Q&A with author Judith Graves

What inspired you to become a writer?
 
I started off as a singer/songwriter, writing lyrics / poetry, and began writing short stories, then novels – and after that – just about any form of fiction. I adore creating characters and the process of worldbuilding, and then putting them all through the wringer.
 
Your novels seem to be based in the young adult genre, do you have any plans on dabbling in others?
 
My (thus far!) published novels are young adult / new adult, however I have screenplays, stage plays, and other manuscript projects for adults, as well as a few for middle grade readers.
 
So it seems that you write "paranormal stories with an attitude". Who would you say is your favorite character/story that you have written so far?
 
All of my lead characters are snarky, but vulnerable, so I think I’m drawn to the anti-hero archetype. The loner with quirks and emotional defences meant to push others away to protect their wounded hearts. Yeah, those are the characters / stories I love to write.
 
What is the hardest thing about writing a series?
 
Keeping things like character eye colours consistent. I have index cards with descriptions / traits, but when you’re flying through a first draft, it’s VERY easy to screw up on those little details. And each novel introduces new characters that may or may not cross over into others within the series, adding to the index card mania.
 
If you could collaborate with any author, past or present, who would it be?
 
Ray Bradbury. I think we could hooch up some wickedly twisted tales and I’d try to absorb as much of his talent as possible.
 
If you could rewrite the ending of any book, which would it be?
 
Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbit. I read it in school and remember the scads of tissues I went through after reading the ending. I know the book wouldn’t have the resonance / message if it ended any other way, but the romantic in me still wants to see Jesse and Winnie get their HEA.
 
Are you currently working on anything that you can share?
 
I’m polishing the last book in the Skinned series, Hour of the Wolf. I can’t share too much as I’m waiting for readers to finish Skin of My Teeth, but I can tell you that Eryn travels back in time. It’s sort of a Doctor Who meets Buffy story that ends the series with a bang.
 
What advice would you give to aspiring writers?
 
Read everything you can find in your genre…as far back as it goes. This helps you learn the tropes, figure out what works best, and what doesn’t. From there – spin what you've learned into something fresh and exciting.


Judith Graves has multiple young adult novels and short stories published with Leap Books, Orca Book Publishers, Compass Press, and, under the pen name, Judith Tewes, is also published with Bloomsbury Spark. In addition, Judith is an award-winning screenwriter and playwright, writes freelance articles for literary magazines, and facilitates writing workshops for both adults and young adults. She lives in northern Alberta with her husband and three crazy labs. 

Ten Fun Facts about An Affair Downstairs by Sherri Browning

1. Logan Winthrop’s appearance was somewhat inspired by model David Gandy. I usually don’t picture real people while creating characters, but Gandy kept invading my imagination. Have you seen him? Who could blame me? 

2. Eve and Marcus from Thornbrook Park make several appearances in An Affair Downstairs… with a new little addition to the family. 

 3. Aunt Agatha once dated a cross-dresser! Learn more about Agatha’s surprising romantic past in An Affair Downstairs. 

4. Like Lady Averford, I’m a protective older sister. Like Lady Alice, I’m a determined younger sister. I’m the middle daughter of three girls, which helped me gain an understanding of both of my leading female characters. 
 
5. Edwardian balls often featured a buffet dinner to seat guests in shifts, and dance cards were becoming passé. 

6. Fox hunts often accommodated hundreds of riders, and about a third of them were women.

7. Edwardian women were sporty. They liked archery, tennis, riding, and those pesky corsets were beginning to get in the way.

8. Cornelius Kenner, a character who appears later in the book, is named after my good friend (and New York Times bestselling author) Julie Kenner, though they don’t share any personality traits. 

9. Diamonds might be forever, but they weren’t actually discovered until 1866. Diamond engagement rings didn’t catch on widely until a DeBeers marketing campaign in the 1930s. Which doesn’t stop one man from offering Alice a diamond. But is it the right man?

