Release Day for Deadly Occupation!

Deadly Occupation cover imageToday is release day for Deadly Occupation, book #1 of my “Michael Stoddard American Revolution Mysteries” series. Here’s the book’s description:

A wayward wife, a weapons trafficker, and a woman with “second sight”—it’s a puzzle that would have daunted any investigator. But Michael Stoddard wasn’t just any investigator.

Late January 1781, in coastal North Carolina, patriots flee before the approach of the Eighty-Second Regiment, leaving behind defenseless civilians to surrender the town of Wilmington to the Crown. The regiment’s commander assigns Lieutenant Michael Stoddard the tasks of tracking down a missing woman and probing into the suspicious activities of an unusual church. But as soon as Michael starts sniffing around, he discovers that some of those not-so-defenseless civilians are desperately hiding a history of evil.

Purchase Deadly Occupation here:
Amazon Kindle US
Amazon Kindle UK
Nook
Apple
Kobo
Paperback

Over at the English Historical Fiction Authors blog, Debbie Brown has posted my essay on Major James Henry Craig, a hero for North Carolina’s loyalists during 1781.

Reviews on blogs:
Aobibliophile
Amber Foxx
Caroline Clemmons
Warren Bull

Black Friday 2014 Camp Follower sale

Camp Follower book cover“An excellent offering from a skilled novelist” — Armchair Interviews

Looking for a great deal on an award-nominated, historical holiday read? Camp Follower, stand-alone third book of my “Mysteries of the American Revolution” trilogy, is on sale 28 – 30 November. The book was nominated for the Daphne du Maurier award and the Sir Walter Raleigh award, and it shows the Yule and Christmas Day celebrations of 1780 for the British Legion, encamped in the South Carolina backcountry.

Here are the sales and where you’ll find them:

Please spread the word. Many thanks.

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A deadly assignment. A land poisoned by treachery and battle. She plunged in headfirst.

Late in 1780, the publisher of a loyalist magazine in Wilmington, North Carolina offers an amazing assignment to Helen Chiswell, his society page writer. Pose as the widowed, gentlewoman sister of a British officer in the Seventeenth Light Dragoons, travel to the encampment of the British Legion in the Carolina backcountry, and write a feature on Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton. But Helen’s publisher has secret reasons for sending her into danger. And because Helen, a loyalist, has ties to a family the redcoats suspect as patriot spies, she comes under suspicion of a brutal, brilliant British officer. At the bloody Battle of Cowpens, Helen must confront her past to save her life.

The Blacksmith’s Daughter: On Sale for the First Time

The Blacksmith's Daughter book cover“A ripping good read!” — Ann Parker, author of The Silver Rush Mystery Series

The Blacksmith’s Daughter, stand-alone second book of my “Mysteries of the American Revolution” trilogy, is on sale for the first time through 26 October in the Kindle Store for 99 cents. Regular price $5.99. Please spread the word.

The patriots wanted her husband dead. So did the redcoats. She took issue with both.

In the blistering Georgia summer of 1780, Betsy Sheridan uncovers evidence that her shoemaker husband, known for his loyalty to King George, is smuggling messages to a patriot-sympathizing, multinational spy ring based in the Carolinas. When he vanishes into the heart of military activity, in Camden, South Carolina, Betsy follows him, as much in search of him as she is in search of who she is and where she belongs. But battle looms between Continental and Crown forces. The spy ring is plotting multiple assassinations. And Betsy and her unborn child become entangled in murder and chaos.

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Regulated for Murder Summer Solstice Deep Discount

Regulated for Murder book coverFor ten years, an execution hid murder. Then Michael Stoddard came to town.

Bearing a dispatch from his commander in coastal Wilmington, North Carolina, redcoat Lieutenant Michael Stoddard arrives in Hillsborough in February 1781 in civilian garb. He expects to hand a letter to a courier working for Lord Cornwallis, then ride back to Wilmington the next day. Instead, Michael is greeted by the courier’s freshly murdered corpse, a chilling trail of clues leading back to an execution ten years earlier, and a sheriff with a fondness for framing innocents—and plans to deliver Michael up to his nemesis, a psychopathic British officer.

