Joy to the Wool

Jemma is visiting Ascroft, eh? to tell us about Joy to the Wool, the latest novel in the Clear Creek mystery series.

Welcome, Jemma. Let’s get started, shall we?

Tell us about the novel that you live inside. Is it part of a series? If so, please tell us about the series too.

Joy to the Wool is the fourth book in the Clear Creek Mysteries. This time around, Clear Creek has dressed itself for the holidays, becoming a real-life Christmas village! Granny’s taking bets on which day of the event a body will be found, but nothing can prepare her for what it’s like to be the one to discover the body.

Does the writer control what happens in the story or do you get a say too?

Rebecca is very generous with my stories. She has things she knows need to happen, but lets me and the other characters vote on the rest.

How did you evolve as the main character?

After the first book, things in my life got a bit more complicated. That’s what happens when you put down roots. You have to get along with the neighbors, and create a business plan, and things like that. There are times I still wish I could just hop on a plane and go to another place, but my wanderlust is settling, and I think I’m finally ready to admit my travel days are over.

Do you have any other characters you like sharing the story with? If so, why are you partial to them?

Well, in this particular book, I share the spotlight with Granny. Which has good times and not-so-good times. She doesn’t like to settle down, or to be told she shouldn’t do things. But overall, she’s a hoot to spend time with. I think everyone wants to be like her when they get old.

What’s the place like where you find yourself in this story?

I’d say it’s a great place, except for the fact that my mother is visiting. That keeps things from going smoothly as often as I’d like. On the other hand, my friends have all gathered together to pull off the Christmas festival the town is hosting, and you couldn’t ask for a better team.

Is there anything else you’d like to tell readers about you and the book?

This book has been a favorite with early readers. For a lot of reasons, but especially the way it ends. I don’t want to say more, because — Spoilers! Just know you’re in for a great holiday story. Despite the murder.

Thank you for answering my questions, Jemma, and good luck to you and your author, Rebecca McKinnon, with Joy to the Wool, the latest book in the Clear Creek mystery series.

Readers can learn more about Jemma and her author, Rebecca McKinnon by visiting the author’s website and her Facebook, Goodreads, and Instagram pages.

The novel is available online at  Amazon

About Rebecca McKinnon: Rebecca enjoys playing with her imaginary friends and introducing them to others through her writing. She dreams of living in the middle of nowhere but has been unable to find an acceptable location that wouldn’t require crossing an ocean.

Posted in Archives, September 2023 | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Hanging by a Thread

Abbey is visiting Ascroft, eh? to tell us about Hanging by a Thread, the latest novel in the Sewing Studio mystery series.

Welcome, Abbey. Let’s get started, shall we?

Tell us about the novel that you live inside. Is it part of a series? If so, please tell us about the series too.

Okay, so here’s what happened.  After college (I got a business degree, my one act of rebellion against my university-professor parents who definitely had different plans for me) I got a job at a huge marketing firm in Los Angeles.  My dream come true!  Then, well, things didn’t turn out as I’d imagined.  My life fell apart, so I retreated to Hideaway Grove where I’d spent idyllic summers with my Aunt Sarah, who owns an awesome bakery, to regroup and figure out what to do with my life.

I got involved with a charity project making pillowcase dresses for girls in Africa, which is kind of weird because my sewing skills are almost nonexistent.  But it was a good cause and I have fun organizing parties for volunteers who want to be part of the project.  Then, somehow, I’ve ended up in a murder investigation—twice now. 

Hanging By A Thread is the second adventure in the Sewing Studio series.  It takes place in touristy Hideaway Grove, a quaint little town filled with unique shops, art galleries, and great restaurants.  My Aunt Sarah’s livelihood is threatened when a rival bakery is planning to open in town.  When the new owner is murdered, Aunt Sarah becomes the prime suspect—and I’ve got to find the real killer!

Does the writer control what happens in the story or do you get a say too?
The writer always has a clear picture of what’s going to happen in each story.  Still, surprises pop up, and because she’s written a lot of books, she goes with them and sees where they lead. 

How did you evolve as the main character?
When I lost my dream job in Los Angeles and retreated to Hideaway Grove, I knew I had to re-think my life and find another path.  My biggest adjustment since moving here was learning to deal with life in a small town.  So far, I’m handling it pretty well.

Do you have any other characters you like sharing the story with? If so, why are you partial to them?
I love my Aunt Sarah, of course.  Even though she never married and has no children of her own, she somehow knows the right thing to say to me when I’m upset or troubled.  She’s my rock!

My best friend is Caitlin.  She’s engaged to be married.  But, honestly, I’m not sure it’s going to work out. 

Something else that might not work out is my sort-of relationship with Zack McKenna, a deputy sheriff here in Hideaway Grove.  He’s handsome—especially in his uniform—and we’ve shared a few moments, but I don’t know if our relationship is going anywhere or not.

What’s the place like where you find yourself in this story?
Life in the small town of Hideaway Grove, sewing pillowcase dresses, launching my tote bag business, and solving murders is all new to me.  I’m trying to figure it out!  

