Friday, February 19, 2021

BOOK: February White Lies by Carol Ann Kauffman

February White Lies

A Cat Collier Short Story Mystery

by Carol Ann Kauffman



Join Cat Collier from January Black Ice as she starts her own detective agency, Red Cat Investigations, inside the gorgeous old Palazzo Castellano Hotel and solves her first real paid case, the case of Shotzie, the missing French poodle. Just when she feels she is destined to find lost pets and missing luggage for the rest of her life in her beautiful new office, complete with business cards, magazines in the waiting room, and her Red Cat logo painted on the frosted glass door, a lovely, mysterious woman named Ms. White hires her to find out who is stalking her. A dead rat on her car. Being run off the road. A car bombing. Someone wants her frightened or maybe…dead.



The trail of graft and corruption leads Cat into danger as she hides the mystery woman with the old, reclusive lawyer Detrick Bittmor for safe keeping.






Cat’s relationship with the handsome Erick “Carter” Larsen is put in jeopardy when she teams up with Officer Kiernan Scott from the Heaton Valley Police Department to unravel the mystery in February White Lies. 


Amazon Link:  https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01BJYOTQG


EXCERPT:

Chapter One

DNA Proof

 

 

“The roads are horrendous! It’s freezing out there. I don’t think you should go. His flight arrives in the middle of the night. He told you not to go get him. It’s extremely dangerous and inconvenient. He’ll find a way home,” my mother snipped.

“I’m sure he could find a way home, but I want to go get him. I’ve missed him.” I spoke calmly but glared at the phone, wondering if my mother called me just to make me crazy.

“That’s not a smart decision,” she said. I could hear her wrinkling up her nose.

Well, I’m going anyway, Mother.”

“If you’re not concerned with your own safety, then what about all the poor, hapless people who happen to be on the road at the same time as the daredevil Cat Collier?”

“I’ll steer clear of all other vehicles. Don’t worry about me, or any unfortunate soul on the highway with me. We’ll all be fine.  I’ll talk to you tomorrow. Good night, Mom.”

“Good night, wild child. Be careful.”

After the conversation with my mother, I needed aspirin and a nap before heading to the airport to pick up my boyfriend because alcohol, my first choice, would have seriously impaired my driving ability.

Hours later, I pulled out of the parking lot of my apartment building, refreshed, excited, and in happy anticipation as I slowly crawled through the icy, snow-covered, country roads to the Youngstown-Warren Regional Airport. 

 

“Flight 211 from New York has landed. Passengers will be arriving at Gate Three,” the United Airlines flight representative announced. I scrambled to the gate and waited as the weary, red-eye travelers quietly trickled passed me from the gate. The sleep-deprived commuters shuffled to baggage pick-up in a zombie-like state.

But my eyes were glued on the doorway. Finally, I saw his gorgeous head of dark, wavy hair towering above the others.

Now, you need to know something about me. I never get the handsome guy. I’m never even in the running. I’m short, more round than the publicly sought after elongated image of beauty, and I have this wild mop of uncontrollable red curly hair. I have freckles. I’m stubborn. I have an odd sense of humor. I don’t like to be told what to do. 

My mother says I lack social refinement. I don’t care. She also says I have bad taste in men and has never liked one of my boyfriends…until Carter, that is. Why this sweet, kind, smart, handsome creature left his underwear model girlfriend for me, I don’t know. But I’m deliriously happy.

Carter!” I shouted and waved. I startled some of the near-by sleepwalkers. “Sorry,” I whispered.

He searched the waiting crowd, broke into a giant grin when he spotted me, and rushed towards me as fast as he could without knocking over the stragglers.

“You’re here!” he picked me up, hugged me, and kissed me. “I told you that you didn’t need to come and get me. I would’ve rented a car. It’s the middle of the night. And it’s freezing.” His smile lit up the airport terminal. His hug was warm and strong. Everyone else was dragging, but the tall, dark, and handsome Erick Carter Larsen was full of energy. “Thank you for coming, sweetie.”

“Oh, my pleasure,” I said. I saw he had his carry-on bag. “Do we need to go to baggage pick-up?”

“No, I had the rest of my stuff shipped. It’ll all be here Wednesday.”

“Then let’s go home,” I said. I reached for his hand.

“Home. Sounds wonderful,” he said, clasping my hand as we walked out the door.

We slipped and slid our way to my old, red Chevy Cruze, clutching onto each other for support. 

