Guest Author Post and Spotlight on Tempest In The Tea Leaves by Kari Lee Townsend

Sunshine Meadows aka Sunny’s Library List

The Power of Being Different by John Paul Carinci (I’ve finally embraced who and what I am. Hopefully the town of Divinity will as well.)

Country Towns of NY: Charming small towns and villages by Mike Tougrias (I just love the small, quaint town of Divinity in upstate NY)

America’s Painted Ladies: the Ultimate Celebration of our Victorians by Elizabeth Pomada, Michael Larson, Douglas Keister (The ancient Victorian I bought is simply adorable. I named her Vicky.)

Haunted Houses by Corinne May Botz (People say Vicky is haunted, but I think it’s the cat I found living within who is doing the haunting.)

Don’t tell the Cat…how to take care of your cat without turning him into a tiger! by Grazia Valci (Morty, short for immortal, is quite the character. A big white mysterious cat with more attitude than should be legal. What am I going to do with him?)

Police Procedure & Investigation: A Guide for Writers by Lee Lofland (I’ve got to learn how to investigate somehow, because Detective Grumpy Pants sure isn’t showing me how.)

Alpha Male Syndrome by Kate Ludeman & Eddie Erlandson (Maybe if I understood Mitch a bit more, I’d be able to work with him better. Yeah, I know. I’m not holding my breath.)

Love Smart: Find the one you want–fix the one you got by Dr. Phil McGraw (If only it were that easy, Dr. Phil. You’d understand if you’d ever met Mitch.)

How to Deal with Parents Who are Angry, Troubled, Afraid, or Just Plain Crazy by Elaine K. McEwan-Adkins (Trust me, people, I’ve tried. There is NO dealing with Vivian and Donald Meadows.)

As far as fiction….I’ll read pretty much anything by Kari Lee Townsend. I hear she’s fabulous.

Kari Lee Townsend’s Library List

Police Procedure & Investigation: A Guide for Writers by Lee Lofland (Like Sunny, I too have to know how to investigate. And no one does it better than Lee.)

Tea Leaf Reading for Beginners by Caroline Dow (This was a great source of research for me, as well as sites online for learning how to read someone’s tea leaves.)

How to Write a Damn Good Mystery by James F. Frey (Frey does a great job on teaching authors how to plot and write a mystery that works.)

Elements of Style by Strunk & White (I have a masters in English and yet I couldn’t live without this handy dandy resource.)

Janet Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum series (She is the person who first turned me on to mysteries. She is so funny and her characters are a hoot. I want to be her when I grow up.)

Donna Andrews’ Meg Langslow Series (She is another funny cozy mystery author. Love her wacky characters.)

Annette Blair’s Vintage Magic Mysteries (Love anything written by Annette. Great characters, hilarious humor, and light paranormal….it doesn’t get any better than that!)

Peggy Webb’s Southern Cousin’s Mysteries featuring Elvis the dog (Peggy is a hoot and anything she writes is just as funny as she is. Love her books!)

Tamar Myers Den of Antiquity Mysteries (Her books are funny and interesting. Real page turners.)

Liz Lipperman’s Clueless Cook Mysteries (Liz is hilarious and her characters are ones you won’t want to leave. There are so many others I love as well, but atlas, my own books are calling for me to finish them. Enjoy and happy reading.)
Title: Tempest in the Tea Leaves
Author: Kari Lee Townsend
Publisher: Berkley
Publication Date: August 2, 2011
Paperback: 304 pages
ISBN: 978-0425242759
Genre: Fiction, Mystery

Book synopsis from the author:

TEMPEST IN THE TEA LEAVES: A Fortune Teller Mystery

In the fortune telling business there are a lot of pretenders, but Sunshine Meadows is the real deal–and her predictions can be lethally accurate…
Sunny is a big city psychic who moves to the quaint town of Divinity, NY to open her fortune-telling business in an ancient Victorian house, inheriting the strange cat residing within. Sunny gives her first reading to the frazzled librarian and discovers the woman is going to die. When the woman flees in terror, Sunny calls the police, only she’s too late. The ruggedly handsome, hard-nosed detective is a ”non-believer.” He finds the librarian dead, and Sunny becomes his number one suspect, forcing her to prove her innocence before the real killer can put an end to the psychic’s future.

Kari Lee Townsend lives in Central New York with her very understanding husband, her three busy boys, and her oh-so-dramatic daughter, who keep her grounded and make everything she does worthwhile…not to mention provide her with loads of material for her books. Kari is a longtime lover of reading and writing, with a masters in English education, who spends her days trying to figure out whodunit. Funny how no one at home will confess any more than the characters in her mysteries!

