desert, the snow-capped San Francisco Peaks, and cinder cone volcanic remnants.

The day we explored Wupatki, it was a cold January morning, and the rabbits were out in full force. Walking along the foot paths, it was easy to see how well- populated this area was hundreds of years ago. (Click on any photo to view it full size.)

A few of the many ruins at Wupatki. How many do you see?


The Citadel is a pueblo atop a hill with wonderful views of the surrounding country. It has often been closed to the public because golden eagles sometimes nest and raise young there. You can see that the inhabitants used some of the black volcanic rocks in building Nalakihu Pueblo at the foot of the hill.

Nalakihu Pueblo and the Citadel

The star, of course, is Wupatki, a pueblo containing over 100 rooms, a ball court, and a geological blowhole. 800 years ago, this was the largest pueblo around.


A slice of Wupatki showing the ball court




Wupatki may be the star, but my favorite ruin is Wukoki. I guess it speaks to the small town girl in me. (Plus, it has a better view!)


Wukoki

By the time Denis and I arrived at Sunset Crater, it was not optimal viewing time. You see... it was snowing. A lot. But we did get a few shots of the lava fields here and there. Even after hundreds of years, the lava is sharp and impossible to walk over, and there are still many areas in which nothing grows.


Sunset Crater...about to get more snow.

A tiny section of the lava fields at Sunset Crater.

I hope you enjoyed this whirlwind tour of one of my favorite areas in Arizona. If any of you like to read letters, there is an excellent book, Letters from Wupatki, written by Courtney Reeder Jones. Her letters were written beginning in 1938 when she and her husband actually lived in the ruins and worked to stabilize the walls.

Friday, April 27, 2012

The Puttering Weekly Link Round-Up


The time certainly is flying by. It's difficult to believe that it's almost May! This has been a "puttering" week for me. You know... nothing great accomplished, just a little of this, a little of that, finish up the final steps on several projects and begin several more with those first two steps.

When I get a chance, I've been sitting in a big white wicker chair in my living room, reading and keeping an eye out on the neighborhood since I'm sitting right by the huge picture window. I am getting quite a bit of reading done (finished Rosamund Lupton's Afterwards which is a fabulous book!), but I'm also enjoying scaring a black cat that (I discovered) likes to leave "deposits" beneath the window. I can also see when the mail carrier is bringing goodies to the door, and be quick to run out and scare off a young Gila woodpecker that's shown a penchant for drilling at the metal window frame of our bedroom window at 1:45 PM while Denis is sleeping.  I know... interesting wildlife around these parts, isn't there?

The case I made for Denis's Nook
Denis says that I'm going to turn into a curtain twitcher, but there's little chance of that. One, I'm talented enough to be able to sit there and see what I want to see without twitching the curtains, and two, with the sun getting ever brighter and hotter, I won't be opening the drapes in there much longer. In no time at all, I'll be spending the afternoons in the pool!

Before I head off and start listing this week's links, I thought I'd show you one of the projects I completed this week. The photo shows the cover I made for Denis's Nook Simple Touch. I used the herringbone stitch for this project because it makes the canvas look like a lovely piece of woven cloth. If you're interested in such things, you can click on the photo to see it in more detail. Now, on to those links!


Bookish News & Other Interesting Stuff

I ♥ Lists

Social Media & Blogging Tips

Book Candy

New to My Google Reader

That's all for this week. Don't forget to stop by next weekend when I'll have a freshly selected batch of links for your surfing pleasure!

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Afterwards by Rosamund Lupton

Title: Afterwards
Author: Rosamund Lupton
ISBN: 9780307716545
Publisher: Crown, 2012
Hardcover, 400 pages
Genre: Literary Suspense
Rating: A+
Source: Amazon Vine

First Line: I couldn't move, not even a little finger or a flicker of an eye.

It's Sports Day at Sidley House School. Grace Covey's eight-year-old son, Adam, has gone inside the school to bring out the birthday cake that he's sharing with his classmates while Jennifer, her seventeen-year-old daughter, is up on the third floor filling in for the school nurse. Grace has simply come to pick her children up at school, an ordinary, everyday task. But what began as a simple task turns into a nightmare when Grace looks up at the school and sees black smoke billowing out of the windows.

Sidley House School is on fire, and her children are inside.

"And then [Grace] was running at the velocity of a scream." As she comes to the school entrance, she sees that her son is outside and safe, but Jenny is still inside. Jenny needs her. And so Grace fights the heat and the smoke and the fear and the panic and the pain until she finds Jenny... but Grace doesn't have the strength to get them outside to safety. They are both rushed to the hospital. Grace has suffered severe head trauma, and Jenny has suffered bad burns and intense smoke inhalation.

