#Giveaway: Murder Dancing by Lesley Cookman

>>>win a Kindle copy of Murder dancing by leaving a comment: what is your favorite murder-solving literary duo?<<<

Murder Dancing

Max Tobin brings his all-male dance company to Steeple Martin, with his new ballet Pendle, based on the infamous Pendle Witch Trials, due to be performed at the Oast Theatre. There have been unpleasant incidents during rehearsals in London, and Max asks Libby Sarjeant and her friend Fran Wolfe to look into them. To everyone’s surprise, the seriousness of the incidents escalates until, inevitably, someone is murdered.
While the police look into the murder, Libby and Fran wonder why someone seemed so set against the ballet. Were occult forces at work, or was there a more worldly, personal motive?



 


Today Leslie joins us with a guest post on cosy (known in these parts as cozy) mysteries. 
First, thank you for hosting me on your blog – I’m delighted to be here.
When I first started writing Murder Mysteries, they weren’t called “cosies” in the UK. Eventually, with the rise of Amazon and the appearance of ebooks, the term came into general use as all books had to be categorised, and my books were never going to bear comparison with any of the grittier stuff.
Luckily, there proved to be a market for this type of story, and particularly the series crime novels. I followed in the great tradition of the Golden Age mysteries, and having read several US published authors, decided that it was a model I could adopt. When my publisher bought the first book – unfinished – she asked if it could be a series, and I delightedly agreed.
So far, there are sixteen full-length novels in the Libby Sarjeant series, one Christmas long/short story and a short story in an anthology. It appears, from the responses I receive from readers, that the main appeal of the books is the characters. One of the most frequent sentences I read is “It’s like visiting old friends.” That delights me, obviously, and I sometimes wonder if I could forget the murders altogether, and just send my little group of main characters off on non-criminal exploits, but one of my most popular characters is my police officer, Ian Connell. When he first appeared, in Book 2 of the series, I never realised how essential he would become. In fact he gets an awful lot of fan mail, mostly asking me not to marry him off!
I think this is the appeal of the series mystery. Each little world is lovingly created and peopled, and as long as the main characters are sympathetic, readers are willing to suspend disbelief. After all, how many murders can one civilian stumble across in their lifetime?
What is more difficult, in my opinion, are the further constrictions placed on the author by setting the stories in a very specific environment. I’m thinking particularly about, for instance, Quilting Mysteries, Crafting Mysteries, Coffee Shop Mysteries and others of their ilk. That seems awfully difficult to me. I have enough trouble finding legitimate situations for my eponymous sleuth to barge into, without tying her to a particular trade or hobby. She does run a local theatre, and once or twice, murders have been loosely connected to that, but mostly I just try and find something new for her to investigate. Occasionally, I send her and her friends off on holiday somewhere, but have to bring them back half way through the book. And I always get comments on the next book saying how nice it is to be back in Steeple Martin, Libby’s home village.
For, of course, in the best English tradition, Libby lives in a typical English village in my home county of Kent. There is also the local seaside town of Nethergate, and several other villages dotted between, which over the years have housed murderers, victims, and scenes of crime. So, if you’d like to see what goes on in the British countryside, do pay Libby a visit. We’d love to see you.
About The Author  

A former actor, model and freelance journalist, Lesley Cookman lives on the Kent coast in the UK, has four musicians as children, two small grandchildren and two cats, Lady Godiva and Gloria. All 14 of her Libby Sarjeant books have reached number one in their genre charts on Amazon UK.
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For Dead Men Only

Hailed as “an intriguing mixture of mystery, romance, and history” by Lois Duncan, the Alexandra Gladstone series from award-winning author Paula Paul continues as an ominous horseman heralds the emergence of a secret society, hidden riches—and a string of chilling murders.

