Interview with Harry Thurgood

Today, I have the honor to be talking with Harry Thurgood, Magnolia Bluff’s Man of Mystery. He’s the owner of the Really Good Wood-Fired Coffee Shop, in beautiful Magnolia Bluff, Texas.

So, without further ado, let’s get started.

CW: Welcome, Harry. Glad you can be with me here today on the blog.

HT: My pleasure, CW. Thanks for having me. Everyone likes free advertising.

CW: That they do. To start, just what, exactly, is wood-fired coffee?

HT: (chuckles) It’s how coffee used to be roasted, back in the 1800s. Before the invention of the gas-fired roaster.

CW: That’s it?

HT: That’s it. Of course, the type of wood used, how hot you get the fire, length of roasting time — all that has a part in the finished product.

CW: Thanks for clarifying that.

HT: I thought you would have known, being the creator—

CW: (I hold up my hand to cut him off.) No. I’m not the creator. I’m simply the amanuensis recording what happens. You, Ember, Reece, Scarlett, Mary Lou, and all the others, you all are telling the story.

HT: Amanuensis, eh? (Shrugs) Okay. Thanks for letting me know.

CW: You guys are the storytellers.

HT: (laughs) Okay.

CW: There are nine books chronicling the lives of the people in Magnolia Bluff, along with some unfortunate murders that take place. You show up in most of these books, so I’d like to find out more about you.

HT: Okay. Go ahead and ask. I’m not an open book. Man of Mystery, you know. But the covers open far enough so you can riffle the pages.

CW: All right, then. You want to keep your past in the past. (Harry nods.) Can you tell me why you decided to move to Magnolia Bluff?

HT: I was looking for a place far away from where I was, that was relatively quiet, and where I could just blend in.

CW: It doesn’t seem like you quite succeeded in doing that.

HT: Not quite. But I don’t regret moving to the town. That is where I met the love of my life.

CW: You’re referring to the Reverend Ember Cole.

HT: I am.

CW: How did you two meet?

HT: We both moved to Magnolia Bluff about the same time. I, to start my new life. She, to pastor the Methodist Church. One day, not long after I opened the coffee shop, in she walks. I thought the silent film star Louise Brooks had come back to life. And to my mind, Louise was the perfect It Girl.

CW: Swept you off your feet, in other words.

HT: She did. And just like Louise, she has “It”. But she also has so much more. She’s warm and caring, so very giving, funny.

CW: She’s the one.

HT: That she is.

CW: So now that you’ve found the love of your life, what’s next?

HT: I’d love for her to marry me. Are you sure you’re just the amanuensis?

CW: Very sure.

HT: Well, I’d love to marry Ember and just settle down to a very comfortable and quiet existence. But our town seems to be plagued with murders and that disrupts the tranquility. Makes life more complex than it needs to be.

CW: Reece Sovern and Mary Lou Fight, especially Mary Lou, seem to thrive on the excitement.

HT: Mary Lou definitely. Reece is just doing his job. I think he’d rather have nothing but boring days until he retires. Mary Lou, though, I think really needs to get a life.

CW: She probably thinks she has one.

HT: Probably does at that.

CW: Do you have any hobbies? Or things you are especially passionate about?

HT: I’m not an artist, but I appreciate fine art. It has the capacity to transport the soul to a better place than the here and now. And even though I’m not a musician, I enjoy fine music. Because it too has the ability to enrich the soul. As for hobbies, I’m not a sportsman. Although I do enjoy target shooting and the game of chess. Just the other night, I battled Capablanca. Lost, of course.

CW: I take it that was in a book.

HT: (smiling) Yes, his match with Lasker for World Champion. Although, with computers nowadays, you can play the greats.

CW: Very true. We’ll have to play a game or two sometime. 

HT: The internet is a wonderful invention.

CW: That it is. Do you have a favorite artist or composer?

HT: I love the paintings of Albert Bierstadt and Grant Wood. And I think the music of Arthur Foote and Sir Granville Bantock is just divine.

CW: I like those artists and composers as well. Such beauty.

HT: You sure you’re just the amanuensis?

CW: Yep. Aside from Ember, do you have any friends in Magnolia Bluff?