Kari writes fun and exciting stories for any age, set in small towns, with mystical elements and quirky characters. You can find out more about her on her website: www.karileetownsend.com and also on the group mystery blog she cohosts, called Mysteries and Margaritas, at www.mysteriesandmargaritasblogspot.com

Guest Post by John Thompson author of The Reservoir

I recently completed a 15-town book tour to promote my new novel, The Reservoir. Here are a few highlights.
    Launching at Fountain Bookstore in Richmond’s historic Shockoe Slip, then going out for celebratory drinks and tapas at Secco with my publishing guru, my wife, and two dazzling “shop girls,” as they jokingly call themselves.
    Seeing familiar faces at Crozet’s charming Over the Moon Bookstore.
    Having pizza and drinks with friends on the Downtown Mall after the reading at Charlottesville’s New Dominion.
    Starting the North Carolina leg at ultra-cool Malaprop’s in Asheville.
    Presenting at McIntyre’s sumptuous, resort-style store in Fearrington Village, and having my cousins in the audience.
    The reading at Flyleaf in Chapel Hill, followed by drinks with brilliant young author Belle Boggs.
    Wandering around the quiet streets of Southern Pines, wondering if anybody would show at Country Bookshop, and then finding a crowd of 35 eager listeners; wine bar afterwards with lovely shopkeepers.
    Arriving at laidback Page & Palette in Fairhope, Alabama at the wrong hour (on the right side of wrong) and enjoying signing copies for a couple of hours before my evening appearance, a rollicking roundtable discussion.
    Driving past the bungalows of Uptown New Orleans thinking I had the wrong address, but stumbling upon Octavia Books and finding welcoming hosts and an enthusiastic group.
    Again thinking I was in the wrong neighborhood, off the interstate, then finding Lemuria in Jackson, Mississippi, as well as wonderful booksellers, a great crowd, and a delightful fellow writer and stage-sharer in Ann Napolitano. Then dinner with writer friend Steve Yates and his wife.
    Tromping around Faulkner sites in Oxford, reading during a terrific storm in Square Books, and having drinks and food with the famous Lisa Howorth and novelist Lee Durkee.
    Entering into the upstairs room in Fayetteville’s Nightbird Books and seeing the smiling faces of Food for Thought book club, all eleven of whom had read my book—dinner and talk set a high-spirited tone for the reading, followed by drinks with dear old friends from my MFA days.
    Perhaps the best, most appreciative audience of a dozen at Houston’s Murder by the Book.
    Having a flight canceled, then making a late connection in Boise when an airline attendant relowered the bridge, signaled to the pilot to reopen the airplane door (and told me it was a one-in-a-million and that if I’d tried to make such a connection in Denver, “You could’ve kissed your ass good-bye”), sheepishly explaining myself to fellow passengers (and giving one a signed copy of my book), taking a hectic cab ride from the San Francisco airport to M is for Mystery bookstore in San Mateo, and just making it.
    Meeting the good people of Seattle Mystery Bookshop and going out to Brooklyn restaurant for amazing local oysters with, yet again, my publishing guru, Paul Kozlowski.
    Getting home after sleeping 5 hours in the past 55 and falling into a comatic 17-hour sleep, waking only for food.
    Looking over this list, it’s clear that the tour was all about people—seeing old friends and making lots of new ones. And that’s what this business is ultimately about; whether we actually meet our readers in person or not, it’s all about telling stories and making connections.

-John Milliken Thompson

I would like to thank Other Press and John Milliken Thompson for making this guest review possible.  John Milliken Thompson has been on tour with his book The Resevoir.

Title: The Resevoir
Author: John Milliken Thompson
Publisher: Other Press
Publication Date: June 21, 2011
Paperback: 368 pages
ISBN: 978-1590514443
Genre: Historical Fiction

Further information about the book and the author may be obtained on the Publisher’s website.

Reviews About Books by Guest Author Mariah Stewart

There are few things in this world I love more than I love books. I even love to read about books. Being a writer, I could read about books all day long. Unfortunately, since writing is my day job, I don’t have as much time as I’d like to read. When I was asked to write a blog for this site but couldn’t decide what to write about, it seemed logical to pay a quick visit here.

Well, my quick visit lasted for over an hour – actually, it was closer to two. But after the first minute, I knew exactly what I wanted to talk about.

Books. More specifically, reviews about books.

As a writer, I’ve often looked upon reviews of my books as a sort of mixed blessing. You love to know that someone is reading your work but you hold your breath until you get to the part where you find out whether or not they liked it. I’ve had plenty of reviews on both sides of that fence, by the way. And for the record, I don’t get particularly upset or annoyed when someone doesn’t like a book I’ve written. Not every book works for every reader.  Breathes there the woman (or man) who read a book that she/he simply adored and hated to see end, then passed on to her/his bff or sister only to have them pass it back with a “thanks but no thanks – couldn’t finish it – hated everything about it”?

Books are like that. Not every book will be everyone’s cup of tea. But it’s okay. The great thing about books is that there are so many of them to choose from, we can all find something we love.

The first thing that I did when I popped over here was scan the list of books that have been read and reviewed during this calendar year, and oh, boy! Bonanza!

First, I skipped the reviews for the books I’d already read – and there were many of them: Allison Brennan’s Love Me to Death – Lisa Gardener’s Love You More – Michael Connelly’s The Fifth Witness – Dolan Perkins-Valdez’s Wench – Paula McClain’s The Paris Wife and several others.

Then I started by reading reviews of books I’ve been meaning to read – books I’ve purchased and set aside because I have a book of my own to finish, but the reviews reminded me why I’d wanted to read them in the first place. The Bird House by Kelly Simmons is one such book. Alzheimer’s has a special meaning in our family since my dad, who had been an Alzheimer’s victim, passed away last year. I haven’t been able to bring myself to read anything about any character with this affliction, but I wanted to read this book and then pass it on to one of my daughters, who while in high school and college, babysat for Kelly Simmons’s daughters, so that made this choice personal. Plus, I’d read her first book and thought it was pretty terrific.