The Temple of the Ninth Daughter sits on a hill at the edge of Newton-upon-Sea, an aura of mystery lingering over its tall, gray silhouette. Villagers whisper about the treasure housed inside, protected by local Freemasons who are bound by clandestine oaths.Dr. Alexandra Gladstone has no time for such nonsense. Between the patients in her surgery and the rounds she makes with her faithful dog, Zack, her days are busy enough. But Alexandra has no logical explanation when the Freemasons start dying, one by one, with no sign of foul play other than smears of blood on their Masonic aprons. And what to make of reports that a Knight Templar rides through the village before each passing?
After the constable disappears in the midst of the crisis, Alexandra reaches out to her dashing, diligent friend, Nicholas Forsythe, Lord Dunsford, for assistance. Is someone after the treasure, or might a more sinister game be afoot? In order to solve this puzzle, Alexandra must somehow catch a killer who shows no remorse—and leaves no witnesses.


Q: Aloha Paula, and thanks for stopping by! Can you tell us a little bit about your protagonist, Alexandra Gladstone? 
A: Alexandra Gladstone is a woman in her early thirties in Essex, England, during the 1880s. She is a doctor of medicine, although, being a woman, she is not allowed to use the term “physician.” Her mother died when she was a child, and she was raised by her father, a physician in the small village of Newton-Upon-Sea and by her father’s housekeeper. Her father taught her much of what she knows about medicine, especially about surgical procedures. Although, she attended a medical school in London, women were denied opportunities to attend certain classes, including those about surgical procedures, because it was considered improper for women to view naked bodies in general and nude male bodies in particular. Alexandra took over her father’s practice when he died, and she has met with some resistance by the villagers because of her gender. In spite of that, she has gained enough of the villagers’ respect to maintain a busy and successful practice.
Of course, she must solve crimes in this series, and she uses her intellect as well as her medical knowledge, along with female instinct to help her. Alexandra has never been married, although she has had a lover in the past. No one except her maid, Nancy, knows all the details. Readers learn a little about that in the third book of the series, Half a Mind to Murder, and will continue to learn more as the series progresses. A woman in her early thirties who is still unmarried was, in the 1880s, considered a spinster, although men are clearly attracted to her, especially the Earl of Dunsford who frequently helps her solve crimes.
Q: How much of you is in Alexandra? How would you feel about her if you met her in real life?
A: There is always a little of me in every character I create, even the villains. In the case of Alexandra, I think the part of her that has to struggle against gender prejudice shows more of me than any of her other characteristics. I am old enough to have experienced a sizeable amount of that in my college days and in my early career as a journalist. Sometimes Alexandra’s self-confidence fails her, and that is a trait with which I identify. If I were to meet her, I believe we would like each other, although we would each be shy and reserved.
Q: Do your characters change and evolve throughout consecutive books in the series?
A: My characters absolutely evolve and change throughout the series. To me, having characters who don’t change in a story is like having a story without a plot. In a series, I believe the change has to come about slower than it might in a stand-alone book, nevertheless, they change. Nicholas (the Earl of Dunsford) becomes more mature, Alexandra becomes more self-confident, and Nancy, Alexandra’s maid, matures and, though she is street-smart, she becomes wise in new ways.
Q: Have you ever thought of killing someone that you know in real life—on the pages of a murder mystery, I mean?
A: I haven’t consciously thought of doing that. I always want people who annoy me or offend me to have to suffer long lives and learn hard lessons. However, having said that, most of the people who die in the pages of my books, while they may not be exact replicas of people I know, have some characteristic I abhor in real people.
Q: How realistic is your setting? Do you take liberties, or are you true to life?
A: The village of Newton-Upon-Sea in the Gladstone series is of my own creation. However, I have done a great deal of research on what a village in Essex in the 1880s would be like. While I have visited England several times, I’ve never been in a village that is exactly like Newton-Upon-Sea.
Q: When the movie or TV series is made, who plays the major parts?
A: From the first time I saw Mary Elizabeth Winstead playing Mary Phinney on Mercy Street. I thought she would be right for the role of Alexandra Gladstone.