HT: I wouldn’t say I have any close friends in town. I do like Scarlett Hayden. She has an “I don’t care” attitude that I like. And I think she’s a very caring person at heart. And if it wasn’t for Ember, I think she and I might have eventually gotten together. I also like Graham Huston. He’s well read, pensive, and, like me, is trying to leave his past in the past. Elder Smythe and his wife are very nice people. I admire their simple lifestyle. And quite honestly, I like Reece Sovern. He’s a good man. Honorable.

CW: What’s the one thing you like most about living in Magnolia Bluff?

HT: It is a pretty little town in the middle of a gorgeous part of Texas. And I love the fact that it is quiet and peaceful. At least most days.

CW: Sounds like a great place to live.

HT: It is. Just keep looking behind you. (Gives me a questioning look.) Amanuensis, you say?

CW: I do. Thanks for talking with me today, Harry.

HT: My pleasure, CW.

 

And you can get in on all the Magnolia Bluff action by visiting the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series page on Amazon. Nine books for your reading pleasure, and Book 10 comes out next week.

Comments are always welcome! And if you have a question for Harry Thurgood, drop it below in the comments section. 

Until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

 

Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!

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Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles 2023

In just a couple of weeks, Book 10 in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series launches: Linda Pirtle’s The Doggone Diamond Dilemma.

Back in 2021 I attended a virtual three-day writer’s workshop. It was, in fact, an extended sales pitch to pay the host thousands of dollars so he could make your book a USA Today bestseller.

I didn’t bite. I don’t have thousands of dollars lying around. Let alone thousands to pay someone just so I get bragging rights about being a USA Today bestselling author. Titles aren’t important to me.

However, I did walk away with some information and an idea. That idea was to create a multi-author series.

I brought the idea to The Underground Authors, the writer co-op I’m a member of. After all, we’d just published a super collection of short stories (check it out on Amazon), so why not take that idea to the next level?

There was some hesitation at first; after all, no one had heard of such a thing. But finally the idea caught hold. And the result was 9 books all set in the fictional town of Magnolia Bluff, Texas. 

Check out the series on Amazon!

What’s the key to making a multi-author series work? There has to be a unifying factor. Something that is common to all of the books in the series.

That unifying factor could be anything. It just has to be present in each of the books.

Taking a page out of Anthony Trollope’s The Chronicles of Barset, we decided the unifying factor would be a town. Just like Trollope’s Barchester.

We then set about giving the town a few buildings to start off. And a name: Magnolia Bluff. Then as each of us peopled the town in our books, the town began to come alive.

We had people with lives. People with problems. And people who’ll resort to murder to solve those problems.

Each book is as different as the author who wrote it. And each one explores a different side of our little Texas Hill Country town.

This year we’ve added two new authors to the series: Joe Congel and KD McNiven. And we’re excited to have these experienced writers on board.

For 2023 we’ll have 10 new novels for you and the first two are going to start the series off with a bang.

So stay tuned for more murder and mayhem in the sleepy little town of Magnolia Bluff, Texas. A wonderful place to live and visit. Just keep looking behind you.

The Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon!

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

 CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

 

Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!

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Final Vella Update

Yesterday, 30 January, the last episode of Tales Macabre and Arabesque went live. The collection of stories is now complete.

You can read my previous update here. I have nothing to add, other than I did get a 40 something dollar bonus for November.

The last locked episodes were read on November 30th. After that, I had a free episode read on December 12th. And that is it. All told, I received $.31 in royalties and $52.36 in bonuses.

For me, Vella is a bust. Sure, the 52 bucks and change was nice. But it won’t break the bank if I don’t get it.

One Vella author advised me to hang out on some of the Vella Facebook pages, where I could tell others about my project, and cross promote with other Vella authors.

And I could do that. But I have no desire to add more time on social media to my schedule. In fact, I have reduced my time to just a couple hours a week so I can focus on writing my next novel.

Attempts to get my mailing list subscribers and followers on Facebook and Twitter to go to Vella all failed. Perhaps due to my older audience. Vella being geared towards a younger smartphone dependent demographic.

All of which leads me to believe that Vella is a closed universe: like Chanillo, Wattpad, Writing.com, and the poetry forums I used to hang out on. And closed universes are difficult to get new people to join.

My other complaint about Vella, is that the romance writers have taken over. 

When I did a search for mystery stories, for example, I got romantic suspense, cozy romance mysteries, paranormal romance mysteries, and other equally non-satisfying results.

A search for horror got me monster romance, vampire romance, werewolf romance, shifter romance, and the list went on.

