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A Trip to Borderland

By Pamela Beason

In April of 2019, I had begun my fifth Sam Westin mystery, set in the Cascade Mountains, my regular stomping grounds close to home. I planned to include an avalanche and wolverines. However, my progress on the manuscript was severely hampered by the need for a plot. My imagination was not coming up with one.

Fortunately, I was about to set off for a Great Old Broads retreat in the Chiricahua Mountains of Arizona, where I would study the “sky islands,” the isolated clusters of mountains rising from the surrounding desert. I flew into Tucson and drove east to the Southwestern Research Station, where I stayed in a dorm normally reserved for researchers and volunteers.

We were close to the US-Mexico border. Like all Americans, I’d seen plenty of news filled with debates over the border wall, and stories of brutal crimes along the border and migrants dying in the desert or detained in makeshift prisons.

At 5400’ in elevation, the Research Station is a different ecological zone than the arid plains I crossed to get there. Readers who are familiar with my Sam Westin wilderness mysteries know that each of those books features wild places and wild animals, so I was eager to learn what southeastern Arizona had to offer. During the days, we explored the nearby canyons and hills. In the evenings, we attended presentations about the unique flora and fauna of the sky islands. One talk was on reintroduction of Mexican wolves, another on the efforts to save jaguars in Mexico and the US. I heard that two jaguars had been sighted in recent years in Arizona. That set my imagination on fire—Imagine spotting a jaguar during a hike! I learned that some animals of the sky islands historically migrated from one small mountain range to the next “island.” Now, the border wall had disrupted that movement. Online, I found sad photos of wildlife stopped at the impassable wall, imprisoned, cut off from the areas in which they expected to find water, food, or mates.

We took a trip to view the wall between Douglas and Naco. The tall structure rippled along the scrubby hills for as far as I could see. On the Mexican side, the brush was thick and wild. On the US side, a wide road was cleared alongside the wall. Many access roads branched off from that, cutting dusty swaths into what little vegetation the area offered. The debris jammed alongside the wall in arroyos proved that the fence sometimes impeded the flow of water. I discovered the story behind the many signs that read “Humanitarian Aid is Not a Crime.”

Desperate migrants. Drug runners. Human traffickers. Vigilantes. Border Patrol agents on dangerous duty. Personnel building the wall, observation towers, and roads. Hispanic Americans with long histories straddling the border. Pronghorns, javelinas, owls, wolves. Dozens of hummingbird species. Jaguars!

How could I not write a story set in this area? Wolverines would have to wait.

~~~

In Borderland, a young wildlife photographer, Jade Silva, vanishes after taking a photo at the border wall of the last known jaguar remaining in Arizona. Her roommate and fellow Southwestern Research Station volunteer, wildlife biologist/writer Sam Westin, struggles to find Jade. Was the Latina woman detained by the Border Patrol, kidnapped by cartel thugs, or simply lost in the vast desert like so many migrants? It’s hard for Sam to know where to start looking, and even harder to enlist help from the overburdened authorities.

~~~

Pamela Beason, a former private investigator, lives in the Pacific Northwest. When she’s not hard at work on another book, she explores the natural world on foot, on cross-country skis or snowshoes, in her kayak, or underwater scuba diving. Learn more about her and her books on https://PamelaBeason.com.

~~~

Buy link: https://www.amazon.com/Borderland-Sam-Westin-Mysteries-Book-ebook/dp/B07YMWHKBH Also available for Nook, Apple, and Kobo.

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Honeymoons Can Kill

By Bob Doerr

Thanks, Thonie, for this opportunity to be on your blog. I enjoy writing and telling stories, and in the last eleven years, I have had fifteen books published. All my books are fiction, so a question people often asked me is, “Where do you get all the ideas for your stories?”

I explain that after nearly thirty years in a career that focused on criminal investigations and counterintelligence operations followed by eight years in financial planning, I started my writing career with a plethora of ideas. The stories were all there, bouncing around in my cluttered mind. The difficult part is not coming up with a new story, but selecting which one I want to turn into a book.

While I have no shortage of ideas to plot out, sometimes my friends encourage me to set my story in a specific place or situation. That’s how my selection of an ocean cruise for the setting of my newest book came about. I’ve been on a half dozen cruises, and inevitably, while on the cruise, one or more of my friends would talk about how a cruise would be a great setting for a murder mystery or thriller. I liked the idea, too.

I also decided to do something different with this eighth Jim West adventure. I brought back two characters from prior books, something I hadn’t done before. The book is still a “stand alone” read, but in coming up with a reason to put Jim on a cruise, I wanted to give him a traveling companion, and, perhaps, finally develop a long term relationship with a woman.

Since nothing ever seems to come easy for Jim, I thought how better to mess with his vacation than to throw a murder or two or three at him. He is sucked into the murder investigation by the unexpected presence of a former lady friend. Her husband of barely twenty four hours is the second victim, and as she had years earlier, she turns to Jim for help.

I enjoyed writing Honeymoons Can Kill and hope readers will like the book, too. Thank you again, Thonie, for having me on your blog.

~~~

Bob Doerr, an Air Force veteran, has fifteen published books. His past books have won a variety of awards, and Bob was selected as the Author of the Year by the Military Writers Society of America in 2013. Bob lives in Garden Ridge, TX, with his wife of 46 years.

To buy this novel, click here: Honeymoons Can Kill

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A Chat with Michael A. Black

Michael A. Black is the award winning author of 36 books, most of which are in the mystery and thriller genres. He has also written in sci-fi, western, horror, and sports genres. A retired police officer, he has done everything from patrol to investigating homicides to conducting numerous SWAT operations. Black was awarded the Cook County Medal of Merit in 2010. He is also the author of over 100 short stories and articles, and wrote two novels with television star, Richard Belzer (Law & Order SVU). Black is currently writing the Executioner series under the name Don Pendleton. His Executioner novel, Fatal Prescription, won the Best Original Novel Scribe Award given by the International Association of Media Tie-In Writers in 2018. His latest novels are Blood Trails and Legends of the West (under his own name), Dying Art and Cold Fury (under Don Pendleton), and Gunslinger: Killer’s Choice (under the name A.W. Hart).