In my fondest dreams Lily James would be Nancy. She was Natasha on War and Peace, Ella on Cinderella, and Lady Rose on Downton Abbey. She is incredibly versatile, and I think could pull off the cunning personality of Nancy.

Maybe Richard Madden for Nicholas. He has the right look, but there is a comic side to Nicholas that could be difficult for some actors.
Richard Madden
Q: What’s the worst and best advice you’ve heard or received as an author?
A: The worst advice is “write what you know.” Wait! Let me explain that. Of course a writer can write effectively about situations or problems and settings with which they are familiar; however, there is much more to it than that. Everything I write involves learning something I didn’t know. One example is in the book Half a Mind to Murder in which one of the themes is the use of vaccinations. While I am in favor of their use, I wanted to learn reasons why some people are not now and were not in the 1880s in favor of their use. Another example is a book I wrote called Forgetting Tommie that is set in modern times in the part of Texas where I grew up. I thought that book would require virtually no research because I know the people and setting so well. I found that was not true. I knew about my relationship with the people and place, but I had to consider how others felt, and that required research into elements of life that had touched other people but not me.
The best advice I have received came in the form of a paperweight given to me by my daughter. It reads: “What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail?” That makes me want to keep writing and attempting to get better. It also implies that one must practice and learn from mistakes.


About The Author  
Award-winning novelist Paula Paul was born on her grandparents’ cotton farm near Shallowater, Texas, and graduated from a country high school near Maple, Texas. She earned a BA in journalism and has worked as a reporter for newspapers in both Texas and New Mexico. She’s been the recipient of state and national awards for her work as a journalist as well as a novelist. Her previous novels featuring Dr. Alexandra Gladstone, including Symptoms of Death, have appeared on bookstore and online bestseller lists. She is also the author of the Mystery by Design series, which she wrote as Paula Carter. She lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico.

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A Daughter's Doubt: Interview and Giveaway with author Richard Audrey

Mary MacDougall’s first case of 1902 seems simple enough.
Just before the 19-year-old heiress leaves for a summer holiday on Mackinac Island with her Aunt Christena, she’s hired to stop in a little town along the way and make inquiries. Did Agnes Olcott really die there of cholera? Or were there darker doings in Dillmont?
Mary’s mentor, Detective Sauer, thinks it’s merely a case of bad luck for the dead woman. But Mrs. Olcott’s daughter suspects her detested stepfather played a hand in her mother’s untimely death.
With the reluctant help of her aunt and her dear friend Edmond Roy, the young detective struggles to reveal the true fate of Agnes Olcott. As she digs ever deeper, the enemy Mary provokes could spell disaster for herself and the people she loves. But in the end, it’s the only way to banish a daughter’s doubt.

 


