Giveaway-Whispers of Warning

Congratulations, Ruth Nixon! You are the  winner of the Whispers of Warning Giveaway! 

Jessie: On the coast of Maine, moving once more towards a September 1 deadline.

I’m not sure why it is but for some reason, over the past six years I have had five September 1 deadlines. For some people having the summer to finish up a book would be ideal. Teachers perhaps. Or students.

For me, it hasn’t been an easy cross to bear. We live at the beach every summer and my office is on the front porch of our small cottage. The sound of the beachgoers trundling past my window smelling of sunscreen, boogey boards tucked under their arms just leaves me feeling crotchety and envious.

It doesn’t help matters that the salty breeze floats up and teases me with the reiminder of all I am missing as I sit at my desk putting my head down and conconcentrating on the task in front of me.

Making things even more challenging is the fact that my kids are home from school all summer and my regular work schedule is thrown into disarray. It is hard to focus on work when your nearest and dearest are thinking only of play. Or of what is or is not available in the refrigerator.

In the end though, all of those summers have been memorable and satisfying. The books, and the work it took to produce them, are a large part of what made those summers something to remember. Somehow, some way, the books have all gotten written. And as difficult as it is for me to believe, in just over a month, on September, 19, the second book in my Change of Fortune mystery series, Whispers of Warning, will be released. Last year at this time I was frantically trying to finish the manusript in order to turn it into my editor by the agreed upon date.

To celebrate the journey I would love to give away a copy of Whispers of Warning to one commenter who leaves a memory of something that took a great deal of effort at the time but was worth it in the end.

 

 

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Planetary Protection Officer or Global Drinks Ambassador???

Hey all. Happy August to you.

During an insanely busy year, book #2 in the Michael McKeon series is finished, in which we meet The Prodigal, the world’s first private nuclear power. I’m very excited about a new book I’m writing with a whole new cast of characters and a protagonist who not only must race against an external ticking clock, but one inside him as well. More to come.

In the meantime, here are some bizarre news stories perfect for your late summer amusement.

Seven priests walk into a bar…start of a killer joke, right? Not in Cardiff, Wales, where the bouncer thought they were a bachelor party in costume and refused them service. When the manager realized the error, he bought them a round.

Scottish whisky company Grant’s is recruiting a new global drinks ambassador. The only thing better might be that NASA is now taking applications for Planetary Protection Officer.

Perhaps best of all, in response to NASA’s open application announcement, nine-year-old Jack Davis from New Jersey applied. He is “great at video games” and has watched most of the alien movies except Men in Black. Most importantly, “My sister says I am an alien.”

Courtesy of NASA

Speaking on behalf of brothers of sisters everywhere, good luck Jack! When he’s 21 and done protecting the planet, I hear there’s a global drinks ambassador opening. Just don’t dress like a priest.

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The Post Where I Announce We’re Moving to Portland

by Barb Ross

Yes, we’re going to be full-time Mainers! Both Bill and I are excited about this next chapter. The plan (there’s always a plan) was to sell our house in Massachusetts (check–you can read about it here), and then come up to our home in Boothbay Harbor and stay until we leave for Key West mid-December. We weren’t going to rush into anything. We definitely weren’t.

But I was keeping tabs on the Portland real estate market, just to educate myself, I said. Bill and I went to a few open houses whenever we were passing through. Casually, I told people, we’re exploring.

Then, in mid-June, when our whole family was up in Boothbay for the weekend, I found a place online that seemed perfect. Our home wasn’t even on the market. It was too soon. Nonetheless, I shot an inquiry off to the listing agent, could we maybe see it on our way home to Massachusetts?

That didn’t work out and between putting our house on the market and helping our son and his family move from Connecticut to Virginia, we didn’t make it back to Maine until after July 4th, the Friday before Books in Boothbay, in fact.

We looked at the place on our way up and, surprisingly, it was even nicer and more perfect for us than the photos. Even more compelling, given all we had been through in the spring, it needed almost no work, not even paint. We drove around the neighborhood, which we kind of, sort of, knew and liked it. (It seems to be in an area of shifting designations, most recently I think it has been called the India Street neighborhood.)

I was still burbling about it the next day when I saw Lea and Kate.

