Wednesday, October 31, 2012

@ The Poisoned Pen with Donis Casey and Vicki Delany


I'd known about Donis Casey and Vicki Delany coming to the Poisoned Pen for quite some time, and it was written prominently in my calendar so you know I was looking forward to this with a great deal of anticipation. The only downside to the whole thing was the fact that Denis had to work and couldn't come with me. Oh well, I got dolled up anyway, climbed up into the Jeep and headed to the Poisoned Pen in Scottsdale on a perfect October Saturday.

I chose my books rather quickly, and had a nice chat with Ariel as I paid for them-- mostly about plants that discourage feral cats from hanging around your property. My next-door neighbors left their cat behind when they moved, and the cat is working on her third litter of kittens since June... and she wasn't the only feral cat in the neighborhood to begin with. Since I have a pool, bird baths, and fountains, all the homeless felines think this property is the local McDonald's. Now armed with good intel from Ariel, I foresee a trip to a garden center in the near future. (You get more than books when you visit the Poisoned Pen!)


"Where's Denis?"


Vicki Delany browsing the Poisoned Pen shelves
Have you ever wanted to watch an author browse for books? I have, and I got to do just that when Vicki Delany arrived early and spent some time wandering the shelves at my favorite bookstore.

It was  difficult for me not to ask the author of my favorite Constable Molly Smith series which two books she purchased in addition to her Poisoned Pen cap, but I did find out later that one of them was Robert Goddard's Blood Count.

Vicki is the first author I've seen who's gone around the store introducing herself to people. (I'll probably see this more often as I keep attending author signings.) When she approached me, I immediately put down the book I was reading.

"Hi, are you here for the book signing?"

"Yes, I am!"

"I'm Vicki Delany...."

"Hi, I'm Cathy...."

"...Kittling Books, right?"

Now-- I have to admit that I was stunned and more than a little pleased when Vicki paired my name with this blog. Come to find out, she'd read just that morning that I was going to be there. Wow....

Shortly afterwards, Donis Casey came in with her husband. I'd met and talked a minute or two with Donis at Jeffrey Siger's author signing in September, and I'd had a chance to introduce her to my husband. Can you imagine how tickled I was when she walked up, said hello, and then asked, "Where's Denis?" Both these ladies have excellent memories!


"I really like modern Gothics..."


Vicki with her new cap
Vicki was the first to tell us a bit about her newest book, a standalone Gothic thriller More Than Sorrow. (My review posted yesterday if you haven't had a chance to see it.) It's the story of Hannah Manning, an internationally renowned journalist and war correspondent who suffered a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) in Afghanistan and is recuperating on her sister's farm in Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada.

"I've always liked modern Gothics, so I decided to try my hand at writing one," Vicki told us. Gothic novels tend to be tied to a particular house or a place that has a secret from the past.

This is the first book Vicki's written that is set in the area in which she lives. In having her characters live in a farmhouse that dates back to the eighteenth century, she was able to use local history as part of the story. Prince Edward County was basically untouched wilderness when settlers began to arrive. Most of them were displaced Loyalists chased out of the United States during the Revolutionary War. Maggie Macgregor was one of the dispossessed. She lost her husband, her home, her family, and almost all her possessions due to the war, and found herself dependent upon others for her survival.

Hannah is facing much the same situation. Unable to work while her brain heals, this voracious reader should be able to devour dozens of books, but she can't. Those who suffer TBI cannot read the printed page. There's not much Hannah can do; she never knows when a horrendous headache will force her to bed, and she finds herself facing endless sleepless nights. Being dependent upon her sister (and her sister's unsympathetic husband) is beyond frustrating. It's not until her brother-in-law mentions that his family had originally built the house and that there are trunks filled with letters and other papers up in the attic that Hannah finds something to capture her attention. Although TBI sufferers cannot read the printed word, they can read handwriting, and Hannah dives into all those letters like they're a lifeline. Through them she begins learning of Maggie Macgregor's life.

It was fascinating to listen to Vicki speaking of the history woven into the book as well as the information about Traumatic Brain Injury. If I hadn't already read More Than Sorrow, I can guarantee that-- after listening to Vicki-- I would be now!


"I just don't have time."


Donis talking about The Wrong Hill to Die On
Donis Casey writes one of my favorite series, too-- the Alafair Tucker series. Alafair is an Oklahoma farm woman raising ten children in the 1910s. The latest book in the series, The Wrong Hill to Die On has just been released, and (I'm happy to say) it's next up on my reading list. 

Donis told us that the way she usually arrives at the next story in Alafair's life is by asking the question "What effects Alafair in her daily life?" To find this out, the author reads a lot of newspapers from the era courtesy of the Muskogee County library system in Oklahoma.

In reading the area newspapers for 1916 (the year in which the book is set), Donis discovered that it was the rainiest winter ever in the West. Widespread flooding, roads washed out, trains running late if they could run at all. This gave Donis a starting place for her book.

In The Wrong Hill to Die On, all of Alafair's children are sick, and she's been run ragged nursing them all. Fortunately Alafair doesn't get sick herself, but if she did, she'd be just like Donis's mother and say, "I just don't have time," and get on with it. Everyone recuperates except for daughter Blanche. The doctor tells Alafair and her husband Shaw that the young girl's lungs need to dry out, and the decision is made for Alafair and Shaw to take Blanche to Alafair's sister who lives in Tempe, Arizona.

Due to all the rain and washouts, it takes the train ten days to take the Tuckers from Boynton, Oklahoma to Tempe, Arizona. When they arrive, they find Alafair's sister, Elizabeth, in rather unhappy circumstances but excited about a movie being filmed not far from their home. Elizabeth uses the Tuckers' arrival as an excuse to have an open house to which she invites many of the movie people. After the party, one of the members of the mariachi band that Elizabeth hired is found dead in an irrigation ditch.

In 1916, the Germans were intent on keeping Mexico riled up so the United States would stay out of World War I. This is also the time Pancho Villa was conducting his raids across the border into the US. This gave Donis the opportunity to show that the present day isn't the first time that Arizonans have been up in arms about illegal immigrants. I really appreciated all the author's insights into her research because it's an important part of what makes her series so real.