Is there anything else you’d like to tell readers about you and the book?
My life got turned upside down and I ended up in this small town, doing things I never dreamed I’d do.  I’m trying to go with it, and trust that this is a path I should follow.  Wherever I end up is the place I belong.

Thank you for answering my questions, Abbey, and good luck to you and your author, Dorothy Howell, with Hanging by a Thread, the latest book in the Sewing Studio mystery series.

Readers can learn more about Abbey and her author, Dorothy Howell by visiting the author’s website and her Facebook, Goodreads and Instagram pages.

The novel is available at the following online retailers:

 Amazon – B&N – Kobo – Bookshop.org

About Dorothy Howell: USA Today Bestselling author Dorothy Howell is the author of 49 novels. Her books have been translated into a dozen languages and sold worldwide. She writes the Sewing Studio mystery series, the Haley Randolph mystery series, and the Hollis Brannigan and Dana Mackenzie mystery series. Dorothy also writes historical romance novels under the pen name Judith Stacy.  Dorothy lives in Los Angeles.

Posted in October 2023 | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Secrets and Scallywags

Zelda, known to her friends as Zell, is visiting Ascroft, eh? to tell us about Secrets and Scallywags, the latest novel in the Magical Mystery Book Club series.

Welcome, Zell. Let’s get started, shall we?

Hello! Thanks for having me. I’m Zelda, known to my friends by the classy nickname Zell. I’m an octogenarian, do you know what that means? It means I’m like a fine wine – been around for a while and super valuable.

Nice to meet you, Zell. Can you tell us about the novel that you live inside. Is it part of a series? If so, please tell us about the series too.

Good job coming up with a perfect opening question. Now pay attention, cuz this is kinda complicated. I star in a series about a book club who are characters in a cozy mystery series about a book club who travel into cozy mysteries. Got all that?

Maybe . . .

No matter. Most important thing to know is that me and my other clubbies pick a new book every month or so to have a book journey. We read the first page and then whoosh! We are inside the book. It’s fun and scary and dangerous, sometimes. But were a gutsy bunch. We’re up for the adventure. And we’d better be! We have to solve the mystery and get to The End to exit the book.

Wow, that sounds exciting. Does the writer control what happens in the story or do you get a say too?

Ha! The writer thinks she makes up the story, but all she really does is type it out. I mean, we live it! We’re the ones who decide what to do and when.

How did you evolve as the main character?

Honey, I’ve been evolving for eight-one years! I just get smarter, cleverer, and more adorable as the years go on. Cleverer is a word, right?

I think so. Do you have any other characters you like sharing the story with? If so, why are you partial to them?

I love ‘em all! Our book club has some of the best folks alive. Or dead. See there’s this one character … oh never mind. You’ll have to read the series. Must be honest and say I’m partial to my buddy Frank. He and I have been in the club the longest.

He’s a nice guy?

Oh, he’s not a guy. He’s a Siamese cat. But he’s witty and snarky and a whole lotta fun to hang out with.

What’s the place like where you find yourself in this story?

Right where I find myself in all the Magical Mystery Book Club stories. At the center of the mystery figurin’ things out.

Is there anything else you’d like to tell readers about you and the book?

This was a super fun adventure! We got to hang out with ghost pirates. Now, before you get all afraid, they are really nice guys! We were in the book to help them find a lost treasure that contains something very special. I don’t want to give it away. But we always solve the mystery. Otherwise, I’d still be stuck in the book instead of talkin’ to you!

I better go. We’re picking a new book to travel into today! Gotta get to my book club meeting.

Thank you for having me. Hope you’ll read all about the pirates. My favorite pirate is Bucko! You’ll love him, too, I bet.  

You’re welcome, Zell, and good luck to you and your author, Elizabeth Pantley, with Secrets and Scallywags, the latest book in the Magical Mystery Book Club series.

Readers can learn more about Zell and her author, Elizabeth Pantley by visiting the author’s website and her newsletter, as well as her Facebook, Bookbub, and Instagram pages.

The novel is available online at Amazon:

 US  CA  UK   AU

About Elizabeth Pantley: Elizabeth is the international bestselling author of The No-Cry Sleep Solution and twelve other books for parents, published in over twenty languages. She simultaneously writes well-loved cozy mysteries: The Destiny Falls Mystery & Magic book series and the Magical Mystery Book Club series. Elizabeth lives in the Pacific Northwest, the gorgeous inspiration for the setting in many of her books.

Posted in Archives, September 2023 | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Reading, Writing and Murder

Brenda Whiteside is visiting Ascroft, eh? to tell us about Reading, Writing and Murder, the latest novel in the Chocolate Martini Sisters Mystery series, which she co-authors with Joyce Proell.

Welcome, Brenda. Let’s get started, shall we?

Tell us about your novel. Is it part of a series? If so, please tell us about the series too.