By that point our house in Massachusetts was under contract, but it hadn’t closed, which meant we didn’t have the money in our pockets to go around buying condominiums in Portland, or anywhere else. So though we loved the place, we waited. But both of our thoughts kept returning to the house.

Finally, everything came together. (Knocking wood furiously. We don’t close on it until this Friday.)

Barb’s study, where the magic will happen, starting fall 2017

It’s a four story townhouse, with an elevator, handy because the kitchen is on the third floor. My favorite part is that Bill’s study is on the first floor, and mine will be on the fourth. I love him, but… No water views, sadly, though last time I was there I glimpsed a tiny sliver of Casco Bay through the chimney tops.

Bill’s study, where the magic will also happen, three floors away from Barb, a relief to them both

It all feels a little impulsive and crazy, but also thoughtful and well-considered. We’ve always loved Portland, since we started coming there in the late eighties when we used to camp at Sebago. Portland’s future was just a glimmer at the time, but we still thought it was cool. Also, we’re city people at heart. Neither of us has ever had dreams of quiet country nights.

The kitchen and dining areas. By the way, the rooms in all these photos were professionally staged. Enjoy. They will never look so polished again.

But, it will be an adjustment, no doubt. We’ve never lived in a house less than 100 years-old, this one was built in 2007. And we’ve never lived in a condominium association. Because there are some ongoing issues, we were given all the minutes of the past year’s meetings prior to close. There were some passages I found hilarious, but maybe I won’t when I’m in the middle of it?

So, we’re going to be Portlanders, or is it Portlandites? Surely not Portlandians, that’s the other coast, right? So much to learn! I’ll have to rely on my Maine Crime Writers friends to find dentists and doctors, hairdressers and mani-pedi places. Things I haven’t changed in years. It’s a little daunting. But as my business partner used to say, you should always be moving toward something, not just away from something, and that’s what it feels like to us.

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Those Visitors From Away …

August in Maine! Pardon for making a very large generalization … but August and September are my two favorite months in Maine. Not TOO hot, not TOO cold … not TOO much rain … pretty much, just right.

Other people agree. People from Texas, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Ohio,  Florida, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New York, Nova Scotia, Virginia … and those are just the license plates I saw this morning in a Damariscotta parking lot.

As my husband sometimes puts it, “They’re here.” Parking lots and restaurants and grocery stores are full. Yes, there are sometimes lines to get over the bridge in Wiscasset because of so many people crossing Main Street there. (In Maine, cars are required to stop when pedestrians are in a crosswalk.) Freeport and Kittery, outlet towns, are full to bursting. You might drive around for twenty minutes trying to find a parking space there.

Now — don’t misunderstand.  This is not a bad thing. Tourists and vacationers and those who choose to divide their years between Maine and some other state (usually more southern, but sometimes — would you believe Vermont?) also bring jobs to Maine. They buy art and crafts and tee shirts and antiques and lots of lobster rolls. They eat at restaurants. They take boat trips and visit botanical gardens and wineries and historical sites; museums and islands and beaches and parks. They shop at those outlets … and at souvenir shops and jewelry stores and book stores.

Those of us who live here all year do those things occasionally, too, of course. But many of us work in summer months (sometimes more than one job) to earn enough to winter over. And … even when there’s back-to-school shopping to be done, why hassle an outlet town in August when the same store will be there in October?

Tourism has changed since I was a child. Then summer was (almost officially) the Fourth of July until Memorial Day. Many visitors to Maine rented cottages for two weeks (the two week vacation – remember that?) You could count on traffic being heavy on the Maine Turnpike at the beginning of July, the middle of July, the middle of August, and Labor Day weekend. Those were the “changing of the guard” dates for summer rentals.

And although there were people who summered in Maine and wintered in Florida, most of the summer visitors were from New York New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and, sometimes, Pennsylvania.

Today the pattern has changed. It isn’t unusual to see a license plate from Washington State or Utah or even Alaska, and Texans definitely claim a place in the summer order, as do people from both the Carolinas. And those are just people who drive here; those who fly, and who rent cars, are more invisible.

The “two week rental” hasn’t totally disappeared, but “one week” is more common, and it’s possible to rent a house for only a few days. People take long weekends. They work from their vacation spots.  Many people don’t come to the same place every year (although, of course, some do,) but choose to “tour” — driving each night to a new town; a new motel.