"Mixing up your reading is a good thing."


After both women finished talking about their latest books, host Barbara Peters led a discussion about standalone versus series books. Barbara likes standalones because they "have no safety net. Everyone can die. This makes reading standalones a much different experience than reading series books." In reading series books, all three women agreed that they didn't care for books in which the author goes back and changes a character's personality because they've written themselves into a corner. Doing that just doesn't work for any of them (or me) because one of the things about reading a series is that the reader likes having something-- like a main character's behavior-- that can be relied upon. We were all in agreement when Barbara said, "Mixing up your reading is a good thing."

This talk about standalone books led Vicki to tell us of an experience she had when at a book signing for her standalone Scare the Light Away in which a woman reads her mother's diaries. When she told one woman what the book was about, the woman shook her head, saying, "No. I don't think I'd like it. My husband died a year ago, and I read his diaries. I thought I knew him. But! I! Didn't!" The woman then began to cry.

On a much lighter note Vicki then told us about finding a trapdoor when ripping up old carpeting in her 1880s house. Something tells me Vicki and I share a love of old houses. I already know we share a love of Gothic mysteries!

The time flew by all too quickly. I had both my books signed by the authors and then I climbed back into the Jeep and headed for home. If you ever have a chance to meet either one of these talented women, please take it! If you can't, then please do the next best thing: read their books!

November 2012 New Mystery Releases!


I don't know about you, but I've had some phenomenal luck lately with my reading-- lots of "A" list books! I'm hoping the trend continues in November because I've managed to get my hands on some advance reading copies of a few of the books that are going to be released.

Denis is working a new shift at the airport which gives him three days off (hallelujah!), and it gives me four days to spend part of each afternoon reading in my comfy white wicker chair in the back garden. Of course I also spend part of that time watching the wildlife wander in and out-- mostly pairs of brilliant butterflies, the occasional jewel-like flash of dragonflies, and plenty of birds-- but they're all used to me sitting there with my nose in a book and think nothing of coming within two or three feet of my little outdoor haven.

As usual, I've grouped these new releases by their release dates, and I've given you all the information you'll need to find them at your favorite book spots. (Synopses courtesy of Amazon.) Since it's November, who knows? Perhaps you'll give some of them as gifts... or suggest a title or two as gifts that you'd love to receive!


=== November 1 ===


Title: The Hunted Hare
Author: Fay Sampson
Series: #1 in the Aidan mysteries set in Wales
ISBN:  9780857212047
Publisher: Monarch Books
Paperback, 288 pages

Synopsis: "Aidan and Jenny, with their daughter Melangell, have come the remote pilgrimage shrine of Pennant Melangell in the Welsh mountains. Jenny is dying of cancer. But the peace and spiritual healing they seek is shattered by a murder. Tensions flare among the small community at the House of the Hare and the residents of this hitherto peaceful valley. Even Jenny is not above suspicion. But soon it seems that she herself may be in danger. Aidan desperately tries to save his family."


Title: Angel Among Us
Author: Katy Munger  
Series: #4 in the Dead Detective series set in Delaware
ISBN: 9780727882011 
Publisher: Severn House Publishers
Hardcover, 224 pages 

Synopsis: "In the fourth compelling ‘Dead Detective’ mystery, Kevin Fahey uncovers disturbing secrets when a schoolteacher disappears. Following his untimely death, former cop Kevin Fahey roams the streets of his small Delaware town seeking redemption in other people’s lives. He knows secrets the living do not know. When beautiful, pregnant pre-school teacher Arcelia Gallagher disappears, Fahey knows that she is hiding a violent past, and when the police investigation leads to Delmonte House, Fahey realizes that evil and fear have stalked the house before. Someone is lurking within its halls, their motives are unknown. Can Arcelia be found in time?"   


Title: Smoke Alarm
Series: #4 in the Martha Gunn series set in Shrewsbury, England  
ISBN: 9780727881991 
Publisher: Severn House Publishers
Hardcover, 224 pages

Synopsis: "A deadly fire reunites coroner Martha Gunn with Detective Inspector Alex Randall in the fourth book in this successful series. When firemen are called to an intense blaze at the Grange in Melverley, they find the bodies of Christie Barton, her daughter, Adelaide, and father-in-law, William, along with evidence that suggests the fire was started deliberately. Detective Inspector Alex Randall enlists the help of coroner Martha Gunn, but the puzzle deepens with a second house fire – the occupant, retired nurse Monica Deverill, is missing. Where is she, and what links the two fires? The answers lie in a secret buried in the past . . ."  


=== November 6 ===


Title: The Wrong Hill to Die On
Author: Donis Casey
Series: #6 in the Alafair Tucker historical series set in 1916 Arizona
ISBN: 9781464200465 
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press
Paperback, 250 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "Nineteen-sixteen was not shaping up to be a good year for Alafair Tucker, and finding Bernie Arruda dead in a ditch wasn't going to help matters. She had not wanted to come to Arizona in the first place. But her daughter Blanche was suffering from a stubborn ailment of the lungs, and her best chance for a cure was dry desert air. So Alafair and her husband Shaw had bundled their sick child onto the train and made the nightmare trip from Oklahoma to Alafair's sister in Tempe, Arizona. Yet as soon as they arrived on that bright March day, Blanche began to improve. But Alafair and Shaw soon discover that all is not well in sunny Arizona. Elizabeth's marriage is in tatters, tensions are high between the Anglo and Latino communities following Pancho Villa's murderous raid on Columbus, New Mexico, and Alafair suspects her sister is involved in an illegal operation to smuggle war refugees out of Mexico and into the U.S. And now here lies Bernie Arruda on his back in a ditch, staring into eternity."  


Title: Written in Stone
Author: Ellery Adams
Series: #4 in the Books by the Bay series set in North Carolina
ISBN:  9780425251737
Publisher: Berkley Prime Crime
Mass Market Paperback, 304 pages

Synopsis: "When Munin Cooper, known as the Witch of Oyster Bay, warns Olivia Limoges that death is coming, neither of them realize that it is the older woman herself who will soon be found dead. And Olivia’s instincts tell her that something—or someone—more sinister than a mystical force is at play…

Olivia has a lot on her plate preparing for the Coastal Carolina Food Festival. When she hears the news of Munin’s untimely death, however, finding the murderer takes priority. The witch left behind a memory jug full of keepsakes that Olivia knows must point to the killer—but she’s got to figure out what they mean.

