Showing posts with label cozy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cozy. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

New Release Tuesday! Midnight Under the Magnolia

It's been awhile. 
My brain pretty much went into hibernation throughout the first four and a half months of my pregnancy. Suffering from constant nausea and narcolepsy is hard on the creative process. We're almost at five months now and my energy has returned, to some extent at least, and I can sit at my desk for more than twenty minutes before the need for sleep overwhelms me. Thanks to this burst in energy I was finally able to finish Dacie Mae: Midnight Under the Magnolia (it went live today!) and get started on The Devil's Children: The von Strassenberg Saga, book 4. It's my goal to have book 4 done before my May 13 due date. 
I blame this guy. Boy #4

After that, we'll see if I will get any work done during the first month. My husband will be away for that first whole month. Can't be helped. I've done it before, having been a newly single mom when my third son was born, but I've never tried to write a book and chauffeur three older boys while raising a baby on my own. And I'm ten years older than I was then. All I can promise is that I will try to keep getting the stories out. We can hope this kid won't be a colicky insomniac like my oldest son. That would be excellent. 
In the meantime, enjoy Dacie Mae and brush up on your von Strassenberg history because more twists and revelations are coming!

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Henry Wallace: Rock Star

Dacie Mae didn't actually begin with the idea of a small town, aspiring journalist. It began with Michael Grimm's audition on America's Got Talent. What a character. Backwoods boy with a bit of an edge and a voice to make your toes curl. He was floating around in my brain and I knew I wanted to plug him into a story, well--a version of him. 
The concept of Dacie Mae came about while I was visiting my ancestral home in Missouri. There is virtually no cell reception there. You kind of have to stand on your vehicle in just the right spot and maybe you'll get a signal. There isn't a store. There used to be a general store, but don't get me started on that. It recently burned down and it still pains me to think of it. My great-great grandfather was Post Master there and generation after generation of my family shopped there and now it's gone. We were at a family reunion there in that little village when Dacie Mae began to take form. It seemed a perfect fit for this soulful voice and unkempt black hair. But Henry Wallace is NOT Michael Grimm, just a reasonable facsimile. For instance, Henry Wallace doesn't care much about his family. Michael Grimm loves his Grandma and Grandpa and is very devoted to them. Henry Wallace is a tramp. Michael Grimm sang to his girlfriend during his final performance on America's Got Talent and then proposed to her on the Ellen Show. I hear they're married now. Henry Wallace is not the marrying type. And he might be a smidge taller than Michael Grimm. 
As you can imagine, in a small town, a young man with a voice like this could be a dangerous thing. Just think of all the hearts he broke and the trouble he caused. I love writing him. He's so sultry and just plain old naughty and Dacie Mae hates him with a passion but sometimes finds herself forgetting that.
BUY FOR KINDLE

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Holler's Grove Meet Wallace County

When I wrote Holler's Grove it was only supposed to be a stand-alone. I wanted a break from having to keep track of all the minute details of a series. The readers, however few, have different opinions. In reviews on Goodreads and Amazon (not to mention my sister and friends badgering me in person), readers have stated their desire to return to Bell County and spend more time with its inhabitants.
In response to their enthusiastic requests I have finally decided to place Dacie Mae's Wallace County beside Bell County. It actually fits quite nicely as Wallace County has just joined a Tri-County Drug Task Force. Dacie Mae is an aspiring reporter who attends a local community college--which will now be Carlson Community College that was described in Holler's Grove. She'll have a knowledgeable and passionate mentor in Liza McPherson who is still working at The Tribune. Sheriff Max Davis of Bell County will be working alongside Wallace County's Sheriff Roy McFarland and US Deputy Marshall Harrison McClain.
It will place Wallace farther north than I wanted but I've lived in northern Missouri and the twang still exists up there.
So, Bell County meet Wallace County.
Dacie Mae will be published as serialized novellas, each of approximately 10-20k words. Pretty much a chapter each, harkening back to the days of serial installments in the newspapers or magazines.
Add Holler's Grove (already available for Nook and Kindle, also in paperback) to your TBR! https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17673601-holler-s-grove
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/12068291-dacie-mae
Now Available on Kindle!



Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Dacie Mae #2

Dacie Mae, Serial Novella, Bit 2


Empty-handed, her change purse still clutched in her fingers and bursting with coins from the coffee fund, Dacie Mae pushed into the cool morning air. The sun was still low. Shadows painted the streets and buildings in abstract shapes, all in a somber gray. A fitting shade, she thought, considering what’s transpired. They waited for her like mutant, predatory leeches. Or maybe birds waiting for their mama to regurgitate her meal into their ravenous, gossiping mouths. “A little bird told me,” she whispered to no one in particular, her heart suddenly tripping wildly inside her chest.
What had she just seen?
Tommy Baker.
The boy who asked her to dance at every dance from sixth to twelfth grade, even though she denied him every time. By their senior year it was their inside joke, though there was no inside between them beyond that one silly thing.
But in light of the gruesome scene hiding behind the shining silver kitchen door, it seemed more like one big thing. The gravity on the earth seemed to shift or the center of her mass was quite suddenly and violently thrown off. “Whoa there, Dacie Mae,” she felt a hand grip her arm and pull her back to standing. She was aware of voices around her, “Dacie Mae, Dacie Mae, Dacie Mae,” they begged her, chirruping at her like starving birds.
“Hank!” The Sheriff’s bark diverted the attention of the assembly. Their cries for satisfaction now took on the form of his name, “Sheriff! Sheriff!” They wanted to know. Was it one of their own? Who else would it be? Why it had to be Tommy Baker, they knew, because Tommy Baker was the only one ever at the diner so early. Their frantic questions settled like a dense fog in her brain. “You all will just have to wait.” The Sheriff made an attempt at a pointed look in Dacie Mae’s direction but the pallor that had swept over her young face switched his mental gears even as the words started barking from his mouth, “Hank, get her outta here. Take her across the street. Stretch her out on Solomon’s cot and get your fanny back over here. We have work to do.” He began to turn, shifting his massive shoulders to fit through the partially opened door, but stopped and threw a dangerous look at the crowd. “You all leave the girl alone, you hear? Leave her be. She can’t tell you anything anyway, so just leave her be. The more you stay out of our way, the faster we’ll have this done and the faster you can have your answers.”
Acquiescing silence was their only reply.
The crowd shuffled away, forming whispering cliques in the stretching shadows.
“All right, Dacie Mae,” she felt Hank slip her arm behind his neck and as he began to dip down she realized with no small amount of horror what he meant to do.
“For all that’s holy, Hank Robertson, don’t you dare pick me up in front of all these people,” she hissed and despaired at the lack of strength in her voice.
She felt the heat of his words on her neck, smelled the coffee on his breath, “I let go and you’re a puddle on the ground.”
“Where’d you get the coffee,” she implored, her words no more than a murmur.
He didn’t hesitate but scooped her up there in front of half the town. She would never recover from this. “I made my own coffee,” his words were steady, not at all winded from carrying what she knew must be a substantial burden. “Some people still do that.”
“You’re stronger than you look, Hank Robertson.”
“Next time I’m just gonna let you pass out on the street.”
She felt the urge to struggle, to fight, to let him and the town know that her one very brief moment of weakness had passed but her muscles felt like Jello, trembling, quivering. Across the streeet, Boss McGee held the door open wide for Hank, welcoming them in to the biggest predatory leech nest of them all, the offices of the Wallace County Gazette. No one inside asked questions. Her co-workers stood near their computers, waiting. They knew Dacie Mae wouldn’t divulge anything in Hank’s presence. So they waited, feigning stunned silence and concern.
In the back office, Billy Solomon was not on his cot at the moment, thankfully. Billy Solomon was a big man with a big snore and Dacie Mae imagined she would rather pass out on the printing room floor than share space with him. Hank lowered her down, gentle as though she were a child, precious and fragile. The indignation must have flashed through her eyes for he said to her, “I could bump you around a bit, smack your head on the slat there. If that would make you feel better about this.”
“The only thing that would make me feel better about this, Hank, would be for you to leave,” but again she heard the lack of conviction in her words, though in her mind they had sounded much more vehement.
Unimpressed, Hank stood and stretched. “Maybe you ought to start takin’ your coffee black. No sugar.” He stretched as though he had just lifted the front end of a truck off a trapped victim, like his muscles were kinked from the exertion and he might never recover, and winked at her. “If you hear what I’m saying.”
Boss McGee didn’t bother to hide his snickering as Hank slipped past him, off to process the crime scene where Tommy Baker lay cold and unmoving. She wanted to be angry again, to focus on the men and their teasing, but at the thought of the black pool against the red tile the quaking took over again and she thought only of being warm and still and in control of herself as she ought to be. This was no way for a future journalist to behave. ©2012 Gwenn Wright 