>>>Win two Mary MacDougall mysteries in print!<<<

Q: Aloha Richard, and welcome back to Island Confidential! Tell us about your protagonist, Mary MacDougall. 
A: In this story, set in 1902, Mary MacDougall has just turned 19. She’s the whip-smart daughter of a mining millionaire and can have nearly anything she wants. But what she desires above all is to become a consulting detective. She’s already proven herself in two earlier cases and in this story takes on her first paying assignment. Is it an improbable dream for a young lady in her position? Absolutely. But rebels and mavericks existed then as now, and Mary is one of them.
Q: How much of you is in Mary? How would you feel about her if you met her in real life?
A: I have almost nothing in common with 19-year-old heiresses of 1902. And I suppose I would find Mary a bit intimidating if I were to meet her. When I first came up with the idea of Mary some years ago, I imagined her as a mashup of Lucy Honeychurch (E.M. Forster’s A Room with a View) and Sherlock Holmes. That early version of Mary was cold and calculating and not very likeable. So this time around, I softened her edges, gave her imperfections, and provided her with a love interest who will baffle, confuse, and delight her.
Q: Do your characters change and evolve throughout consecutive books in the series?
A: Mary definitely matures. After all, she starts sleuthing just a month after she graduates from high school. In fact, there’s a bit of Nancy Drew about her in the first two novellas. In this third story, a novel, she faces some harsh realities and pays the price for her mistakes. In other words, Mary is beginning to grow up.
Q: Have you ever thought of killing someone that you know in real life–on the pages of a murder mystery, I mean?
A: Not anyone I know. But I’ve created dislikable characters that are based on former acquaintances. That’s as close as I’ve come to committing literary revenge.
Q: How realistic is your setting? Do you take liberties, or are you true to life?
A: I’ve tried to make the Midwestern settings that Mary operates in as true as possible to what things were like in 1901 and 1902. My goal is to create characters and plots that engage readers and draw them into the stories, with just enough historical flavor to make it seem real. I don’t try to provide the exhaustive period details that one might find in a straight historical novel. Think watercolor brush strokes vs. photographic specificity.
Q: When the movie or TV series is made, who plays the major parts?
A: For Mary, I’d cast Emma Watson. For Mary’s Aunt Christena, Cate Blanchett. For Edmond Roy, Josh Hartnett. For Mary’s father, Russell Crowe. For Detective Sauer, Tim DeKay.
Q: What’s the worst and best advice you’ve heard or received as an author?
A: The worst advice was to spend a lot of time on promotion and getting reviews and such. The best advice is to write as many good books as you can. Building your series up to at least five or six titles is the most important thing.



Richard Audry is the pen name of D. R. Martin. As Richard Audry, he is the author of the King Harald Canine Cozy mystery series and the Mary MacDougall historical mystery series. Under his own name he has written the Johnny Graphic middle-grade ghost adventure series, the Marta Hjelm mystery, Smoking Ruin, and two books of literary commentary: Travis McGee & Me; and Four Science Fiction Masters.
Visit D. R. MARTIN & RICHARD AUDRY BOOKS
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We have a winner!

Congratulations to the winner of the Rafflecopter giveaway. Rebecca S. has won two hardcover Molly Barda mysteries: The Case of the Defunct Adjunct and The Musubi Murder.
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Goodreads Book Giveaway

The Cursed Canoe by Frankie Bow

The Cursed Canoe

by Frankie Bow

Giveaway ends April 18, 2016.
See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

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Spotlight and #Giveaway: Pushed to the Limit, an Emma Cassidy mystery

Faye Seymour has long reigned as Greenville’s gossip queen, but recently she’s been at her worst, spreading rumors like wild fire and putting a lot of noses out of joint. Event planner Emma Cassidy has already lost an important client to Faye’s loose tongue, and she can ill afford to lose any business. When Emma discovers Faye lying at the bottom of a flight of stairs, the feisty old lady declares she was pushed—and that Emma is the culprit!—before passing out.


As Faye recovers, Emma reluctantly delves into the busybody’s life of meddling and scuttlebutt. She has to clear her name before Faye falsely accuses her again, and besides, there’s a capricious parrot relying on her now.What scandalous secrets has Faye unearthed? How many lives has she ruined or threatened to ruin? Plenty of people have a reason to hate her, but one in particular is driven to commit a brutal murder. Can Emma follow the clues to unmask the killer, or will she fall victim herself?The Emma Cassidy Mystery series:Book 1: Throw a Monkey Wrench
Book 2: Pushed to the Limit
Book 3: Murder Most Likely (coming in 2016)

About The Author  
Karen Chester is a mystery author who grew up watching Murder, She Wrote and reading Agatha Christie. She spends her days thinking up dastardly methods of murder and cunning red herrings.

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What does it mean to be an "author?"

Q. What does it mean to you to be called an author?
A. People have different ideas about what it means to be a writer versus an author, and which is better. K.M. Weiland’s site is called “Helping Writers Become Authors,” which implies that author is the preferred state of being. Dean Wesley Smith, on the other hand, defines a “writer” as being active and forward-looking, already working on the next book while the “author” rests on his or her laurels. Rather than step into the middle of that debate, I’m just happy that I have the opportunity to write entertaining stories, and share them with other people.

