Lea Wait's Blog, page 185
September 17, 2018
Previously on Maine Crime Writers . . .
Kaitlyn Dunnett/Kathy Lynn Emerson here, today with follow ups on some of the blogs I’ve posted during the past few months at Maine Crime Writers.
[image error]First, though, a reminder that the drawing for one of nine advance reading copies of the next Liss MacCrimmon Mystery, Overkilt, remains open until Thursday afternoon. When it gets to be 5 PM here in Maine, I will toss crumpled slips of paper with numbers on them to Bala the cat. Each entry will have been assigned a number. The nine she chooses to play with will be the nine who win copies of the ARC. If you haven’t entered yet, you can do so by sending an email to me at kaitlyndunnett@gmail.com with the subject line “giveaway” before 5 PM on October 20.
[image error]Now back to your regularly scheduled program, updates on some of the things I was writing about in various blogs. In Books Looking for a Good Home back on March 1, I wrote about weeding out specialized reference books and hoping to find people who’d appreciate them. There were actually a couple of weedings, and the addition of some titles my husband owned, amounting to over 250 titles in all. By posting about the first two collections (177 titles) on social media, offering the books free if the recipient would pay for the postage, I found homes for sixty two of them. In August, fellow Maine Crime Writer John Clark picked up the rest, and a good-size stack of jigsaw puzzles. A retired librarian long involved in raising money for Maine libraries, John will now be the one finding them good homes.
[image error]In April, I wrote about Mom’s Good China and the problem many people in my generation face. No matter how pretty the heirlooms are, no one in the family of the original owner wants to inherit them. In this case, I lucked out. The china had been hand painted by a well-known artist in my old home town. Someone in the Facebook group for people who come from there knew the artist’s granddaughter and put us in touch with each other. Last month, she drove here to Maine to pick up the china and take it home with her. Instead of sitting, unloved, in a spare cabinet in my kitchen, it is now with the artist’s family, where it will be appreciated and passed on to others who have a connection to it.
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First in the series and the ebook is still on sale for $1.99
The topic for August 1 was Those Pesky Details. I was in the process of rereading my own books, all twelve of them in the Liss MacCrimmon series, to try and prevent myself from including bloopers in the current work in progress. I’m pleased to report that I finished the project and now have extensive notes on all the major characters and settings. To my great relief, I haven’t contradicted myself on too many occasions. If the police station goes back and forth, several times, between having one desk and several file cabinets and two desks and one file cabinet, and the fire department loses a truck between Scone Cold Dead and Scotched, perhaps no one will notice. Ditto the fact that Moosetookalook Scottish Emporium is air conditioned in Kilt at the Highland Games and, in X Marks the Scot, the very next book, there’s “no air conditioning and never has been.” Even more mysterious, there is no mention of Dan and Liss’s house having a garage until the twelfth book, Overkilt, when I needed one. On the other hand, nowhere in the earlier books did I say there wasn’t one. I did contradict myself by giving Liss and Dan a dishwasher in the early books. In Book Twelve, Liss says she’s never felt the need to own one. Maybe her memory’s going. Or mine is. Anyway, all in all, not too many “oops” moments.
Finally, in the middle of last month, I wrote Too Darn Hot about the fact that this past summer was a brutal one for Maine people used to cooler, less humid days and nights. It did, in fact, set records, especially the one for number of days with a dew point of seventy or above. We’re still having a few hot, humid days, but at least now the temperature drops at night and we’re able to enjoy sleeping with the windows open.
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Kathy Lynn Emerson/Kaitlyn Dunnett is the author of nearly sixty traditionally published books written under several names. She won the Agatha Award and was an Anthony and Macavity finalist for best mystery nonfiction of 2008 for How to Write Killer Historical Mysteries and was an Agatha Award finalist in 2015 in the best mystery short story category. She was the Malice Domestic Guest of Honor in 2014. Currently she writes the contemporary Liss MacCrimmon Mysteries (Overkilt—November 2018) and the “Deadly Edits” series (Crime & Punctuation) as Kaitlyn and the historical Mistress Jaffrey Mysteries (Murder in a Cornish Alehouse) as Kathy. The latter series is a spin-off from her earlier “Face Down” mysteries and is set in Elizabethan England. Her most recent collection of short stories is Different Times, Different Crimes. Her websites are www.KaitlynDunnett.com and www.KathyLynnEmerson.com and she maintains a website about women who lived in England between 1485 and 1603 at www.TudorWomen.com
September 16, 2018
What I did on my summer vacation, part II
I had a great trip to some of the farther reaches of our beautiful state Labor Day week. My sister Liz and I went down east to Lubec for three days, then up north to the Crown of Maine — Aroostook County’s St. John Valley.
