Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Marcy McCreary--The Summer of Love and Death

DEBORAH CROMBIE: Woodstock. One word. That's all most of us have to hear to immediately envision one of the defining cultural events of a generation. I was too young to go to Woodstock, but old enough to think it was all incredibly cool and romantic. How I would have loved to have had a bird's eye view of the festival.

Author Marcy McCreary has given us better than that, however, in her new novel THE SUMMER OF LOVE AND DEATH, a dual timeline story set in 1969 and in 2019. Here's Marcy to explain!


MARCY McCREARYOn Friday August 15, 1969, my mom took me and my twin sister to the (now-defunct) Catskills Game Farm. If you know anything about that location and that date, you’ll pretty much guess what happened next. Yup, we got stranded on the road along with hundreds of thousands of hippies on their way to the Woodstock Music & Art Fair. I was six years old at the time and being stuck in that traffic jam pretty much sums up my personal experience with Woodstock.

But that memory stuck with me, and even inspired scenes in my latest novel, The Summer of Love and Death. But my stuck-in-traffic experience was not going to cut it for truly understanding what went down during those three days of peace and love. And so my research journey began.

As you can well imagine, there is plenty of information about the Woodstock festival on the Internet (the bands, the crowds, the ticketing fiasco), but there is next to nothing about how security was handled and the role of law enforcement at Yasgurs Farm in Bethel, New York, where the festival took place. What was there felt incomplete, and I suspected, not 100% accurate. To authentically render the novels flashback scenes, what I really needed was a firsthand account of policing at Woodstock and the surrounding area.

For my earlier novels, I had no trouble finding and interviewing detectives, lawyers, doctors, and forensics specialists who could answer my questions or provide background on a particular subject matter. What were the chances of tracking down one of the three hundred NYPD police officers who worked at the festival? Felt like I was in slim-to-none territory.

And then luck stepped in.

In the fall of 2022, while at a writer’s conference, I chatted up fellow writer Gregory Renz about my manuscript and he thought he might know someone who could provide some insight. A few weeks later, Greg put me in touch with Nick Chiarkas, an ex-NYPD cop (and crime writer!) who was one of the 300 “Peace Force” cops at Woodstock. 




Nick and I talked for hours about the security apparatus and his personal experiences at the event. In addition to describing how law enforcement handled the crowds, kept the peace, assisted in medical emergencies, Nick regaled me with personal anecdotes that I have woven into the story (with his blessing). Meeting Nick felt fateful, and I’m grateful for his contribution to the novel.



The Summer of Love and Death
is a dual timeline murder mystery—2019 and 1969—set in the Catskills featuring a father-daughter detective team. Detective Susan Ford is investigating a murder that is eerily similar to her dad’s first case as a detective. Detective Will Ford’s chapters are set in 1969, with the historical events of that year unfolding around him—the Apollo moon landing, the Miracle Mets, the Vietnam War protests. It was fun to incorporate these events within the context of his scenes, get his take on them, and see how they influenced his worldview. And although his chapters are dark (he’s investigating a serial murder!), Will’s optimism and idealism mirror the sentiment of that era’s generation.

If you could go back in time and attend Woodstock, would you? Which band(s) would you want to see? Would you skinny dip?


DEBS: Oh, oh, can I just cheat here?? I love Marcy's questions! 

Even as a romantic teenager, I was a little creeped out by the idea of the crowds, so not sure I would want to be magically there. But I would love to experience it vicariously! The bands! I would love to have seen (and did see some in concert):

Hendrix. The Who. Joplin. Jefferson Airplane. Crosby, Stills, and Nash! But you know which one really jumped out at me? Country Joe and the Fish. Who grew up in the late sixties who couldn't sing Joe McDonald's "I Feel Like I'm Fixin' to Die?"

Oh, and skinny dipping. Yeah, sure, if I could look like I did when I was seventeen:-)

Here's a list of the bands for your perusal.


Marcy McCreary is the author of The Disappearance of Trudy Solomon, a Silver Falchion finalist for Best Investigator Mystery and The Murder of Madison Garcia, a Society of Voice Arts and Sciences winner for Best Audiobook—Mystery. The Summer of Love and Death is the third book in her Ford Family Mystery Series, released in August 2024. She graduated from The George Washington University with a B.A. in American literature and political science and pursued a career in marketing and communications. She lives in Hull, MA with her husband Lew. She is an active fundraiser for the Alzheimer’s Association. 

