Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Wordy Wednesday: Horror in WV

Because much of my social media is cat-related, on a daily basis I see cats in desperate need of help. I share when I can, but I also try to be sensitive to the fact that many people are bothered by this. There is only so much any of us can do, and seeing these images day after day fosters a sense of helplessness after awhile.

But Monday night while I was scrolling through my Facebook feed this picture ripped my heart out:

(Facebook: Imagine Home)

These cats are living in deplorable conditions in a "dog pound" in Logan, West Virginia. Their dry food is thrown on soiled newspaper, a steel bowl for a litter box overflowing, and there is no sign of water around. If animal control were called to a home to find cats living in these conditions they would be removed and the owners hopefully punished.

The Paws Squad is a rescue group in Logan that pulls from this pound on a regular basis, and they are in desperate need of fosters, especially for cats. These cats have been there for a month, and as I write this on Tuesday, the situation for these little angels is dire.

West Virginia is one of the poorest states in the country, and this area has been hit hard by job losses in the coal mining industry, but that is still no reason to treat the most innocent among us like this. As easy as it would be to just "go off" on this "shelter", that isn't going to get these babies the help they need right now.

So what did I do? I shared their story on my Facebook pages, as well as on a tortie rescue group that I belong to. I blogged about it. And then I curled up in bed with Truffles and I cried. And I'm still crying. For these lost souls and all of the others that I can do nothing for but click my mouse and hope someone sees it who can do more.

To those precious little angels: I am so, so sorry that the world has treated you this way. You don't deserve it. You should be lounging in sun puddles, playing with catnip mice, living a beautiful life filled with love and security, not cowering in fear in a cold cage. I wish I could promise you that, but I'm just so damn helpless.

If you can help, please contact thepawssquad@yahoo.com

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Spotlight Guest Post: Plagued by Quilt by Molly MacRae

Plagued By Quilt: A Haunted Yarn Shop Mystery


My Family was Haunted . . . 

As a character, the ghost in my Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries arrived and developed the way characters tend to. They take up residence in my head. They move in with their belongings, set up housekeeping and actually pay very little attention to me, their host. The ghost arrived in my head that way, bringing only her tears, her television addiction, and vague personal memories. I’ve had to tease her story out of her along the way. But her name I knew immediately. For years, my family was haunted by a woman named Geneva. It happened like this.

For a month or two after we moved into our house on Maple Street in Johnson City, Tennessee (in 1993), we received letters addressed to the previous owners. We forwarded them, or just walked them over, because the family moved just a couple of blocks away. We also received the occasional letter addressed to Geneva Bowman. Those I marked “deceased” and put back in the mailbox. The family we bought the house from had bought it from her estate. Ms. Bowman had been gone for quite a few years.

In 2002, when we moved to Illinois, I filled out change of address forms for all of us. We were still receiving the occasional piece of mail for Geneva Bowman, but I didn’t fill out a change of address for her, because she was . . . you know . . . dead. Her mail followed us anyway.

We lived in an apartment in Urbana, Illinois, for the first five months, and envelopes addressed to Geneva dropped into our mailbox right along with envelopes addressed to the rest of us. I marked hers “deceased,” and put them back in the mailbox, even her invitations to join the AARP. When we bought a house in Champaign, Urbana’s twin city, I filled out change of address forms for all of us again. But not for Geneva Bowman, because she was still, well . . . you know . . . dead. 

Geneva’s mail not only followed us to the house in Champaign, but someone—the post office?—changed her name. She was no longer Geneva Bowman, she became Geneva Thompson (Thompson being my husband’s and our children’s last name), and she received notices about retirement plans, ads for motorized scooters, and offers for time shares in Florida and the Carolinas. (I made that last part up. There were no offers for time shares in the Carolinas, only for Florida.) And so our family settled into our new Midwestern lives. Our family—Molly, Mike, Gordon, Ross, and Geneva (who took up residence in our lives and who received more mail than the rest of us on most days). How could I not name the ghost in my books Geneva? 

So I did. 