With handsome Police Chief Rawlings by her side, Olivia starts to identify some of the jug’s mysterious contents—and finds its secrets are much darker than she suspected. Now Olivia must enlist the help of the Bayside Book Writers to solve the puzzle behind the piece of pottery and put an end to a vengeful killer before any more damage can be done…"


Title: The Anatomist's Wife
Author: Anna Lee Huber
Series: #1 in the Lady Darby historical series set in Scotland
ISBN: 9780425253281
Publisher: Berkley Trade
Paperback, 368 pages

Synopsis: "Scotland, 1830. Following the death of her husband, Lady Darby has taken refuge at her sister's estate, finding solace in her passion for painting. But when her hosts throw a house party for the cream of London society, Kiera is unable to hide from the ire of those who believe her to be as unnatural as her husband, an anatomist who used her artistic talents to suit his own macabre purposes.

Kiera wants to put her past aside, but when one of the house guests is murdered, her brother-in-law asks her to utilize her knowledge of human anatomy to aid the insufferable Sebastian Gage--a fellow guest with some experience as an inquiry agent. While Gage is clearly more competent than she first assumed, Kiera isn't about to let her guard down as accusations and rumors swirl.

When Kiera and Gage's search leads them to even more gruesome discoveries, a series of disturbing notes urges Lady Darby to give up the inquiry. But Kiera is determined to both protect her family and prove her innocence, even as she risks becoming the next victim..."


=== November 13 ===


Title: Beneath the Abbey Wall
Author: A.D. Scott
Series: #3 in the Highland Gazette series set in 1950s Scotland
ISBN: 9781451665772
Publisher: Atria Books
Paperback, 352 pages

Synopsis: "On a dark, damp Sunday evening, a man taking a shortcut home sees a hand reaching out in supplication from a bundle of sacks. In an instant he knows something terrifying has happened.

In the Highlands in the late 1950s, much of the local newspaper’s success was due to Mrs. Smart, the no-nonsense office manager who kept everything and everyone in line. Her murder leaves her colleagues in shock and the Highland Gazette office in chaos. Joanne Ross, a budding reporter and shamefully separated mother, assumes Mrs. Smart’s duties, but an intriguing stranger provides a distraction not only from the job and the investigation but from everything Joanne believes in.

Beneath the Abbey Wall brilliantly evokes a place still torn between the safety of the past and the uncertainty of the future, when rock ’n’ roll and television invaded homes, and a change in attitudes still came slowly for many. As the staff of the Highland Gazette probes the crime, they uncover secrets deeply rooted in the past, and their friend’s murder becomes the perfect fodder for strife and division in the town and between her colleagues."



Title: Hand for a Hand
Author: Frank Muir
Series: #1 in the Detective Inspector Andy Gilchrist series set in St. Andrews, Scotland
ISBN: 9781616951818
Publisher: Soho Crime
Hardcover, 336 pages

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "Murder. It's the only word in a note clutched by the dismembered hand found on the lush green of a golf course in St. Andrews, Scotland. When DCI Andy Gilchrist learns the note is addressed to him, he realizes the thing he feared most has come to pass: a killer is deliberately targeting him. Though Gilchrist is no new hand at solving murders, this time he is overwhelmed by the flood of seemingly unconnected crises-- the note clutched in the hand, his son's missing girlfriend, his ex-wife's failing health, and his boss's decision to pair Gilchrist up with a scumbag detective from his past, who in turn is hiding evidence. Worse, the hand turns out to be just the beginning, and soon he's faced with a relentless parade of body parts."


Title: Crashed
Author: Timothy Hallinan
Series: #1 in the Junior bender series set in Los Angeles
ISBN: 9781616952761
Publisher: Soho Crime
Paperback

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "Junior Bender is a Los Angeles burglar with a magic touch. Since he first started breaking into houses when he was fourteen years old, he’s never once been caught. But now, after twenty-two years of an exemplary career, Junior has been blackmailed by Trey Annunziato, one of the most powerful crime bosses in LA, into acting as a private investigator on the set of Trey’s porn movie venture, which someone keeps sabotaging. The star Trey has lined up to do all that’s unwholesome on camera is Thistle Downing, America’s beloved child star, who now lives alone in a drug-induced stupor, destitute and uninsurable. Her starring role will be the scandalous fall-from-grace gossip of rubber-neckers across the country. No wonder Trey needs help keeping the production on track.

Junior knows what that he should do—get Thistle out and find her help—but doing the right thing will land him on the wrong side of LA’s scariest mob boss. With the help of his precocious twelve-year-old daughter, Rina, and his criminal sidekick, Louie the Lost (an ex-getaway driver), Junior has to figure out a miracle solution."


=== November 26 ===


Title: The Black Box
Series: #18 in the Harry Bosch series set in Los Angeles
ISBN: 9780316069427
Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Hardcover, 560 pages

Synopsis: "In a case that spans 20 years, Harry Bosch links the bullet from a recent crime to a file from 1992, the killing of a young female photographer during the L.A. riots. Harry originally investigated the murder, but it was then handed off to the Riot Crimes Task Force and never solved.

Now Bosch's ballistics match indicates that her death was not random violence, but something more personal, and connected to a deeper intrigue. Like an investigator combing through the wreckage after a plane crash, Bosch searches for the 'black box,' the one piece of evidence that will pull the case together.

Riveting and relentlessly paced, The Black Box leads Harry Bosch, 'one of the greats of crime fiction' (New York Daily News), into one of his most fraught and perilous cases." 


=== November 27 ===


Title: Killer Librarian
Author: Mary Lou Kirwan
Series: #1 in a new series set in Minnesota and England
ISBN: 9781451684643  
Publisher: Pocket Books
Mass Market Paperback, 320 pages

Synopsis: "Champion of the mystery section at a small-town Minnesota library, Karen Nash is about to embark on a dream trip to London—a literary tour inspired by every murderous intrigue, wily suspect, and ingenious crime found in the pages of the British mysteries that she devours. But she’s clueless why the love of her mid-life, Dave, would dump her hours before takeoff—until she spies him at the airport with a young honey on his arm! She decides the best revenge (for now) is to get on that plane anyway . . . and entertain schemes for Dave’s untimely demise while crossing the pond.