The Summer of Love and Death

Detective Susan Ford and her new partner, Detective Jack Tomelli, are called to a crime scene at the local summer stock theater where they find the director of Murder on the Orient Express gruesomely murdered—naked, face caked in makeup, pillow at his feet, wrists and ankles bound by rope. When Susan describes the murder to her dad, retired detective Will Ford, he recognizes the MO of a 1969 serial killer . . . a case he worked fifty years ago.

Will remembers a lot of things about that summer—the Woodstock Festival, the Apollo 11 moon landing, the Miracle Mets, the Vietnam War protests—yet he is fuzzy on the details of the decades-old case. But when Susan and Jack discover the old case files, his memories start trickling back. And with each old and new clue, Susan, Jack, and Will must narrow down the pool of suspects before the killer strikes again.

90 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Marcy, on your new book . . . I know Woodstock was a big deal, but you had me at Apollo 11 Moon Landing and now I can't wait to read the book and discover how it all relates!

    Would I like to go back in time to attend Woodstock? Considering the crowds of people that were there and how I don't do too well in big crowds like that, I don't think so [and, no, I wouldn't go skinny-dipping, either] . . .

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    1. Thank you Joan! It was crowded -- and I think between the traffic jams and the crammed-together bodies, I can see how it would be overwhelming.

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  2. That's great you got to interview someone with first hand knowledge. And congrats on your new book.

    Not sure I'd want to actually visit Woodstock if I had the chance. I just don't think it's something I would enjoy.

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    1. I didn't think I would ever find someone -- so very lucky on that count.

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  3. MARCY: Congratulations on your new book!

    I have never been to such a huge multi-day concert like Woodstock, but that lineup is epic!
    Janis Joplin, Richie Havens - gone too soon
    Joan Baez, CCR, and the Band also play my type of music.

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    1. I love all the bands that played there. I'm a huge Grateful Dead fan, so that would have been a treat for me!

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  4. Marcy, the new book sounds fabulous, and how wonderful you found a primary source to interview.

    I might have gone to Woodstock if I hadn't been a high school student in southern California, and I certainly did my share of skinny dipping a few years later. (And I think I just figured out Debs and I are the same age!)

    All those iconic bands and singers: Joplin, Baez, Creedence, the Dead, Crosby Stills and Nash - wow.

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    1. Thank you Edith! If I was sixteen instead of six, I would have definitely gone. I love rock concerts and music festivals!

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    2. Yes, Edith, I think we are!. I would have been a highschool junior in '69, except that I'd dropped out the year before. If I'd been braver I could probably have run away to Woodstock with some of my older hippie friends. But Dallas is a long way from upstate NY!

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  5. I never went to Woodstock but liked the idea of it. Like Joan, I don't like large crowds. What I would have loved was the musical line-up. So many of my favorites. A few years later, late
    seventies, I think, a great movie - documentary - came out that did a good job of giving you the experience: terrific photography throughout scenes of the event, performances, etc.It may even have been called Woodstock.

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    1. I highly recommend the documentary as well. Really captured the spirit and moment.

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    2. I can't believe I've never seen the documentary. Wonder where it is available...

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    3. I think you can "rent" it on Prime Video.

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  6. Meanwhile, congratulations on your book. It definitely sounds like a book I'd like. My husband and I are out of town for a few days - he had surgery, and here in Portugal they don't send patients home as quickly as in the U.S. But when we get home I plan to order this.

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    1. Oh, Elizabeth, how is he doing? I hope everything went smoothly and that he is recovering nicely. Sending him good wishes from across the Atlantic!

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    2. Judy, thank you so much. He had it Monday and it went very well. Surgeon said he is fine. I've seen him twice in ICU, once asleep, once awake briefly. Today they are moving him to recovery and I can share his room. They take wonderful care here.

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    3. Thank you Elizabeth. Sending good wishes to you husband!

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    4. Glad for the good news, Elizabeth!

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    5. So glad to hear your husband is doing well, Elizabeth, and very impressed with the health care you're getting in Portugal!

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  7. Wow, I am flashing on that summer. I had just graduated from UCONN and spend the summer in California at Clairemont College, otherwise, I might have been there. My brother went. We recognized him sitting naked in a circle passing around a few joints in the PBS documentary that was aired sometime in the 90's. My son came into the kitchen where the TV was on and said, "Mom, is that Uncle Robby?" I probably wouldn't have gotten totally naked in that crowd back then, although I did occasionally skinny dip.

