Showing posts with label Cozy Mystery with romantic elements. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cozy Mystery with romantic elements. Show all posts

Monday, November 4, 2019

A Little Romance a Little Mystery by Paty Jager

Boy do I have a red face! This month we were asked to suggest a holiday themed book. I had one on my Kindle from an author I enjoy, so I read it and when I headed over to Amazon to capture a cover and link for it...it's not there. Because it was a short story, I'm thinking it was something her newsletter peeps received.

Anyway, it was A Christmas Miracle in Pajaro Bay by Barbara Cool Lee. I have been reading her Pajaro Bay series and really like the California coastal town that is her setting and all the intrigue that happens along the coast. Smugglers, drug dealers, and small town revenge.

The first book in Ms. Cool Lee's series: The Honeymoon Cottage that introduces you to the town and community is FREE at                   
Amazon      Apple    Nook     Kobo

"Readers praise the series for its "sweetness," its "excellent characterization," and say the books are "adorable, lively and like a warm hug."

I have to agreed. While there is suspense and unique, quirky characters the books are feel good reads, so even if you don't have one that is set around the holidays, reading it will give you the same warm feelings.  To learn more about Barbara check out her website: http://barbaracoollee.com/

If you are wondering what Shandra Higheagle, my mystery character has been up to, her latest book,
Toxic Trigger-point is now available in ebook and print.

Adultery… Jealousy… Murder

Shandra Higheagle Greer is minding her own business when she walks into a room for a massage and it is already occupied—by a dead body.

Always the champion for someone she knows, when her favorite masseuse looks like the murderer, Shandra listens to her gut and dreams choreographed by her deceased grandmother.

Detective Ryan Greer can’t believe his wife has walked into another homicide. He’s learned no matter how he tries to keep her out of the investigation he can’t. But this time the consequences could be deadly for Shandra—she heard the murder happen.
Universal Buy Link    https://books2read.com/u/4Ex9De



Paty Jager is an award-winning author of 42 novels, 8 novellas, and numerous anthologies of murder mystery and western romance. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. Paty and her husband raise alfalfa hay in rural eastern Oregon. Riding horses and battling rattlesnakes, she not only writes the western lifestyle, she lives it.
blog / websiteFacebook / Paty's Posse / Goodreads / Twitter / Pinterest   / Bookbub

Top photo source: Deposit Photo

Monday, April 29, 2019

Co-writing the Cozy Mystery by Traci Hall

Celebrating collaboration
Thank you so much for having us as a guest blogger!

I’m Traci, half of the writing duo Traci Wilton. Patrice Wilton is the other half—you can see that we decided not to get too crazy with our pen name J. We wanted our romance readers to be able to find us.

Between us, Patrice and I have well over seventy novels—Patrice is a New York Times bestselling romance author and I especially love her Paradise Cove series. My backlist meandered a bit more to include medieval romance, paranormal romance, and young adult, and there are sixteen novels in my contemporary romance By the Sea series. In the Dog House, a sweet contemporary romance, was released in February.

After so many years of writing romance, we decided to stretch our writing wings and tackle a cozy mystery. In romance there are different levels of heat, as you may know, and Patrice and I are similar in varying the level of sexy depending on the story. Let’s face it, sometimes we aren’t in the mood, lol. With mystery, we didn’t have to be—though in Mrs. Morris and the Ghost, we have two love interests for our widow. We stuck with the traditional format of the handsome detective, because our ghost makes for a very unique third party.

In the first book, Charlene, a native of Chicago, buys a mansion sight unseen in Salem, Mass. to escape the memories of her life with her husband, who was killed in a car accident.  The house, as it turns out, is haunted by Dr. Jack Strathmore. According to her sources, it is believed that he died of natural causes, but he’d actually been murdered and Charlene is the only one who can see him.

We’ve written three of the stories so far and they are so much fun—we’ve completely fallen in love with Jack ourselves.

We get asked quite a bit how it is to write with a partner and it helps that we’ve been critique partners since 2003, before we were published, so we trust each other with our words and our writing styles. We follow a plot, which is key to keeping us both going in the same direction, and alternate chapters to write, and then when we do our next pass, we switch those. If one of us feels strongly about writing a certain scene, we try to be supportive of that because at the end of the process, this is about the story, and not ego. When we disagree, we leave a note in the comment section, and come back to it later. We made a pact that we are friends first and always!

Authors in Salem, Mass doing
research
We co-authored a romance before this to see how we worked together, so we knew we could do it and it was so much fun working with a friend, when writing can be so solitary. I am a plotter, she is a pantser, and we both are very goal-orientated, so we make a great team.