The season has been extended, too. People who spend the whole summer here now may arrive as early as April. By Memorial Day the state is in full summer swing … a swing that lasts through Columbus Day.

One reason? Public schools in southern states end classes in late May, so families from the Carolinas or Virginia head to Maine then. (Schools in more northern states don’t end until about the third week in June.) On the other hand … young families from the south head for home about the first of August, because schools start up again then. New Jerseyans and New Yorkers stick around until close to Labor Day.

And then there are the visitors who plan their vacations for September and October. They tend to be people without school children. They include, but aren’t limited, to the leaf peepers – some of whom may come from as far away as Australia. Locals (quietly) call visitors at this time of year the “newly wed and the nearly dead.”

No insults are intended: these folks without young children tend to spend more money than those who arrive in July and have less frenetic schedules. We welcome them, as we do visitors who arrive earlier in the season.

Maine’s license plates claimed the nickname “Vacationland” beginning in the 1930s. Tourism is still a major industry here. Com’on down and claim your lobsters and Maine tee shirt! The state is open for business … and would love to see you!

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Thanking the Mentors

I’m riding the crest of feeling very supported lately by excellent blurbs from good friends and fellow authors (see the kind words here) as I get ready to launch In Solo Time, the prequel to Solo Act, and thinking about Bruce’s words of gratitude. I’ve also been considering the great influence of mentors in my writing life and what I owe them. I hope that when I have an opportunity to help someone up, I will be as generous and gracious as others have been to me. Here, the small tale of one of my great mentors:

Why I Tell the Truth

I didn’t meet Tom Williams the first time I was supposed to. In September of 1989, I entered the writing program at the University of New Hampshire, a thirty-eight year old graduate student with one published short story to my credit. The summer before I went to Durham, I read The Moon Pinnace, the only one of his novels in the library.

It didn’t move me, but I suspect it was more my failure than the novel’s. A month before classes began, a note from the English Department chair advised me that Mr. Williams wouldn’t teach that semester. This was the summer, I later learned, he was diagnosed with the lung cancer that killed him.

When I met him finally, it was February, his final semester of teaching. He limped into our group’s first meeting in the attic room in Hamilton Smith Hall, in the deep heart of a New Hampshire winter. I expected to hear that he’d fallen on the ice. He explained, not without smirking at the melodrama, that he’d broken three ribs coughing.

Tom’s most compelling quality was his honesty. It was central to his concept of himself and thus to the face he turned to the world. He did not fear saying uncomfortable things and that made him difficult for some people to be with, though I never knew him to be unkind.

That honesty might have given him disciples, except he maintained a distance between what he expected of himself and what he expected of you. He was honest about the costs of honesty, and did not disapprove if you couldn’t pay them. The few times I saw anyone emulate him, he seemed embarrassed.

The gift of his teaching was the ability to locate the heart of an unsuccessful story, the germ that even the writer had not recognized, and lay it bare. One student writer submitted a story about a white man eating Thanksgiving dinner in a black neighborhood restaurant in Hartford, Connecticut, complete with waitress speaking homilies in urban dialect. Tom calmed those of us who mistook the story for its writer’s politics, then showed us that the story’s core was the connection between the waitress and the man, the writer’s only fault in obscuring that connection. No story was a cliché unless it was badly told.

Knowing Tom was a hunter and a fisherman, I brought him an essay I’d written about hunting for a local magazine. It was slight, but one of the first pieces I’d published, and I thought I’d captured my ambivalence about killing for food or sport. One day, I found it in my wooden mailbox in Hamilton Smith with a note attached, as if he had not wanted to mar my copy with writing of his own. “Very nicely done,” he wrote in pencil. “Not that any words of explanation will penetrate the holy sanctimony of the Friends of Animals.” I’ve thought of framing that note, but somehow it feels inappropriate, a little dishonest.

I knew he’d gone back into the hospital in October, but I was unprepared to hear he’d died. On that rainy leaf-blown day, I pulled a slip of paper out of my mailbox expecting a meeting notice. A secretary in the English Department had photocopied the news of his death three times on a piece of paper, then ripped each sheet into thirds. As an economical man, I think Tom would have approved.