Very disappointing.

Vella was a nice try, but it’s not for me. I’ll continue to follow the couple authors I know there, but I won’t otherwise be reading or publishing on the platform.

I’ve also decided to unpublish Tales Macabre and Arabesque from Vella. Amazon will remove the story collection in a couple months.

So if you want to read some of my spooky and bizarre fiction for next to nothing (tokens are pretty cheap, and the Zon may even give you free ones) — head on over to Kindle Vella.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!

Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon!

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One Of My Favorites

With my own contribution to the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles, Death Wears A Crimson Hat, leading the way as the top sales getter of any book in my oeuvre since its publication in April, I thought I’d give a shoutout to my own Justinia Wright mystery series.

It is obvious readers enjoy mysteries, if sales of the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles is any indicator.

So, if you have read Death Wears A Crimson Hat and/or any of the other books in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles, then I encourage you to take a trip to Minneapolis, Minnesota and spend some time with Tina and Harry Wright.

The Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries are classic whodunits just like  many of the Magnolia Bluff stories.

If you enjoyed the sleuthing of Harry and Ember, or Graham Huston, or Caroline McCluskey, then you will enjoy the escapades of Tina and Harry Wright.

Each Justinia Wright mystery is a standalone. But since there are overarching character arcs, you may want to start at the beginning with Festival Of Death.

Or you might start with one of my favorites: But Jesus Never Wept.

Before I tell you why I like the book, let me share with you two reviews.

From Mark Scott Piper:

Great Characters, a Complex Plot, and Plenty of Surprises

But Jesus Never Wept is the third book in CW Hawes’s Justinia Wright Investigator Mysteries series. You don’t need to have read the first two to understand the characters and their steady and unsteady relationships. This one is a good read all on its own.

The title implies the focus of the novel may be about exploring the basic tenants of Christianity, but it’s not. Yes, there is an ongoing dialogue between the characters about whether Jesus ever existed in physical form, but this issue doesn’t carry the novel. In fact, the question of faith works more as a metaphor for examining and trying to understand what’s real and what’s not with the gory crimes and relentless criminals the characters must face. Like life, there are always questions here. And not all of them are answered by the end of the book.

The plot is at once intriguing and complex, and Hawes seamlessly mixes the basic murder investigation with an unexpected profusion of other themes and references including, the basics of the Christian religion, family dynamics, love relationships, high-end online prostitution, and the wrath and violence of the Yakuza crime syndicate. Not an easy task, but Hawes pulls it off with aplomb. And by telling the tale from Harry Wright’s point of view, Hawes provides some humor, even occasional sarcasm to the narrative. A nice touch, especially given the gruesome murders and constant threats from powerful enemies.

Hawes’s characters are memorable but never “average.” Justinia, Harry, Bea, and Cal all have their quirks and unique abilities. The relationships between all four have been established before in the series, and we can assume they develop further in this one. Even the minor characters and victims prove to be much more complex than they seem. I would be remiss if I didn’t mention the bone-chilling weather in Minnesota. Dealing with the ice, snow, and painfully low temperatures colors the action and the attitude of the characters in the book.

The descriptions of the weather also help pull the reader into the novel, even those of us who’ve never been to Minnesota. That’s also true of the detailed descriptions of the many meals Justinia, Harry, and Bea share. Harry is a gourmet cook, and you’ll often feel the compelling desire to sit down with them and get a taste or two of his latest culinary delight.

Jesus Never Wept is a good read, and the skill and insights of Hawes turn the standard murder mystery plot into something more—and something better. Highly recommended.

And from Joseph A Congel:

Another GREAT, 5 STAR read! This series just keeps getting better!

This is the third book in the Justinia Wright Private Investigator series, and it is a top-notch addition to a top-notch series, written by a top-notch author. If you’ve been following the brother/sister PI team, you already know this series is rich in storyline and character development. If you are discovering the Wrights for the first time in this book, you will not be disappointed. However, treat yourself, and go back and read the first two books in this wonderful series.

In this installment, the author mixes religion, the Japanese mob, and high-end prostitution, and wraps it all up in a very engaging murder mystery. But what truly drives this story is the relationship between the main characters – Justinia, Harry, Bea, and Cal. The subplot of their lives is intertwined masterfully with the main plotline of the book, which is the mystery that needs to be solved. And although the idea of an intriguing mystery may have brought you here, the well thought-out, fun, realistic, characters is what will bring you back for more. A great murder mystery will make a great book, but a deeply developed cast of reoccurring characters is what makes a great series… and this is a great series.

