Wednesday, October 31, 2007
Disaster and Animals
But so many people lost homes and vehicles. A few lost their lives. Really terrible stuff.
Then there was the effect on animals. I saw on TV how people flocked to evacuation centers such as Qualcomm Stadium, living in tents and on bleachers and wherever else they found space. Their pets couldn’t be there with them, so special rescue centers were set up.
The pictures of those poor animals were heart-wrenching. Cats hissed at the cameras. Dogs cowered in fear. Volunteers expressed their sorrow for these pets, but said that at least they had moms and dads who would come for them when they could.
I missed seeing the segment, but I was also told that the news featured a man who was permitted to go into endangered homes to rescue pets who’d been left behind. That would be a hard job even if the animals had cooperated, but many were scared and attempted to protect their homes--and therefore fought with their rescuer. From what I heard, he hung tough and got them out, like it or not. Good man!
Horses and livestock were evacuated to local college campuses and other places set up to house them.
What about the pets and livestock who didn’t get out? And the wildlife? I shudder to think of all the animals who may have attempted to flee but couldn’t escape. A lot of people were given voluntary or mandatory evacuation orders. Most animals got no advice or assistance; they either got out or died. At least the animals at the San Diego Wild Animal Park were safe, protected by firebreak and irrigated areas, and even able to take refuge in their watering holes.
One thing I hope is that, with some of their senses so superior to humans, as many animals as possible became aware of the fires and fled safely. Where would they go with so many acres of their habitat destroyed? That’s a whole other issue.
By the way, hope everyone's Halloween has been fun and safe!
--Linda
Galena!
Then a marching unit made up of children. There is something adorable about a group of youngsters in widely varied costumes marching behind a horizontal banner naming their school, some of them wishing they were somewhere else, others waving like experienced politicians. Then comes a high school band, its members dressed as convicts, porn stars, devils, angels, ballet dancers, and ex-presidents. Only the drummers are good musicians – but they are really good.
It was a very chilly evening, with an icy breeze blowing, so when a wicker basket big enough to hold six people, if they were good friends, came along on the back of a trailer, I smiled. I’ve been to this parade before, so I knew it was one of the baskets that rides under a hot-air balloon. The balloon wasn’t there, but the burner was – the mechanism that fills the balloon with hot air. And there was someone in the basket, one hand on a blackened pipe sticking up in the center of the basket. WHOOOSH!! A huge orange plume shot three stories up in the air. I could feel the heat clear over on the curb. I joined the cheers, which encouraged the operator to let loose another blast. WHOOOOOSH!! Ahhhhh . . . warm! There were eight or ten baskets, each with a burner. One operator was blasting flames upward in time with the music of the band in front of him. The yellow-orange flame shot upward and, when he cut it off, a rolling ball of flame continued upward just for a second. Amazing!
The Men’s Precision Folding Lawn Chair Marching Unit was closer to the center of the parade rather than bringing up the rear as it did last time I saw them. About a dozen strong, they were all in shorts and muscle shirts, though some of them wore white or black long Johns under them. They formed a straight line, did a “wave” movement down the row with their lawn chairs and back up again, turned around, snapped the chairs open, sat down, stood up, snapped them shut, right-faced, and marched on. Silly but fun.
There were floats, all done by amateurs and often showing it. A very ragged corpse rising from a coffin, a gathering of the characters from Wizard of Oz (including one of those plastic toy houses found in many back yards serving as Dorothy’s house). An ambulance came by, its pristine white sides ornamented with spider webs and posters featuring vampires. There were costumed adults carrying buckets and bags of candy which they threw to the crowd.
Now, imagine all this going on along a narrow street lined with nineteenth-century brick shops – and one hotel – while trying to find someone in that crowd. The burner in a basket flares and you catch sight of him, but the next instant the flare is gone, leaving you dazzled, and meanwhile your quary vanishes.
Then, the parade over, you are walking up a side street when a shape comes toward you. It is a woman, all in black, and her dress has a huge skirt that brushes the ground. She is carrying a lantern on a pole, a lantern with a single candle in it. A big hat is on her head, with a heavy veil draped from it. She turns as if to speak to you, and there is only a black emptiness where her face should be.
That is “Annie Wiggins,” who owns a bed and breakfast in town, and she wears that costume to conduct night-time tours of Galena, telling ghostly stories about the various old houses as you pass them. Galena has lots of ghost stories to be told. Some of them are true.
I want this to be in the book Blackwork, which I will write if ever I finish Thai Die. All I have to do is find a reason for Betsy to be chasing someone in Galena, Illinois.
So long as I was in town, I did a book signing at Timeless Needle a beautiful (and expanding) needlework shop. The part of the building they expanded into used to be a bank, and the huge, walk-in safe is still there. The door weighs a ton, but moves smoothly on its hinges -- once you get it going.
I’ve been having a sleep problem lately. I want to stay up later, and so I don’t want to get up. This morning I woke up to my clock radio, shut it off and lay there awhile, thinking about how I didn’t want to get up. Next think I knew, it was six-thirty, too late to go to water aerobics. So I’ve been puttering around the apartment, then got awake enough to realize I hadn’t posted this.
Maybe it’s daylight savings time. I hate daylight savings time. If people want more daylight in the evening, fine. Everyone reset your clocks an hour early – AND LEAVE THEM THERE! This business of going on and going off is painful and aggravating. And yes, I know we get back the hour we donated in the spring, but it's still aggravating.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
New Ideas from the Road (or Shower)

So it wasn’t surprising that I had new thoughts about the direction of my career while driving home from Magna cum Murder (one of the best fan events around). Seven hours of epiphanies.
The main one is this – I love, love, love writing multiple points of view, which I discovered while working on the first of my doll collecting mysteries. A little nervous about exploring a new area, I only had two different povs in the first book—Gretchen’s and her mother’s. The next book had more. To tell you the truth, I’m having trouble controlling an urge to add too many. I have to rein in my eagerness. A plot becomes very complex when viewed through eyes other than those of the protagonist and at times I feel horrible lost. But then it all comes together.
Once I have more time, I’m going to try a stand-alone suspense novel. In the meantime, I want to push the fourth doll book even closer to the edge of cozy mystery and into suspense where life is a little scarier. What do you think? A shower scene perhaps?
Monday, October 29, 2007
Halloween Special--Shirley Damsgaard and a Contest!