A memorial service in the UNH Alumni House attracted well-known writers – John Irving, Andre Dubus, Ernie Hebert – but two speakers moved me more than any of the stars. Tom’s son Peter read a poem his father had published in Esquire:

The giraffe is disappearing

    from the world

without a word

Who are we to say its legs

    are mismatched

and look as if they are on backwards

How it runs graceful as a rocking chair

escaping in a dream

Think of a lovely girl who has

    six fingers

on one of her hands

You must let that strange hand

Touch you

Because Tom generally spoke seriously, I did not think of him as having a light side. That he was capable of such a delicate line delighted me.

Later, a lifelong friend spoke of encountering Tom on a river in northern New Hampshire. Tom was sitting on a rock, smoking a cigarette, and when the friend asked how he’d done, he said he’d caught his limit. Seeing only nine trout laid on the wet river grass, the friend questioned his arithmetic, until Tom opened one of the gutted trout to show a tiny one inside. To have spent time with him and not known him capable of silliness made his loss even worse.

One of my favorite poems is James Wright’s Lying in a Hammock on William Duffy’s Farm in Pine Island, Minnesota. The last line, turning all the beautiful imagery back on its head, reads “I have wasted my life.” It was fear of failure that kept me from writing about Tom for so many years. I feared not being able to say honestly what his teaching meant to me.

What made it possible was remembering a comment he once made about why he wrote fiction: “Nobody is going to listen to what I say anyway, so I might as well try to tell the truth.” This is the lesson I learned from him, that the attempt to be honest, more than its success or failure, makes the difference. He speaks it over my shoulder every day.

I invite you to think of your mentors, past and present, and offer a bit of thanks.

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Weekend Update: August 5-6, 2017

Next week at Maine Crime Writers, there will be posts by Dick Cass (Monday), Lea Wait (Tuesday), Barb Ross (Wednesday), Brendan Rielly (Thursday), and Jessie Crockett (Friday).

In the news department, here’s what’s happening with some of us who blog regularly at Maine Crime Writers:

From Kaitlyn Dunnett: For the month of August, the ebook of The Scottie Barked at Midnight will be on sale for $1.99. Here’s the Kindle link: Scottie ebook. It’s also a BookBub pick. This is the 9th book in the Liss MacCrimmon series and involves Scottie dogs, a “live” reality/competition show, a ski resort only a short drive from Liss’s usual stomping grounds in Moosetookalook, Maine, and, of course, murder. Other books in the series are also discounted in August, although not as much.

From Kate Flora; Here are a few of the Maine Crime Writers and alums from the MWPA mystery party in Tess Gerritsen’s garden last Saturday.

Brendan Rielly by the sea

Maureen Milliken and her wonderful mom.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bruce Coffin in conversation

 

 

 

The very photogenic Dick Case

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

An invitation to readers of this blog: Do you have news relating to Maine, Crime, or Writing? We’d love to hear from you. Just comment below to share.

And a reminder: If your library, school, or organization is looking for a speaker, we are often available to talk about the writing process, research, where we get our ideas, and other mysteries of the business. Contact Kate Flora

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Summer Soundtrack

By Brenda Buchanan

I’ve paid special attention to my senses when writing this summer. Regular readers of this blog might have guessed as much when I wrote in July about summer’s indelible scents. Today I want to talk about the richness of the aural backdrop, the sounds that bring the world (real and fictional) to life.

It’s August (sigh), so let us consider the noises that define the warm weather months.

August sunset

Fireworks in the distance are one defining noise of the season. We live only a few miles from Hadlock Field, where the Portland Sea Dogs celebrate every home run with a brief explosive display. Some nights also feature full-on fireworks shows, which we can hear but not see.  Boom. BoomBoom. BOOMBOOMBOOMBOOM.

Sometimes there’s a big fireworks display after the game.

Missing out on the visuals is not an issue around the Fourth, when local backyard pyrotechnicians go crazy on the two summer days when it’s legal to set off fireworks in our city.

I’m as patriotic as the next gal, but am always glad when July 5 rolls around and the sound of black cats, fountains and roman candles no longer punctuates the midnight stillness.

Driving with the car windows wide open invites other people’s summer songs into my life, and allows me to share mine with them. This year the hit that seems to wafts my way at every stoplight is the cool and catchy Desposito by Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee.

