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In person again! Except … not

August 30, 2021 Leave a Comment

It was a thrill to schedule my first in-person book events in more than a year.  

I signed up for Bouchercon, the world mystery book convention, in New Orleans – a location that doubles the fun of my favorite writers’ conference. I scheduled readings at two Montana independent bookstores, Fact and Fiction in Missoula and This House of Books in Billings, to coincide with the releases of The Truth of It All and Best Kept Secrets. And I was scheduled for two different panels at the Montana Book Festival with writers whose work I really admire. 

I couldn’t wait! 

Except, I – along with everyone else – will have to. 

Thanks to a resurgence of COVID, Bouchercon went virtual and the Montana Book Festival is going to do likewise. No word yet on the bookstore readings, but I’m guessing they’ll also be virtual. 

Truly, it’s the best and safest thing to do. And virtual events offer lots of benefits in their ability to include people who might not otherwise be able to make it in person. 

But there’s something so special about seeing people face-to-face – the energy of talking about writing with other writers, the warmth of meeting readers.  

“It’s fine,” is my new mantra. “It’s fine, it’s fine.” 

But dammit, it really isn’t. 

Here’s hoping the great unvaxxed see the light and that someday – soon, please – we can go back to normal, for real this time. 

Leave a Comment Tags: Montana Festival of the Book, Reading

RIP to reader Mary Vanek

August 9, 2018 4 Comments

I never had the pleasure of meeting Mary Vanek – but I know it would have been a pleasure indeed, and that I’m the poorer for the lack.

I first heard from Mary in 2014, after the publication of my second novel, Dakota. At the time, she was a postulant at St. Placid’s Priory, a Benedictine monastery in Washington state. She introduced herself  as an Amarillo, Texas, native who’d gotten her MFA from the University of Montana’s highly regarded creative writing program. Hers was one of those notes that sends a new, uncertain author’s heart soaring. The voice in my novels, she generously wrote, “hit every Texas nerve I have and left them vibrating” – and she added that she was recommending my books to her fellow postulants.

My first reaction was: Yikes! The idea of a religious community reading Dakota, which was about human trafficking in the Baaken oilfields, reawakened long-dormant Catholic school sensibilities. But I got over the initial embarrassment and so began a wonderfully rewarding correspondence.

Mary’s creative writing chops showed in every email. Her Christmas note last year began thusly:

The wind has finally laid low after an all-night blow. One of my feral cats – an older tom – has an injured front paw, but he’s so wild, I can’t get near him, and it’s making me nuts. So I’m praying hard to St. Francis and Our Lady Undoer of Knots that he heal. Great thing about being Catholic – as I always tell my friends and clients – is that we’re fully accessorized. We’ve got a saint for anything, any malady, or hope (usually based on a deeply embedded holy person of pagan persuasion or a place that’s been holy to local people for time out of mind) you can come up with. Us recovering addicts have everybody from St. Augustine of Hippo to St. Maximillian Kolbe to Blessed Matt Talbot (an Irish drunk who died sober in 1925 who was found to have bound his body in chains and ropes as penance for his earlier life as a drunk). 

She always apologized for the length of her emails; I always wished they were longer.

I was glad I’d sent her an advance copy of my most recent novel, Silent Hearts. We’d discussed the progress (or lack thereof) of the manuscript over the years and she shared my joy in its long-awaited publication.

Her last note to me, on Valentine’s Day, touched as always on the weather (a mutual obsession) and Catholicism, even though by then she’d left the monastery and was back in Amarillo.

We’re having one of those weird weather days – 73 degrees and wind, wind, wind. A somewhat welcome change from below 32 and wind, wind, wind. … So, Ash Wednesday on Valentine’s Day. A conundrum for observant Catholics as today is a day of both fast (only one solid meal) and abstinence (no meat). Definitely no candy. 

She asked after my partner, who’d just had quadruple bypass surgery, and told me she’d sought prayers on his behalf from the sisters of St. Placid. At which point I relaxed, knowing he’d be fine.

And then, three days ago, a thoughtful note from a member of Mary’s writing group arrived, letting me know that Mary had died. The air went out of the room.

It seemed impossible that such a vibrant, intrepid spirit was gone. She’s not, of course. I imagine her swirling about on those wild Texas winds, taking a delighted and descriptive interest in everything she sees. But I’m so sad we’ll never meet in person.

And I hope every writer is fortunate enough to have such a perceptive, generous, responsive reader. It’s the ultimate honor.

Rest in peace, Mary. And eternal thanks.

 

 

 

 

 

4 Comments Tags: Reading

Some Sentences, July 2017 – Like daughter, like mother

July 27, 2017 Leave a Comment

July 27, 2017 – Every time I feel like a failure as a mom (100 percent of the time, right?), I remind myself that I have kids who read.

My daughter and I have especially similar tastes in books, and our conversations always include a check of what the other is reading, and a hard nudge for ideas for more. She’s far more organized than I, keeping a list of everything she reads. Every so often, I ask her to just send me her list, as a lazy way of creating a list of my own.

