Murder at Morningside
by Sandra Bretting
BLURB:
Heads turn
when milliner Missy Dubois waltzes into town to set up shop on the Great River
Road in Louisiana. Heaven only knows the brides who get married in the grand
old mansions there could use a bit of help.
But then Missy discovers a murder
among the magnolias, and even the worst “bridezilla” seems suddenly tame.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Guest Post:
Do you research your books and if so
what's the weirdest/wildest thing you’ve done for the sake of your writing?
I DO research all my books, because I want to get
the details right. My biggest fear is that someone will catch a mistake I’ve
made, and then they won’t trust the rest of my writing.
The strangest thing I’ve researched is the people
who practice voodoo along the Atchafalaya River in Louisiana. The second book
in the Missy DuBois Mystery Series
has several characters who use voodoo to get healthy, get rich, or find a mate.
The book is called Something Foul at
Sweetwater, and one of the main suspects is a Cajun woman who cooks up a
special type of voodoo pouch called a gris-gris on her kitchen stove.
Anyway… I made my husband take me deep inside the
Atchafalaya River a few years ago. It’s just like you’d expect: Spanish moss
dangling from gnarled cypress trees; nothing but the sound of squirrel tree
frogs sawing and herons calling; and the smell of decomposing leaves, like a
wilted houseplant left near a hot kitchen window.
It was intoxicating, but very creepy. Especially
since we spotted several alligators along the way. That trip is as close as
I’ve come to people who cook love spells over blackened fire pits and sew
voodoo dolls by candlelight.
EXCERPT;
Before
Beatrice could say more, the front door flew open and in stomped an elderly
gentleman. He was on the verge of a good old-fashioned hissy fit.
“Y’all
don’t deserve a say in this wedding!” he said to a young woman who’d slunk in
behind him.
The
girl looked to be the right age for his daughter. She wore flip-flops and a
wrinkled peasant blouse, and she buried her head in her hands. Well, that
lifted the blouse an inch or two and exposed her bare stomach.
Lorda mercy. It seemed
the girl and her fiancé must have eaten supper before they said grace, as we
said here in the South, because an unmistakable bump appeared under her top.
She looked to be about four months along, give or take a few weeks, and I could
see why her daddy wasn’t too happy with her right about now.
After
a piece, she lifted her chin and glared at him. “I hate you!” Her voice rippled
as cold as the river water that ran nearby. “I wish you were dead.” She stalked
away.
I
fully expected the man to cringe, or at least follow her. Instead, he merely
glanced our way and shrugged. After a minute, he pivoted on the spectacle he’d
caused and casually strolled away, leaving a bit of frost in the air.
“Oh
my. Why don’t we continue,” Beatrice said.
Poor
Beatrice. She obviously wanted to divert our attention elsewhere. It
couldn’t have been every day one of her hotel guests wished another guest was
dead. She hustled us farther into the ballroom, as if nothing had happened, all
the while explaining the history of Morningside Plantation.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Sandra Bretting works as a
freelance feature writer under contract to the Houston Chronicle. She received
a journalism degree from the University of Missouri School of Journalism and
wrote for other publications (including the Los Angeles Times and Orange Coast
Magazine) before moving to Texas.
Her Missy DuBois Mysteries
series debuts from Kensington/Lyrical Underground in May 2016. Bretting’s
previous mysteries include Unholy Lies (2012) and Bless the Dying (2014).
Readers can reach her online at www.sandrabretting.com
and through Facebook at www.facebook.com/sandra.bretting.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
GIVEAWAY INFORMATION and RAFFLECOPTER CODE
Sandra Bretting
will be awarding a $20 Amazon/BN GC to a randomly drawn winner via rafflecopter
during the tour.
RAFFLECOPTER
CODE:
17 comments:
Good morning! Thanks for having me here today.
I enjoyed reading the excerpt. This book sounds like such an interesting and intriguing read! Totally can't wait to check out this book!
I love your blog & this book looks like a fun read
Great post - thanks for sharing, I enjoyed reading it.
Thank you for hosting
Thanks, everyone. I'm glad you liked the post...it was a lot of fun to write :)
sounds like a great book! Thanks for the giveaway.
rounder9834 @yahoo.com
When you start a new book, do you have all the characters in place and an ending planned, or does it come to you as you write?
Hi, Peggy. I know my ending and my characters, but what happens in-between sometimes changes. It depends on which way the characters want to move!
Love this cover and thanks for the fantastic guest post
You're so sweet, Pam! I'm glad you enjoyed the post, and I hope you'll get a chance to meet Missy DuBois and her friends in this new series!
The cover and blurb makes it sound/look like my kind of book!
Glad you liked the cover and blurb!
What do you find to be the hardest part of writing?
Hi Peggy - I think the hardest thing about writing is working in isolation for so long, and not knowing (but hoping!) others will respond to the characters the same way you do. That isolation is probably the toughest part.
Fashion must be a large part of this story. Did you have problems finding authentic examples of the period? Did you in fact become a designer yourself for the book?
Hi Sue: Fortunately, the book is set in the present day, so I could study modern hat-making techniques for my lead character. I'm not a fashion designer, but I've always loved fashion (hats especially), so it was a treat for me to find out more about the method behind making a beautiful hat. Thanks for asking!
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