Interview:

Question: Okay, let’s get started with this interview. You’ve got a pretty impressive body of work. How did you get started writing?

Black: Writing has always been a part of me. I wrote my first short story in the sixth grade.

Question: Wow, you have been at it a while. Do you remember that story?

Black: Vaguely. It was a private detective story and the villain was a crooked cop. I guess it’s kind of ironic considering how things turned out for me. The teacher hated it and gave me a poor grade. She told me never to try it again.

Question: Are most of your books police procedurals?

Black: The majority fall into the field of mystery and thriller, although I’ve been published in several genres. Lately I’ve been writing a lot of westerns, but I’ve done sci-fi, sports, fantasy, you name it. I always wanted to be published in as many different genres as I could.

Question: What can you tell us about the westerns?

Black: I’ve always been a fan of the western genre. My latest book under my own name is called Legends of the West. It takes place in the 1880’s and is based on an actual historical figure named Bass Reeves. Reeves was a former slave who became a United States Deputy Marshal. At that time in our history the American Indian tribes had been forcibly relocated to the Indian Territory. It later became the state of Oklahoma. There was a Native American police force called the Lighthorse who were in charge of enforcing the law, but they had no authority to arrest white men. Consequently, the Territory became a magnet for outlaws and bad men. Reeves was one of the federal deputies courageous enough to venture into the Territory to arrest them and keep order. He remains a great inspiration to me and to all in law enforcement.

Question: Interesting. So are all your westerns about historical characters?

Black: No, just Legends. My other two are part of a series I write under the name A.W. Hart. There are actually several talented writers doing the series which involves a pair of fraternal twins, Abby and Connor Mack, who roam the West under the tutelage of a gunslinger named River Hicks. They’re written with an eye on the young adult market, and I have a lot of fun writing them.

Question: What are the titles?

Black: The titles are Gunslinger: Killer’s Choice, and the forthcoming Gunslinger: Killer’s Brand. I’m working on another one called Gunslinger: Killer’s Ghost, but I have to polish off another book before I can start that one.

Question: Another book? What can you tell us about that?

Black: It’s the leadoff for a new series called Trackdown, and it features modern day bounty hunters. Well, I guess the proper term is Bail Enforcement Officers. The first one is called Trackdown: Devil’s Dance, and I’m under contract to do three more this year.

Question: Three more. That means four books in the space of a year?

Black: Yeah, in that series. I hope to do a couple more as well, maybe rounding things off at six or seven.

Question: When do you sleep?

Black: Whenever I can. Sometimes I fall asleep at the keyboard.

Question: You sound pretty busy. And I didn’t get to ask you about the sci-fi stuff. When’s that

coming out?

Black: Actually, it came out already. It’s an anthology called Space Noir and I have a story, “Hybrid,” in it. It was released as an e-book and edited by one of the best, Paul Bishop.

Question: I’ve heard of him. Anything else in the pipeline?

Black: Well, my latest Executioner novel, Cold Fury, came out last December. I write those under the name Don Pendleton. I’m honored to be part of this long-running series.

Question: Any plans to do another one of those?
Black: I’ll always make time for the Executioner. One of them, Fatal Prescription, won the Scribe Award in 2018 for Best Original Novel given by the International Association of Media Tie-In Writers.

Question: Unbelievable. How do you get so much accomplished?

Black: Like I said, I love to write.

Question: Anything else you’d like to say?

Black: Just thanks to Thonie for inviting me to her blog. She’s a talented writer and fellow member of the PSWA (Public Safety Writers Association). Don’t forget our annual PSWA Conference is coming up in July in Las Vegas. I hope to see you there.

Legends of the West, featuring real historical figure, Bass Reeves. Reeves was a former slave who became a lawman following the Civil War and worked for the famous hanging judge, Isaac Parker. Reeves was appointed Deputy Marshall and enforced the laws in the Indian Territory, which is now the state of Oklahoma. It came out in October 2019.

Star Noir, The anthology features a sci-fi novella called “Hybrid,” An e-book currently available on Amazon as of November 2019.

Killer’s Choice, (writing under the house name of A.W. Hart) was officially released November 15, 2019 as both an e-book and a trade paperback

Cold Fury, an Executioner novel, written under the name Don Pendleton, came out in December. Pendelton’s Executioner series has been going strong since the 1960’s and I’m honored to be one of the two remaining ghost writers for the series. (The other is the redoubtable Mike Newton.) Harper Collins is released this one as an e-book as well.

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Catching Up with Ann Parker

I’m visiting with historical novelist Ann Parker today, who exhibits a fascinating blend of science and art in her writing. She’ll be fielding comments today as I’m off the grid for a short while. Thanks for sharing your interesting life, Ann!

Name:

Ann Parker

Where are you from?

I’m Northern California born-and-bred. Despite a
strong desire to move to Colorado, I managed to move
only one set of hills east from my hometown. Many
decades later, and I’m still here!

Tell us a little about yourself, like your education,
family life, etc:

I come from a family of artists, musicians, and scientists. Both of my parents played piano exceedingly well. My father longed to be a concert pianist early in his life, but his mother made sure he became a physician instead. Of my siblings, one is a musician, the other became an astronomer, and the third was an artist. My husband was a scientist (ground-water chemist). Now that he’s retired, he can pursue his passion full-throttle: ice- and rock-climbing. We have two children: one working on a PhD in astronomy, the other an artist/designer. The kids are grown and gone, but my husband and I and my cat (the “Diva Miss Mia,” queen of all she sees) are still here, rumbling around in our suburban home in the outer reaches of the San Francisco Bay Area.

As for me, I earned degrees in Physics and English Literature from the University of California, Berkeley, before becoming a technical writer/editor (many decades ago, now). I started my career as a technical editor/writer and eventually moving into the field of science writing… I’ve “worked with words” all of my adult life. These days, I write about cutting-edge science and technology during the day and write my Silver Rush historical mysteries at night.