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The eBook version of Regulated for Murder, award-winning fourth novel in my historical crime fiction series, is on sale today and Saturday for 99 cents in Kindle, Nook, and Apple iBooks formats. Enjoy!

A big thanks to the folks at eReader News Today!

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Paper Woman Memorial Day Deep Discount

140524PaperWomanCoverShe expected the redcoats to solve her father’s murder. The redcoats and her father had other plans.

In early June 1780, the village of Alton, Georgia, is rocked by the triple murder of the town printer and one of his associates, both outspoken patriots, and a Spanish assassin. Alton’s redcoats are in no hurry to seek justice for the murdered men. The printer and his buddies have stirred up trouble for the garrison. But the printer’s widowed daughter, Sophie Barton, wants justice for her father. Under suspicion from the redcoats, Sophie sets out on a harrowing journey to find the truth about her father — a journey that plunges her into a hornet’s nest of terror, treachery, and international espionage.

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The eBook version of Paper Woman, award-winning first novel in my historical crime fiction series, is on sale through Sunday for 99 cents in Kindle, Nook, iTunes, and Kobo formats. Enjoy!

A big thanks to the folks at eReader News Today, Free Kindle Books & Tips, and Bargain eBook Hunter!

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Do Historical Mysteries Have Something to Say About Our Time?

From the Vault: A budget proposed in 2013 by the governor of the state of North Carolina called for closure of four historical sites to save money. (How much money would this really save? Read the end of the article.) Whenever something like this appears in the news, it spotlights people who didn’t learn history. Remember what George Santayana said? “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” History has a lot to say about modern times. Historical mysteries, too, have a lot to say about our time, as I discuss in the following essay, originally published at PPWebcon in 2009.

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For many of us, history is a huge hurdle we negotiated in school, a dry gulch of treaty and battle dates regurgitated on tests. Although we’re given such admonitions as George Santayana’s “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it,” few enjoy studying the lessons of history, let alone reading a mystery set in times past. Historical whodunits that are long on descriptions of clothing and food and short on plot and characterizations have given the entire sub-genre a bad reputation. It’s as if historical mysteries are the dorks on the dance floor of crime fiction, surrounded by sleekly twirling thrillers, sinuous suspense schemes, and cheetah-like cozies. Are historical mysteries really just for geeks? Or are their messages relevant to a wider readership?

All mystery fiction deals with righting wrongs. At the heart of those rights and wrongs is the duality of human nature. Socrates observed, “Bad men live that they may eat and drink, whereas good men eat and drink that they may live.” So it looks as though human nature has remained fairly consistent throughout recorded history. We tote the baggage of various dysfunctions with us through millennia while striving to balance “the Dark Side” with philanthropy, gratitude, love, compassion, and other characteristics that exemplify the best that humanity has to offer.

One reason we conveniently forget lessons from history is that significant events become shrouded in myth, even within our lifetimes. Farther back than our grandparents, we have little connection with the people who moved and shook the earth. Those of us in affluent countries have access to instant communications, antibiotics, fast food, and reliable transportation, whereas danger and scarcity often shaped the everyday decisions of our ancestors who lived on the same soil. Via school history textbooks, the courage these ancestors displayed filters down to us as the extraordinary fearlessness of comic book superheroes. Since you probably don’t know many fearless superheroes, you can easily dismiss people of the past and their vital stories.

But what if our ancestors’ courage was less about extraordinary, fearless superheroes and more about ordinary people who responded appropriately in the presence of their own fear? Let’s look at when you might have done so recently. Have you quit a job or started a home-based business? Left an abusive relationship? Run a daylong marathon? Such accomplishments require courage. Fear of failure plucks at us each time we move forward. Ordinary, non-superhero folks like you and me challenge ourselves every day. Somehow we find ways to respond appropriately, bypass the fear-snags, better ourselves, right wrongs. It’s human nature to do so.

