Showing posts with label gardening mysteries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening mysteries. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

A Corpse for Yew review

I thought I would share with you a great review of our friends Jim and Joyce Lavene's new Peggy Lee Gardening mystery.

Have a look! Click on the book cover to go to the review!


Sounds great, and I can't wait to check it out!

Click on the linked graphic above to get to Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews
and enter to win during cozy Mystery Week!

Friday, September 4, 2009

Cozying up to... Jim and Joyce Lavene - Part 3

We continue our Cozying Up to Jim and Joyce Lavene series with some more questions and some contact information!


Donna - There has been some concern that ‘cozy’ as a designation is a slight to the sub-genre (I don’t think it is, but some authors apparently feel so.) How do you feel about the designation ‘cozy’ for your murder mysteries?


J&J - We think most readers don’t know what that means. Cozy mystery like any other subgenre is a writer’s term. We have to know what it means so we can send our stuff to the right editors and market it. But readers just know what they like to read. They might enjoy a cozy today and read a police procedural tomorrow. Most people happily read across the spectrum without ever knowing the difference.


Donna – You wrote ‘The Everything Guide to Writing a Novel’ and teach classes and workshops on writing. Are there any skills to do with writing that you think can’t be taught?


J&J - Voice. No one can teach you HOW to tell a story. We can teach people how a story goes together; verbs, nouns, sentences, plot, character, but if they can’t put it together in a way that a reader finds interesting, it doesn’t mean anything. Voice is what makes two writers, telling the same basic story, completely different.


Donna - Why murder mysteries? What is it about the genre that led you to writing them?


J&J - We started out writing romances but the genre was so limited. Our editor kept saying we had too much plot. This isn’t meant as any slight on romance. If you can write it, you’re lucky! But we couldn’t stay in the pocket with the basic formula. We started experimenting with other genres and have published fantasy, science fiction, romantic suspense and others. Mystery seems to fit us best right now. Not sure why really. We like to have whole characters that have whole lives with jobs and friends and family and problems that don’t just revolve around them. Maybe we like to kill people too. Who knows?


Donna - Do you both read murder mysteries? If so, what are your favorite authors?


J&J - We both read a little of everything. Jim’s favorite authors right now are Charlaine Harris and E.E. Doc Smith. Joyce’s are Loretta Chase, A.E. Maxwell and Simon Greene.


Thank you so much, Joyce and Jim, for being my first guests here at CMM. I want to encourage everyone to check out Joyce and Jim’s wonderful array of murder mystery series. Here is some information that will help you find out all about them!


Website: www.joyceandjimlavene.com

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/Joyce-and-Jim-Lavene/54780722723?ref=ts

Twitter: @author54

Blog Spot: http://carolinaconspiracyblog.blogspot.com/

Carolina Conspiracy: www.carolinaconspiracy.com


Wednesday, September 2, 2009

Cozying Up To... Jim and Joyce Lavene - Part 2

Today we continue our three part interview with Jim and Joyce Lavene.


Donna - You live and work in North Carolina; how does where you live affect your writing? Did it influence writing a stock car series, for example? Do you set all your books close to home?


J&J - North Carolina is a weird state. We mean that in a good way! It has rivers that flow backwards, fairy crosses, strange phenomena like the Brown Mountain lights and a love of history. It’s a good place to live and work. It probably didn’t influence NASCAR because that sport has grown to almost every corner of the earth. We do set many of our books at least close to home (Wilmington, Myrtle Beach, Duck are places we like to go) probably because you can find a little of everything here. We’re two hours from the mountains and two hours from the coast. Like California without all the mansions!


Donna – I’m intrigued by your note on the Midnight Ink site that your pets ‘help’ you write. How?


J&J - Quincy won’t let us write unless he’s in the office too. He howls if we don’t let him in and hogs up all the space when we do! We had to have a bigger desk to accommodate him since he has to lay in front of the monitor. He has this uncanny ability to sneak up and lay his paw on the zzz key. We’ve come to acknowledge that it means we’re writing boring stuff and look to see what we can do different.


Donna – You are very prolific as a team; what is your schedule like: writing, family, down time, etc?


J&J - We write six days a week, half chapter per day. We usually do at least one set of revisions (for another book) during the rough draft part of each book. The rest of our writing time is taken up with promotional things; website, blogging, setting up promotional events for ourselves and the Carolina Conspiracy, our group of mystery authors that we promote with.

We are fortunate to have our whole family living close by and see them almost every day. Sometimes that takes up even more time when our son, the pizzeria owner, needs a spare pizza delivery guy or our daughter, the bookstore owner, needs some help with something. But we love being part of their lives.


As far as downtime, we like to drive around the back roads looking for anything unusual. We love taking pictures too! Jim likes to putter with his (and other people’s computers) and Joyce likes to do some watercolor painting. We even manage to sneak in some TV occasionally and enjoy movies and reading.


~::~


That’s all for now… but come back Friday for the final installment - as well as contact information and lots more - of Cozying Up To… Jim and Joyce Lavene.

Monday, August 31, 2009

Cozying up to... Jim and Joyce Lavene - Part 1

Today I'm launching my new Question and Answer feature "Cozying Up To..." First up, I will be Cozying Up To... Jim and Joyce Lavene, authors of several murder mystery series.


Good Morning, Jim and Joyce. Thank you so much for agreeing to do this Q&A. You’re my very first blog guests! I understand you have several murder mystery series. Could you tell me a little about each?