10. An Edwardian Christmas was an elaborate, fun-filled affair. After a solemn midnight mass, the family would rise early and enjoy a day of winter activities like sledding, skating, or carriage rides before exchanging gifts.


About the Book

Title: An Affair Downstairs
Author: Sherri Browning
Series: Thornbrook Park
ISBN: 978-1-4022-8682-7
Pubdate: 1/6/2015

The attraction of the forbidden cannot be suppressed…

Lady Alice Emerson is entirely unsatisfied with the endless stream of boring suitors her family finds appropriate. She wants something more. Something daring. Something real. Each tiresome new suitor only serves to further inflame Lady Alice’s combustible attraction to Thornbrook Park’s rugged, manly estate manager, Logan Winthrop. Despite Logan’s stubborn attempts to avoid her, Lady Alice is irresistible, and so is the forbidden desire exploding between them…

If you’re a fan of Downton Abbey, don’t miss the fascinating Edwardian world of Thornbrook Park.

Sherri Browning writes historical and contemporary romance fiction, sometimes with a paranormal twist. She is the author of critically acclaimed classic mash-ups Jane Slayre and Grave Expectations. A graduate of Mount Holyoke College, Sherri has lived in western Massachusetts and Greater Detroit Michigan, but is now settled with her family in Simsbury, Connecticut. Find her online at www.sherribrowningerwin.com.

Ten Things That Inspire Me by Alicia Rae

1.    My family—I’m very blessed to have a husband and family who truly support me unconditionally. That is the greatest inspiration any writer could ever ask for. 

2.    My three boys—They continue to amaze me every day with their free-spirited imaginations and pure hearts.  

3.    My readers—There is nothing sweeter than hearing that someone loved one of my novels. Each time, it makes me want to stop what I’m doing and go back to my writing cave. 

4.    Love—Every girl dreams of falling in love and having her perfect happily ever after. I love to give that to my characters, and I hope to share their stories with others. 

5.    Reading—There is nothing better than losing yourself in a story.  I fight the battle very often. Do I read or write? I’m very passionate about both. 

6.    Authors—I have so many favorite books. I could never choose just ten. So many authors have made me cry, melt into a puddle, and laugh out loud, causing my husband to look at me as if I’ve lost my mind. Then, I’m usually left with a major book hangover. After reading an unthinkable amount of books in 2012, I give many thanks to all the authors who inspired me to write love stories of my own. 

7.    Emotions—We all have them, and we try to control them, tame them, or let them flow. I have taken a leap of faith in the writing world as I poured my emotions into The Beautiful Series. I took a chance on myself when I wrote Beautiful Chances, My Beautiful, Beautiful Dreams, and now, Beautiful Ties.

8.    People—At heart, I am an observer. I love to watch people interact, smile, and laugh while they embrace a moment. Life is too short not to take a chance on your dreams. 

9.    Music—I have always loved music. Since I started writing, my love for it has intensified. Now, I find certain songs unleashing scenes in my mind, forcing me to run and search for the closest thing—paper, napkin, or anything within my reach to write my ideas down on. 

10.    Day-to-day living—You never know what is going to happen the next day or even the next moment in your life. I’ve learned to be thankful for each moment, every person, and every experience that I have. 


Alicia Rae is a Contemporary Romance Author who lives in Dekalb, Illinois, with her husband and three beautiful boys. Alicia has a passion for reading all types of romance, writing to bring a story to life, and photography.

Thank you to my dear sister, Kels, who showed me a few years ago how much I truly missed reading. And to my loving husband, for not throwing away my Nook, and planting the seed of writing in my mind. I am forever grateful. Xo

Readers, words cannot thank you enough for supporting me along this incredible journey. I hope you enjoy my novels as much as I do writing them. I thank each and every one of you.

Believe in yourself and follow your dreams...