And shortly after the first book, Last Wool and Testament, came out, an interesting thing happened. Interesting and, surprisingly, a little bit sad for me. Geneva’s mail stopped arriving.

I like to think that means Geneva Bowman/Thompson is happy now. That she’s content, even if I did turn her into a somewhat depressed and TV obsessed ghost. That she’s found a cozy place in the Weaver’s Cat in Blue Plum, Tennessee—and the Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries. 


Molly MacRae, national bestselling author of Spinning in Her Grave, Dyeing Wishes, and Last Wool and Testament, was director of the history museum in Jonesborough, Tennessee’s oldest town, and later managed an independent bookstore in Johnson City. Her short stories have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine for more than twenty years, and she has won the Sherwood Anderson Award for Short Fiction.

www.mollymacrae

https://www.facebook.com/molly.macrae.9

http://www.pinterest.com/MollyMacRae/

About the book: Yarn shop owner Kath Rutledge is at a historic farm in Blue Plum, Tennessee, volunteering for the high school program Hands on History. But when a long-buried murder is uncovered on the property, Kath needs help from Geneva the ghost to solve a crime that time forgot....

Kath and her needlework group TGIF (Thank Goodness It’s Fiber) are preparing to teach a workshop at the Holston Homeplace Living History Farm, but their lesson in crazy quilts is no match for the crazy antics of the assistant director, Phillip Bell. Hamming it up with equal parts history and histrionics, Phillip leads an archaeological dig of the farm’s original dump site—until one student stops the show by uncovering some human bones.

When a full skeleton is later excavated, Kath can’t help but wonder if it’s somehow connected to Geneva, the ghost who haunts her shop, and whom she met at this very site. After Phillip is found dead, it’s up to Kath to thread the clues together before someone else becomes history.

Veterans Day 2014


Monday, November 10, 2014

Tradition of Deceit by Kathleen Ernst: Guest Author & Giveaway


Tradition of Deceit


Secrets!
Guest Blog Post by Kathleen Ernst

Is it ever acceptable to keep a big secret from the one you love?

Most of us, I suspect, have confronted that question—which made it perfect to explore in my latest mystery, Tradition of Deceit. As one reviewer noted, “In Ernst’s exciting fifth Chloe Ellefson mystery... everybody has secrets.” (Publisher’s Weekly)

Chloe, my protagonist, is collections curator at a large living history site in Wisconsin. Tradition of Deceit takes her to Minneapolis to help a friend write a proposal to turn an abandoned flour mill into a museum—in the aftermath of a murder at the site. Meanwhile Chloe’s boyfriend, beat cop Roelke McKenna, is in Milwaukee struggling to solve the murder of his best friend. Distance puts a strain on their still-fragile relationship. Then personal revelations further test their faith in each other.

The dictionary defines “secret” as “something that is kept or meant to be kept unknown or unseen by others.” The definition of “deceit,” however, is a bit more purposeful: “the act or practice of concealing or distorting the truth for the purpose of misleading.”

Decisions about what to reveal to a new partner, and when and how to reveal it, can be sticky. Chloe and Roelke are very different people, and their relationship has had its share of challenges along the way. So if one of them hasn’t shared something important with the other, is that a secret? Or is it deceit?

Since Chloe and Roelke wrestle with that question in their personal lives, it felt natural to mirror the theme in the mystery plots as well. Friends keep secrets. Professional colleagues keep secrets. Spouses keep secrets. Secrets from the past have implications for both of the modern murders.

So…is it ever OK to keep something important secret from a loved one? There’s no simple answer, but I’d love to hear your thoughts!

I’m grateful to Melissa for letting me celebrate my new book here. And in gratitude to readers, I’m giving away six books! Leave a comment for a chance to win any one of my Chloe Ellefson mysteries: Old World Murder, The Heirloom Murders, The Light Keeper’s Legacy, Heritage of Darkness, or Tradition of Deceit.


