The Cursed Canoe has a little something for everyone: a slick mystery, and intrepid heroine, some comic relief. At this time of year, people start making noise about good ‘beach reads’. Here ya go. Catch a few rays for me!
The Cursed Canoe has a little something for everyone: a slick mystery, and intrepid heroine, some comic relief. At this time of year, people start making noise about good ‘beach reads’. Here ya go. Catch a few rays for me!
The women’s crews would leave the bay, paddle the tough eighteen miles down the coast, and disembark. The women would get out and the men’s teams would climb into the same canoes and paddle back up the coast, where they would arrive at the starting point many grueling hours later. A spectator on the beach wouldn’t see anything after the canoes sped off. I’d be staring out at the empty blue water.
The Labor Day Race is a big deal—so much so, that all seven women on Emma’s crew want to participate. (Unfortunately, the canoe has only six seats…)
Read more: The Cursed Canoe by Frankie Bow – Guest Post + Giveaway » Brooke Blogs
Mandy Hemphill is living her dream, running the successful Rose Cottage Cafe in Orchardville, Texas, from the ground floor of a converted, old—and possibly haunted—downtown home. She even had plans to grow her business with a new outdoor patio…if only the mayor wouldn’t have turned her down.
So when the beloved mayor is found murdered, Mandy finds herself among the suspects. And now business at the cafe is dropping faster than a fallen soufflé. How can she prove her innocence and save the Rose Cottage Cafe?
Thankfully Ben, the new owner of The Orchardville Gazette, doesn’t believe she’s guilty. As the two of them set out to find the real killer, they uncover one small-town lie after the next. But the closer they get to learning the truth about who killed the mayor, the more in danger they find themselves.
About The Author
After her twenty-year career in magazine publishing came to a screeching halt faster than you can say “print is dead,” Lori Stacy decided it was time to finally turn the many stories she had been crafting in her head over the years into books.
Lori has authored a number of fiction and nonfiction books for young adults, has written articles for both print and online publications, and has written about hotels for one of the world’s leading search engines.
She lives in Texas with her husband and three children. When she is not writing, you can usually find her in the kitchen baking treats (which she says are for her children) or trying to train their hundred-pound golden retriever, an obedience school dropout.
You can find out more about Lori and her latest books at www.loristacy.com, provided she didn’t forget to pay her web hosting bill.
Q: Julie, thanks for stopping by Island Confidential! Can you tell us a little bit about your protagonist Jezabelle Jingle?
A: Jezabelle Jingle is a 60-something woman. She has a little snark to her personality but is like most of us, having good days and bad days. Jezzy likes to bake, has a secret late night visitor, cares about her neighbors and is inquisitive but not intrusive. She develops lifelong friendships and those friends are with her through thick and thin. She doesn’t suffer fools lightly but likes the quirkiness of her neighbors and is not afraid to delve into the mystery when a burglar and murderer threaten her neighborhood, the Penderghast neighborhood. More of her character will be revealed in the coming books.
Q: How much is Jezabelle like you? How would you feel about her if you met her in real life?
I would like to think that I have a little of the quirkiness and fun that Jezabelle does. I would love to have her quirky friends. Otherwise I have a feeling I write characters that I would like to eventually become in real life. If I met my characters in real life I would want to hang out with them because they would make my life interesting. And I’d probably get in a lot of trouble.
Q: Do your characters change and evolve throughout consecutive books in the series?
A: Yes, in my Fuchsia Minnesota Series you get to know the background and what makes the characters who they are now. The same thing will happen in the Brilliant Minnesota Series.
Q: Have you ever thought of killing someone that you know in real life–on the pages of a murder mystery, I mean?
A: No, I guess I haven’t. I have those people, like all of us that I don’t like but I would think you would almost have to hate someone to kill them. I don’t know. There is no one I hate and I may threaten to put someone in my book and kill them, but no, I never would. Maybe next year. Ask me again. I have been known to change my mind.
Q: How realistic is your setting? Do you take liberties, or are you true to life?
A: Very unrealistic. Brilliant is fictional and very different then Fuchsia in my other series. None are like the real world with the rules we live with today. They are more relaxed settings and quirky. My goal is to take people away from the real world for a short time and give them something to laugh about. And I never mention where in Minnesota they are located except close to each other. I leave that to my readers’ imaginations.
Q: When the movie or TV series is made, who plays the major parts?