When my late husband was hospitalized for several months at the Mayo Clinics in Rochester, MN. I spent a lot of time driving. It was during those long drives that I started playing with the idea of writing.
2. Does writing “run” in your family?
At the first writing conference I ever attended author Donald Harstead pointed out that every story starts out with one question, “What if…?” That started me thinking—what is it like to be a psychic? What if one felt their talent let them down at the moment they most needed it? Can one ever be who they’re meant to be if they don’t follow their destiny? Those questions were the beginning of WITCH WAY TO MURDER.
I’ve found the most creative time for me is early in the morning, when the house is quiet. When I’m working on a manuscript, I usually begin my day about 4:30 and try to write about 5 pages before getting ready for work. On the weekends, it’s more. In the evenings, I work on marketing, updating my mailing list, responding to emails, etc., while I watch TV.
According to my oldest daughter, she talks just like me! And we definitely have the same sense of humor. And, unbeknownst to me when I was originally creating it, her relationship with Abby is much like the relationship that I shared with my mother when she was alive.
12. In what ways is she different?
I think I’m a little more open than Ophelia is—not so reluctant to express my feelings as she is. She’s younger. Oh, and she’s a witch and a psychic and I’m not! (Even though my nine year old granddaughter has been known to try and impress her little friends by telling them I am.)
Don’t give up—be persistent—but at the same time, roll with the punches—be flexible. If the first pitch doesn’t work, think of a new one. If you receive advice from someone who knows what they’re talking about—listen. Try and take every situation, even the negative ones, and learn from it to improve your craft!
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_ss_gw/104-6563304-3269513?initialSearch=1&url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=Shirley+Damsgaard&Go.x=3&Go.y=10
Saturday, October 27, 2007
A trip to Egypt


I'm such a parasite, working off the great ideas from all my sister bloggers … and this is no exception.
I started thinking about my favorite places, where I feel at home, relaxed yet energized, creative.
On my top ten list: The Temple of Dendur (ca. 15 B.C.). The structure was thoughtfully given to the United States by Egypt in 1965 and presented to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, so that I wouldn't have to make the long trip in time and space to see it.
I spent some time in this "room" a couple of months ago. The top photo shows the water that surrounds the temple; the bottom one gives you the setting: overlooking the east side of Central Park.
There is nothing missing in this wonderful spot, especially if you've managed to sneak a cappuccino in from one of the Met's many kiosks.
A series of photographs and documentation along the wall show the history of the temple and its amazing trip to Manhattan.
Here you can sit on the rim, walk into the temple, stare at the magnificent Central Park, take photos, write, or read, or pray.
Has anyone been here? Did it make your top ten?
Friday, October 26, 2007
An ill wind, and then...