One of the really nifty things that happened this past year is that I was inducted into the Colorado Authors’ Hall of Fame. Although I reside in California, my initial writing inspiration came from Colorado, and I still consider it the “home of my heart.”

Do you have a blog/website? If so what is it?

I have a website at annparker.net, and a blog where I explore fun turns of phrase, slang, and idioms every Wednesday and host guest authors.

Question: When and why did you begin writing?

Well, if we go back, waaaaay baaaaack, I wrote my first book that included a beginning, a middle, and end in middle school (which was then called junior high) and high school. It was a bit of a genre-mashup of a Western/adventure/mystery/spy story with a strong female protagonist. As to why, I was, even then, a long-time fan of TV and movie westerns, but even at a very early age (probably around ten years old or so), I realized something: The guys were having all the fun! They were the ones having the adventures, fighting the bad guys, and riding horses at a breakneck pace down steep mountain paths… The women mostly stood around, posing in fancy/revealing clothes. Even to my young mind, this was patently unfair. So, I set out to change that dynamic with my first attempt at fiction.

I guess I didn’t quite work it out of my system, because many decades later, when I decided to write an historical mystery, I chose for my protagonist a strong-minded woman who, in addition to solving mysteries, would have adventures, fight the bad guys (and gals), and ride her horse at breakneck pace down steep mountain paths.

Question: What inspired you to write your first book?

If we skate over my very early mashup and focus on Silver Lies, the first book in my Silver Rush series, I’d have to say my initial inspiration came from my family’s history. My parents were both raised in Colorado, so we visited there often when I was young. It wasn’t until I was well into my forties, however, that I learned from my Uncle Walt that Granny (my paternal grandmother) had been raised in Leadville. I’d never heard of the town, but once my uncle told me about its history, including the huge silver rush in the late 1870s, I was hooked.

As an homage to my grandmother, I gave my protagonist Granny’s maiden name: Inez Stannert. Of course, I checked with all the remaining family members first, just to be sure they thought it would be okay. (I should add that, like my fictional Inez, dear Granny had a will of iron. Unlike my fictional Inez, Granny was a VERY proper woman.)

Colorado continued to be my inspiration for the first five books of the series. These form what I think of as the “Colorado cycle”: Silver Lies, Iron Ties, Leaden Skies, Mercury’s Rise, and What Gold Buys. After that, San Francisco cycle begins with A Dying Note and Mortal Music.

Question: How did you come up with the title of your most recent book?

Mortal Music was one of those titles that came late in the game. I wanted the title to have a musical theme, like the previous San-Francisco-based book, A Dying Note. And, if possible, I wanted one that wasn’t replicated by other authors (Deadly Music and Deadly Overture, for instance, have been used multiple times).

So while I was musing (Deadly Muse?) I started looking up music-related quotes for inspiration. I perked up when I saw this one from George Eliot: “It is always fatal to have music or poetry interrupted.” Hmmm. Fatal Music? Nope, already taken. Then I thought: Mortal Music! I checked Google and amazon: no books with that title. There is a Mortal Music recording studio, which seems to focus on heavy/thrash/death metal, but that’s far enough removed from the world of mystery novels/crime fiction that I figured there wouldn’t be any confusion. Mortal Music was the perfect title for my story, so I grabbed it.

Question: If you were not a writer what else would you like to have done?

My original ambition was to go into the field of astronomy, or astrophysics, or atmospheric physics. I still get wistful pangs about those lost aspirations sometimes… and this is many decades later! However, as a science writer, I get to do the next best thing, and talk to astronomers, astrophysicists, climate scientists and experts in other fascinating areas of science. I should also add that being a science writer taught me how to research quickly and efficiently and how to present what I’ve learned (but not all of it!) in ways that will interest readers and encourage them to read on. I put both skills to use in writing historical fiction.

Question: What are your current projects?

