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DEATH AT WENTWATER COURT, the first Daisy Dalrymple mystery, will be out as a Kindle e-book on May 15. The second, THE WINTER GARDEN MYSTERY, is already out for both Kindle and Nook.

Still no sign of Requiem for a Mezzo or Murder on the Flying Scotsman, but I'm beginning to believe they will actually appear sooner or later. It's been a long wait!


They're using the old hardcover art:


 
 
Here's the link to my post on a different blog, about interesting ways I've used gardens in my mysteries:

http://murderousmusings.blogspot.com/2012/05/flowers-that-bloom-in-spring.html
 
 
In March I went to Left Coast Crime, the annual mystery conference--in Sacramento this year. Among other adventures, I was interviewed by Lorie Lewis Ham of Kings River Life magazine. Considering she recorded it on her cell phone, it came out amazingly well. You can see and hear it at I was interviewed by cell phone(!) at LCC. You can see the result here:
http://kingsriverlife.com/04/18/mystery-author-video-interviews-from-left-coast-crime/
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I drove down to Sacramento from Eugene with a friend, passing Mount Shasta on the way. My friend had never seen the mountain before-- She got a terrific view. Often as not, it's hidden by clouds.
This is one of the panels I was on. Our subject was 20th Century History. My fellow-panelists--Ken Kuhlken, Bill Seil, Rebecca Cantrell, Kelli Stanley--all write mysteries set in various periods between 1900 and 2000.

Here I am saying something intelligent... I hope!
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We saw some interesting buildings in Sacramento. This is the Crocker Art Museum

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This appears to be a sparrow condo!

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And here is Darth Vader looming over the city.

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This is my favourite train at the wonderful California State Railroad Museum.

Back to the conference:
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The other panel I was on was called Anglophilia, but we rechristened it Britophilia, as one of the panelists was Catriona McPherson, a Scot.



The others on the panel were Jacqueline Winspear, Rhys Bowen, and Michael Kurland. Four British women living in the US against one American male--Michael was outnumbered. We were supposed to talk about the American fascination with British mysteries, but it seemed to me that it was the audience who ought to explain it to us.
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What I enjoy most at mystery conferences is not the panels, but meeting and talking to readers and fellow-authors.

This is LJ Sellers, another Eugenean and author of--well, I lose count! She's a prolific writer of mysteries and thrillers.

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 Here's a reader who came up to the table at the end of a panel just to have a quick word before I dashed off to a signing.

On the way home--so exhausted the madrone had to hold me up...
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Picnic stop in the Rogue River rest area/park
All photos courtesy of Linda Cummens
 
Gone West covers 04/10/2012
 
The latest Daisy--cover art. Which do you prefer?
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US large print edition
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US hardcover
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UK edition
 
 
Believe it or not, I don't actually spend every minute of every day writing, though I spend nearly that thinking about it. Also, it's been a busy month, what with signing tours north to Seattle and Portland and south to San Diego and the Los Angeles area, followed by Left Coast Crime in Sacramento. In between all the running about, I paused to play in a recorder concert.
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All photos courtesy of Dennis Galloway

If you think of recorders as those things elementary kids play--well, you're  half right. They do, but so do a large number of musicians, a few professional and many amateur.

Recorders come in several sizes, from the 6 inch garklein to the double contrabass (large and elusive, like the Sasquatch--I've never met one in person).

The most commonly played are the soprano/descant and the alto/treble, while tenors and basses are not uncommon. I've played the descant since I was seven years old--with long periods of not playing--and still play my original instrument. I've also learnt to play the treble, but the fingering is different and I don't have time to practise, so I haven't actually played it in a while.


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Sometimes we're joined by viols, also known as violas da gamba, or even viola da gambas!

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We play music ranging from medieval to modern. Recorders went out of fashion by Classical times (Haydn, Mozart). A revival began in the early 20th century, with renewed interest in "ancient" music. My favourite period for recorder music is the Renaissance, especially the English Renaissance from mid 17th century to early 1700s, composers such as Gibbons, Byrd, John Johnson, Anthony Holbourne, Orlando Gibbons, and the all time best, Anon.

This is the group I play with, the Eugene chapter of the American Recorder Society, aka EARS. We meet once a month for a couple of hours, just for fun, about as much as I can manage. There are other more serious groups in Eugene, but we do play serious music.

These pictures are of the Play the Recorder Month concert in March. We played Vaughan Williams' Come Away Death, John Dowland's Now I Needs Must Part, a tango by Astor Piezzolla, Palestrina's Nigra Sum sed Formosa, and others.


It's a lot of fun, exhilarating and exhausting, as making music usually is, and it makes a change from sitting at the computer or behind the wheel.
 
 
Daisy in the UK: My UK editor just sent me some pics of the Cosy Mystery display in Waterstones (a large UK chain) store in Reading (a largish UK city). Daisy's rubbing shoulders with AA Milne's only mystery, the Red House Mystery, and Agatha Christie!


Waterstones has two stores in Reading, each catering to a different kind of reader/customer, and apparently Daisy's doing very nicely in both.
 
 
I just turned in the revised manuscript of the third Cornish Mystery, Valley of the Shadow, to my editor. It's been "available for pre-order" on Amazon for a couple of weeks already!! Coming out in December, along with the paperback of the first Cornish Mystery, Manna from Hades, with new cover art.

http://caroladunn.weebly.com/cornish-mysteries.html
 
 
A new review of my Regencies came out last month--amazing all this time after I wrote them!

http://www.vcstar.com/news/2008/feb/10/prolific-authors-historical-novels-run-the-gamut/


They're still going strong as e-books, as well as reissues in large print and in the UK (Miss Jacobson's Journey, Lord Roworth's Reward, and Captain Ingram's Inheritance, in October).
 
Home, Sweet Home 03/15/2012
 
A day late, because of snow in the Siskiyou mountains, but I'm home and trying to catch up with life!

Errands can be fun. At the Post Office, the clerk invited me to speak to her book group; among the accumulated mail were a royalty cheque (e-Regencies) and a hand-written letter from a reader in Australia, forwarded via my UK publisher and my NY publisher; and in the library, an elderly (ie older than me) lady patted me on the shoulder and said she loves my books. Came home smiling :-D
 
 
I have just two California signings to go:

March 11 at noon, Huntington Beach, Mystery Ink
http://mysteryink.com/

March 11 at 3 pm, S. Pasadena, Book'Em Mysteries
http://www.bookem.com/

If you can't make it to these signings, the stores will reserve a copy and get it signed for you, and personalized if you like.


Signed copies can also be ordered from Seattle Mystery, Murder by the Book in Portland OR, Mysterious Galaxy San Diego, or Mysteries to Die For in Thousand Oaks.