B Dalton in the mall at Los Angeles City Hall. The bookseller, Candace Davis, set up a nice table—complete with a vase of flowers!—and I sold lots of books. I was impressed by how many men bought the book. But that was encouraging--I think diet, exercise, humor and murder mysteries is a combination that will interest many readers in America, not just women.
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Dog Story
Why? Because of the dog. What was most important, from my perspective, was to determine what was in poor Iggy’s best interests.
In case anyone reading this is unaware, the situation apparently started out when Ellen adopted a tiny and adorable dog from a shelter. Unfortunately, Iggy supposedly didn’t get along with the household’s cats, so Ellen decided to give him to her hairdresser’s family to adopt and adore.
The problem? Apparently, she had signed a contract not to re-home the dog. Finding a new family was to be the agency’s responsibility, not the adopter’s.
From a lawyer’s perspective--which I happen to be--Ellen purportedly breached a contract, so the agency’s “rescuing” the dog from its new home to force compliance with the agreement was entirely appropriate.
From the dog’s perspective? That’s what I really wonder about.
Poor Iggy. Dogs most often shower love and affection on their owners. Being in a shelter had to hurt, in the first place. And then being shuffled to Ellen’s home, then her hairdresser’s, and then a whole new adoptive family found by the shelter... talk about canine confusion.
I guess the outcome was that Iggy will stay at this new and latest home. As long as it’s a loving family who can help him past this trauma--well, okay. I can buy that.
I don’t believe Ellen Degeneres set out intentionally to do anything against the adorable dog’s interests. In fact, she may have felt she was doing everything exactly right, giving up little Iggy to a family she believed would adore him. And, in fact, one of the children in that household was apparently devastated to have Iggy repossessed.
But on the whole, I’m really sad about how all this came down. The shelter owner was subject to death threats. Ellen wept on camera. The child who thought she was getting to adopt Iggy lost that precious puppy. And poor Iggy was cast from home to home. All of them deserve a whole lot better than what happened.
Still, the upshot was to put shelters and pet adoptions in the public eye--not necessarily in the best light, but even so, some attention may wind up being better than none.
I hope that lots more homeless dogs--and kitties too, of course--wind up finding wonderful new homes as a result.
--Linda
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Autumn
I love autumn. It’s my favorite season. I once thought that was uncommon, because so many people greet spring with such enthusiasm. The end of harsh winter, the tender green of new growth, every living plant in flower – there is much to recommend spring. And autumn, with its promise of harsh winter back again, the sun fading south, the leaves skittering down the street sounding the death rattle of the year, can seem downright sad. But there’s the crisp air, the tart apples, the heaps of produce – spring’s promise is kept in autumn – the cozy drawing in, the hearty soups, the brilliance of the dying leaves. Don’t you sometimes wish humans could put on such a beautiful display at the end of their lives? Wouldn’t it be fun to suddenly drop the gray and find under it a rich purple or brilliant blue or bright green? Of course that would mean the end is near, so maybe not so much.
I thought we’d have a bad autumn for color this year. In the city, some of our trees are
already naked, a few are glowing orange, and others are still green. Usually our interim seasons (spring and fall) move fast. One weekend the pools are open, the next weekend the leaves are spectacular, the third weekend we can park only on the odd-numbered side of the streets so snow removal can commence. The last few years we’ve had drawn-out autumns, when you don’t have to keep careful track of leaf colors’ progress down the state in order not to miss the one Saturday you can take an autumn drive up the St. Croix to see the colors and buy apples from a roadside stand.
I thought we weren’t going to see autumn out in that blaze of color. But on my drive down Interstate 35 into Iowa the color was lovely, especially on the low shrubs that line the freeway. I think they are the variety called “burning bush” and that’s a great name for shrubs that turn such bright reds, oranges and yellows in the fall. But oh, the hills too! They looked like giant bouquets, the evergreens standing among the maples, aspens, and oaks serving as the greenery tucked among the flowers. This year even the elms and oaks are bright.
I’m going to Galena, Illinois, this weekend. It is small, full of quaint , antique buildings, very touristy – and one of America’s most haunted cities. Virtually every old building has a story of ghostly children’s laughter, a silent figure in a doorway or window, or a mischievous sprite who keeps turning on the lights. So, naturally enough, the town loves Halloween. They have a parade the Saturday in October closest to October 31, which is this coming one. I want to have the climax of the book I will write next set there on that weekend, so I simply must go there for another look. And so long as I am there, I’ll do a signing at Mike and Kathy’s Timeless Needle shop. I’m taking my friend and needlework pattern designer Denise along. A really fun trip, and tax deductible, too.
How I suffer for my art!
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
A Day in the Life
Shouldn’t I have more confidence by now? Established authors tell me they experience the same feelings with every book they write.
I live one day at a time, like a recovering addict, never sure where tomorrow will lead. But on a day like Monday, when the writing worked, I’m flying high. Wonder what today will bring.
DebBaker
Sunday, October 21, 2007
Unchained Melody, Unchained Me

Lyrics by Hy Zaret, Music by Alex North
There are the places we live because we must, and the places we would live if we could. For me, the coast of South Carolina has always been my spiritual home—the place of my dreams and wishes. It is where I return to find strength and solace. I love everything about the area called “the Low Country.”
The moment I step outside the Charleston airport, I stand and sniff the air like a lost dog searching for home. My heart thrills and my spine stiffens as we drive over the Cooper-River Bridge, with a main span of 1,546 feet (471 m), the longest among cable-stayed bridges in the Western Hemisphere. For more about this fabulous structure go to http://ravenelbridge.net/
Rituals shape my visit.
1.) I stay on Kiawah (KEE-ah-wah) Island, a place as ecologically near to its beginnings as possible considering the human habitation. I’ve seen bobcats, herons, alligators, loggerhead turtles and crabs. http://www.kiawahisland.org/
2.) I eat at Rose Bank Farms Restaurant—My salad of choice is a wedge of lettuce with Clemson cheese, my main dish is shrimp in tasso gravy on cheese grits, and dessert is blueberry buckle.
3.) I buy books at Indigo Books.
4.) I walk the beach.
5.) I walk the beach.
6.) I walk the beach.
7.) And I read books and listen to the ocean.
How about you? What’s your favorite place? Is it where you live? Or just a place you get to visit?
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Hobby disorder

Linda blogged earlier this week on the plethora of hobbies and crafts out there. I'm embarrassed to say I've tried almost all of them. If the term had been around when I was kid, I'm sure I would have been diagnosed with Something-DD.
I have a short attention span, no discipline, and get bored easily. The way I deal with this is to add another project or hobby to my life.
One time I was frustrated with the designs on common items like dishtowels, sweatshirts, babies' bibs, Frisbees. So I made up some with designs I liked. Instead of a teddy bear on a bib, I put an image of Marie Curie, and a quote of hers: "All my life through, the new sights of nature made me rejoice like a child." Instead of a mushroom, I put Marconi on a dishcloth. Instead of a puppy, I put Einstein on a Frisbee. I learned silk screening to do this, but eventually outsourced that part of it.
That done, I moved on to cartooning. Then I'd be able to make my own images for products. I made up a Christmas card one year with a cartoon drawing of my husband and me, then moved on to beading.
The next year, everyone I know got beaded presents as I mass-produced zipper pulls and bookmarks. Another time they all got ornaments that were small balls to which I'd glued a computer chip and painted the greeting: "Tech The Halls." The image above is of a card I designed with the same sentiment, in the era of 5-in. floppies.
Every baby of a friend who turned one got a numeral one, made of colorful fabric that I sewed and filled with batting (an alternative to stuffed animals in costumes that belittle them).
Of course there has been the usual knitting, wreath-making (using electronic components), crocheting, embroidery, calligraphy, stamping, and scrapbooking—but not the way Joanna does it, which requires Discipline, Attention, and Patience, not to mention Talent.
That might be it. I am DAP- and T-challenged.
The only two hobbies that have been long-lasting in my life are dollhouses/miniatures and card making. I wonder why.
If anyone would like a sample product from any of my above-mentioned hobbies, let me know!
Friday, October 19, 2007
Cozy mysteries and Sex! Violence! Chicks Gone Wild!

