Characters, Characters, Characters!
It occurred to
me recently that at present I have three historical cozy mystery series, and
they all have more or less the same heroine.
This came about
through a series of events that are not uncommon in the publishing biz, which
is crazy most of the time and understandable never, at least to me.
First, along
about 2001 or thereabouts, Daisy Gumm Majesty, phony spiritualist in Pasadena,
California (my home town) in the early 1920s, popped into my brain. I love the
1920s, which were a fascinating era. I love the Pasadena of my girlhood. I love
Daisy. She’s my favorite of all the characters in all my books. She’s a peach.
In actual fact, Daisy’s me, only with a supportive family behind her and none
of my crippling neuroses. Now it didn’t seem enough to have a cool heroine
solving mysteries; I had to give her some problems. Therefore, I gave her a
husband who was grievously injured (by both bullets and mustard gas) during the
War to End All Wars (alas, misnamed). Billy Majesty, the love of Daisy’s life,
had been all set to get a job as an automobile mechanic—a position greatly
sought-after and respected at the time—but when he came back, shell-shocked,
barely able to breathe and crippled, he couldn’t work anymore. Daisy, who had
been fiddling with the Ouija board, tarot cards and palm-reading since she was
around ten years old, boldly set out to make a living for the both of them. And
if you think it’s tough for an ordinary, every-day woman without a college
education and few skills to make a living today, you can probably imagine what
it was like in the ‘twenties, when women were not merely believed to be, but
KNOWN to be less intelligent and capable than men.
Mind you, I had
to rear two daughters alone in the ‘sixties and ‘seventies, and that was no
blasted fun either. Things hadn’t come a very long way, baby, by then. I
remember job postings for men and job postings for women in the company for
which I slaved as a secretary. A secretary—I believe they’re now called
administrative assistants, but in my day we were secretaries—is the person who
does all the things nobody else wants to do and takes the blame when anything
goes wrong. I suppose the ‘sixties and ‘seventies were more enlightened than
the ‘twenties, but not by very blasted much, they weren’t.
Ahem. I
digressed there for a moment. Anyhow, I wrote the first two Daisy books, STRONG
SPIRITS and FINE SPIRITS, assuming they would be marketed as historical cozy
mysteries. Unfortunately, my editor said they didn’t have enough mystery in
them (precisely true) and that they wanted me to take out the dead bodies, add
a subsidiary romance (because Daisy was already married) and they’d publish
them as romances. So I did. And they did. And the books tanked. I was
brokenhearted. The late, great Kate Duffy even telephoned me one day to
apologize for mis-marketing the books and asked if I wouldn’t please take
another name (I already had four, for Pete’s sake) and write a series of
romances. So I wrote my post-Titanic
series. The first book in that series was the hardest book I’ve ever written
because I didn’t want to write the cursed
thing. After that, things got easier, but I was still crushed about the
demise of Daisy.
And then my good
friend and fellow author, Mimi Riser, called to say that her good friend, the
entrepreneur Melissa Alvarez (who has done smashing covers for a lot of my
e-books) was starting a new publishing venture called New Age Dimensions, which
would publish trade-size paperbacks and e-books. So I figured, what the heck,
and wrote the first of my Pecos Valley books, PECOS VALLEY DIAMOND, which star
Annabelle Blue, a young woman who lives in the gawd-forsaken town of Roswell
(called Rosedale in the books because I don’t want anybody suing me) in 1923.
These books, too, are historical cozy mysteries. That turned out fairly well,
so I wrote the second book in the series. And then NAD was wiped out by
Hurricane Wilma during the great hurricane epidemic of 2005. Wilma, by the way,
was my late mother’s name. I don’t believe for a second that this is a
coincidence. But now Annabelle was as dead as Daisy.
Faintly daunted
but pursuing, I allowed Mercy Allcutt to swim into my generally enfeebled brain
about that same time. Mercy, a Boston Brahmin of impeccable lineage, flies in the
face of her family, takes shorthand and typing classes at her local YWCA, and
shocks her mother and father by moving to Los Angeles, California, to live with
her married sister Chloe, whose husband does something in the silent pictures,
but Mercy isn’t sure what. Mercy, you see, yearns to become a member of the
worker proletariat and learn how real
people live. In order to do this, Mercy—gasp!—gets a job! What’s more, she works as a secretary (see where I’m going
here?) for a private investigator, the jaded ex-cop Ernie Templeton. I sent
this book (LOST AMONG THE ANGELS) to Five Star, and they published it! What’s
more, they’ve published several more, and the second book in the series, FALLEN
ANGELS, won the 2012 New Mexico-Arizona Book of the Year Award for
mystery/suspense. This is the only contest I enter, by the way, because it’s so
. . . I dunno. Incongruous, I guess, the state of literacy in New Mexico being
what it is.
About then, and
since Five Star had a women’s fiction line, I decided to send my third Daisy
book, HIGH SPIRITS, to Five Star and see if they’d bite. They did, and by gum,
Daisy was reborn! I was totally, absolutely and deliciously delighted.