I loved the first two books, and this one is no different. It’s why I bought the whole series. I look forward to seeing what the Wrights get themselves into between the pages of the next book. But don’t take my word for it, try them for yourself – just don’t be surprised if you become addicted.

Reviews like those two, really lift a writer. They are a light to illuminate the dark days that touch every storyteller.

So why do I like But Jesus Never Wept? I love the characters.

If I do not like the characters, then the book, movie, TV series, short story, or stage play are dead to me. It is as simple as that. I am there for the characters. And I love Tina and Harry. They are my children.

Characters aside, I also like the storyline in this novel. It touches on religion, something important in my life. The story also asks us what is of importance in our short lives. What’s life all about? Is love the answer? Or is it something else? Or maybe there is no answer.

As both Raymond Chandler and Erle Stanley Gardner noted, the murder mystery is the simplest of stories.

A kills B. The police think the killer is C, until the sleuth shows them the perpetrator is A.

The task of the writer is to use style to turn a very simple story into one that is not only complex, but beautifully satisfying; perhaps even elegant.

I think But Jesus Never Wept is a cut above. And I ask you to give it a try. Pick it up at Amazon.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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Born and Bred Texan Review

2022 closes with the publication of the 9th book in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series: Born and Bred Texan by Jinx Schwartz.

Ms Schwartz poses the question: can we ever truly return home? And she answers the question by giving us the delightful story of Blue Bonet.

Blue returns home to Magnolia Bluff, after an absence of many years, to take possession of the home and land left to her by her grandmother.

A widow, who’s not sure what she wants to do with her life now that she’s single and back home, Blue sets out to first modernize the old house and rejuvenate the surrounding land.

One day, while out exploring the back forty, she discovers a body in an old shack. Then it’s determined the man was murdered. And after that, bones begin popping out of the ground due to a freeze.

All of the above is going on while Blue is attempting to make a new life for herself in Magnolia Bluff, and getting re-acquainted with old friends.

Ms Schwartz’s style is as easygoing as small town life and is laced with plenty of humor and a bit of suspense.

If you’re a fan of happy endings, then Born and Bred Texan is definitely for you.

The book is available from Amazon. As is the entire Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series.

Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles at Amazon.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles 2022

Nine authors. Nine books. One town. Magnolia Bluff, Texas.

What an amazing year this has been for the Underground Authors. There were times when I didn’t think we’d do it. Working with 9 creatives is a challenge. But we did it, and that makes me feel very good. We successfully published this multi-author crime fiction series over the course of 9 consecutive months.

And now Book 9 is live! Born and Bred Texan by Jinx Schwartz.

I’m a bit behind on my reading, but a review will be up soon. In the meantime, here is the blurb to wet your whistle:

Blue Bonet, widowed and in mourning, returns to Magnolia Bluff in her home state of Texas. Her grandmother had bequeathed an old lake house to her, and she cherishes childhood memories there. She arrives at the lake and finds the house she remembers as being grand, is now in disrepair.

She tackles the repairs, and is determined to make a new life for herself. It seems like an uphill battle.

A rollercoaster of ups and down conspire to destroy her dream, and she begins to wonder if you really can’t go home again.

That is a good question: can you ever truly go home? I’ve pondered that question myself, and am looking forward to finding out what Blue has to say about it.

Pick up your copy on Amazon!

Here are the first 8 books in the series. They are available on Amazon.

Death Wears a Crimson Hat by CW Hawes
Secrets, gossip, and a murder that could reveal all.

Eulogy in Black and White by Caleb Pirtle III
Death stalks Magnolia Bluff every May 23rd. When will it end?

The Great Peanut Butter Conspiracy by Cindy Davis
Can lyrics from Jimmy Buffet songs help a ghost find justice?

You Won’t Know How… Or When by James R. Callan
Will the confessional give a killer license to kill?

The Flower Enigma by Breakfield & Burkey
What happens when death interrupts the ideal vacation?

The Shine from a Girl in the Lake by Richard Schwindt
A serial killer’s at work. But can a clinical psychologist stop him?