The only bad thing about going on vacation is coming back. I’m so loaded down with stuff to do, I’m going to let the pictures do the talking. I will say this though — I know I say it all the time, but I’ll say it again — I don’t think a day goes by when I don’t appreciate how lucky I am to live in such a beautiful place.
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Lubec harbor with Liz on the dock. Hard to take a bad shot in Lubec.
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We stopped by the library, of course.
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And the Lubec Historical Society, which was hopping, and where I bought a book about the great gold hoax.
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No trip to Lubec is complete without a visit to West Quoddy Head, the easternmost spot in the US. We also visited East Quoddy Head, on Campobello, which is in Canada across the way there.
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Way up Route 1, in Grand Isle, in the St. John Valley, we took a look at the Musee Culturel du Mont Carmel, a former basilica. It wasn’t open, but it was still pretty cool.
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One of the cool things in the Acadian Village in Van Buren was this teachers desk in the one-room school, that has the signatures of the teachers who used it. Liz, who’s a history professor, took this photo.
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Lest you think our trip was all culture, we had a pint (or in Liz’s case a glass) at the First Mile Brewery in Fort Kent. Called that, as you know, because Route 1’s first mile is there. I had the red ale, and it was quite tasty.
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Before we boozed it up, we earned it by hiking up Deboullie Mountain in the Allagash region. This is the view from the top.
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Deboullie summit, complete with fire tower, which we did not climb. And guess whose book coming out October 31 has a plot point involving a fire tower? No, guess. Guess! That’s right, me.
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Another Aroostook County stop was Stockholm, home of fellow Maine Crime Writer Vaughn Hardacker. We couldn’t find the monument, though. Unfortunately this is the only photo that survived our visit. (taken by Liz).
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The absolute gorgeous magnificent St. John River. Hi Canada! This was taken in St. John Plantation. Or Township. Same dif, as we say in Maine.
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Sunrise over Eagle Lake on our last morning. We stayed at The Overlook, a nice motel that I highly recommend. While we didn’t see a moose, we heard the plaintive cries of one lovelorn lady every night. All night.
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We ended our trip by doing my favorite thing — we dropped down Route 11 from the top of Maine like a set of keys. It goes all the way to my town. Of course, no trip down Route 11 is complete without me shooting this Katahdin view in Stacyville (or possibly Soldiertown or Hersey Plantation), which I think I have a good dozen shots of by now.
September 14, 2018
Weekend Update: September 15-16, 2018
[image error]Next week at Maine Crime Writers, there will posts by Maureen Milliken (Monday), Kaitlyn Dunnett/Kathy Lynn Emerson (Tuesday), Joe Souza (Wednesday), Vaughn Hardacker (Thursday), and Brenda Buchanan (Friday).
In the news department, here’s what’s happening with some of us who blog regularly at Maine Crime Writers:
[image error]from Kaitlyn Dunnett: You still have time to enter the contest for the giveaway of advance reading copies of the twelfth Liss MacCrimmon mystery, Overkilt (in stores October 30). If you haven’t already entered, simply send an email to kaitlyndunnett@gmail.com with the subject line Giveaway. The drawing will be held September 20th. In this one, Moosetookalook’s luxury hotel, The Spruces, owned by Liss’s father-in-law, is targeted by protestors because they claim his special Thanksgiving couples promotion violates family values. The boycott quickly spreads to include Moosetookalook Scottish Emporium and other businesses in town, causing hard feelings all around. Liss tries to make a joke of it, calling the reaction “overkilt”. . . until someone takes things a bit too far and her nearest and dearest suddenly become suspects in a murder investigation.
