How exciting! My article "When A Door Closes" is featured in this month's Southern Writer's Magazine.
I drew my inspiration from what could have been a catastrophic event in my career. My mystery publisher pulled the plug on their entire mystery line. As I networked with other authors in my house and unbelievably other publishers who'd also cut their cozy lines, I realized the reaction from the news devastated some and energized others. I was upset, don't get me wrong, but I was also determined not to let it beat me.
Here's the first little bit of that article:
I encourage everyone not to let roadblocks get them down. Opportunities are still out there, if you only know where to look!
[I don't have permission to post the entire article, but I can at least post something more legible of what's in the teaser they prepared. The snip follows.]
When a Door Closes by Maggie Toussaint
Runners pace themselves. If they go out too fast, they won’t last to the finish line. They push through the burn and find their stride. Authors go through a similar pacing process throughout their careers.
We learn how to navigate the ups and downs of story crafting, submissions, rejections, contracts, edits, blog tours, booksignings, reviews, conferences, newsletters, and social media. When we hit our stride, we feel confident and think, “I’ve got this.”
Then something unexpected happens. For some, financial or health concerns take precedent over their creative journey. For others, their publisher drops their books or an entire product line.
One day everything was fine for them, and the next, it wasn’t. When my publishing world upended, I stumbled and couldn’t quite catch my breath. Here’s what happened.
In the fall of 2015, my publisher announced it was closing its entire mystery line. The books already acquired for 2016 would still be published, but that was it. On our author loop, shock and concern dominated our posts. Many said this was a career ender for them because no house would acquire an ongoing series.
Several authors quit. They couldn’t conceive of writing for another house. Others stalled in the complaining phase of this turn of events. The rest looked around and said, “What’s next?”
A few decided to change genres, a few started a new series to shop around. Some, like me, had a backlog of manuscripts in a current series. If we wanted to keep publishing, we needed a new house or the stamina to become indie-publishers.
Finding a new house with an ongoing series is difficult, but indie publishing is no cakewalk either. Another consideration crept into my decision making process. Many of the larger mystery conferences require that authors be with a Mystery Writers of America approved publisher to be eligible for panel consideration.
Concurrently with my publisher closing their mystery business, other big houses shut down their cozy lines. Suddenly the ground was thick with unemployed cozy mystery writers, which is my genre. I knew that I couldn’t delay making a decision.... more at Southern Writer's Magazine.
Dadgummit, my August 1 release from Camel Press is receiving exciting reviews. It's up for pre-order at all venues. Check out the early reviews at http://maggietoussaint.com/dadgummit/
That's it for now. I hope you're having a great summer!
Maggie Toussaint
http://www.maggietoussaint.com
Paranormal Cozy Mystery Author Maggie Toussaint aka Valona Jones's blog about the writing life, living in the South, and other stuff
Thursday, June 29, 2017
Saturday, April 22, 2017
Cover Reveal: Turtle Tribbles
I'm so very pleased to present the cover for the next novella in my Lindsey & Ike Romantic Mystery Series. Turtle Tribbles, the second installation in this three-novella set, is a cozy mystery featuring amateur sleuth Lindsey McKay.
For all of my Bailey the dog fans, Bailey is her irrepressible self: headstrong and curious and super friendly. She loves being Lindsey's assistant, but so does Sheriff Ike Harper. He just wishes Lindsey would focus on her newspaper and him, LOL! Lindsey & Ike's relationship encounters some rough water during the course of crime-solving...
Here's the blurb for the novella:
In Book 2 of the Lindsey & Ike Novella Series, newspaper editor Lindsey McKay must decide if she’s ready to take the next step with her boyfriend, Sheriff Ike Harper. He’s anxious for her to move in, but she worries something is missing. Meanwhile, the Turtle Girl, a college intern named Selma Crowley, begs Lindsey to cover her turtle story. Someone is stealing federally protected loggerhead turtle eggs off a Georgia barrier island, and it has to stop.
