Why Mysteries?

I have been a fan on mysteries since Scooby-Doo and Nancy Drew. I loved all the 70s Saturday morning cartoons where the amateur sleuths solved the crimes and capers…”The Funky Phantom,” “Josie and the Pussycats,” “Speed Buggy,” “The Pink Panther.” The list is long. These were definitely my gateway mysteries to my current habit.

I read lots of genres, but I always gravitate n to the mystery. It has so many interesting subgenres and has been a reading staple for so many for generations.

Here are my Top 10 reasons…

  1. I love a good puzzle and the opportunity to solve it before the end of the book.

  2. I want to see justice served in the end.

  3. Mysteries are an escape from the craziness of normal life.

  4. Cozy mystery sleuths always have interesting jobs and hobbies. I like to learn new things.

  5. The locations are intriguing. I love take book vacations to all kinds of interesting places.

  6. The amateur sleuths are fun. They prove that every-day people can solve crimes. (As a kid, I loved that Nancy Drew was a teenager with a car who could solve crimes before the adults did.)

  7. The mystery genre has so many subgenres that there is something for every taste. I bounce around from sweet and cozy (but deadly) to dark thrillers that keep me up at night.

  8. I love puns, double entendre, and other kinds of wordplay. Mystery writers are masters at multiple meanings, clues, and red herrings.

  9. I am fascinated with technology, pop culture, and science, and they all appear everywhere in this genre.

  10. The community of mystery writers is so amazingly kind and generous with their time and advice. It is such a fabulous group to be a part of. I just came back from the Malice Domestic Conference in Bethesda, MD, and it was a whirlwind weekend full of so many mystery writers and readers.

And that’s why I love mysteries. What would you add to my list?

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Teresa Trent

I’d like to welcome author Teresa Trent to the blog for #ThisorThatThursday!

I’d like to welcome the fabulous Teresa Trent to the blog today for #ThisorThatThursday!

Things you need for your writing sessions: I need a quiet room. I might put on music, but when I’m really into it, it’s just me and all those people in my head.

Things that hamper your writing: If I’m stressed out over something new in my life, I have a hard time writing. For example, my son being in the hospital. I couldn’t write at all until we knew he was going to be okay, then I couldn’t stop writing. I guess I had bottled up on my writing urges.

Things you love about writing: I love to create characters, situations, ideal worlds. I love to write an outline and work my way through it.

Things you hate about writing: Hands down—editing. One of the methods I use for writing is dictation, especially when I’m on a roll. Unfortunately, dictation stinks when it comes to punctuation and using the right word.

Hardest thing about being a writer: For me it’s going through draft after draft after draft. By the end of the process, you really don’t want to read that book again.

Easiest thing about being a writer: Getting to play with storylines and of course, I love the flexibility of my work hours.

Things you never want to run out of: I’m weird. Chocolate, licorice, cottage cheese, coffee/tea.

Things you wish you’d never bought: The latest diet program I fell for on Facebook.

Favorite foods: Pizza, Lasagna, Tiger Roll, Chicken Lo Mein

Things that make you want to gag: Brussel Sprouts, Okra

Favorite music or song: I love New Age piano music. Think George Winston or Kevin Kern. It gives me a calm base to go about my day.

Music that drives you crazy: Heavy metal and rap. I gave birth with rap music playing in the birthing suite once. I don’t know put it on the tv but I distinctly remember someone saying to me “Push” and my reply was “Turn it off!”

Favorite smell: Roast beef cooking in the oven.

Something that makes you hold your nose: I went to college in Greeley, Colorado. The school was upwind of the stockyards. Nothing like rushing to class holding your nose.

Things you always put in your books: A moment between characters that makes me cry.

Things you never put in your books: The “F” word.

Things to say to an author: Where can I leave a review?

Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: You know, I have a great idea for a book. You can write it for me and then I’ll collect the royalties! Okay?

Things that make you happy: Time with my family, reading, singing with my daughter, watching streaming tv with my husband.

Things that drive you crazy: People on the phone in traffic who don’t go when the light turns green. I’m in Houston and boy, howdy. It happens daily.

About Teresa:

Teresa Trent is the author of over 15 books. She started writing cozy mysteries with the Pecan Bayou and Piney Woods Mystery Series. She sets her stories in different geographical areas of Texas and The Swinging Sixties historical series is set just north of Dallas, starting in 1962. You might think with so many books set in the Lone Star state, she was born there, but no. She has lived all over the world, thanks to her father's career in the army. After living in Texas for twenty-five years, she's finally put down roots.