The Dewey Decimal Dilemma by Linda Pirtle
How are poodles, ghosts, drugs, and Ponzi schemes connected with a serial killer — and can he be stopped?

Justice by Kelly Marshall
Is justice possible for one dead Mexican child, a victim of sex trafficking?

Nine marvelous books. Enjoy them today!

Get them from Amazon!

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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Christmas with the Wrights: What the Readers Say

The stories in Christmas with the Wrights started out as gifts to my mailing list. If you want to get in on the fun, click or tap on this link: https://BookHip.com/BMNGDTB

When you do, the link will take you to BookFunnel, where you’ll get a free copy of Vampire House and Other Early Cases of Justinia Wright, PI (a $3.99 value), and join my mailing list. I’d love to see you at the party!

I’ll admit short stories are a hard sell for indie authors. And I don’t know why. They’re perfect for the person on the go.

Our schedules are busy. A short story can fill those odd moments of the day: waiting at the doctor’s office, commuting to work, lunch or coffee breaks. Or any other time when you are in between things.

I love short stories. A well-crafted short can be as satisfying an experience as a novel — only you get that experience of satisfaction faster. And more of them.

Christmas with the Wrights sees Tina and Harry dealing with 3 very different cases.

There’s Cordell Oscar Hellman, a conservative political pundit, who’s recreational morphine use has come to the attention of a vicious blackmailer.

Mrs. Solberg’s dope of a husband is being hoodwinked by the office minx and the Missus doesn’t like that one bit. But what can Tina do about it? She’ll have to get very creative.

Finally, there’s Emil Papenfuss. He’s homeless and a millionaire. Only he doesn’t know he’s millionaire. But Tina has to find him first before she can deliver the good news.

Three cases. Three chances to do a good deed. And with the inducement of three big, fat fees, and Harry’s help, Tina delivers the goods. But not without difficulty. A lot of difficulty.

So what do the readers say about all this? Let’s take a look.

If you like a story with fascinating characters and a good plot, as well as clever dialogue, check this one out.

That is a very satisfying review for an author to receive. Especially since it comes from another writer: Maryann Miller.

Here’s another review:

CW Hawes has done such a marvelous job of creating Justinia & Harry Wright, brother-and-sister sleuth team, that I keep coming back for more. I had just finished reading a story by this author when this Christmas book caught my eye. The characters were still in my head, and I decided to see what good deeds (hopefully) they might be up to during the Christmas season.

This book was as delightful as it promised to be … with three feel-good stories driven by Hawes’s exceptional characters of whom I’ve grown quite fond. The stories were great fun – the last one being my favorite.

Although this book offers Christmas cheer, it’s a great read for any time of the year, and again … just like the other books in this wonderful series.

Such a delightful review.

Fellow mystery writer, Joe Congel had this to say:

I have enjoyed CW Hawes’ Justinia Wright series for a long time, and this short story collection has arrived just in time for the holiday season. If you’ve followed the progression of the series, you’ll be delighted to know that the three stories in this volume have all the fun, mystery, and mayhem that you love in the full-length books. And if you’re new to the world of Minneapolis’ top private sleuth and her equally talented brother, Harry, then you are in for a real treat!

The stories are told through the eyes of Harry, which lends a bit of the whimsical to the narrative as Harry pulls no punches regarding his sister’s down falls as well as why she is the best PI for any client looking for justice in a cruel world. You can feel the love, trust, and admiration between the two characters as Hawes has done a superb job allowing the dialog to show the reader the tight, though somewhat flawed relationship between a brother and sister.

Hawes is a master of his craft, and these three tales pack a lot of surprise and intrigue inside each crisply written mystery. One of the things I like best about this collection is that even though the common thread throughout the book is that it’s the holiday season, these are not stories about Christmas mysteries, but rather good old fashion mysteries that happen to take place during Christmas time. It’s a wonderful blending of a magical time of year and the realization that mystery, bad decisions, and crime do not take a break during the holidays.

Do yourself a favor, and pour a cup of eggnog (spiked if you prefer), get cozy in front of the fireplace, and enjoy some of the best storytelling you’ll find between the pages of a book.

Now that is high praise, indeed — especially coming from a peer, who is no slouch when it comes to spinning an engaging yarn.

Richard Schwindt, another writer, who I think is one of the best storytellers writing today, wrote:

Christmas with the Wrights is the mature Hawes at the top of his form.