A: In the Brilliant Series I can see Dolly Parton or Diane Keaton for Jezabelle Jingle and Mark Harmon for Police Chief Hank Hardy.
Q: What’s the worst and best advice you’ve heard or received as an author?
A: The best advice would be to have faith in my writing and write from my heart. And don’t dwell on bad reviews if they aren’t constructive criticism. I can’t think of any worst advice. I have had some very good mentors.
About The Author
Julie Seedorf is a Minnesotan. She calls dinner, supper, and lunch, dinner. She has had many careers over her lifetime but her favorite career was that as mother to her children. In later life she became a computer technician, opening her own business. In 2012 Julie signed a contract with Cozy Cat Press for her Fuchsia, Minnesota Series. Books included in that series are Granny Hooks a Crook, Granny Skewers A Scoundrel, Granny Snows A Sneak and Granny Forks A Fugitive.
Closing her computer business in January 2014 Julie has transitioned to becoming a full time writer adding free-lance work for various newspapers, along with continuing her column Something About Nothing, which is now in book form in a book of the same name released in early 2015. Her children’s series, Granny’s In Trouble gives her grandkids a hint of the young Grandma underneath the wrinkles.
Her books are light and fluffy and highlight the fact that in the midst of life we have to find the humor in bad situations to keep us going. “We all take ourselves too seriously and we need to have a little fun.” Julie secretly yearns to be like the Granny characters in her books.
In February 2016 the first book in the Brilliant Minnesota Series was released titled the Penderghast Puzzle Protectors. She also is part of a group mystery by Cozy Cat Press Authors titled “Chasing the Codex.” Julie’s serious side is revealed in a story included in the Anthology, We Go On – Anthology for Veterans where the proceeds will go to Veteran’s Charities.
Visit her website at http://www.julieseedorf.com. Her blog http://sprinklednotes is a little scattered like Granny but lends itself to wisdom and occasional flip flops about life. You will also find her on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/julie.seedorf.author and on Twitter at julieseedorf@julieseedorf and her character Granny has her own Facebook page, http://www.facebook.com/GrannyFromFuchsiaMinnesota. Enjoy the moments; they may carry you through a lifetime.
Author Links
http://julieseedorf.com
http://sprinklednotes.com
http://www.facebook.com/julie.seedorf.author
Tweets by JulieSeedorf
https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6556799.Julie_Seedorf
Purchase Links
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-penderghast-puzzle-protectors-julie-seedorf/1123331597?ean=9781939816801
Here is how to spot each of the five aspects of personality:
1. Conscientiousness
More conscientious people used pictures that were more natural, colourful and bright.
They expressed the most emotions of all the different personality types.
This probably reflects the fact that conscientious people like to do what is expected of them.
2. Openness to experience
People high in openness to experience often had the best pictures: these tended to be sharper, at higher contrast.
Their photos tended to be more artistic or unusual and their faces were often larger in the frame.
3. Extraverts
Extraverts used more colourful images and were more likely to show a group of people rather than just themselves.
Unsurprisingly, they were usually beaming at the camera.
4. Neuroticism
People higher in neuroticism tended to use simpler photos with less colour.
5. Agreeableness
Highly agreeable people post relatively poor pictures of themselves…
…but they are probably smiling and the pictures are bright and lively.
The study’s authors sum up their findings:
“Users that are either high in openness or neuroticism post less photos of people and when these are present, they tend not to express positive emotions.
The difference between the groups is in the aesthetic quality of the photos, higher for openness and lower for neuroticism.
Users high in conscientiousness, agreeableness or extraversion prefer pictures with at least one face and prefer presenting positive emotions through their facial expressions.
Conscientious users post more what is expected of a profile picture: pictures of one face that expresses the most positive emotion out of all traits.
Extraverts and agreeable people regularly post colorful pictures that convey emotion, although they are not the most aesthetically pleasing, especially for the latter trait.”
The study was published in the journal AAAI DIGITAL LIBRARY (Liu et al., 2016).
from PsyBlog http://bit.ly/1XutQe0
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March on Barton Farm can only mean one thing: maple sugar season.
To combat the winter slump, resilient director Kelsey Cambridge organizes a Maple Sugar Festival, complete with school visits, pancake breakfasts, and tree tapping classes. Kelsey hires curmudgeonly maple sugar expert Dr. Conrad Beeson to teach the classes, despite misgivings over his unpleasant demeanor. It’s a decision she ends up regretting when, before the first tree can be tapped for sap, Dr. Beeson turns up dead.The maple sugar expert’s death threatens to shut down not only the Maple Sugar Festival, but also Barton Farm itself. Kelsey must solve Dr. Beeson’s murder to escape the increasingly sticky situation.