The earnest young woman convinces Lindsey of the story’s potential, and the next day Lindsey ferries to the island to see the nests and take photos. Selma promises she’ll have tangible evidence of the theft on Friday, but the revelation doesn’t occur. Worse, Selma’s missing, and no one’s seen her since Wednesday evening. Because she demanded proof from Selma for the newspaper story, Lindsey blames herself for the intern’s disappearance.
When Selma’s body is discovered, Lindsey vows to get justice for Selma and her turtles. Selma’s tribbles are over, but the tribbles are just beginning for Lindsey and her trusty sidekick, Labrador retriever Bailey.
Ready to get your copy?
Turtle Tribbles released last year bundled in the Happy Homicides 3 Anthology. This year it's going solo. I updated the story a smidge for this individual release. Right now, this author's edition version is on pre-order at Kindle. It releases on May 1, 2017. To reserve your copy today, click on this link: PRE-ORDER NOW.
If you haven't signed up for my quarterly newsletter, I hope you will fill out the form on the sidebar of this blogsite.
Free Cookbook
As a bonus, I'm a participant (under my pen name of Rigel Carson) in a cookbook project, so there's a free cookbook for you, if you'd like one! My Gingerbread Man recipe is a family favorite at my house and everywhere I've carried them. COOKBOOK LINK
Thanks for stopping in!
Maggie Toussaint
For all of my Bailey the dog fans, Bailey is her irrepressible self: headstrong and curious and super friendly. She loves being Lindsey's assistant, but so does Sheriff Ike Harper. He just wishes Lindsey would focus on her newspaper and him, LOL! Lindsey & Ike's relationship encounters some rough water during the course of crime-solving...
Here's the blurb for the novella:
In Book 2 of the Lindsey & Ike Novella Series, newspaper editor Lindsey McKay must decide if she’s ready to take the next step with her boyfriend, Sheriff Ike Harper. He’s anxious for her to move in, but she worries something is missing. Meanwhile, the Turtle Girl, a college intern named Selma Crowley, begs Lindsey to cover her turtle story. Someone is stealing federally protected loggerhead turtle eggs off a Georgia barrier island, and it has to stop.
The earnest young woman convinces Lindsey of the story’s potential, and the next day Lindsey ferries to the island to see the nests and take photos. Selma promises she’ll have tangible evidence of the theft on Friday, but the revelation doesn’t occur. Worse, Selma’s missing, and no one’s seen her since Wednesday evening. Because she demanded proof from Selma for the newspaper story, Lindsey blames herself for the intern’s disappearance.
When Selma’s body is discovered, Lindsey vows to get justice for Selma and her turtles. Selma’s tribbles are over, but the tribbles are just beginning for Lindsey and her trusty sidekick, Labrador retriever Bailey.
Ready to get your copy?
Turtle Tribbles released last year bundled in the Happy Homicides 3 Anthology. This year it's going solo. I updated the story a smidge for this individual release. Right now, this author's edition version is on pre-order at Kindle. It releases on May 1, 2017. To reserve your copy today, click on this link: PRE-ORDER NOW.
If you haven't signed up for my quarterly newsletter, I hope you will fill out the form on the sidebar of this blogsite.
Free Cookbook
As a bonus, I'm a participant (under my pen name of Rigel Carson) in a cookbook project, so there's a free cookbook for you, if you'd like one! My Gingerbread Man recipe is a family favorite at my house and everywhere I've carried them. COOKBOOK LINK
Thanks for stopping in!
Maggie Toussaint
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
Cover Reveal for Dadgummit
I'm very happy to present the cover for my upcoming Dreamwalker Mystery series novel, Dadgummit. We were looking for an image of a mountainside lake with a bit of atmosphere. I think we nailed it!
In this 4th book of the series, my sleuth Baxley Powell goes on vacation to the mountains with her family and friends. What could be better, right?
For starters, there's an armed guy running around the mountains claiming he's on patrol. His visit the first evening puts our sleuth on notice that there's no relaxing around here.