Now that comment is the best award I could have ever won.

Enjoy some Christmas cheer. Christmas with the Wrights is available from Amazon and is only 99¢. Which makes it the perfect stocking stuffer for that mystery reader on your list. As well as for yourself!

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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Christmas with the Wrights

It is no secret that Tina and Harry Wright are my favorite fictional children.

They first appeared in my life way back in 1982. It took 32 years for them to find their way out into the world.

Doing so first in Festival of Death, and then in Trio in Death-Sharp Minor.

To date, there are 22 investigative adventures featuring Tina and Harry. Over half of my total published output. Yes, indeed, my favorite children.

Christmas with the Wrights, which I published last year, is a collection of 2 novelettes and a short story, which I originally gave to my mailing list as Christmas presents.

The stories are delightful and suspense-filled tales that intertwine a good mystery with a bit of holiday cheer.

The book is only 99¢, which is a good deal for the the holidays. The perfect stocking stuffer. The book is available at Amazon.

Even more than the royalties, actually much more than the royalties, I love to get positive feedback from my readers. That can be in the form of reviews, emails, tweets, or Facebook posts.

That feedback lets me know I’m achieving my goal of giving good-value entertainment, making the reader’s life just a little bit better.

GP Gadbois posted the following review on Amazon:

CW Hawes captivated my attention with realistic plots. From the process in which Tina and Harry Wright choose a case right up until it’s solved. Every detail matters. The interaction between brother and sister, and all the other characters is also delightful. A great read.

Bri had this to say:

I enjoyed all three stories which were told by Harry, Justinia’s brother. His storytelling, the characters, and the jumbles they get themselves into made for a few laughs. 

I love these characters. The author has done a great job of bringing them to life in the stories, along with the setting. I felt the cold. The second story had me wondering how in the world Justinia was going to solve the case. 

The stories are quick, enjoyable reads. I highly recommend sitting down with Justinia and Harry at the little mansion on West Franklin in the Minneapple while she has a cigar and a glass of Madeira, and he plays online chess, and they work through the case and a bit of sibling rivalry. Justinia keeps secrets. 🙂

I laughed when I read the next review by night owl, but also felt good because they had a satisfying experience reading a short-form mystery.

I didn’t think he could do it.

When I heard this was an anthology of Justinia Wright stories, I didn’t believe the author could pull off the feat. After all, the other stories were full-length books. To take detective plots and fit them into a smaller format… I was wrong.

Nuff said?

Want some feel-good holiday cheer? Need a stocking stuffer for the mystery reader in your life? You can get it — for only 99¢ on Amazon.

Christmas with the Wrights. Not like any Christmas you’ve ever experienced.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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Justice Sampler

Last post, I talked a bit about the newest addition to the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles: Kelly Marshall’s Justice.

In this post, I thought you might like to take a read of a portion of chapter one. Something to wet your whistle. Something to get a feel for the excitement and tension Ms. Marshall packs into the first chapter.

So, without any further advertising, I give you Justice by Kelly Marshall. Book 8 in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles.

Chapter One

“Take it easy. Catch your breath.” I reached out and touched his shaking shoulder. What could possibly have frightened him so much?

He dropped his head down on his chest and sucked in several more breaths. When he looked up at me, tears had made a muddy path from his eyes to his chin. “La chica esta muerta.” The girl is dead.

I stood and reached out my hand to help him up. “Donde esta ella? Take me to her.” 

He staggered up and leaned against me for support. How quickly he morphed from a tough teen into a frightened youth. 

We threaded our way through red cedars and bald cypress trees. The teen pointed to a spot approximately twenty yards ahead. 

His voice quavered. “She’s over there.” 

Blow flies buzzed and circled a slender, pubescent body. She lay facedown, her brown legs and arms outstretched. She wore one frayed tennis shoe and no clothing. Heavy bruising and welts dotted her legs and arms. I checked for a pulse, but it was clear the child was dead. 

I noticed a blue band secured around her wrist like those attached when someone enters the hospital. Odd. There was no identifying information on the band. 

The lack of putrefaction and rigor on the corpse told me this girl died very recently. I carefully stepped away from the body to preserve the scene. Her ripped clothes lay in a pile next to her corpse. Bloody cotton panties hung from a nearby tree.

Behind me, I heard the teen gag, and turned to find him bent over, hands on his knees, vomiting.