In the day job, I’m finishing up a short article regarding recent climate change research. In the fiction part of my life, I’m delving into Book #8, so we shall see how that goes. Here’s a hint as to how it opens: You’ve heard the saying “The walls have ears?” Well, much to Inez’s shock, a wall in an old San Francisco house turns out to be hiding a lot more than mere auditory appendages…

~~~

To buy Mortal Music, click here: Mortal Music on Amazon

Ann is the author of the award-winning Silver Rush historical mystery series. The series, set in the 1880s U.S. West, features Colorado saloon-owner Inez Stannert— a woman with a mysterious past, a complicated present, and an uncertain future. When Inez leaves Colorado and moves west to San Francisco, California, she re-invents herself as the manager of a music-store and a 19th-century “angel investor” for women-owned small businesses. The latest book, MORTAL MUSIC, finds Inez dealing with dastardly doings in San Francisco’s opera world. Ann’s books have won numerous awards, including the Bruce Alexander Memorial Award for Best Historical Mystery, the WILLA Literary Award, the Colorado Book Award, and the Colorado Independent Publishers Association’s EVVY Award. The series was picked as a “Booksellers Favorite” by the Mountains and Plains Independent Booksellers Association.

Ann is an inductee to the Colorado Authors’ Hall of Fame, and is a member of the National Association of Science Writers, the Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, International Thriller Writers, Historical Novel Society, Women Writing the West, and Western Writers of America. Ann and her family reside in the San Francisco Bay Area, whence they have weathered numerous boom-and-bust cycles.

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Where Do I Go From Here?

By Marilyn Meredith

The latest in the Deputy Tempe Crabtree series, Spirit Wind, is
number 17. Though the area Tempe covers as the resident deputy
of Bear Creek is vast, there is not a large population. In order not to
have Bear Creek get the Cabot Cove syndrome of “Murder She
Wrote,” Tempe has solved crimes in other cities.

In Spirit Wind, a call from a ghost hunter changes Deputy Tempe
Crabtree’s vacation plans. Instead of going to the coast, she and her
husband are headed to Tehachapi to investigate a haunted house and are confronted by voices on the wind, a murder, and someone out to get them.

Tehachapi was a great setting as there is so much going on there: the railroad Loop, a different Indian tribe, high desert and mountains, the biggest wind farm in California, and the historic earthquake that damaged and destroyed most of the town including the women’s prison.

To be honest though, I love using the mountain setting of the Southern Sierra and the Bear Creek Indian Reservation. I also like Tempe’s friendship with Nick Two John. I also enjoy researching writing about the legends and Native American ceremonies and beliefs.

Yes, I am writing number 18 in the series, but am wondering if it’s time for Tempe to turn in her badge and gun, and for her husband to retire as the pastor of the community church. Because Tempe and Hutch have been in my life for such a long time, I don’t know if I’m ready to give them up. How will I know what’s happening with them if I don’t continue writing about them?

Yes, it is a dilemma, one that I haven’t solved yet. Maybe the answer will come as I’m finishing up the latest in the series. I’ll have to wait and see.

Readers, what do you think? Is it time for me to retire the series?

Marilyn

A call from a ghost hunter changes Deputy Tempe Crabtree’s vacation plans. Instead of going to the coast, she and her husband are headed to Tehachapi to investigate a haunted house and are confronted by voices on the wind, a murder, and someone out to get them.

https://www.amazon.com/Spirit-Wind-Tempe-Crabtree-Mysteries/dp/1092112081/ref=sr_1_fkmrnull_1?keywords=Spirit+Wind+by+Marilyn+Meredith&qid=1556631664&s=books&sr=1-1-fkmrnull

Bio: Marilyn Meredith is the author of over

40 published books, including two mystery series, two family historical sagas, and a romance with a touch of the supernatural, other fiction titles, and a popular cookbook. She lives in the foothill community of Springville with her husband and other members of her family. She’s been writing nearly her whole life, but didn’t get published until she was a grandmother.

Webpage: http://fictionforyou.com

Blog: https://marilynmeredith.blogspot.com

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Spotlight on Lynn Hesse

Today I’m pleased to present Lynn Hesse, author of “Another Kind of Hero” and “Well of Rage.” As you’ll see Lynn knows the police world and brings her distinctive voice to her stories.

Name:

Lynn Hesse

Where are you from? Tell us a little about yourself:

I am originally from Webb City, Missouri, a former mining town in Southwestern Missouri. Most people have heard of Joplin, Missouri, 7 miles away from Webb City.

I am a small-town girl who moved to Toledo Ohio, then Atlanta when my dad worked for Toledo Scales. My roots are blue collar. I married a preacher’s son, and my son was born in Indianapolis, Indiana. When I became a single parent, I moved back to Atlanta. I attended Georgia State University, GSU, as a student and worked as a GSU state police officer for two years, then DeKalb County Police Department, DKPD, for 23 years. I graduated from the DeKalb County Police Academy in 1980 with academic honors. I was one of the first female police officers on the streets in DeKalb County. I received my Bachelor of Science degree from GSU, Magna Cum Laude in 1996. I taught sacred dance in the United Methodist Church for over 20 years.

Five women placed within the first fifteen highest scores for the sergeants’ test in the early 80s, but they were passed over by the administration. I and another female officer joined these deserving women and sued for discrimination. The suit was settled in 1986. I retired with the rank of lieutenant in 2003. DKPD had 1 female captain when I left.

In 1984 my husband, a retired firefighter and professional photographer, and I were married. We raised his daughter, Nicole, and my son, Aaron, together in Stone Mountain, Georgia. We have several grandchildren and 4 feral cats. Besides my day job, writing, I perform with local theatre and dance troupes.

Do you have a blog/website? If so, what is it?

My web site and blog posts: lynnhesse.com, Scribblersweb@earthlink.net. Discount Code:10SCWG or https://www.amazon.com/Lynn-Hesse/e/B01LKPRAZQ

Do you see writing as a career?

Yes, I see writing as a career. Most days I begin with writing, then marketing and event planning, and end with reading articles or research to improve my craft.

What is the biggest challenge of your current work?

The biggest challenge of my finished manuscript, “Stranded In Atlanta”, involves finding the right publisher or agent for my anti-hero female protagonist. My beta readers like Clara and identify with her outsider sensibility. She is Roma, from a historically ostracized community, and a con artist.

Do you remember the first book you read?

I don’t remember the first book I read, but “The Feminine Mystique” by Betty Friedan came out while I was in high school and influenced the projectory of my life. It gave me permission to be myself. I realized I wasn’t alone in my need to be a mother and have a career outside the home. A tattered copy still occupies the book shelf at eye level behind my desk.

If you were not a writer what else would you like to have done?

I would pick a Broadway career as a professional dancer in my next life.

What do you want written on your headstone and why?

Headstone: She was brave and true. Her handshake meant assurance. She respected all who crossed her path unless they proved themselves untrustworthy. When she failed, she tried again until she got it right.

~~~

Lynn won the 2015 First Place Winner, Oak Tree Press, Cop Tales, for her mystery, Well of Rage. Her novel Another Kind of Hero was a finalist for the 2018 Silver Falchion Award. Her short story “Jewel’s Hell” was published September 3, 2019 in Me Too Short Stories: An Anthology by Level Best Books and edited by Elizabeth Zelvin.

Her short story about a domestic homicide, “Murder: Food For Thought”, published in the anthology Double Lives, Reinvention & Those We Leave Behind, 2009 by Wising Up Press was adapted in the play, We Hunt Our Young, produced at Emory University Field Showcase and Core Studio Luncheon Time Series, 2011. Excerpts from the play “Unacceptable Truths” was performed on the Atlanta BeltLine in 2013.

An interview concerning Lynn’s role as a police officer, as exemplified in the dance video, “Blue Steel,” is in The Women’s Studies Archives, The Second Feminist Movement, Georgia State University. She performs for social justice in several dance and theatrical troupes in Atlanta, Georgia. One of her personas is “The Dandelion”.

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IS IT READY? IS IT GOOD ENOUGH? By Marilyn Meredith

By Marilyn Meredith

Even though I’ve had over forty books published, whenever I send
off a book to the publisher those two questions plague me. It doesn’t
matter that my critique group liked what I’d read to them, or my
editor. I continue to have those doubts.