This story is told by Grace as if she's talking to her husband, and she has quite the story to tell. You see, she and Jenny both have out-of-body experiences. They leave their battered bodies and follow their friends and loved ones. They hear what's being said, and although they can talk with each other, no one else can see or hear them.  A lot is being said because what was originally a tragic fire is really arson, and it also seems as though someone wants to make sure that Jenny dies. Did she see the person who started the fire?

Grace's sister-in-law, Detective Sergeant Sarah MacBride, in many ways is the hero of this book. Her family has been dealt a devastating blow. Sarah wants to make sure that her family survives, and she goes about it the only way she knows how: by doing her job. Sarah proves to be tireless at tracking down witnesses, at searching for clues, at reading interview transcripts and teasing out tiny inconsistencies and peculiar word choices. She simply will not give up.

Although the ultimate ending of the book really comes as no surprise, I enjoyed Lupton's meticulous plotting of the investigation. This is the sort of case which relies on listening to how people say things as well as listening to what they don't say. It is a case of nuance and shadow. Taken simply as a mystery, this is an excellent read. But Grace Covey takes this book beyond mystery and whodunit. As she watches her husband and son, as she talks with Jenny, and as she follows Sarah, she learns what extraordinary people her family members are. She learns about herself. And she learns that "the last of the senses to go is love."

This is an extraordinary read that kept me mesmerized from first page to last-- often with a lump in my throat and tears in my eyes. If you have someone in your life whom you love more than life itself, you will also be deeply affected by  this book. In her depth of characterization and psychological nuance, Rosamund Lupton reminds me of Louise Penny. Like Penny, Lupton can take subject matter that's profoundly sad and create something very beautiful and life-affirming. I was impressed by Lupton's first book, Sister. I am blown away by Afterwards.

Divorce Horse by Craig Johnson

Title: Divorce Horse
Author: Craig Johnson
ISBN: 9781101592649
Publisher: Viking, 2012
eBook, 48 pages
Genre: Short Story, Police Procedural, part of the Sheriff Walt Longmire oeuvre
Rating: A
Source: Net Galley

First Line: It was Memorial Day weekend, and I was having dinner with my best friend, Henry Standing Bear, and my daughter Cady at the Busy Bee Café.

Absaroka County Sheriff Walt Longmire is still recuperating from what happened to him in Hell Is Empty. His daughter Cady's wedding is only a few months away, and she's in town to spend some quality time with her dad.

But it always seems that Walt's not allowed to just sit and relax. The American Indian Days Parade and Pow Wow are in full swing. Walt gets word that the notorious "divorce horse" is missing, and Tommy Jefferson wants the horse back. Now.

Tommy Jefferson is a renowned Indian Relay Racer and the missing horse is the pride and joy of his stables. With the help of Henry Standing Bear and Cady, Walt sets off to the races to find the missing horse.

As author Craig Johnson explains, this short story is the "connective tissue" between his last book, Hell Is Empty and As the Crow Flies, which will be available May 15 (and reviewed here at Kittling: Books). "Divorce Horse" is light, fun, filled with Johnson's marvelous sense of humor-- and the scenes depicting an Indian Relay Race are marvelous. As a short story, I recommend it.

However, there's something else that I don't recommend about this short story. Of the 48 pages that are only available as an eBook, 27 are the story itself, and the remaining 21 are notes, acknowledgements, and a sneak peek at the first chapter of As the Crow Flies. I'm lucky; I got a copy of "Divorce Horse" through Net Galley, but if I were to go elsewhere to obtain one, it costs $3.99. Would I pay $3.99 for "Divorce Horse"? I am a diehard Craig Johnson fan; I've been raving about his books since I picked up the very first one he wrote... but I'd have to say no. I would not pay $4 for a 27-page short story. A lot of people are going to miss out on a delightful tale due to its high price, and that's a shame.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Scene of the Blog Featuring Melissa of Jayne's Books!

I trailed this week's featured book blogger to her lair from a comment she left on another blog. Melissa of Jayne's Books is a library tech, a self-professed Starbucks addict, and a Canucks fan (that's hockey to you uninitiated).

As I wandered through her posts, I discovered that we're both the same Austen heroine and that I enjoy the mix of books that she reads. (No, she isn't a crime fiction fan, but I'm not about to hold that against her!) She also admits to sometimes being unable to put her feelings about a book she's just read into words. I think we've all struggled with that, haven't we?