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Dacie Mae #1



Tommy Baker could have been sleeping.
If he was the sort that slept with his eyes open. But he wasn’t. He had been a mouth breather in waking and in sleeping. And Dacie Mae had watched Tommy Baker sleep through enough classes to know this was not normal for him.
She crouched down beside Tommy’s body, holding onto the edge of the stainless steel sink to keep from slipping in the grease, and wondered exactly what she was going to tell Tommy’s grandmother. Hettie Baker was a relic and many believed she had been living on the Bakers’ farm since before the beginning of the Civil War. She had a deep hatred for the modern world and all its conveniences with the exception of indoor plumbing. She was not an easy woman to talk to.
A trickle of blood was drying in dark red line between Tommy’s nostril and his upper lip. A small circle formed a black spot against the red tiles in the kitchen of Tom’s Diner. Tom, not for Tommy but for his great-granddaddy, Thomas Robert Baker.
“Dacie Mae MacIver,” barked a gravelly voice she was well acquainted with. “Get your fannie away from my crime scene.”
She stood carefully, wondering when Tommy had last mopped the floors with anything other than water; if he had even bothered to do that. “Sorry Sheriff.”
“You weren’t takin’ pictures, were you?”
Dacie Mae barely bothered to lift her feet as she slid down the line to where the Sheriff and his deputy were waiting. “No Sheriff. Don’t be gross. Why would I want pictures of that?”
The Sheriff, a hulking man with impressive shoulders, shrugged, “To send to the paper. You’re always trying to get your foot in the door.”
“Sheriff, please. The Wallace County Tribune is hardly goin’ to be printin’ any photos of dead bodies.” She looked over at Tommy and for the first time since she had stumbled across it, she felt the sadness that should have been there from the beginning. “Especially not one of our own.” And then looking at the frying pan laying by Tommy’s side, “What a way to go.”
“You mean the skillet?”
“I imagine he was hit about the head several times.”
“You didn’t touch the body did you?”
“No of course not. There was no need. There’s a big ol’ lump on the back of his head. The top of his head’s cracked open and he’s got all those bruises around his face. Hardly takes a medical expert.”
“You didn’t touch the alleged murder weapon?”
“I ain’t stupid Sheriff. I didn’t touch nothin’.”
“Drop the redneck speech, Dacie Mae. You ain’t foolin’ no one.”
“Neither are you, Sheriff.” A moment passed between them while Dacie wondered whether the sheriff was just going to gawk at the body all day.
“Get on outta here, girl. Let us do our work so we can get this poor boy off the floor.”
Dacie Mae pushed through the swinging door, backing into the diner. “Yes sir.”
“Dacie Mae?” He looked at her over his shoulder and she saw then how all of his years on the force hadn’t made this any easier for him. “You promise no pictures?”
“Of course, Sheriff,” she held the door back from swinging shut. “Ain’t crazy enough to want Old Lady Hettie after me.” With a sorrowful grin she turned toward the diner and saw the crowd beyond the sparkling windows had already gathered at least half of the able-bodied in the town. ©2012 Gwenn Wright
More tomorrow.....