Next I read reviews of books I hadn’t heard about but am now eager to add to my ever-growing to-be-read pile. Just listen to direct quotes from this blog site and tell me that you don’t want to read these books:

“I would recommend The Bayou Trilogy to any reader who enjoys dark, seedy, and exceptionally well-written crime fiction.”

Well, who doesn’t? This one went straight to the top of my list of books to buy.

“Promise Not to Tell by Jennifer McMahon is an exquisitely written, deeply emotional book filled with mystery, murder, and complex family issues as well as secrets.”

Mystery! Murder! Two of my personal favorite things!

“This book took my breath away. Say Her Name, by Francisco Goldman…”

Now, seriously, what could you say, after you say that?

I could go on and on – there are other books I picked from the review list that I’m dying to read but I’ll have to wait a little longer, at least until my own work is finished. But it looks like it’s going to be a great summer for reading.

So here’s a question for you: What was the last book you read because of a review? Did you agree with the reviewer? If you liked the book, did you (or would you) look for other books by that author in the future?

-Mariah Stewart


Title: Almost Home (Chesapeake Diaries, Book 3)
Author: Mariah Stewart
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Publication Date: March 22, 2011
Paperback: 400 pages
ISBN: 978-0345520371
Genre: Romance

Mariah Stewart’s most recent book, Almost Home, is on tour during the months of May and June through TLC Book Tours.  To learn more about author Mariah Stewart and her books please visit her website.

My sincerest gratitude to Mariah Stewart for taking time out of her busy schedule to guest blog on Rundpinne and to TLC Book Tours for making this all possible.

Guest Author: Anne Easter Smith author of Queen By Right

Medieval ideas of love and marriage:  by Anne Easter Smith

Cecily Neville and Richard, duke of York, are said to have had one of history’s few real love matches in an arranged marriage. This probably came about because they were together at Cecily’s father’s castle of Raby from an early age. Richard was orphaned when he was only four, and after being put in the care of Sir Robert Waterton for several years, his wardship was eventually purchased by Ralph Neville, earl of Westmorland. And so Richard would have met and been under the same roof as Cecily when he was twelve and she was eight. It was not long afterward that Ralph wisely betrothed his youngest daughter to the young duke. Richard Plantagenet had a strong claim to the throne (but that’s another story!), so when he married Cecily she became the highest ranking of all the Neville clan.

When Ralph died in 1426, he willed the wardship to his wife, Joan, who was then placed in the king’s household with Cecily and Richard until Richard took his place at court, probably when he was 17. In Queen By Right I have the couple married before November 1429 when we know Richard received a Papal indulgence to have a portable altar and a confessor “for the duke of York and his duchess” (so we know they were married by then).

You might ask why it was unusual for theirs to be a love match? As lovers of historical fiction, I’m sure you know that most marriages from the gentry up to the royals were those of political and economical expedience. Many contracts were arranged between families when their offspring were only a few years old. But these young people might live at opposite ends of the country from each other and never meet until the legal age for marriage arrived: 12 for girls and 14 for boys. Sometimes–in the case of King Henry VI and Margaret of Anjou–one or other had someone stand proxy for them and you might be married before you even saw your husband! Imagine dreaming about your knight in shining armor or your Guinevere and being forced to live the rest of your days with Eygor from Frankenstein or Cruella Deville. Yes, a familiar love grew between couples in many cases, but it was hardly what we know today as conjugal bliss! Romantic love was most definitely missing for these very often mismatched pairs; can you blame them for looking for it elsewhere?
And so early in the medieval period, the troubadours began to sing about love and romance, which quickly spread to literature and pretty soon, anyone born with a silver spoon in his or her mouth were caught up in what we would probably call affairs today. We now refer to this idealized version of romance as “courtly love.” We would laugh at it now as it was highly exaggerated and artificial; we would also deem it highly dangerous as it’s most exciting aspect was secrecy. When a knight or lord fancied a lady, he was supposed to let her know by sending her secret gifts, singing her songs or penning poems. The lady on the other hand was supposed to only afford her pining lover a mere nod of approval and hint at affection. The relationship was more of a mistress dominating her servant, and the men apparently went for it.

Did they go all the way? You betcha! In fact medieval intellectuals believed that romantic love had to be adulterous because everyone knew that marriage was just for begetting children, thus real love was precious and lovers should be allowed to carry on in secret. Andrew the Chaplain, a medieval clergyman, wrote: “Love rarely survives when it becomes common knowledge.” And Heloise (the lover of Abelard) is said to have stated: “The love freely given matters. The name of ‘wife’ may seem more sacred or more worthy, but sweetest to me will always be the words ‘lover, concubine or whore.’” Quite controversial for even our time, wouldn’t you say!

Back to Cecily and Richard. Compared with many of their rank in the 15th century, there is no evidence of Richard ever having a mistress–or a bastard that has surfaced in this age of genealogy fascination–and Cecily faithfully followed her husband around the country or to France or to Ireland or wherever his career took him dragging her children with her. When Richard returned from 10-months exile in Ireland and the king had tried to stop his progress from the North Wales coast to London, the first person he sent for was Cecily, who raced up to meet him at Worcester, to where he’d pushed his way down, gathering men as he went. It was one of the few times she went to him without her children. I am sure it wasn’t to talk about the weather or how little George and Richard were, I think they were hungry to wrap their arms about each other.