About Kathleen: Tradition of Deceit is Kathleen Ernst’s thirtieth book. In addition to the Chloe Ellefson Historic Sites series, she has written many books for American Girl, including nine about the historical character she created, Caroline Abbott. Over 1.5 million copies of Kathleen’s titles have been sold. The Chloe series has earned a LOVEY Award for Best Traditional Mystery, and several of her mysteries for young readers have been finalists for Edgar or Agatha awards. Visit Kathleen at www.kathleenernst.com, www.facebook.com/kathleenernst.author, or www.sitesandstories.wordpress.com for more information.





Kathleen's in-house feline editor Sophie
 
Blurb: Curator and occasional sleuth Chloe Ellefson is off to Minneapolis to help her friend Ariel with a monumental task. Ariel must write a proposal for a controversial and expensive restoration project: convert an abandoned flour mill, currently used as shelter by homeless people, into a museum. When a dead body is found stuffed into a grain chute, Chloe's attention turns from milling to murder. Back in Milwaukee, Chloe's love interest Roelke has been slammed with the news that a fellow officer was shot and killed while on duty. Sifting through clues from both past and present, Chloe and Roelke discover dangerous secrets that put their lives—and their trust in each other—at risk.

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Spotlight Guest Post: On Borrowed Time by Jenn McKinlay


On Borrowed Time (Library Lover's Mystery Series #5)


My mother swears I wasn’t a mistake, but when I do the math, which is admittedly not my gift, I can’t help but think that my arrival eleven months after my brother was born was not, shall we say, planned. We are Irish twins, siblings born less than a year apart, and while I’m sure it was exhausting for my mom for us it was pretty terrific. For the first five years of my life, I didn’t even realize my name was Jenny. I thought it was JedandJenny, you know, because we were always together we became the original mashup, two kids in one.

Jed (my brother’s given name is Jonathan but he’s always been Jed to me) probably looks back fondly on the eleven months that he had our mother all to himself. So sad, too bad, the minute my peepers cracked open, I was on the bro like a barnacle. Wherever he went, I went, whatever he did, I did. I decided as soon as I was mobile that we were a package deal. Poor guy, you sort of have to feel sorry for him. Luckily, he’s a tolerant person and we became the best of friends, partners in crime and occasionally during the tween years, mortal enemies.

When it came time to write ON BORROWED TIME, I knew Lindsey’s brother Jack was due for a visit and I knew who I was going to model their relationship on, my brother’s and mine. I didn’t have to dig very deep to know how I would feel if my brother was kidnapped – devastated -- and it wasn’t a stretch to know I would do anything to get him back, much like Lindsey when Jack is taken.

Here’s a brief description of the book, which was released on Nov 4th, so you can see what I’m talking about:

Holiday cheer fills the air in the town of Briar Creek, making even the grumpiest public servant almost chipper. Things take a somber turn, however, when Lindsey finds her brother Jack hiding in one of the library’s meeting rooms. He tells her that he’s on the run from someone who wants to kill him and that he’ll explain later. When later comes, Lindsey opens the door to the meeting room to find her brother missing, leaving a dead body in his place. Now Lindsey is in on borrowed time, trying to find her brother before the police or the killer do.

I hope you enjoy reading ON BORROWED TIME as much as I enjoyed writing it. My brother is still my best friend, which is why this book is dedicated to him. When I look at my life, he is definitely one of my greatest blessings. For more information about me or my books, you can go to my website www.jennmckinlay.com or find me on Facebook or Twitter.

Happy Reading,
Jenn

Sunday, November 9, 2014

Sunday Selfies


Truffles: Remember how last week Mommy couldn't drag me out of bed to take a selfie? Well this week I took one...from my bed! That's why it's a little grainy...oh and I guess I chopped my mouth off too...but I'm still pretty cute :) What can I say...it's chilly here in Vermont and I *love* my beds! This is my entry for the Sunday Selfies blog hop hosted by The Cat on My Head.







Saturday, November 8, 2014

Truffles Interviews: Jack the Chihuahua from Joanna Campbell Slan's Kicked to the Curb (w/Giveaway)


A note from Truffles: I hope you enjoy my interview with the canine star of Joanna Campbell Slan's Cara Mia Delgatto mystery series. Caturday Art returns next week!