We hope to write many more Mrs. Morris cozy mysteries—I think they are being called the Salem B & B cozy mysteries? As writers, our characters are family, so we just think of them as Charlene and Jack.

Thank you again for letting us visit with you all at Romancing the Genres!

Traci


Learn more about Traci Wilton on their websites:

You can find Mrs. Morris and the Ghost at these e-retailers.

Saturday, April 27, 2019

Crime of Passion by Paty Jager

How many times do you hear that on a mystery show? It was a crime of passion. There are statistics that show most murders are crimes of passion. Lovers kill lovers, husbands kill wives, mothers kill children, fathers kill families. It's not something we want to think about or write about- but it is the world a mystery writer has to think about.

Passion- it can get out of control and cause the loss of life or it can be used to keep readers wanting to know what happens next with your protagonist.

What the statistics do tell us, is no matter what happens in a person's life- romance or lack of romance- plays a part in how that person acts and reacts to others. 

That is why I enjoy reading mystery books that have an element of romance going on either between the main protagonists or the secondary characters. It's that little bit of human interaction that makes me root for them, remember them, and think of them as real people.

Not too long ago at a book signing, I'd just set everything up and five women marched up to my table
and one declared, "Why are you being so mean to Ryan?"  They all agreed and went on to quiz me about when I was going to have Shandra (main protagonist in my Shandra Higheagle mysteries) give in and agree to marry Ryan. The women said they loved the mysteries but wanted to know when I was going to get Ryan and Shandra together. 

I gave them a vague answer, knowing full well which book I planned to give Ryan and Shandra a happy-ever-after. Drawing out their attraction and waiting for the right moment had worked. It kept readers purchasing the books. While my reviews remark about the mysteries, the Native American elements, and the twists, they usually also comment on the romance element too. 


One of my critique partners who writes romance kept telling me to add more romance into the story, but I knew staunch mystery readers wouldn't like that. I tried to keep the romance as much a mystery as the murder they were trying to solve. It was the best way to keep the ones who like romance in the books to keep reading and to appease the ones who don't care for romance in their mysteries. 

If you look back to Agatha Christie's Tommy and Tuppence mysteries there was a romantic/married
couple who solved mysteries. Dame Christie's books also showed a wonderful array of local people who might or might not be involved in a bit of hanky-panky. 

I believe to make a realistic setting for a mystery you have to include romance in either your main characters, secondary characters, or both.  My latest murder mystery series, Gabriel Hawke, I have a man in his 50's who lost his wife the first five years into his career because of his career and has believed he doesn't need another woman in his life. Unfortunately for him, his best friend, other than the couple who are his landlords, is a woman and he's having strong feelings towards another woman. While there isn't a romance, yet. There is ample opportunity for one to happen and for the readers (who have already been telling me who he should go for) to made a wager if he'll crumple and if so with which woman. 

I'm betting that having this will he or won't he fall in love element of romance fluttering on the fringes of the murder mysteries he solves is one of the things along with the cast of characters and the settings and twists that keep the readers coming back for more.  

How about you? Do you like romance with your mysteries or do you want just the facts ma'am and work at solving the mystery on your own? 



Paty Jager is the award-winning author of the Shandra Higheagle and Gabriel Hawke Mystery series. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. Paty and her husband raise alfalfa hay in rural eastern Oregon. Riding horses and battling rattlesnakes, she not only writes the western lifestyle, she lives it.
This is what Mysteries Etc has to say about her Shandra Higheagle mystery series: “Mystery, romance, small town, and Native American heritage combine to make a compelling read.” And Books A Plenty Book Reviews says this about the Gabriel Hawke Series:"The blend of nature tracking, clues, and the animals makes for a fascinating mystery that is hard to put down." 
blog / websiteFacebook / Paty's Posse / Goodreads / Twitter / Pinterest   / Bookbub

Saturday, April 13, 2019

A Little Romance with Your Mystery?