You can reach Alicia via: Blog | Twitter | Facebook | Author Goodreads

About her book

 

Colton Kingston has loved Paige Summers his entire life. All he has ever dreamed of is having Paige by his side while he lives the simple life of a cowboy raising horses and cattle on his farm.

When tragedy strikes, fate tests the strength of their love. 
Paige’s confidence is shaken as she wonders if she can heal from her past and move forward, so Colton can have the life he was born to live.

Can Colton and Paige endure everything in fate’s path?

Or will Paige give up her one true love to give Colton the life he deserves?

What Does Your Office Look Like? by Catherine Hensley

My office is a mess.  As a freelance writer and editor, I work from home.  The spillover seems to happen no matter what I do to stem the tide.  Just as my office is a mess, my home is often a mess as well.  

I do better at tidying up the home part, but much less so with the office part.  This irks my husband to no end.  “How can you get anything done?” he asks me.  “How can you work like this?”  “I get lots done,” I tell him, usually while shuffling papers and Post-Its around and moving notebooks out of the way.  Maybe I don’t actually get lots done each and every day, but there’s order in my chaos.

I check things off on my handwritten to-do list each day.  I keep my Excel spreadsheet payment log balanced.  I edit.  I email.  Things get done.  There are style guides sprawled out on my desk, Post-Its reminding me of to-do’s on the computer monitor, US Weekly peeking out from under one of those style guides—well, you’ve got to take a break every now and then.  

“Two minutes of work and a two-hour break,” my husband says.  He’s wrong, of course (though not far off every once in a while).  My system may not be the most efficient in terms of organization or utilization of space, but it works for me most of the time.What does your office look like?  Have you mastered the delicate mix of design and functionality in your workspace?  Or, like me, are you still looking for that Martha Stewart recipe you jotted down on a Holiday Inn Express notepad and then placed near the credit card bills in the filer?  Really, I should consider putting that in a better place when I find it.  Maybe it’s under the US Weekly…


Catherine L. Hensley is a professional freelance editor and writer. From fiction and nonfiction manuscripts to academic pieces, she provides an extensive range of copyediting, proofreading, content editing, and writing services to a wide variety of clients located around the United States and abroad.

A native of south Louisiana, Catherine received her master of arts degree in creative writing and media studies from New York University and her bachelor of arts degree in English from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, with minors in history and mass communication. Her writing has appeared in The Advocate (Louisiana’s largest newspaper), OT Practice magazine, Quiet Mountain: New Feminist Essays, and Mused, the BellaOnline Literary Review. 

You can reach Catherine via: Website | Facebook | Twitter

About the Book

It’s Fashion Week in New York, and Denton Hodges just got her first big assignment for Glitter magazine.

Denton’s assignment: Get in the show at the posh Regency Viscount Hotel, and find a story. But a chance encounter with hard-partying starlet Amber Donovan forever changes the course of the night—and Denton’s life. After a night of being chased by the paparazzi, swimming in swag bags, and falling heart over heels for Hollywood hunk Chris West, Denton’s not just on the story. She is the story.

Suddenly, Denton’s no longer merely a low-level assistant. Amber’s latching on like a BFF from hell, Chris is flirting and cooking her dinner, and as Denton falls for the real people behind the tabloid screen, neither knows about her ties to Glitter. Only Denton holds the secret—or so she thinks. Is Anna Creel, Glitter’s icy beauty editor, on to her? Will Denton be able to write a story exposing her new friends? And is Chris more than just a friend, or did Glitter get the headline right—“Chris and Amber: Hot Nights!”?

Step into the spotlight, and peek beyond the red carpet in New York Dolls.

Buy the Book

The Wrong Side of History by Mark Patton

What does it mean to be “on the wrong side of history,” and how does one respond to the realisation that this is the case? My recently published third novel, Omphalos, is, in part, an exploration of these questions. The novel comprises six inter-woven stories, each set in a different time period, from the present day back to 4000 BC, and three of these stories feature protagonists who find themselves, in different ways, on the wrong side of history.