Q: Amanda, welcome back to Island Confidential! Re-introduce us to your protagonist, Kelsey Cambridge.
A: Kelsey Cambridge is a historian and the director of Barton Farm, a living history museum located in Ohio’s Cuyahoga Valley. The Farm is struggling to stay afloat, and Kelsey will do whatever it takes to keep it open even hosting big events, like the Maple Sugar Festival, that get her into a lot of hot water. She is also divorced and a single mom of a precocious five-year-old boy named Hayden.
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Q: How much of you is in Kelsey? How would you feel about her if you met her in real life?
A: There is always a little bit of me in all my protagonists. In the case of Kelsey, I love history like she does, and I worked a living history museum when I was in college. I knew then that it would make a great setting for a mystery novel. If I met Kelsey, I know that we would be friends. We have the same sense of humor. However in a lot of ways, I’m more like her best friend Laura Fellow than I’m like Kelsey herself.
Q: Do your characters change and evolve throughout consecutive books in the series?
A: My characters definitely change as a series goes on. In the case of Kelsey, she’s healing from a messy divorce and is wondering if she will ever be able to trust another man again.
Q: Have you ever thought of killing someone that you know in real life–on the pages of a murder mystery, I mean?
A: Yes, I’m not saying who.
Q: How realistic is your setting? Do you take liberties, or are you true to life?
A: The setting is based on a real living history museum in Ohio, so the setting is close to fact. I took liberties in the way Barton Farm is owned and operated and how much freedom Kelsey as the director has. She needs freedom to sleuth. I don’t think the director of an actual living history museum could get away with as much as she does.
Q: When the movie or TV series is made, who plays the major parts?
A: Kelsey Cambridge—Olivia Wilde; Chase Wyatt—Chris Pratt; Detective Brandon—Christina Hendricks; Gavin Elliot—Andrew Garfield.
Q: What’s the worst and best advice you’ve heard or received as an author?
A: The best advice was from the very talented Heather Webber who also writes as Heather Blake. She told me once many years ago. “Always be writing something new.” She said this because the publishing industry changes so rapidly you need to have something ready in order to adapt to those changes.
The worst advice was from a well-meaning high school English teacher who told me not major in English in college because I would never find a job. I changed my major three times my freshman year because of that one comment, but in the end, I majored in English because I wanted to write and knew that degree was going to help me achieve my dream. I’m so glad I didn’t listen to him.
Q: Where can readers follow you?
A: My main website is amandaflower.com, and you can follow me on Facebook,Twitter , Goodreads, Pinterest, or Instagram.
About The Author
Amanda Flower is an academic librarian and the Agatha Award-nominated author of Maid of Murder, the Appleseed Creek Mysteries, and the India Hayes Mysteries. She also writes the Amish Quilt Shop Mysteries under the name Isabella Alan.
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Sleuthing Women is a collection of 10 full-length mysteries featuring murder and assorted mayhem by 10 critically acclaimed, award-winning, and bestselling authors. Each novel in this set is the first book in an established multi-book series—a total of over 3,000 pages of reading pleasure for lovers of amateur sleuth, caper, and cozy mysteries. Only $2.99!
Today we have a character interview with Carol Sabala, the protagonist of MURDER, HONEY, by Vinnie Hansen.
When the head chef collapses into baker Carol Sabala’s cookie dough, she is thrust into her first murder investigation. Suspects abound at Archibald’s, the swanky Santa Cruz restaurant where Carol works. The head chef cut a swath of people who wanted him dead from ex-lovers to bitter rivals to greedy relatives.
Q. Carol, thanks for coming by! Tell us a little bit about yourself–both something we learn from Murder, Honey and something that readers might not guess?
A. My name is Carol Sabala. Readers know that I’m Mexican-American, but other characters often fail to recognize this. Apparently, I received all my mother’s Anglo genes! My surname, a corruption of the common Mexican name Zavala, doesn’t help.
Since my father disappeared when I was a baby, my desire to claim my full-identity underpins my decisions and arcs through the Carol Sabala Mystery Series.
Readers don’t know that for a sleuth I have a lot of phobias, including arachnophobia. Fortunately, I don’t encounter spiders in the series, although I do have a brush with a couple of scorpions in Black Beans & Venom.