J&J – Here is a brief explanation of each of our series.


Peggy Lee Garden Mysteries – Peggy Lee owns a garden shop in Charlotte, NC and teaches botany at Queen’s University. She uses her special knowledge of plants, especially poisonous plants, to help the Charlotte Police solve murder mysteries.


Renaissance Faire Mysteries – This series is set in a Renaissance Faire in Myrtle Beach, SC. Our protagonist is Jessie Morton who is working on her dissertation that involves being apprenticed to different craft people in each book. We’ve tried to capture the crazy, fun atmosphere of going to a Renaissance Faire in these books.


Pet Psychic Mystery – Our pet psychic is Mary Catherine, a Wilmington, NC radio talk show host, who can communicate with animals of all sorts. They frequently cause more trouble than they are worth! Mary Catherine hears the cry of a turtle whose owner has been killed in The Telltale Turtle and she helps catch the killer.


Stockcar Mysteries – Glad and Ruby have been called the Nora and Nick of the racing circuit. Glad is a retired Chicago cop and Ruby is a small town southern hairdresser. They travel from race to race in the NASCAR circuit solving mysteries.


Sharyn Howard Mysteries – This is our first mystery series. It is set in the Uwharrie Mountains in North Carolina. We wrote it about the first woman ever elected as a sheriff here. Our protagonist, Sharyn Howard, becomes the sheriff when her father is killed. She finds she likes the job and is very good at it. There are 12 books in this series. Each book has a historical mystery, some from as far back as the Civil War, that links to a present day mystery Sharyn solves.


We have a new series beginning May 2010. It’s called the Missing Pieces Mysteries. It’s set in Duck, NC on the Outer Banks. It’s about Dae O’Donnell, mayor of Duck, and a finder of lost things. In the first book, Death Watch, Dae finds a wristwatch on the arm of a dead woman and helps solve the crime.


Donna - You are a husband and wife team who work very closely in a multitude of ways. How do you split up the writing work?


J&J - We don’t split up writing the books. We sit down and take an idea that we think will work, collected through the year. Then we write a long synopsis that details what we think the story will be like. Our final stage is sitting down together at our large desk with back to back computer monitors. We talk out the story as we type it in. Then when the story is all in the computer, we begin revisions. That is our process.


Donna - How do you resolve disputes about the books you write?


J&J - We have one rule in working together; we have to agree or it doesn’t make it into the book. If we don’t agree about something, we get up and go out for a drive or a walk and talk it out until we come up with something else. Or until Joyce convinces Jim that she’s right!


Donna (laughing) - I like that Joyce convinces Jim she's right! How did you decide on the central idea of each series; for example, how did the idea for a pet psychic murder mystery series come about?


J&J - We came up with the idea for Sharyn Howard because we loved the Uwharrie Mountains and wanted to write about what it would be like for the first elected woman sheriff. The history part came in because we love history.


Our next mystery was the Peggy Lee series. We are both Master Gardeners and Berkley was looking for a garden mystery series. We wrote it in Charlotte because people in that town love their gardens and we thought urban gardening would be fun.


We did the NASCAR books for our racing crazy relatives who wanted to see mysteries written about the real life of stock car fans who camp out and go wild during races.


The Pet Psychic was an offshoot of a Peggy Lee book. Mary Catherine was actually in Fruit of the Poisoned Tree, the second Peggy Lee book. She helped Peggy with her Great Dane. We wanted to write a whole book about the character. We met a pet psychic that the book is based on.


We love Renaissance Faires and Festivals! We thought it would be a great place to kill people (in a book, of course) and wanted everyone to be able to experience the fun. We put it in Myrtle Beach because we thought that area could sustain an all-year faire. We put it in the old Air Force base there and we have had a great time writing it! Our newest book is the second in the series, GHASTLY GLASS, out September 1 from Berkley Prime Crime.


We visited the Outer Banks last year and loved the spooky, foggy area. We thought it would be fun to write something there with all the folklore, pirates and ghosts that haunt the area. Our protagonist is able to find things by touching the people who own them. Missing Pieces is the name of her thrift store in Duck where she sells some of the things she finds.


Donna - Thank you so much, Jim and Joyce, for the fascinating answers... but you've answered a whole lot more, and Part 2 and Part 3 of this wonderful interview is coming up on Wednesday and Friday!


*Note to my readers... I am sooo not a technical person, so I'm having a little trouble with the funky things blogger is trying to do with the font. I can't get it to stay all in one font! Until I get it sorted out... have fun reading everything from Courier to Arial with a little stop at Verdana somewhere in the middle!

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Jim & Joyce Lavene

I am thrilled to introduce my first Cozy Murder Mysteries interviewee(s), Jim and Joyce Lavene, authors of several murder mystery series - including a series centered on stock car racing, gardening and a pet psychic, among other things - for Murder Ink and Berkley Prime Crime.

Jim and Joyce, a long-time married couple who not only write together but seem to enjoy doing everything together, have this to say in their bio on their website:

(Jim and Joyce) ...currently write four mystery series and work for a small newspaper in Stanly County, North Carolina. When they aren't promoting their books, coming up with new ideas for books, or taking photos of sweet potatoes that look like guinea pigs and congressmen who look like sweet potatoes, they spend time with their family (3 children, 5 grandchildren) and their cat, Quincy who ‘helps’ them write.

They have been gracious enough to answer all my questions, and beginning Monday, I will host a three-part series on them and their books.

For now, visit them at: http://www.joyceandjimlavene.com/