For more information please visit Anne Easter Smith’s Website and Facebook Page.

Follow the book tour for Queen By Right by Anne Easter Smith

My sincere gratitude to author Anne Easter Smith for taking the time to guest blog on Rundpinne and for Historical Fiction Virtual Book Tours for making this post a possible.

Guest Author Caroline Taggart – “A Quiz on Proverbs”

A Quiz on Proverbs
By Caroline Taggart
Author of An Apple A Day: Old-Fashioned Proverbs –Timeless Words to Live By

Two questions are likely to spring to mind when you open a book about proverbs. The first is, “Another book about proverbs?” and the second is, “Um, so what exactly is a proverb?”

Let’s answer the second question first. A proverb is defined as ‘a piece of wisdom or advice, expressed in a short and memorable way.’ It can be anything from a quotation from the Bible (‘Spare the rod and spoil the child’) or Shakespeare (‘The course of true love never did run smooth’) to a piece of folk wisdom whose origins are lost in the mists of time (‘An apple a day keeps the doctor away’). And to go back to the first question, the point of this book is not only to explain familiar proverbs but also to see if they are still relevant today.”

Many of them are relevant. There’s a world of truth in sayings, such as “Haste makes waste,” “You’re only young once,” and “Handsome is as handsome does.” There may be room for debate over the apparent contradiction of “Many hands make light work” and “Too many cooks spoil the broth,” but it’s worth remembering that each individual proverb is only one person’s take on a situation, the product of his own culture, personality, and mood at that moment in time. Part of the beauty of proverbs is that you can adopt the ones that suit your needs and ignore the others — you’re not going to end up in jail either way. If you are cautious by nature, you can take “Look before you leap” as your motto; if “He who hesitates is lost” is more your line, then that is fine, too.

So without taking any of it too seriously, here is a short quiz on the origins of familiar proverbs and my take on them. Can you match the proverbs (1 – 5) with their sources (a – e)?

1. Don’t count your chickens before they are hatched
2. Necessity is the mother of invention
3. Brevity is the soul of wit
4. You can’t make bricks without straw
5. Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise


a. A piece of fifteenth-century folk wisdom
b. A fable by Aesop, written in the sixth century B.C.
c. An eighteenth-century poem about a sofa
d. The Biblical story of the Children of Israel being enslaved in Egypt
e. A quotation from Shakespeare’s Hamlet

Answers:

1. B, This is the moral of Aesop’s The Milkmaid and Her Pail. A milkmaid, carrying a pail of milk home on her head, dreams of what she will do with the profits of selling it: Buy some hens from the poultry farmer; get rich on the proceeds of the eggs and chickens they will produce; buy a pretty dress that will attract all the boys; and toss her head at their advances. Unfortunately, as she dreams, she actually does toss her head — and spills all the milk (which, come to think of it, she may then have cried over). So the warning is against acting prematurely on something that may or may not happen.

2. C, The English poet William Cowper did write a poem about a sofa — a female acquaintance had challenged him to do it — and it contains the lines “Thus first necessity invented stools/Convenience next suggested elbow-chairs/And luxury the accomplished sofa last.” The first line is the important one here: Somebody got tired of standing up all the time, so he invented something to sit on. And so it is has been throughout history: When somebody needed a cart to carry a heavier load than he could manage himself, he invented the wheel; when buildings got taller and people didn’t want to walk up all those stairs, they invented the elevator. The same poem, by the way, also tells us “variety is the spice of life.”

3. E, A lot of proverbs come from Hamlet: “You’ve got to be cruel to be kind” and “Desperate situations call for desperate measures” are two others. In this context “soul of wit” means “essence of wisdom,” so the speaker, Polonius, is advising himself to keep his information brief and to the point (he is trying to tell the king and queen that Hamlet has gone mad). But we — the audience — know that Shakespeare is having fun at his character’s expense. We have just seen Polonius giving endless worthy advice to his son, Laertes, and we know that he wouldn’t recognize brevity if you hit him over the head with it. Irony aside, however, it is sound advice: Keep it snappy and you have a better chance of keeping your audience’s attention.

4. D, This is from the Old Testament book of Exodus. The enslaved Children of Israel spend their time making bricks — of which a key ingredient is straw. Moses, their spokesman, tries to persuade Pharaoh (the Egyptian king) to “let my people go.” Pharaoh, furious at this impertinent request, ordains that not only should the Jews stay in slavery, but that from now on they will no longer be given straw. They will have to find it themselves and still produce the same number of bricks each day. The point of the proverb is that this is kind of hard. “Give us the tools,” the Children of Israel might have said, “and we will finish the job.”

5. A, People have been making this irritating claim for over 500 years — and the really irritating thing (for those of us who hate getting up in the morning) is that it is true. Once it was sensible not to stay in bed during daylight hours, when you could be working. And you wouldn’t want to waste candles sitting up late: You’d think electric light would have changed all that. Maybe, but the “healthy” part of the argument remains valid. When it gets dark, our levels of the sleep hormone melatonin rise and our levels of the stress-related hormone cortisol lower, making it easier for us to unwind and go to sleep. So although artificial light allows us to party till 2 in the morning, if we choose, it lessens our ability to cope with stress and with general wear and tear. So off you go to bed, and don’t forget to set the alarm!