Actually, there are some good reasons for those doubts. Despite the
fact I’ve made the corrections found by my critique group and my
editor and no matter how carefully I’ve gone over the manuscript
myself, errors and typos seem to creep in. Some eagle-eyed reader
will spot where I changed a character’s name, or something I missed like a sweater becoming a jacket, or a simple typo. One good thing, in this day and age, it’s easy to for the publisher to make the corrections.

I have an additional worry concerned with my police procedural series. I do not have a law-enforcement background. I started writing the first book in the Rocky Bluff P.D. mystery series when my police officer son-in-law started coming to my house for coffee after his graveyard shift. His tales intrigued me, and I went on my first ride-along with him. The first book in the series, Final Respects, was loosely based on a series of events that happened during that time period.

For years, we lived in a neighborhood with police families and I heard a lot over coffee with the wives and saw how their husband’s jobs affected their lives. Plus I now have two grandsons who are law enforcement officers.

I belong to the Public Safety Writers Association and this group is made up of a majority of men and women who are or were in some sort of public safety field, and most of them law enforcement. So I can’t help but worry a bit that I’ve made some horrible mistake in police procedure, especially when one of them reads one of the books.

One thing I’ve done to protect myself, is my Rocky Bluff Police Department is in a small town and horribly underfunded. Most forensic evidence is sent off for another department to analyze. The officers in RBPD solve crimes the old-fashioned ways.

The plots in the RBPD series not only focus on crime solving but also what is going on with the families—probably my favorite part to write. In the latest, Bones in the Attic Detective Doug Milligan is surprised when his daughter Beth informs him a skeleton has been discovered.in a long-abandoned home that Beth and other students are turning into a haunted house as a fund raiser for the high school art club. Sergeant Navarro’s brother is upset because their newly widowed father has a woman friend. Police Chief Chandra Taylor’s romance with the mayor is complicated by his newly-found daughter. Sergeant Strickland has concerns about his daughter who has Down syndrome. A wild fire threatens the lives of the people and the town of Rocky Bluff.

To my great relief, two of my law enforcement friends have written great reviews for Bones in the Attic.

Marilyn

~~

Buy link: https://tinyurl.com/yxpd8mxy

Marilyn Meredith, who writes the RBPD mystery series as F.M. Meredith, once lived in a small beach town much like Rocky Bluff, and has many relatives and friends in law enforcement.

https://marilynmeredith.blogspot.com

http://fictionforyou.com

On Facebook as Marilyn Meredith

and Twitter as marilynmeredith

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False Light by Claudia Riess

By Claudia Riess

Thanks, Thonie!

I’m happy to announce that False Light, the second book in my art mystery trilogy published by Level Best Books is now available.

Once again, academic sleuths Erika Shawn, art magazine editor, and Harrison Wheatley, a more seasoned art history professor, set out to tackle a brain teaser. This time the couple—married since their encounter in Stolen Light, first in the seriesattempt to crack the long undeciphered code of art forger Eric Hebborn (1934-1996), which promises to reveal the whereabouts of a number of his brilliant Old Master counterfeits. (Hebborn, in real life, was a mischievous sort, who had a fascination with letters and a love-hate relationship with art authenticators. I felt compelled to devise a puzzler on his behalf!) After publication of his memoir, Drawn to Trouble, published in 1991, he encrypts two copies with clues to the treasure hunt. On each of the title pages, he pens a tantalizing explanatory letter. One copy he sends to an art expert; the second, he releases into general circulation. The catch: both books are needed to decipher the code.

When the books are at last united 25 years later, Erik and Harrison are enlisted to help unearth their hidden messages. But when several research aides are brutally murdered, the academic challenge leads to far darker mysteries in the clandestine world of art crime. As the couple navigate this sinister world, both their courage under fire and the stability of their relationship are tested.

In retrospect I’ve found that my novels, which range from art mystery to edgy romance to courtroom drama, have a common factor—they all explore the conflict of staunch independence and romantic love, submissive either by nature or indoctrination. Humor is also a pervasive element. It’s not that I set out to be amusing or exaggerated in depicting action or dialogue, but—and it might seem contradictory—humor seems, in hindsight, to highlight the core reality of the plot and character development, even the most serious aspects of it. Also, if the characters have a sense of humor, they kind of spar on their own while I serve as referee.

At talks and panel discussions, one question that occasionally arises is: “Who are your favorite authors?” This can be a little like asking myself, which do I like more, Hamlet or Curb Your Enthusiasm? With that qualification…:

  • Umberto Eco. His brilliance, demonstrated especially in The Island of the Day Before, blows my mind.
  • David Mitchell. For his mastery of the language and his wildly creative and provocative ideas, as in The Bone Clocks, where immortal souls jump from body to body. (NB: The funniest passage I ever read is from Mitchell’s Cloud Atlas: “The Ghastly Ordeal of Timothy Cavendish.” You don’t have to read the book. This stands out as a hilarity in itself.)
  • For me, the most moving passage on the ravages of war is a paragraph near the start of Sebastian Barry’s wonderful novel, A Long Long Way. I’ve read it many times, both for the content and to marvel at the writing—pure poetry.
  • Ian McEwan. For his profound insight into human nature.
  • Philip Roth. With seeming effortlessness, he cuts to the heart of the matter, as in Everyman.
  • Anita Brookner. For her ability to describe the intricacies of the human spirit and the constraints of society. (How does she manage to write three-page sentences that make perfect sense?)

Website: claudiariessbooks.com

False Light available: on Amazon and Barnes & Noble, at independent bookstores and from Level Best Books.

https://www.amazon.com/s?k=claudia+riess+false+light&i=stripbooks&crid=2W9Q2LF7E6MTM&sprefix=False+Light+cl%2Cstripbooks%2C194&ref=nb_sb_ss_i_1_14

https://levelbestbooks.wordpress.com

Claudia Riess has worked in the editorial departments of The New Yorker Magazine and Holt Rinehart and Winston books. She has also edited Art History monographs. For more about Riess and her work, visit http://www.claudiariessbooks.com. Books in the art mystery series are available through Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com, IndieBound.org and at independent book stores such as Book Revue in Huntington. For bulk discount purchases, contact http://www.levelbestbooks.wordpress.com.