Bruce Robert Coffin and Kate Flora will be at the South Portland Public Library on Thursday, September 20th at 6:30pm. Also appearing will be retired Portland Police Department Assistant Chief Joseph Loughlin, co-author of two novels with Kate. It promises to be an interesting night of crime and mystery author talk.
An invitation to readers of this blog: Do you have news relating to Maine, Crime, or Writing? We’d love to hear from you. Just comment below to share.
And a reminder: If your library, school, or organization is looking for a speaker, we are often available to talk about the writing process, research, where we get our ideas, and other mysteries of the business. Contact Kate Flora
September 13, 2018
My mother would kill me
My mother would kill me. Of course she wouldn’t literally, she whose love for my sister and me was the driving force of her life, but the old expression got a workout throughout my youth: my mother would kill me if I drove too fast, hid a porno magazine under my bed, or joined friends with illegal beer under the stadium at Friday night football games. Not, of course, that I performed any of those wicked acts. The expression was for me and I suspect others who used it a means of self-enforcing standards of conduct by projecting them to someone else.[image error]
The expression came to me today as I hung bedding on the line. Hanging laundry outside to dry in crisp sunshine is one of the three favorite things I (otherwise a total winter person) like about summer and miss when the seasons change. The others are biking and boating, and they disappear from my routine even earlier than hanging laundry. I’ve been known to continue the practice until I have to shake the ice out of the sheets.
But back to maternal murder. My mother would kill me if she saw the utter chaos of my laundry hanging. She prided herself on lining up the laundry by color and size. This has not proved to be a heritable trait. I pin up sheets and pillow cases in no particular order, intent more on fitting too many items on the small line strung between trees near our brook than in creating a perfectly ordered composition. . If she were alive, my mother would take a look at my messy line, shake her head, and silently re-hang them, imposing maternal order on her son’s sloppy approach, perhaps hoping that someday he’ll get it right the first time.
Why does this simple act, even when carried out with so little regard to my mother’s standards, give me such pleasure? Of course it’s environmentally wise, saving electricity the dryer uses. Beyond that it achieves a sensual delight: the smell of sunshine when I remake the bed. I think the whole business is actually also related to writing. Putting words on paper is a lot like putting sheets on the line—sometimes you just throw them together to see what fits. Then you edit, rearranging the words to create an effect. I try to edit my writing ruthlessly, but occasionally it’s fun to hold back on cutting and rearranging to take a look at what your first effort brought. Sometimes you like that—and sometimes not. Hanging sheets on the line with gay abandon might be a form of therapy for a writer since, except for my late mother, no one really cares what my clothesline looks like. Messiness and disorder in first drafts can serve a good purpose if it leads to the next step of careful editing.
And then maybe there’s a bit of rebellion implicit here. Maybe it’s not just drying the items but deliberately hanging them in a way my mother would disapprove. Freud would have an answer, but I’m not going to wait for it. It’s only mid September, and I’ve got a few more months to hang the laundry, smell the sunshine—and perhaps assert my independence from my beloved mother.


September 12, 2018
Can This Book Be Saved?
Kate Flora: As some of you aware, if you follow the blog, recently I’ve been conducting [image error]excavations in my files, looking at old manuscripts and remembering some of the adventures I had writing them. I have plenty of unpublished work. I have the books that I wrote while learning to write, including a mystery set on Sanibel Island, in Florida, where the protagonist is a teacher who flees New England winters and the pain her ex’s constantly canceled visitations is causing their son, and moves to Florida, where she becomes a dog groomer. I’m sure that all that I learned about the City of Sanibel zoning and wetlands protection is so dated my plot will no longer make sense (if it ever did). For now, that one is definitely staying in the drawer.
They say that your early books are often autobiographical, and while that’s not true of my Sanibel dog groomer, that is likely the case with my two law student books, one of which deals with trusts and estates and a family’s attempt to hide a recent will, and the other with banks and lending and discriminatory red lining (the subject of an entire course I took which ended in a dramatic trial). These two are also likely to stay in the drawer, though some day I may reread them out of curiosity or nostalgia for my law school days.
Sitting beside my desk now are three books featuring high school biology teacher Ross McIntyre. I haven’t had the nerve yet to see what I did with drug smuggling (Silent Buddy), antique glass (The Maine Course), and older men who prey on teenage girls (Married Bliss).