Welcome Jack! Thank you so much for taking the time to answer a few questions today. Can you tell us how you came to live with Cara?

A mean man threw me out of the window of his truck. Cara Mia happened to be walking by when it happened. She took me to the vet and adopted me. At first I was scared of all people, but soon I learned that most people are nice. (By the way, the bad man went to jail. I’m glad!)

What is a typical day like for you?

I wake Cara up around six-thirty, because I like seeing the sunrise over the ocean. A lick on the chin usually does it. We cuddle for fifteen minutes or so, because she’s a slow waker-upper. Then she puts kibble in my dish and makes coffee for her employees. I always come first, and that makes me happy. It’s how I know she loves me!

I have a crate in the back room of her store, The Treasure Chest. That way I’m not underfoot. I love it here because it’s where all the action happens. Honora works on her miniatures in the back, Cara has her office here, and Skye does her crafts. I have so many people who’ll take me for walkies. That’s extra fun. Around five, the store closes. Cara and I take a long walk together. She tells me about her day. It’s my job to keep her happy, so I do my best.

Around ten, we go to bed. I love snuggling with her.

My Mommy and I live in Vermont, but the company she works for is based in Stuart, Florida. Do you enjoy living there?

Oh, yes! Stuart is wonderful! Did you know that Stuart is the sailfish capital of the world? There’s a big fountain with a sailfish statue in the middle of a traffic circle in the center of downtown Stuart. I love drinking water out of that statue. I also like going to concerts down at RiverWalk Park. We sit outside on the stairs and listen to the music. It’s fun because I can watch everyone from Cara’s lap. What company do you work for? I wonder if Cara knows the owners! She’s a very friendly person.

Who is the cute cat on the cover and how do you feel about kitties?

Her name is Luna, and she’s come to live with us. When her mother was murdered, Luna didn’t have anywhere else to go, so Cara took her in. Our friend Skye Blue says that Cara’s store (The Treasure Chest) is one-part retail store and one-part animal rescue shelter. I think that’s funny. The truth is that Cara is all about second chances. Of course she’s willing to give animals a second chance, too.

I like kitties as long as they’re nice to me. Luna kinda ignores me, but sometimes she does like to play. I think she misses her old mama, but she’s coming around.

What kind of trouble to you and Cara get into in Kicked to the Curb?

I screen all the men who are interested in Cara. You see, if a guy won’t take me out to go potty, he’s not good enough for her. So I whine a little until the man notices. If he takes me outside, that’s a sign that he’s cool with animals. If he’s not good with pets, I’ll go and pee on his shoe.

Anything you can tell us about your upcoming adventures?

Cara is planning to move to a house on the beach. I’m excited about that! (I’m a little afraid of crabs, but she promises she won’t let them pinch me.)

We’re also excited because for the first time, we’re offering a special bonus to people who sign up for our newsletter. All they have to do is send an email to KTTCBonus@JoannaSlan.com and they’ll get two recipes, two craft tutorials, and an outtake scene from Kicked to the Curb.


About the book: Cara Mia Delgatto’s cup runneth over with worries. Her ex-husband is refusing to pay their son’s college tuition, her evil sister is pulling mean pranks, and her old boyfriend has broken her heart. And that’s just the personal stuff. She’s also concerned about keeping the cash register ringing at The Treasure Chest, her retail store specializing in upcycled, recycled, and repurposed décor items with a coastal theme. The media event that Cara plans turns nasty when reporter Kathy Simmons threatens to share unsavory details from the shopkeeper’s past. Things get really dicey when Kathy mysteriously disappears. Cara’s other problems seem trivial in comparison to…a murder investigation!

About the author: National Bestselling and Award-Winning Author Joanna Campbell Slan has penned 26 books, including the popular Kiki Lowenstein Mystery Series (Agatha Award Finalist). Her new series featuring Cara Mia Delgatto is a spin off from those books. Joanna writes about spunky women who get by with a little help from their friends. A crafting junkie, Joanna lives on a nearly deserted island in Florida with her dog, Jax, who is making a career out of stealing women’s lingerie.

Author Links:
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