After touching ground in the hallowed homeland of Christie, Sayers, and Peters, she checks into a cozy B & B run by charming bibliophile Caldwell Perkins. Soon she’s spilling tears in her pint at the corner pub, sharing her heartbreak saga with a stranger. That night, a B & B guest drops out of circulation—permanently. And when Dave and his cutie turn up in London, Karen realizes they are an assassin’s target. With the meticulous attention to detail that makes her a killer librarian, Karen sleuths her way through her own real-life mystery—in which library science meets the art of murder."


Some fabulous books coming out in November, eh?  Which titles tickle your fancy? Do tell!

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

More Than Sorrow by Vicki Delany


First Line: They tell me it was an IED hidden in a truck full of goats going to market, pulled off to the side of the road with an apparent flat tire.

Until an improvised explosive device ripped into her vehicle, Hannah Manning was an internationally-renowned journalist and war correspondent. Now suffering from TBI (traumatic brain injury), Hannah's staying with her sister and her family on a small vegetable farm in Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada.

She's been told that her type of injury can take a long time to heal, but she never dreamed that time would drag so slowly. The tiniest thing can set off a horrendous headache. Once a voracious reader, she can no longer read the printed word. Her brother-in-law doesn't understand the nature of her injury and wishes she would leave-- the sooner the better. The only ways Hannah has found to pass the time is by fixing lunch for everyone, going for walks with Hila, an Afghan refugee staying on a neighboring farm, and going on the occasional horseback ride with her ten-year-old niece Lily.

When Hannah is told that they're living in the original farmhouse her brother-in-law's ancestors built in the 1780s and that there are trunks filled with letters and other documents in the attic, she perks up a bit. Although she can't read the printed word, she can read handwriting... just one of the quirks of TBI. Sleepless most nights, Hannah goes up into the attic to read those letters and becomes interested in the life of Maggie Macgregor, a woman whose life was destroyed by the Revolutionary War. Hannah also begins to have visions of a woman whenever she has to go down into the root cellar. Are these visions a result of TBI... or are they real? (And which would be worse?) Then Hila disappears, and when Hannah cannot account for her time, old enemies begin to circle.

Author Vicki Delany has written an absorbing tale of suspense centered on an old Canadian farmhouse built by people loyal to England who were forced to leave the United States during the Revolutionary War. Maggie Macgregor is a woman in the past who is dependent upon others for her survival. Hannah Manning is an independent woman in the present who is afraid that she will be dependent upon others for the rest of her life. These parallel stories twine about each other and give each character a chance to shine-- and shine they do.

Hannah is a very well-defined, believable character; however, this tale isn't merely a character study. More Than Sorrow has a lot to say about people's reactions to refugees (and how it feels to be one), how long-buried secrets will always find a way to haunt those in the present, and it also sheds light on a little-known chapter in American Revolutionary War history. When I finally closed the cover on this book, I was thoroughly entertained, enlightened, and wishing that I knew what was in store for Hannah Manning in the years to come. Vicki Delany is the author of two excellent mystery series, but if I were you, I wouldn't ignore her standalone novels-- like More Than Sorrow.

More Than Sorrow by Vicki Delany
ISBN: 9781590589878
Poisoned Pen Press © 2012
Paperback, 302 pages

Standalone gothic thriller
Rating: A
Source: Purchased at the Poisoned Pen.

Monday, October 29, 2012

What Sign Should You Be With?


You Should Be With an Air Sign


Your best match is a Gemini, Libra, or Aquarius. You crave excitement and playful banter. Only an air sign can match your wit.

An air sign will keep you on your toes and keep you interested. Your air sign will bring you fun, excitement, and surprises. Sounds like your perfect playmate! 


What Sign Should You Be With?


[My question for you: Is Denis an air sign?]

Scene of the Crime with Author Anna Loan-Wilsey!



This week's featured author is Anna Loan-Wilsey whose book, A Lack of Temperance made me wonder why I'd never read a mystery using the backdrop of the women's temperance movement before. The main character, Hattie Davish, is a traveling private secretary, and I'm eagerly awaiting the second book in the series, Anything But Civil. Anna has very graciously agreed to share a sneak peek of this second Hattie Davish mystery:

Once famed for its lead mines, steamboats and Civil War heroes, Galena, Illinois, is now a sleepy river town.  This is exactly the way Miss Hattie Davish, a traveling private secretary, likes it.  While working for her mentor, Sir Arthur Windom-Green, a millionaire Civil War buff, Hattie has settled in to a routine of typing manuscripts, interviewing aging soldiers, hiking along the Galena River and preparing for a festive Christmas.  

But as Sir Arthur’s house fills with guests, the town begins to bustle with horse-driven sleighs, holiday shoppers, and cannon-firing mobs of veterans seeking revenge.  Cries of “Traitor” and “Copperhead” drown out the Christmas carols and jingle bells.  

As Hattie decorates for the holidays, she finds that behind the mistletoe and holly are unhealed wounds and long buried secrets from a war that ended over twenty-five years ago. When a Christmas dinner party is poisoned and a Santa Claus look-a-like is found dead at the foot of General Grant’s statue, Hattie wonders if this Christmas can possibly get any worse.  And then Sir Arthur is arrested for the murder.  With her life and livelihood on the line, Hattie must find the killer before she’s snuffed out like lights on the Christmas tree.

Anything But Civil is definitely on my wish list, and I hope you put it on yours, too!


Anna Loan-Wilsey

As always, I've rounded up a few links so that you can connect with this talented writer and learn even more about her:





Now... on to the fun part-- the interview!





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

I read Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes adventure The Hound of the Baskervilles when I was about 11.  I was probably too young to fully appreciate it but I loved it because my mother loved it.  