[image error]I remember very little about these three books. But as a writer recalling interesting experiences in the writer’s journey, I recall that when I started the third book in this series, I had a very clear plot in mind. I’d even made an outline. But at the end of Chapter One, a young girl, a student who was supposed to be in the book, walked into McIntyre’s classroom and said, “You’ve got to help me, Mr. M. I’m in terrible trouble.” I was the author, and supposedly in charge, but I had no idea what kind of trouble she was in. In an experience I’ve never had before or since, the characters then took over, and they drove my typing fingers propulsively for nineteen chapters, at which point, they stopped speaking to me. It was like being at a party where all the guests suddenly got up and left. When I complained that they had to stay and tell me what happened next, they said, “You’re the author. You figure it out.”
One day soon, I plan to pick up Silent Buddy and see how it reads twenty-five years [image error]later. Not only has technology changed, but so has the field of biology, the type of drugs that might be being smuggled, and how they might be smuggled. Still, I know I’ll like the scene where they used those woodchuck bombs (still available at your local hardware store) to defeat the bad guys.
This week I finally found the draft of the first book in my Vinnie Malcolm architect series, Bones are Bad for Business. I read through it and made a lot of notes on top of a set of notes I made the last time I read it. There’s some good stuff there, but Vinnie needs more backbone and makeover, and there needs to be more tension and detective work. I’m not sure I want to spend the time on this book, but I need a new project, and it might be fun to see if I can make it into something you will want to read.
[image error]Likely, it will get elbowed aside again, as it has before, when I figure out what is happening in Joe Burgess’s life. At the end of A Child Shall Lead Them, Burgess 6, he was so tired he was thinking about retirement. But one weekend this summer, when I happened to have four doctors as weekend guests, they all consulted on his condition and there may be a solution.
So while I putter around, wondering about Vinnie Malcolm, I’m rereading my romantic suspense fairy tale, Runaway, and wondering if readers will understand that it’s a fairy tale?
If you happen to have a good editor in your pocket, will you share?
And don’t forget: leaving a comment on one of our posts makes you eligible to win one of our September giveaways: A signed first edition of Richard Russo’s Empire Falls or the audio book of Louise Penny’s The Long Way Home.
Creating Drama
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People often ask how I go about plotting my novels. How does one write a great thriller? Is there some trick to it? Well, as any mystery/thriller writer will tell you there is no trick. Creating a book that is exciting and page-turning can be a long and arduous process. So many things need to be considered. The pacing, the plotting, the introduction of new conflicts or even twists in conflicts already introduced.
The first thing I do before sitting down to write a new novel is dwell on an idea. I’ll be honest, I get ideas all the time, but the good ones are the ones that stay with me. If an idea captivates me then hopefully it will have the same affect on the reader. Next I must have some idea where I want this story to go. What am I trying to say? How will the story end? Admittedly, I don’t always have the ending rock solid in my brain when I begin the novel. I find endings to be one of those fluid things that often get resolved as the book nears completion. Making tough decisions about how much information to pass on to the reader and how much to hold back or cut altogether are often the hardest part of structuring a suspenseful tale. Where should I cut my scenes? Where do I begin or even end my chapters? A good rule of thumb in thriller writing is: come in late, get out early. Nobody wants to be dragged through a long introduction before getting into the action. So give the reader what they want. Pick ‘em up and drop them right into the fray.
It is my humble opinion that you can never have enough conflict. Conflict by its very nature needs to be resolved. Likewise, the reader will want conflict resolved. The more conflict you introduce into your novel, the longer the reader will have to keep turning pages to find out what happens. Every dilemma you throw at your protagonist will be just one more thing your readers will want to follow through to see how they get out of it.
When I begin writing a novel, I know that there are things that need to happen. There must be a murder, or murders, obviously, the genre demands it. The crime may have already happened, or perhaps is about to happen and the reader will bear witness. Next I need to introduce the characters who will make up the cast of the book. Be sure to include the killer or killers as soon as possible. Following that I begin to think about what things I want to add to the story to give it its flavor. Will there be distractions keeping my protagonist occupied with things other than solving the murder and catching the killer? Will there be antagonists looking to thwart the forward progress of our hero? Or several?