Copyright © 2011 Caroline Taggart, author of An Apple A Day: Old-Fashioned Proverbs –Timeless Words to Live By


Title: An Apple a Day: Old-Fashioned Proverbs –Timeless Words to Live By
Author: Caroline Taggart
Publisher: Readers Digest
Publication Date: March 3, 2011
Hardcover: 176 pages
ISBN: 978-1606521915
Genre: Reference, Mythology, Folklore

Author Bio
Caroline Taggart has been an editor of non-fiction books for nearly 30 years and has covered nearly every subject from natural history and business to gardening and astronomy. She has written several books and was the editor of Writer’s Market UK 2009.

For more information on the book and the Blackboard Books, please visit www.rdtradepublishing.com

My Review of An Apple A Day by Caroline Taggart may be read here.

My sincere gratitude to Caroline Taggart and FSB Associates for making this post possible.

Guest Author: Rain Mitchell author of Tales From the Yoga Studio

The Addict in Me
By Rain Mitchell,
Author of Tales from the Yoga Studio

In advance of the publication of my novel, Tales from the Yoga Studio, I spent a portion of the fall talking it up to as many people as I could. I was trying to promote my book as a good reading group selection, and attempting to convince everyone I know who is either a big reader or a yoga practitioner (or both) that I thought they’d have a lot of fun with it.

In the midst of all this self-promotion, one friend said, in a slightly peeved tone of voice, “So what are you reading right now?”

I hesitated for a minute and then mentioned that big fat novel that everyone was supposedly reading, the one whose author was on the cover of Timemagazine and, even more famously, on Oprah.

“Enjoying it?” she asked.

“Well, I’m just at the beginning,” I confessed.

What I didn’t tell her was that I had bought the book over a month earlier and had barely read twenty-five pages. I’d given myself the usual excuses for why I hadn’t made more progress — too busy, book too dense, don’t like the print. And so on.

But when I went home that night, resolved to dip into the book and really make a dent in it, I had to face the truth. For months (okay, years) I had been too Internet-involved/distracted/addicted to do even a fraction of the reading I did throughout my life. My mother was an English teacher, and my sister and I were brought up to love books. I never (and I mean never) left the house without carrying a book. No matter what happened — car breaking down, traffic jam, mom in grocery store for too long — it would be a perfectly fine day because I had my book with me, and that’s all it took to make me happy. I’d choose the next book I was going to read before I was halfway through the one I was reading, and for my birthdays, I always asked for a gift certificate to our local indie bookstore. Vacations meant unlimited reading time, and I identify certain period of my life with the novel I was reading at the time.

But about five or six years ago, I began spending more and more time online. I’m not even sure doing what. I’m not a big Facebook person, I don’t “get” Twitter, I don’t gamble, and I’ve never (I mean it) had any interest in porn. But there were all those emails to check, all those YouTube videos to watch, all those news stories to read, songs to download, blogs to peruse, gossip sites to dip into, and real estate listings to drool over. Add it all up, and it spells hours. Hours. Daily.

Every time I sat down to read, I lasted about five or six minutes before I had to jump up and check my email or get a live update on something really important, like Angelina Jolie’s marriage or a reality star’s plastic surgery nightmare. The sad truth is, I had whittled down my attention span to seconds and had impaired my powers of concentration. As a result, for years, I had been struggling through a mere few novels a year instead of the two or three per week I had enjoyed before I ever heard of gmail.

When you spend a vast chunk of your life doing something that has no intrinsic value and robs you of the ability to do what you do love, something’s off balance. I’ve watched enough episode of Intervention to know that I was hooked and out of control.

I decided, right then and there, to cut down to thirty minutes online per day. To monitor myself, I wrote down when I went online and when I went off, the way a dieter is supposed to write down everything she eats.

That lasted about twelve hours.

I went to a hypnotist recommended by a friend. I guess I’m not suggestible enough.

I tried to convince my nurse practitioner that I needed a prescription for Ritalin. She wasn’t buying it.

Then, around Thanksgiving, I had the realization that instead of trying to convince myself to stop doing something, I should take a more positive approach. Why not just try to encourage myself to read more and see what happened?

In the past, checking my email was the last thing I did at night and the very first thing I did upon stumbling out of bed in the morning. My new plan was to make a cup of tea, lie on my favorite sofa, and read for fifteen minutes before I touched the computer, before I did anything. It’s always good to start off slowly, as I learned in yoga classes.

What surprised me the most was that I initially found it painful to avoid the computer. I mean physically painful. For the first few mornings, I actually felt a kind of muscular withdrawal, as if my whole body was straining to sit down at the keyboard and go online. It hurt!

But fifteen minutes? I could do that. I was reading Maryann in Autumn, a novel by Armistead Maupin. Light, funny, and short chapters. Not too intimidating. Each morning, it got a little easier to avoid the computer, and by the fifth day, I found myself reading for half an hour. Then, without even realizing it, I started getting up a little earlier so I’d have more reading time before sitting down to write. A few chapters before the end of that Maupin novel, I was eagerly searching my bookshelves for the next book I was going to read.