Reading, Writing, and Murder is a Chocolate Martini Sisters Mystery. It is book two in the series, but the books are standalone stories also. Book one was Candy, Cigarettes, and Murder. Book three, Cornbread, Ribs, and Murder, is in the creation process.

Twice a year sisters Emma Banefield and Nicole Earp spend a relaxing weekend at the storied Dulce Inn in Wyatt, Arizona celebrating their birthdays. They always have at least one chocolate martini in the Azul Saloon inside the inn to toast their respective birthday, Em in the fall and Nic in the spring. The staff has become familiar with Nic and Em and dubbed them The Chocolate Martini Sisters. Each visit they somehow become involved with a murder mystery. Chief Homicide Detective Guthrie isn’t sure whether to applaud the sisters’ sleuthing skills or ban them from snooping in his crime investigations.

In Reading, Writing, and Murder, aspiring mystery writer Emma and travel writer Nicole are excited to attend a writers’ conference during their latest sisters’ getaway. Nic’s birthday should be all about relaxation, writing, and a chocolate martini to toast another trip around the sun, but the climate at the gathering rumbles like a sudden desert thunderstorm.

Where did the idea for the mystery that is central to the story come from?

All authors have most likely attended a writing conference at some time in their lives. Joyce and I have certainly attended our share. It was natural for us to imagine a conference spiralling into a mystery.

Is there a theme or subject that underlies the story? If so, what prompted you to write about it?

Solving a murder is the key to each of The Chocolate Martini Sisters Mystery books. Having the murder happen during a writers’ conference at the relaxing, beautiful Dulce Inn was a natural.

How do you create your characters? Do you have favourite ones? If so, why are you partial to them?

Joyce and I are building a community in Wyatt, Arizona with each story we write. Many of the characters will appear in all the books. Personally, the sisters are my favorites. They have unique personalities and appearances and yet are best friends. Since I write from Nic’s point of view, I’m particularly partial to her. She’s fashionably carefree and arty, often wearing long skirts, and has a hat mania. She frets over her hair being too thin. She loves to eat. Intuitive, she prizes unconscious reaction and gut feelings. Cheerful, chatty, and charismatic, she can also be haphazard and too trusting. She’s great fun for me to write.

How do you bring to life the place you are writing about?

Because we model Wyatt, Arizona after Prescott, Arizona, it’s no stretch for me to picture the setting and give it a detailed personality. I was born and raised in Arizona. There is a town north of Phoenix called Prescott. It’s relatively small, is touristy on one level, and western in flavor. My real-life sister lives there too, so I visit often. Joyce lives in Minnesota, so she’s great at following the lead and coming up with picturesque additions.

What research do you do to provide background information to help you write the novel?

Research can take us anywhere depending on the story. We’ve had to research exotic poisons and their delivery. How crime scenes are processed and who does that are other avenues we’ve travelled. We’ve even had to research recipes.

Is there anything else you’d like to tell readers about the book?

The story is entertaining. The characters are many and diverse. We know you’ll love the sisters. We hope you have as much fun reading it as we had writing it.

Thanks for answering my questions, Brenda, and good luck to you and Joyce with Reading, Writing and Murder, the latest book in Chocolate Martini Sisters Mystery series.

Readers can learn more about Brenda and her writing by visiting her website and her Facebook, Goodreads, Bookbub and Instagram pages. You can also follow her on Twitter.

The novel is available at the following online retailers:

Amazon US   Amazon UK    Amazon Canada

About Brenda Whiteside: Brenda is the award-winning author of romantic suspense, romance, and cozy mystery. After living in six states and two countries—so far—she and her husband have settled in Central Arizona. They admit to being gypsies at heart and won’t discount the possibility of another move. They share their home with a rescue dog named Amigo. While FDW fishes, Brenda writes.

About Joyce Proell: Joyce is the award-winning author of AmaryllisEliza and the Cady Delafield mysteries: A Deadly TruthA Burning Truth and A Wicked Truth. Along with her husband and little dog, Nellie, she lives in Minnesota in her very own little house on the prairie. She loves to hear from readers.

Joyce’s: Website    Facebook    Amazon Author Page   Goodreads Author Page

Posted in Archives, September 2023 | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Something Borrowed, Something 90% Dark

Amber Royer, author of Something Borrowed, Something 90% Dark, a Bean to Bar mystery, is visiting Ascroft, eh? today to tell us about the part music plays in her writing.

Welcome, Amber. I’ll turn the floor over to you –

In addition to writing mysteries and Sci-Fi, I am also a writing instructor and writing coach.  I often tell students that it is fine – even inspiring – to write to music.  After all, hard rock or high energy classical music may be just what you need to get an action scene moving quickly, bringing you close to keeping tempo with the tension you’re putting on the page.  Figuring out a character’s favorite artist can help you build a playlist that gets you into her head when you write.  But what you don’t want to do: edit to music.  Because those same emotions that you feel sweeping you away when you write may seem to be on the page because of how the music is making you remember how you felt while writing, rather than what you actually said.  So it can seem like the writing has emotions that will touch the reader, even if, when read with a more critical eye, it falls flat. 