All of this is conflict and the sooner you start weaving it into your story the better. It’s like watching a juggler. If we put a juggler up on stage with only two tennis balls and watch them juggle it would be pretty lame right? Adding a ball only adds slightly to the entertainment factor. Adding another could add a bit more. Yawn. But what if we up the drama by introducing a couple of eggs or something else that’s breakable, like a plate, or a piece of grandma’s antique Waterford crystal. Still haven’t got you on the edge of your seat? Let’s say we add a butcher knife, or a straight razor, or maybe a buzzing chainsaw. How about we bring the juggler to the front of the stage so that the objects she’s juggling are directly above the people in the front row? Now let’s blindfold her and strap on roller skates. That should get the heart rate cranking, especially those tickers in the front row. Can you see how all of this would add to the tension felt by your readers?
When writing my novels I keep this little analogy in mind. If the story is flowing along just a little too easily or predictably I can always add in another chainsaw for John Byron to juggle.
Until next time. Write on!
September 11, 2018
The Day the Music Died
John Clark remembering what happened seventeen years ago. Each of us has moments we never forget. Sadly, many of them stem from tragic events that were so unexpected they froze us in place while our minds tried to process the unimaginable. Three stand out in my personal history. Fortunately, one was a positive event. I’ll share them in chronological order.
I was in high school when John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. For reasons I cannot explain to this day, I was sitting in the small school library at Union High when I decided to turn on the cranky black and white TV sitting on a cart near the back of the room. I spent most study halls in the library, but had never thought about turning on the TV. What appeared on the screen grabbed everyone’s attention and word spread through the school like wildfire. Our president was wounded and panic was afoot. Fifty-five years ago, getting the facts separated from rumor was a much slower process than it is today. For the next several days, the whole country watched and waited to learn that JFK was dead, his assassin had been captured and then killed in turn by a man whose own motives and history were very murky.
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Even today, there are aspects of the killing and those involved, that provide fodder for conspiracy theorists. In all honesty, we may never know everything about who, what and why of this tragedy. It sent a chill through America, leaving many with shattered illusions about how safe we were.
July 20, 1969. I was in the summer of ultimate despair. Nothing seemed to be going right, I felt alone and alienated from everyone and everything. I remember listening to my car radio as I returned to Sennebec Hill Farm from a night class I was taking at University of Maine-Augusta. In addition to driving from the farm to Bath five days a week to paint the old Carleton Bridge, I would grab supper four nights a week, gobble it down and drive to class in Augusta. It was a burnout schedule, done in an effort to save money during the first semester of my senior year at Arizona State. By taking six credit hours, I could qualify for a much lower part time rate in the fall.
There was a full moon that evening and, as it rose in the sky, the news broke that our astronauts were walking on the moon’s surface… On the bright orb hanging above me. That was powerful enough to allow me to get out of my own head for a few hours, something desperately needed right then.
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September 11, 2001. To say that I was blissfully unaware of what was happening while driving to the Boothbay Harbor Memorial Library that day would be an understatement. I tended to listen to a couple of my new age music tapes instead of the radio on my way to work, so I was speechless when I got to the library and found my staff and several patrons, looking as pale as ghosts, while they watched the planes slam into the towers over and over in between frenzied updates from national network anchors. Many of us knew people in New York City, so it was personal from the git-go. That worry increased as the day progressed, spurred by concern that one of our patrons who lived on Southport Island and was a United Airlines pilot, had been at the controls of one of the jets. We found out early the next day that he wasn’t, but just the possibility he might be dead had everyone feeling numb. It’s pretty safe to say little or no work got done that day and there was an increasing sense of doom and foreboding as more was revealed about the terrorists passage through Portland, the complete cessation of flights across the country and the unspoken worry that this was just the beginning of dark times.
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Seventeen years later, some of that foreboding still lingers, fed intermittently by terrorist attacks and mass shootings. It’s safe to say, that for me at least, some of the music of life died that day.
September 9, 2018
Cruisin’
by Barb, back from Bouchercon and working away in her study
Back when our condo in Portland, Maine was built, it had views of the harbor. That’s why, improbably, our living-dining-kitchen space is on the third floor.
Now we have a view of the condo building behind us.