Like any addict, I’m taking this one day at a time. But it’s now over three months since I started, and I haven’t missed a single morning. I usually read for at least an hour after I get up, and even better, I find myself reading instead of doing you-know-what in the evening as well. I’m back to reading about two novels a week, and I feel as if my concentration has improved in all kinds of other areas as well. I feel as if I have my life back.

When I was describing this to a friend, she said, “Gee, Rain, it sounds as if you’re getting addicted to reading books.” I happily admitted that I am. I always have been. And honestly, I can’t think of a more wonderful addiction.

So now, let me tell you about this novel I wrote . . .

© 2011 Rain Mitchell, author of Tales from the Yoga Studio

 


Title: Tales From the Yoga Studio
Author: Rain Mitchell
Publisher: Plume
Publication Date: December 28, 2010
Paperback: 288 pages
ISBN: 9780452296916
Genre: Fiction

Book Synopsis:

The yoga studio is where daily cares are set aside, mats are unfurled, and physical exertion leads to well-being, renewal, and friendship.

In Los Angeles, yoga teachers have become celebrities and designer tank tops can cost a small fortune. Still, many students flock to the relatively unglamorous Edendale Yoga in the hip, out-of-the-way Silver Lake neighborhood. It’s here where Lee uses her extraordinary teaching skills and unusual empathy to help students gain control of their bodies and possibly their lives as well.

Katherine, the studio’s resident masseuse, is trying hard not to sabotage what could be the perfect relationship.
Graciela, is a dancer on the cusp of getting her breakthrough job, assuming she can overcome a suspicious injury.
Imani, a happily married and successful actress, struggles to get beyond the one big loss she can’t seem to forget.
Stephanie, a talented screenwriter and development girl, might be driving herself to the breaking point.

But will Lee’s students have learned enough from their beloved teacher to help her when she faces financial problems and a marital crisis of her own?

Tales From the Yoga Studio is a warm, funny, and gripping novel about the gift of connection and the joys of discovery, featuring five amazing women you will never forget.

Author Bio:

Rain Mitchell, author of Tales From the Yoga Studio, began practicing yoga as a teenager and is currently at work on the second novel in the series.  Rain’s favorite pose is corpse.

My gratitude to Rain Mitchell and FSB Media Associates from providing me with this post.  My review of Tales From the Yoga Studio will be up as soon as possible.

Guest Author: Chelsea Cain author of The Night Season

Origin Story
By Chelsea Cain,
Author of The Night Season

*Chelsea Cain’s newest thriller, The Night Season, will be out March 1, 2011.*

I always knew I would grow up to write gory thrillers.

That’s a lie.

The truth is that I wanted to grow up to be a fire-dog. There was a vintage fire truck at the park we used to go to when I was a kid and I just really liked the idea of riding on the back of it, ears perked, black and white fur tickled by the wind. My parents were hippies, so didn’t want to limit my potential by telling me that I couldn’t grow up to be a Dalmatian.

I never did get a job as a fire dog, so in that sense I’ll always be a failure.

My mother wanted me to grow up to be a potter. We had a clay spinning wheel for a while in the backroom of an apartment we rented, and I have to admit I was pretty good at creating lopsided earthenware pen vases, if you like that sort of thing.

But in retrospect I always had a fascination with the macabre.

It started with the pet cemetery. A kitten of mine was hit by a car and I buried her in an elaborate ceremony under the Rhododendron bush in our front yard in Bellingham, Washington. Then, walking home from school a few months later, I came across a dead bird. I picked it up, put it in my lunchbox, carried it home and buried it under the Rhododendron. I found eight more dead birds that week. They all went into the cemetery. Who knows what kind of bird epidemic was sweeping through my town. I guess I’m lucky I didn’t catch bird flu.

Eventually kids in the neighborhood started hearing about the cemetery and would appear at my door cradling their dead pets. By the end of that year I had buried fifteen birds, three cats, a hamster, a rabbit, a chicken, and about a dozen gold fish. Each corpse was laid in a shoebox, cushioned with toilet paper, and presented with a piece of costume jewelry from a collection that someone had given me. I would then bury the box and say a few words to whoever was present. I had a special vintage ladies hat I would wear for the occasion. It was black, with white silk flowers piled on it, and a torn black net veil.

I was not an ordinary child.

At the time I was very interested in the Green River Killer. He was our local serial murderer. They found his first victims in 1982. I was ten years old. He went on to kill dozens of women, mostly prostitutes, many of them teenagers. It was the first time that I was aware that there was that sort of danger in the world — That you could go out one day, and they might find you the next day, dead, naked in a river. His main killing ground was about an hour and half from the town I grew up in. But I still thought about him when I was walking my dog alone at night. I followed the stories in the newspaper and I knew that there was a task force assigned to catch him. I liked that idea — a team of professionals who were working really hard to keep me safe from the bogeyman.

I still wasn’t thinking about writing gory thrillers. Though I will admit that, in seventh grade, I got 40 pages into a novel about a female PI. I typed the entire thing in a cursive font. I thought it looked fancy.

Journalism. That was my college goal at the University of California, at Irvine. I didn’t know anyone who wrote books, and after the fire-dog disappointment, I wanted to be realistic about my professional aspirations.

