Monday, February 25, 2019

Storytellers

My mother and father were both storytellers. My mother told us her stories at bedtime and on rainy days when she needed to calm us down. We loved her stories. They were always about children out and about in their neighborhood, and the trouble they got into. The main character was a young girl named Naughty Mary, which she changed to Naughty Matilda later, after my older brother married a girl named Mary.

Naughty Mary and her friends got into trouble frequently. She was adept at imagining horrible things for them to do, and they were always found out. My sisters and I were aghast at what they dared to do, and knew the trouble we'd be in if we ever tried to do any of the things they did. Later, when we were too old for the Naughty Mary stories, she told us about her experiences growing up in a small city with two of her sisters. Because she felt responsible for her sisters when they were walking around their neighborhood, she always warned them about people they met who could possibly be a danger to them. I can only guess how she herself knew.

My father's stories were usually about what he did when he was young. No matter what he had done, his descriptions always made us laugh. As we got older he would tell us stories about his family life and the city where he lived. He and his friends owned bikes and would bicycle long distances to go swimming and fishing. On Sundays we would often go for rides and he would drive through the areas where he and our mother grew up, and point out the locations where some of his stories took place.

After I married my husband and we had a daughter, the day came when my mother would take care of her, and tell her and her cousins the naughty Matilda stories. It wasn't long before my husband started asking me about them, and I told him the history of my mother's stories.

A few years later, we were at the Yarmouth Clam Festival where we met an artist, Sherry Fowler, displaying her work. My husband got her card, and later, when I wasn't around, he called her. He told her about my mother's stories and asked her if she could make two dolls, a mother and a daughter. She agreed, and he gave them to me for a Christmas present. I was touched, and extremely pleased with the dolls. Every time I look at them, I think of my mother, and remember the extraordinary woman she was.

Sunday, February 17, 2019

Drained

The  publication of my last book drained me more than I expected. kdp (kindle direct publishing) at first wasn't too bad because I had made sure while writing my book to format it the way kdp wants it formatted for it to look good on a kindle ereader. The problems came later. Everything seemed to be just a tiny bit different than they were last year. Not a big thing usually, but one thing led to another and nothing seemed to interconnect with or be related to the next thing.

It's sort of like being instructed in jumping rope and they forget to tell you that you need a rope long enough but not too long, and leave you to figure it out. Then they forget to tell you that you have to swing the rope over your head with both hands but don't tell you or show you how exactly it's done. Think about it. I felt most of the time when reading their instructions they had left out a key item, and sure enough they had. I had to keep going back and re-reading everything while looking for that key word or phrase I may have missed the first, second or third time I read it. The last time I missed something I was ready to hit the publish button, but when I did, I would get an error message. Finally, I left it alone for a couple of days. I don't know if I thought little elves would come in and while I wasn't looking, make it all better, or I just couldn't stand to be that close and still fail.

Finally, I sat down one morning and and started going through the things I couldn't change when re-publishing. I found one thing in that list that I had changed. I went back to the page and while I was hovering over the box, a little message popped up, a message I had never seen before, telling me what I was supposed to do. I followed the instructions and BINGO!, I was able to publish my book.

It's had such an unsettling effect on me, I haven't been able to even think about writing the next book. I decided to take a short vacation and think about nothing except happy and fun things. Yesterday my daughter got married and we all had a great time, a happy and fun thing. Today my husband and I sat around and relaxed, played with the dog, watched a little TV, and just did what we felt like doing. Tonight I'm feeling much better. I just have to keep thinking about the good times.

MURDER BY THE DARK COVE OF DECEIT is now available on Amazon.com in both paperback and ebook.

Friday, February 1, 2019

A Noah Drinkwater Mystery, Book 2

Here is the description of my new book, MURDER BY THE DARK COVE OF DECEIT


Only someone intent on murder would choose Deanes Island near the Dark Cove of Deceit, and this one definitely had murder on his mind. The black water was the perfect cover for a body, and once the fishes had their feast, days would pass before the body would be found, if ever.

From the author of Murder Is Always Evil comes a story of a crime so heinous even “evil” can’t describe it.  A young man is brutally murdered and once again Police Chief Noah Drinkwater must begin a desperate hunt for the murderer before he kills again.

 It’s been just a few years since the second World War ended, and the residents of Fairhaven, Maine are starting to get their lives back to normal. No one wants to think about murder and mayhem, but news of the recent murder has spread like wildfire, and now they’re hearing rumors of villainous activity on the waterfront. Someone has invited crime to their peaceful town, and their uneasy thoughts are filled with terror.


Noah and his officers furiously conduct a search for suspects only to realize they’re looking for a murderer almost impossible to find. He may not even exist.

 But he does exist, and when they find him, they almost wish they hadn’t.




kdp for Amazon

Here I go again. I've started preparing my second book for publishing. I'm using a program called Kindle Create for formatting my book which is supposed to be crazy simple. Amazon puts all kinds of instructions on their website, but they're not helping. I've read them, watched videos, printed off copies so I can refer to their instructions, but I think I'm wasting my time. I'm shutting it down for the night and trying again tomorrow.

I need someone who can answer my questions, but the online help at kdp seem to be people who have never tried to use the program themselves. The answers they provide are vague at their best or downright irrelevant at their worse. I've never liked technology because it uses fabricated words that have no meaning. When I was working, I managed because we always had tech people around to help. Has anyone ever wondered why businesses always have tech people on their staffs? Simple answer? Nothing would ever get done or at least get done on time. The good part is these tech people never minded explaining how and why something was done. After I was given their help, I could usually manage on my own.

One word of advice to Amazon: Hire better people to explain to writers how to use your programs. The tech writers you have now never learned  how to explain what they know, or even how to write clear instructions. Fire them all and bring in some new people who care.
I hate disabusing our wild turkeys, but your staff techies are all TURKEYS!!