Life

New Book Release: Your Addiction is Deadly

November saw the release of my 5th book in the River City Mysteries. The series is comprised currently of four full novels and a prequel. The latest full novel is Your Addiction is Deadly.

Here’s the information on what happens in the latest exploits of Becca and her friends. All stories are stand alone novels.

Intrepid amateur sleuth Becca Reynolds believes she is leaving family, friends, and murder behind when she travels from River City to St. Louis, Missouri, to attend her first mental health conference.  But things rarely go as planned, and this trip is no exception.

Instead of instructional workshops with a bit of sightseeing on the side, Becca finds herself embroiled in murder and mayhem when she is discovered alone with a dead body.  To her horror, the police focus on her as their prime suspect. Visions of a prison cell with a mandatory dress code of stipes, or worse orange, and a new best friend named Bertha, forces Becca to launch her own investigation.  If she ever wants to see River City again, it’s up to her to solve the case.  

As the body count increases, she has serious doubts about who she can trust.  But never a quitter, Becca vows she will find the killer and see justice prevail.

Hot men, dangerous suspects, and twisted motives keep Becca on her toes as she works to solve her latest case and clear her name.

Join Becca and her gang of quirky characters in the latest installment of the River City Mysteries, Your Addiction is Deadly.

Several of the quirky things that happen to Becca in the book are actually things that happened to me on several trips to St. Louis over the years. This month in my newsletter I’ll be talking about those real life exploits that fueled my writing imagination. I hope you will join me later this month as I reveal them.

Life

It’s Up

My book, Your Eight O’clock is Dead is published on Amazon in e-book format. And it is in the process of being published at other retailers.

Click on the image to be taken to where you can purchase the book.

I’ve overhauled my first book in the River City Mysteries, Your Eight O’clock is Dead, and given it a new cover. And I’ve revised the long-awaited second book in the series, Your Time is Up. It will be out very soon. The third book in the series, Your Lights are Out is in the revision/editing stage and awaiting a cover. But I hope to have that published this summer.

Additionally, I’m writing a prequel to the series since so many readers over the years have inquired about my main character and what happened in her life to bring her to her current circumstances. That book will be entitled Your Jig is Up and will be free to anyone who is on my mailing list when it is published – or who joins the mailing list later.

Also, I have ideas for more stories in the River City Mysteries. I’m looking forward to writing these.

Ideas for two other light-hearted mystery series have also come to my imagination. They surround my passion of knitting. So that’s exciting as well.

I feel like rushing water that has been held back by a dam for too long and has broken free. Or as someone said to me recently the genie is out of the bottle and is not going back in.

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Learning to Promote

I love to write.  A lot.  In fact, I can lose myself for hours writing.  Time ceases and I enter the world of my characters.  It’s just the best feeling.

I hate to promote.  I’m new to promoting. In late October, my first book was published in electronic format – “Your Eight O’Clock Is Dead” – it’s the first in a humorous mystery series set in my hometown of Richmond, Virginia.  I realized that to reach potential readers I’d have to promote not only the book but myself.  And I’m just such a neophyte where this is concerned.

Don’t get me wrong.  I’ve done bookstore signings with a non-fiction anthology I had published in 2008, and I absolutely loved that part of promotion.  I’m good with people in person.  To chat with someone about books or writing is a treat for me.  I’m interested in people and what they think.  So that was all very comfortable to me.

But enter the e-book market.  And I realized that I was totally unprepared for the promotional end of it.  Sure, I’d watched my writer friends go down that road, and I’d kind of paid attention to what they were doing it while I continued to write.  Often, I’d hear complaints about how difficult it was to connect with readers in this new virtual world we live in.  But the full magnitude of the situation didn’t sink in until I had to do it myself.

After the book came out, I realized no one knew who I was.  I had zero name recognition. What could I do to get my name and my book to readers?

I belong to a wonderful online community of knitters on Ravelry.com.  They are the best people and have seen me through a lot over the past several years.  They’re my friends.  In fact, I spend so much time on the computer either writing or connecting with my peeps in the knitting world, one of my friends gave me a magnet that proclaimed that all of my friends live in the computer.  And it’s true.  I have good friends all over the world thanks to Ravelry.

So it seemed logical to start with announcing to my online friends that my mystery was published.  Before I could do it myself, my dear friend Kim Tyler shared the information for me.  I was simply overwhelmed with the love my knitting friends poured out to me.  They have been staunch supporters of me and my writing, and I’ve received so much positive feedback from them.

Then another dear friend, Anne Hanson, a designer extraordinaire, used her Knitspot blog to alert her fans about my new book.  I was totally blown away by her generosity in doing this for me.

I contacted family and all of my non-knitting friends, and they’ve also helped me get the word out.

Sales have been steady, and I’ve been very pleased that 8 O’Clock has been so well-received.  But I want to reach more people.

So I’m trying a couple of things.  Yes, I’ve alerted my Facebook and Twitter peeps about my book.  But I went beyond that and signed up for some guest blog spots. This is kind of scary to me.  I’ll let you know how it goes.

My first guest blog was for a sweet lady who used to own an independent bookstore in Richmond, Lelia Taylor.  I blogged with her after Christmas.  It’s nice to start off with people you know.

For the other blogs, I hired a company to help pull this together for me.  I’d heard that doing it yourself was very time-consuming.  The price for the service was very reasonable.  I think you have to make a judgment call on what you need to do vs. what you can effectively delegate both in monetary and time savings.

I’ve also tried to make myself and the book more visible on Kindle-friendly sites, since that is where I sell most of my books.  Kindle Mojo and the Frugal Ereader are two that come to mind.  I think the added exposure has definitely helped.

It’s been quite the learning curve, and I know that there’s still so much more to figure out.  I’ll keep you posted on how I’m doing with promo.  And maybe I’ll learn to like it and feel comfortable with it.  We’ll see.

What’s that old saying – nothing ventured, nothing gained?

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Big October

October was a huge month for my family and me.  All treats, no tricks.

First, our darling son Michael became engaged to his sweet lady love, Jenna.

And then, the first book in my River City Mystery Series was released.  I’m so proud of this series and of this first offering, too.  It’s entitled Your Eight O’Clock Is Dead and is available on Amazon.com in Kindle format, Barnes and Noble for Nook and on Smashwords in various formats.

I had an extremely talented cover artist, Jessie Gemmer, and I’m just thrilled with the job she did.  I wanted something that conveyed that this is a light-hearted mystery and that also got the elements of the story into the cover and Jessie was able to do just this.

She’s hard at work on covers for books 2 and 3 in the series, Your Time Is Up and Your Lights Are Out.  And I’m hard at work writing them.

I’m also at work plotting new adventures for Becca, Max, Ryder and Marty to get into.

This last week I may have been celebrating all of the good news.  Now it’s back to work.