Read more: 5 Questions with Frankie Bow – I Read What You Write!


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Character Interview: forensic anthropologist Mimi Charles

“I can’t truthfully say I’m filled with delight when another writer of anthropological mysteries shows up to join the competition, but I have to say that Bones of Paradise is one terrific debut. A spunky, intelligent protagonist, a gorgeous setting (Hawaii) well described, a clever plot, and foul play notwithstanding, a sunny, funny, upbeat novel. Looking forward to seeing more of Mimi Charles.”
Aaron Elkins, Edgar Award-winning author of the Gideon Oliver series

Even in paradise, people do die. And it’s the job of Mimi Charles, Forensic Anthropologist, to analyze the bodies that aren’t found right away – skeletons, mostly. Mimi and her colleagues at the Medical Examiner’s office are a tightly-knit team that relishes solving the puzzles presented by each case. But outside of the office, their lives in the sweet little town of Hilo, Hawaii, flow in a gentle island rhythm. None of them is prepared for the disappearance of one of their own, right from the building where they work (or the parking lot outside, anyway). Soon a series of notes begins to arrive, supposedly from the missing person. Even though the FBI shows up to join the local police in the search for clues, Mimi and her friends can’t resist doing a little “digging” of their own. Suddenly, there’s a very pesky TV reporter calling Mimi at home and peeking out at her from behind potted plants. And then John, the Death Investigator who works with Mimi, begins to act strangely. Despite the distractions, Mimi begins to piece together odd, seemingly unrelated bits of information in the race to find her missing friend, and she most sincerely hopes that she’s not too late…


Q: Dr. Charles, thanks for coming by Island Confidential. Tell us a little bit about yourself—what is something readers might not already know?
A: I’m a forensic anthropologist today but that’s not what I started out to become. When I went to college, I wanted to work with the great apes. I wanted to join in on the experiments using sign language to communicate with them. And I did get to work with gorillas – at the zoo, my job was to enrich their lives as much as possible within their caged existence. And I did learn sign language. But I never got to work on those signing experiments, like I’d dreamt of doing. And then, through a series of accidents, I got recruited into forensics and went off in a completely different direction. I still miss the gorillas, though.
Q: Who’s the character in Bones of Paradise you get along with the best?
A: That person has to be Becky. She’s the wife of the Chief Medical Examiner (who is also my close friend). She and I have been through life-altering experiences together and survived them. However, I hope that I get along well with all my friends.
Q: Which character do you not get along with so well?
A: Marcus Ortiz is a weasel. He is not my friend so I don’t care about getting along with him. In fact, I doubt that he has any friends. Probably his mother doesn’t even like him – if he has a mother and didn’t just ooze out of a cesspool somewhere. He is a television reporter who is relentlessly invasive. I think I recently found a way to get rid of him…maybe. I slowed him down for a while, anyway.
Q: Just between you and me: What do you really think of your author, Jane Hoff?
A: Well, I like her. And I appreciate that she’s kept some of my secrets. So far, anyway. She can be chatty, though, so she may wind up spilling some beans in the future and we’ll just have to see how I feel about her then. Basically, though, she and I share a lot in common and I think she captures me pretty well. There’s always room for improvement – I’m probably a little more fabulous than she lets on.
Q: Who plays you in the movie?

A: I have to admit that I’ve thought about this before. I asked some of my friends about this question, too. Cyd thinks Julianne Moore would be a good choice. John just stared at me for a while and then shook his head. Lehua suggested Nicole Kidman, but I think she’s too glamorous to play me. I sort of like the idea of dyeing Kristen Wiig’s hair red and letting her loose with my character.
Wiig
Q: What’s next for you?
A: The forensics cases just keep coming in to the Medical Examiner’s Office, so there’s no shortage of stories to tell but, lately, there’s been one case that’s really puzzling me. An old tree fell over on Banyan Drive, here in Hilo, and there was a skull in the root ball. I found the rest of the body, too. I’ve seen bodies under trees before, so that’s nothing new. The thing is, those trees were all planted by famous people visiting Hilo in the past. The more I find out about the trees, the more I want to know whose body it was and how it came to be there…and whether one of those famous people “planted” it.