To me, music can also transport me to a place.  On one level, there’s that location’s music scene – bands that were born there, venues that are iconic.  When you think of Nashville, there’s automatically a soundtrack in your head.  When you think of New Orleans, it gives you a completely different feel and sound.  But what kind of soundtrack hits your brain when you think of Galveston?  (Which is the place where my Bean to Bar Mysteries are set.)  Of course, there’s the song by Glen Campbell. 

But Galveston’s music scene – and musical history – is so much more vibrant than that. If I had to think of one word to describe it, it would be eclectic.  We’re talking about a place that built an opera house in 1894.  The Grand has survived through numerous hurricanes, and numerous tastes in art (including a Vaudeville phase, and a stint as a movie house).  A few months ago, we saw a musical there.  But it has also hosted on its stage everyone from Willie Nelson to the Beach Boys. 

Then there was the (somewhat infamous) Balinese Room, situated on a pier out past the Seawall.  The spot drew big-name singers to the island.  In the 1930s and 40s, headliners included Frank Sinatra and Bob Hope.  According to Lost Treasure: the Balinese Room, “During this period it also became Balinese Room lore that head bartender Santos Cruz “invented” the Margarita for singer Peggy Lee in 1948. He supposedly named it after the Spanish version of her name, Margarita, and it’s been a hit ever since.”  Of course, this is likely apocryphal, as there are recorded versions of the cocktail mentioned as early as 1936.  By the 1970s, the spot had become a disco.  In 2008, Hurricane Ike destroyed not only the Balinese Room, but the entire pier it was built on.

Of course, there are smaller, more modern music venues all over the island.  You can often hear music wafting out of open doorways in the Strand area, or see performers playing outside.  (We recently caught part of a concert by a local Cajun band playing in the courtyard behind Sugarbean coffee shop.)  There’s even a Live Jazz on the Seawall concert hosted annually by the San Luis Resort.

I touch a bit on Galveston’s music scene in Something Borrowed, Something 90% Dark.  My characters likewise have eclectic taste in music, especially Felicity who grew up with Cajun and country music, but also went to jazz concerts with her best friend, and is learning about European techno music from one of her two love interests.  So it is only natural that, having expanded her shop’s café area into the space next door, she should look at hosting a few music events.  (This is partly inspired by the real-world Jazz nights at Dallas-area chocolatier Chocolate Secrets.  If you ever get to try their chocolate mousse cake – I highly recommend.)  This all gets rolling because of the live jazz band coming into town for the wedding Felicity is helping plan.  Felicity has been doing pre-wedding matron of honor duties for her best friend, Autumn, for several books now.  Finally, the big event has arrived – if Felicity can prevent it from being spoiled by the inevitable murder that falls into every cozy mystery.  The jazz group is friends with Autumn’s brother, who lives down in Padre.  They’ve come into town a few days early and wind up meeting in Greetings and Felicitations, Felicity’s chocolate shop.  They offer to do a little jam session – which turns onto an actual concert. 

I love getting to play with music in this way, writing my first-person character listening to people play, feeling her emotions as she gets caught up in the live performance.  It’s bringing full circle that idea of music inspiring me as a writer to get into character emotions in the first place.

Thank you for sharing this with us, Amber, and good luck with Something Borrowed, Something 90% Dark, the latest book in the Bean to Bar mystery series.

Readers can learn more about Amber Royer by visiting the author’s website and her Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Goodreads pages. Readers can also follow her on Twitter.

The book is available online at  Amazon

About Amber Royer: Amber writes the CHOCOVERSE comic telenovela-style foodie-inspired space opera series, and the BEAN TO BAR MYSTERIES. She is also the author of STORY LIKE A JOURNALIST: A WORKBOOK FOR NOVELISTS, which boils down her writing knowledge into an actionable plan involving over 100 worksheets to build a comprehensive story plan for your novel. She blogs about creative writing techniques and all things chocolate at www.amberroyer.com. She also teaches creative writing and is an author coach. If you are very nice to her, she might make you cupcakes.  Chocolate cupcakes, of course.

Posted in Archives, September 2023 | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

Have Yourself a Deadly Little Christmas

Merry Wilkinson is visiting Ascroft, eh? to tell us about Have Yourself a Deadly Little Christmas, the latest novel in the Year-round Christmas mystery series.

Welcome, Merry. Let’s get started, shall we?

Tell us about the novel that you live inside. Is it part of a series? If so, please tell us about the series too.

My newest adventure can be found in the pages of HAVE YOURSELF A DEADLY LITTLE CHRISTMAS, by Vicki Delany.  This is the sixth in the Year-Round Christmas series, and I’m delighted to say that after having spent the last three years in a little box, I’m back! The series is set in Rudolph, New York, your Year-Round Christmas destination. In this outing, I get involved (unwillingly) in an amateur theatrical production of A Christmas Carol, in which tensions and rivalries among the cast and crew threaten to get out of hand.

