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Featured in Kings River Life Magazine

10/28/2014

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The California magazine Kings River Life is featuring authors who will attend the Bouchercon mystery convention in November. My novel Stone Cold Dead is mentioned in Sunny Frazier's column in the October 25 issue. 
    
Also featured in Sunny's column is author Leigh Perry, with whom I will co-present the Short Mystery Fiction Society's Derringer awards for best short story.

You can find the magazine column Coming Attractions Countdown to Bouchercon Continues at the link below. 

http://kingsriverlife.com/10/25/coming-attractions-countdown-to-bouchercon-continues/

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The Winter Eggplant Part Two

10/21/2014

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Last year I suffered an epic fail trying to grow eggplants. (I chronicled my struggle in a March 2014 post.) Last fall, when I began to clean up prior to a killer freeze, I notice an eggplant in a pot was just beginning to thrive. I brought it indoors, expecting it to die before spring. The warm and sunny window must have suited it, because the eggplant thrived. This spring, I set it outdoors again.

I did plant other eggplants, in a protective hot house made from greenhouse scraps. I learned how to make ratatouille with the eggplants, squash, and tomatoes from the garden. But this little potted Winter Eggplant just continued to look pretty.  

When a hail storm took out most of the garden in early spring, I thought the potted eggplant was a goner, but it made a comeback. Then temperatures were predicted to drop near freezing in late September, and I brought the eggplant indoors again. Another fruitless summer on the deck, I thought. until I noticed three little eggplants hanging from its branches. I may get an eggplant out of this yet!   

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Plants, Poop, and Everything In Between

10/14/2014

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PictureMorrison Museum life size dinosaur skeletons
At the Denver Mineral, Fossil, Gem and Jewelry Show in September, I found everything related to dinosaurs, from the fossilized plants and fishes they ate, to the end product of their digestion. 

Entire skeletons were amazing, whether they were assembled from fossilized bones, or from casts, as were the full-sized specimens on display by the Morrison Museum. 



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I was intrigued by the do-it-yourself fossils offered by Oreodont Fossils. Jim Ackerman is a geologist and paleontologist from South Dakota. He had on display items as they appear freshly dug up in the field. Wrapped in newspaper and bound with black electrical tape (photo below), Jim had a good idea of what could be found inside. Although most looked like lumps of dirt to me, perhaps with a bit of bone or a tooth showing, a budding paleontologist could “excavate” the treasure. Jim took the time to explain to me some of the how and where of fossil discovery.




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I did not expect to see the large variety of fossilized plants, fish, and insects on display at the show. This palm frond was offered as "Geo Decor," and had a price tag of $65,000. I might have one wall in my house large enough to display this fossil, but not the budget!

PictureDIY fossils from Oreodont Fossils
Because it is mentioned several times in my novel Stone Cold Dead, I was hoping to find an affordable sample of coprolite. The humor abounded as the vendor and I made tasteless quips about purchasing fossilized dinosaur poop.

Another customer, with no interest in spending good money on fossilized feces, asked how a person could be certain the samples were actual dinosaur poop. The vendor said her source traveled the world in search of coprolite, and that it can be tested to verify authenticity. 

PictureAn inexpensive coprolite specimen
Since then, I have learned that coprolite is serious business. A July 29, 2014 article in the National Geographic online magazine describes a case of a poop impostor in the article Was Six-Million-Year-Old Turd Auctioned for $10,000 a Faux Poo? You can read the article at this link: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/07/140729-dinosaur-coprolite-paleontology-dung-fossil-auction/  

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Author Patricia Coleman Defines Steampunk

10/7/2014

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I love the new Sherlock Holmes movie series, which I grant takes liberties with the original Arthur Conan Doyle novels. Still, I find them visually appealing and entertaining. My friend, multi-genre author Patricia Coleman, explained that the movies have a steampunk twist. I asked for a definition, which Patricia provides below.

Hi everyone. I’m Patricia Coleman, aka P. R. Morris, and Cathy and I have been friends and writing buddies for more years than either of us care to count. I write humorous historical intrigues, the contemporary amateur sleuth series Media Fan Mysteries, and steampunk mysteries.  My latest steampunk short story , “English Waters”, just came out in the September issue of Steampunk Trails.  You can find me at www.prmorris.com.

I get a lot of questions about just what steampunk is. Basically, it is an alternative time line where the combustion engine is not the prime technology.  Most stories are set in a late Victorian era, but not all.  Lately we’re seeing stories set in WWI and the 1920s.  Another definition I hear a lot is retro-futuristic.  Think how nineteenth century writers predicted the future.  Another common element in steampunk stories is the emphasis on technology, either as a positive force or as the antagonist. Many plots deal with the abuse of technology and the creation of techno-based feudal political systems.  Like historical mysteries, steampunk mysteries incorporate these unique aspects of the “times”.

Steampunk has moved beyond its YA roots and is appearing in practically all genres now.  We’re seeing leather corseted ladies with guns in their garters on romance novels and bowler-wearing gizmo-carrying PIs with a dirigible in the background in the mystery section.  So why do I write steampunk?

Steampunk allows me to explore alternatives that my historical and contemporary mysteries don’t.  In those the investigative techniques and modus operandi must stay in the realm of appropriate and realistic for the time.  In steampunk I can extrapolate and create new possibilities.  It is a grittier world, full of horrifying villains and troubled heroes, and societies in the middle of change, yet the fundamental human spirit is constant, fighting through.

Not all steampunk is dark and brooding.  One of the lighter examples is the old TV show and  later movie The Wild, Wild West.  Series like Carriger’s Parasol Protectorate and  Ballantine and Morris’ The Ministry of Peculiar Occurences are cross-over stories that appeal to mystery readers.  So if you’re looking for something a little different, give steampunk a try.

Patricia's steampunk short story is found in volume 2 of Steampunk Trails: http://steampunktrails.blogspot.com/p/blog-page.html - the website states Denver area fans can find copies at Broadway Book Mall 200 S Broadway

I recommend Patricia's cozy mystery Entering the Twilight Zone, written as P. R. Morris, available in paperback and a variety of e-book versions:
http://www.amazon.com/Entering-Twilight-Zone-P-Morris/dp/1466216948/ref=sr_1_4?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1412685603&sr=1-4&keywords=p.+r.+morris

You can learn more about Patricia at http://www.prmorris.com/

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