Rocktober!
That’s the way to kick off the month. Things have
been busy here in the Mitten, with a two-day event, a writer’s workshop and my
first appearance as a guest at a book club.
Details you ask?
Just keep reading.
Writing
“Goes
to show you never can tell.” That’s a great line from a song by Chuck Berry, the
father of rock and roll. It even shows up in “The Wayward Path” during an
exchange Chene has with another character.
The same line popped into my head earlier this month.
I was participating in the final
outdoor festival for the season. My booth was set. David Kobb, co-author of scary tales for kids
had his display ready. My table set up, complete with Crime Scene tape. It was
a perfect fall day. While there wasn’t
as large of a crowd as we’ve seen at other events, there was a steady flow of
people.
Sales were slow, until a guy stopped
by and started checking out all of my books. Then he pulled out his credit
card, nodded and said, “All of them. I’m camping and love to read.”
That’s the second time this summer
someone has bought all seven of my books. That’s when I referred to Chuck’s line.
Twice during the weekend I sold copies
of “Devious” and the young lady buying the book was named Jamie. Two women at the booth beside me bought
copies of “Why 319?” then proceeded to sit in the sunshine and read the book
while the event was going on.
Last Monday was the second writer’s
workshop at the local library. I’ve been recruited to facilitate the meeting.
Ten authors were in attendance. We had some excellent conversation on a few
writing related topics. Six people read excerpts from their current projects
and received feedback from the group. The reactions were all very positive.
And then, last Thursday, I was invited
to a book club meeting. One of the group had suggested “The Wayward Path” as the
selection for the month. I joined them to answer their questions. We talked about Detroit, mobsters, cops,
dialogue, humor and even Chene’s interactions with Simone, his lady fair.
A finishing touch here. I stopped at
the library yesterday and out of curiosity, checked the shelf for local
authors. Normally I’ll see a few copies
of my books on hand. Not this time. Only “Vanishing Act” was there. The rest
have all been checked out. That’s confirmation
that people are reading my stories.
Gotta love that!
Work
in Progress
With feedback from my beta readers in hand, I cleaned up the manuscript
for "Chasing Favors” the fourth novel in the Jamie Richmond series on the
last Thursday in September. A quick
note was attached and sent to Melissa at Inkspell Publishing. Since I’d contacted her a few weeks before,
she knew it was coming.
What I wasn’t expecting was her
message the next day. Less than 24 hours later, not only had she read the
story, but Melissa was accepting it! The
contract was attached.
As Jamie would say “What the hell!”
Sure, there are some authors whose work is accepted
that quickly. Or they may have a contract for a certain number of books in a
series. But this is unusual for me. One day later and we’re moving forward!
The publication will probably take place in July. There
is still editing to be done (of course!) and artwork for the cover. That time
will go quickly, as it often does. Yet knowing the book has been accepted is
quite a thrill. Jamie is obviously delighted.
Meanwhile, I’m getting started on my next effort.
This one is going to be a little different. Instead of a mystery, this may be
more of a crime novel. Ideas for the
plot are already brewing. I’ve written about 2,000 words to get it started.
Author Interview
The wonders of technology make it easy to reach
across the miles and make a connection.
Over the years I’ve developed such contacts with people in Australia,
Taiwan, Italy and various parts of the US and Canada. One such connection is with the very talented
M.S. Spencer.
We share a love of a good mystery, engaging
characters and realistic adventures. We’ve traded emails on a variety of
subjects during the course of our friendship.
I’ve read several of her novels and enjoyed each one. She’s been in my
corner with the Chene series and I think she’s become fascinated with Leo
Agonasti.
Let’s get to know her.
Where
are you from?
Oh gee, that’s a toughie. I was born
in upstate NY, but left for sunnier climes (Maryland) after 6 months. After
that we moved some 22 times before I went off to college and proceeded to move
another maybe 15 times until I settled in Florida some 8 years ago. My goal was
to move before I had to wash the windows, which usually meant every 2 years. I
lived in various cities in the US, Europe, and the Middle East. I did spend a
big chunk in the DC metro area—part of my childhood in a tiny Victorian town in
a large Victorian house, and then after marriage in a Sears farmhouse that
still had a well in the basement.
What’s
your ‘someday’ or dream vacation spot and why?
It’s a tossup between the Galapagos
Islands and Florence.
What’s
your favorite thing to do for relaxation?
A good dinner and a stimulating
conversation.
Any
favorite hobbies?
Not anymore. I used to do needlepoint.