    Being stuck in traffic up there must have been brutal for twin six-year-olds. We went to the Catskill Game Farm every summer in the 1980's when our kids were young. The photos are hilarious!

    I am going to look for your series. It sounds like something I will really enjoy reading. Thanks Debs. You are my guru.

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    1. Hmm, my cousin's name is Judy Singer. My mom's maiden name also. I heard that lots of naked people were roaming around! Not sure I would have stripped down to my birthday suit at a concert (although I have gone skinny dipping with a small group of friends). The photos were taken at Mystery To Me bookstore in Madison, WI where I met up with Nick for a book event there. He lives in that area now.

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    2. Marcy, so sorry. My comment about hilarious photos was not about the pictures you included today of your meeting with Nick, but our family photos of my kids being mobbed by deer and goats at Catskill Game Farm. I apologize for not making that clear. Your photos with Nick are excellent! It must have been incredible to get his first hand account of Woodstock!!

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    3. Marcy, I know of 4 other women and girls in my area named Judy Singer. My husband's family is small but there are many families around here named Singer. My maiden name is just as common and so is my mother's maiden name.

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    4. That's funny about the photos comment. Now that I look at your comment in context it makes more sense that you were talking about your photos! LOL! I'm pretty sure that "Singer" was not my family's original name (on my mother's side). That side of the family emigrated from Poland at the turn of the century.

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    5. What a great story about your brother, Judy!

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  8. While the whole "Free Love" aspect of Woodstock might've been appealing to me at one point, being around that many dirty hippies is not something I would ever consider. Hell, even now when there are way better sanitation and security measures in place I wouldn't want to go to any of the festivals that I know I'd enjoy musically. So no, I wouldn't want to go back and be at Woodstock '69.

    However, I would've liked to see some of the bands on the list. From Day 1 I would've loved to see Sweetwater (saw a movie about the band so seeing them live would've been great).

    From Day 2 - Santana for sure. Of course, since he's still recording and touring, that's actually still possible. Also, Creedence Clearwater Revival, Janis Joplin, The Who.

    From Day 3 - Jimi Hendrix

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    1. Sweetwater was supposed to open the concert, but they were stuck at LaGuardia Airport, and then in traffic. Ritchie Havens (who was supposed to go on next) played for three hours in their stead. Not sure if Sweetwater even played. Will have to look into that.

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    2. According to my research, Sweetwater was supposed to be the opening act, but never made it to Woodstock. They got stuck at LaGuardia and then in traffic. Ritchie Havens ended up playing for three hours waiting for them to arrive. When he ran out of his own songs, he played Beatles songs.

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    3. I was watching an interview I found with Joe McDonald yesterday, and he said he was dragged on stage to fill in for another delayed act. He did the Fish cheer and the Fixin' to Die Rag, and had a huge response from the crowd. It was the first time he'd performed without the rest of the band and jumpstarted his solo career. He also credits that as the beginning of the acceptance of the F word in popular culture--whatever you may think about that:-)

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  9. This book does sound fun but I am definitely glad I wasn't there! The crowds, the weather, the lack of plumbing - triple ugh! Can you imagine if we'd all been following it on CNN or social media? Well, I was only 8 so I was oblivious until many years later. I will ask my mother what she thought at the time.

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    1. Rained the entire time, sun broke on Monday morning when Jimi Hendrix hit the stage at 9am. Even with all the negatives, I think I would have gone! I've attended my fair share of Grateful Dead concerts and music festivals and it's a vibe I really love.

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    2. The weather was crazy for sure. Rained (poured) most of the weekend. Sun broke out Monday morning when Jimi Hendrix took the stage at 9am.

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    3. That must have seemed like divine intervention!

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    4. For those that stuck around they got the sun and an iconic Jimi experience!

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  10. Congratulations on publication of The Summer of Love and Death, Marcy! The story sounds fascinating. I love dual timeline books!

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    1. Thanks Brenda! I also love dual timeline books, which is why all my books have a past/present storyline.

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  11. Jay, Santana just played a concert here in Cincinnati, and we could actually hear some of it from our back porch! We live uphill two miles from Riverbend, more like a mile as the crow flies, and the sound travels sometimes. They're one of my favorites, now, but then I would have been more interested in CCR, The Who, Sly and the Family Stone, and Janis, of course. The playlists bring back so many memories!