When I started writing DYING TO BE THIN, the first installment in the Fat City Mystery series, I was not fully aware that the mystery sub-genre known as “cozies” had to follow certain restrictive guidelines. With some glaring exceptions, most cozies are written according to the following rules:
• They have “kinder, gentler” story lines.
• There is little graphic violence.
• Murders are mostly presented off-stage.
• Sex tends to be delivered in “fade to black” mode. (You know, like the couple in From Here to Eternity; you get to see them thrashing around in the surf. But then, just when the action gets interesting, the scene ends.)
And so…ahem. In the interest of full disclosure, I should let you know that even though DYING TO BE THIN often gets lumped in with cozy mysteries, readers will encounter a few “uncozy” passages:
• Murder victims are presented splat on the page, complete with a discussion of the deceased-one’s physical appearance (including, in the case of one victim, the impact of weaponized fondue forks).
• There are frequent and colorful references to a fictional S&M scene in the story’s locale, Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina.
• The plot line is neither kind, nor particularly gentle. But it is often humorous.
My thought is that the concept of a "cozy" mystery is expanding in terms of the amount of sex and violence that readers will accept. What do you think?
And if you have a chance to read DYING TO BE THIN, I’d so appreciate it if you’d go to my web site http://www.kathrynlilley.com/, and send me an email with your feedback.
Saturday, October 20, 1 PM
Mysteries To Die For
2940 E Thousand Oaks BlvdThousand Oaks, CA 91362-3278
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Hobbies--Killer or Not
There were an amazing number of subjects! Crafts included everything from genealogy to journals to creating Christmas ornaments. Designing different kinds of jewelry. Lots of types of needlework and sewing, including making lace, knitting, crocheting, hooking (presumably involving needlework and not the cruder connotation of the word, which I suppose can be a hobby, too). Gardening. Papercrafts such as origami, collages, and, of course, scrapbooking.
Then there were the collectibles: old phonograph records. Model cars. Pottery. Toys such as Star Wars memorabilia and Transformers and Hot Wheels. Sporting stuff including trading cards and fishing lures. Traditional sorts such as coins and stamps and model trains. Hallmark keepsakes. Coca Cola memorabilia.
Each of these activities and more, were featured in books describing, extolling and advising about them as pastimes.
Now, there are definitely a lot of people in the world, and many of them have hobbies. It’s fun to think of how different we all are, yet we tend to gravitate toward others with similar interests.
I wonder how many of these varied hobbies have mysteries set in their special venues. Even if all of us, the Killer Hobbyists, took on a bunch of extra hobbies to set murders in (with really only a minimal amount possible, with our existing writing schedules), there would probably still be plenty out there for other mystery writers to leap into. And blog about!
Of course, I’m quite content with my usual subject: pets, as featured in my Kendra Ballantyne, Pet-Sitter mystery series. And I’m especially content witih my own pet. My Cavalier King Charles Spaniel Lexie has been especially adorable lately, resting her head soulfully on my legs as I try to eat, ramping up her already intense begging mode.
So, as impressed as I was with that plethora of additional hobbies, I’ll leave them to others to evolve into mystery settings... at least for now.
--Linda
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Mind Games
Knitting isn’t all that hard – I say that now, having found knitting to be easy once you learn it (it’s purling that is harder) – but there are people who just aren’t satisfied learning a craft. They have to find ways of making it extremely difficult. I am not just speaking of people who knit Aran sweaters. (Go to http://www.aransweatermarket.com/catalog/ for a look at some.) I am speaking of this woman: http://www.bugknits.com. Itty, bitty sweaters. No, littler than than itsy bitsy. I mean, sweaters the size of a dime! There is not a reason in the world for this woman to knit something that small. Is this just sour grapes? Well . . . yes, because I can’t do it and therefore say they are ridiculous. On the other hand, why do people do these ridiculously difficult things? God knows.
I thought Thai Die was going to come in short. Maybe as much as ten thousand words short. I called my agent, who said not to start padding but to go ahead and finish it and we’d worry about it later. So, thinking I had the end in sight, I set off toward the it – and the problem seems to have gone away. There are so many tangled strands to this thing that it is taking me longer than I thought to sort them out. I am no longer worried about it being too short. Funny how these things happen. People who don’t write ask us how we can write so many words. That’s easy to answer. We don’t think about writing 60,000 words at the start. That would scare anyone. We just start telling the story and pretty soon there is a great heap of words. Mine usually take between 55,000 and 65,000 words. I was afraid Thai Die was going to come in at 50,000. I have one published novel that is closer to 90,000. The problem for some of us is making it short enough to fit in just one volume. I sometimes think of the first four Betsy Devonshire novels as a single story in four volumes. It took that long for Betsy to discover her wild card talent for sleuthing and accept that her fate was to get mixed up in mysteries ever after. The first one was relatively easy – first ones often are. But I remember writing that fourth one, in which she declares she is through with sleuthing, it’s too scary and too difficult, and she’s not going to do it ever again. That was a great idea, and I thought it was realistic. I mean, what would you do if all of a sudden everywhere you go there’s a dead body? And people expecting you to find out why and who dunnit? I wouldn’t like that. The problem was, as I neared the end of the novel. Betsy, though sleuthing like mad, still didn’t want to sleuth. How to change her mind? I had to call in the big gun – Jill Cross Larson, who can talk sense into anyone. She and Betsy have a conversation, and Betsy gives in.
Does this sound like I’m talking about real people? They are real to me. That’s part of the fun – and insanity – of being a writer. To make it work, you have to think of them as real. What’s really interesting is when a fan takes them for real, too. We can sit and gossip about these people just as if we live in the same neighborhood. Are they insane, too?
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
The Procrastinator's Handbook