I rarely crank the radio myself, but when The Lovin’ Spoonful’s Summer in the City comes on, the volume knob gets a big twist. I’m dating myself, I know, but (like Desposito) it’s got a great beat and you can dance to it . . .

Summer in the City – Lovin’ Spoonful – YouTube

Sometimes a longstanding summer sound disappears. The ice cream truck that cruised our suburban neighborhood in summers past must be plying other routes this year.

Make mine with jimmies

There are a lot of kids on our street—shrieks and whoops from the nightly game of tag or soccer carry through the back yards that adjoin ours—but the jangle of Pop Goes the Weasel is absent this year. Don’t get me wrong, I can live without the tinny tune distracting me from my work. But I do ponder the mystery of where the treat truck has gone.

Speaking of potential distractions, a baseball game (okay, a Red Sox game) is a constant background sound at our house on summer evenings. The announcers’ voices are a low drone until a big hit brings the Fenway crowd to its feet. Though the 37,000+/- roaring people are 100 miles from of my house, their voices sometimes waft up the stairs to my study.  This happened often the night I wrote this post, when the Sox beat the Indians 12-10.

A Lesser Yellowlegs, contemplating its breakfast.

Bird music is an especially lovely summer sound.

The cottage we visit in Brooklin shares the cove with a flock of Greater Yellow Legs. They busybody along the water’s edge, chattering at each other as they go. Dew-dew-dew, they proclaim. Dew-dew-dew. We spend the sunset hour eavesdropping on their conversations.

A hermit thrush entertains us from a high branch in the woods behind the cottage while we do the supper dishes. There’s a broad window over the kitchen sink through which we bask in its ethereal, multiple-phrased song. Here it is for your listening pleasure, with credit and thanks to Garth McElroy:

The rumble of thunder and crackle of lightning are classic summer noises, taking me back to my parents’ screen porch, a favorite childhood perch during electrical storms. Almost as exciting as the storm itself was the anticipatory rush of wind through trees, mimicking the sound of rain.

Is there a sound that evokes the nascent swing toward fall more than crickets chirping their little hearts out?

I wasn’t ready to hear them yet—this summer has been such an on-and-off affair—but one night last week when I stepped onto the deck after dark there they were, madly rubbing their wings together, hoping to get lucky.

I always hope that for them, too.

Commenters: What are your favorite summer sounds? What noises could you do without? Is there a summertime tune that causes you to turn up your car radio?

Brenda Buchanan’s Joe Gale mysteries feature an old-school reporter with modern media savvy who covers the Maine crime beat. The first three Joe Gale books—Quick Pivot, Cover Story and Truth Beat—are available in digital format wherever ebooks are sold. Brenda can be found on the web at www.brendabuchananwrites.com, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/BrendaBuchananAuthor and on Twitter at @buchananbrenda

 

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Thank you

Bruce Robert Coffin here, wishing all of you a happy August. By the time you read this blog the release of my second Detective Byron novel, Beneath the Depths, will only be five days away! I don’t know about you but I am more than ready.

I’ll admit it, I really struggled with what I wanted to write about this month. Perhaps it is the excitement of the impending release or maybe it is because I’m nearly three quarters of the way through the manuscript for book number three. But regardless of the reason the answer finally came, as it always does, when I wasn’t thinking about it. I decided that this blog would be all about gratitude. To whom am I expressing thanks? Why to you of course.

Writing novels has been my dream since I was a young man and your support has helped me to make it a reality. No writer goes on this journey alone. Oh the actual writing may be a solitary pursuit but the rest of it requires help from you, the reader. You are the reason each of us put pen to paper and fingers to the keys in the first place. It is your imagination that helps us breathe life into the characters who reside on the pages of our books. Your enthusiasm for our storytelling is the very thing that keeps each of us going back to the well again and again. There is no greater feeling than having a fan tell you they can’t wait for our next book. Trust me when I tell you that we each feed off of that. Our fans are why we struggle to find the right word, the correct phrase, and for clarity of thought. You are the reason that we are always striving to improve.