In 1945, arguably all Germans and Austrians, apart from those few brave souls who had actively opposed Hitler and the Nazis, found themselves on the wrong side of history. The protagonist of “The Spirit of the Times,” Oberleutnant Friedrich Werner, is in just this position. He is a fictional character, and his story is told through the letters he exchanges with his wife and family, in the last year of the Second World War, and afterwards as a prisoner-of-war. In the process of researching the story, I read a great many real letters and diaries of the period. Friedrich is an average middle class German, not a fanatical Nazi by any means, but a party member, nonetheless, and an architect who, at the beginning of the story, aspires to work with Albert Speer. As events unfold, Friedrich’s view of the world changes, and he is forced to confront the reality of the system he has supported, opening up tensions between himself, his mother and his brother.  

Suzanne de Beaubigny, the fictional protagonist of “The Infinite Labyrinth,” is a Royalist refugee from Revolutionary France. When her diary begins, in the summer of 1799, her father has already given his life in the service of his king, and she herself is drawn into a clandestine world of espionage and intrigue. The cause for which she and her companions have been fighting, however, the coronation of King Louis XVIII, is all but lost, and, when Napoleon Bonaparte comes to power in France, the emigré community to which Suzanne belongs is torn apart. She herself makes some surprising choices: she has found love, but she and her beau are sailing off into a very uncertain future.

Richard Mabon, the protagonist of “Jerusalem,” is a historical character, a Catholic priest from Jersey who is known to have made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem in the first quarter of the 16th Century. No record of his pilgrimage survives, so the story itself is wholly fictional. The story follows Mabon and his secretary, Nicholas Ahier, on their journey from Venice to Jerusalem in 1517. Mabon himself is a Catholic of the old school, a fervent believer in indulgences, the intercession of saints and the healing power of relics, notions that are already being questioned by many. One of his travelling companions is a knight from the German city of Wittenberg, where, later that year, Martin Luther will publish his Ninety-Five Theses, launching the Protestant Reformation that will challenge everything that Richard Mabon believes in.

Together, the six stories that make up Omphalos will take the reader on a journey, a pilgrimage of sorts, through six thousand years of our shared history.

Mark Patton’s novels, Undreamed Shores, An Accidental King and Omphalos, are published by Crooked Cat Publications, and can be purchased from Amazon UK or Amazon USA

Further information can be found on his website (www.mark-patton.co.uk) and blog (http://mark-patton.blogspot.co.uk). 

Photo captions
“German Occupation 4” German officers in the Channel Islands, where Friedrich serves. Photo: Imperial War Museum, non-commercial license.

“Sea-coast promenade fashion, 1809” Fashion print of 1809, “Sea-coast promenade fashion” (image is in the Public Domain). I came upon this after I had written the story, but it is exactly as I imagined Suzanne.

“Monk, Priest, Acolyte, Deacon” A monk, a priest, a deacon and an acolyte: 16th Century woodcut by Tobias Stimmer (image is in the Public Domain). Richard Mabon could be the central figure carrying a chalice.


Mark Patton was born and grew up on the island of Jersey. He studied Archaeology & Anthropology at Cambridge and completed his PhD at University College London. He has taught at the Universities of Wales, Greenwich and Westminster, and currently teaches with The Open University. He is the author of two previous historical novels, Undreamed Shores (Crooked Cat, 2012) and An Accidental King (Crooked Cat 2013).

For more information please visit Mark Patton’s website and blog. You can also connect with him on Twitter and Goodreads.

About the Book

Publication Date: December 5, 2014
Crooked Cat Publications
Formats: eBook, Paperback
Pages: 312

Genre: Historical Fiction

SIX EPOCHS, TEN LIVES INTERSECTING AT A SINGLE PLACE. 2013: Al Cohen, an American in search of his European heritage.