However, since learning that I have three months to plot, write, and submit doll collecting mystery number four, I’ve found myself making excuses for not starting. You’d think I’d be working day and night, but no.
After this weekend, though, I’m ready to stop procrastinating. I’m going to do it now. Rita Emmett gave me the push I needed. She’s the author of a little book with a big message called The Procrastinator’s Handbook. We both had presentations at the Edgerton (Wisconsin) Book Festival at different times, so I had the opportunity to hear her speak and to buy her book.
Here are a few of her words of wisdom and advice:
“The dread of doing a task uses up more time and energy than doing the task itself.”
“The mother of all excuses: I work better under pressure.”
“Obsession with perfection is the downfall of procrastinators.”
I realized that I was using all the get-out-of-starting tactics she lists on page 49. Shuffling papers, surfing the web, playing computer games, doing an excessive amount of preparation instead of doing it, talking on the phone with everybody and anybody.
Reading her book showed me that I’m procrastinating out of fear. I suddenly realized that I’m afraid that the words and ideas won’t come, afraid that I’ll write a really bad book considering the looming deadline, afraid that I can’t do it. This isn't a new phobia. I get it every time I write a story.
I know I can finish. I've done it six times. What's one more?
So I’m off to write my story.
Just as soon as I finish her book.
The Procrastinator's Handbook

However, since learning that I have three months to plot, write, and submit doll collecting mystery number four, I’ve found myself making excuses for not starting. You’d think I’d be working day and night, but no.
After this weekend, though, I’m ready to stop procrastinating. I’m going to do it now. Rita Emmett gave me the push I needed. She’s the author of a little book with a big message called The Procrastinator’s Handbook. We both had presentations at the Edgerton (Wisconsin) Book Festival at different times, so I had the opportunity to hear her speak and to buy her book.
Here are a few of her words of wisdom and advice:
“The dread of doing a task uses up more time and energy than doing the task itself.”
“The mother of all excuses: I work better under pressure.”
“Obsession with perfection is the downfall of procrastinators.”
I realized that I was using all the get-out-of-starting tactics she lists on page 49. Shuffling papers, surfing the web, playing computer games, doing an excessive amount of preparation instead of doing it, talking on the phone with everybody and anybody.
Reading her book showed me that I’m procrastinating out of fear. I suddenly realized that I’m afraid that the words and ideas won’t come, afraid that I’ll write a really bad book considering the looming deadline, afraid that I can’t do it. This aren't new phobias. I get them every time I write a story.
I know I can finish. I've done it six times. What's one more?
So I’m off to write my story.
Just as soon as I finish her book.
Sunday, October 14, 2007
The Great Lover