I even went to graduate school in journalism at the University of Iowa where I wrote a column for The Daily Iowan, dyed my hair dark red and stared reading Sylvia Plath. Literary towns will do that to you.

But there was one thing about journalism that I didn’t like at all: talking to strangers. Writing books, on the other hand, requires talking to far fewer people. And Iowa City, home of the lauded Iowa Writers Workshop, was full of people writing books.

So I wrote a few too.

That’s a lie.

I moved from Iowa to Portland to New York and back to Portland with brief stays in Florida and Pennsylvania, and in the process wrote a dozen books over the next ten years.

But I only published a few.

The rest were really, really bad.

Don’t worry. I had a real job. I was a creative director for a PR firm. (My hair was very blond at this point.) Then I fell in love with the clerk at my local video store, and in the throes of an identity crisis (I had dyed my hair red again), I retired from PR at the grizzled age of 31. I married the video store clerk and a year later, pregnant with my daughter, I was up late at night and I came across an episode of Larry King Live about the Green River Killer.

They had caught him in 2001, nearly twenty years after his first victims were discovered, and he had a name: Gary Ridgway. I hadn’t thought about the Green River Killer or that case in years, but there, live on TV, were the cops from the task force I remembered as a kid. I recognized them from the newspapers photographs that were burned into my mind. They had spent their careers looking for this guy. And they had caught him. Finally.

I was safe.

And I thought to myself: gory thriller!

That would be fun to write.

(You find that you have lot of time on your hands when you suddenly are not drinking because you are pregnant.)

So I wrote HEARTSICK. Having begun a book while pregnant and finished it with a baby in the house, I can tell you it is a feat that cannot be adequately praised.

But I guess that I shouldn’t be surprised to find myself writing thrillers. It does bring together many of my interests: forensic pathology, medicine, damaged heroes, dead pets, Nancy Drew, TV cops shows, my home of Portland, Oregon, and having an excuse to be alone in a room for long periods. Sometimes I think being a thriller writer might be as fun as being a fire-dog.

But I guess I’ll never know for sure.

Copyright © 2011 Chelsea Cain, author of The Night Season


Title: The Night Season
Author: Chelsea Cain
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Publication Date: March 1, 2011
Hardcover: 336 pages
ISBN: 9780312619763
Genre: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller

Book Synopsis:

With the Beauty Killer Gretchen Lowell locked away behind bars once again, Archie Sheridan — a Portland police detective and nearly one of her victims — can finally rest a little easier. Meanwhile, the city of Portland is in crisis. Heavy rains have flooded the Willamette River, and several people have drowned in the quickly rising waters. Or at least that’s what they thought until the medical examiner discovers that the latest victim didn’t drown: She was poisoned before she went into the water. Soon after, three of those drownings are also proven to be murders. Portland has a new serial killer on its hands, and Archie and his task force have a new case.

Reporter Susan Ward is chasing this story of a new serial killer with gusto, but she’s also got another lead to follow for an entirely separate mystery: The flooding has unearthed a skeleton, a man who might have died more than sixty years ago, the last time Portland flooded this badly, when the river washed away an entire neighborhood and killed at least fifteen people.

With Archie following the bizarre trail of evidence and evil deeds to catch a killer and possibly regain his life, and Susan Ward close behind, Chelsea Cain — one of today’s most talented suspense writers — launches the next installment of her bestselling series with an electric thriller.

Author Bio:

Chelsea Cain’s first three novels featuring Archie Sheridan — Heartsick, Sweetheart, and Evil at Heart — have all been New York Times bestsellers. Also the author of Confessions of a Teen Sleuth, a parody based on the life of Nancy Drew, and several nonfiction titles, Chelsea was born in Iowa, raised in Bellingham, Washington and now lives in Portland, Oregon, with her family.

For more information about the author please visit her website, follow the author on Facebook and Twitter.

My sincere gratitude to Chelsea Cain and FSB Media Associates for making this post possible. My review of The Night Season will be up this month.

Guest Author Michelle Moran

MADAME TUSSAUD: The Woman

When most people hear the name Madame Tussaud, the first thing that comes to mind are the eerily lifelike waxworks which crowd her museums throughout the world. But who was the woman behind the name, and what was she like in the flesh?

Madame Tussaud’s story actually began in 18th century Paris. While most people know her from her famous museum in London, it was in France, on the humble Boulevard du Temple, where Marie first got her start as an apprentice in her uncle’s wax museum, the Salon de Cire. At the time, the Boulevard du Temple was crowded with exhibits of every kind. For just a few sous a passerby might attend the opera, watch a puppet show, or visit Henri Charles’ mystifying exhibition The Invisible Girl. The Boulevard was a difficult place to distinguish yourself as an artist, but as Marie’s talent grew for both sculpting and public relations, the Salon de Cire became one of the most popular attractions around. Suddenly, no one could compete with Marie or her uncle for ingenious publicity stunts, and when the royal family supposedly visited their museum, this only solidified what most showmen in Paris already knew — the Salon was an exhibition to watch out for.