 

Author 2ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jane Lasswell Hoff was born in Hollywood, California, and lived most of her childhood in southern California. She went to the University of Hawaii for her undergraduate studies and, there, she fell in love with the Hawaiian Islands. She is a professional forensic anthropologist, a member of the American Academy of Forensic Sciences and a lecturer in anthropology. As a forensic anthropologist, she has worked for tribal groups, the U. S. government and in the states of Alabama, Florida, Hawaii, Mississippi, Washington and Utah. She was married to Charles Hoff but is now widowed and lives and works in Hilo, Hawaii.

Keep up with Jane:

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If you write under a pen name, who knows your real identity?

Since you write under a pen name, which people in your life know that you’re a writer?
When I started writing I had to make a decision about how “out” I wanted to be. I decided to use a pen name to make sure my academic research and my mystery stories didn’t show up together in the same search. On the other hand, I wanted to be able to do in-person talks and book signings and have an author photo. So I settled on being pseudonymous, rather than anonymous. My family and friends, some of my work colleagues, and one or two of my students know my secret identity.

Read more: Deal Sharing Aunt: Sinful Science by Frankie Bow Interview & Giveaway


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Does Jana know you're doing this? Does she approve?

Q: What is Kindle Worlds? 
A: Kindle Worlds is authorized fan fiction offered by Amazon. Sinful Science is written in Jana DeLeon’s Miss Fortune world, the bestselling series that starts with Louisiana Longshot (free to download).  “Miss Fortune” is Fortune Redding, a CIA operative who’s forced undercover in Sinful, Louisiana (pop. 253) after an arms dealer puts a multimillion dollar price on her head. ​
Q: Does Jana DeLeon know you’re doing this? Does she approve?

A: Yes! She even has a Kindle Worlds page on her website. I’m very grateful to her for opening her Miss Fortune world to other authors.   I’m pleased that as of this writing, Sinful Science is ranked at #2 in Kindle Worlds. 

Read more: Guest Post/Virtual Tour with Giveaway ~ Sinful Science by Frankie Bow


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#Giveaway and interview: Who Invited the Ghost to Dinner?

>>>Enter to win a copy of the e-book by leaving a comment: Aside from Who Invited the Ghost to Dinner, what is your favorite paranormal mystery?<<<

Cam Shaw is hoping that her life will be ghost-free from now on. But that hope dies with the appearance of Mac “the Faker” Green, a wise-cracking ghost from Vegas who has followed her grandmother home. And during the opening night of Blithe Spirit, someone has sent Susan Ingram to her ghostly afterlife. What does her death have to do with the death of her mother-in-law fifty years ago? Who is trying to wipe out the Ingram family one person at a time? And when will that Vegas ghost stop sticking his nose into Cam’s business?

Who-invited-the-ghost-Teresa-Watson


 
 
