#PRAYFORPARIS
I have friends and clients and colleagues who live in Paris. They're all safe. Or as safe as you can be in a city that's in lockdown mode. By early evening US time last night, social media was already full of ribbons and French flags and hashtags and expressions of horror.
And I couldn't help thinking that the word "terrible" is the same in French as it is in English.
And how terrible is it that there's even a colored ribbon FOR terrorist acts?
Paris is my heart's hometown. The Charlie Hebdo attack hit home for me because I started life as a journalist.
And now, after this latest atrocity, there are conservative journalists already blaming the influx of Syrian and Iraqi refugees for fueling the crisis. Classic and cruel "blame the victim" mentality. But I remember what it was like in the days after 9/11. The Indian man murdered by the zealous patriot who decided he was a terrorist because of his skin color.
Today's tears and prayers are for the people of France, but tomorrow they must be for all people who live under the shadow of terror.
Saturday, November 14, 2015
Friday, November 6, 2015
#HEARTBLAZE--Twilight with a Bite!
There's a real depth of world-building here--an element most paranormal romances skip over--and real stakes at hand. This is Twilight with a bite, a story with some edge to its emotions.
Heartblaze is a great read, and it's available worldwide.
Labels:
Heartblaze,
paranormal romance,
Shay Roberts,
time travel,
vampire
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Clean Living--Flash Fiction for Halloween
Rena Jacobs
had been offered the job via email, which wasn’t unusual.
People were
often embarrassed to be associated with a hoarder house, even if they weren’t
the hoarder responsible, and they liked to put as much distance between them
and the house in question as possible.
Rena understood
the impulse. Cleaning other people’s houses wasn’t exactly the career she’d
envisioned for herself. But an art history degree doesn’t go very far in a
small town, and when the owner of the gallery where she worked had died, she’d
found herself with few prospects. After maxing out her credit cards, and
discovering that any job she was qualified for was already being done by unpaid
interns from the local university, she’d narrowed her options to medical
transcription or becoming a career barrista.
And then one
day as she was channel surfing, she came upon a reality show about hoarders. It
was perversely fascinating and Rena found herself sucked in. At the end of the
episode, a team of specialty cleaners had been brought in to bring order out of
chaos. There’d been a phone number to call for people who needed “help with a
“situation,” and when Rena had called, she’d found herself on the phone with
John T. Macallan, who was more than happy to talk to her about franchise opportunities
with KLEEN LIVING.
Labels:
flash fiction,
hoaarder monster,
short fiction
Thursday, September 17, 2015
Are you mysterious?
If you're on Facebook and you're interested in all things mysterious--books, movies, writers, television--consider joining the Bellingham Mysterians group. We are a book club sponsored by the awesome Village Books in Bellingham, WA but our FB group is open to all. We post articles about books and giveaways and fiction contests and all sorts of things that might be of interest to the mystery fan. We're looking for suggestions for reading in the next three months. Join the discussion. Make a suggestion. Pimp out your own book!
Find us here.
Find us here.
Labels:
Bellingham Mysterians,
Facebook,
mysteries
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Shakespeare's Guide to Parenting
Shakespeare was a parent. And he also was the author of the famous line, "How sharper than a serpent is an ungrateful child." (King Lear). This book looks like a lot of fun.
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Shakespeare Retold
You may have heard that Hogarth Shakespeare is publishing a series of "Shakespeare Retold" novels in which writers such as Margaret Atwood and Jo Nesbo have been paired with plays. (Nesbo will be doing Macbeth and I cannot wait.) For a full list of writers involved so far, check here.
Labels:
Hogarth Shakespere,
Jo Nesbo,
Mabeth,
Margaret Atwood
Friday, July 31, 2015
Sean Haldane: The Devil's Making, a review
Darwin and
the edge of the Empire
Amateur
naturalist Chad Hobbes—the atheist son of a preacher—has come to the colony of
British Columbia to learn a bit about life before he settles down to a life as
a lawyer. Unfortunately for Chad, he’s just missed the Gold Rush, which means
that nobody in Vancouver or nearby Victoria really needs a lawyer. But what
they do need is a policeman. The wilderness settlement has several police
officers but none with Hobbes’ particular set of skills. The idea of being a
“peeler” appeals to Hobbes and he’s soon thrust into the heart of a murder
mystery that has racial and colonial implications.
Hobbes is
fascinated by his duties and dutifully records everything he observes in a
leather-bound journal his mother gave him before he left home. There’s plenty
to observe. Elections are pending and one of the questions is whether B.C. will
become part of America. Passions run high on both sides of the question but not
as high as when an American “alienist” is found dead and the most likely
suspect is a medicine man.
Sean
Haldane’s novel transcends genre here with its literate (but never ponderously
literary) style and the sharp observations on everything from class to
vegetation. (Hobbes is fascinated by the quality of blue in the sky, so
different from the English sky back home.)
Fans of
historical mysteries are in for a treat with this book.
Labels:
Devil's Making,
historical mystery,
Sean Haldane
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