We’ve been on a roll this summer, discovering a new book we both love, and rediscovering an older one.

beartownI take credit for stumbling across Beartown, Fredrik Backman’s (A Man Called Ove) April release by Atria. I clicked on a whim, without knowing anything about it. Within hours of starting, I was on the phone to Kate

“Drop everything else and read this book right now.”

It’s about ice hockey, was all I’d tell her, this daughter who played ice hockey on a boys’ team in high school. Which, as anyone who’s read the book knows, is a wholly inadequate description. But to say more would have been to give too much away.

By the next day, she was calling me so that we could compare notes on what we’d read so far. Each of us loved it. Each of us hated to see it end – the ultimate measure of a great book.

fowlerAnd each of us felt bereft, the only cure for that being to read another good book. By happenstance, I went to my shelves and pulled one she’d recommended a long time ago, but that I’d never gotten around to reading: Karen Joy Fowler’s We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves. (2013, Putnam’s)

A few pages in, another phone call. “This is fabulous. I love her writing, her protagonist.”

Kate just might have said, “I told you so.” But she also picked up the book again and is re-reading it, enjoying it just as much as she did the first time – another mark of a terrific book.

I’m nearly to the end, though, and badly spoiled by two great books in a row. Recommendations?

Leave a Comment Tags: Reading, Some Sentences July 2017

Some Sentences, July 4, 2017 – A two-fer summer reading list

July 4, 2017 Leave a Comment

 

I was bowled over to see both DISGRACED and RESERVATIONS on the Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association‘s summer reading list for mystery and detective fiction.

Of DISGRACED:

disgracedcoverDisgraced contains much of the same timely social and political commentary as the earlier volumes in the series. Sexism and racism and their corrosive effects on both the victims and the perpetrators receive the principal focus, this time raising important questions about the cost of harassment for soldiers risking their lives to defend their country and for the civilians back home who care about them …. (Lola) may be home from the battlefields of Afghanistan, where she spent years as an international correspondent, but she continues to explore—and expose—crimes against women and minorities throughout the West.

 

 

And, of RESERVATIONS:

ReservationscoverReservations begins with one of the best opening lines I’ve read in a long time: “The day that would see Ben Yazzie transformed into shreds of flesh in too many evidence bags began with a rare strong and satisfying piss”…

Reservations offers all the usual Florio pleasures: lyric descriptions of the land and the people who inhabit it; cultural commentary on Native American communities, traditions, and history; Native American vs. white conflicts, both historical and contemporary; sharp critiques of big business and its effects on the well-being of those it impacts; a strong social justice approach that rivals that of Sara Paretsky in force and potency; and a solid, fair-play mystery. All four books in the series are excellent, and they keep getting better.

 

All I can say is … wow. Better than ice cream and strawberry shortcake on the Fourth of July.

 

 

Leave a Comment Tags: Disgraced the novel, Reading, Reservations the novel, Reviews

Some Sentences, May 6 – Cheating, writer style

May 6, 2017 Leave a Comment

 

May 6, 2017 – With a deadline six weeks away, today is a rare free day, nothing to do but write. Huzzah! Right?

Well …

stabenowAt midnight last night, the long-awaited next book in one of my favorite series, Dana Stabenow‘s Kate Shugak mysteries, was released after an interminable four-year wait from the previous book. Of course, I pre-ordered it.

But I made a deal with myself. The book would serve as a reward, both for today’s writing marathon, and tomorrow’s literal near-marathon – a twenty-mile training run. I’d limp home from the run with nothing to do the rest of the day but catch up with Kate and the rest of the gang in Stabenow’s fictional Alaska park.

I went to bed last night serene in the knowledge that I had a Plan. Woke up around 1:30 a.m., my phone only inches away, the newly delivered book – Less Than a Treason – nestled within the app.

It couldn’t hurt to peek, right? Just a chapter. Or two. Or … I finally put the phone down at 3 a.m. (There’s a reason Stabenow’s fans call themselves the Danamaniacs.)

I didn’t finish the book. And I did hit the ms. hard today. But I’m counting the hours until those *$&#! twenty miles are behind me tomorrow, and I can settle in and finally find out how those skeletal remains ended up in that secluded valley. And what about Mutt? What in holy hell happened to Mutt?

Maybe I’ll find out tomorrow. Or maybe it’ll be another semi-sleepless night, unable to resist temptation and, honestly, not really caring.

Leave a Comment Tags: Reading, Running, Some Sentences May 2017, Writing

Some Sentences, Jan. 2017 – All book recommendations welcome

January 19, 2017 Leave a Comment

 

NancyPearl

Jan. 18, 2017 – When it comes to Nancy Pearl, I’m an unabashed fangirl. (Because what’s not to love about the creator of the Book Lust guides?) Whenever the former Seattle librarian is interviewed on NPR, I try to stop what I’m doing, so that I can catch her reading recommendations.