Before that though I adored the Sweet Pickles series!  I belonged to the club and eagerly awaited the arrival of each new book from Who Stole Alligator’s Shoe? to Zip Goes Zebra.  I was mortified when my mother gave my collection away thinking I was too old for them.  I’ve been slowly buying the series back, book by book, for my daughter to read and enjoy.



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

I love to travel, anywhere and everywhere.  It could be a daytrip to city or park I’ve never been to before or a trip of a lifetime, like spending a month in China.  I also enjoy hiking, escaping into a Masterpiece Classic, and renovating our 1892 farmhouse.


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.)  

Reiman Gardens LEGO Exhibit
I’m originally from Syracuse, NY, but I’d like to recommend places from my adopted hometown of Ames, IA, since you won’t find it in guide books but you should.

Reiman Gardens, one of the largest public gardens in Iowa, is an award-winning must-see with its many themed gardens (currently including giant LEGO sculptures of plants and animals), ponds, and an indoor conservatory with a 2,500 sq. ft. glass butterfly wing. It's one of my favorite places to relax and enjoy the changing seasons.

I’d also recommend a stroll across the Iowa State University’s central campus, with its world renowned landscaping, and I know you'd enjoy listening to the bells ringing from the iconic Campanile.

If shopping is more your style, I would highly recommend a visit to downtown Ames, aka Main Street.  Newly renovated, it has everything: restaurants, coffee shops, clothing and jewelry boutiques, specialty gift and food stores (my favorite is the Ames British Store!), two bookstores and our library! Needless to say, I spend a great deal of my time on Main Street.


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

Keri Russell
Keri Russell. I’ve always been told I had the girl next door look, and I like that this lady is also smart and sexy!


Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

Jessica Fletcher, first from the television show and then the Donald Bain books.  When I was younger I wanted to be just like her.  She’s curious, independent, successful, well-educated, well-traveled and has cultivated a diversity of friends.  What’s not to admire?



If you could have in your possession one signed first edition of any book in the world, which book would that be?  


This is a very difficult question.  There are so many books that I could think of: Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, Mark Twain’s Pudd’nhead Wilson, Agatha Christie’s Pocket Full of Rye (the first Christie book I ever read), but if I could pick just one, it would have to The Lord of the Rings, by J.R.R. Tolkien.  Being one of my absolute favorite books (I’d read it three times by the time I turned 14), I have multiple editions but not a first edition or a single one signed by the author.







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? 

It’s cliché but I literately jumped for joy. I’d been hiking in a local park with my new daughter (of three weeks) and had my cellphone with me just in case.  When I hung up from “the call” I couldn’t help jumping up and down, squealing with delight as my daughter looked at me with bewilderment in her eyes.  Luckily there weren’t any other hikers about at the time! 

The first time I saw my book on a shelf in a bookstore, I ended up selling it and signing it for the lady who just happened to be standing next to me at the time!





Name one thing on your Bucket List.  

Mark Twain's writing "hut" in Elmira, New York

I have been extremely fortunate to have checked several things off my bucket list lately: becoming a mother, visiting the Great Wall of China, sleeping in a glass house in the Hawaiian jungle and giving a reading of my published book.

One thing still on my list that I might be able to check off soon is my writers’ cottage.  Ever since I saw Mark Twain’s in Elmira, NY, I wanted one.  My husband recently cleared off an old foundation in the back of our property and gave me a book of cabin building plans for my birthday!


You've just received a $100 gift card to the bookstore of your choice. Which bookstore are you making a bee-line for?  

I would have to say Booked Up, Larry McMurty’s bookstore in Archer City, TX.  I used to live in Texas and have been there several times. Despite the fact that they recently drastically downsized, a visit to Booked Up is an experience in itself, and the stock is such an eclectic mix that you never know what you might find!







ON SALE NOW!





Thank you so much for spending this time with us, Anna. It was a pleasure to be able to get to know you a little better.

May your book sales do nothing but increase!












Friday, October 26, 2012

The Enjoying Critters Weekly Link Round-Up



Denis's new work schedule definitely agrees with us both. Last week we went to the Desert Botanical Garden for the Monarch exhibit at the Butterfly Pavilion; this week we packed up some goodies and headed up to the White Mountains and Black Canyon Lake. Next week, we'll be heading to the Desert Botanical Garden again for Ofrendas... and perhaps other places, too. Who knows? My social calendar does show an author signing at the Poisoned Pen for tomorrow afternoon. I think I'll get dolled up and head over there to meet Donis Casey and Vicki Delany while Denis is at work.

Denis took this photo of a female Western Bluebird yesterday at Black Canyon Lake. She was decked out in her drab winter colors and keeping an eye on what we were doing, although she was much too shy to join in with the squirrels and Stellar's jays.

Denis and I love to head up to Black Canyon Lake. At over 7,000 feet in elevation up in the Ponderosa pines, it's a refreshing change from the desert heat-- although our preferred time is after Labor Day so we miss the crowds that like to hang out at the lake.

It definitely isn't the place for anyone who's shy and skittish around critters. I'd just sat down on a park bench when a young golden-mantled squirrel climbed up my pant leg, sat on my lap, tapped me on a boob a time or two with a tiny paw, and looked at me as though to say, "Where's the goodies?" I didn't have to be asked twice. Sunflower seeds and unshelled peanuts were brought out almost immediately!

Denis and I find the wildlife every bit as good for the soul as the setting at Black Canyon Lake, and I could rhapsodize about it for several more paragraphs, but... y'all would like some links, wouldn't you?


Bookish Links & Other Interesting Stuff

eBooks 

I  ♥  Lists & Quizzes

New to My Google Reader


That's it 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, October 25, 2012

The Dark Winter by David Mark


First Line: The old man looks up, and for a moment it feels as though he is staring through the wrong end of a telescope.

A young girl adopted from Sierra Leone is hacked to death in full view of the congregation at Holy Trinity Church in the center of Hull. Detective Sergeant Aector McAvoy is assigned to the task force looking for the killer and fully expects to spend his time manning the phones and making sure everyone enters all their information in the database.

Before he gets fully settled in, the Assistant Chief Commissioner asks him to take care of a death notification. Although it puts him in hot water with his superior, McAvoy does so and learns about an old man who, forty years earlier, had been the sole survivor of a ship wreck. The old man had agreed to be interviewed for a documentary and was with the film crew aboard an Icelandic container ship when he cut filming short and went outside for some air. A few days later, his body was found floating in a life raft.