I keyed my shoulder mic. “10-79. 10-79. Body of female juvenile found at Ink Lake. Request CSI stat at 3630 Park Rd 4 W, Burnet. Repeat. Request CSI at 3630 Park Rd 4. I’m a quarter mile in the tree line from dock. Notify Wylie Garrison to contact the Medical Examiner stat.”

My teenage companion barfed until all that was left were dry heaves. He insisted he wanted to leave. 

“What’s your name?”

“Julio Mendez.”

“Julio. You found the body and that makes you very important to this investigation. I’m gonna let you slide on not having a license. But make my job easier by sticking around. Otherwise, I’ll have to come find you and that wastes my time and may embarrass you in front of your friends. You’re a hero.”

He stood up taller. “Estas seguro?”

“Yes, I’m sure. You’re a key person. We need your help.”

He nodded toward the body. “I don’t want to see that. Those flies are eating her.”

I agreed with Julio. The incessant buzzing of the ravenous insects disturbed me as well. As bad as that was, at least the body had yet to omit the overwhelming odor of putrefaction.

“Let’s move back away and wait for my guys to arrive.”

While we lingered at the edge of the tree line, I took a statement from Julio and recorded it on my phone. He admitted running away from me, fearful because he had neither a driver’s license nor a fishing license.

“I can let you slide on the fishing license but driving without a license is a more serious matter.”

“But you said, I’m a hero and you’d let me slide.”I lied and deflected.

“Let me talk to my boss and see what I can do.”

He seemed relieved and continued his statement that he stumbled on the girl running away from me and immediately turned and ran back to the dock to report finding the body.

The team hustled to the lake within a half- hour. I waved them over. 

The Burnet County white forensic van screeched to a stop in front of us. Doors flew open, and four agents spilled out toting canvas bags filled with the necessary tools of their trade. One of them lugged a body bag and a lightweight metal board to carry the corpse away from the crime scene.

Sheriff Blanton’s black Charger announced his arrival with a piercing siren, lights pulsing, and a thick dust storm trailing behind him. He braked behind the forensic van. Buck Blanton grunted as he emerged from his cruiser. 

The massive man stood to his full six- foot-two height and put on his gray Stetson. The hat, his Ray-bans, and black quill Justin boots were the man’s signature. You never saw Buck without them. They were as much a part of his uniform as the khaki-colored shirt and pants he wore. 

Blanton power walked toward me. “You found the body, Miss Jackson.”

“Yes, sir.”

“Fill me in.”

I nodded toward Julio. “We’d had some words, and he decided to leave.” As he was running from the area, he stumbled on the body.”

Blanton put his big hand on Julio’s shoulder. “You need to show Officer Jackson more respect than that. Don’t you know that, boy?”

Julio shrank beneath the man’s grasp and didn’t answer.

“Answer me, son, or I’ll lock you in my car.”

Julio’s surly attitude surfaced. “I found the body and reported it. You need me.”

Buck’s smile spread from ear to ear. “Is that right? You need to think about your answer, boy.” 

Blanton grabbed the teen under the arm, marched him to his Charger, pushed his head down and shoved him in the rear of the police car. A twerp, then a click from the sheriff’s fob locked the boy in the caged backseat of the car.

Blanton marched towards me. His smile spread-eagled across his face. He pontificated, “Now that, Officer Jackson, is how to handle a smart-ass gangsta wannabe. He needs to spend some time thinking about his shitty attitude. Now let’s go see the crime scene.”

“He’s mine, Sheriff. You can park him in your ride until we’re out of here. But he’s leaving with me.”

Blanton’s teeth flashed white. “I like the hell out of you, Madison. You got your Daddy’s gonads.”

“My daddy wants grandchildren someday, so I’m not sure he’d be happy with your description.”

“Just sayin’ he raised you right. Don’t get your panties in a wad.”

“Who says I wear them?”

Buck threw back his head and roared his approval of my quip. He charged into the trees leaving size-twelve shoe imprint as he crashed through the underbrush beside me.

What was once an eerily quiet death scene bustled like a beehive with the white-robed forensic team combing the grounds for clues and placing yellow evidence markers on the ground.

They had already bagged the victim’s hands. The girl was laying on her stomach, long black hair draping down her back. I noticed bruises and scrapes along her arms and broken fingernails, indicating she aggressively fought her attacker. 