And before you think that Melissa hijacked a blog from someone named Jayne, think again. Jayne is her middle name, and in a moment of serendipity, she chose it for her blog name. If you haven't visited Jayne's Books before, I hope you'll take this opportunity to do so. Don't be shy-- say hello while you're there!

If you're visiting from Melissa's blog-- Welcome! I'm glad you stopped by to take a look at Melissa's creative spaces. If you'd like to see any of the photos in a larger size, all you have to do is click on them, and they'll open in a new window. If you'd like to see the blogging spaces of previous participants, all you have to do is click on the Scene of the Blog tab at the very top of my blog header. You'll find two ways to search: by Blog Name or by Location. Let's go visit Melissa, shall we?


Melissa the Mobile Blogger



I don't normally blog from a desk, but usually on my laptop from the comforts of a couch in my living room as I watch something on my TV.  It can be a sporting event (usually hockey) or a TV show or watching the news.   I sometimes do my blogging from the comforts of my bed, but I generally keep my bedroom for reading and sleeping.






Melissa's view






This second photo is of the view out of my main living window. From it I can view the comings and goings of the people that live in the neighbourhood and see the changes throughout the course of a day as well as the changing seasons.








I like the table that your laptop is sitting on, Melissa-- and are you using a small bookcase as an end table? What a wonderful idea! I also like the view of the sky and trees that you have. It would indeed be a good spot to watch the ebb and flow of both people and nature.

Thanks so much for allowing us this glimpse into your home, Melissa. We really appreciate it!


Don't forget to stop by next Wednesday when I'll be featuring the creative spaces of yet another book blogger in our worldwide community!

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Wicked Weaves by Joyce and Jim Lavene

Title: Wicked Weaves, A Renaissance Faire Mystery
Author: Joyce and Jim Lavene
ISBN: 9780425223307
Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime, 2008
Mass Market Paperback, 272 pages
Genre: Cozy, Amateur Sleuth, #1 Renaissance Faire mystery
Rating: B-
Source: Paperback Swap

First Line: "We believe he is dead, faithful squire," Queen Olivia pronounced in grand, dramatic fashion.

Assistant professor Jessie Morton spends every summer at the Renaissance Faire Village in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, learning centuries-old crafts and working towards her Ph.D. This summer she's working with master basket weaver, Mary Shift, a woman whose secrets are as well hidden as her talent is amazing. When Mary's estranged husband is found in the village, murdered in broad daylight, suspicion falls upon Mary and shows no signs of shifting. Jessie, however, is convinced that the woman is innocent and is determined to find the real killer.

The setting of this book is marvelous. The Renaissance Faire Village is on an old airfield, and everyone lives by rather arcane rules and regulations. (For crying out loud, don't let Robin Hood and his Merry Men know that you just bought a new toaster oven!) With all the disparate types of people living and working there, it's Gossip Central and reminds me more than a little of a fictional New England village called Peyton Place. I also liked the misdirection in the plot that kept me from realizing the identity of the killer, and although I questioned having a basket shop in a Renaissance village that features Gullah baskets, I really appreciated learning a bit about both that style of basket weaving and the customs of the Gullah people.

I think what is going to make or break this book for readers is their opinion of the main character, Jessie Morton. I found her alternately irritating and endearing. She often bemoans the fact that she's got a shiftless twin brother who can't-- or won't-- hold down a job and is constantly trying to borrow money from her, but her brother isn't the only one who hasn't really grown up.

Jessie's love life occurs only in the summer when she's working at the Renaissance Faire Village, and as I read further and further I began to wonder if there was a male left in the village that she hadn't bedded. Of course there was: the bailiff as a matter of fact, smart and handsome Chase Manhattan. (All the characters in the book were used to the name and had stopped snickering.)

Although Jessie has to be around the age of thirty, she just plain doesn't act like it. When it looks as though Mary is going to be arrested for murdering her husband, Jessie lies and gives Mary an alibi-- then becomes upset when Mary doesn't thank her profusely. This isn't the only time she does this. Jessie is also the sort of sleuth who decides she doesn't like someone and then tries to pin the crime on that person. Since she tends to be a bit emotional, she can have a new suspect every thirty minutes or so. Yes, Jessie can have you talking to yourself, but she has real potential.

Now that the scene is set and Jessie is well and truly introduced, I'm looking forward to seeing what other crimes and misdemeanors occur in this very original-- and entertaining-- setting.


What's Colorful About You?