Secondly, the cops have an unusual case, a case wherein they can't see any obvious means of death on a very healthy appearing young man. During a sweep of the area, they come across Baxley and friends, run their names, and realize they have a bona fide psychic police consultant on hand, one with a 100% solve rate.
So, Baxley's vacation turns into a work-cation for her, but her encounters with the paranormal have never been anything like this! Soon she's hanging out with some "people" straight out of Cherokee mythology and trying to figure out who killed Haney, the young man by the lake. As if that's not enough something is running around stealing people's energy. Oh my my.
Dadgummit releases August 1, 2017 from Camel Press. The trade paperback is available for preordering at Amazon, and it will be available in both print and ebook format at multiple venues upon release.
To read an excerpt, visit my website at http://maggietoussaint.com/dadgummit/
Happy Reading!
Maggie Toussaint
ps Don't forget our monthly contest at Booklover's Bench! We have a $25 gift certificate to Amazon or B&N up for grabs! Contest runs through the 18th of the month. http://bookloversbench.com/win-a-gift-card-march-2017/
Sunday, February 12, 2017
Book Release!
Really, Truly Dead is out! This longer-length novella available exclusively on Kindle for the first 90 days, and also uploaded to other vendors after that.
Here's the Kindle buy link: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B06VTKF5G6
And for those who haven't seen it yet, here's the back cover blurb:
An amateur sleuth and her dog return home to a town of secrets … and an ugly murder
In this novella, science writer Lindsey McKay takes a leave of absence from her job and returns home with her dog to save the family newspaper. She left Danville ten years ago and she trusts she can wrap this up quickly. She promises her Atlanta boss she’ll return in two-weeks.
Sheriff Ike Harper is thrilled at Lindsey’s homecoming. She’s the gal who got away, and now he has a second chance at the woman he’s always admired.
Lindsey encourages her father to fight for the paper’s survival, but he won’t cooperate. Meanwhile, the murder of a local judge is a boon for the newspaper, but it’s too late. With her leave running out, neither the tragedy nor Lindsey’s hard work can save the failing business. Then the sheriff arrests her father for the murder, and she faces a new challenge.
Determined to clear her father’s name, Lindsey stirs up a hornet’s nest of trouble. Will saving her father’s life cost Lindsey hers?
Happy Reading, Everyone!
Maggie Toussaint
Friday, February 10, 2017
Really, Truly Dead Cover Reveal!
I'm so happy to present the wonderful cover for my novella, Really, Truly Dead. The creation is the work of Boulevard Photografica and it really and truly (sorry, I couldn't resist!) sets the tone for the romantic mystery. See for yourself!
The novella will release in the next few days on Kindle Select at Amazon. This is the first of three in a novella series. The collection will be issued in a print book later this year.
Here's the blurb for the story:
An amateur sleuth and her dog return home to a town of secrets … and an ugly murder
In this novella, science writer Lindsey McKay takes a leave of absence from her job and returns home with her dog to save the family newspaper. She left Danville ten years ago and she trusts she can wrap this up quickly. She promises her Atlanta boss she’ll return in two-weeks.
Sheriff Ike Harper is thrilled at Lindsey’s homecoming. She’s the gal who got away, and now he has a second chance at the woman he’s always admired.
Lindsey encourages her father to fight for the paper’s survival, but he won’t cooperate. Meanwhile, the murder of a local judge is a boon for the newspaper, but it’s too late. With her leave running out, neither the tragedy nor Lindsey’s hard work can save the failing business. Then the sheriff arrests her father for the murder, and she faces a new challenge.
Determined to clear her father’s name, Lindsey stirs up a hornet’s nest of trouble. Will saving her father’s life cost Lindsey hers?
Stay tuned for release information in the next few days!
Maggie Toussaint
ps Over at Booklover's Bench we're giving away a tablet. The contest ends on Feb 18, 2017. To visit the page: http://bookloversbench.com/win-a-samsung-galaxy-tablet-feb-2017/
Sunday, February 5, 2017
How to: Online Critique Groups
So you’ve decided to join an online critique group? Good for
you! When guidelines are established up front and followed, online critique can
be enjoyable and boost your writing level.
