Tuesday, January 5, 2010

On Fan Mail



JAN: I'm sure I speak for us at Jungle Red when all I say we all love to get fan mail. Every correspondence is hugely appreciated. I, for one, am always amazed and touched that there are readers out there who take valuable time out of their days to write a note.

Maybe it's because I have a secret fantasy of teaching high school English, but an email I received recently from a fifteen year old boy from Toronto went straight to my heart. It made me think a bit about why we all write murder mysteries.

Eeshmam Munir is a student at the Scarborough Academy of Technological, Environmental and Computer Education in Toronto, who had read A Confidential Source, the first in my Hallie Ahern series. It started with a simple email: He wrote me to ask if the mayor, Billy Lopresti, or anyone from the Providence Police, was involved in the conspiracy which explains the murder. He added, "Can you please tell me before December 14th because I need to know before my class presentation."

I was so excited that I'm sure I went on and on -- with more detail than necessary explaining more than he wanted to know. But it really tickled me to think of a high school student an
alyzing my book. Thinking about what it all was supposed to mean.

Later, he wrote me back to thank me and sent along the pdf. file of the poster he made and presented to his class. I thought, it doesn't get any better than this. What a treat to see how someone else's imagination interprets your own imaginary characters and world??

Through later emails, Eeshmam said I could run his poster here, but being WAY more responsible and diligent than I ever am, asked me to cite the links where he got his art. (I run those at the bottom) Also, he asks that no one download his artwork from here. So no downloading.

The best part, for me, was that he also explained why he chose each image in the poster. The white sedan, for example, is in one of the earliest scenes, a getaway car for the murderer. It also turns up in later scenes and for another murder. That's why he put it against a dark background.

The woman in the middle is Eeshmam's idea of what my protagonist, Hallie would look like. As it turns out she looks a lot like the actress Anna Torv from the TV series Fringe, which is a big compliment to Hallie. She is holding a flashlight in this poster to symbolize "no matter what happens she will get to the truth."

The character to the left represents is the prosecutor Matt Cavanaugh, who is Hallie's love interest throughout the series. The man on the right is Hallie's confidential source, Leonard, the talk show host. Eeshmam says they are on either side of Hallie to symbolize their support for her 'honesty and bravery." (That comment alone made my writing career worthwhile.)

You can't read it here in the compressed image, but on the bottom he wrote: No one wants to know the ugly truth. This hits on the theme that no one in power wanted to own up to either the murder or the conditions that gave incentive for the murder.

And here Eeshman gets at why we write mysteries. Because in our worlds, we want to believe that although it's a struggle, the good guys will eventually expose the truth. That the flashlight will shine.

Okay, so this was my favorite fan letter ever, but I know there are a lot of writers out there who read this blog, so come on, now it's your turn: Tell us about your favorite fan letter. Or if you are a fan, tell us if and when you were compelled to send a fan letter.

Below are the attributions for the images used.

http://i2.paultan.org/mazda3/m3s1.jpg: White sedan.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Seal_of_Rhode_Island.svg: The seal of Rhode Island.

http://i38.tinypic.com/xn9t7t.jpg: Anna Torv, who stars at the show Fringe on FOX, as Hallie.

http://tv.yahoo.com/the-x-files/show/273/photos/9: The actor Mitche Pileggi in the X-Files series represents Leonard of Late Night.

http://l.yimg.com/l/tv/us/img/site/10/62/0000061062_20090910164904.jpg: This picture represents prosecutor attorney general Matt. It is Joshua Jackson, also from a FOX TV series Fringe.

http://www.wlcntv.com/media/uploads/articles/police_cruiser.jpg: This is the background picture the brick wall and a police cruiser light flashing.

And thanks again Eeshmam, for one of my very favorite Christmas presents this year!


Sunday, January 3, 2010



JAN: I received a beautiful pair of earrings from my sister-in-law on Christmas Day. Lucky I put them on and wore them that evening, because when I wore them Monday night, I lost one. I've lost so many things, I don't even get upset
anymore.