And then,
greatly daring (actually, I figured what the heck) I sent the second Pecos
Valley book, PECOS VALLEY REVIVAL, to Five Star—and they published it! My cup
very nearly ran over, but I managed to contain myself, mainly because I was
still poor as a church mouse. I mean, unless you’re Nora Roberts or Stephen
King or one of a very few other lucky and talented authors, you really can’t
make a living at this. However, PECOS VALLEY REVIVAL got a starred review in Booklist, so I’m not repining. What’s
more, the third book in the series, PECOS VALLEY RAINBOW, has just been
published. Five Star, by the by, creates fabulous covers for their novels, so I
really am a fortunate person. In some ways. Truth to tell, I’d rather be rich
than have a way with words, but I guess we all have our own . . . blessings?
Well, whatever. Here are the covers for the latest books in each series:
And there you
have it. Three historical cozy mystery series all featuring more or less the
same female protagonist. Go figure. The whole thing’s beyond me. Blame
publishing.
Please feel free
to enter my monthly contest by sending your name and address to me at alice@aliceduncan.net . At the end of
April I’ll be giving away copies of Mercy Allcutt’s fourth adventure, ANGELS OF
MERCY. Also, please feel free to visit my web site, where you can read the first
chapter of darned near every one of my fifty or so books (www.aliceduncan.net ), and feel free to
hang out on my Facebook page, too, if you feel like it: https://www.facebook.com/alice.duncan.925?ref=tn_tnmn
Thanks!
24 comments:
I love Daisy Gumm Majesty most of all your heroines, but I've never read a Alice Duncan book I didn't love.
Awww, thanks, Caroline! I appreciate that!
I love Daisy Gumm Majesty too, and I need to read more of your books. I guess I'm a child of the "now women can have jobs outside the home and still do everything they used to do before" generation. One day we'll get it right.
Alice,
Thanks for sharing the background of these fine novels with us. It's torture trying to please publishing houses. Just shows, writers do know best in the long run.Wishing you every success with the latest novel!
I know PRECISELY what you mean, Sheila. Sigh.
Thanks, Jacquie. You're too right. It is torture. In fact, I often wonder if it's worth it.
And thanks for the e-mail, Sheila! I still can't send from my e-mail site, so I'm answering you here. Yes, I'm feeling much better! And I'll enter you in my contest for April!
And thanks for your 3-mail comment, too, Jacquie. I hate it when my e-mail server doesn't work.
They sound like interesting stories, Alice. Best luck.
Rose
Thanks, Rose!
Your humor shines through every line you write. I loved the article and the history of your success. Can't wait to read another one of your books.
This is a fun story, Alice. It's always fun to hear where and how an author's characters are born.
Thanks, Carole. As for success, I guess it depends on how you define it. I'd say money, but I don't have any of that :-)
Thanks, Patricia! These three characters were all such flukes, you know? Publishing is a screwy business, to put it mildly.
Hi Alice - I read Angel's Flight, and decided I needed to read the entire series. Now it sounds like I'll need to add the other two series to my reading list! Congratulations on your persistence.
Catherine Dilts
Alice, you're always so depressed and you always make me laugh. I know, that and $2 will get you a ten cent cup of coffee.
I love your Daisy and Mercy books, but can't seem to get into the New Mexico series. The fact that you loved old Pasadena and hate new Roswell seems to make the difference.
Frankly, I don't know why you aren't selling a gazillion books, rhey are that good. Somehow readers just aren't getting the message.
Wishing you a streak of good luck and many sales, I remain,
Very truly yours,
Pat Browning
Thanks, Catherine! I appreciate all the readers I can get :-)
Thanks, Pat. Yes, you're probably right about the Roswell books, although my cousin hates it when I whine about Roswell. Wish I were selling a gazillion books, too. Sigh.
Daisy is my favorite too!
Thanks, Diane! I'm very fond of Daisy :-)
I've enjoyed all your heroines, Alice, and since we've been friends so long I can hear/see the resemblance between you and Daisy. Your sense of humor, outrage at injustice and resilience in the face of difficulties comes through.
Thanks, Mary Ray. Indeed, we've been friends since . . . kindergarten? Wow. And thank you for your kind words about my books. I'm outraged by so many things, I have to temper my writerly tongue when writing my books :-)
I didn't realize what a long trail you traveled to see these books published, Alice. Sometimes I wonder if publishers really know anything about what will sell, and what readers want! I'm glad you kept trying, as I love all your series, although Daisy is my favorite. You refer to your three heroines as "all the same," but they are not, although they do share many of the same attributes (plucky, resourceful, honest, loyal, nosey . . . )
Especially nosy, Linda. Thanks! That's another thing all three have that I don't. Well, I guess I'm nosy, but I'm too restrained (scared, actually) to butt into other people's business. I'd make a truly pathetic heroine.
The covers of your books are so beautiful and truly reflect the "golden years." I will read the Pasadena-based ones soon once the extra minutes appear in my day. I love the Huntington Library & Gardens in Pasadena and visited it often when I was in California.
I love the Huntington Library, too, Charleydog! I always try to go there when I'm in Pasadena. I was writing in my latest work in progress, and SO wished I could just drive down to San Pasqual (where most of the book takes place) and look around. Sigh.
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