Well-written historical mysteries transport us into a past teeming with the sort of prickly issues we deal with today as well as horrors we’d rather relegate to an earlier time — but we cannot do so because they haunt us still. In the course of fictional investigations, protagonists from the past tackle gritty matters like addiction, amputation, sexual predation, post-traumatic stress disorder, hate crimes, and human trafficking. Since there’s no Dr. Phil or even Dr. Freud to coach the characters of most eras through the psychology, we receive a window into how real people in history might have managed what was deviant. And somehow they must have done it. After all, we’re here today.

By transporting us into another time, authors of historical mysteries cleverly showcase the duality of human nature from a different angle. Historical mysteries challenge us to ponder issues anew, search ourselves for solutions buried beneath the layer of techno-babble that coats the twenty-first century, resolutions perhaps invisible behind the defenses we erect about our souls. We read of human beings plagued with faults but striving to right wrongs, just as we struggle today. Dull reading? Hardly.

If you believe all historical mysteries are set in England or North America, you haven’t read from the sub-genre lately, and you’re in for a treat. Detectives through the ages solve crimes in Egypt and the Middle East, the Byzantine Empire, Japan, Australia, Mexico, India, Tibet, Africa, Laos, and South America. Crime Thru Time is one of several web sites providing a timeline of historical mystery series. Pick out an intriguing “when” and “where” on the site. Then prepare yourself to escape into the past and have fun. While you’re connecting to history in ways your teachers could never have imagined, don’t be surprised if a mystery author sneaks in one of those lessons that we’re supposed to learn about good, evil, courage, and human nature.

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IndieReCon Conference, Day 1

IndieReCon, a free online conference for writers, started at 10:00 a.m. EST this morning and runs through Thursday 27 February, twelve hours each day. JA Konrath and Bob Mayer are among the speakers lined up to address topics of interest to authors publishing independently. There are book giveaways, including the grand prize of a Kobo Aura loaded with ebooks. Check out the schedule.

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The Fussy Librarian Spotlights Regulated for Murder

Regulated for Murder cover imageThe first book of Michael Stoddard’s series, Regulated for Murder, is spotlighted in today’s book recommendations over at The Fussy Librarian. Regulated for Murder, on Suspense Magazine‘s “Best of 2011” list, continues to receive outstanding reviews. The latest reader to post a five-star review for the book on Amazon wrote, “When a book makes me stay up late at night to get to the end and have it solved it has to be a good read.” Regulated for Murder is available for Kindle, Nook, iTunes, and Kobo and in trade paperback format.

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Read Tuesday 2013

Today I’m participating in Read Tuesday. For today only, all five of my ebooks are discounted to $2.99 each at Amazon.

Read Tuesday banner

Read Tuesday is a worldwide event scheduled for 10 December 2013. Its purpose is to get people to (what else?) read more and buy more books. It’s a sort of antidote to Black Friday and Cyber Monday, a special day dedicated to huge book savings. Thousands of books are on sale today. What a great opportunity for readers to stock up on books from their favorite participating authors and publishers. Discounted books also make great gifts for the holidays. And Read Tuesday provides a great way to help improve literacy. Encourage someone—especially, a child—who doesn’t read much to read more. Share the gift of reading.

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Buy the Paperback, Get the Kindle Edition Free in December

For the month of December, I’m participating in a special promotion with thirteen other authors of historical fiction. Buy the paperback version of our books on Amazon, and you’ll be offered the opportunity to download the Kindle edition for free. Amazon will also credit your prior purchase of these paperbacks.

What a great opportunity for you if you prefer paperback but also like to have a digital version—or if you’ve been thinking about giving a paperback as a gift and want an ebook for yourself. You’ll find all five of my books in this promotion. Here’s the full list of titles we’re offering.

Remember: this special promotion is only for December.

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