On Writing Mysteries with a Romantic Subplot
by Shéa MacLeod
I admit it, I love mysteries, but I always want a bit of romance (or a lot of romance) mixed in. I remember when I first read Agatha Christie. I loved her novels, but I always thought, “You know, this couple would be perfect together. This is the exact moment that we should get a hint they’re going to live happily ever after. I want more romance!”
You might point out that Christie did, in fact, often hint at romantic involvements, but it wasn’t explicit enough for my taste. I don’t mean explicit in the sexual sense, but rather in the sense of romance. Of giving me, the reader, that wonderful satisfaction of knowing that not only have these two people survived a killer and justice been served, but they are now madly in love and their future is bright.
“But it’s hard to get romantic when there’s a dead body involved.”
I beg to differ! There’s something intrinsically romantic about trying to solve a puzzle together, seeking justice together, protecting each other. Isn’t that the heart and soul of a committed relationship? Isn’t that what we all want? Someone to cherish and protect who will do the same for us?
I suppose that is why when I started writing my cozy mysteries, I wanted to make sure that there was always a romantic subplot. Human relationships are the most fascinating thing to me. In fact, they’re usually the reason the victim is murdered in the first place! Jealousy is the dark underbelly of love, and such an excellent motive for murder. So I wanted to explore the various aspects of human relationships. Not just those that resulted in death or betrayal, but those that resulted in happiness.

The beauty of having a long-term protagonist from book to book is that I get to explore those relationships over time. I’m not focused on getting the Happily Ever After by the end of book one (after all, these are not Romantic Mysteries which would require that!), but rather I’m exploring the process of getting to that Happily Ever After over time. That includes the occasional misunderstanding, bump in the road, or even break up in one instance.

But being a romantic at heart (and a reader and writer of romance), I always keep the rules of romance in mind, even when writing a cozy mystery. I want to give my readers satisfying endings. Not just that the mystery is solved, but that the relationship between my heroine and her hero is moving forward. Maybe the pace is slower, but they’re getting there.

And that’s the key, I think, to meeting reader expectations when it comes to romance in mysteries, whether you are writing a full-on romance with a mystery subplot, or a mystery with a romantic subplot. It must be satisfying, always. Because we all live for Happily Ever After. Even when murder is involved.


Shéa MacLeod is the author of the bestselling Lady Rample Mysteries, a cozy mystery series set in jazz-era London, as well as the contemporary Viola Roberts Cozy Mysteries.
She lives in the rain forest of the Pacific Northwest where she fuels her writing habit with copious amounts coffee, wine, and chocolate.


Saturday, April 6, 2019

The Place of Romance in Mystery by Debbie Young

Debbie Young - Angela Fitch Photograph
In every mystery story I write, there’s a generous helping of romance, in common with many mysteries at the lighter end of the spectrum.

The precedent was set during the Golden Age of Crime-writing. Many of Agatha Christie’s stories require crimes to be solved to reunite lovers parted by accusation and arrest. In Dorothy L Sayers’ Strong Poison, when Lord Peter Wimsey falls in love with Harriet Vane at her trial for poisoning her ex-lover, he must prove her innocence before her date with the noose.

Cover by Rachel Lawston
Lawston Design
In my own novels, the romances aren’t necessarily key to the central mystery, but they are an integral part of the story and its world. The love affair between Sophie and her bookseller boss Hector Munro has its own plot arc running the course of the whole Sophie Sayers Village Mystery series. In Murder in the Manger, the series’ Christmas special, when village shopkeeper Carol Barker confesses her loneliness, Sophie vows to find her a boyfriend, and the resulting relationship develops in the sequel, Murder by the Book.

While the “will they, won’t they?” feeling is a good reason for the reader to keep turning the pages, besides wanting to solve the mystery, perhaps the most important function of romance in mystery novels is to provide comfort and warmth to restore the reader’s spirits after the shock of cold-hearted crimes. It also adds point to the more poignant moments, such as accentuating the sense of loss at a murder.

Cover by Rachel Lawston
of Lawston Design
The strength of the romance in my novels, in tandem with a generous helping of comedy, has led fellow novelist Rosalind Minett to describe them as “feel-good murders”. That might sound like a contradiction in terms, but I believe a murder mystery can and should be life-affirming. Don’t we all want to believe that all will be well, and that justice will prevail, even in our darkest days?

But I don’t weigh up the balance of mystery, romance and comedy as I go along, as if mixing a sponge-cake recipe. I use them instinctively, as a natural extension of my upbringing and personality. Coming from a close-knit, quick-witted, optimistic family, in my household never a day goes by without hugs and laughs. My parents have just this week celebrated their sixty-sixth wedding anniversary. I’m lucky to have been raised to regard happy endings and true love as ideal and achievable. And in my mystery novels, unlike real life, I have the unassailable power to deliver both.
Debbe Young's Sophie Sayers Mysteries
Covers by Rachel Lawston of Lawston Design
Debbie Young lives and writes in a Victorian cottage in  a small village community in the beautiful English Cotswolds, full of eccentric characters and lively events to inspire her cozy mystery novels. Her Sophie Sayers Village Mystery series, currently standing at five books, will on completion run the course of a village year from one summer to the next.