Saturday, October 13, 2007
This and that for fall

THE BOOKS
Like most series authors, I'm working on three books at once: proofing the galleys and working on my promo for Book 1 (pictured here): creating a new database, setting up launch parties and flyers. I'm wrapping up edits for Book 2; and starting Book 3—manuscript due March 1.
THE OTHER WRITING
… because no one can write only one kind of book. I'm moving ahead a miniature inch at a time on a nonfiction self-help book, a "mainstream" novel, and a bio-pic.
THE ONLINE CLASS
I blogged on my gender-neutral online class for Golden Gate University in San Francisco a couple of weeks ago. It's the only class I have where I'm actually responsible for 16 weeks of homework, term papers, and grades. As opposed to ...
THE IN-PERSON CLASSES
…. where it's mostly adults who have come to writing later in life (like me) and now are ready to get serious. I teach these workshops through community colleges, adult ed programs, and organizations like the California Writers Club and my chapter of Mystery Writers of America. No grades, just a lot of satisfaction.
THE EDITING JOB
I work part time as a scientific editor at a large laboratory, which will go nameless for now. I undo all the passives and a tad more.
THE ORGANIZATIONS
I'm on the board and Speaker Bureau coordinator for NorCal Sisters in Crime, booking our published members in bookstores, libraries, and other venues. Got a venue for us? Let me know. This fall I'm running a bookfair at a local Barnes & Noble for California Writers Club, on the Saturday of Thanksgiving weekend.
THE HOBBY
I work on miniatures for gifts and for charity auctions. Also it's time for my niece and me to work on a dollhouse for a school holiday raffle. This week I'm off to my favorite Cooper's Dollhouse Studio in Benicia, California, to pick up a kit or (better) a ready-made dollhouse to prepare for the raffle.
THE LIFE
… spending time with my wonderful husband, extended family, and friends.
THE SLEEPING
…. is overrated.
Sometimes I let myself get drawn into an "I'm busier than you" contest with someone complaining about having too much to do … but really these are all my choices and I wouldn't have it any other way.
It's my position that unless a person has at least 7, preferably 10, things going at once, he/she is very boring.
Oops, I need another couple of projects.
Friday, October 12, 2007
On the road for DYING TO BE THIN: week two
This past week has been incredible.
My week-that-shall-live-in-fond-memory started last Friday, when I attended the book launch party for DYING TO BE THIN. And what a party! The hostess, Mary Farrell, pulled out all the stops to make the party a night to remember. She brought in an awesome caterer, Jen Sweet (gotta love that last name), who produced Whoopie Pies wrapped in ribbons that were made from the text of my book (you have to read the first chapter of DYING TO BE THIN to understand the Whoopie Pie thing); Jen produced to-die-for empanadas, as well as dessert “cones” made out of facsimiles of the book cover. I’ve never before been to a party with such imaginative catering—I hereby nominate Jen for next year’s Top Chef!
There was a big, festive crowd, and everyone had a blast! On hand were Sisters-in-Crime LA Chapter Prez Diana James, SiS LA V.P. Susan Kozar Beery, writer-comrade Kathy Kinston, and Diana’s husband, Darrell James, who won the 2007 DEADLY INK award for his work, Trust A Dead Man To Keep A Secret. Also in attendance were my writing critique group members: Elizabeth Ralser, Lynn Schwartz, and Warren Deasy, who helped organize the event. Our critique group’s fearless leader, Lyn Stimer, could not come due to a family illness, but she was there in spirit! Oh, and Pamela Eells, the Emmy-nominated writer of Disney’s The Suite Life of Zack and Cody, was also there. She’s been my best friend ever since our Wellesley College days!
On Saturday, I appeared with fellow Killer Hobbies blogger, Linda O. Johnston, at the Mysterious Galaxy Bookstore near San Diego (check out Linda’s newest book, Fright of the Iguana—it’s a great read!). Even more fun than selling books was getting the chance to meet the bookstore staff, both of whom are named Linda. We had three Linda’s in the house!
On Sunday, I gave a talk at the San Diego Public Library. The talk was titled (somewhat self-importantly) as “From daydream to reality: one writer’s journey to publication”. But in reality, it was a fun discussion of anything and everything about the writing process. Lynn Whitehouse and her entire staff, including technical guru, Alan Bugg, made me feel very at home.
Upcoming
The fun continues this weekend:
This Saturday, October 13th, I’ll be signing DYING TO BE THIN at 1 p.m. at The Mystery Bookstore, 1036-C Broxton Ave in Los Angeles (aka Westwood), California.
I’ll appear at another signing that same day in Valencia at 4 p.m., at Borders Books and Music #297, 24445 Town Center Drive.
Please stop by for a visit at either location, and say Howdy!
Thursday, October 11, 2007
Short and Sweet
So, as usual, I’m writing this on Wednesday. But life is getting in my way. I didn’t get an opportunity to do any writing yesterday because of a trip to a doctor’s office for an annual physical exam--and although I’ve lived in L.A. a long time, I’ve never seen traffic in that area so heavy. Today, I had to stay late at my morning job, and tonight my critique group is coming over to accommodate my schedule since I can’t meet on our usual night, Thursday, because I’m giving a talk at the Mystery Bookstore in Westwood.
As a result, I’m keeping this blog short so I can squeeze in some writing time. That’s a really important thing to me--being able to write. So, hope you all understand: that’s why this is short and not very exciting.
One thing, though: I’ve been missing my older son, who moved to Chicago, but he and his delightful girlfriend have been sticking bookmarks for THE FRIGHT OF THE IGUANA in copies of that new release and the other Kendra Ballantyne, Pet-Sitter Mysteries, that they’ve found in bookstores. Great to have promotional assistance other spots in the country!
Okay, now’s my writing time, at last!
--Linda
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Mom and The Pack
Here’s a challenge to those of us sixty and older: Somewhere between forty and fifty years ago there was a football game on television. The Packers versus . . . somebody. Those were the days of Vince Lombardi. There was a short film someone put together of quick shots of the players from many games. The film was probably played at halftime. It was set to the words of “If” by Rudyard Kipling. The poem begins, “If you can keep your head when all about you are losing theirs, and blaming it on you,” and there were a quick series of players colliding so hard their helmets were knocked off. It continues, “If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you . . .” and there was a referee with his arms folded, grimly ignoring the screams and waving arms of outraged coach and players. And so on, until the final verse, “If you can fill the unforgiving minute, with sixty seconds worth of distance run,” and there’s the clock counting down the final seconds while the players battle it out on the field. “Yours is the earth, and everything that’s in it” (trophy held high), “and which is more, you’ll be a man, my son!” And there’s a grinning player, standing against the sun on the sidelines, proud and tall, while someone throws one of those old-fashioned heavy winter cloaks around his shoulders. It was wonderful, it made me appreciate the fun and glory of the game – and started me on a lifelong appreciation of Rudyard Kipling’s poetry. Question: Am I the only person in the world who remembers this short film? I only saw it that one time. My Mom doesn’t remember it. No one remembers it – but me. I even asked the people at Lambeau Field in Green Bay (home of the Packers), who have archival film of every game, I think, and they didn’t know what I was talking about. Did I dream it?
The book is changing shape as it comes into the later chapters – interesting the way a book will do that. Books tell their own stories, of course, if you let them. And you have to let them, otherwise the book doesn’t work. But I wonder if some of this shape-changing isn’t because I’m in a very different environment. Having to pay attention to Mom yanks me out of the writing mode: time for a bathroom break? Time for another pill? Is she too warm, too cool? Snack time, meal time, bed time. She loves to sit by the big front window and watch the birds coming to the feeders Therese has out there. I sit with her and we talk about everything. Great stuff sometimes, unimportant stuff, valedictory stuff. Night falls and she goes into her room to watch sports. She sleeps a lot. I’m blessed to have this time with her. Then the book calls, and I write easily, rapidly – then she calls me. She wants the visitor by her chair to go away. She is alone in the room and I say so. She looks at me with clear blue eyes, unafraid, unapologetic. “I’m having a hallucination,” she explains.
Tuesday, October 9, 2007
You're Invited to a Wedding