Does the writer control what happens in the story or do you get a say too?

I try to put my 0.02c worth in, but I usually let Vicki Delany have her way. It makes her cranky if she’s not in charge.

How did you evolve as the main character?

Have I evolved? I hope I have. Vicki finally let me realize who is the love of my life and become more comfortable in the career path I’ve chosen.

Do you have any other characters you like sharing the story with? If so, why are you partial to them?

My closest friend is the owner of Victoria’s Bake Shoppe, in our town. I have to let Vicky Casey help me investigate otherwise she’ll cut me off mince tarts and gingerbread. I know my dad isn’t Santa Claus, but I do wonder sometimes. In HAVE YOURSELF A DEADLY LITTLE CHRISTMAS, my mom, a former diva at the Metropolitan Opera, is involved. Once a diva always a diva.

What’s the place like where you find yourself in this story?

My home town of Rudolph, New York, where we celebrate Christmas all year round. I own Mrs. Claus’s Treasures, a gift and decor shop.

Is there anything else you’d like to tell readers about you and the book?

Come and celebrate the true spirit of the holiday season with us in Rudolph, New York by enjoying a live on-stage production of the musical version of A Christmas Carol. If you can’t make it in December, you’re welcome any time of the year. If the occasional murder happens, sorry about that.

Thank you for answering my questions, Merry, and good luck to you and your author, Vicki Delany, with Have Yourself a Deadly Little Christmas, the latest book in the Year-round Christmas mystery series.

Readers can learn more about Merry and her author, Vicki Delany by visiting the author’s website and her Facebook, Bookbub, and Instagram pages. You can also follow her on Twitter.

The novel is available at the following online retailers:

Amazon – B&N – Kobo – Bookshop.org – PenguinRandomHouse

About Vicki Delany: Vicki is one of Canada’s most prolific and varied crime writers and a national bestseller in the U.S.  Author of more than fifty books, she is currently writing the Tea by the Sea mysteries, the Sherlock Holmes Bookshop series, the Year-Round Christmas mysteries, and the Lighthouse Library series (as Eva Gates). Vicki is the recipient of the 2019 Derrick Murdoch Award for contributions to Canadian crime writing. She lives in Prince Edward County, Ontario.

Posted in Archives, September 2023 | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Writing the Detective Whiskers Cat Cozy Mystery series

Chris Abernathy, author of the Detective Whiskers Cat Cozy Mystery series, is visiting Ascroft, eh? today to tell us how a hurricane affected him and his family, and how it will affect his future writing.

Welcome, Chris. I’ll turn the floor over to you –

The Detective Whiskers Cozy Mystery Series is set in Paradise Cove, a fictional beach town on the Florida gulf coast. Although it’s not spelled out exactly in the series, in my mind the town is nestled somewhere in the Big Bend area where the panhandle meets the peninsula. That means that, if it really existed, Paradise Cove would currently be recovering from the devastation wrought by Hurricane Idalia.

It has been in my mind a lot since the hurricane struck, wondering what things might be like for Whiskers and Sheila, as well as the rest of the characters. I lived through a direct hit from a hurricane myself almost exactly three years ago now. Hurricane Sally hit Orange Beach just four days after we sold our house in northeast Alabama and moved down.

Sunset Cottage, Sheila and Whiskers’ home, would almost certainly have been flooded if not completely destroyed as it sits directly on the beach. Where would they be?

One of the things that we had to consider as we looked for a place to go was finding something pet friendly. Even though the options were extremely limited we knew that our Gracie couldn’t be passed off to another family or shelter while we adjusted. She had already endured massive upheaval in the move. The stress of the storm affected her as much as the rest of us so adding separation anxiety was out of the question.

I hope that Sheila and Whiskers would be able to stay together, also. The Parrot Eyes Inn is family friendly and, even if that hadn’t been the case, I’m certain that Evelyn would make an exception for her friend Sheila who has done so much to help her at the Inn. With the Inn’s location being a few blocks from the beach it may have survived, although, considering the disrepair it was already suffering from that seems a bit unlikely. In all probability, Sheila and Whiskers would have evacuated before the storm arrived and be left to scour television news coverage for any signs of how their home and their town fared.

In our case, we stayed put. The storm was expected to stay well to our west. By the time we realized it was coming straight for us the winds had reached dangerous enough levels that I made the decision to hunker down instead of crossing one of the three high bridges that provide access on and off the island. If I had listened to our son, who was celebrating his 14th birthday that day, we would have been safely away and staying in a hotel somewhere. Instead, we ate cake and pizza while the sky darkened and the wind howled.

The first sign that our house might not stand up to the storm was when we noticed water stains on the ceiling. With 110 mile-per-hour winds screaming outside the windows, I climbed into the attic looking for where the water was getting in. What I found was a gable that had been blown into the attic. That allowed the rain, which was more driving than falling, to sweep straight into the attic unobstructed. The ceiling was doomed and soon fell, literally, on our heads. Water reached every inch of the house, inside and outside of every wall. The house was doomed.

