I have been on a run with short stories the past few years. Five sold to Ellery Queen in the past three years. Two to Alfred Hitchcock. Luck with four other collections or anthologies. A piece of flash fiction in Shotgun Honey. The last two years, I’ve been short-listed for the Best American Mystery and Suspense, nominated for the Robert L. Fish Award by the Mystery Writers of America for my first short story, and recipient of the Bodwell Fellowship for the Maine Writers and Publisher Alliance.
Lately, I’ve been working on something longer about Pittsburgh in the 1980s. I was born in Pittsburgh and grew up in northwestern PA. Erie. Pittsburgh. Waterford. Greensburg. Somerset. Windber. With dairy farms and coal mines and lake effect snow.
I’m still asking a lot of the same questions about family and loyalty and independence. Still thinking about what sorts of lines a person is willing to cross for the people they love.
The process has been very rewarding. But it’s also been tough.
Specifically, staying in a groove.
As I’ve mentioned, I have two kids. They are great. My two favorite things. Funny and fun and very active. But kids require food and water and attention. They have sporting interests and other interests not related to sports. Which means my afternoon, evening, and weekend routines are not regular. But I’m still getting it done. I knocked out a scene sitting on the floor at my younger son’s basketball practice. I knocked out another scene at my older son’s batting practice at the Picklr in Westbrook where there is a secret batting practice in a creepy back room.
I travel a lot for my job. It’s good, hard work. But my routine is finding an hour at the end of the day and an hour in the morning and an hour on a plane. I’ve drafted scenes at hotel rooms in Storrs and Easton, Connecticut, in Warwick, Rhode Island, or on an island in Maine. I’ve reworked them in my mother-in-law’s basement outside Bangor. At the beautiful La Quinta in Texas. At a park in Reno.
I did finish another draft. It is sitting at around 45,000 words. Which is either 40,000 words too short or 40,000 words too long.
I’m up against some issues that are pretty common with writers of short fiction. Things are compressed. Some scenes read like screen-writing – all stage directions and dialogue. I’m missing interiority in some places and world-building in others. Perhaps I’m underutilizing the secondary characters and subplots.
If you write, I’m curious about your process. Do you go long and then have to edit down? Are you a pantser? Or do you plot everything out?
A few updates:
You can catch my latest story in the March/April Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. It’s called “Generous Strike Zone” and was written at my older son’s baseball practice. The editor of AHMM said it was “haunting.” You’ve been warned.
“The Best and Sweetest Things” is my second story with Sloane, a Portland-based private investigator. She’s going to be a fun recurring character. It’s out in the May/June Ellery Queen.
And finally, I have another Annie story out in the July/August Ellery Queen called “A Well-Worn Path.” This one takes place in Portland and involves the disappearance of a comfort care companion who happens to be a refugee. I wrote this story in November of 2024. It’s going to land a little different now.
For events:



- On March 15, I’ll be at the Kittery Dancehall for a Seacoast Noir at the Bar. Doors open at 6:00.
- On April 10, I’ll be at the Bloom & Doom event in Old Town at Kanu (283 Main Street) at 7:00pm.
- On April 15, I wish I could be at the Murder in Mud Season event at the Rockport Public Library. It’s going to be amazing. Doors at 6:00. (I will be in Reno. You know. For work.)
- On April 29, I’ll be in New York for the Edgars.
- On May 29 and 30, I will be in Portland for the Maine Crime Wave. It is going to be AMAZING. If you haven’t registered yet, you can do it now. Information is HERE.
Next week at Maine Crime Writers there will be posts by Joe Souza (Monday), Gabi Stiteler (Tuesday), Kate Flora (Thursday) and Allison Keeton (Friday).

While there, I met a group of ex-pat writers (mostly Brits, Aussies, and Americans, there were 8 or 10 of us) and we would meet (as writer groups do) to discuss and/or read what we were working on. Not a bad thing to do in Florence, especially when a glass of Prosecco or Chianti and a plate of pasta were also part of the night. The group is still going and has grown to become a mainstay in the literary “firmament” of the city.




You could say I’ve been at this game a long time. My first publication credits were in teen magazines in the late 1960s. My first traditionally published book was released in 2014. Since that time, I’ve published two additional books. One traditionally, one independently. Can you understand why, when I sit down to write, my brain screams AMATEUR.
In a ‘just the facts, Ma’am’ synopsis, here’s the deal. I’m a SLOOOOOOW writer. Except I’m not. That full-time job I mentioned above was in the legal biz. Part of my role entailed writing pleadings, deeply researched documents intended to persuade a judge or mediator to see things from our client’s point of view, often written on a twenty-four-hour deadline. It was intense, and it had to be fast, detailed, and defensible. Twenty-page documents flowed effortlessly from my fingers in the space of four hours. If my attorney was driving, I often had the outline banged out before we returned from court.
My idea of writing a novel comprised of throwing my ideas into the air and watching where they landed. Then I’d write from one to the other until the story emerged. That’s a lot of work when you’re writing crime fiction. It’s like managing the reins for a ten-horse team. The writer needs to be in control, but flexible enough to avoid a crash and still arrive at the destination. Then comes the editing. A necessary step in every novel, but an essential one for a discovery writer to move from the first to the second draft.
The last book I wrote took two years to write and is currently undergoing edits at the request of a potential publisher. That’s a long time. While the book was on submission, characters from an existing series clamored for new words of their own. Another idea, another plot, another three years. Scary thought. Then my husband bought me a book by K. Stanley and L. Cooke titled Secrets to Outlining a Novel. In his defense, he was tired of hearing me complain. The book reinforced my work-life experience. Outlining matters, but it’s not about the minutiae at this stage. It’s about the main events. The what, not the how. The how comes in the creative process.
Anyway, things have changed. Digitizing source material made it easier to access. More people, men as well as women, took an interest in the distaff side of history. There was no way I could keep up with every new tidbit of information about the women who had entries in my Who’s Who.
















