JENN McKINLAY: If you know me at all, you know I have a soft spot for stories about libraries. Well, our today's guest Allison Brook (aka Marilyn Levinson) has given us an even better setting -- a haunted library! Take it away, Marilyn.
MARILYN/ALLISON: One reason why I love writing cozy series is because it gives me the opportunity to write about many subjects. Of course my characters and their story lines are my major concern. I love the excitement of setting up murders and sprinkling my plots with clues and red herrings. But writing cozy series also offers me the chance to explore other topics. Here are two I've included in BOOKED ON MURDER, the eighth and final book in my Haunted Library series.
My sleuth, Carrie Singleton, the head of programs and events at the Clover Ridge Library in Clover Ridge, Connecticut, has come across a centuries-old diary while helping the reference librarian put the library's historical collection in order. It was written by a woman named Verity Babcock, who lived in the sixteen hundreds and was hung as a witch. Verity Babcock's diary never existed because Verity Babcock is a character I created based on what I'd read about people who were accused of being witches. Between 1647 and 1663 of the 43 cases of witchcraft, 16 resulted in executions, mostly hangings. Or at least 34 were accused of witchcraft and 11 were hung. Numbers vary somewhat because of poor documentation. The first Connecticut hanging took place years before the Salem Witch Trials.
JENN: I was raised in CT, and I had no idea. Fascinating!
Carrie and other characters are outraged by what Verity had experienced when she was accused of witchcraft by a neighbor whose husband died after taking some of Vertity's herbal medicines. This woman had begged for Verity's help when her husband was deathly ill and had little chance of recovering. I explore the reasons why women and a few men were accused of witchcraft when witchcraft was a capital offense in the Colony of Connecticut. For years, relatives of victims and other concerned citizens tried to get these victims exonerated with no success. Finally, in May 2023, while I was writing this book, both the Connecticut House of Representatives and Connecticut State Senate voted in overwhelming numbers to exonerate 12 people who were convicted of witchcraft in the seventeenth century. I was delighted that that long overdue wrong had been righted, but for the purpose of my novel I took literary license and continued to write it as though the victims had yet to be pardoned.
A secret society is another topic I explored while writing BOOKED FOR MURDER. Carrie receives a formal invitation to attend a meeting of the Wise Women's Circle, a loosely formed organization in Clover Ridge. Carrie has never heard of the Wise Women's Circle, and she is astonished to discover that many of the women she knows, including a few she is close to, are members. At the meeting she learns that the group's mission statement is to help women in trouble or danger; women who suffer in painful silence.
Carrie has been invited to join the group because she has helped many people. She is shocked to learn the Wise Women sometimes resort to "other" methods to achieve their ends, and has to think good and hard whether or not to join.
How about you, Reds and Readers, would you join a secret society?
About Marilyn: A former Spanish teacher, Marilyn Levinson writes mysteries, novels of suspense, and books for kids. Her books have received many accolades. As Allison Brook she writes the Haunted Library series. Death Overdue, the first in the series, was an Agatha nominee for Best Contemporary Novel in 2018. Other mysteries include the Golden Age of Mystery Book Club series, the Twin Lakes series, and Giving Up the Ghost. Her suspense, Come Home to Death, was released in April, 2024, and her suspense, Dangerous Relations, will be republished in 2025.
Marilyn's juvenile novel, Rufus and Magic Run Amok, was an International Reading Association-Children's Book Council Children's Choice and has recently come out in a new edition, followed by Rufus and the Witch's Drudge, the second book in the Rufus series. And Don't Bring Jeremy was a nominee for six state awards. Her YA horror, The Devil's Pawn, came out in a new edition in January, 2024.
Congratulations, Marilyn, on your newest book . . . it's always bittersweet, though, when a wonderful series comes to an end . . . .
ReplyDeleteWould I join a secret society? I'd have to give that a great deal of thought [mostly over what the society is about and why is it a secret], but I think I'd be likely to decline . . . .
I probably would say no, too.:)
DeleteCongratulations again on the new book! I'd never heard of the Connecticut witch trials. Wow.
ReplyDeleteI doubt I would join a secret society, but I've never had the chance, so who knows?
Hi, Edith, and thanks. I find with every book I write I learn something new.
DeleteCongratulations Marilyn on your latest and final book in your endearing series.
ReplyDeleteI don't think I would join a secret society.
Hi Dru! Somehow, I think there's always something ominous about a secret society.
DeleteMARILYN/ALLISON: Congratulations on your new book! I am sorry to hear this is the last book in the series.
ReplyDeleteI vaguely knew about witches & Salem witch trials but never heard about similar trials in CT. And that the government voted so recently to exonerate the 12 people who were convicted of witchcraft in the 17th century!
Your Wise Women's Circle's has a well-intended mission but I doubt that I would join such a society IRL.
Thank you, Grace. I felt it was time to end the series, but I still might write a few stories about my characters. I hate to think I'll never spend time with them again.
DeleteI've loved the Haunted Library series and look forward to reading this one!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Maren. The characters and the focus of this new series is quite diffeerent. I'm having so much fun writing the first book.