This week, her “under the radar” recommendations included a book called “Slow Horses.” I liked the sound of it – the “slow horses” are disgraced British intelligence agents – and I really liked the fact that the ebook went on sale that day for $1.99. Click.

Several very happy days later, I’ve just finished it and am looking forward to the next in the series by Mick Herron. All of which is a roundabout way of saying a good book recommendation is one of the best gifts you can give. Unless someone wants to give me a Nancy Pearl action figure!

Leave a Comment Tags: Reading, Some Sentences Jan. 2017

Some sentences, Dec. 26 – Recommendation a great present

December 26, 2016 Leave a Comment

Dec. 26, 2016 – Survived the holidays, despite a most unfortunate Hannukah/Christmas Eve story about white supremacists behaving badly in Montana, underscoring the reality that, in newsrooms, nothing good ever happens on the holidays.

But I also got a great present, made better still by the fact that the giver has no idea of his role. The best present, of course, is the ongoing gift of family and friends, good health, relative financial security, a job I love, and the unbelievable privilege of being a published novelist.

This gift was a pretty close second, though. I’m always seeking recommendations for good reads. Recently, via the magic of Twitter, I reconnected with an old Philadelphia Inquirer colleague, Larry Copeland, also turned novelist. (His debut novel, The Moaning Bench, will be released next month.) I scanned his blog and found this post about the works of John D. MacDonald, among others.

macdonaldI came late to crime fiction, and so there are huge gaps in my knowledge, MacDonald’s work among them. I spend a lot of time these days playing catch-up. Larry’s post led me to The Deep Blue Good-by, the first in MacDonald’s Travis McGee series. I peeked into it at about 11 one night, intending to scan a couple of pages before bedtime. Hours later, MacDonald had hooked me with sentences like this:

“I heard the lisping flap of water against the hull, the soft mutter of the traffic on the smooth asphalt that divides the big marina from the public beach, bits of music blending into nonsense, boat laughter, the slurred harmony of alcohol, and a mosquito song vectoring in on my neck.”

That vectoring – that’s all it took. So, thanks, Larry. Hope to return the favor, or at least pass it along.

 

 

 

Leave a Comment Tags: Reading

Some Sentences, Nov. 17 – Jane Eyre to the rescue

November 18, 2016 Leave a Comment

janeeyreNov. 17, 2016 -In a timely Washington Independent Review of Books column today, E.A. Aymar offers Eight Books to Comfort and Console You. Last night, I was in search of a book to do just that and turned to an old favorite, Jane Eyre. Who better than Charlotte Bronte’s fierce protagonist, who refuses to compromise her principles, or bow to anyone’s will, saying, ““I am no bird; and no net ensnares me: I am a free human being with an independent will.” And, lest our Jane sound too stuffy, “I would always rather be happy than dignified.” I fell asleep feeling better. Thanks (again), Jane.

Leave a Comment Tags: Books, Reading, Some Sentences Nov. 2016

Some Sentences Journal, Day 4 – Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz (not)

October 27, 2016 Leave a Comment

 

 

Oct. 27, 2106 – Brutal insomnia last night.

 

insomnia

 

 

 

 

 

 

Finally gave up on sleep and dove into The Sparrow. Wowza!

sparrow

 

 

 

 

 

 

When life gives you lemons, etc. lemonade

 

 

Leave a Comment Tags: Reading, Some sentences journal

Here a book, there a book, everywhere a book or ten

May 20, 2014 Leave a Comment

 

When people ask what I’m reading, I usually rattle off three or four titles. Lately, though, it’s gotten out of hand. 

I’ve just finished The Painter by Peter Heller—now there’s a novel to be savored—along with Hatchet, a young adult novel by Gary Paulsen recommended by a friend, and Vehemence, a short story by J.J. Hensley, whose debut novel Resolve is a finalist for an International Thriller Award. And I’m about to finish the most excellent Fire on the Plateau: Conflict and Endurance in the American Southwest by Charles F. Wilkinson, a history of legal cases that affected development in the region.

I’m a few chapters into Cavanila’s Choices, the first in a trilogy of novels about the Minoan Cataclysm by Jesse Sisken, who in addition to being a fine writer is also my uncle. My obsession with Dana Stabenow’s Kate Shugak series continues with A Deeper Sleep, the fifteenth of twenty books featuring Shugak. And, I’m reading a mystery manuscript by a friend of a friend.

What awaits? Busted, about the investigation into corrupt Philly cops that won Philadelphia Daily News reporters Wendy Ruderman and Barbara Laker a Pulitzer. Death in a Strange Country by Donna Leon, whose mysteries set in Venice I’ve been meaning to read for a long time.  (Even though I swore to finish reading at least one of the other books first, I confess to peeking into this for a chapter or two.) Another Wilkinson book, Blood Struggle: The Rise of Modern Indian Nations. And of course, the next Shugak mystery. I dread the end of that series. I’ll miss Kate and Mutt and the gang terribly. [Read more…]

Leave a Comment Tags: Books, Reading

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