Please welcome fellow mystery author Kate Collier to the Killer Hobbies blog today. Kate, my hubby and I are horrible at money management. Can you tell us how your protagonist Lyssa Pennington might be able to help?
Lyssa Pennington
has an unusual hobby: reconstructing the “money story” for people she meets. If
the idea of having a “personal money story” is new to you, simply put it is: how
a person has historically spent money toward their own wants, needs and goals;
how well that pattern is working for them; and how they can revise their money
story to better address changing wants, needs, and goals.
For
Lyssa , who has a Ph.D. in Economics and teaches at a small college, the money
story is a topic in her Financial Literacy course. The students who choose that
elective are typically seniors who have not paid their own way through college
and who have little money sense. It’s a perfect storm for them, as they’ve
amassed credit card debt, may have taken out school loans that will come due on
graduation, and tend to define success by the homes they came from, not
stopping to think their parents worked for decades to afford the big house,
updated kitchen, new cars, and costly vacations.
It takes
work and stamina for Lyssa to raise her students’ awareness of the realities of
the job market, the real price of credit card debt, and similar bad surprises
they’ll be confronting very soon. Having them do the analysis of their own
money story is a wake up call for them and an important step in rethinking
their financial priorities and redefining “success” for themselves. At first, they
may resist the exercises she takes them through, but once they see the way
clear to a bright solvent future they thank her.
However,
as her first year of teaching winds down, Professor Pennington has more on her mind
than her students’ success. She’s faced with a loaded gun in her backyard
garden. Because there’s no body, no missing person, and no history of violence
at their address, the police have no interest. It’s up to Lyssa and her
husband, Kyle, to learn who planted the gun, why, and where the shooter and his
victim are now. Lyssa’s inherent nosiness and her favorite hobby—getting to
know someone by subtly inquiring into their money story—get the Penningtons
involved in solving the mystery.
She and
Kyle discover that two young men, who grew up in their neighborhood and
graduated from her college six years earlier, can’t be traced. Kyle pushes the
state police to match the ballistics of their gun to unsolved homicides, while
Lyssa uses her talent to analyze the young men’s money stories. She puts
together clues from neighbors and relatives, digs into data, and visits places
the young men were known to frequent.
Then she
reads between the lines of their money stories, where the real story lies. If
only the truth didn’t include a killer intent on protecting the crime, even
when it means killing again.
4 comments:
Tracy, thanks so much for hosting me and the Penningtons today! What is everyone reading this summer? Right now I'm reading Dashiell Hammett's The Thin Man to see why reviewers are saying Lyssa and Kyle remind them of Nick and Nora.
Welcome! So glad to have you!
Welcome, Kate! Your theme and protagonist sound like fun.
Thanks, Linda! I totally enjoy writing the series, The Penningtons Investigate. Lyssa and her husband are opposites who have fun together, even when they're mixed up in a murder mystery. Your dog is absolutely adorable!! --Kate
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