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Even the people who bought into our complex originally in 2007 knew they would eventually lose their views. “If you want water views, buy waterfront,” one of them said to me philosophically. Due to the Great Recession, they probably got to have views a lot longer than they otherwise would have. We were the first people to buy here after the views were gone, and I’m a little divided about it. On the one hand, I would have loved the views, but on the other, I can’t miss something I never had. Plus the construction behind us was long, messy, and loud.
But, despite all this, from my fourth floor study, I have fantastic views of the cruise ships that visit our harbor.
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I’m fascinated by these giant ships that look like skyscrapers floating on their sides. I often look up where they’re coming from and going to. This time of year they’re usually going up the coast to Bar Harbor, Halifax, St. John, or sometimes even Quebec. Later when the leaf-peeping starts, the direction will reverse. When they are on their way to New York City/New Jersey, and send them on with best wishes to my friend Dru Ann Love, who can see them from her windows there.
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In Key West, where we live January through March, we run our lives by the cruise ships. Going downtown? Check the cruise ship schedule in the local paper. Three ships in town? Forget about it. Having drinks and watching the sunset? Check out what time that giant ship will be leaving. Don’t want it to block our view.
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A two-fer day
But much bigger Portland seems to absorb the tourists better and we don’t spend a lot of time at the height of summer in the Old Port, in any case. Through the windows at my nail place, I do like watching the touring trolleys go by. And observing the group tours in Eastern Cemetery out my windows on the side opposite the water.
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The ships are usually gone by dark, though as the fall gets later, and the days shorter, that will decreasing be the case. I’ve never been on a cruise, though I have vivid memories of seeing my grandparents off on the QE2, when I was a small child.
For now, my trips are completely imaginary, but I enjoy them thoroughly, nonetheless.
September 7, 2018
Weekend Update: September 8-9, 2018
[image error]Next week at Maine Crime Writers, there will posts by Barb Ross (Monday), John Clark (Tuesday), Bruce Coffin (Wednesday), Kate Flora (Thursday), and William Andrews (Friday).
In the news department, here’s what’s happening with some of us who blog regularly at Maine Crime Writers:
[image error]from Kaitlyn Dunnett: I have nine advance reading copies of the next Liss MacCrimmon mystery, Overkilt (publication date October 30), to give away. To enter the drawing for one of these uncorrected ARCs, send an email with the subject line “giveaway” to kaitlyndunnett@gmail.com. Bala the cat will pick the winners on September 20th. This is the twelfth book in the series and, as you can see by the cover, the story has something to do with Thanksgiving. Both the cats, Lumpkin and Glenora, and the Scotties, Dandy and Dondi, have roles to play in this one, along with a few human characters.
If you’re at Bouchercon, the large mystery conference for fans and writers in St. Petersburg, FL this week, a whole bunch of Maine Crime Writers are here, including Brenda Buchanan, Dick Cass, Bruce Coffin and Barb Ross. If you see one of us, we’d love to say hello.
This coming Tuesday at the Curtis Memorial Library in Brunswick:
Mystery Author Event: Kate Flora and Bruce Coffin
Tue Sep 11th 7:00pm – 8:30pm
adults
Morrell Meeting Room
Join us for a presentation by two Maine mystery writers: Kate Flora and Bruce Coffin.
Kate Clark Flora is the author of the Thea Kozak mysteries, the gritty Joe Burgess police procedurals, and two true crime books, Death Dealer and Finding Amy (co-written with Joseph Loughlin, a Portland Deputy Police Chief). She and Loughlin teamed up again for Shots Fired: The Misunderstandings, Misconceptions, and Myths about Police Shootings. She was co-author with Roger Guay of A Good Man with a Dog: A Game Warden’s 25 Years in the Maine Woods.
Bruce’s bestselling debut novel Among the Shadows and his follow-up, Beneath the Depths, the first two novels in the John Byron Mystery Series from HarperCollins Publishers, have been well-received by fans and critics alike. The third novel in the series, Beyond the Truth, scheduled for release on October 30th, is now available for advance purchase.
Co-sponsored by Sisters in Crime and Maine Crime Writers. Books will be available for sale and signing.