Media Contact: Janice Jay Young November 2019 631-284-3737 jartandi@yahoo.com

Categories
Mystery Readers Only

Spotlight on Double Jeopardy

With an excerpt below!

By Donna Schlachter

January 7th, 2020 is release day for my first traditionally-published
full-length historical. Set in 1880, Becky Campbell leaves her
wealthy New York lifestyle in search of her father, only to learn he
was murdered in the small town of Silver Valley, Colorado. Unable
to return to her mother in humiliation and defeat, she determines
to fulfill her father’s dream—to make the Double Jeopardy
profitable.

Zeke Graumann, a local rancher, is faced with a hard decision
regarding his land and his dream. After several years of poor weather and low cattle prices, he will either have to take on a job to help pay his overhead expenses or sell his land. He hires on with this Easterner for two reasons: he can’t turn his back on a damsel in distress. And he needs the money.

Becky isn’t certain Zeke is all he claims to be, and after a series of accidents at her mine, wonders if he isn’t behind it, trying to get her to sell out so he can take over.

Zeke finds many of Becky’s qualities admirable and fears he’s losing his heart to her charms, but also recognizes she was never cut out to be a rancher’s wife.

Can Becky overcome her mistrust of Zeke, find her father’s killer, and turn her mine into a profitable venture—before her mother arrives in town, thinking she’s coming for her daughter’s wedding? And will Zeke be forced to give up his dream and lose his land in order to win Becky’s heart?

Leave a comment to enter a random drawing for an ebook copy of Double Jeopardy.

Excerpt:

Chapter 1

1880 Silver Valley, Colorado

Dead. Dead as her dreams and her hopes.

Dead as a doornail, as her mother would say.

Just thinking about the woman drove a steel rod through Becky Campbell’s slumping back. Perched on a chair in the sheriff’s office, she drew a deep breath, lifted her shoulders, and raised her chin a notch. She would not be like the woman who birthed her. Pretty and pampered. A silly socialite finding nothing better to do with her days than tea with the mayor’s spinster daughter or bridge with the banker’s wife.

No, she’d much rather be like her father. Adventuresome. Charismatic. Always on the lookout for the next big thing.

Now her breath came in a shudder, and down went her shoulders again. She tied her fingers into knots before looking up at the grizzled lawman across the desk from her. “There’s no chance there’s been a mistake in identification, is there?”

He slid open the top drawer of his desk and pulled out a pocket watch, a lapel pin, and a fountain pen, which he pushed across the desk to her. “He was pretty well-known around here. I’m really sorry, miss.”

Becky picked up the timepiece and flicked open the cover. Inside was a photograph of her family, taken about ten years earlier when she was a mere child of eight and Father stayed around long enough to sit still for the portrait. Her mother, petite and somber, and she, all ringlets and ribbons. She rubbed a finger across the engraving. To R. Love M. Always.

Yes, this was his.

And the lapel pin, a tiny silver basket designed to hold a sprig of baby’s breath or a miniature rosebud—a wedding gift from her mother twenty years before.

She looked up at the sheriff, tears blurring her vision. “And his ring?”

The lawman shook his head. “No ring. Not on his body or in his shack.”

“But he always wore it. Never took it off.”

He shrugged. “Maybe he lost it. Or sold it.”

“I doubt he’d do either. My mother gave it to him when I was born.”

She peered at him. Had he stolen her father’s ring?

Or maybe Sheriff Freemont was correct. Maybe something as important as her birth hadn’t meant much to her father. Maybe she didn’t either. Was that why he left?

Because surely his absences couldn’t be explained by any rift between her parents.

Although, what Matilda Applewhite saw in Robert Campbell—Robbie to his friends and family—Becky had never understood. Her mother, who ran in the same circles as the Rockefellers and the Astors, with presidents and admirals—yet much to the consternation of her family, chose a ne’er-do-well like Becky’s father.

Becky set the two items side by side on the scarred wooden desk, next to the fountain pen. The same one he’d used to write his letters to her. Signing them, Give your mother all my love too. Your devoted father. She needed no more information. No more proof.

Dead.

Not what she hoped for when she left New York a month prior, against her mother’s wishes, with little else to direct her steps than a ticket to Silver Valley and her father’s last letter. Written a year before, but as full of life, promises, hopes, and wishes as ever.

She collected the only three material evidences of her father’s existence and dropped them into her reticule then stood. “Thank you for your time, Sheriff. I appreciate my father’s death must be a difficult business for you.”

He stood and dipped his head. “Yes, miss.”

“Do you know how he died?”

He cleared his throat, not meeting her gaze. “Still investigatin’, miss. Lots of things to look into.”

She bit back a groan. Unlike in the city, where manpower and resources seemed limitless, out here, there was just the sheriff and sometimes a deputy. “Thank you again. Please keep me updated.” She turned to leave. “Where is he buried?”

“Over by the church. Just ask the preacher. He can show you.”

Not like she was in any rush to see her father’s final resting place. She stepped outside and scanned the street. Surely the man who was more gypsy than family man would hate to think of his physical body buried beneath the dust of any one place.

A morose sense of humor invaded her. At least it was a way to get him to stay in one place longer than it took to eat a meal.

Sheriff Fremont joined her on the front step. “You’ll likely be returning home now, I ’spect.”

She looked up past his dimpled chin, his bushy mustache, his aquiline nose, into eyes as dark as coal. “No, sir. I have no plans to return.”

“What will you do?”

“Do?”

She blinked several times as she pondered the question, which was a very good one indeed. She’d not thought beyond the ache building in her bosom for the father she’d never see again. At least when he went off on yet another adventure, she had the unspoken promise of his return at some point, in the distant future. And always a letter. Or a postcard. Never many words on either, but confirmation he was alive and she was still important to him.

At least, important enough to sit a few minutes and pen a few words.