I try to tell myself that Matter Doesn't Just Disappear, but I don't believe it.
I actually think it's a conspiracy against me. As if the universe is stealing my valuables, or just messing with me mentally. Once I lost a diamond earring in my bedroom. I felt it fall off and immediately began the search. Bill and I searched the bedroom a dozen times. We still haven't found it.

But I've come to think that there are certain things that are just eminently lose-able. Earrings are obviously an issue for me. But when the kids were little, it was pacifiers. I'd have a dozen of them, but whenever I desperately needed one, I couldn't find any. Then I'd come across three under the sofa cushion when the baby was sleeping peacefully with three more of them next to her in the crib.

Now, it's guitar picks. I have a ca
rved box in the living room where they belong. They are always gone. And none in the guitar case either, or stuck in the strings. Two days later, I'll find one in my son's pockets when
I'm doing laundry. Or in my wallet. Or on the window sill.

Reading glasses?? Come on, don't
you secretly think there's someone out there removing them from your nightstand, coffee table or purse?? Or are there other things in your life that have a way of slipping behind the shelves?

RO: I can't believe you're blogging about this because this was going to be my next rant. No one likes losing anything, but I HATE it. And I have a hard time shutting up about whatever it is that I've lost - an expensive pen, my sister's two necklaces which I lost in 2005 and always wore together (one, yes, two?..I smell conspiracy.)

And I never stop expecting to find the missing item. I can remember moving out of an apartment many years ago and thinking - ha! I'll finally find that earring! Didn't happen. These are not misplaced items, these are the well and truly gone, beamed to another planet, never to be seen again things. How does this happen?

Last year on tour, I was at the airport in Philly and couldn't find my driver's license - my only picture ID. Somehow I finessed the security guards, got on my flight and had my husband overnight my passport to my hotel. But it drove me nuts. how could I lose my driver's license? Six months later I found it. It had slipped between the lining and the leather of the bag I was using. THAT'S why you never stop looking.

Now, whenever I'm looking for something and ask my husband if he knows where the item is, he says "it's with your sister's necklaces." Do you think he means "shut up, already"?

HANK: Ah, this is hard. I agree, nothing is really lost. It can't be lost, it exists. Still, if you don't have it, it's lost to you. And it's so frustrating, because you keep going back to the time when it wasn't lost--and
how did it cross over into the land of the lost? And why didn't you stop it?

And how about my Mom's famous question: Where did you lose it?

Still, when its not our own stuff, isn't there a women-can-usually-find it thing? I mean this morning, Jonathan said: Where's the mayonnaise? I said, fridge, door, lower left. No, it isn't, he said, I can't find it. You do not need me to tell you what happened next.

(But I know that's different than losing earrings and pens. Last night at din
ner, no two nights ago, I wore mismatched earrings, because on the costume-jewelry level, they are all I have left. Not kidding.)

HALLIE: Mismatched socks. Mismatched gloves. I have an entire basket where they live because hope springs eternal that the missing mates will show up. I wish there was a way to put a expiration date on the orphans so I’d know when to throw one out.

And what about that horrible feeling when you realize you’ve lost your purse? I remember having the exact same feeling when I went to the mall for the first time in years WITHOUT a daughter in tow. I knew something was missing, but it took me awhile to figure out what it was. Some things don’t go missing, they just grow up.

ROBERTA: yes, I lose earrings because they're too uncomfortable to keep on for long and soon the squeezing pain outweighs the urge to be stylish. I find them in pockets, in my car, in my husband's suit jacket... Yes, Hank, in our household we say "use your looking skills" when something is hidden in plain sight.

I will never forget years ago my grandparents came to visit me. They'd been in their room a long time so I finally went to check. They had lost their keys and were going through every item in their suitcase, frantic to find them. I pointed out that they'd pinned them to one of the pockets so they wouldn't get lost. Scary, scary, scary to think I'm closer to that than I ever could have believed!

Oh, and more way to lose things--on my computer when I save them to the wrong file. Very, very nervewracking...

JAN: So have you been losing stuff all your life? Do you cede your possessions to the universe or are you like Ro, expecting that if you just keep searching a little bit longer, you'll find it?

Friday, January 1, 2010

A Preview of Coming Attractions!

