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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: echelon press. mystery novels, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Beth Solheim: A Star on the Rise

Like the main character in her Sadie Witt mystery series, Beth Solheim was born with a healthy dose of imagination and a hankering to solve a puzzle. She learned her reverence for reading from her mother, who was never without a book in her hand.

By day, Beth works in Human Resources. By night she morphs into a writer who frequents lake resorts and mortuaries and hosts a ghost or two in her humorous paranormal mysteries.

Raised and still living in Northern Minnesota, she resides in lake country with her husband and a menagerie of wildlife critters. She and her husband are blessed with two grown children and two grandsons.

The Beginning of an Incredible Journey

KS: Can you tell us a little bit about what is was like to get the word that a publisher wanted to publish your book?

BS: Shock. Absolute shock and joy. Several months had lapsed after Karen Syed, publisher of Echelon Press, requested my manuscript, so I thought she must not be interested. Then, as I do every morning, I opened my email and there it was. Karen said her editorial board expressed interest and would I like to look at a contract. Would I? Are you serious? Of course! Acting like an adult was out of the question as I raced from room to room. I realize the real work has just begun, but I’m still riding that cloud of debut-author bliss.

KS: How long have you been writing and what was the first thing you remember writing?

BS: I’ve been writing for about ten years, six seriously. My first attempt at writing was a mystery. I knew nothing about plotting, characterization, or pacing, but I plodded through and thought it was great. A best seller. It wasn’t. It was horrible. I’m mortified by that first attempt, but also thrilled with what I’ve learned over the past six years.

KS: What is a typical day like for you with regard to a day job and now a pending career as an author?

BS: My full-time day job is in Human Resources in a hospital. My evenings are spent doing typical household chores, writing and editing, and occasionally drawing floor plans and processing paperwork for my husband’s construction business. Signing a contract with Echelon Press added another dimension—marketing. Over the past year I read books and surfed websites to learn what I could about marketing. I’ll format a plan to stay current with trends in marketing and writing.

KS: How do you think your life will change once your book is published and available for sale to readers?

BS: The pace will quicken, especially when both the eBook and print book are available to readers. Blog tours, book signings, speaking engagements and book fairs will be priority along with other marketing venues. I’ll keep my day job and most of all stay focused on writing and edits.

KS: What kinds of things do you do to keep your focus when trying to write when life gets in the way? Do you use candles or music or meditation?

BS: I park my butt and write. I have a nasty chat with a certain lazy writer if I don’t meet my goal. And, no chocolate! I also use Goals for Guppies, a Sister’s in Crime support group. I set a goal each week and have to report in on weekends. Shame on me if I don’t achieve that writing or marketing goal. If I’m exhausted when I come home from work, I enjoy a meal with my husband and then walk a mile or two with Il Divo, Celine Dion, or Josh Groban serenading me. Music is stimulating and makes me feel whole again. It triggers ideas.

KS: Who in your life has been the most influential in your journey toward being an author?

BS: A friend of my sister’s, Stephanie Sorenson, who is a publicist for Penguin Putnam, took the time to read my manuscript and made suggestions out of the goodness of her heart. No one in the profession had ever validated my writing or made constructive comments. That honest critique coupled with encouragement and counsel was the best thing that happened.

KS: Tell us a little bit about book one of your upcoming series.

BS:
At Witt’s End is a humorous, paranormal mystery. Witt’s End is a bustling resort in Northern Minnesota with clients vying for one of the few remaining rentals, except Cabin 14, where guests never leave alive.

Most sixty-four year old senior citizens aren’t expected to solve a murder while trying to prevent an unscrupulous sheriff’s deputy from shutting down their lakeside resort, but that’s exactly what Sadie Witt must do.

When five guests arrive at Cabin 14, they’re stunned to learn that the flamboyant Sadie is their conduit to the hereafter. Clad in the latest fashion trends, fads that are typically reserved for those without sagging body parts and sporting hairdos that make bystanders want to look away but can’t, Sadie realizes one of the guests had been murdered and must work against the clock to untangle the web and prevent further mayhem.