Flat Chance, the first in
Debbie Young's new series,
 will be published in the summer
Her Staffroom at St Bride's series will follow the intrigues of the teachers at a traditional British boarding school for girls, and the first in the series, Flat Chance, will be launched this summer.

She also writes short stories and has published three themed collections. She is founder and director of the Hawkesbury Upton Literature Festival, a frequent speaker at literary events around the country, co-presenter of BBC Radio Gloucestershire's Book Club, and UK Ambassador for the Alliance of Independent Authors.

Twitter: @DebbieYoungBN

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Canadian Romantic Suspense Author Maureen Fisher

The First Meet


by Maureen Fisher

More here: Cold Feet Fever 
First meets between the hero and heroine are crucial to making a romance plot work. First and foremost, it’s the first turning point of the book. After the first meet, the protagonists are unable to return to their ordinary lives.

Not only does it introduce the characters, it initiates the romantic conflict, helps set the tone of the book, and hints at character goals and future conflict.

The first meet should pack a good, dramatic punch in the development of the plot, and it should leave the reader hungry to find out what these two people will get up to the next time they meet.

In Cold Feet Fever, my romantic crime mystery, Granddaddy Hiram wants Sam Jackson, his grandson and senior business partner, to mend his wicked ways and settle down. When he meets party planner Katie Deluca by chance, Hiram senses she’s the perfect woman to tame Sam.

Unaware of Katie's former career (mortician) and criminal connections, Hiram steps way over the line by hiring her without his grandson’s say-so, giving Katie carte blanche to organize the grand opening for Kinki, their jointly owned nightclub. To compound the transgression, he implies that Sam is a junior employee, and will report to Katie. One of her duties is to keep Sam in line. To that end, Hiram insists she share Sam’s office.

Katie’s Goal in the Scene: To break the news to Sam as tactfully as possible that his boss hired her this morning to organize Kinki’s grand opening. As of today, Sam will now report to her, and they will share his office.

Sam’s Goal in the Scene: To forget his financial worries by amusing himself, teasing the very attractive, but uptight woman who had the nerve to barge into his office, interrupting him during a most enjoyable massage session.

Without giving away too much, here is Sam and Katie's first meet.

********************

Excerpt

Her chest rose and fell as she inhaled a deep breath. “Please don’t call me ‘Cupcake’. My name is Katarina Deluca. People call me Katie.” She regarded him as though she expected a reaction.

“Should I know you?”

“Of course not.”

A lesser man might have missed her subliminal relaxation. Reading body language was a mandatory talent for skilled gamblers, and he considered himself one of the best. She’d hoped he didn’t recognize the name. Making a mental note to Google Katie Deluca, he stuck out a hand. “Sam. Sam Jackson.”

She shook his hand with surprising firmness. “I know all about you.”

“I get that a lot.”

“If we’re to hit it off, I have one request.” She fixed him with melted chocolate eyes, which, on closer study, sparked with disapproval.

“Do tell.” He picked up his pizza.

“Since we’re sharing an office until after the grand opening, I must ask you to refrain from entertaining female guests on your couch.”

Sam froze, the pizza halfway to his mouth. “Say what?”

“I won’t tolerate ‘massages’ while we’re sharing the space.”

“Sweet baby Jesus,” he moaned. “I’ve gotta lay off bourbon.”

“Excellent idea. Do your body a favor. Nevertheless, your senior partner, Hiram, engaged me to plan and coordinate Kinki’s grand opening. He also mentioned the only available space was in your office, and indicated that he expected me to supervise you.”

An arrow of pain speared Sam’s skull. The wily old man’s powers of persuasion obviously worked fine in spite of major impulse control issues. Smelling another of his granddaddy’s matchmaking attempts, he set down the last of his pizza. “Hiram’s my granddaddy. He calls himself the senior partner because he’s older, not because he’s my boss. He has no hiring authority.”

“Hiram warned me you’d say that.” Katie’s voice brimmed with compassion. “He also promised that after you got over your snit, you’d be happy to comply.” Under her breath, she muttered, “It would have been a nice touch if he’d warned me about the casting couch.”

Sam lowered his feet to the ground with great care. Leaning forward, he spoke softly, emphasizing every word. “It’s not a casting couch. I should know. It’s my office, my couch.” For some reason, it mattered what she thought.