1944-1946: Friedrich Werner, an officer of the Wehrmacht and later a prisoner of war. His wife Greta, clinging to what remains of her life in war-torn Berlin.

1799: Suzanne de Beaubigny, a royalist refugee from revolutionary France.

1517: Richard Mabon, a Catholic priest on pilgrimage to Jerusalem with his secretary, Nicholas Ahier.

1160: Raoul de Paisnel, a knight with a dark secret walking through Spain with his steward, Guillaume Bisson.

4000 BC: Egrasté, a sorceress, and Txeru, a man on an epic voyage.

Transgressions, reconciliations and people caught on the wrong side of history.

Omphalos. A journey through six thousand years of human history.

Praise for Omphalos

“Omphalos is a powerful word, a powerful connotation, as are the stories focused on in this excellent collection. The author leads the reader from one story to the next like an easy progress through the chambers of La Hougue Bie, followed by a reverse journey of revelation. To say too much of how this is cleverly achieved through the excellent use of letters, prose and poetry, I feel, would spoil the enjoyment of a potential reader. The skilful writing techniques used make it a thoroughly engrossing read. I have no qualms in recommending ‘Omphalos’ to the lover of historical fiction and to those who enjoy a well-crafted tale.” – Nancy Jardine

Behind the Stories of Sewing Can Be Dangerous and Other Small Threads by S.R.Mallery

First off, I love history.  I love reading about it, watching documentaries about it, imagining it, and transporting myself back into those various time periods. I also love action, mystery, crime, and romance. So perhaps, being a quilt designer/instructor when I started writing these short stories, I knew somehow I was going to include it all. Hence the ‘thread’ link through each story.

The following includes just a tiny tidbit of research for each story, with excerpts from the FIRST THREE stories only.  I have also included links to ‘images’ for these different subjects because if you’re like me, seeing photographs/pictures makes everything more authentic.

1) “Sewing Can Be Dangerous”

In 1912 desperate immigrant families were pouring in to Ellis Island at an alarming rate.  Non-English speaking, frightened, they grabbed any available job American business magnates offered, no questions asked.  In the ambitious Age of Industrialization, horrendous factory conditions around the country were being ignored while people survived on minimal pay and long hours with no breaks. It was an era, ripe for accidents.

After so many girls died in the infamous New York Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of March 25, 2012, the owners, Harris and Frank went on trial.  But the few female witnesses testifying against them, were not only unable to fully understand the sophisticated verbal courtroom language, they were too intimidated to speak out, so in the end there were no convictions, simply the devastation of the girls’ families and indeed, all of New York City.

Yet, from out of the ashes came new, progressive legislation that would forever change American industry: sprinklers, exit doors mandated to push outward, not inward, more fire escapes, no parts of the building being sealed off, etc.

Images

Excerpt

“...but Sasha’s heart sank.  She found out soon enough what working conditions were really like: sixteen hour days, six days-a-week, hunched over cumbersome black iron industrial sewing machines in dense, almost airtight conditions that had her breaking out in streams of sweat on hot summer days, and teeth chattering shivers in the dead of winter.... microscopic fibers clogged mechanisms and filled nostrils with a dust so fine, after two hours it became difficult to breathe...
Oil soaked rags, used for greasing the mechanisms, radiated their own heat that could be slightly comforting in winter for those workers near the large bins where they were dumped, but toxic in spring and summer for everyone else...”

2) “A Drunkard’s Path”

Funnily enough, I had read years before how certain old quilt patterns had ‘curses’ attached to them. That fascinated me.  But in what story/context could this fact be included?  One night, watching a documentary about the Salem Witchcraft trial, I got my answer.

In the past there had been ‘ergot’ poisoning theories about what happened back then, but more recent evidence indicated that these teenage girls, the accusers who wreaked such havoc in the town of Salem, were much like the hysterical women that Dr. Sigmund Freud treated.  One by one, these girls fed on each other’s psyche, twisting the truth and adding more fervor to the already rigid, naïve, cult-like behavior of the townspeople and the opressive judges.  