The more McAvoy learns about both deaths, the more convinced he is that the two are related... and then a third death occurs, and the race is on to catch a killer who has a very singular objective. Well, at least the race is on with Aector. Some of his fellow officers seem more interested in a quick arrest than in finding the real killer.

I slid into this story effortlessly. Aector isn't your normal police officer. He doesn't smoke. He seldom drinks. He loves his pregnant wife and young son to distraction, and they love him every bit as much. He's what his boss DCI Patricia Pharaoh calls "a natural policeman"-- somehow it's in McAvoy's blood to feel the links between disparate facts, to insist upon seeing the right person in prison for committing a crime-- but he's a bit of a mystery and a joke amongst his co-workers.

There are whispers and rumors galore throughout the police station about McAvoy: that he turned in one of their own, that he's not to be trusted, that the only thing he's good for is answering phones and sitting at a computer. Then there's the matter of his size. He's a red-headed 6 foot five inch bear of a man who avoids using any semblance of force. There wouldn't be so many questions and rumors about McAvoy if the people he worked with knew more about the man, but they don't, so suspicion persists.

It was a sheer delight to begin to put the bits and pieces of information about McAvoy together as the story progressed. He is a fascinating, complex character. The identity of the killer was genuinely puzzling throughout, and some of the action sequences in the book actually made me gasp aloud as I read them. (I'm not a screamer, and I don't gasp, so you can use this as an indication of how far into the story I was!)

Above the characters and the killings, the atmosphere of Hull lies over everything like a grimy blanket of snow. Hull, a once thriving city until the fishing industry collapsed and sounded a death knell. Hull, full of history, full of hope-- and hopefully full of many future cases for DS Aector McAvoy to investigate. David Mark's debut novel has me hooked, and I want more!

The Dark Winter by David Mark
ISBN: 9780399158643
Blue Rider Press © 2012
Hardcover, 304 pages

Police Procedural, #1 Detective Sergeant Aector McAvoy mystery
Rating: A
Source: the publisher

Pago Pago Tango by John Enright


First Line: Once upon a time this had been a road.

Detective Sergeant Apelu Soifua was born on an island in American Samoa, and when he was a child, his father moved the family to the mainland where, as an adult, Apelu joined the San Francisco Police Department. After seven years on the force, he moved his own family back to Samoa to take care of his ailing father. His wife works for a shipping company, Apelu is a detective sergeant on the island police force, and they have four children.

Apelu's background makes him very familiar with the differences between the two cultures that co-exist on the islands. He needs every bit of that knowledge with a case he's determined to solve. He is called to the home of a white family in Pago Pago. They've been burglarized, and after speaking with the wife, Apelu goes to the canning factory to meet with the husband, who gives him a list of the stolen items. At first, it seems like an open-and-shut case, but as the detective starts gathering evidence and piecing together clues, he realizes that it's anything but a clear-cut case of breaking and entering.

As Apelu investigates, it becomes very clear that living on a small island where everyone knows everyone else has its advantages. He has to navigate a twisted track between the Samoan and American cultures, finding mystifying codes, dead bodies, and plenty of lies along the way.

Although the real villain's insertion into the plot was a bit too transparent for me, I really enjoyed this book. It's perfect for any armchair traveling mystery lover. Enright's descriptions of the Samoan landscape-- where the frigate birds are as much a part of the sky as the clouds-- are vivid and poetic. He shares a great deal of information about Samoan culture and the effects that Western civilization has had on the islands. All these insights may seem like so many interesting sidetrips in the narrative, but they aren't; they are vital to understanding how Apelu approaches the investigation.

I was so engrossed in this book that I finished it much too soon. Now I have to wait in hopes of another investigation with the intriguing Detective Sergeant Apelu Soifua. I highly recommend Pago Pago Tango to any crime fiction lovers who like strong stories, intriguing characters, vivid, exotic settings, and learning about other cultures.

Pago Pago Tango by John Enright
ISBN: 9781612185002
Thomas and Mercer © 2012
Paperback, 296 pages

Police Procedural, #1 Jungle Beat mystery
Rating: A
Source: Amazon Vine

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

What's New in Christmas-Themed Mysteries for 2012


Our beloved retail establishments have already begun putting out their Christmas goodies, so please don't hurt me for putting mine out on the shelf. I know I'm not the only one who enjoys reading a Christmas-themed mystery or two each holiday season, and since I am an enabler, it's my duty to let you know about some of the new mysteries that will be available this year. You  need a little time to see which ones catch your eye so you can get your hands on them, right? (Well... that's my story, and I'm sticking to it!)

Here are my picks from this season's list of brand-new holiday-themed mysteries. I've grouped them by release dates and included the information you'll need to find them at all your favorite book spots. (Synopses courtesy of Amazon and Barnes and Noble.)

Ho, ho, ho-- a'reading I will go!



=== Available Now ===


Title: Naughty: Nine Tales of Christmas Crime
Short Stories
ISBN: 9781477421857
Publisher: CreateSpace
Paperback, 210 pages

Synopsis: "In this collection of hilarious short stories, you'll see what the thieves, killers, psychos and scumbags are up to come the holidays...and it's not caroling door to door. Well, not unless they're casing the neighborhood for a break-in, as a rag-tag gang does in the title story. You'll also meet a mall elf menaced by a very, very bad Santa (in "I Killed Santa Claus"), a London police inspector hunting for the man who murdered Ebenezer Scrooge (in "Humbug"), a trucker out to save his shipment of Cabbage Patch Dolls from bumbling hijackers (in "Special Delivery") and many more characters you'll never forget.

Originally published in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine and Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, these nine tales from award-winning short story master Steve Hockensmith (Holmes on the Range, Dreadfully Ever After) are sure to have you ho-ho-hoing from the first page to the last."