    We know several people who were at Woodstock, including my husband's twin brother, who went with three of their (and my) friends in a VW Bug. Even today they're mad at my BIL for insisting on leaving early, because they missed hearing Hendrix, who played last. It was only a year later that he died.

    No, I would not have gone. Crowds like that wear me out, and I'm far too practical to want to share meager toilet facilities with hundreds of thousands of drunk and stoned people, let alone trying to be comfortable in all that mud. As for skinny dipping, only with my best guy, and only when I was sure there was no one else around. I'm pretty sure one of my high school girlfriends went, but I never heard from her again after that summer. She was ripe for the hippie life, and I suspect she would have happily gone flower child somewhere.

    Marcy, love the juxtaposition of the two crimes, fifty years apart. We're in our mid-70's now, but I can easily see the same person committing murder a half a century later. Brilliant idea.

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    1. The original projection was for only 50,000 attendees, so many people went thinking it would be a manageable crowd. But when 400,000 showed up -- that's when things got crazy! A lot of people left on Sunday (Hendrix ended up going on Monday morning). But according to Nick, there was still a good-sized crowd there to see Hendrix. Maybe it's the same perp...but maybe...it isn't! You'll have to read the book to find out!

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    2. The idea of 400,000 people in that space is just staggering.

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  13. It sounds like a wonderful book! I will definitely look for it. And I love that you found and interviewed a police officer who was at Woodstock. Definitely a different perspective from that of a concert-goer. I was a little too young for Woodstock, and while the music appeals, the rest of the chaos doesn't. I would have loved to see young Joan Baez, Janis Joplin, the Grateful Dead, CCR, Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young. I definitely would have skinny-dipped. It was something I did regularly back in the day.

    I have gone to the Vancouver (BC) Folk Festival--the first time we slept out on the beach and were quite bedraggled by the end, I also attended the huge Bob Dylan/Eric Clapton (plus much more!) concert outside London in 1978. We somehow managed to get to the very front, so we were in danger of being trampled at times.

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    1. It was truly Kismet finding Nick. I was chatting up another author at Bouchercon, and he knew Nick was on the "Peace Force" at Woodstock. I mean, what are the chances? My adult kids go to a lot of music festivals--most are very well run, but at the last Boston Calling, the crowd for Chappell Roan got dangerously out of control.

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    2. Gillian, I'll be that London festival was something!

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    3. Debs, it was amazing--at a place called Blackbushe aerodrome In Surrey. We took a train to get there. They estimate the crowd at 250,000.

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  14. What a great backstory! And how fortunate you were to connect with with Nick Chiarkas. Count me in the crowd that hates crowds and I’m always worried about where my next toilet will be so no I would never go ever ever ever to a concert like Woodstock.

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    1. The toilet thing would definitely freak me out now. But when I was a teen, not sure I would have thought too hard on that aspect of it.

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  15. Even if I had been of age instead of a measly 7 years old in 1969, Woodstock just wouldn’t have been my scene, man.
    I am interested in reading your book though. Adding it to my goodreads.

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  16. Just preordered - cannot wait to read this book.

    I was at Woodstock, live, in the flesh, sometimes showing more of the flesh than should have been exposed, but from a very different perspective. I was dating one of the doctors who worked the medical tent. I had no medical experience beyond first aid - care for a band aid - so I was a free-spirited agent. It was amazing. Something I will never forget. I'll be curious for the peace keeper's point of view. I don't remember much bad going on. Everyone got along, no fights (although I'm sure there were with that many people), certainly no murders. I do seem to remember a woman going into labor and delivering. Now that would be a birth certificate to cherish! It was a golden time - or maybe that's just memory.

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    1. Thank you Kait! Wow! You were there. Jealous. According to my research, there is no evidence to support the claim of a birth at Woodstock and there were three deaths - two overdoses and one guy got run over by a tractor in the early morning hours while he slept in his sleeping bag (unseen by driver). So, if you know something about a birth, maybe there was one!

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    2. Wow, Kait! What an experience that must have been.

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    3. Wow, Kait!! What an experience!! That is so cool. (Sounding like a hippie, there.)

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    4. It was way cool - borderline groovy. Now there's a word you don't hear often anymore. I do remember an overdose. So sad, and so avoidable. I didn't know about the man in the sleeping bag. Awful. My recollection of labor and delivery could be quite incorrect, it's been a long time now, and it could have been another festival.

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  17. Welcome to Jungle Reds, Marcy!