She stared at the dusty mining town. More tents than wooden structures. More mules than horses. More assay offices than churches.

Two men tumbled onto the boardwalk opposite her, rolled down the two steps to the street level, and lay prone in the dirt littered with horse apples. The barkeep, a barrel-chested man, his formerly white apron now stained beyond redemption and a dingy cloth slung over his arm, burst through the swinging doors. “And don’t come back here. We don’t need the likes of you in here bothering our customers.”

The man turned on his heel and disappeared back into the saloon. Within ten seconds, the tinny notes of a piano filtered to her ears.

The two in the street lay still.

Had he killed them?

A pack of boys ran from a nearby alley, grabbed a hat from one the men’s heads, and raced down the street, jabbering and hollering like their britches were on fire. Three mongrels loped after them, tongues lolling and tails held high.

She turned back to the sheriff. “Is there a decent boarding house in town?”

One eye squinted as he peered at her for a long moment before nodding slowly. “So, you’re going to stay?”

“I have no reason to return.”

She glanced at the two men in the street. One climbed to his feet, swaying unsteadily, while the other puked into the dust without even lifting his head. The acrid odor wafted across to her, and she wrinkled her nose, breathing through her mouth. Until the smell coated her tongue. Then she snapped her mouth shut.

Maybe this wasn’t the town for her …

No. She would never give her mother opportunity to say I told you so.

“Well, we got us a hotel above the saloon over yonder, and just about every drinking establishment in town rents out rooms, but I wouldn’t recommend those places. Mrs. Hicks over at number fourteen Front Street rents out a few rooms in her house. Tell her I sent you.”

“Thank you, Sheriff.” She took a couple of steps, her drawstring bag banging against her thigh. “I’ll also need directions to my father’s claim so I can get that transferred into my name. As his next of kin.”

“You’ll need to check with the Land and Assay Office, two doors up from the mercantile. But I don’t know what kind of a title he bought. Some can be transferred, but most who come out here can’t think past their next pay lode, so they don’t spend the money to buy that kind.”

She tipped her head. “You mean I might need to buy my own father’s property?”

He shrugged. “Not that I know much, but that’s what I’ve heard. I wish you luck, miss. You’ll need it if you plan to stay here.” He tipped his hat to her before closing his door.

Becky drew in a breath of the warm May afternoon then released it in a sigh. First the cost of the train ticket, then her meals and occasional hotel rooms along the way. And now this. Was there no end to the ways her dwindling cache of gold coins could disappear like snow in July?

First things first—a proper place to stay tonight. She picked up her carpetbag waiting on the bench outside the sheriff’s office and walked in the direction the lawman had indicated toward the home of Mrs. Hicks. Her heels beat a rhythm like a drum corps in a parade. She nodded to women and couples she passed but averted her eyes from the solitary men.

And there were many. Of all sizes and shapes, ages, and deportment. Several ogled her from the chairs they occupied outside the six—no, seven—saloons she passed, and that was only on her side of the street. A lone barber lounged in one of his three chairs, not a customer in sight, testifying to the fact that the men hereabouts were more interested in cards, booze, and loose women than in personal hygiene.

A fact she confirmed when one lout stood his ground and refused to let her pass. Cheap perfume, rotgut whiskey, and sweat mingled to create an odor that made her eyes water.

Another man stepped up behind the drunk. “Micky, are you troubling this young lady?”

Micky swayed in place, twisting the brim of his hat in gnarled fingers. “She one of your flock?”

“Doesn’t matter. Apologize and move on.”

The drunk tipped his hat to her in apology and stepped back against the building, allowing her to continue. The preacher, his collar white against the severe black suit, nodded, and she acknowledged his courtesy with a tiny smile. “Thank you. Reverend?”

The clergyman dipped his head. “Obermeyer, Pastor Obermeyer.”

She held out her hand. “I’m Becky Campbell.”

He blinked a couple of times then his brow raised. “Oh, you’re—”

“Yes. Robbie Campbell’s daughter.” She glanced over her shoulder. “The sheriff told me you could show me where my father is buried.”

He held her hand and sandwiched it between his own. “Please accept my condolences on your loss, Miss Campbell.”

“Thank you.” That now too-familiar ache swelled in her bosom. Would it never ease? “If I may call on you another time? I’m off to find lodging.”

He tipped his head to one side. “Oh, you’re staying?”

Why did everybody think that because her father was dead, she would leave?

Or was this wishful thinking on their part?

If so, why?

She nodded. “I am.”

He shook himself like a hound dog awakening from a nap. Had he stretched and yawned, she would not have been surprised. “Good. Good.” He pointed down the street. “The church is there. The parsonage is the tiny house behind. I’m in my study most days. Come any time.” He tipped his hat. “Perhaps I’ll see you in church tomorrow?”

“We shall see. Thank you for rescuing me from that horrible man.”

His shoulders slumped. “So many have too much time and money on their hands.” He quirked his chin toward the others walking along the street. “Many work all week then come into town and spend it on a Saturday, only to go back and repeat the same cycle next week.”

Sounded like a hopeless cycle. But what could she do about it? Nothing. If she wanted to make it on her own here, she had her work cut out to stay out of the poorhouse. She surely wouldn’t ask her rich-as-Midas mother for assistance. Maybe once she got on her feet …

“Thank you again. Good day.”

She gripped her carpetbag and continued on her way, pleased that at least two men in this town—the sheriff and the parson—were raised by genteel women. She should count herself lucky she’d met both today. Having even one on her side might come in handy at some point. And having two—well, that was just downright serendipitous.

Three blocks through the business section, then a right for two blocks, and she soon found the house she sought. Narrow but well-kept flower gardens lined both sides of the walkway. She unlatched the gate, headed for the door, and knocked. Her gloved hands sweating, she longed for a cool drink of lemonade or sweet tea. As she raised her hand to knock again, the door swung open and a tall, thin woman of indeterminate age peered down at her.

Becky tossed her a smile and introduced herself. “The sheriff said you might have a room for rent?”

“How long?”

“I’m not certain. I plan to stay until I settle my father’s estate, at least. Possibly longer.”