HANK: Thanks so much for the kind words about yesterday's New Years Eve poem! Next year, more verses. I’m already keeping notes on rhymes for next year: Lesa (piece-a cake?) and Rhonda (easy one. Quite fond a).

A funny thing happened on the way to the 2010 preview. I thought it would be fun, you know, to compile a list of upcoming books and stories from the friends of Jungle Red. Fun to see the coming attractions. So I asked around, requesting just the basics and figuring I’d just put it all together, slap it on the blog, and have a fun look into he future.

But it turned out to be more than that. As I sat at the computer, copying and pasting and downloading and alphabetizing, it became more than an edit session. Forgive me for being sappy, but it became a lovely ritual. Here were so many peoples’ hopes and hard work and years of devotion and persistence. Each time I made name bold, or put a title in caps, I thought of the person who created it. How often they’re thought about it, how they certainly struggled , and how excited they must be to have their pub date draw near.

It started as a kind of little gift to you—a way to let fellow authors have a tiny moment in the spotlight. (Such as it is.) But it turns out, it’s a gift you have given to me. To allow me to think of each of you, separately, and as part of our writing and reading community. And to share in your happiness. Thank you.

Anyone who’s not listed—put yourself in the comments!

(And the covers are randomly interspersed…and some didn't work at all. Blogger wins that round. Sigh. Think of the spacing as...surprising.)

And happy happy new year from all of us at Jungle Red Writers.

COMING IN 2010!

Ellery Adams
A KILLER PLOT
(A Books By The Bay Mystery)
6/1/2010
Berkley Books

Avery Aames
THE LONG QUICHE GOODBYE
A Cheese Shop Mystery
Berkley Prime Crime
July 2010






Jina Bacarr
The BLONDE SAMURAI
Harlequin Spice
February 2010



Lorna Barrett
CHAPTER & HEARSE
#4 in the Booktown Mystery Series
Berkley Prime Crime,
August 3, 2010
According to the gossip around Stoneham, New Hampshire, Tricia Miles cannot put down a real murder mystery. After all, the owner of the mystery bookstore, Haven’t Got a Clue, has been spending more time solving whodunits than reading them…


Lee Barwood
SOME COST A PASSING BELL
January 2010
Double Dragon Publishing
Love can survive death, but so can hate; the two collide in this haunted Ozarks tale of murder, betrayal, and heroism -- on both sides of the grave.









Brant, Marilyn
FRIDAY MORNINGS AT NINE
Kensington Books
October 1, 2010.





Brown, Pat
L.A. BYTES
Digital Armageddon descends on the city of Angels.

BETWEEN DARKNESS & LIGHT
Downtown Los Angeles' financial center is the heart of this thrilling murder mystery and the unwanted love that grows between a cop with a dark secret in his troubled past and an up and coming world class artist.

Kate Carlisle
IF BOOKS COULD KILL
NAL Obsidian
February 2010

Jessie Crockett
LIVE FREE OR DIE
Mainly Murder Press
August 15, 2010

Krista Davis
THE DIVA PAINTS THE TOWN
Berkley Prime Crime
February 2010
Sophie Winston could hardly turn down her deceased neighbor’s last request for a bequest party, but she had no idea that the crafty old man brought the guests together for a deadly reason .

Jenny Gardiner
WINGING IT: A MEMOIR OF CARING FOR A VENGEFUL PARROT WHO’S DETERMINED TO KILL ME
Simon & Schuster
March 2010
Barb Goffman
"VOLUNTEER OF THE YEAR"
in Chesapeake Crimes: They Had It Comin'.
Wildside Press
Spring 2010


Rosemary Harris
DEADHEAD
A Dirty Business Mystery
St. Martins Minotaur
April 2010
(Ro! Your cover would not download! CLick here to see it! Http://www.rosemaryharris.com )






Angela Henry
SCHOOLED IN LIES
A Kendra Clayton Mystery
Boulevard West Press
December 31, 2009

Stacy Juba
SINK OR SWIM
Mainly Murder Press
December 1, 2010


Teresa Leigh Judd
ALLIGATOR DREAMS”
Anthology: Ghostly Dreamspell

THE PURRSISTANT CAT”
“Mystery, Mischief and Mayhem”
Anthology: Cats in a Dreamspell

“HIRED HELP”
Anthology: Revenge
L & L Dreamspell.