    Congratulations on your new novel with dual time periods - 1969 and 2019. If I had a chance to time travel, I would Not be interested in Woodstock since I'm not a fan of crowds. Remembering the first time my class took the train (BART) to San Francisco and riding the Cable Car, it was very crowded and I was about four years old. Yes, I started school at the age of 2 years. And since I already am Deaf, I am not sure if the Cochlear Implants would work with time travel. Depends on if the electrics connected to battery recharging exists.

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    1. Thank you! Nice to be here! It seems that "the crowd" is what most people cite as the reason for NOT going to Woodstock. I'm not sure if I would be bothered by the crowds, but I sure would be freaked out by the lack of bathrooms and water/food.

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    2. Thank you! Great to be here! It seems the number one people cite for not wanting to go to Woodstock are the crowds! I'm fine with crowds, it's the lack of toilets and food/water that would have freaked me out.

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  18. Would I want to go to Woodstock? I hate crowds, so no. I handle airports and the occasional convention, ballgame, concert (which are rare) and such because I know what to expect, but Woodstock was an event that seems like no one was accurately prepared for so I'll stay home.

    Your book sounds fabulous. I need to check out the series.

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    1. This seems to be a consensus among Jungle Red Writer readers -- that the crowd would be a deterrent to attending. Thank you checking out the series! All three books are set in the Catskills where the old hotels used to operate (think Dirty Dancing and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel). I spent my all my summers at one of the hotels as my dad worked at The Hotel Brickman.

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    2. The organizers were expecting 50,000 attendees...400,000 showed up! Not sure that would happen today, but it was clear to organizers by Thursday (the day before the concert started) that they were in trouble. They chose to finish the stage and abandoned the construction of the ticket booth and fencing. The series takes place in the Catskills region where the old hotels used to be--think Dirty Dancing or The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. I spent all my summers there (from 2-19 years old) as my dad worked at The Hotel Brickman.

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    3. I love the background of the old Catskill hotels, Marcy. So interesting.

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  19. Not sure if anyone is seeing double replies from me. But on my end I'm noticing some of my replies disappearing after publishing, so answering for a second time.

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  20. This is SO great! I know it dates me, but I was in college when this happened, and I already had calendars of events and schedules--and I remember putting a line through some date squares with the annotation "Music festival?" And I think I still have that somewhere.
    But we did not go, and I am ETERNALLY grateful that we didn't. NO amount of fond memories would make up for that hideous muddy filthy mess.
    And yay Nick! Love him, and lucky--and wise--you! xxx Congratulations!

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    1. Finding Nick was like winning the lottery. Only 300 volunteer NYPD cops there, and I found one! And, he is such a great storyteller. If I was older in 1969, I think I would have wanted to go. Maybe it's the mystic of it that makes me say that now. But I loved going to concerts (still do), so I believe I would have made the trek.

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  21. Oh, and you all--Marcy is getting booted from comments by the weird spam filter--so she is going to hold off a while before she answers more. But she is reading--and loving--every single one!

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  22. Sorry Blogger is being difficult, Marcy! I'm trying to okay all your comments!

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    1. No worries! I think I have the hang of it now. Pausing between commenting so Blogger doesn't think I'm non-human.

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  23. I was 20 when I heard about Woodstock. I did want to go but fortunately I was on the West Coast and had no money! It would have been a nightmare with the crowds so I am glad I didn't go. The popular Burning Man in NW Nevada seems similar in the music, crowds, etc.

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    1. For all the things that could have gone wrong at Woodstock, it miraculously ended up not being a disaster. Two disastrous festivals were Woodstock '99 and Fyre Festival (2017). Poor planning and greedy promoters. But most music festivals these days are well organized with the right infrastructure in place. But the crowding can get scary.

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  24. Just for comparison, the annual attendance at the Glastonbury festival in Somerset is about 200,000 people, and Glastonbury has a huge infrastructure to support the crowds.

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  25. Congratulations on the book, Marcy. What a great twist of serendipity. I'm sure those interviews lent a lot of realism to the story.

    I think I'd skip the festival. I've never been big on crowds - not when I was younger and not now. But if I could hear some of the bands live without crowds, sure, I'd go for that.

    That's a hard pass on the skinny-dipping. Even when I had my sixteen-year-old physique.

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    1. Thanks Liz. Having Nick's input was key to helping me understand how law enforcement operated there, which was integral to the plot. I had to understand how local police interacted with the NYPD "Peace Force" in order to set up a twisty reveal!