The next few weeks were spent hopping from one AirBNB to the next while shopping for a new house. Before the storm the market was extremely tight. Houses would pop up on the listings then disappear the same day. Following the storm many of the available houses for sell were now unavailable due to damage or changes in the sellers’ plans. Houses to rent were even harder to find. Eventually we found a house that wasn’t listed but our agent had seen it listed a few months prior and asked the owners if they would consider an offer. We offered their previous asking price that same day and worked out a deal to move in early and pay rent until the closing.

The whole experience changed my mindset in more ways than I can express here. I appreciate things more than I used to and take less for granted. Watching Idalia sweep onto Florida’s coast brought back the memories. I anticipated the experiences that the people living there would be facing. I thought about how their lives would change and how their communities would change.

There is so much left to be done before we know how, and if, these hard-hit communities will rebuild. Each individual family will have to decide for themselves if they want to start over where they have spent their lives or start a new chapter somewhere else. Some of them will have that decision made for them because circumstances outside of their control will determine if rebuilding is even possible.

How will this all affect Sheila and Whiskers? That chapter (or book) is yet to be written. But I will be watching what these communities do and pondering the possibility of including a hurricane in a future book. I like to keep my stories fun and funny so this would be a challenge. I just hope that I do’t get too much fresh inspiration!

Thank you for sharing this with us, Chris, and good luck with the Detective Whiskers Cat cozy mystery series.

Readers can learn more about Chris Abernathy by visiting the author’s website and his Facebook and Amazon pages. You can also sign up for his newsletter.

The book is available online at  Amazon 

About Chris Abernathy: Chris has narrated more than 200 audiobooks and now he is writing his own stories. He has been a storyteller his entire life — around campfires at a summer camp as a counselor, on the radio for more than 30 years, as an actor with background roles on major motion pictures and TV series, as a producer of short films for social media and more. Chris is married with two sons and lives on the Gulf Coast in Alabama. He is a dual national with citizenship in the US and UK and visits family in the Scottish Highlands as often as possible.

Posted in Archives, September 2023 | Tagged , , , | 1 Comment

Toes in the Tulips

Gladys from Toes in the Tulips (Adventures of Gladys), the latest novel in the Mystery Book Nook Shared World is visiting Ascroft, eh? today.

Welcome, Gladys. Let’s get started, shall we?

Tell us about the novel that you live inside. Is it part of a series? If so, please tell us about the series too.

Well, hey there! I live inside the book Toes in the Tulips and as for series, I’m glad you asked. It is actually a very special book because it can be connected to the Adventures of Gladys cozy mystery series AND the Mystery Book Nook Shared World that is brand new this year. I like to get out and meet new people so jumping from my regular series to connect with characters that authors brought together using the Mystery Book Nook was a fun way to do that.

Does the writer control what happens in the story or do you get a say too?

The writer just tries hard to keep up with me. For some reason, she thought writing a graying seventy-year-old would be simple but boy did I show her! I have to admit, after a few of my shenanigans she got me back. You should see the disguise I wear in Toes in the Tulips. It was perfect, but the author imagined it up right out of nowhere to give me a taste of my own medicine.

How did you evolve as the main character?

That’s a bit of a long story, starting with a series where my life as a measly secondary character began (Ooey Gooey Bakery Mysteries for those curious types out there). Lucky for you, I’m retired so time is plentiful. From secondary character in a series about best friends, baking, and bodies dropping, I was whooshed into the Adventures of Gladys series by popular demand. From lonely senior lady to starring senior sleuth. In Toes in the Tulips, I’m recently recovering from romance trouble and I guess you could say I evolve by learning when to appreciate good friends and when to be satisfied with my quiet (okay, okay, less than quiet) life as it is.

Do you have any other characters you like sharing the story with? If so, why are you partial to them?

I mentioned my starter series so I’m mighty partial to best friends Piper Rivers and Samantha Lowe, they also happen to be the best bakers in a four-series radius. During my stint in Toes in the Tulips, I enjoyed deepening my friendship with Rex, a local senior like myself, as well as Sophie, the owner of Babbling Books in our little beach town.

What’s the place like where you find yourself in this story?

Seashell Bay is a nice, small beach town but I avoid the touristy bits. We have a close-knit community and several of my friends own local businesses. Though retired, I work part-time with them to help out. In this story, I started a brand-new project: a community garden. At least, I helped start it. And I invented the plant potluck – everyone brings plants, clippings, or seeds to share.

Is there anything else you’d like to tell readers about you and the book?

I reckon I’d say, I think you’ll love it. I think you’d love the whole Adventures of Gladys series if you like humor, outlandishness, and mysteries, but you don’t have to read the whole series just to enjoy this particular book. I’d also tell all of the readers, thank you for giving me a chance on your shelf, digital or otherwise, and thank you for telling others about the book if you enjoy Toes in the Tulips. My author, she’s not great at selling and tooting her own horn so she is blessed by any help she can get.