7 Comments on Beth Solheim: A Star on the Rise, last added: 7/23/2009
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2. Tea on the Veranda Under the Ginkgo Tree

On Sunday, July 26, 2009, find out what Lemon Lace, a Judas quilt, strolling on the veranda, a diamond shoe clip, and an unregistered bed and breakfast guest have in common. Luisa Buehler, author of the acclaimed Grace Marsden murder mystery series, hosts “Tea on the Verandah” at Under the Ginkgo Tree bed-and-breakfast, 300 N. Kenilworth Ave. in Oak Park. Afternoon tea begins at 1:00pm and will be served until 3:00pm. Guests are invited to bring their favorite teacup.

Local author will host afternoon tea, sign copies of her six published murder mystery novels, discuss the two final novels in the series, and talk about Illinois' Civil War underground railroad.

Under the Ginkgo Tree provides an appropriate setting for a talk and review of Buehler's sixth and latest Grace Marsden mystery.

The Innkeeper:An Unregistered Death begins with a runaway slave and a society girl laying entombed in the cellar of an old boardinghouse. Renovations turn gruesome when skeletal remains are uncovered. Forensic report adds a twist—the remains were entombed 80 years apart! Grace becomes involved when her friend, the owner of the house falls under suspicion. Grace tries to stay apart from the investigation and succeeds until she sees the spirit of the freedom seeker haunting the house and he turns to her for justice. Can she deny him in death what he sought so tragically in life?

The Innkeeper: An Unregistered Death is slated for release late this August by Echelon Press ($13.99 ISBN 978-1-59080-627-2).

Grace Marsden's seventh and final cold case will be The Re-Enactor: A Staged Death, scheduled for publication in early 2011. The author who first brought to life the thirty-something, OCD-plagued, often idiosyncratic sleuth in 2002 says Grace is weary of experiencing pain and tragedy through the restless souls who seem to find her. She intends to avoid sleuthing and concentrate on her life with her family.

Oftentimes, especially in the case of a novel or story series, their authors come to regard their characters as friends, accomplices, partners, even family. Does Buehler feel that she's saying goodbye to someone she "knows" so well and in whose life she's been so intimately involved for more than a decade?

“Not so much goodbye,” says the author, “more that our life paths are moving in different directions from where we are now in our relationship. We won't have as much contact but we'll always have Pine Marsh! {home to Harry and Grace Marsden}.... I hope readers will be satisfied and pleased and find the conclusion of the series totally believable in The Re-Enactor.”

Grace is a conglomeration of several women Buehler has known with “a smattering of my OCD tendencies – mine are mild compared to Grace!” She adds that fictional characters such as Nancy Drew (her original inspiration for becoming a mystery writer) and Nora Charles also influenced her.

The tie-in to Under the Ginkgo Tree begins back in book four, The Scoutmaster: A Prepared Death and re-introduced in The Innkeeper. The renowned Oak Park B&B is mentioned by name and is the setting for a scene early in the book.

Part history, largely mystery, Buehler says she will focus her remarks at “Tea on the Verandah” on her research about stations on the underground railroad in Illinois and the symbols used on quilts to guide the freedom seekers to safety or to warn them of danger. Buehler uses an interesting twist concerning a quilt found in the boarding house.

All who attend “Tea on the Verandah” will be entered in a drawing, to be held at 3:00pm, for prizes including a certificate for a one night stay at Under the Ginkgo Tree B&B, a vintage tea cup and tea basket, and a vintage jewelry piece.

Luisa Buehler lives in west suburban Lisle with her husband, their son, and family cat, Martin Marmalade. Between managing a business and family and documenting Grace Marsden’s sleuthing, she also finds time to tend her garden.

Under the Ginkgo Tree is located at 300 N. Kenilworth Ave. in Oak Park, near the corner of Erie. Call (708) 524-2327 for more information about “Tea on the Verandah.”

For more information about Grace Marsden Murder Mysteries, and/or the author Luisa Buehler, email [email protected] or visit www.Luisabuehler.com.

Any or all of the Grace Marsden Murder Mystery novels can also be purchased at the publisher's website, www.echelonpress.com or at your local booksellers or online retailers. Local residents of Chicago can purchase them at Centuries & Sleuths in Forest Park or your local Barnes & Noble stores.

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