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  26. I would have loved to see the bands, but acres of mud, trash, and too-few overflowing Port-a-potties? No, thank you.

    It's interesting - I feel like the 60s and 50s are having a real moment in novels, after a long period of neglect. Maybe in another ten-fifteen years there will be a thriving market for my I-was-there stories of the 1980s!

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    1. My stories take place in an upstate NY town that is 10 miles from Yasgur's Farm (the site of Woodstock), so I think it was inevitable that I would write a story that had a Woodstock connection. Because I have older characters (Detective Susan Ford is in her 50s and her dad is in his 70s), it worked!

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  27. This is a wow book for me. 1969 was so much more than festivals. I got married in March and was in Japan during Woodstock. I am here to tell y'all that a lot of hippies were wearing military uniforms back then. My festival was Monterey Pop. We couldn't go inside ~~my husband would have lost his security clearance ~~ but we did listen from the streets outside. My clearest memory is hearing the Who, and watching the astounding people. My age, they were, and seemed so much more open and innocent. Now looking to order your book Marcy. Thanks for bringing back memories.

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    1. From all the responses here, I think I just might write a novel that is solely set in the late sixties! Seems to be resonating with lots of folks.

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  28. I was in college then and that's my music! Still is. I didn't hear about Woodstock until it was over but that's a hard no about attending. What a mess. I'd love to have heard the bands but not in a sea of mud and people. I was talking about the moon landing with my husband the other day. I was home for the summer, glued to the TV with my family, watching that magical event. My future husband was on a hill in Vietnam with his unit.

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    1. Wow! And thank your husband for his service! Even though I was six, I remember watching the moon landing. My aunt and (future) uncle were studying at Columbia University in the late sixties and I remember visiting them during a huge campus anti-war protest.

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  29. I had just graduated from High School and would have dashed off with friends if there had been any way to go. A bit too young, and no money - so missed it.
    The subject alone just forces *wink * me to read this book.
    Thank you, Marcy, for your words about your experience researching your novel.
    (Heather S)

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    1. Thank you Heather for taking the time to read my post. This one was a fun one to research. Not just the Woodstock stuff, but also how a regional theater operates. For that, my primary source was a friend of mine who has performed in summer stock theaters, Broadway, off-Broadway, etc.

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  30. Hey, Marcy, fellow DeadHead here. I can't wait to read your books, especially this new one.
    I was too young and far away to go to Woodstock, but I remember desperately wanting to. Turns out my first big show was 3 years later, the Dead and the Allman Brothers at RFK stadium in DC. Tens of thousands as opposed to hundreds of thousands, and I felt like I'd found my tribe! Martha

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    1. My first Grateful Dead concert was at Radio City Music Hall (3 sets, first set acoustic) in October 1980. 💀 🌹 I even bought vintage clothing to wear at my book events!

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  31. This sounds amazing! What serendipity to meet Nick. As for Woodstock, I used to see the Grateful Dead (with Jerry) back in the day and those shows were crazy fun but I can’t imagine multiple days of shows.

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    1. I've seen my fair share of Dead concerts (with Jerry and without)! Even got arrested at a show in Baltimore (but that's a story for a different day). But the acts I would have loved to have seen live was Sly and the Family Stone and Janis Joplin.

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  32. Congratulations! This sounds great. I would have loved Woodstock. As a long time DeadHead and music festival addict, this is right up my alley.
    I would have loved to see Janis and Jimi!

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    1. Thank you Kate! I'm with you -- I would have loved to have been there (the crowds, the rain, and lack of toilets would not have deterred me if I was a teenager).

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  33. I am late to "the party"...a day late to be exact. So most likely my comment won't be read but that's ok. I still happily would love to leave a comment anyway because any references to the music scene of the sixties is always a thrill to me. I had just turned 19 the summer of the Woodstock Music Festival and still living at home. So sneaking out the bedroom window and disappearing for three days was never going to happen in my parents household. :) But word spread fast afterwards about the bands and musicians who were on that stage at Woodstock those three days...the most exciting for me being a group by the name of Santana. That festival put them on the map and the drum solo by their then 19 or 20 year old drummer in the middle of the song "Soul Sacrifice" is, of course, legendary. I still follow that drummer...Michael Shrieve...who is now 75 years old and still creating music. So many of our rock and roll icons from back then are still out there touring; music keeps us boomers young at heart. ;)

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    1. Better late than never! The music scene back then was pretty wild and I would have loved to have experienced it, but I was way too young.

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