It’s April
Having said
that, I have nothing else to add.
Not really. But
the end of the month kind of crept up on me, and I never even thought about a
blog until today, March 31. However, I do have a few things worth mentioning (I
hope).
The first is that
I finished writing a book in March. Titled DARK SPIRITS, it’s book #8 for Daisy
Gumm Majesty, Sam Rotondo, and Daisy’s family and dog, Spike. The Ku Klux Klan features
large in this book. Let me tell you, it’s not all that easy to write a
basically funny book about the Klan, because the Klan is so not funny. Also, I was shocked and
surprised to learn that the Klan actually gained a foothold in my beloved City
of Pasadena, California, in the early 1920s. Well, 1923 was the precise year I
wanted. So I got in touch with Rosalie Jaquez, librarian at the (equally
beloved by me) Pasadena Public Library, and she sent me a whole bundle of
information about the Klan and the geography of Pasadena in 1923, which isn’t
as easy to find as one might think (the geography, I mean). But Rosalie was a
champ, and she helped me heaps.
So did Mimi
Riser, friend and fellow author, who suggested I get the book AN UNDERGROUND
EDUCATION, by Richard Zacks. I tell you, if you ever want to know the hidden
history of anything, check out this book. I not only learned that the Klan had
an uptick in membership in the early 1920s primarily because a sheet-maker in
Atlanta wanted to make money, but also that the price of Klan membership in early
twenties was $10.00. The price of a Klan sheet (with the pointy head covering)
was $6.50.
Mimi’s
participation in my book-writing process is nothing new. In fact, if it weren’t
for Mimi Riser, I’d have quit writing anything at all several years ago. She’s
the inspiration behind my newest published Daisy book (SPIRITS REVIVED). Well,
she and the image I got in my brain of Daisy holding up a bad guy with a pair
of chopsticks, but that wasn’t as important to the writing of my past several
books as Mimi’s been. In fact, there would be no PECOS VALLEY books at all if
it weren’t for Mimi. Too long a story to detail here, but trust me on this.
Then there are
my beta readers, who include former RWA Librarian of the Year Lynne Welch;
Michigan schoolteacher Sue Krekeler; and a new cyber friend who lived for years
in Pasadena and Altadena, Andie Paysinger. Without them . . . well, there
wouldn’t be a book without input from Lynne. There might have been a book
without Andie and Sue, but it wouldn’t have been a very good one.
Who said writing
is a lonely profession? I swear. And I’ve never even met Mimi, Rosalie, Lynne, Sue, or Andie, except via the Internet. Of
course, if I didn’t live in the outer reaches of the universe (Roswell, New
Mexico) maybe I’d get out more, but it’s hard to get anywhere from here. You
can trust me on this, too.
Um . . . what
else? Oh, yeah. I signed up to attend the mystery conference Bouchercon in
November. It’s being held in Long Beach, CA, so I’ll get to visit friends and
relations after it’s over.
I’ll be giving
away copies of PECOS VALLEY RAINBOW in April. If you’d like to enter my
contest, send me an email with your name and address to alice@aliceduncan.net. At the end of
the month, Bam-Bam, my latest winner-picking wiener dog, will select two or
three wieners. I mean winners.
Isn't it amazing what you can do on the 'net?
ReplyDeleteOn another note, about maybe 10 years ago, my friend's sister actually drove by a cross burning on her way home in MD. It is still so scary out there....
I enjoy the Daisy Gumm books and looking forward to reading the next one
ReplyDelete