Liskow, Steve
WHO WROTE THE BOOK OF DEATH?
May, 2010
Mainly Murder Press

"Strangle Hold"
Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine
July/August issue.


Rebbie Macintyre
A CORNER OF UNIVERSE
Five Star/Gale
Feb. 17, 2010


Nancy Martin
OUR LADY OF IMMACULATE DECEPTION
(A Roxy Abruzzo Mystery)
March 2010
Minotaur Books




Donna Russo Morin
THE SECRET OF THE GLASS
Kensington Publishing
March 1, 2010


Kris Neri
REVENGE FOR OLD TIMES' SAKE
(A Tracy Eaton Mystery)
March 30, 2010


Susan Oleksiw
UNDER THE EYE OF KALI
An Anita Ray Mystery
by Five Star
May 2010.
At a seaside hotel in South India four women tourists find far more than sandy beaches and palm trees under a romantic moon, and Anita Ray must find a missing tourist and a murderer before her aunt's hotel is ruined.


Jessica Conant-Park and Susan Conant
FED UP (paperback)
the fourth Gourmet Girl mystery
January 4, 2010
Berkley Prime Crime.

Jessica Conant Park and Susan Conant
COOK THE BOOKS
(the fifth Gourmet Girl mystery )
March 2, 2010
Berkley Prime Crime.


Sandra Parshall
BROKEN PLACES
(Third in the Agatha Award-winning Rachel Goddard series)
Poisoned Pen Press
February 2010
Blackmail. Murder. Summer is deadly in the mountains of Virginia.


Christina Phillips
FORBIDDEN
Berkley Heat
September 2010

Caridad Pineiro
STRONGER THAN SIN
Forever from Grand Central Publishing
October 2010
A football player sidelined by a degenerative bone disease would risk anything to return to the game he loves, including a radical gene therapy--but when obtaining a cure threatens his family and doctor, he must change his plan to protect them.

Linda Rettstatt
NEXT TIME I'M GONNA DANCE
Champagne Books
January 1, 2010
SHOOTING INTO THE SUN
Champagne Books
May 1, 2010

Hank Phillippi Ryan
DRIVE TIME
(Fourth in the Agatha-winning Charlotte McNally Mysteries)
Feb 2, 2010
MIRA Books
When everyone has a secret, reporter Charlotte McNally learns it’s possible to know too much--and the real secret is knowing when to tell.


JB Stanley
BLACK BEANS AND VICE
(A Supper Club Mystery)
October
Midnight Ink


Jennifer Stanley
STIRRING UP STRIFE
(A Hope Street Church Mystery)
St. Martin's
January 1
Cooper Lee and the members of the Sunrise Bible Study find murderers while they search for friendship, romance, and answers to life's biggest questions.

THE PATH OF THE WICKED
(A Hope Street Church Mystery)
St. Martin's
April 27
Cooper Lee and the members of the Sunrise Bible Study must discover the identity of a killer preying on the elderly.

THE WAY OF THE GUILTY
(A Hope Street Church Mystery)
St. Martin's
September
Cooper's sister finds a body in the trunk of her car and the members of the Sunrise Bible Study must foil a smuggling ring dealing in illegal aliens, forged documents, and heroin.


Elaine Viets
HALF-PRICE HOMICIDE:
(A Dead-end Job mystery)
May 2010.
Helen Hawthorne solves the murder of a dead customer -- and really, truly gets married this time.

Elaine Viets
AN UPLIFTING MURDER
(A Josie Marcus Mystery Shopper paperback)
November 2010
Josie mystery shops lingerie this time!

Heather Webber
TRULY, MADLY
Feb 2
St. Martin's Press
A romantic paranormal mystery.


Liz Zelvin
"THE GREEN CROSS"
Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine
2010
A young Marrano sailor on Columbus's first voyage

Hurray for everyone! If you have a new book or story coming out next year, tell us all about it in the comments!