The victim’s slim brown legs were spread apart suggesting a sexual assault and murder. What a desperate, sad way for a young life to end—her last moments on earth filled with frantic fear and pain and knowing she was marked for death.

Justice of the Peace Wiley Garrison trudged in behind us. The JP was a weenie of a man—slight build with wire-rimmed framed glasses that seemed to be set cock-eyed on his face. I thought he must have been teased mercilessly in grade school and later as the town one-hundred-pound weakling. 

He nodded at me and moved closer to the body then announced he’d attend the autopsy in Austin when the medical examiner scheduled it.

Wiley spoke to Dan Caruthers, the forensic team leader. “Can we turn her over?” A nod from the supervisor gave permission for the investigators to reposition the body.

“Shit.” I covered my mouth.

Blanton agreed. “We’re looking for an animal.”

Dried blood covered her face and pubic area. Deep cuts marred her cheeks, and her lips were sliced and dangling from the corner of her mouth. 

Bruises around her neck indicated strangulation. Both lower legs had been snapped and the tibia on her right leg protruded through her skin.

I turned away from the grisly scene momentarily to gather my resolve and swallow my gorge.

Buck spat on the ground and nodded towards the girl’s panties on the tree. “That’s the signature of the pervert coyotes. The killer’s started a rape tree. I’m bettin’ that’s hymen blood and this kid was trafficked out of Tenacingo, Mexico.”

“How can you be sure?”

He shrugged his beefy shoulders. “Tenacingo is the biggest source of sex slaves in the US. I’m a bettin’ man that this is the Jalisco New Generation Cartel or CJNG as they call themselves. See that band on her arm? The cartels tag these girls so everyone knows which gang owns them. These bastards work with families and buy their daughters for twenty to twenty-five thousand dollars.” He nodded at the child on the ground. “A virgin like this can fetch even more. Then they traffic them north and make prostitutes of them. The girls are forced to have sex with ten to fifteen clients a day, and they work them six days a week. The cartel rakes in millions.”

Looking at the child on the ground, I was aghast and couldn’t imagine this pre-teen being raped repeatedly, day after day. I wondered if she had tried to run and that’s why her killer mutilated her so viciously.

Wiley stood up and addressed the forensic team, “When you’re done here, I’ll drive her to Austin.”

“I’d like to attend it, too.”

Wiley looked at me. “Suit yourself, but I’d call the medical examiner and let him know you’re comin’.”

“Will do.”

Blanton eyeballed me. “Why put yourself through an autopsy? Ain’t this bad enough? When he gets that saw out and lops off the top of her head, you’re gonna be pukin’ your guts, Miss Jackson.”

“It won’t be my first, Sheriff, or my last.”

***

I hope you enjoyed that sample of Justice by Kelly Marshall. You can, of course, find the book on Amazon.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

 

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

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Justice

Lots of stuff happens in Magnolia Bluff, Texas. Not nice stuff. Like murder. Attempted murder. Multiple murders. 

I’ve heard the locals, the long-time folk, saying, “Things used to pretty quiet around here until the new people started moving in.”

And maybe they’re right. I wouldn’t know. I’m a newbie myself. Moved to Magnolia Bluff 8 months ago.

The locals, though, are right: murder and mayhem do seem to occur about as regular as a full moon.

And here we are in November. Yep, there’s a full moon, and doggone it but State Conservation Officer Madison Jackson has just stumbled onto another body. This one though is especially nasty.

A young girl raped and murdered.

The blue band on her wrist and her underwear in the tree tell Madison that this isn’t your everyday, garden variety killing. It’s cartel related. And that ain’t good. Not in Magnolia Bluff.

But what can a conservation officer do about the killing? And that’s exactly what Madison asks herself. What can she do to bring about justice for the dead little girl?

Kelly Marshall is no stranger to the crime fiction scene. She’s the author of the 4 book Winston and Strom mystery series, and she brings that experience to the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series.

Justice is the 8th installment in this varied and exciting new series.

The book officially releases on November 16th, but you can pick up a copy today — on Amazon.

I read an advanced copy, and I can tell you Justice is full of suspense. And the ending? Well, I never saw that one coming.

Get yourself a copy of Justice today. You won’t regret it.

Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!

CW Hawes is a playwright, award-winning poet, and a fictioneer, with a bestselling novel. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.

 

If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes

Share This!
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