Your Heart is Colorful




You are independent yet interdependent. You want other people around, but you don't like needing them.

You are warm-hearted and caring. You celebrate and commiserate along with your friends.

You are a free spirit, but deep down you are reliable and trustworthy. You honor your commitments.

You are the friend everyone invites to the party. It's not the same if you're not there.


Monday, April 23, 2012

Scene of the Crime with Authors Joyce and Jim Lavene!


I'm slowly making my way through the books written by North Carolina writing team Joyce and Jim Lavene. It's definitely an enjoyable pursuit, although I wish I could learn to read eight books simultaneously. This dynamic duo has the knack of creating cozy mystery series with intriguing premises that I find irresistible.

Joyce and Jim Lavene
I know that many of you prefer reading cozies, so I was thrilled when Joyce and Jim agreed to be interviewed. Before we get to that interview, however, let me share a few links so that you'll be able to learn more about the authors and their books:





What was the very first book you remember reading and loving? What makes that book so special?

Joyce – The first book I remember reading and loving was filled with short stories by Edgar Allen Poe. My mom didn’t know I was reading it.

JimA Princess of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs


Outside of your writing and all associated commitments, what do you like to do in your free time?

We both love to drive and we enjoy photography. Jim loves to rip computers apart and repair them for people. He’s always giving a computer away that he got the pieces cheap and repaired. Joyce also loves watercolor painting. They both enjoy hiking and gardening.


If I were to visit your hometown, where would you recommend that I go? (I like seeing and doing things that aren't in all the guide books.)

Little Meadow Creek where the first nugget was found.
We have a wonderful old gold mine where the first gold was found in the U. S. It’s called Reed Gold Mine, named for the owner, John Reed. You can go down in the old mine where it’s always 50 degrees. It’s spooky!









You have total control over casting a movie based on your life. Which actor would you cast as you?




JimThe Rock – no reason. I just like him.

JoyceAndie MacDowell -  she has naturally curly hair.





Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

JimHarry Dresden in the books by Jim Butcher.
Joyce: Probably one of ours!


Name one book that you've read that you wish you had written. What is it about that book that made it come to mind?

Jim - Any of Anne McCaffrey’s Dragon books. They were just wonderful, enviable books.

JoyceThose Who Hunt the Night by Barbara Hambly  - it’s a very good, unique story.



How did you celebrate when you first heard you were to be published? What did you do the first time you saw one of your books on a shelf in a bookstore?

We danced around the room a little then went for a long walk and planned all the things we would do. The first time we saw a book of ours on the shelf, we told the people around us that it was ours and went to find the manager of the store so she’d know too.


I don't know if you've seen it, but I love Parnell Hall's video about book signings. What is the most unusual experience you've had at a book signing or author event?

Probably the most unusual experience we’ve had at a bookstore was when a man came in wearing full armor to buy a copy of one of our Renaissance Faire Mysteries. His girlfriend was wearing a long gown and pointed hat with a veil. It was fun!


What's the best thing about eBooks? What's the worst?

The best thing about e-books is that they have no boundaries. We’ve received letters from all over the world from people who have read our e-books. We have a fan club in New Zealand! The worst thing about e-books is that they have no boundaries. We’ve seen our books for free all over the Internet. It’s hard to make a living like that. We think of them as promotional work.


Writing as a part of a team has to be an interesting process. How does yours work?

We come up with ideas (and characters) all year and write them down. Then we pick out what the best idea seems to be and we start working on it as we go for drives and are sitting around talking. Finally, we have a long synopsis and we sit down to write. We have two computer monitors that are networked together and we both tell the story back and forth until we have a rough draft written. After that we revise and send on to our agent and editor. They add suggestions and send back to us. Then we revise again and – well, you get the idea.

Right now, we are finishing the fifth book in our Nationally Bestselling Missing Pieces Mystery series. Those books are set in Duck, NC (a real place) and the mayor is our protagonist. She is psychically gifted and a finder of lost things. We’ll take a short break then start work on the second book in our new Sweet Pepper Fire Brigade Mysteries set in Sweet Pepper, Tennessee. That series is about a firefighter from Chicago who travels to a small town to help get their volunteer fire department going. It’s a very different world for her – and she has the ghost of the old fire chief looking over her shoulder.  

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On Sale Now!
Joyce and Jim-- thank you so much for taking the time to do this interview. We certainly appreciated the chance to get to know you better.

May your book sales do nothing but increase!


Stop by tomorrow when I'll be reviewing the first book in Joyce and Jim Lavene's Renaissance Faire mystery series, Wicked Weaves!