Teresa is a hybrid author, self-publishing early in her career, which led her to traditional publishing with Level Best Books and Camel Press. She is the author of several short stories that have appeared in a host of anthologies. Teresa publishes the blog and podcast, Books to the Ceiling at https://teresatrent.blog where she loves to read the book excerpts of other writers and share in the writing community.

Teresa is a member of Sisters in Crime and lives in Houston, Texas with her husband and son.

Let’s Be Social:

FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/teresatrentmysterywriter

TWITTER: https://twitter.com/ttrent_cozymys

BLOG: https://teresatrent.blog/

WEBSITE: http://teresatrent.com

GOODREADS: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5219581.Teresa_Trent

INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/teresatrent_cozymys/

BOOKBUB: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/teresa-trent

What I've Been Reading Recently

My TBR piles grow every week. Every time I think I’ve made a dent, there are so many new things to add. Here’s what I’ve been reading so far this summer. It’s an eclectic mix of mysteries, suspense, thrillers, police procedurals, and classics.

I have finally caught up with all of Louise Penny’s novels. I love all of my visits to Three Pines. The stories are well done, and the characters are old friends by now.

After watching the new Lincoln Lawyer and the Bosch reboot, I realized that I haven’t read all of the Michael Connelly books. I love the Lincoln Lawyer and Harry Bosch. Renee Ballard is growing on me. Connelly is a master with characters and action, and I’m working my way through his collection.

Elle Cosimono’s Finlay Donovan is a very funny character. Her adventures are fun reads. Nancy Cole Silveman’s The Navigator’s Daughter, is a page-turning historical mystery.

My favorite cozies this spring/summer are from Ellen Byron’s new Vintage Cookbook Mysteries, Julie Anne Lindsey/Bree Baker, Sherry Harris’s Chloe Jackson Mysteries, Libby Klein’s Poppy McAllister Mysteries, anything by Diane Kelly, and Jackie Layton.

I track my recent reads on Goodreads and BookBub. Hop over for the reviews and favs. Follow me there. I’d love to keep up with what you’re reading.

Goodreads

BookBub

What are your recent recommendations?

#WriterWednesday Interview with the Moonlight and Misadventure Authors

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I’d like to welcome Joseph S. Walker, Sharon Hart Addy, M. H. Callway, Tracy Falenwolfe, Kate Fellowes, Jeanne Dubois, Robert Weibezahl, K. L. Abrahamson, and Susan Jane Wright to the blog today to celebrate their latest anthology, Moonlight and Misadventure, edited by Judy Penz Sheluk.

JOSEPH S. WALKER, ‘Crown Jewel’

The most exciting thing about your writing life:  I’d say there are two genuinely exciting things about writing. The first is the feeling of getting into a groove where a story is just clicking along, seemingly without any conscious guidance from me. At least in my experience, starting a story is sheer agony; actually writing, once you’re in that place, is simply fun. The second exciting thing has been the contacts I’ve made because of writing. Because of my writing, I’m now in regular touch with many other writers, including a number I’ve admired for many years. There’s also the pleasure of hearing from people who enjoyed your work, and just being part of the mystery community in general. Especially over the past couple of years, that’s been a godsend. I suppose it’s a paradox that the fundamentally solitary activity of writing has greatly increased my social circle.

The one thing you wish you could do over in your writing life:  Start sooner!  I always knew I wanted to be a writer, but I was paralyzed by self-doubt. I started dozens of stories and never finished them. I was forty before I started submitting fiction, and it’s really only been in the last few years that I’ve really dedicated most of my (non-work) time to it. Maybe I needed those years to fully develop, but my sense is that I just cost myself a lot of productive writing years for no reason.

 SHARON HART ADDY, ‘The Library Clue’

The nicest thing a reader said to you: Your book Lucky Jake is my son’s favorite.

The craziest thing a reader said to you: My son Jake thinks you wrote Lucky Jake for him.

 M.H. CALLWAY, ‘The Moon God of Broadmoor’

Something you wish you could do: I’d love to be a mountain climber. I run, ski and hike, but I’ve never tried rock climbing. Tales of “exposure” or dangling over a fall of thousands of feet are too scary. I’m happy to remain an armchair adventurer and to read about climbing feats.

Something you wish you’d never learned to do: To write and read bureaucratese after spending a working career in government. Mind you, it’s given me great comedy material to use in my writing.

JUDY PENZ SHELUK, ‘Strawberry Moon’

Favorite thing to do when you have free time: Golf.