[image error]Wednesday, September 12: Lea Wait will be speaking at the Wiscasset Library (High Street in Wiscasset, Maine, at 5 p.n. She’ll be focusing on her newest books, CONTRARY WINDS, set in 1777 and partially set in Wiscasset, and FOR FREEDOM ALONE, set in Scotland, but will also speak about her mysteries. Copies of all Lea’s books will be available for purchase and signing.
September giveaways: A signed first edition of Richard Russo’s Empire Falls and the audio book of Louise Penny’s The Long Way Home.
An invitation to readers of this blog: Do you have news relating to Maine, Crime, or Writing? We’d love to hear from you. Just comment below to share.
And a reminder: If your library, school, or organization is looking for a speaker, we are often available to talk about the writing process, research, where we get our ideas, and other mysteries of the business. Contact Kate Flora
September 6, 2018
The Place I Found Peace … The Coast of Maine
Lea Wait here, thinking about my summers in Maine, past and present. Before I was ten, I spent half my summers in Maine, most of them at my great uncle’s home in West Bath. (The other summers I spent in Massachusetts, either at my grandmother’s home in Roslindale, or, one summer, at Onset, on Cape Cod.)
My memories of those first Maine summer are vivid. The New Meadows River, Thomas Point Beach, swimming in my uncle’s pool or in a family friend’s cove, where she taught me to row. Picking blueberries and raspberries. Exploring tide pools, climbing rocks. Learning the names of birds and mosses and seaweeds. Walks in deep woods. One summer on Southport Island, where my sister Nancy and I crabbed and roamed the (then unposted) woods and rocks. Standing in the words and being doused with spray from a heavy storm.
When I wa[image error][image error]s ten we spent our first summer in the home I live in now. All winter I planned for that summer. So did my mother, whose plans included removing the 13 layers of wallpaper on some rooms, and my grandmother, who planned a garden with raspberries that soon involved everyone. (So did those layers of wallpaper!)
[image error]As a teenager I spent my evenings at first ushering, and then in the box office, of the Boothbay Playhouse, a repertory company not far from our home. I rowed on the river. I mowed the grass. I stretched out on our lawn overlooking the Sheepscot River and read. I helped make raspberry jam and bread and butter pickles.
Maine was where I wanted to be year round, but I couldn’t convince my grandparents to stay all winter so I could attend a local school. I had my own private rituals for the end of August, when we headed back to New Jersey. At a low tide I’d walk to the eddy near our home, sit on the trunk of a tree that had sunk into the mud, inhale the smell of the mud flats, and bottle it, at least in my mind. Then on a warm sunny day I’d walk barefoot in our large garden, by then empty of some vegetables, and I’d promise myself I’d never forget the feel of warm soil under my feet.
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25 years ago
And I never did. I only missed one summer in Maine. It was my first summer working in New York City, after college, and I didn’t qualify for any vacation days until after I’d worked a year. That summer my mother took a small Victorian shadow box frame, put a sprig of sea lavender in it, and tucked a note in the back: “Remember the salt wind, tide pools, crying gulls, sea lavender, and know there’s still a quiet place.” That frame and its message stayed on my desk through 30 years of corporate jobs, and is still on my desk today. And I’ve never forgotten.
As years passed I spent a Christmas in Maine, brought my daughters to Maine, hunted for jobs in Maine (unsuccessfully,) and eventually was able to move to Maine full-time, where I cared for my mother for four
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1st daughter sees ocean for first time
years and then married the man I loved. He learned to love Maine, too.
This summer one of my daughters was married here (my second daughter to be married in Maine), and my sisters and daughters have all visited. One of my granddaughters had her first summer job here. My twenty-fourth book written here was published. (A couple of years ago I even wrote a book about what it was like to live in Maine with the man I loved, who was an artist, and what it was really like to be an author.) [image error]
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and what Researching a book ….
October 1 I will have lived [image error][image error]here fulltime for twenty years; without doubt, some of the best years of my life.
In thinking back, I have very few regrets in life. But even in hard times (we all have had them) thoughts of Maine sustained me.
Maybe it’s that smell of mud flats. Or the taste of lobster. Or sea breezes. Or just knowing that people lived here before we did, and survived, and that this world would also be there for those who came after us. And that, as my mother had written, no matter what “there’s still a quiet place.”
Maye we all find the place that brings us that peace and calm Maine has brought me.
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