Thank you for answering my questions, Gladys, and good luck to you and your author, Katherine H. Brown, with Toes in the Tulips (Adventures of Gladys), the latest book in the Mystery Book Nook Shared World series.

Readers can learn more about Gladys and her author, Katherine H. Brown by visiting the author’s newsletter and her Facebook, Goodreads, Bookbub, and Instagram pages. You can also follow her on Twitter.

The novel is available online at  Amazon

About Katherine H. Brown: Katherine is a wife, mom, Texas author, and unreformed bookaholic. From childhood, Katherine has devoured books for fun, for escape, for inspiration. As an author, it is Katherine’s goal to provide that same fun escape for others and encourage a love of reading in any age group. Clean cozy mysteries with sass and good Southern manners are her specialty, though recently Katherine has taken the jump into the steampunk world with a fun twist on Mary Poppins inspired characters. When not writing, Katherine enjoys weekly trips to the library with her toddler, teaching yoga workouts, and spending time with family.

Posted in September 2023 | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Murder in Trastevere

Faye Masters is visiting Ascroft, eh? to tell us about Murder in Trastevere, the latest novel in the Roman Holiday mystery series.

Welcome, Faye. Let’s get started, shall we?

Tell us about the novel that you live inside. Is it part of a series? If so, please tell us about the series too.

I’m the star of Murder in Trastevere, book two in the Roman Holiday Mystery series. I’m an American who has called Rome home for the last ten years. I’m the Queen Bee of the expat set here, and I love getting to know new people, welcoming them and helping them get settled.

This book is my first starring role. In Murder in the Piazza, book one in the Roman Holiday Mystery series, I was present but on the sidelines. My friend Maggie White was the detective in that story. She found the body, so it only made sense. But when the writer, Jen Collins Moore, announced her plan for me to find the body in this book, I knew it was my chance to shine.

Does the writer control what happens in the story or do you get a say too?

Jen thinks she controls the story, but it’s simply not true. In this book, for example, she did not intend for me to solve the case. She wanted my friend Maggie to be the detective again, with me just helping because the body was, after all, in my house.

I said, “No, thank you.”

She kept writing, and I kept nudging my way into scenes and interviews. Finally, she had to give in and rewrite the whole thing from my point of view. And guess what? It worked great.

Maggie’s wonderful, of course, but there’s no question I’m the more capable one. I’m good with people, fast on my toes, and I had more skin in the game in this book than Maggie did. That’s because when Rowena Burke collapsed, it was on my living room floor. Everyone blamed me! Some thought I poisoned her; others thought the poison was intended for me. Either way, I was the one who needed the case solved and my name cleared.

How did you evolve as the main character?

I’m not sure I’d say any evolving was necessary, but I will say this: I got to tell my side of the story. I know people look at me and think I have my life together. I’m fun and charismatic, I have plenty of money and the time to eat well and exercise. I have lots of friends and at the center of anything that’s happening.

In the first book, Murder in the Piazza, Maggie White didn’t trust me. She thought I came on too strong and was maybe a little bit judgmental.

Anyone who knows me would say that’s nonsense, but Maggie was new in town, and readers may have been left with the impression that I wasn’t an especially nice person. In Murder in Trastevere I finally get to show people the real me. I’m a nice person. I’m popular.  I only want the best for people.

My only question is, if that’s true, why do so many people think the poison that killed Rowena Burke was actually intended for me?

Do you have any other characters you like sharing the story with? If so, why are you partial to them?

It was an honor to share the stage with Esta DiLorenzo, another character in Murder in Trastevere. This septuagenarian is a minor celebrity in Rome. Her family’s company is a household name in Italy, and the donna is a regular at theater openings and fashion shows, as well as the top dog in her family’s hotel division.

Older women don’t always get the best parts in stories, and I was happy that in this one, Esta is a force to be reckoned with from the first page to the last.

What’s the place like where you find yourself in this story?

Rome! Can you imagine a better setting than Italy for a story? It’s a magical place. There’s food. There’s history. There’s art. Did I mention the art? I spend a lot of time tracking down Caravaggio’s paintings in this story, which means visiting a lot of museums and churches.  Some of the pictures are worth it. Others… Well, let’s just say they aren’t pictures I’d want hanging in my apartment.

Murder in Trastevere is particularly special to me because it’s centered on my favorite neighborhood in Rome. Trastevere is the place I call home, just across the river from all the major sights, and filled with old world charm. There are still more locals than tourists here, something that’s hard to find in this popular city.

Is there anything else you’d like to tell readers about you and the book?

I credit Caravaggio with my ultimate solution to the case. Do you know much about him? I had the bright idea to get a group of expats together to see all of his paintings in Rome.

He’s the bad boy of the Renaissance, so I thought it would be fun. I trooped through museums and churches and museums and even a private home to check his paintings off my list. But I also studied up on the artist. Turns out Caravaggio’s a lot more than a groundbreaking artist. In 1606, he became a murderer, and his life helped me piece together the puzzle.