Q. Who’s the character you get along with the best? Why?
A. My best friend is Suzanne, the garde manger at Archibald’s, the fancy restaurant in Santa Cruz, California, where I have my part-time job as a baker. Suzanne is a cream puff of a woman, sweet and easy-going, a balance to my personality. In Rotten Dates, Suzanne is the first person officially to hire me to investigate a murder. My buddy, though, meets the love of her life, and by book four, Squeezed & Juiced, she’s moved to Kuwait.
Q. Which other character do you have a conflict with? Why?
A. Hoo boy, I have conflicts with just about everybody. I love my mother, but I was a late-in-life baby. Sometimes Mom seems more like a grandmother. My head feels like it will explode from her maxims. We’re both independent and blunt, our similarity making it hard for us to connect.
Eldon, the kitchen manager at Archibald’s, is basically a good guy, but he drives me crazy. He runs the kitchen efficiently, but he’s a born bureaucrat who never shuts up. When I finally become a part-time private investigator, my other boss, J.J. Sloan, is an overbearing, arrogant alcoholic. And don’t even get me started on my love interests or the actual bad guys.
Q. Just between you and me: What do you really think of author Vinnie Hansen?
A. Hansen, the author, gets on my nerves, always reining me in. Frankly, if it weren’t for her, I’d swear even more than I do, and I’d kick some serious ass. But she keeps buffing my raw edges, so cozy readers might accept me. She should embrace that I have more in common with Kinsey Milhone and Stephanie Plum than with Miss Marple. Maybe she could use that energy to create me a mate. Think young Johnny Depp.
Q. What’s next for you?
A. Cough up my secrets? You gotta be kidding! Did you bring a gun, because I’m armed with my Colt.
Carol Sabala is the creation of author Vinnie Hansen. You can read all about Carol’s adventures in Murder, Honey, one of the books in Sleuthing Women: 10 First-in-Series Mysteries, a collection of full-length mysteries featuring murder and assorted mayhem by ten critically acclaimed, award-winning, and bestselling authors. Each novel in the set is the first book in an established multi-book series—a total of over 3,000 pages of reading pleasure for lovers of amateur sleuth, caper, and cozy mysteries, with a combined total of over 1700 reviews on Amazon, averaging 4 stars. Titles include:
Assault With a Deadly Glue Gun, an Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mystery by Lois Winston—Working mom Anastasia is clueless about her husband’s gambling addiction until he permanently cashes in his chips and her comfortable middle-class life craps out. He leaves her with staggering debt, his communist mother, and a loan shark demanding $50,000. Then she’s accused of murder…
Murder Among Neighbors, a Kate Austen Suburban Mystery by Jonnie Jacobs — When Kate Austen’s socialite neighbor, Pepper Livingston, is murdered, Kate becomes involved in a sea of steamy secrets that bring her face to face with shocking truths—and handsome detective Michael Stone.
Skeleton in a Dead Space, a Kelly O’Connell Mystery by Judy Alter—Real estate isn’t a dangerous profession until Kelly O’Connell stumbles over a skeleton and runs into serial killers and cold-blooded murderers in a home being renovated in Fort Worth. Kelly barges through life trying to keep from angering her policeman boyfriend Mike and protect her two young daughters.
In for a Penny, a Cleopatra Jones Mystery by Maggie Toussaint—Accountant Cleo faces an unwanted hazard when her golf ball lands on a dead banker. The cops think her BFF shot him, so Cleo sets out to prove them wrong. She ventures into the dating world, wrangles her teens, adopts the victim’s dog, and tries to rein in her mom…until the killer puts a target on Cleo’s back.
The Hydrogen Murder, a Periodic Table Mystery by Camille Minichino—A retired physicist returns to her hometown of Revere, Massachusetts and moves into an apartment above her friends’ funeral home. When she signs on to help the Police Department with a science-related homicide, she doesn’t realize she may have hundreds of cases ahead of her.
Retirement Can Be Murder, A Baby Boomer Mystery by Susan Santangelo—Carol Andrews dreads her husband Jim’s upcoming retirement more than a root canal without Novocain. She can’t imagine anything worse than having an at-home husband with time on his hands and nothing to fill it—until Jim is suspected of murdering his retirement coach.
Dead Air, A Talk Radio Mystery by Mary Kennedy—Psychologist Maggie Walsh moves from NY to Florida to become the host of WYME’s On the Couch with Maggie Walsh. When her guest, New Age prophet Guru Sanjay Gingii, turns up dead, her new roommate Lark becomes the prime suspect. Maggie must prove Lark innocent while dealing with a killer who needs more than just therapy.
A Dead Red Cadillac, A Dead Red Mystery by RP Dahlke—When her vintage Cadillac is found tail-fins up in a nearby lake, the police ask aero-ag pilot Lalla Bains why an elderly widowed piano teacher is found strapped in the driver’s seat. Lalla confronts suspects, informants, cross-dressers, drug-running crop dusters, and a crazy Chihuahua on her quest to find the killer.
Murder is a Family Business, an Alvarez Family Murder Mystery by Heather Haven—Just because a man cheats on his wife and makes Danny DeVito look tall, dark and handsome, is that any reason to kill him? The reluctant and quirky PI, Lee Alvarez, has her work cut out for her when the man is murdered on her watch. Of all the nerve.
Murder, Honey, a Carol Sabala Mystery by Vinnie Hansen—When the head chef collapses into baker Carol Sabala’s cookie dough, she is thrust into her first murder investigation. Suspects abound at Archibald’s, the swanky Santa Cruz restaurant where Carol works. The head chef cut a swath of people who wanted him dead from ex-lovers to bitter rivals to greedy relatives.
Buy Links
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About the Author: Vinnie Hansen fled the South Dakota prairie for the California coast the day after high school graduation.
A reading addict since childhood, Vinnie is now the author of the Carol Sabala mysteries. The seventh installment in the series, Black Beans & Venom, was a finalist for the Claymore Award. She’s also written many published short stories including Novel Solution in the anthology, Fish or Cut Bait, and Bad Connection, the 2015 winner of the Golden Donut Award. Still sane after 27 years of teaching high school English, Vinnie has retired and lives in Santa Cruz, California, with her husband and the requisite cat.
Cognitive psychologists and neuroscientists would resoundingly give all three of those claims a rating of one.
Did you bomb that test? Here’s a small piece of solace—many professional educators wouldn’t pass either. The Hechinger Report http://bit.ly/1TSPXIj
Read the rest
A staff member of the United Kingdon’s National Environment Research Council suggested that NERC create a citizen poll to suggest a name for a $287 million polar research ship. Johnson, the U.K. Government’s Science Minister responsible for, among other things, NERC, sought to get the effort off on the right inspirational foot by saying: “Can you imagine one of the world’s biggest research labs traveling to the Antarctic with your suggested name proudly emblazoned on the side?” (One might add, proudly flying the British flag.) There were apparently employees of NERC pulling for names like Shackleton or Endeavor. Instead, they got something else.
James Hand, a journalist, apparently thought he would have a bit of fun with the contest. He proposed a name, Boaty McBoatface. The name immediately zoomed into the lead on the Internet, perhaps supported by adolescents (and their parents) who had grown up playing with toys like Thomas, the friendly locomotive. (Hand later apologized for “scuppering the contest,” saying he actually preferred Clifford, the Big Red Boat.)
The final result was that Boaty McBoatface, aided by the Internet, polled 120,000 votes, four times more than the second place finisher. It was likely much more attention than had ever been drawn to a relatively quiet corner of the U.K. Government’s science establishment.
Now Minister Johnson has a decision to make. He apparently has delayed it, perhaps waiting for interest to wane. But he did issue a statement saying that: “We want something that fits the mission and captures the spirit of scientific endeavor.”
This is perhaps a learning opportunity for all of us in marketing. What do you do when a brand goes out of control? Is it even possible to bring it back under control? What are the costs and benefits of trying to do it? Specifically, should British Science Minister Jo Johnson think about Boaty as an opportunity or salvage project? What do you think?
References:Dina Gerdeman, Advertisers Get Serious About Playing With Their Brands,Harvard Business School Working Knowledge, hbswk.hbs.edu, May 18, 2015 (accessed April 19, 2016)
Emma Henderson, “Boaty McBoatface ‘unlikely’ to be the name of new multi- million pound research vessel, www.independent.co.uk, April 19, 2016 (accessed April 19, 2016)
Katie Rogers, “Boaty McBoatface: What You Get When You Let the Internet Decide, www.nytimes.com, March 21, 2016 (accessed April 19, 2016)
from HBS Working Knowledge http://hbs.me/1rU9DCR
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