Tonight at 7pm, Woody and Emma, a cloth doll couple, will renew their wedding vows in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Thirty years ago today, this lovable twosome attracted hundreds of people and media coverage when they tied the knot. Tonight, the same minister will preside over the exchange and some of the same musicians will play.
Emma is a retired Piggly Wiggly clerk. Woody’s a retired bus driver. At the first wedding, people dressed up as dolls, brought their dolls, donated a limo, and sent flowers. Not to mention the three-tier wedding cake.
The renewal of their vows tonight promises to be an even more spectacular event. And we’re all invited.
Monday, October 8, 2007
The Blessing in Disguise

Saturday, October 6, 2007
Books -- light and heavy

What makes a mystery "literary?" I started a thread, sort of, by a posting on Dorothy L about the Dexter novels by Jeff Lindsay. I love the books and the TV show, and put the writing in the class of novels of Martin Cruz Smith, Thomas H. Cook, and Joanne Harris, all favorites of mine.
Some disagreed, which, of course, makes for a good discussion.
Whether or not you've read Dexter, the question is still an interesting one. Put differently, why do many libraries and bookstores put "mysteries" on one rack, and "fiction" or sometimes "fiction and literature" on another? Aren't mysteries literature? Aren't they "fiction?"
I don't pretend to have a definition of what makes a work literary, just an informal, personal assessment. For me, it's a matter of the writing. I can forgive a lot of faults in plot if the writing moves me.
Not that I don't want a good story and interesting characters, but the books and authors that I remember and keep going back to are those that make me want to stop and reread a phrase or a sentence just for the surprising and pleasurable way the words are on the page.
Someone suggested that literary novels have big themes; in the case of mysteries, then, not just "who dunnit." (In Dexter the theme of good/evil is present in a much deeper way than in my books, for example.)
What do you think? Who are your literary favorites? Or don't you make that distinction?
Friday, October 5, 2007
Notes from the road: launch week for DYING TO BE THIN

Launch day began with a bang—early Tuesday morning I appeared on regional radio, AM 1290 KZSB in Santa Barbara, which gets distributed all over the world. My host was the genial Baron Ron Herron, who started off the interview by making me laugh with a discussion about Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and his affair with a Telemundo TV reporter (who, when last heard from, had been exiled to Riverside—which is kind of like Siberia, only hotter).
From there, we went on to talk about my book, and we touched on the next installment in The Fat Series Mysteries series, A KILLER WORKOUT.
On Wednesday, I visited AdviceRadio.com with host Megan Willingham. Megan is a truly wonderful interviewer. She has a warm, intime interviewing style, and asked many thought-provoking questions. She’s the kind of interviewer who makes you want to confess all your secrets! We were laughing together like a couple of old friends after just a few minutes on the air. I really enjoyed the hour. You can listen to the podcast this week at:
http://www.adrenalineradio.com/podcast/
(Click Writers).
Later that day, bearing cookies in hand, I started visiting bookstores to sign stock. The staff at my local Borders bookstore rewarded me by moving my books from the shelf to the table in the front of the store, where the featured releases are. I call it the Power of Cookie Persuasion!
This weekend, on Saturday, I’ll be appearing with fellow blogger Linda O. Johnston at Mysterious Galaxy bookstore in San Diego. We’ll be interviewing each other and talking about the cozy mystery genre.
On Sunday, October 7th, at 3 p.m., I’ll be giving a talk at the San Diego Public Library. I’m billing the talk “From Daydream to Reality: one writer’s journey to publication.” But in reality, we’ll be talking about anything and everything when it comes to writing. Hope to see you there!
Thursday, October 4, 2007
Lexie and the Book Fair
Oops! I shouldn’t say Kendra owns her Lexie, any more than I own mine, since we visited West Hollywood, nicknamed WeHo. There, people are officially, by law, pet guardians. I brought another guardian along especially for Lexie--my husband, Fred, who took care of her at times when I couldn’t.
I participated in a panel on cozy mysteries along with fellow mystery writers Joanne Fluke, Susan Kandel and Linda Palmer, moderated by Sue Ann Jaffarian, with a signing afterward. It went great! I also signed at the Sisters in Crime and Mystery Writers of America booths. Fellow blogger Kathryn Lilley was there, too. And when I wasn’t scheduled for something else, I had the great joy of hanging out at the Arfriend booth, where Lexie and I were featured attendees.
Arfriend is a wonderful local organization that is a resource for people and pets. I held a drawing for the benefit of Arfriend, with the winner’s pet to appear in the 7th Kendra Ballantyne, Pet-Sitter mystery. But I requested that a donation be made to Arfriend to enter and there were quite a few entries. The winner was Mooch, a terripoo mix. I’ll be receiving more info about Mooch soon.
Also at the Arfriend booth most of the day were the delightful Arfriend founder and coordinator Janet Cole and her wonderful adopted pug Humphry, as well as veterinarian Dr. Karen Halligan, author of Doc Halligan’s What Every Pet Owner Should Know. It was utterly enjoyable hanging out with them, and Doc Halligan gave me lots of good pointers for caring for Lexie’s health.
Lexie and Humphry weren’t the only dogs at the WeHo fair. In fact, there were quite a few. We didn’t get to meet them all, but I did admire many of them from afar. Lexie even got nose to nose with one or two, which is a wonderful thing for her. She isn’t as well socialized as I would like, since her dear friend Sparquie, whom we recently lost, used to nip at canines of all sizes, so when we had the two of them out together (which we did most of the time so one wouldn’t be left behind and feel bad about it) we kept them apart from other pups. As a result, Lexie is a bit timid when it comes to other dogs. She’s much more of a people pup, but I want her to get along with pets of other persuasions as well.
In any event, a good time was had by all. And I got to pass out bookmarks for my new release, now officially available since it’s October: THE FRIGHT OF THE IGUANA.
Thanks, Arfriend and WeHo and everyone else who helped to make this a really fun and memorable day.
--Linda
Wednesday, October 3, 2007
Michaelmas
Anyway, she married and moved to Vermont, and we were glad for her until September rolled around. It’s very hard to find a goose in September – they come in around Thanksgiving – but a butcher found a small forgotten one in the back of his freezer for us. We invited two other couples, each of whom brought a dish to share, and we were off. We’ve done it every year since, and it’s grown into a big party. One year we had forty guests! This year there were about twenty. I buy free-range geese nowadays, which are costly but lower in fat and really delicious, and stuff them with a mix of whole cloves of garlic, tart apples, green grapes, onions and fresh parsley, with savory and poultry seasoning, salt and pepper. My supplier phoned to say she didn’t have two large geese for me and would I take four smaller ones. I said yes, and managed to roast two at a time in my own oven and the oven in the party room.
We sing a song of my own composing, “Amazing Goose,” and say a for-real prayer to St. Michael (“. . . defend us in battle . . . [against] evil spirits who prowl about the world seeking the destruction of souls”). Everyone still brings a dish to share and they were all spectacular this year, from a red-cabbage dish made with wine and goose fat to an enormous chocolate cake to popcorn flavored with almond bark. We eat around seven. I will note that somewhere around four, when I was dashing up and down from the first floor (party room) to the third floor (our apartment) to baste the geese every fifteen minutes and burning my fingers (the ovens were set at 425 degrees -- apply ice immediately and there are no blisters), I was swearing off Michaelmas.
But when first-time attendees were asking hopefully if I was going to do this again next year, I blithely said, “Of course!”
Tuesday, October 2, 2007
Paper Dolls