Thank you for answering my questions, Faye, and good luck to you and your author, Jen Collins Moore, with Murder in Trastevere, the latest book in the Roman Holiday mystery series.

Readers can learn more about Faye and her author, Jen Collins Moore by visiting the author’s website and her Facebook and Instagram pages.

The novel is available at the following online retailers:

 Amazon – B&N

About Jen Collins Moore: Jen transports readers to Rome in the Roman Holiday Mysteries. Her short fiction has appeared in Mystery Weekly and Masthead: The Best New England Crime Stories. She is president of Sisters in Crime Chicagoland and a founding member of Sleuths and Sidekicks. A transplanted New Englander, she lives in Chicago with her husband and two boys.

Posted in Archives, August 2023 | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Deadly Manor

Kate Parker, author of Deadly Manor, a Deadly mystery, is visiting Ascroft, eh? today to tell us a bit about her most recent novel. I read Deadly Manor last week and really enjoyed it so I’m delighted Kate is here today.

Welcome, Kate. I’ll turn the floor over to you –

Hi, Everyone. I’m Kate Parker, USA Today© bestselling author of the Deadly Series, now on its tenth book. While I’m a peaceable person and enjoy a quiet life, that would make for boring stories. And the best person to aggravate, harass, and torture is my main character, Livvy Redmond.

Livvy and her husband, Adam, are happy newlyweds who would do anything for each other. With WWII going on, and Adam being a British army officer, the best way to make Livvy struggle is to hurt Adam.

Deadly Manor takes place in the autumn of 1940, during the worst days of the Blitz. Just a few months before, Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, and France have all fallen to Nazi invasions. Adam works for army intelligence, which would mean he would be aiding Britain’s allies when they came under attack.

Once these allies had fallen, Adam and his specialist colleagues would have carried out rearguard actions helping the allies secure their treasuries, their top government leaders, and scientists with particular talents and fields of research. They would have remained in France after Dunkirk to escape at the last minute from ports to the west such as Cherbourg. They would have had assignments that wouldn’t need to be carried out unless France fell.

When we first see Adam in October, 1940, it is four months since he escaped from France. He has kept both his legs despite bullet wounds from a Nazi sniper, and he’s finally been released from the hospital. Now, beside bombing raids that send both Livvy and Adam to the shelter night after night, he has to work to strengthen the muscles that have been severely damaged.

It seems like a lifeline when Rosalie Billingsthorpe, a friend of Livvy’s from her time at Bletchley Park, invites Livvy and Adam to her country estate far from the bombing. Clean country air outside of smoky London, good fresh food, and sleeping in comfortable beds all night without air raid sirens blasting them awake seems like a dream come true. There’s plenty of garden paths for Adam to attempt to walk along to build up his muscles.

Unfortunately, Livvy runs into difficulties. The train trip is slow and tires Adam out. They arrive at Briarcliffe Hall to discover a neighbor’s shooting party is staying at Briarcliffe Hall while shooting on the neighbor’s land. And the shooting party has been arranged by Viscount Norrington, the heir of the Earl of Silverthorn.

The viscount is an odious bully. His wife refuses to be in the same county with him, let alone the same house. No one can get a word in when the viscount is holding forth on any subject, and particularly when the subject is how many birds he has shot. In the viscount’s favor, these are game birds and the meat is given to the poor in the area. Most of the population in this rural area is the very young and the very old because the war has sent the young and able-bodied into the military or the factories.

The viscount is insensitive and unaware of how his words and actions may upset others. Rosalie and Thorpe, being neighbors of the Earl of Silverthorn and a friend of his, don’t want to be rude to the viscount and hold their tongues when he offers them their brandy in their home as if he were the host. Livvy and Adam have trouble not saying what they think.

Then the other guests start dropping like flies, and Livvy’s choices become more difficult. If they leave, it will set back Adam’s recovery. If they stay, Rosalie wants Livvy to help find the killer, which will put them in danger.

Either way, Livvy is in a more difficult position than she was before.

Thank you for sharing this with us, Kate, and good luck with Deadly Manor, the latest book in the Deadly mystery series.

Readers can learn more about Kate Parker by visiting the author’s website and. her Facebook, Bookbub and Goodreads pages.

The book is available online at the following retailers: 

 Amazon  –  Kobo – B&N

About Kate Parker: With her love of travel, Kate Parker sets her novels overseas. Once home from her research trips and armed with hot tea and chocolate, she can be found clicking away on her keyboard, hiking the hills of central North Carolina, and spoiling her 90 pound muse puppy. She’d tell you what she did before she retired, but then she’d have to use certain skills to eliminate you. She pens stories to entertain readers who enjoy action and murder in tales about plucky heroines, quirky characters, and difficult situations in a bygone era. Her stories are sweet, as in no graphic sex, violence, or language. Her heroines remain ladylike while chasing murderers and escaping danger. Well, as ladylike as scratching, punching, and kicking can be.

Posted in Archives, August 2023 | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment