Showing posts with label Butterfly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butterfly. Show all posts

Monday, August 20, 2018

One Adventure Too Many


(There was a little confusion regarding last week’s blog. I don’t really want to be famous. “Famous Like Dolly” was a just-for-fun post. I don’t have the energy to be rich and/or famous.)

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This week I’m announcing the release of One Adventure Too Many – A Sandi Webster Mystery.
https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_1_8?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=marja+mcgraw&sprefix=Marja+Mc%2Caps%2C418&crid=205ZIKB5C7IVA
I once wrote a post about things that can inspire a story. It might be a photo, a figurine sitting on a shelf, something you overheard at an auction, history, or even something you saw someone do at a mall. The oddest thing that’s inspired me? A black butterfly that showed up in my yard and hung around for a while. He even let me take pictures of him – or her. I looked it up and it’s actually called a Red Admiral. The point is, almost anything can inspire a story.

One Adventure Too Many was inspired by a photo I took of an abandoned house, although I didn’t use the picture for my book cover. The house is surrounded by so many trees and so much growth that it didn’t show up clearly. However, it made me think about finding someone in the house, which would be odd since it was supposed to be deserted. Okay, maybe not so odd. There are squatters out there looking for shelter and I hope they find it, but this was a different situation. Plus, the house only plays a small part in the story and yet it was the inspiration. Go figure.

One thing led to another, and before long a story took shape. I felt like it practically wrote itself. It seemed to have a mind of its own. The ideas kept coming, and the quirky characters (Sandi Webster’s mother and aunt) kept me motivated.

I tried to think of the one thing in this story that first came to mind, but in this case it was the entire story. Sandi’s mother and aunt were foremost in my thoughts simply because they have such an interesting relationship and they view everything as an adventure.

A crime takes place in a forest area near some abandoned railroad tracks. There’s one witness, although he isn’t sure what he witnessed – he’s in the wrong place at the wrong time, thanks to his job. When he’s attacked and left for dead, the story takes off. Like the house, the witness plays a very small part in the story.

That’s the short version. Following is a second short version.

Overview:

Taking a vacation can lead to an unexpected case for private eye Sandi Webster-Goldberg. Taking a vacation with your menopausal mother, an eccentric aunt, a pregnant friend and her husband, and a flustered husband can lead to total chaos.

Pete Goldberg and Stanley Hawks take a leisurely walk in the country, only to discover an abandoned house. When Sandi, her mother, Livvie, and her Aunt Martha decide to explore, they discover that the house isn’t quite as abandoned as previously thought.

A young woman and her baby are hiding out from unknown danger. She needs help, and the three women are more than happy to oblige her.

Until next time, I’m curious. What’s the oddest thing that ever inspired a story you wrote or, if you’re a reader, what’s the oddest thing you can think of that could inspire a story?

CLICK HERE to visit Marja McGraw’s website (Recently updated)
CLICK HERE for a quick trip to Amazon.com


Monday, March 27, 2017

Black Butterfly, or Red Admiral



One day my daughter and I were sitting on the patio talking, and of all things a black butterfly flew into the yard and buzzed me. I’ve never seen a black butterfly before and didn’t even know they existed. This beautiful insect hung around for about half an hour, maybe more. He landed on my shed and practically posed for photos. I obliged him.

Of course, I researched it. It’s called a Red Admiral, and although it’s black, there’s some color on its wings.

I couldn’t get this bug off my mind. Who’d have thought a black butterfly could inspire a mystery. Well, it did, and of all things the story is more about the mob back in the 1950s than the butterfly. In the story, the black butterfly isn’t a what, but a who.

Of course, the butterfly begged to see itself on a book cover, so I obliged. I tried putting other elements from the story on the cover with the insect, but it just didn’t work. There’s a yellow dress in the story and I tried adding that. Nope, it didn’t work. I even tried putting a violin case containing a gun and ammo on the cover, but that didn’t work either. It was a lone butterfly or nothing. I have to admit that half the fun of a book is creating the cover, especially when I can use my own images on it.

https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_1_8?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=marja+mcgraw&sprefix=marja+mc%2Caps%2C445&crid=2NPM7ORIF4BVX

 So what kind of story did this little guy inspire? A book titled Black Butterfly - A Bogey Man Mystery. What else?

“Chris and Pamela Cross are in the thick of things, once again, when an elderly neighbor asks for their help. The Black Butterfly has been accused of deadly crimes and her past is catching up to her.

The body of a gangster who’s been missing for over sixty years is found buried under a casino floor in Las Vegas. Once again, the Black Butterfly is accused of murder, which brings the thug’s family to California to find answers.

 Enter Chris’s mother and the Church Ladies. Have they lost their minds? Why on earth would they try to protect a woman thought to be a Hit Lady in the 1950s?

The Crosses are about to find answers that might have been better left buried in time.”

I said sometime back that I was never going to write anymore Bogey Man Mysteries, but this theme seemed to fit the Bogey characters best. I guess the lesson learned is never say never.

Now I’ll take a break from writing and turn my attention to a neglected home. It’s also begging for attention. Then it’s on to another Sandi Webster mystery.

In the meantime, I hope you enjoy reading about the Black Butterfly and the thugs who tried to frame her.

Until next time, have a great week and don’t forget to support your local authors.

CLICK HERE to visit Marja McGraw’s website (in dire need of updating)
CLICK HERE for a quick trip to Amazon.com

I almost forgot. Old Murders Never Die – A Sandi Webster Mystery, will be free on Amazon on Friday, March 31 and Saturday, April 1 (not an April Fool’s joke). If the idea of a ghost town intrigues you, this is the book for you. Imagine being stranded in a ghost town with a history. (CLICK HERE to view the book trailer.)