And so I thank you. Thank you for reading my blog posts and my random social media thoughts. Thank you for reading my short stories and novels. Thank you for sending emails of encouragement and praise. Thank you for posting reviews and for recommending my books to your friends and family. Thank you for the invites to speak at your local bookstores and libraries. Thank you for attending my readings and book signings. Thank you for inviting me into your schools and social clubs. Thank you for purchasing my books and more importantly for reading them. Thank you for waiting patiently these past eleven months for another visit from John Byron and Diane Joyner. And thank you most of all for giving this retired cop another shot at a career he loves.

Thank you, dear reader.

 

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Help! In Need of a New Cozy Title

Kaitlyn Dunnett/Kathy Lynn Emerson here. Last week, in a guest post at Wicked Cozy Authors, fellow Kensington author Maya Corrigan (https://wickedcozyauthors.com/2017/07/28/the-tell-tale-title-guest-maya-corrigan/#comments) talked about using crowd-sourcing to find good pun-laced titles for her food-oriented cozy mysteries. I am blatantly stealing this approach because in just one short month I have to turn in the proposal for the second book in my Deadly Edits series.

Yes, I know the first book isn’t out yet. It won’t be out until next June. But a “reasonably detailed outline” of the plot of Book Two has to be turned in to my editor on September 1 and it would really help if it had a title. Right now the file in my computer just says “Mikki #2” to distinguish it from the nearly empty “Liss #13” file. Liss #12, due December 1, has had a title, Overkilt, from the beginning, but it was my previous editor at Kensington who picked that one, not me. Don’t get me wrong. I like it. It just wasn’t my idea.

I think I’m pretty good at coming up with titles. I have a few I’m particularly proud of. Face Down in the Marrow-Bone Pie (written as Kathy) was a hit with pretty much everyone. That was the first of ten books to feature Lady Appleton, sixteenth-century gentlewoman and expert on poisonous herbs as the amateur detective. All the titles in the series start with the words Face Down, which has been good for branding. The Diana Spaulding Mystery Quartet set in 1888 (also as Kathy), used words related in meaning in the titles: Deadlier than the Pen; Fatal as a Fallen Woman; No Mortal Reason; and Lethal Legend. I can also take full credit for the titles of my (Kathy’s) two collections of short stories, Murders and Other Confusions and Different Times, Different Crimes. Kathy’s track record for coming up with titles in Mistress Jaffrey series has not been as good. Murder in the Queen’s Wardrobe was mine but Murder in the Mercery was changed to Murder in the Merchant’s Hall and Murder in a Cornish Kiddlywink became Murder in a Cornish Alehouse.

As for Kaitlyn’s titles, those in the Liss MacCrimmon series have been a mix of those I came up with and suggestions from two agents and three editors. I came up with Kilt Dead. My agent wasn’t enthusiastic about the original plot, but she loved the title. Since then, though, more often than not my original idea has been overruled by either the editor or the marketing department. I’m not complaining. My editor came up with The Corpse Wore Tartan and I think that’s one of the best. On the other hand, A Wee Christmas Homicide still makes me cringe. I kept pitching ideas to do with the Twelve Days of Christmas theme but none of them made the cut.

By now you’re probably wondering what happened to the search for a title for the new book. Let me do a cover reveal first. This is an early draft of the front cover of Crime and Punctuation, the first Deadly Edits mystery featuring Mikki Lincoln, a retired teacher who sets up as a free-lance book editor to make ends meet. There will be at least minor changes to the cover art before publication, if only adding a real quote where it says “a really good reading line here.” My original title for the book was Deadly Edits, which is now the series title. I can definitely live with that. It was my editor who came up with Crime and Punctuation—a perfect choice given Mikki’s new profession and the fact that this is a murder mystery.

 

In the process of finding a title for Mikki #1, the editor who bought it, the editor I now have, my agent, and I all came up with title suggestions. Once the decision was made for the first book, the best of the other possibilities went on a list to consider for Mikki #2. I’d really appreciate any and all feedback about these titles. Just post your opinions in the comments section below.

If anyone can think of a possible title not on this list, that would be even better. Post a new suggestion in the comments section and if I love it, I’ll send you your pick of any of my novels as a thank-you gift.