DeleteWelcome Marilyn/Allison! I love hearing about what you've made up based on what's real. For sure I'd join the secret society...unless we had to murder someone!
ReplyDeleteLucy, you murder people all the time...literally, of course. (snicker)
DeleteRoberta, Good for you on being venturesome enough to join a secret society. And congratulations on your latest book!
DeleteHi, Marilyn. Your series has a really good narrator. I think I may be one or two behind. I love the premise of this story and would consider joining a secret society. It would definitely depend upon their goals and their methods. Protecting women certainly sounds noble.
ReplyDeleteI was born and raised in Connecticut and do know about our history of witch trials, but no specifics. I also know that our legislature voted to exonerate them in 2023. There is a stigma attached to being a descendent of a convict even if no one remembers. If I remember correctly, a descendent of a convicted witch requested that the legislature take it up. Now, I am interested in how someone got something so seemingly obscure through our busy legislature during one of our very brief sessions. I'm going to see if one of my pals can give me a summary of how that came up.
"Connecticut, not just the weather can surprise you!" LOL
Judy, So many people have told me that Mia is a wonderful narrator. I've been meaning to contact her and tell her this. As for being a descendent of a convict: I was on a trip abroad some years ago and was chatting with a couple from Australia. Turns out he was a descendent of a convict—once a stigma but that turned 180 degrees and it became something to brag about.:)
DeleteI’m excited about this book! I have a probable ancestor who was accused and acquired more than once in the CT witch trials. Eventually she and her family moved to RI to escape persecution and the location of their graves are unknown. Fascinating story! I did some research and learned that most of the accusations were from a neighboring family who wanted my ancestors’ land. Go figure!
ReplyDeleteCathy, That was a common reason why neighbors accused someone of witchcraft, and I mentioned it in BOOKED ON MURDER. Sad, isn't it? How interesting that one of your ancestors was accused of being a witch. I'm glad she escaped.
DeleteCongratulations, Marilyn. Funny how a lot of the women (and men) accused of witchcraft owned property that was coveted by their accusers.
ReplyDeleteDon't think I'd join a secret society though.
Hi Liz, Oh, yes. I wonder how those people managed to live with themselves, knowing they were condemning a neighbor to death.
DeleteWelcome Marilyn/Allison! And happy book birthday! A mystery book about a haunted library is a book that I would want to read.
DeleteSo sad about the witch trials. Can you imagine how much society would have benefited from the wisdom of women if they were allowed to live in peace?
Absolutely, Diana. Those women were usually herbalists or had an important role in colony life.
DeleteJenn, Thank you for having me as your guest. And for finding that great illustration!
ReplyDeleteI think I'd be afraid to join a secret society. That said, there are situations in which being powerless but not alone can benefit the soul... so maybe. This was a fun and thought-provoking post. Thank you, Jungle Red, and thank you, Marilynn.
ReplyDeletePam,
ReplyDeleteSo glad you enjoyed it.
Congratulations on completing your series, Marilyn—a bittersweet achievement for sure. And Best of Luck with the 8th. As for joining a secret society? Depends on the group's goals.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Gay, for your good wishes. And thanks for weighing in on the secret society issue.
DeleteCongratulations on your book, Marilyn. It must feel bittersweet to complete a series. That's a fascinating back story about the CT witch trails--I'm looking forward to learning more. And I love the secret society question. I might join, depending on the situation and the goals.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Deborah. It is bittersweet to end a series, but I felt it was time to do so. I was happy to end it on a very positive note (a wedding) and to incorporate a few interesting side issues.
DeleteCongratulations, Marilyn. I'm going to read this one with tears in my eyes.
ReplyDeleteSecret society. Intriguing. I would consider it, but join. Hum.
Hi Kait, I know your feelings about the Haunted Library series and appreciate how much you care about it. Isn't a secret society kinda scary? Most of us are very hesitant or even reluctant to join one.
DeleteSo sorry to see this series go, but I understand every series has a natural ending. Thanks so much for joining us today, Marilyn!
ReplyDeleteJenn, Thank you so much for having me as your guest today. I feel my Haunted Library characters will always be with me.
DeleteLooking forward to the new series. Glad for the company kept with the old one ... a bit like life.
ReplyDeleteMaren, The new series is quite different but I hope you and other readers will find it endearing.
DeleteMy tastes are eclectic!
ReplyDeleteMarilyn, this sounds like such an interesting read. I have always been intrigued by the danger women faced with neighbors or others in the community accusing someone of being a witch and it being believed. You probably know author Kathleen Kent, whose first book The Heretic's Daughter told the story of Martha Carrier, one of the first women to be accused, tried, and hanged as a witch in Salem, Massachusetts. Kathleen is a descendant of Martha Carrier. And, now you give us Connecticut and its history. Katherine Howe is another good author for reading about witches, and she edited The Penguin Book of Witches.
ReplyDeleteKathy, No, I've never read either book. Thanks for mentioning them.
DeleteI probably would not join a secret society for one secrets are bound to get out, fear and jealousy could breed hatred of the group and whispers could get you arrested. Deborah
ReplyDeleteSuch wonderful ideas for another novel!!
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