I took it up so as to be doing something productive while my mother-in-law
droned on and on about the price of green beans. Possibly the dullest human
being I’ve ever known. However, while maintaining the polite mask on my face, I
made Christmas stockings for every member of the family, plus so many eyeglass
cases that she begged me to stop.
How
long have you been writing?
I’ve been writing since my chubby baby
fingers could hold a piece of chalk. I wrote stories and poems from elementary
school on. A friend sent me a poem that we published in my middle school
newspaper. In a word? Sappy. My first novel was released in 2009. Before that
speeches and statements I’d written for different US Senators and Dept. of the
Interior officials were published. I’m probably best known for an article on
the Ethiopian national epic published in the Vth Journal of International
Ethiopian Studies (6 weeks on the bestseller list)(jk). Sadly, out of print now
😊
Is
there a particular genre that you write?
Or more than one? What led you there?
I started out writing spicy romantic
suspense—so spicy that to this day my adult children refuse to read my books.
The spice gradually disappeared—I knew I was done when my draft was sprinkled
with /sex scene here/ instead of the actual sex. In its place dead bodies began
to crop up. After awhile I took the hint and moved on to murder mystery. My
favorite part is sneaking in obscure clues and inserting red herrings into the
story.
What
authors had an impact on you growing up and as an adult?
I loved the Oz books (I collect them) and E. Nesbit, P. L. Travers (Mary
Poppins), and the Dr. Doolittle books. From early on I read anything and
everything, particularly the classics (I figured, they were classics for a
reason). My favorites were English writers—Austen (mistress of perfect prose),
Hardy, Waugh, Iris Murdoch, but I also loved Thomas Mann and Dostoyevsky. Later
I read the great British mystery writers (Christie, Marsh, Sayers, Allingham)
and they colored my current writing. Nowadays I enjoy thrillers (Rollins,
Baldacci) and eschew modern angst fiction as trite, boring, inauthentic, and
unhelpful.
Has anyone in your life
influenced you or encouraged you to pursue your interests of writing?
Not really. It was more or less a personal ambition.
Maybe spurred on when my husband threw away my first manuscript (by accident).
Is
there a common theme or item that appears in each of your work?
Each of my
15 books is a stand-alone story, with its own set of characters. The settings
vary, although they generally occur in either Maine or Florida. I try, with minimal
success, to have some character mention or go to Paris at least once per book.
Do
you have a favorite scene you’ve written? What makes it special?
I love the funny bits involving secondary characters. In Mrs. Spinney’s Secret there’s a scene
in which two brothers—both actors—attempt to spar. A lot of bluster and very
little actual hands-on fighting. Imagine George Clooney and Steve Martin. Then
there are the Miss Marples in The Mason’s Mark. Andromeda
Miller Bliss and Letitia Canfield are equally sharp and sophisticated and yet
you can’t imagine either without a set of pearls and a pillbox hat.
Tell
us about your latest work:
I have a romantic suspense novel awaiting my editor’s imprimature
entitled The Wishing Tree: Love, Lies, & Spies on Chincoteague Island.
My latest publication is Hidden Gem: the Secret of St. Augustine. (It is
currently a finalist at Florida Writers Association Royal Palm Literary
Awards.) Here’s the story:
Barnaby and Philo’s story begins with
very bad chili and a dead body.
Barnaby is in St. Augustine, Florida,
to teach a college seminar, and plans to use The Secret—a treasure hunt book—as
a framework for his class. He enlists Philo Brice, owner of an antique map
store, to aid him in seeking clues in the historic sites of the ancient city.
Together they face murderers, thieves,
thugs, and fanatics, heightening their already strong attraction to each other.
Can they solve the puzzle and unearth the treasure before the villains do?
Philo and Barnaby pursue several twisting paths and false leads before arriving
at a startling conclusion.
Excerpt: The Black Raven
Across Avenida Menendez lay the city
marina. At the end of one of the floating docks a ship was ablaze with red and
green lights. Philo tugged Barnaby’s sleeve. “That’s the Black Raven.
Let’s go have a dekko.”
They walked carefully down the dock,
compensating for the slight sway caused by the incoming tide. Just as they
reached the ship, the lights winked out, leaving the marina in darkness except
for the feeble glow of the gibbous moon. Next to the galleon, tied up stern in,
was the Queen Anne’s Revenge. “That’s Blackbeard’s flagship.”
“So, do the pirates board the Black
Raven and have their way with the wenches?”
“The only wenches on board are pirates
too—Lady Red and Georgia Fury—and they aren’t exactly attractive.”
“You mean, no man in his right mind would
rip their bodices?”
“Something like that.”