An underappreciated aspect of critiquing other writers’ work
is that you are less emotionally tied to every word and can discern where
something stops working. It has been my experience that
evaluating how a story is put together will cross over to your own work and
help you to elevate your craft.
For critique to be constructive, praise the parts that are
working as well as note where something doesn’t work. Articulate in a kind and
helpful manner why it doesn’t work for you. Offering suggestions on possible different
directions to take may be welcomed.
Who is a good match
up for you?
(This may surprise you.) Any publication-minded writer who
is familiar with story structure, who has a keen eye, and who has a kind way of
phrasing their observations. I have had critique partners since the 1990s, so I
know this to be true. The genre matchup between your work and your critique
partner(s) need not be identical. Also, while it may be helpful if the other
members of your critique group are at a similar place on their publication
journey, it doesn’t matter as much as you might think.
Family members, best friends, or anyone who might
rubberstamp your work to avoid hurting your feelings are rarely desirable for critique partners. Also, be on the lookout
for toxic critiquers. These folks find fault with everything, and their input
is rarely constructive. My advice? Bow out of that situation and try again.
What are your
exchange parameters?
In general, the larger the group, the smaller the page count
swapped (i.e., it would be arduous for a group of six people to swap 25-30
pages every week; 10 pages is a better amount for a larger group).For groups of
two or three writers, 20-25 pages is a good ballpark number. Most groups use
standard margins of one inch, double spacing, and a standard font such as Times
New Roman size 12. Using Track Changes in Word gives you a way to add comments
in the margin of the page. If your members aren’t familiar with Track Changes,
another option is to use all caps or a different color of font for your
remarks.
Clearly define what input you are seeking. For a piece that’s
highly polished, a writer may want to know where you were tempted to put it
down. For a first draft piece, a writer might want to know if the story flows,
if the characters are believable, and so on. This may be author-specific or
manuscript specific.
If you have more than two people in a group, decide if the
critiques go back to the author or to the entire group. It can work either way,
and it can also stimulate a discussion post-critique, if that’s what your group
wants to do.
When will your group
meet?
Keeping to a schedule is a good idea. That way, there are
fewer surprises on submission dates. Decide upon frequency of submission and
expected time of response. Some groups exchange weekly, some every other week,
or some only at the beta reader stage. Whatever works for your group is the
right answer.
Where will your group
meet?
Most online critiquers opt for getting the exchanged files
in their email Inboxes. Some may set up private social media groups for the
exchange of files. Others may elect to connect via phone or a video chat
service such as Skype.
How to critique
Avoid stomping on someone’s dream. It takes a high degree of
trust to put your work out there for peer review. The same people you are
swapping with are also reviewing your work. Instead of offering negative
feedback, provide constructive comments.
It is easy to make line edit suggestions, but grammar and punctuation are rarely
the primary focus of an online critique group. Instead, critique partners often
note story construction weaknesses, characterization inconsistencies, timeline
issues, lack of setting in a scene, slow pacing, opening or closing hook needs
strengthening, missing beats, untagged dialog, head hopping, and so on.
Showing vs telling is a common critique comment. If you
notice an author “told” something instead of “showing” it, make a constructive
comment to illustrate a showing in this situation. The goal is not to rewrite
the work, but to offer a suggestion so that the author may own that revision.
Give praise where praise is due. A particularly well-drawn
character, hero or villain, is a treat to readers, and the author should be
praised for getting this right. Perhaps the dialog sparkles, the pacing is
spot-on, or the settings are three dimensional – make sure you tell the author
you noticed.
Writing styles vary. You want your critique partners to
respect your style, so respect theirs. Style and voice are individual, and your
goal as a critique partner is to make sure the work you are reviewing reflects
the author, not your personal style.
Be kind. Nuance, humor, and tone don’t come through well during
a critique, so make remarks in a neutral way. If you don’t understand
something, say that instead of saying “you did something wrong.” Asking for
clarification will help the author figure out what areas of the work need
strengthening.
