Jule Selbo
This is a short post, I am out shoveling the highway. Community service in lieu of jail time.
Seriously, more snow?

I want to share a great connection for anyone intending to spend time in FLORENCE ITALY. (I recommend it.)
Backstory: Moons ago, I spent 4 years (one full semester a year, so let’s say almost 5 months a year for 4 years (or was it 5 years?) as a professor in Florence, teaching screenwriting and film history for my California University in its Study Abroad Program.
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.
The Florence Literary Society. They meet at the British Embassy (Consulate), a historic (well everything is in Florence is) building that is situated on the Arno River, not far from the Ponte Vecchio and the Duomo (the pictures above, they are central to the historic part of Florence.

There is a solid number of writers who have made Florence their home and love to share work, talk about the craft, meet other writers (from anywhere) and bring in speakers etc etc. Add to that the near-constant change of participants as writers (travelers) come and go and it’s an exciting way to spend an evening or workshop afternoon.
Lori Hetherington — one of the founding members of our group way back when – is now president of Florence Literary Society. She’s an enthusiastic bringer-together of writers. And she wants to open the group’s doors to our band of merry writers – the Maine Crime Writers.
If you open the link, Lori is the third from the left, the blond with the “I make things happen” smile on her face. Some of the others pictured I have spent workshop/writing group time with –
I was in Florence last month (instead of the 5 months a year, I try to do a bit more than a month every year, renting the same small apartment up the narrow stairs that the University used to rent for me, right in the heart of Florence and just keep my writing routine in place (lots of coffee shops to work at in Florence (ha!) and I never want to leave. Lori and another of the writers, Deirdre Pirro, and I got together. Lori (American ex-pat from Ohio) writes fiction and historical fiction (check her out on Amazon), but her “day job” is as a translator of books (Italian to English). Deirdre (Australian, went on a cruise when she was 22, the cruise ship’s Italian captain fell in love with her and chased her around the decks and they married and Florence became her home forty years ago) writes essays and short stories (mostly historical, check her out on Amazon) and has a wicked sense of humor. They are so much fun to talk writing with and are at the heart of the Florence Literary Society.
The number of events (which includes speakers, readings and workshops) are extensive and Lori is opening the door to all of us to take advantage of them when anyone is there! There are mystery writers in the group, basically any genre is welcome.
So if you or any writer you know are heading that way – get in touch with me and I will get you in touch! (Or you can email Lori through the Literary Society website.)
And Lori wants to know what WE are up to here too, she wants to share workshop ideas (very interested in Crime Wave set up) and more. So we have a FLORENCE CONNECTION now!
Maybe we should do a Mystery Writers Conference in Florence????!!

PS: This is the book I wrote in Florence, back in 2018, my first novel. It’s a romance/mystery/historical fiction about a young woman (Lynn). Her mother has recently died, and on her deathbed, asked Lynn to “Find Me in Florence.” Lynn had always felt her mom has something in her past that had been kept secret. The mom had been a Mud Angel in 1966 during the great flood – the waters of the Arno River nearly took over the city (including museums, libraries etc etc) and people came from all over the world to help, they were given knee-high rubber boots and were tasked to dig into the mud and muck and save Botticellis, Michelangelos, Cellini’s and more paintings, sculptures…) anyway, something happened to Lynn’s mom during that experience and Lynn goes to Florence to search for the truth….



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.




I close the WIP, pull up my friend Gracie, and let her go have an adventure. Grace Christian is a somewhat wayward US Marshal who first appeared several years ago in a story published by Level Best Books called “Gracie Walks the Plank.”Gracie has voice and Gracie has attitude. She’s a true badass and it’s fun to see what she’ll think and say. After “Gracie Walks the Plank,” I wrote a second Gracie story about a battered wife and jewel heist called “All that Glitters.” Then, just for fun, because she’s a vacation from my other characters, I wrote “A Hole Near Her Heart,” and then Entitlements.” In a recent bout of playing hooky from quotas, I wrote “Black Widower.” I am gradually turning all the stories, plus more, into an entire Gracie novel.