Images

Excerpt

“At the front of the room facing the magistrates, sat all the accusers, the “afflicted” girls: Abigail Williams, her cousin Betty Parris, Ann Putnam, Sarah Bibber, Sarah Churchill, Elizabeth Booth, Mercy Lewis, Susanna Sheldon, Jemima Rea, Mary Warren, Mary Walcott and Elizabeth Hubbard. With downcast eyes and folded hands, they appeared demure; inwardly they were experiencing emotions quite different from anything they had ever known. Childhoods stocked with adult repression and fear now served as a springboard to the frenzy of accusations they had created, because on this day, along with their catharsis and even exhilaration, came the most important emotion of all: a sense of empowerment. At last, they were getting adults to listen to them, and it was intoxicating.”

3) “Lettie’s Tale”

In doing my research on the Antebellum south, I was fascinated by how many times the slaves out-maneuvered their owners.  “Puttin’ on the Massah” was repeated time and again, and indeed, their rich tradition of using mostly drawings in the dirt in Africa served them well in America.  I also was taken with the Canadian who came up with codes numbers to help them escape on the Underground Railroad.  Coupled with their use of ‘pattern codes’ in patchwork quilts, they were far more powerful and intelligent than their white master could ever imagine.

Images

Excerpt

 “...At first, the idea of slavery wasn’t even a conscious thought for Lettie.  She had been well-treated up at the Big House and even here, in the lowlands, surrounded by her cousins, with whom she romped through the tall-bladed grass each sunset, just before snuggling up together, heads to wriggly toes on one large, straw mat.  But as they all matured, she could see how arduous their tasks had become.  How being a half-quarter hand was infinitely more grueling than being a quarter hand.  With the other boys becoming full field hands, Lettie watched them return from long, backbreaking days; exhausted, bitter, transformed from the carefree boys she had gotten to know.
         
Her narrow world was shifting and with it, an awareness of little things that now called out to her; secrets whispered between the adults behind doorways, conversations stopped mid-sentence as she approached.  It also occurred to her that more and more, slaves were disappearing.  Where did they go? She wondered.  Was that the secret? For the first time in her life, a tight knot was growing inside her chest, keeping her on high alert...”

4) “The Comforter”

We have all heard about the various Christians who helped Jews in Nazi Germany; putting a good Samaritan couple in my story was a given. But the origins of Kristallnacht pointed to a young Jewish man who, having had enough of being treated so shamefully by the Nazis, shot and killed a minor officer.  That gave Goebbels the excuse and impetus he needed and soon, Kristallnacht was in full gear and my ‘quilt-protagonist,’ a major player.

Image

5) “A Plague On Both Your Houses”

Visiting Wall Street in the late 1980’s I was privy to the madness involved.  High-tufted wall-to-wall carpeting allowed for peace and quiet, while downstairs on ‘the floor,’ it was heart-attack city.  Papers were strewn everywhere, computers were flashing, brokers––jacketless, their ties loosened and skewed––were screaming one minute and looking thoroughly depressed and/or intense the next. Having always loved a good Romeo and Juliet story, I decided to include a Wall Street powerhouse with an artsy fiber artist.

Image

6) “Border Windfalls”

In researching this story, I had reason to interview a doctor from a Doctors Without Borders type of group.  We talked about the problems of dealing with hare-lipped children living in foreign countries; how superstitious their families can be, how they can be seen as being ‘from the devil’.  I also talked to people from Guatemala who claimed in some of the smaller villages, people would do anything to survive---so helping drug dealers became a way of life.