The stern look on the woman’s face eased. “Sorry for your troubles. Four dollars a week including meals.” She peered past Becky. “And I only take respectable women. No children. No men. My name is Joan Hicks.”

While the amount seemed high, Becky had little choice. “My name is Becky Campbell.”

“Oh, you’d be—”

Becky sighed. Either her father was famous, or infamous. The former, she hoped. “Yes. His daughter. And yes, I’m staying in town until I get his claim sorted out.”

The wrinkles around the landlady’s eyes deepened, and her mouth lifted in a smile. “Actually,

my next question was if you want dinner tonight?”

“I would. Thank you. What time?”

“Dinner’s at five. Perhaps you’d like to see your room and freshen up.”

She was going to like this obviously kindly, no-nonsense woman. So unlike her own mother.

“Thank you.”

The interior of the house was dark but cool, and Becky followed Mrs. Hicks up two flights of stairs to one of three doors that opened off the top landing. The landlady stood aside and held out her hand, palm up. “Payment due in advance. Pot roast for dinner.”

Becky dug the four coins from her reticule and handed them over. “Thank you.”

“No keys for any of the rooms. I got the right to inspect the room with an hour’s notice. No cooking or smoking in the rooms. Privy is out the back door.”

Becky swallowed back a lump of disappointment. She’d expected indoor plumbing, just as she enjoyed in New York, but the modern conveniences hadn’t made their way this far west.

Or at least, not to this house in Silver Valley.

She entered what would be her home for at least the next week, longer if she could figure out how to make her remaining money stretch further. She set her bag on a dressing table, and then she closed the door. When she sank onto the bed, the springs creaked beneath her weight. She sighed.

A pang of—of what? Homesickness? Missing her father? Wishing things were different?—caught her off guard, spreading through her like a flooding river, threatening to wash away all hope. So much for her dreams of prospecting with her father in the mountains of Colorado. Of catching up on all the years they’d missed.

Rather, that she had missed.

She doubted her father had lacked any adventures or excitement.

His life had been so different from her own.

She dumped the contents of her drawstring bag onto the bed and sorted through them. Sixty-three dollars which, along with the hundred or so in her carpetbag, should tide her over for a while. If she didn’t have to buy her father’s claim. If she didn’t have to pay top dollar for every single thing she needed.

Because if there was one thing still alive in her, it was the desire to understand her father. To understand what drove him to leave the comforts of home and travel to this remote place. Was it the lure of silver? Was he simply tired of his refined life? Of his wife?

Of her?

~~

Available at Amazon.com and fine booksellers in your area.

About Donna:

Donna lives in Denver with husband Patrick. As a hybrid author, she writes historical suspense under her own name, and contemporary suspense under her alter ego of Leeann Betts, and has been published more than 30 times in novellas and full-length novels. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers, Writers on the Rock, Sisters In Crime, and Christian Authors Network; facilitates a critique group; and teaches writing classes online and in person. Donna also ghostwrites, edits, and judges in writing contests. She loves history and research, and travels extensively for both. Donna is represented by Terrie Wolf of AKA Literary Management.

www.HiStoryThruTheAges.wordpress.com

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Categories
Mystery Readers Only

Missing Deposits – The Story Behind the Story

– with giveaway

By Leeann Betts

Readers—and writers, too, for that matter—often ask me where I get the ideas for my stories. Well, in this case, I wanted to set my story in Colorado so I could enter several state-based writing contests that require a Colorado setting.

As I do with just about every book in this series, I made up a fictional town based on a part of the state I’d recently visited and which I thought readers might like to learn more about. The Grand Mesa/Mesa Verde National Park area on the western slopes of Colorado is a world unto itself. The scenery is spectacular, the weather is iffy, but the people are warm-hearted and compassionate.

Well, most of the people.

Not the villain in my tale, of course.

I also wanted a politically conservative setting, because while not exclusively so, politically conservative folks also tend to be church-goers, and I wanted both Carly and Mike to be slam-dunked into a situation where they had to re-examine their spiritual beliefs. Throughout this series, a little here and a little there, Carly and her husband have been introduced to the Christian faith.

I don’t think that most folks make a huge decision about their spiritual journey the first time options are presented to them. It didn’t happen to me that way, either. So I’m using the entire series to take them along that path to deciding where they stand regarding their faith. And no, I haven’t decided what that is, yet, either. I’m hoping Carly will show me in the next book, which will come out in June 2020, Risk Management. If you want to know the answer, you’ll need to read that one.

The couple who hosts Carly and Mike on their working vacation are named after very good friends—first names, only. Their last name was drawn from a desire to design a brand that I could draw. A Lazy L, in brand terms, is one that lays horizontally.

The details about the black-footed ferrets are mostly true. Not about the truck accident that dropped several of the critters on the western slope, but they were transported down I-25 into Arizona and New Mexico. At the timing of this story, 2005, they were on the “extinct in the wild” list, although they have since recovered are now on the “endangered” watch list.

Leave a comment, and I will draw randomly for a print copy (US only) or ebook version (winner’s choice) of Missing Deposits.

About Missing Deposits:

Carly looks forward to a vacation when Mike is hired to assist an association of ranchers in western Colorado catalogue their various mineral rights following the discovery of several large deposits. However, Carly soon learns that the real wealth—and the real danger—aren’t below ground. Someone is out to keep a secret bigger and more profitable than gold and copper. And they’re willing to kill for it.

About Leeann:

Leeann Betts writes contemporary romantic suspense, while her real-life persona, Donna Schlachter, pens historical romantic suspense. In the Money is the tenth title in her cozy mystery series, and together she and Donna have published more than 30 novellas and full-length novels. They ghostwrite, judge writing contests, edit, facilitate a critique group, and are members of American Christian Fiction Writers, Writers on the Rock, and Sisters in Crime. Leeann travels extensively to research her stories, and is proud to be represented by Terrie Wolf of AKA Literary LLC.

Website: www.LeeannBetts.com Receive a free ebook just for signing up for our quarterly newsletter.

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