Q: Thanks for stopping by Island Confidential, Teresa. Can you tell us a little bit about your protagonist, Cam?
A:  Cam Shaw is a ghostwriter who suddenly found herself able to see and talk to ghosts. You can imagine how unnerving something like that would be. Her first encounter with a ghost was Stanley Ashton in the first Ghostwriter book, and it didn’t leave her with a warm, fuzzy feeling. Her parents live in the same town; her father, Jim, a retired Methodist minister, and her mother, Charlotte, running a coffeehouse that is located downtown. She sometimes finds herself running interference between her mother and her grandmother, Grandma Alma, is a bit of a wild child at times. Overall, Cam loves her life. Being able to communicate with ghosts, well, let’s just say it’s definitely turned her life a bit upside down and sent her in a direction she didn’t expect.
Q: How much of you is in Can Shaw?  How would you feel about her if you met her in real life?
A:  Way too much of me is like Cam! I love Dr Pepper, I do have penguin lounging pants, I love to read, I’m a writer (not a ghostwriter like Cam, though), and I have a close relationship with my family. Cam’s parents in the story are based on my own, and Grandma Alma is based on my grandmother, although she was never as wild as Grandma Alma is in the books.
Q: Do your characters change and evolve throughout consecutive books in the series?
A:  This is only the second book in the series, but yes, I think they do. Randy, Cam’s best friend, is starting a new relationship, and Grandma Alma has a relationship. Even Cam has changed, because of this new ghostly ability, as well as her relationship with Mike. She’s learning that she can depend on her family and friends when the chips are down. I think the person who is going to evolve the most is Mike. As a police chief, he’s always been a by-the-book, follow the rules kind of guy. Now, he finds himself dating someone who can talk to ghosts, and it kind of unnerves him that she’s able to provide information that can help him close his cases, but he can’t tell anyone how he got that information. That’s not an easy thing to do for someone who has to be able to provide evidence to solve his cases. He can’t go to a judge and say, “A ghost told me that so and so killed him.” They’d lock him up in the funny farm!
Q: Have you ever thought of killing someone that you know in real life–on the pages of a murder mystery, I mean? 
A:  You mean you’ve seen my hit list? (laughs) Actually, there are a couple of people that have irritated the bejesus out of me, and I will admit to wondering how to turn them into my next victim. I’ve actually had a couple of people ask me to “kill” them in my books. No, really!
Q: How realistic is your setting? Do you take liberties, or are you true to life?
A:  Very realistic! Waxahachie is the setting for this series, and it is a real place (I live here!). In this book, I do my best to describe the Waxahachie Community Theatre, which was built in the early 1900s, and is located near the entrance of Getzendaner Park. One of my editors sent me a message one night: “Waxahachie has a lake?!” Yes, we really do! It’s called Lake Waxahachie.
Q: When the movie or TV series is made, who plays the major parts?
A:  Oh gosh, what a question! Let me think…Emma Stone as Cam (she’s a redhead like Cam & I); maybe Channing Tatum as Mike; Doris Roberts as Grandma Alma; Len Cariou as Jim; Polly Draper as Charlotte; Ryan Reynolds as Randy. Now I’m going to be thinking about this the rest of the day, so this lineup is subject to change!
Q: What’s the worst and best advice you’ve heard or received as an author?
A:  I’m not sure if this is the worst advice, but it was the worst thing that was ever said to me. A publisher liked the first book I ever wrote, but he wanted me to make it longer (it’s only 84 pages). He said no one would go for a novella from a no-name writer. I thought about it, and declined, because I felt it would ruin the story. Now that goes hand in hand with the best advice, which I got from my father. He told me to remember why I wrote the stories I wrote, why I wrote them the way I wrote them. “Do you write for money, or do you write to tell a story?” he asked me. I said to write a story. “Then be true to yourself, and write them the way you want to. That’s the most important thing.”
 


 
About The Author  

 
I’m the daughter of a semi-retired Methodist minister, and have spent most of my life living in Texas and New Mexico (no, I am not a native Texan; I was born in the state of Washington). I graduated from West Texas A&M University with a bachelor’s degree in 2000. I taught school for a couple of years before realizing that I really wanted to spend my time writing.
I’m a daughter, mother, wife, sister. Currently, I live in North Texas with my husband (still getting used to being an empty nester!). I love sports, and spend my free time harassing my husband about his Cowboys losing to my Redskins (and Steelers). Who Invited the Ghost to Dinner? is my tenth book (second book for the Ghostwriter series). I also write the Lizzie Crenshaw Mysteries (next book for this series is Death Drives a Zamboni).
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