The thing you’ll always move to the bottom of your to do list: Clean the house (especially dusting, I mean, it’s just dusty again the next day, right?)

TRACY FALENWOLFE, ‘Cereus Thinking’

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: A panda bear. No kidding. When we were kids, my brother and I rode our bikes around on adventures and called each other Bebs One and Bebs Two. Bebs was a panda bear. I was even making stuff up back then.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: I spend a lot of time yelling at people to take shorter showers, to stop holding the refrigerator door open for so long, and to keep their hands off the thermostat.

 KATE FELLOWES, ‘The Currency of Wishes’

Something you wanted to be when you were a kid: A child detective, like Trixie Belden.

Something you do that you never dreamed you’d do: Punch a clock.

JEANNE DUBOIS, ‘Moonset’

Favorite places you’ve been: St. Augustine Beach in September, northern California in June, anywhere in spring, Ireland anytime.

Places you never want to go again: Boston in winter. Too many layers. For one visit in February of 2013, I purchased a clearance puffer coat online. I soon discovered why it was so cheap. The coat was white. I “disappeared” in the blizzard that weekend.

 ROBERT WEIBEZAHL, ‘Just Like Peg Entwhistle

Most daring thing you’ve ever done: Tried out for Jeopardy! It took a few online tests and a couple of auditions but I was finally selected to be on the show … and I won!
Something you chickened out from doing: Going to graduate school. Had even sent in the deposit and was making plans but changed my mind the summer before. 30+ years later I finally went back to school and got that elusive masters.

 K.L. ABRAHAMSON, ‘Chicken Coops and Bread Pudding’

The funniest thing that happened to you on vacation: My 'vacations' may not be like most people's. I like to grab a backpack and go off on my own to strange places in the world. This story happened travelling in Northern India along the Indo-Chinese border. Now you have to understand that I am six feet + tall and I wear my hair short. When I travel in placed like India this can be an advantage because I am rarely harassed by men. I also wear baggy clothing and a photographer's vest so people can't see my shape. Along the border the local bus I was on had to frequently stop for armed security checkpoints. Foreigners had to disembark and present their passports. There were only a few foreigners on this bus so we all lined up with passports at the ready. When my turn came they opened the passport and took down most of my information. Then the guards (who spoke no English) stopped and looked at me, then down at their ledger and back at me. Then they laughed nervously. That was when it hit me. They didn't know whether I was a man or a woman because of my 'disguise'. In response I opened my vest and showed them that I had breasts (through my t-shirt of course). Much laughter ensued, but they gave me back my passport and my travels continued…

The most embarrassing thing that happened to you on a vacation: Picture the ruins of Angkor Wat. Picture monsoon rains and two tourists and their guide huddled in a hut waiting for the rain to lessen. Unfortunately, the Cambodian cooking took a bad turn in my stomach and I urgently needed to relieve myself. Finally, the guide allowed me to go out to find a private place in the brush. I did.

I thought. I pulled down my trousers and squatted among the ferns and vines in the pouring rain just in time for line of villagers peddling bikes through the underbrush. I was three feet from a trail that I hadn't seen through the downpour! Again, much laughter, but I still color-up at that memory.

 SUSAN JANE WRIGHT, ‘Madeleine in the Moonlight’

Something you're really good at: I can count large groups of things very fast. I discovered this as a summer student working for biologist. I could count the number of butterfly eggs on the back of a leaf in a flash. I was accurate too. It's an interesting skill but not highly valued in the real world.

Something you're really bad at: Watching scary movies. My daughters refuse to take me with them to the cinema because I scream at the slightest provocation and scare the audience.

 About the book

Whether it’s vintage Hollywood, the Florida everglades, the Atlantic City boardwalk, or a farmhouse in Western Canada, the twenty authors represented in this collection of mystery and suspense interpret the overarching theme of “moonlight and misadventure” in their own inimitable style where only one thing is assured: Waxing, waning, gibbous, or full, the moon is always there, illuminating things better left in the dark.

Featuring stories by K.L. Abrahamson, Sharon Hart Addy, C.W. Blackwell, Clark Boyd, M.H. Callway, Michael A. Clark, Susan Daly, Buzz Dixon, Jeanne DuBois, Elizabeth Elwood, Tracy Falenwolfe, Kate Fellowes, John M. Floyd, Billy Houston, Bethany Maines, Judy Penz Sheluk, KM Rockwood, Joseph S. Walker, Robert Weibezahl, and Susan Jane Wright.

