Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Author Spotlight Featuring Nancy Haddock's A Crime of Poison

Nancy Haddock is one of my favorite authors, 
and her Silver Six Crafting Mystery series is funny, warm and clever. 
Thanks, L.A. for hosting me on your blog. It's always a joy to be here.

Do you all like art and craft festivals? I love them, and I’m eagerly awaiting the big November event in St. Augustine!
Whether they are small, intimate fairs with twenty or thirty booths, or large, juried festivals with a hundred vendors, I adore browsing and admiring the creativity and variety of goodies being offered. And, okay, I do more than browse. If the price is right, I buy fun things for family and friends. Everything from jewelry to art prints, to garden stones so ornate I hang them in my house!

My love of arts and crafts came from my mother who was a self-taught artist and craftswoman. I didn’t get all her talent, but if I can spend time at a festival – or an antique show or flea market – I’m there.

Watching my mother and her friends age was one of the inspirations for my Silver Six Crafting mysteries. My mother isn’t one of the Silver Six, per se, but her varied talents and general “get-‘er-done” attitude is reflected in both my group of senior characters and in the 30-year-old character, Nixy.  Another driving inspiration was my love of art and craft forms, so the Silver Six had to be crafty.


In the first book, Basket Case, my characters host an arts and crafts fest on their farmhouse grounds. In A Crime of Poison, they’ve moved the festival to the town square.

So, I wondered ….

What if a despised former resident showed up at the festival? What if he were working for an equally hated town bully? And what if someone wanted those men permanently gone from picturesque Lilyvale?

When Nixy stumbles on a crime scene with Amber the dog and T.C. the cat, she and the Silver Six are sure to be on the case!

Excerpt From A Crime of Poison:
The critters and I were fed and out the door by six forty- five for our morning jaunt. We walked up Fairview, one of our customary routes, but instead of crossing at Troost to loop back, we went another three blocks to cross at Moccasin, and then turned left on McKinley headed for home. Amber sniffed everything in sight. The grass, the sidewalk, the gutter, the dirt, every tree, even the air. Nothing escaped her notice. T.C. batted at and pounced on bugs, a fallen leaf, a rock. Entertaining as they were to watch, the start-stop pace sure wasn’t giving me aerobic exercise.

On McKinley I noticed an older- model sedan parked whopperjawed midblock under one of two oak trees. The front angled into the curb while the back stuck out into the street. Not enough to impede traffic, but nowhere near parallel to the curb. The paint might’ve been a cream color at one time, but now the car had more rust spots than not.

Amber and T.C. lifted their heads and sniffed as we approached. The closer we got, the more my critters fidgeted, whining and meowing, all the while testing the air for scents. When we pulled even with the passenger door, they sat at the edge of the sidewalk. Amber bayed her odd barkaroo, and T.C. screeched a reeoow. All the windows were open a few inches, the back windows more so. They weren’t tinted, and I noticed a man in the passenger seat. He looked to be asleep, his head tilted back, resting partly on the window, partly on the headrest.

I tugged gently on the leashes, planning to walk away, but my pets refused to budge. They gave me the big eyes and pitiful whimpers as if to say, Aren’t you going to do something?
I sighed and carefully stepped nearer to the car window for a closer look inside. I didn’t want to touch anything, but now I saw the man clearly.

A white floppy hat sat off- center over thin graying hair. Bruises colored his face. A split lip. White shirt smudged with dirt and blood droplets, and something else.

In spite of the cool morning, I suddenly felt clammy, and my knees shook. I swallowed and bent lower to see his eyes, then clamped my free hand over my nose and mouth as a foul, sour smell seeped from the window. The man wasn’t sleeping; not unless he slept with his eyes open and fixed on something he could no longer see.

Sure enough, Cornell Lewis was dead.

Buy: 

Blurb:
The Silver Six are known for their arts and crafts—but they’re about to be tested in the art of catching a crafty killer.