Images

7)  “Emma at Night”
    
People during the Middle Ages had, according to several articles, different circadian rhythms than we do nowadays.  With no TV to keep them up they would fall asleep early, then wake up around 2 a.m. and start to ‘roam’.  In some cases, there would be dozens of people at a time, wandering the countryside while the people living in manors were more contained.  I also saw plans for entire seamstresses wings in the manor, with their own duty being to do their best ‘embroiderie’. Other research uncovered how Richard the Lionhearted wasn’t always so gentle; there was unrest in England as their army went away on all the countless Crusades.

Images

8)  “Murder She Sewed”

I taught machine sewing/quilting for years and years.  In my classes, I always made it a point to talk about safety, particularly when it came to rotary cutters.  What are those? People would ask and I would hold up something that was akin to a pizza cutter and in front of them, start to make sharp, even cuts to produce fabric strips.  There were also quilt workshops galore on those big ship cruises back in the ‘80s. So I put a quilt teacher bunking in with a burned out NYPD detective. Voila! Murder Most Foul....

Images

9)  “Precious Gifts”

The production and sale of the Singer sewing machine was nothing short of a miracle. Some women claimed it almost ranked up there with the ‘wheel’.  When I was at an exhibition of the Sewing Machine, I noticed a tiny note nestled behind glass at a counter display.  It read something to the effect of, “I’m going to hide my Singer in the cornfield tomorrow in case of Indian attack. Washington Territory 1870”.  Wow. More important than her house....and her family?  Further research showed how the Chinook Indians of that area were fat and happy from all the salmon running upstream.  I created an unlikely friendship from a white woman and a young Chinook Indian out on his spiritual quest.

Image


10) “Lyla’s Summers of Love”

That was my era––I wasn’t a hippy per se, but I sure was part of the culture; hence, the inclusion of a macramé necklace and San Francisco.  But I also learned that in the late 60’s early 70’s while students protested, a few professors had been hired by the government to keep their ‘eyes and ears’ open regarding campus unrest.  At that same time The Zodiac Killer was filling the news.

Images

11) “Nightmare At Four Corners”

A bored middle-aged housewife with a journalistic background hooks up with her Hopi Native American housekeeper to solve a cold case murder. In the process, she learns Katchina dolls and the beliefs behind them have tremendous power.  In her Southwest travel to the Four Corners area of the United States she also learns about the power of prejudice.

Katchina Dolls and the Power behind them:
http://americanindianoriginals.com/kachina-dolls.html


S.R. Mallery has worn various hats in her life.

First, a classical/pop singer/composer, she moved on to the professional world of production art and calligraphy. Next came a long career as an award winning quilt artist/teacher and an ESL/Reading instructor. Her short stories have been published in descant 2008, Snowy Egret, Transcendent Visions, The Storyteller, and Down In the Dirt.

Unexpected Gifts”, her debut novel, is currently available on Amazon. “Sewing Can Be Dangerous and Other Small Threads, her collection of short stories, Jan. 2014, both books by Mockingbird Lane Press.

For more information please visit S.R. Mallery’s website. You can also find her on Facebook, Twitter and Goodreads.

About the Book

Publication Date: December 16, 2013
Mockingbird Lane Press
Formats: eBook, Paperback, Audio Book
Pages: 276

The eleven long short stories in “Sewing Can Be Dangerous and Other Small Threads" combine history, mystery, action and/or romance, and range from drug trafficking using Guatemalan hand-woven wallets, to an Antebellum U.S. slave using codes in her quilts as a message system to freedom; from an ex-journalist and her Hopi Indian maid solving a cold case together involving Katchina spirits, to a couple hiding Christian passports in a comforter in Nazi Germany; from a wedding quilt curse dating back to the Salem Witchcraft Trials, to a mystery involving a young seamstress in the infamous Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire; from a 1980’s Romeo and Juliet romance between a rising Wall Street financial ‘star’ and an eclectic fiber artist, to a Haight-Asbury love affair between a professor and a beautiful macramé artist gone horribly askew, just to name a few.