In summary, offer constructive feedback on writing craft
elements in a neutral manner. Respect voice and style. Provide an example, if
needed, for clarification of your remark. Praise aspects of the sub which are well
done. Remember to be courteous and professional in how you phrase your remarks.
###
Check out this giveaway for a new tablet! Contest is live February 1-18, 2017: http://bookloversbench.com/win-a-samsung-galaxy-tablet-feb-2017/
###
Check out this giveaway for a new tablet! Contest is live February 1-18, 2017: http://bookloversbench.com/win-a-samsung-galaxy-tablet-feb-2017/
Monday, December 5, 2016
Besties
Some of us are lucky to have best friends. It’s rare to have
multiple best friends simultaneously, but I’ve been blessed to have two best
friends my entire life. They are sisters, and they were my next door neighbors
forever.
We grew up sharing scraped knees, Barbies, favorite songs,
and chicken pox. We listened to rain on a tin roof, caught blue crabs in tidal
creeks, and confided our deepest darkest secrets to each other. We forged friendships
that have spanned more than fifty years.
So, when I decided to create a character foil for my amateur
sleuth Baxley Powell, I wanted her to have the same rich and enduring
friendship I’ve had. Newspaper reporter Charlotte Ambrose appears in every book
of the Dreamwalker cozy mysteries, but she was in Baxley’s life long before the
series.
In firming up their backstory, I decided this pair had been
inseparable since grade school. Charlotte struggles with her weight, with
confidence, and with upward career mobility. As a fulltime employee at a weekly
paper, she can get title promotions, but the job remains the same, no matter
the label. Meanwhile, Baxley struggles with her unusual skill of communicating
with the dead, her burning desire to be normal, and her decision to suppress
her psychic abilities for most of her life.
As children, teens, and adults, Charlotte and Baxley needle
each other when they need an extra push. They support each other when things go
wrong and cheer for each other’s successes. They’re in and out of each other’s
houses all the time. Charlotte is the sister Baxley never had, and Baxley’s
parents are Charlotte’s second set of parents.
This closeness works out well for best friends in real life
and for characters in stories. For instance, when everyday things that happen to
us, we turn to our friends first. Our friends are our sounding boards and our
barometers. They tell us when we’re messing up, and they rat us out to our
folks when we need it. The same goes for Baxley and Charlotte.
In book one of the series, Gone and Done It, Charlotte helps Baxley through the decision to
become the Dreamwalker. She helps Bax when the admission of power totally
whitens Baxley’s forelock. On the flip side, Baxley clues her friend into the
first murder the county has had in forever. That’s solid gold and pure
adrenaline for an ambitious reporter like Charlotte.
In the second Dreamwalker mystery, Bubba Done It, Charlotte gets first dibs on reporting the banker’s
death, but her astute observations shape the overall police investigation.
There’s a lot of give and take in their relationship and a squabble or two for
good measure. As always, Charlotte remains the brains of the pair and Baxley
the pluck.
And now we’re to book three in the series, the subject of
this book release blog tour, Doggone It.
With several months of dreamwalking under her belt, Baxley enjoys a more formal
relationship with the sheriff’s department. The increased work and pay make her
life as a single mom easier, but the more cop work she does, the less she can
confide in Charlotte in real time. With Charlotte being a member of the press
and Baxley on the side of law and order, a rift in their friendship threatens.
In addition, Charlotte’s reporting of two previous murder
cases shakes up the pecking order at the paper and gains her notice throughout
the state. She’s sure her next murder story will springboard her to a bigtime career.
While Charlotte pursues fame and fortune, Baxley keeps a low profile. The
people she meets are either dead, criminals, family of the dead, or cops. Her
dreamwalking clients drop by at all hours of the day and night, leaving her
little time for her friend.
Adjustments must be made if Baxley and Charlotte are to
remain close friends.
Read more about Baxley
and Charlotte in Doggone It!
This post originally aired at Storeybook Reviews on October 20, 2016 http://storeybookreviews.com/2016/10/guest-post-giveaway-doggone-it-by-maggie-toussaint/
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