But as the Salon’s popularity grew, so did the unusual requests. Noblemen came asking for wax sculptures of their mistresses, women wanted models of their newborn infants, and – most importantly – the king’s sister herself wanted Marie to come to Versailles to be her wax tutor. While this was, in many ways, a dream come true for Marie, it was also a dangerous time to be associated with the royal family. Men like Robespierre, Marat, and Desmoulins were meeting at Marie’s house to discuss the future of the monarchy, and when the Revolution began, Marie found herself in a precarious position. Ultimately, she was given a choice by France’s new leaders: to preserve the famous victims of Madame Guillotine in wax, or be guillotined herself.

Madame Tussaud: A Novel of the French Revolution is the story of Marie’s life during one of the most tumultuous times in human history. Her survival was nothing less than astonishing, and how she survived makes for what I hope is a compelling read.


Title: Madame Tussaud: A Novel of the French Revolution
Author: Michelle Moran
Publisher: Crown
Publication Date: February 15, 2011
Hardcover: 464 pages
ISBN: 978-0307588654
Genre: Fiction, Historical

To learn more about Michelle Moran, her book or today’s release of Madame Tussaud please visit the author’s website and blog.

My gratitude to Michelle Moran for writing this post for Rundpinne. I shall be reviewing Madame Tussaud shortly.

Unbridled Books Holiday Cheer: Day 4

Unbridled Books asked authors to share who they would like to have dinner with or to share favourite recipes and over the next few days I will be sharing four of these with my readers. Two authors I have read, reviewed and highly recommend and the other author I anxiously looking forward to reading.

Today’s submission is from Pamela Thompson, author of Every Past Thing which I have yet to read.

Moorish Orange Cake
In theory, this dessert recipe may horrify some people: How good can a cake be if it’s made without flour or butter? And for the holidays? Though it’s true I would never have found this recipe if my son were not a celiac, that’s not the reason it’s become our celebratory staple. It’s easy to make (if you have a food processor) and its use of the entire orange—rind and pulp—is just so cool. This is my simplified version of Ariana Bundy’s, from the book Sweet Alternative. The only hard thing about it is remembering that it takes an hour to cook the orange first—but you could do that the day before you make it, too.
1 orange
1½ cups ground almonds (we grind ours in a coffee grinder but you can buy prepared)
½ tsp baking powder
pinch of salt
3 eggs
1 cup sugar (I used unrefined)
1 tsp vanilla (or almond) extract

Put the orange in a pot and cover with water. Bring to a boil, then reduce to a simmer and cook for one hour. Let it cool. Cut the orange in half and remove any enormous seeds. (Or, you can forget to do this, which I’ve gotten away with.) Put in a food processor and whiz until you have beautiful pale orange paste.
Preheat oven to 350. Butter an 8-inch springform tin, line the bottom with baking parchment, butter and flour and set aside. (If you are trying to keep this gluten-free, as I am, dust instead with rice or potato starch or tapioca starch or corn starch: anything else!)
Sift together ground almonds, baking powder, and salt. In another bowl, whisk eggs, sugar, and extract until pale and yellow: “ribbon stage.” Fold in the orange puree and then the almond mixture. Pour into prepared tin and bake for 40-50 minutes. Let it cool in the tin. It’s a very, very moist cake (depending, I suppose, on the size of your orange), so be gentle with it. Yummy with whipped cream.

Pamela Thompson is the award-winning author Every Past Thing published by Unbridled Books.


Title: Every Past Thing
Author: Pamela Thompson
Publisher: Unbridled Books
Publication Date: September 29, 2007
Hardcover: 336 pages
ISBN: 978-1932961393
Genre: Fiction

My sincere gratitude to Unbridled Books as well as author Pamela Thompson for allowing me to share this Holiday Cheer with my readers.

Unbridled Books Holiday Cheer: Day 3

Unbridled Books asked authors to share who they would like to have dinner with or to share favourite recipes and over the next few days I will be sharing four of these with my readers. Two authors I have read, reviewed and highly recommend and the other author I anxiously looking forward to reading.

Today’s submission is from Greg Michalson Co-Publisher of Unbridled Books as well as a respected and talented writer.

Single-serving Nonfat Chocolate Bundt Cakes

Vegetable oil spray
1 c. nonfat plain yogurt
1/4 c. egg whites or liquid egg substitute
1 c. purified water
1 T. apple cider vinegar
1 T. pure vanilla extract
2 c. cake flour
1/3 c. unsweetened cocoa
2 tsp. baking soda
1 c. sugar or Splenda for baking

Serves 1

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Generously coat mini-Bundt pans with Pam.
In a large bowl, combine yogurt, egg whites, water, vinegar and vanilla.
Add flour, cocoa, baking soda and sugar,
Beat with an electric mixer for approximately 3 minutes, until thoroughly combined.
Pour mixture into pan and bake 35-45 minutes or until a wooden toothpick comes out clean.
Let cool 10 minutes, then remove from pan.

Serve with toppings as for banana split: Chocolate /caramel syrup, mandarin oranges, red and green maraschino cherries, pineapple, nuts Cool Whip – Let guests build their own desert on the cake.

Greg Michalson is, with Fred Ramey, Co-Publisher of Unbridled Books. He is the author of numerous prize-winning short stories and articles, his work has been mentioned in Best American Short Stories and the Pushcart Prizes.

My sincere gratitude to Unbridled Books as well as Greg Michalson for allowing me to share this Holiday Cheer with my readers.