Monday, March 26, 2018

How Susan Wittig Albert Influenced My Writing


Susan Wittig Albert (aka Robin Paige and Carolyn Keene) is the author of the fictional book "Loving Eleanor", as well as the China Bayles Herbal Mysteries, the Darling Dahlias Mysteries, and The Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter. The China Bayles series were the first books from Albert to come to my attention. I was very atracted to this series because of the strong characters, and the real life situations they encountered. Bayles left a high profile professional life as a criminal attorney in Houston to open an herbal shop located in a small town located half-way between Austin and San Antonio. (I love the attached  tea shop, and the connecting metaphysical shop owned and run by her best friend.)

Each character is solidly written, with a past and a present that define who they are, and why they think and act as they do. We are shown how the words and actions of one character affect the other characters, and how life is full of surprises. Wittig also goes into the shadows of her characters past, and how they can hold them back in a very not good way. 

There are several areas of focus in the China Bayles series, inluding herbs, recipies, families, being supportive of friends, and metaphysics. This is important to me, as I would like to bring things such as Tarot, Reiki, and other healing modalities into my books. I also want these energies to take second place to the story that I am writing, so that they compliment it, but do not necessarily drive it. 

Another thing that I take away from Albert's series is attention to detail - especially details of a physical nature, such as how rooms are placed in relation to each other, how a house looks/feels overall, and how we relate to our surroundings.

The theme for April will be beta readers. My first blog will be on what they are, and why as writers we need them.

(c) March 2018 Bonnie Cehovet
Reproduction prohibited without written permission of the author.    

Monday, March 19, 2018

How Joanne Fluke Influenced My Writing




I have decided to institute a monthly theme to my author's blogs. My theme for the month of March is female writers of (cozy) mysteries that have influenced my own writing in some way. This week I am talking about Joanne Fluke.

Fluke is the author of the "Hannah Swensen" series of cozy mysteries, as well as a young adult horror series under the pseudonym Jo Gibson, and a series of edgier mysteries (as Joanne Fluke) from Kensington Press. (Note: Kensington Press is in the process of reissuing many of these books.)

There are so many elements of Fluke's writing that I am drawn to. In the Hannah Swensen series we see a single woman running her own business (a bakery), and is owned by an adorable cat by the name of Moishe. The series is located in Lake Eden, MN (I am a MN native), and features the culture of that area. There is a food thread that runs through each plot, with recipies at the end of each book. This is old home week for me!

Fluke not only developes her characters well, but has them interacting with each other consistently. We are talking about small town america here, where everyone knows everyone, and anything can happen! The Hanna Swensen series is centered around family and community, and will bring out good memories for anyone that is from this area, or is familiar with it.

My hope is that in my books I can reflect the world that my characters live in accurately, as well as their lives, their hopes, and how their pasts can act as shadows.   

Next week I will be talking about Susan Wittig Albert.

(c) March 2018 Bonnie Cehovet
Reproduction prohibited without written permission of the author.  

Monday, March 12, 2018

How M.C. Beaton Influenced My Writing



I have decided to institute a monthly theme to my author's blogs. My theme for the month of March is female writers of (cozy) mysteries that have influenced my own writing in some way. This week I am talking about M.C. Beaton, author of the Agatha Raisin and Hamish MacBeth series.

M.C. Beaton is a pseudonym for Scottish writer Marion Chesney. Her books include a number of romance novels, under different pseudonyms, but she crossed my path originally for her Agatha Raisin series, followed by the Hamish MacBeth series. I love the character Agatha Raisin, a retired publicist from London that has chosen to live in the country. She stumbles around, wanting to be one thing, but unable to quite bring that about. She wants to think she is in the prime of life, she wants a steady relationship, she wants to be taken seriously -  but the small things seem to constantly trip her up. Like her absolute inability to cook anything, and her existing relationships - one a professional relationship with a young man that she trained, and one a relationship with a wealthy socially prominent gentleman with a roving eye. The situations that she gets herself into, the people that she meets - all very plausible, all things that could happen to any of us. Her characters each have their own story to tell, and are very consistent in telling it.

In Hamish MacBeth Beaton has created a totally different type of character. Here we see a Highland village policeman that is not especially ambitious, in fact he trys to avoid attempts at promotion, but uses his wit to solve cases. He is very much a part of the village that he serves in, and he wants life to stay just as it is. His way of thinking isinfluenced by the fact that he comes from a large family (three brothers and three sisters), where his parents are crofters.  

Both the Agatha Raisin series and the Hamish MacBeth series have been made into TV series, which may or may not be a thought with all writers, but I do hope that at least one of my books will hold enough interest that it will be made into a movie, at the least. This is the hope that writers like M.C. Beaton give us.  

Next week I will be talking about how the author Joanne Fluke has influenced my writing.

(c) March 2018 Bonnie Cehovet
Reproduction prohibited without written permission of the author.

Monday, March 5, 2018

How Agatha Christie Influenced My Writing


I have decided to institute a monthly theme to my author's blogs. My theme for the month of March is female writers of (cozy) mysteries that have influenced my own writing in some way. Agatha Christie has influenced me from childhood with her characters, so she is going to take the lead for March.

 


Christie wrote 66 detective novels, and fourteen short stories. She introduced two of my favorite characters: Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot. I want to think that I carry a tiny bit of each of these characters in my psyche: Miss Marple for her astute observation of the people around her from a very down to earth point of view, and Hercule Poirot for his astute observations of the people around him from a more intellectual point of view. Both of these characters have given me many hours of reading pleasure, and will continue to do so.

Christie is known for her well developed characters, as well as descriptive backgrounds, and portraying the mores of her time well. I absolutely adore both the book and movie versions of "Murder On The Orient Express" - it is absolutely riviting about the inter-relationship between the passengers, and one does really not guess the truth until it is spelled out at the end of the story.

Christie's story hooks were often very simple facts of life - such as a character knowingly exposing a group of people to measles, causing a death that did not have to be (Miss Marple - "The Mirror Crack'd from Side to Side"), or blackmail (Hercule Poirot - "The Murder of Roger Ackroyd"). 

Another character that Christie developed was Raymond West (Miss Marple's nephew). It took me a while to get used to him, but hehas great charm. He is an author, married to an artist, and he helps support Miss Marple financially. Through this character, Christie is able to expand her stories to a wider audience (IMHO).

Through Agatha Christie I have seen what a cozy mystery really can be. I have no intention of tring to duplicate her work - it stands alone, and always will. What I do intend to do is to reflect the life and mores of my time through the genre of cozy mystery. 

Next up: M.C. Beaton, author of the Agatha Raisin and Hamish MacBeth series.

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(c) March 2018 Bonnie Cehovet
Reproduction prohibited without written permission of the author.


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