“Believe it or not, I find this situation as difficult as you do.”

“I doubt it.” He gulped a fortifying swig of coffee, wishing with all his heart he could lace it with something stronger. “What else should I know?”

He watched with reluctant amusement as she whipped out a notepad and flipped the pages. Who used a notepad in this era of tablets and other electronic devices?

She must have found the nugget of information she wanted because she stopped flipping. “Ah, yes. Here it is. Hiram informed me you won a lot of money in the casinos, enough to buy Kinki and renovate it too, with plenty left over for a grand opening. His words were, and I quote, ‘The sky’s the limit’.”

Sam choked on his coffee. 

About Me

Transplanted to Canada from Scotland at the tender age of seven, I’m an escapee from the world of bits, bytes, and dumps (possibly not what you’re thinking).

I’m a voracious reader, bridge and Mahjong player, yoga enthusiast, seeker of personal and spiritual growth, pickleball enthusiast, and avid gourmet cook. My husband and I love to hike, cycle, and travel.

I’ve swum with sharks in the Galapagos, walked with Bushmen in the Serengeti, sampled lamb criadillas (don’t ask!!!) in Iguazu Falls, snorkeled on the Great Barrier Reef, ridden an elephant in Thailand, watched the sun rise over Machu Picchu, and bounced from Johannesburg to Cape Town on a bus called ‘Marula’.



My Books

"Maureen combines action, adventure, romance, mystery, and an often LOL sense of humor in her page-turning novels. They are the perfect additions to your libraries, like da rum and da coconut in your piña coladas." 

Find out more about my novels here or click on the links under the covers.

More here: FurBall Fever 

More here: The Jaguar Legacy


Coming Soon: Horsing Around With Murder, a cozy murder mystery with romance and inappropriate boomer humor.

Connect with Maureen

Website | Facebook Author Page | Twitter  | Goodreads                          

Monday, October 30, 2017

Haunting Corpse- A Halloween set Mystery by Paty Jager

After using Sheba, a dog, and secondary character in my Shandra Higheagle Mysteries as the character to find the dead body in my Christmas set mystery, Yuletide Slaying, I had the idea to use Lewis, the cat, also a secondary character, as the character to find the body in my latest Halloween mystery, Haunting Corpse.

I enjoy including the animals in my amateur sleuth, Shandra Higheagle's, life in the finding of the bodies. And Lewis, being an orange cat that we could add a streak of red on to look like blood, made for a great cover.

The book actually opens with a wedding the weekend before Halloween. But there is a Halloween party where clues are dropped. The title Haunting Corpse came to me as I ran words through my brain that I felt were connected to the holiday. Haunting came to mind and fit the story line. While the body (Corpse) doesn't actually haunt, the person's past comes up time after time in the investigation of the death, bringing back pain for the people who knew him and in my mind, haunting them even after he is gone.

I've found I enjoy murdering characters during holidays or events. It brings people together and lends itself to multiple suspects. I had a fan send an email giving me a great idea of a book set in Colorado, so stay tuned for a book set there.

Several people have asked me how many books will be in this series. At the moment, I have the idea for four more for sure and will keep writing them as long as fans want them and I can come up with plausible murders.

I have a question I will be sending out to my fans in my newsletter. It has to do with the romance between the amateur sleuth, Shandra Higheagle and the Sheriff's Department Detective, Ryan Greer and their wedding. If you aren't on my newsletter list and would like to know when the next mystery comes out or help me in a decision about the series-here is where you can sign up for my newsletter: Paty's Mystery Newsletter

Here is the blurb for Haunting Corpse, book 9 in the Shandra Higheagle Mystery Series




A runaway bride, murder, and arson has Shandra Higheagle sleuthing again. Sorting through the debris of her best friend’s childhood, Shandra believes she must solve the murder before her friend becomes the next victim. 

Stumbling upon a dead body, Detective Ryan Greer is determined to bring the killer to justice before Shandra becomes too entangled in her friend’s dysfunctional past. He could be too late. Her deceased grandmother has already visited her dreams, putting Shandra in the middle of his investigation and danger. 

This Book Link takes you to whichever ebook store you use: Buy Link

Paty Jager is an award-winning author of 32 novels, 6 novellas, and numerous anthologies of murder mystery, western romance, and action adventure. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. This is what Mysteries Etc says about her Shandra Higheagle mystery series: “Mystery, romance, small town, and Native American heritage combine to make a compelling read.”
 


blog / websiteFacebook / Paty's Posse / Goodreads / Twitter / Pinterest