I loved, loved, loved my paper dolls. How about you? Did you play with them? If not, you can start now by downloading your very own.
Since Joanna blogged yesterday about royals and Diana, I thought it might be a good time to give you a link to print out a Princess Diana paper doll and some of her wonderful outfits, go to
http://www.100megsfree4.com/gogators4/DianaDoll.html
Monday, October 1, 2007
Why the Brits Loved Princess Di

We took our spot in line and presented passports and invitation to security. Windsor sits on a hill, majestically overlooking the town of the same name. Thick stone walls circle the castle and its outlying buildings, including the famous St. George’s Chapel where the induction was to be held. We spectators were accorded spots along the route winding from the castle to the chapel. Once inside the grounds we quickly found the small island of grass that corresponded to the number on our map.
And I do mean “small island of grass.” We were located on a berm, a grassy knoll, a small divider in a sea of pavement. There was no seating and no shade. No shelter from the summer heat. And we had dutifully—as suggested--arrived hours early.
The sun beat down on us. Our little spot filled up with more spectators. Soon we were cheek to jowl with hundreds of others “banished” to our tiny patch. There was barely enough room to move. The Brits came well-prepared. They brought folding chairs and coolers of champagne. We (David, Michael and I) didn’t know to do that…and we were parched and miserable. I did my usual survey of ladies restrooms and I’ll grant HRH this: She has the classiest Port-a-Potties in the world. A huge trailer with white siding and gold trim was parked on the grounds just for this purpose. The inside was lavish, and the taps were gold. It changed forever my expectations of Johnnies on the Spot!
Michael was restless, hot and miserable. We were all getting sunburned. We were squished against other people. Finally, he slumped down onto the grass and immersed himself in his Game Boy. So much for introducing him to living history!
I was especially interested in this ceremony because family lore has it that one of my ancestors was a Knight of the Gartner. That explains the blue garter on the family coat of arms. I had grown up being told the story of “Honi Soit Qui Mal Y Ponce” by my maternal grandmother. In fact, during our first tour of Windsor, a docent asked if anyone knew the motto of the Knights of the Garter. I popped out with “Honi Soit…” and his jaw dropped. He said that in fifty-plus years of working at the castle he’d never had a visitor who knew the motto, much less an American!
Our closely-packed group serged forward again and again, never stepping beyond the roped stanchions that corralled us, but lurching as close to the dignitaries as possible so we could see. By then, we were a pretty smelly, tired, dusty and stinky lot.
“And that,” said the Brit standing at my elbow, “is why we loved Princess Di. Look at him. Hasn’t worked a day in his life. Never has a worry or a care. All he has to do to make us lot happy is to wave—and does he? No. Can’t be bothered. Diana would have walked over and shook hands. She would have smiled and waved and been happy to see us. That’s why we loved her.”
Suddenly, I understood. The rigid class system in the UK is such that commoners can never challenge the accident of their birth. They can never become royalty. The regular “guy” is forever relegated to the small, green patch of grass. He is always on the outside, gazing in at the pomp, circumstance and privilege. All he asks for is a tip of the hat, a wave of the hand, a nod to acknowledge that but for a switch of infants in the crib, that HRH could have been the poor sod out on the grass, sweltering in the heat, and hoping for a good line-of-sight to gawk at the rich and famous.
For more about the Order of the Garter go to http://www.writersworkshop.co.uk/garter.htm