Paranormal Cozy Mystery Author Maggie Toussaint aka Valona Jones's blog about the writing life, living in the South, and other stuff
Friday, July 20, 2018
Maggie Toussaint's Podcast Interview
I'm delighted to share a link to a podcast interview by Tyler Wagner of Business Insights. This brief podcast is a great way to get to know me and my mysteries. You'll learn why Dr. Seuss's Green Eggs and Ham was a sentinel book in my childhood.
Best of all, the audio interview is concise and only 5 minutes long.
Please check it out! https://tinyurl.com/y9nf522r
Maggie Toussaint https://maggietoussaint.com
Monday, July 9, 2018
Book Club Questions for Confound It
Is your Book Club interested in reading Confound It, a paranormal cozy? Here are discussion questions to get the party started! (This book is available through Ingram, through Baker and Taylor, online vendors, and Epicenter Press.) I am also available to Skype into your meetings!
10. In a series mystery like this one, as the
series goes along, the amateur sleuth gains more of a familiarity with the
criminal world, though she still says firmly grounded in her community. Although
Baxley has gained experience as a dreamwalker, one of her abilities, being able
to perceive lies, happens automatically. This can be a bonus for her police
work, but this (and her other skills) makes people leery of her. If you had a
special skill that made people nervous, would you use it or hide it?
1. We are often quick to judge others. For instance, what if
a young mother found a lucrative way to provide a future for her son, but then
couldn’t get out? Soon she becomes a homicide statistic. We automatically look
at what she did-making drugs-and label her a bad person. Now that you know character
Mandy Patterson’s backstory, do you feel empathy for her? Do you think others
care if a meth cook dies?
2. A man she met on vacation, Deputy Sam Mayes, visits my
sleuth Baxley Powell and her family. Like her, the man has extrasensory abilities,
and she wants to learn from his experiences. He, on the other hand, is abiding
by her lets-be-friends decree, but he’s made it clear he’s interested in a
romantic relationship. As a woman, would you pursue the friendship?
3. For the longest time, Baxley has lived in relationship limbo.
Her elite soldier of a husband went missing on a military mission. After a year
went by, the Army declared him dead. As someone who can traverse the Veil of
Life, Baxley knows he isn’t dead, only she can’t find him in the land of the
living either. She worries he’s hurt. That’s the only way she knows that he
wouldn’t come home to her and their young daughter. People say she should start
dating again, but Baxley is married. Her honor and integrity demand that she
honor her vows. What would you do in that situation?
4. In-laws and Outlaws is a phrase I’ve often heard applied
to some extended families. In Confound It,
discord rules amongst the victim’s family members. There’s love, but there’s
also envy, greed, jealousy, and lust. Does your family always get along? What’s
the usual bone of contention? Examples: curfew, bedtime, heirloom, elder care,
employment, authority, money, respect…
5. We expect those who care for us to comfort us when
troubles occur. But Confound It’s
Mandy Patterson is trapped in a desperate situation, and she’s afraid of her
boyfriend. What advice would you give someone like Mandy?
6. In Confound It,
Mandy’s sister makes no bones that she wants what her sister has, only June is
mostly talk and no action. Plus, she believes the world owes her. She gets mad
when Mandy won’t continue to give her money. Do you believe in Tough Love? Why
or why not?
7. My sleuth Baxley Powell is a Dreamwalker. She taps into
her extrasensory abilities to learn more about a person, place, or thing in
this world or the next. In reality, psychics often have one strong extrasensory
skill. In the Dreamwalker Series, I take liberties so that Baxley explores a
new paranormal aspect in each book. Confound
It is book five in this series. Usually in other books, she must hold an
item of the victim to make contact with his or her spirit. In this book, Baxley
has several spontaneous visions causing her no end of confusion. What
characteristic of Baxley’s do you most admire and why? (Her traits include loyalty,
adaptability, courage, patience, composure, self-sufficiency, perceptiveness,
honesty, fairness, or her curiosity).
8. Deputy Sam Mayes is a Cherokee. He carefully treads his
way in both his native world and the white man’s world. Baxley doesn’t understand
the issues he faces, doesn’t know how hard he is to appear to be solidly in
both worlds, or that it costs his tribes when he is less than fully theirs.
Assimilation used to be the American Way. Our society is a melting pot of immigrant
groups. Why does assimilation hurt Native American tribes? Don’t people have to
live and make a living in the twenty-first century?
9. Baxley’s household has a menagerie of animals: a
Shih-Pooh named Muffin, a chihuahua named Elvis, black lab named Maddy, a Maine
Coon cat named Sulay, and a tabby named Ziggy. Her ghost dog, Oliver the Great
Dane, puts in appearances now and then. Occasionally, one of her pet-sitting
clients leaves their animals with her, so she has even more animals at home.
With such a variety of dogs and cats, which animal is the boss and why?
This book is currently available in print and ebook formats. It will be released in Large Print at a later date still to be determined.
Don't delay! Get your copy today!
Thanks, and I hope you love reading this mystery!
Maggie Toussaint
Monday, June 18, 2018
Dadgummit Wins Award!
I'm thrilled to announce that Dadgummit, Book 4 in my Dreamwalker Mystery Series, won the honor of finalist in the Detective/Mystery category on June 16, 2018, at the Georgia Author of the Year Awards.
It was a great night of celebration, of making new friends, of finding a long-lost cousin, and of reminiscing with my brother and sister. Somehow Cliff managed to get these nice photos without a flash (something about bouncing the light off the wall) and I was impressed with his photography skills.
Maggie Toussaint
https://maggietoussaint.com
The stiff competition had me sweating in my boots! Out of 19 category entries from the entire state of GA, Dadgummit came in second (finalist). A good friend, Roger Johns, took top honors in the category, and I highly recommend his book, Dark River Rising. Thank you, Georgia Writers Assn., for honoring Dadgummit. I am most appreciative!
Pictured above, the event emcee Michelle Khouri presents me with a certificate. GA Writers Assn also presented finalists (and winners) with cool stickers to place on our winning books.
I had a brief moment at the podium to thank my new publisher, Camel Press, for picking up this ongoing series. I did my best to sound rational and coherent but it wasn't easy. My heart was racing from excitement, and the room was crowded - somewhere between 150 and 200 people in attendance. Still, for an introvert, I did pretty good.
By now you must be wondering what the certificate looked like! I posted a photo holding the certificate above. All of these lovely photos are courtesy of my brother, Clifford Watson. He and sister Virginia Baisden accompanied me to the award banquet.It was a great night of celebration, of making new friends, of finding a long-lost cousin, and of reminiscing with my brother and sister. Somehow Cliff managed to get these nice photos without a flash (something about bouncing the light off the wall) and I was impressed with his photography skills.
Now I just need to decide where on the book cover to place the Georgia Author of the Year finalist sticker. Decisions, decisions!
I hope you'll check out Dadgummit and all the Dreamwalker Mysteries at my website.
https://maggietoussaint.com
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)