Cover Designs - Which do you like better?
/My publisher has posted two cover designs for Secret Lives and Private Eyes. Please stop in and vote for your favorite. The book is slated to be released on June 20. Many thanks!
Click here to vote.
Mysteries with a Southern Accent
Crazy for Words is mystery author, Heather Weidner's blog on writing, reading, and anything that catches her interest.
My publisher has posted two cover designs for Secret Lives and Private Eyes. Please stop in and vote for your favorite. The book is slated to be released on June 20. Many thanks!
Click here to vote.
Recently, I was asked, "How much of your mysteries are based on real events or places?"
I do a mix of real and fiction in my short stories and novels. All of my city settings are real places. I tend to set my works in Virginia cities and counties because I write what I know. If a crime occurs, I make up that location's name. I wouldn't put a horrific or violent event at a real restaurant or store. But if you've been to the real cities, you'll recognize landmarks and street names.
I get ideas for crimes and capers from real cases, but I usually take liberties with the details. In my short story, "Washed up," a beat up suitcase washes up on Chick's Beach, and it's filled with some mysterious contents. Back in the 80s, there was a real case where suitcases filled with body parts did wash up on beaches on the East Coast. In my story, I thought it would be interesting for beachgoers to find something old and sinister in an unexpected place.
I carry a notebook with me wherever I go, and I am always jotting down names and interesting tidbits that might one day make their way to a story.
I base some of my characters on combinations of real people. I blend characteristics of several real people to make an interesting fictional person. And phrases that family and friends say frequently appear in my stories. I have two co-workers who keep asking me to make them villains. I haven't done that yet, but I do hint from time to time that unruly team members will end up in a dumpster in a future story.
I use friends and family member's names for minor characters. In Secret Lives and Private Eyes (out May 2016), my sleuth, Delanie Fitzgerald, gives herself all kinds of aliases in her investigations. These are usually names of friends and family. And every once in a while, you'll find police, EMTs, or FBI agents named after my favorite authors, rock stars, or actors.
One of my oddest writing moments happened when a woman with the same name as one of my main characters followed me on Twitter. What a fun surprise!
Dan Roam's Blah, Blah, Blah: What to Do When Words Don't Work is a great book on communication. He has wonderful suggestions for how to get your message across in communication, work sessions, and brainstorming events.
This is my favorite quote from Roam, "Words are magnificent. When used well, words help us think, make us feel, let us remember, tell us the truth, show us the way, help us understand, unravel the complex, gather us together, and give our lives meaning" (p. 27). All writers need to remember that. What you put on paper can be powerful.
Here's what else I learned...
Check out Roam's book. It's worth it.
I love Pinterest. It's my big electronic scrapbook for thousands of great pictures. I didn't get interested in the site until I ruptured my Achilles tendon, and I was stuck on the couch for months.
I have boards (the containers you create to group pictures) for crafts, DIY projects, funny memes, recipes, and places I've been or dreamt about.
Writers can use this social media platform to highlight their books.
1. Build a board for your book. Post pictures of what characters would look like, what actors you want to play them in the movie, locations where they visit, and things they like. I have a board for the anthology series that I'm a part of. It's Virginia is for Mysteries, and I have pictures of all the sites mentioned in the stories.
My author friend, Mary Miley, has a board for her 1920s mysteries with all the items from that era.
2. Build boards of your favorite books and authors.
3. Make boards for themes in your book (e.g. pets, historic sites, locales, fashion, foods, knitting, etc.) My writer friend, Mollie Cox Bryan, writes a scrapbooking-themed series. Her Pinterest boards are loaded with ideas and templates.
4. Create boards for your author events and upload photos of signings, panels, and workshops. Make sure to include links in the descriptions when you upload photos.
Let's connect on Pinterest. I can be found at: https://www.pinterest.com/crazyforwords13/
I have a signed contract for the publication of my debut mystery novel, Secret Lives and Private Eyes. It's slated to be published in May 2016. I'm also have a story, "Spring Cleaning," in Virginia is for Mysteries Volume II that comes out in February.
The novel has been years in the making. I stared this about three years ago after burying two other manuscripts in the bottom of my desk drawer.
And now the fun really begins...
I attended two panels at Bouchercon 2015 on the importance of setting to your novel, especially your mystery. Donna Andrews moderated "Crime Beyond the White Picket Fence" with her panel, Tom Franklin (who tells the funniest stories about armadillos), Maya Corrigan, LynDee Walker, and Judy Penz Sheluck. Katrina N. Holm's moderated, "Danger and Death in Suburbia,' with Greg Hemen, Mary Sutton, and Lori Roy. Both groups emphasized the importance of where you locate your story. They also focused on smaller communities, rather than large urban areas.
Crime set in small towns are more personal than those committed in the bigger cities. And here's why...
1. In small towns, everyone knows everyone else.
2. Small towns are surrounded by swamps, forests, and farms, all great places to hide a body.
3. Small police forces often don't have quick turn-arounds on forensic investigations. The body often has to be sent to a larger city, and that gives the amateur sleuth some time to figure out the crime before the expert.
4. Murder in a small community is more frightening. Crime destroys the trust of a close-knit group.
5. Suburbia used to be the ultimate goal of the American dream. This changed with the economic downturn, and it's led to the rise of crime outside of the urban areas.
6. The suburbs are often the femme fatal that lure people with the promise of the perfect life.
7. Small towns and suburbs are where the families and the secrets live.
And secrets are always key to a good mystery.
I had the great pleasure of meeting Julie Rivett (Dashiell Hammett's granddaughter) and Richard Layman (a Hammett biographer) recently at Bouchercon. Their talk of on one of my favorite mystery authors was a dream come true for mystery fans. I loved getting the business/historical perspective of his life juxtaposed to the family memories and stories.
Here are some tidbits of interest from their presentation...
1. Dashiell Hammett was a master of dialogue and his novels were cinematically structured. This made an easy transition for him when started writing for the movies.
2. Rivett and Layman have a new electronic book coming out in 2016 of Hammett's short stories. They appear in order of original publication. One story even has the original author's character and plot notes included.
3. Hammett also wrote many stories that weren't in the detective genre.
4. Hammett's writing style was compact and concise, and that influenced the style and genre for novels that came after his.
5. Hammett's philosophy was to get out of the way of the story. He believed that the characters told the story. Good advice for writers.
6. The family donated Hammett's papers and documents to the University of South Carolina. This is a huge opportunity for literary research. And it preserves the legacy of Dashiell Hammett for years to come.
Joan Schulhafer skyped with our Sisters in Crime - Central Virginia chapter recently and provided great information about publicizing yourself as a writer and your book. Here are nine things I learned from her presentation:
1. Authors need to balance their online and in-person presences. You need a mix of both.
2. You can't do everything, but get out and get involved.
3. Attend conferences and network with everyone.
4. Build your email list. It's valuable for authors.
5. Blogging is important. It's a way to keep your website fresh. Blog posts do not have to be deep, witty, or perfect.
6. Pictures are important. Take lots of pictures. Post pictures with your content.
7. Make sure that your biographies and other information are current on all the social media sites where you have accounts.
8. Authors needs to be on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google+, Instagram, and Pinterest. If your readers are younger, you need to be on Snap Chat.
9. Be polite on social media. Don't forget to thank those who help you.
Originally from Virginia Beach, Heather Weidner has been a mystery fan since Scooby Doo and Nancy Drew. She currently lives in Central Virginia with her husband and a pair of Jack Russell terriers.
Heather writes the Delanie Fitzgerald mystery series for readers who like humorous mysteries with a strong, female sleuth.
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