It's early October, time for the Fall Folk Art Festival and Bake Sale in Lilyvale, Arkansas. Leslee Stanton Nix, known as "Nixy," is in charge of making the event run smoothly. The festival will benefit the Handcraft Emporium, the store Nixy manages with her aunt and her five sassy housemates, collectively known as the Silver Six. Delicious baked goods, beautiful crafts, and time with friends—Nixy is confident that the festival will be a success.

But things become knotty when local troublemaker Cornell Lewis is found dead with a plate of Snickerdoodles from the bake sale. Two members of the Silver Six are accused of cooking up a murder plot, but Nixy knows that the cookies weren’t literally to die for. With time running out, Nixy and company must catch the actual killer... before the Silver Six find their number permanently reduced to four.

Bio: 
Nancy Haddock is the award-winning and national bestselling author of the Silver Six Crafting Mysteries. Basket Case and Paint the Town Dead are her current books in the series, and A Crime of Poison will be released in December 2017.

Nancy draws on historic wealth, southern culture, and the plain old quirkiness of places and people for her books. She lives with her husband and rescue dog Baron. You can reach her via www.nancyhaddock.com

Find Nancy:


12 comments:

  1. Hi Nancy, So good to see you here. I. CANNOT. WAIT. for your new book to come out. And my mom adores your writing. She's from the south, so relates to well to the language.
    Hugs, L.A.

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    Replies
    1. L.A., it's such an honor for you mom to enjoy the Silver Six. I think it's great she's from the south - she has to be a classy steel magnolia! I'm delighted to be with you - as always! Have a fabulous week!

      Light,
      Nancy

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  2. Hi, L.A.! Thank you so much for having me, and apologies for being late to my own party. Last week my desk top gave me fits. This morning, the desk top decided not to cooperate. Is something in retrograde? Ack!

    It's always a pleasure to be with you and your readers! I enjoyed sharing some background on what inspired the Silver Six crafting mysteries. Oh! And that arts fair I mentioned above? One was held this weekend, and my daughter and I got to go play at it! She bought a few things. I didn't, but I visited with the gourd artist who inspired my gourd artist in the second book. I was thrilled to see her!

    Okay, just because the desk top is working so I can comment doesn't mean I need to go on and on. Again, many thanks, L.A., and season's best to you and your readers!

    Light,
    Nancy

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    Replies
    1. Hi Nancy,
      It's always a pleasure to have you on the blog. Your books rock, and BTW, so do you.
      Hugs, L.A.

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  3. Congratulations on such a unique angle for your mystery series, Nancy! Sounds like one for Hallmark Movies & Mysteries. I wish you the best in in the marketing & promotion of your forthcoming release--just in time for the holidays! Hope it's another national bestseller.

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    Replies
    1. Lisa, huge apologies for not having responded sooner. I had computer glitches again - argh! Thank you so much for your congrats and good wishes for the new book! You are so kind!

      Happy reading!

      Light,
      Nancy

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    2. Hi Lisa,
      Good to "see" you. I hope everything is going smoothly on your latest book. Can't wait to have you here on the blog with it.
      Hugs, L.A.

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  4. I love small town series with a whole cast of characters, some fun, some grumpy, some just colorful additions to a wonderful crew. The Silver Six is a delightful crew - now to sell the place to Hallmark.

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    Replies
    1. Hey, Skye! How are you?? I appreciate the Hallmark thoughts you and Lisa are putting out - I'd love to see the Silver Six on TV! Thank you for the kind compliment, and I hope you're all better! Lunch soon?

      Light,
      Nancy

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    2. Hi Skye! I know exactly what you mean and Nancy does it all so well. I'm hoping when I start my new series featuring a small yet ritzy ski town in Colorado, I do it half the justice Nancy does to her town.
      Hugs,
      L.A

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  5. Thank you again for hosting me, L.A. You are the best! Have a wonderful holiday, and happy writing and reading to us all!

    Light,
    Nancy

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    Replies
    1. Merry Christmas, Nancy and happy holidays to all. May this coming year be filled with joy, laughter and peace.
      Hugs,
      L.A.

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