Title: The Christmas Carol Murders 
Series: #1 in the Dickens Junction series set in Oregon
ISBN: 9780985323608  
Publisher: Harrison Thurman Books
Paperback, 276 pages  

*Upcoming review on Kittling: Books

Synopsis: "It's the holiday season in Dickens Junction, Oregon. Local bookstore owner Simon Alastair is getting ready for the community's annual celebration of Charles Dickens's well-known story. But when a mysterious stranger shows up in the Junction and is murdered hours later, Simon begins to suspect that his little community has been targeted for destruction by a shadowy organization. With the support of Zach, a dashing young magazine reporter, Simon decides to investigate the crime himself. When a second murder follows, Simon must confront the worst questions of all: which of his friends and business associates is a ruthless murderer? And why is everyone suddenly reading Ayn Rand?

The Christmas Carol Murders is the first of an exciting new cozy mystery series combining the atmosphere of a classic Agatha Christie puzzle, the deft touch of Charlotte MacLeod, a hint of Oscar Wilde's humor, and the literary spirit of the great Charles Dickens."


Title: Elvis and the Blue Christmas Corpse
Author: Peggy Webb
Series: #5 in the Southern Cousins series set in Mississippi  
ISBN: 9780758241436 
Publisher: Kensington
Hardcover, 262 pages

Synopsis: "Someone's ringing slay bells and Callie, her bodacious Cousin Lovie, and the basset hound who believes he's the King reincarnated must go on the hunt for a killer who's anything but jolly. 

It may be Christmas in Tupelo, but there's precious little peace in the valley for the Valentine gang. Callie Valentine Jones' not-quite-ex Jack is trussed up like a holiday turkey, recovering from a shattered leg. Cousin Lovie's on the rebound, looking for love in all the wrong stockings. And Elvis the basset hound is out for revenge on the Lhasa Apso who's been singing "Merry Christmas, Baby" to his sweet French poodle behind his tail.

Everyone finally gets into the spirit when Uncle Charlie is pressed into service as Santa at a weekend charity event in the mall. But Yuletide cheer turns to Yuletide fear after a killer tries to zap Charlie back to the North Pole marked "Return to Sender"--and sends Rudolph to the big reindeer pen in the sky.

Determined to find out who's decking the mall with Christmas corpses, Elvis and the Valentines fill up their sleigh with suspects. Could it be the cookie lady who puts more than sugar into her Christmas goodies? The deranged vet who vows to barbecue Santa? Or the former beauty queen who's been stalking Charlie in her spare time? Can the Valentine gang unmask this devil in disguise in time to turn their "Blue Christmas" all Christmas-y and white?"


Title: Mistletoe, Merriment, and Murder
Author: Sara Rosett
Series: #7 in the Mom Zone series
ISBN: 9780758269218
Publisher: Kensington
Mass Market Paperback, 320 pages

Synopsis: "Super organizer Ellie Avery could really use some Christmas cheer when Gabrielle Matheson, a grinchy professional rival, sets up shop in the same small Georgia town. But before the halls are even halfway decked with holly, someone uses Ellie's terrifically tasteless white elephant swap gift as ...a murder weapon! Ellie's now a suspect. Besides playing Mrs. Santa for her Air Force pilot husband and their two kids, shielding her eyes from the garishly over-decorated house down the street, and helping a client who's a hardcore hoarder, Ellie also has to solve this ho-ho-homicide ...and find a killer who wishes her a very deadly Christmas."


Title: December Dread
Author: Jess Lourey
Series: #8 in the Murder-by-Month series set in Minnesota
ISBN: 9780738731889
Publisher: Midnight Ink
Paperback, 288 pages

Synopsis: "With Christmas just over a week away, ’tis the season for grinning sales elves on TV, maddeningly jolly Muzak, and a guilty Nut Goodie addiction. But for Mira James and other Battle Lake-area women, the holidays are marred by something far worse—a serial killer leaving candy canes as his calling card. His target? Thirty-something brunettes who look just like Mira. When a woman from her high school graduating class becomes his latest victim, Mira plows through a case of online dating turned deadly with Mrs. Berns at her side. Will she earn her detective stripes . . . or end up deader than the Ghost of Christmas Past?"


Title: The Snow White Christmas Cookie
Author: David Handler
Series: #9 in the Berger and Mitry series set in Connecticut
ISBN: 9781250004543
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Hardcover, 272 pages

Synopsis: "The newest adventure featuring the mismatched romantic crime-fighting duo of New York City film critic Mitch Berger and Connecticut State Resident Trooper Desiree Mitry presents Des with her first taste of Christmas in the historic New England village of Dorset.

And what a taste it is. Three blizzards have blanketed the village in forty inches of snow. Bryce Peck, Mitch’s blue-blooded neighbor out on Big Sister Island, has just been found dead of a drug overdose. Young Kylie Champlain has slammed her car head-on into an office building after she’s caught trying to shoplift a pair of Ugg boots. And a grinch has taken to stealing the mail from Hank Merrill’s postal route, which happens to be the main route through the historic district.

Stealing the U.S. mail is a serious federal crime, but Des soon discovers that she’s onto something much bigger: a black-market prescription drug gang with ties to organized crime. And now a fourth blizzard is on its way. And so is another murder.  And, somehow, the man in her life has managed to land himself smack dab in the middle of the whole mess. Not to mention that he’s in way over his head with Josie Cantro, the beautiful and treacherous life-coach who just may be responsible for it all. If Des doesn’t act fast, this will truly be a Christmas to remember---but for all of the wrong reasons."




=== October 26 ===


Title: The Gingerbread Bump-off
Series: #6 in the Fresh-Baked series set in Texas
ISBN: 9780451234834 
Publisher: NAL Trade
Paperback, 304 pages

Synopsis: "Not only will Phyllis Newsom's house be featured in the annual Christmas Jingle Bell Tour of Homes, she also has a Christmas Eve bridal shower and a New Year's Eve wedding to bake goodies for. But like her tasty treats, she rises to the occasion.

Before the tour gets under way, Phyllis makes a gruesome discovery on her porch: someone has tried to kill her friend. As Santa's naughty list gets longer, Phyllis tries to catch a half-baked killer."