About our Editor, Judy Penz Sheluk

A former journalist and magazine editor, Judy Penz Sheluk is the author of two mystery series: The Glass Dolphin Mysteries and the Marketville Mysteries. Her short crime fiction appears in several collections, including The Best Laid Plans, Heartbreaks & Half-truths, and Moonlight & Misadventure, which she also edited.

Judy is a member of Sisters in Crime National, Toronto, and Guppy Chapters, International Thriller Writers, the Short Mystery Fiction Society, and Crime Writers of Canada, where she serves as Chair on the Board of Directors.

 Find the Book:

Moonlight and Misadventure

 

 

#ThisorThatThursday Author Interview with Samantha McGraw

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I’d like to welcome author and blogger, Samantha McGraw, to the blog!

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A few of your favorite things: Almost any kind of tea (I love to try new ones!), Chocolate (Everyday!!), Cats (Strays know I’m a cat lover and always find their way to my doorstep.)

Things you need to throw out: Many people would say I have too many notebooks, colored pens, and books, but I say those people are crazy! My closet could use a good decluttering though.

Things you need for your writing sessions: Good lighting, quiet, a cup of tea, and a few Hershey’s Kisses.

Things that hamper your writing: A cluttered desk or a long to-do list that’s cluttering my mind.

Things you never want to run out of: Chocolate and Tea.

Things you wish you’d never bought: I seem to have an addiction to various kitchen gadgets that have only been used once, or never been used at all.

Favorite foods: Did I mention that I like chocolate? Any kind of cheese would be at the top of this list too. And if you’re a chocolate and cheese lover too – try a grilled cheese with brie and Nutella. You’ll thank me later.

Things that make you want to gag: I never liked fish. The taste and the smell are not appealing to me.

Favorite smell: I love citrus smells and fruity flowers. Honeysuckle is one of my favorite scents, it reminds me of my childhood at my grandparent’s house. I have a honeysuckle candle on my desk that I often light when I’m writing.
Something that makes you hold your nose: Bleach. I suffer from migraines from time-to-time and this smell is a trigger so I avoid using bleach whenever possible.

Something you’re really good at: Baking. I love trying new recipes and experimenting with new ideas.
Something you’re really bad at: Crafty DIY projects. I’m one of those Pinterest-fail people!

Last best thing you ate: While I’m sure I’ve had something marvelous since, this question takes my memory back to a few months ago on a girl’s trip to Wilmington, NC. We were blessed with discovering some of the best restaurants in town. Fabulous grilled cheese sandwiches, tapas, crepes, and homemade breads. It’s a good thing I don’t eat like that too often!
Last thing you regret eating: My husband offered me a bite of his dish when we were at a Chinese restaurant. I asked if it was spicy and he assured me it wasn’t. He lied!

 Things to say to an author: Your story is a fabulous escape for me! I loved taking a trip into the world you created.
Things to say to an author if you want to be fictionally killed off in their next book: Your work reminds me of ______’s work, but their stories are a little better.

 Favorite places you’ve been: Wilmington, NC, San Antonio, TX, Napa Valley, CA New York City
Places you never want to go to again: The Jersey Shore. It’s a lovely place to visit, but there are A LOT of bridges to cross in order to get there. Bridges are not my thing!

Favorite books (or genre): Mysteries, of course, and Thrillers, but those are also kind of mysterious. I occasionally enjoy Women’s Fiction too.
Books you wouldn’t buy: I’m not a big fan of history or autobiographies unless it’s someone I really admire.

The coolest person you’ve ever met: Hmm, there are a few. The coolest writers I’ve met are Sue Grafton and David Baldacci. I’m a big fan of both so that was pretty awesome. In a previous life, I was an event planner in Washington, D.C. and planned events that were attended by President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore. I also planned a holiday party for Adrian Cronauer (of the Good Morning, Vietnam fame).

The celebrity who didn’t look like he/she did in pictures/video: I once met Steve Guttenberg and Quincy Jones at an inauguration party and didn’t recognize either one.

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About Samantha:

Samantha McGraw has a love of mysteries and afternoon tea. Her short story, “Deadly Devonshire,” can be found in the Deadly Southern Charm Anthology. She lives in Richmond with her husband and very spoiled fur baby.  

Freelance Writer

Blogger on the award-winning Tea Cottage Mysteries

Contributing Author to Deadly Southern Charm

Contributor at Huffington Post

Let’s Be Social:

Blog: http://www.teacottagemysteries.com

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/teacottagemysteries 

Instagram: http://www.instagram.com/teacottagemysteries