“Darn. I hope there’s at least a mock
skirmish.”
Philo tried to remember what the young
man had told her. “I’ve never actually gone on the treasure voyage, but—”
“Treasure? Fantastic! Now who did I
assign this to?” He snapped his fingers. “Lincoln, that’s it. They have a
cocktail cruise, which seemed to attract his notice.”
She looked over the ship. “How do you
suppose they have a proper swordfight if everyone’s drunk?”
“ ‘Any damn fool can navigate the
world sober. It takes a really good sailor to do it drunk.’ Sir Francis
Chichester.”
“Anyway.” Why do I even
attempt to have a normal conversation? “Blackbeard arrives on the Queen
Anne’s Revenge and boards the Black Raven. He steals their treasure
chest and makes off with it. The captain orders the crew—which consists of a
couple of college kids on summer break and the paying passengers—to chase him
and retrieve it. Which they do.”
“And what happens to the redoubtable
Blackbeard?”
“I think they make him walk the plank.
Or…” She stopped to think. Behind her came a splash. She whirled around. “What
was that?”
“It came from the port side.” Barnaby
walked past the ship’s stern and peered into the water. “Probably just a fish
jumping.”
“It sounded awfully big.”
“A big fish then.”
Philo scanned the deck. “Someone’s up
there. I saw a shadow against the moon.” She yelled, “Hi there!”
There was no answer, but they heard a
bang and another crash. Barnaby ran around to the starboard side. Philo caught
up with him. He stood, facing the darkness. “Nothing.”
They waited for a few minutes, but all
was still. Finally Philo said, “Must be a crew member preparing for tomorrow.”
“Okay. Come on.”
As he took her hand, she pulled back.
“There it is again!”
“What?”
“The shadow.”
Before Barnaby could respond, a
whistling noise rent the air. A large iron ball attached to a thick rope came
swishing down from the mast and crashed at their feet. The entire dock
vibrated. Barnaby jumped to one side, but he must have slipped on the decking,
for he fell, landing hard. As Philo reached for him, he slid off the slick
surface and into the dark water. “Barnaby!”
He surfaced, spluttering. “What the
hell?”
“Are you okay?” Philo paced the dock
trying to see him in the faint light. She knocked into something. “Barnaby! I
found a ladder!”
“Where?”
“Follow the sound of my voice.”
He let out a bark of laughter. “Yes, my
Puck. ‘And we fairies, that do run / By the triple Hecate’s team, / From the
presence of the sun, / Following darkness like a dream.’ ” He swam to the side and climbed out. “God, that water’s
freezing.”
Philo wrapped her arms around him.
“Let’s get out of here.”
“No, wait. I want to know who just tried
to kill us.” He took a step toward the ship but suddenly bent down and picked something
up.
At that moment a light flashed in their
faces, blinding them. “You there. What do you think you’re doing?”
Here
are the links where you can find the book.
Social
Media Links:
Blog: https://msspencertalespinner.blogspot.com
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/msspencermysteries
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/msspencerauthor
GoodReads:
http://www.goodreads.com/msspencer
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/msspencerauthor/
Bookbub:
https://www.bookbub.com/profile/m-s-spencer
MeWe: https://mewe.com/i/msspencer1
Amazon
Author Page:
http://www.amazon.com/M.S.-Spencer/e/B002ZOEUC8/
Music
I
can’t work in silence. Music is part of life, so it’s always playing, except
when I’m teaching. I’ll jump from Pandora to Spotify to YouTube for some variety.
Recently Prince has been popping up in
the rotation on all of these sites and the radio. More than six years after his death, his
music remains popular.
Prince was a singer, songwriter,
musician and record producer. His flamboyant style and wide vocal range helped
him cross genres, mixing funk, rock, rhythm and blues, soul, pop and jazz. During his career, he captured multiple
awards, including an Oscar for an original song, multiple Grammys and a Golden
Globe. His album sales have topped more than 120 million worldwide.
Prince was inducted into the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame and The Rhythm and Blues Hall of Fame.
Here are my top five favorites.
Kiss: https://youtu.be/H9tEvfIsDyo
Let’s Go Crazy: https://youtu.be/svqYueRzAh0
Raspberry Beret: https://youtu.be/l7vRSu_wsNc
Little Red Corvette: https://youtu.be/v0KpfrJE4zw
Purple Rain: https://youtu.be/TvnYmWpD_T8
2 comments:
What a great interview with M.S. Spencer.
Thanks so much for letting me spout! So enjoyed the interview and I hope your readers do too. I'm looking forward to the crime novel :) M. S.
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