=== October 30 ===


Title: A Christmas Garland
Author: Anne Perry  
Series: #10 in the Christmas mysteries 
ISBN:  9780345530745
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Hardcover, 208 pages

Synopsis: "'An annual treat,' declared The Wall Street Journal of Anne Perry’s Victorian-era holiday mysteries. Now she continues this magnificent tradition with A Christmas Garland, a yuletide tale set in exotic India. This time the mistress of mystery tells the story of a terrible crime that sets the stage for another: accusing an innocent man of murder.

The year is 1857, soon after the violent Siege of Cawnpore, with India in the midst of rebellion. In the British garrison, a guard is killed and an Indian prisoner escapes, which leads to yet more British deaths. Cries for revenge are overwhelming. Despite no witnesses and no evidence against him, a luckless British medical orderly named John Tallis is arrested as an accomplice simply because he was the only soldier unaccounted for when these baffling crimes were committed.

Though chosen to defend Tallis, young Lieutenant Victor Narraway is not encouraged to try very hard. Narraway’s superiors merely want a show trial. But inspired by a soldier’s widow and her children, and by his own stubborn faith in justice, Narraway searches for the truth. In an alien world haunted by memories of massacre, he is the accused man’s only hope.

The trial of John Tallis equals the white-knuckle best of Anne Perry’s breathtaking courtroom dramas. And thanks to a simple Christmas garland and some brilliant detective work, Narraway perseveres against appalling odds, learning how to find hope within himself—and turn the darkest hour into one full of joy and light."


Title: Eleven Pipers Piping
Author: C.C. Benison
Series: #2 in the Father Tom Christmas series set in England
ISBN: 9780385344463 
Publisher: Delacorte Press
Hardcover, 496 pages

Synopsis: "Father Tom Christmas, the recently widowed vicar adjusting to life in the English village of Thornford Regis, would do almost anything to avoid attending the annual Robert Burns Supper at the local hotel. But as chaplain to a traditional Scottish pipe band, Father Tom must deliver the grace—and contend with wailing bagpipes, whiskey-laced parishioners reciting poetry, and the culinary abomination that is haggis.

As snow falls to unprecedented depths, the revelers carry on—briefly interrupted by an enigmatic stranger seeking shelter. Then Will Moir, proprietor of the hotel and a dedicated piper, inexplicably goes missing—only to be found later in the hotel’s dark tower, alone and dead from what appears to be a heart attack.

Father Tom’s own heart sinks when he learns the actual cause of Will’s demise. When word gets out, the flurry of innocent speculation descends into outlandish gossip. And, for all its tranquil charm, Thornford Regis has plenty to gossip about—illicit trysts, muted violence, private sorrows, and old, unresolved tragedies. The question is: Who would benefit most from the piper’s death? Suspicion swirls around many, including Will’s beautiful widow, their shadowy son, Will’s obnoxious brother-in-law, and even the mysterious party crasher, who knows more than she lets on about the grudges she left behind—but never forgot."


=== November 6 ===


Title: The Twelve Clues of Christmas
Author: Rhys Bowen
Series: #6 in the Royal Spyness series
ISBN:  9780425252789
Publisher: Berkley Hardcover
Hardcover, 320 pages

Synopsis: "She may be thirty-fifth in line for the throne, but Lady Georgiana Rannoch cannot wait to ring in the new year—before a Christmas killer wrings another neck…

On the first day of Christmas, my true love gave to me—well, actually, my true love, Darcy O’Mara, is spending a feliz navidad tramping around South America. Meanwhile, Mummy is holed up in a tiny village called Tiddleton-under-Lovey with that droll Noel Coward! And I’m snowed in at Castle Rannoch with my bumbling brother, Binky, and sourpuss sister-in-law, Fig.

So it’s a miracle when I contrive to land a position as hostess to a posh holiday party in Tiddleton. The village is like something out of A Christmas Carol! But no sooner have I arrived than a neighborhood nuisance, a fellow named Freddie falls out of a tree, dead…. Dickensian, indeed.

Freddie’s merely a stocking stuffer. On my second day in town, another so-called accident turns up another mincemeat pie—and yet another on my third. The village is buzzing that a recent prison break could have something to do with it… that, or a long-standing witch’s curse. I’m not so sure. But after Darcy shows up beneath the mistletoe, anything could be possible in this wicked wonderland."


Title: The Clue Is in the Pudding
Series: #20 in the Pennyfoot Royal Hotel series set in England
ISBN: 9780425253274
Publisher: Berkley Trade
Paperback, 304 pages

Synopsis: "The kitchen staff of the Pennyfoot Hotel is toiling away to prepare the finest meal for the guests on Christmas. And the plum pudding may very well be to die for…

Cecily Sinclair Baxter could use a Christmas miracle. Mrs. Chubb, the Pennyfoot’s housekeeper, must travel up north for a family emergency, and Cecily needs a temporary replacement. The agency doesn’t have much to offer on short notice during this busy time of year. But they have someone—Beatrice Tucker—who turns out to be more of a curse. She fights with just about everyone, including Archibald Armitage.

Star of the London stage, Armitage is staying at the Pennyfoot this holiday season. His presence turns out to be a blessing after he rescues the stable manager’s dog from drowning in the icy duck pond. But not everyone in Badgers End is a fan of the actor…

When Armitage drops dead after Beatrice serves him some plum pudding, everyone assumes the huffy housekeeper is the culprit. But as Cecily begins to investigate, the list of suspects grows, and solving this case may not be as easy as pie…or pudding."


Title: Mrs. Jeffries and the Mistletoe Mix-Up
Series: #29 in the Mrs. Jeffries series set in England
ISBN: 9780425251706  
Publisher: Berkley
Mass Market Paperback, 272 pages

Synopsis: "Moments after a high tea is interrupted by a fire in the servants’ hall, art collector Daniel McCourt is found sprawled on the floor of his study under a bundle of mistletoe, his throat slit by the bloody sword lying next to his body. Could the killer be a disgruntled lover, sending a message by murdering McCourt under the mistletoe? Could it be one of his fellow collectors, pointedly using one of McCourt’s own acquisitions to kill him?
Inspector Witherspoon is determined to solve the case—preferably before Christmas Eve—but of course he will need some assistance from the always sharp-witted Mrs. Jeffries, who has her own theories on why McCourt had to die by the sword…"
That's my list! How about you? Did any of these titles catch your eye? Which ones?