And now, without further ado, the current list of title ideas for Mikki #2:

KILLER COMMAS

MURDER REVISED

MURDER REWRITTEN

THE BLOOPER MURDERS

DEADLY TYPO

MURDERED WORDS

MURDER OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE

HOMICIDE WITH HOMONYMS

DEATH OF A NIT-PICKER

KILL YOUR DARLINGS

MURDER IN THE PRESENT TENSE

OXYMORON MURDER

THE STYLE SHEET MURDERS

LINE-EDITED TO DEATH

THE PROOFREADER’S LAST MARK

THE COMMA BEFORE CHRISTMAS

A FATAL REVISION

REVISED TO DEATH

CLAUSE AND EFFECT

DIAL M FOR MODIFIER

GAME, SET, SYNTAX

BRAVE NEW WORD

THE SENTENCE ALSO RISES

THE SOUND AND THE FRAGMENT

PRESUMED IDIOM

Kathy Lynn Emerson/Kaitlyn Dunnett is the author of more than fifty traditionally published books written under several names. She won the Agatha Award and was an Anthony and Macavity finalist for best mystery nonfiction of 2008 for How to Write Killer Historical Mysteries and was an Agatha Award finalist in 2015 in the best mystery short story category. She was the Malice Domestic Guest of Honor in 2014. Currently she writes the contemporary Liss MacCrimmon Mysteries (X Marks the Scot—December 2017) and Deadly Edits series (Crime and Punctuation—2018) as Kaitlyn and the historical Mistress Jaffrey Mysteries (Murder in a Cornish Alehouse) as Kathy. The latter series is a spin-off from her earlier “Face Down” mysteries and is set in Elizabethan England. New in 2017 is a collection of short stories, Different Times, Different Crimes. Her websites are www.KaitlynDunnett.com and www.KathyLynnEmerson.com

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When a Writer’s Not Engaged in Her Employment

On my way to the Witherle Library in Castine for a library talk. Is anyone else terrified about driving over the Penobscot Narrows Bridge?

Kate Flora: You may recall that a post or two ago, I declared that I was going to spend my summer exploring indolence. At that time, I had visions of sitting in a white rocking chair on my porch, devouring novels like a box of bonbons. The very next day, an edited manuscript arrived that demanded my attention through the Fourth of July weekend, returned a week later like a boomerang, and has returned once more since. Evidently the editor read my blog post and decided I really needed something to do.

That matter settled, an e-book that needs to become a paperback also arrived and needed my attention. In between, I explored carrot and parsnip fritters, and made a lovely dish with Israeli couscous. Along with reading, my vow has been to cook my way through Yottam Ottolenghi’s book, Jerusalem. So far, my results have actually looked a lot like the pictures.

 

In an excess of enthusiasm at the idea of having an empty schedule, I paid a visit to the

The Maine Mulch Murder by A. Carman Clark

lovely ladies at Mainely Murder to drop off some copies of my late mother’s mystery, The Maine Mulch Murder, and choose some summer reading. The conversation turned to my mother’s second mystery, The Corpse in the Compost, which was in draft form at the time of her death. For a few years now, I have vowed to see if I could finish it when I had time. Now, as Paula and Ann pointed out, I said I had a wide open summer. And that was that.

Instead of devouring novels, I am sitting in my white rocking chair on my porch with a notebook in my lap. It contains the draft novel, my typed comments after reading it about fourteen years ago, notes from an editor, and notes from her good friend, Marilis Hornidge, who was a writer and editor herself. Now I am slowly making my way through the book, editing, writing notes to myself, and occasionally looking skyward and saying, “Darnit, mom, what were you trying to do here?” or “Look, where are you notes on antique fabrics?” It’s a strange conversation, and I’m trying to tweak what needs tweaking without spoiling the author’s unique voice.

Sunset over Mackerel Cove

I would say that I am paying for my desire to have to the summer off, but in truth, this project is a whole lot of fun. When I’m not channeling my mother, I am slowly working toward assembling a dozen of my published short stories into a book, and finishing the next Thea Kozak mystery. Maybe, as everyone has always said, it is impossible for a writer not to be writing.

Of course, because I am still trying to embrace indolence, I am spending pleasant time communing with my flowers. And on Thursday, weather permitting, I will join other members of my family in Union for a morning of picking blueberries and a swim in Sennebec Pond.

The Alert sailing out of the cove

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