“Oh, safe!” he said as he closed the car door. “The sidewalks and parking lot are treacherous. Have these people never heard of rock salt?”

“It’s too cold for rock salt to work right now and… we’re not safe yet. The roads are slick. Luckily, everybody else is home asleep, so we’ll have the road back to Heaton Valley all to ourselves. Buckle up, honey, and hold on tight.” 

I pulled out of the parking lot and slid sideways, just missing the unmanned ticket booth.

Carter shrieked and covered his face while I howled with laughter. I’m used to driving in this kind of weather.

“You almost took out that ticket booth,” he panted.

“The operative word being ‘almost.’ Quit fussing,” I laughed. “I had a good four-inch clearance.”

Carter groaned. “I think there are more dents on your car since I left you last week.”

“No. Some cowardly paint may have run off in fear, but no new dents.”

Carter raised an eyebrow at me.

“Excuse me, Mr. Larsen, would you prefer to drive?”

“No, absolutely not, Miss Collier. You’re doing a great job. Fantastic. No complaints.” He searched the floor and in the back seat.

“What are you looking for?”

“Helmet. Mouth guard. Knee pads. Shin guards. Rosary beads to wear around my neck. Holy water. Race car shoulder harness. Tibetan prayer shawl.”

“Rough flight, honey?” I laughed.

“Not until now,” he teased with a wink and a smile. 

I took the center of the snow-covered, deserted road.

“Don’t you have to pick a lane here in Ohio?”

“Not until we see something coming at us. The center’s not as icy as the traffic lanes.” 

The night was pitch black against the iridescent white snow. I followed the broken white line down the center of the road.

“You’re unusually quiet,” I said. “Are you sleepy?”

“No. Scared. I don’t want to take your mind of the road. We’ll talk later.”

We arrived at my apartment unscathed.








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Thursday, February 18, 2021

ENTERTAINMENT: Godless (Netflix)



This was another husband-chosen film for the evening's entertainment. Since the pandemic began, I have developed a new appreciation of the western. That, coupled with the fact that Lady Mary Crowley (Michelle Dockery) had the female lead, made this a 'must watch.'




 "In the 1880s American West murderous outlaw gang leader Frank Griffin hunts for ex-protege Roy Goode. Frank's chase leads him to La Belle, New Mexico - a town inhabited, after a mining disaster, almost entirely by women."  

"No Man's Land"

If you're looking for a good old-fashioned western with lots of guns and violence and outstanding acting, do not miss this one. 






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Wednesday, February 17, 2021

INTERVIEW: British Mystery Thriller Author Alan Hardy


 


Alan Hardy
United Kingdom


Good morning, Alan, and welcome to Vision and Verse, the site for art and authors of today. I've read The Nazi Spy and it was fantastic. It was one of the best books I read this year and I read every night. Can you tell us a little about what else you've written? 

12 books, with another three ready to come out, hopefully all this year. I also write poetry, and have been published quite extensively in a number of poetry magazines in the UK and other countries. Although I still write poetry, in the last five/ten years I’ve been concentrating on writing novels, in a variety of genres.

 


What is your favorite genre to write? 

 Really difficult to say. Probably I’ve been most successful with the mystery and thriller genres, although one of the books I’ve just written and hope to bring out later this year, is a WW2 romance from a female Point of View. I found that very interesting to write, as also a thriller which was also written from a female POV.

 

Favorite food. 

Either egg and bacon; any type of mixed salad with French or Italian dressing; or gnocchi alla gorgonzola

 


Tea or coffee? 

Tea, probably

 


Pizza or ice cream? 

Ice cream




Wine or beer? 

Wine

 


Where would you like to visit? 

Vienna

 


Favorite musical artist. 

David Bowie.   

 


Do you listen to music when you write?    What? 

I don’t, I’m afraid.

 


Afraid of music? Then do not listen! What makes you laugh? 

Well-written, cheeky situation comedies

 


Because this is an art and author blog, I am obligated to ask: 

Favorite work of art or sculpture. 

Edvard Munch’s The Scream

 


How old were you when you started writing? 

Putting aside juvenile stuff, I think about 15

 


Do you plan out your book with outlines and notecards? Or just write? 

I have a rough idea where I’m going, but not to the extent of outlines/notecards. The story fills in/expands as I go along. I don’t write ‘blind’, so to speak, but keep my eyes peeled on the ground immediately in front of me. Halfway through, though, I normally know the final destination.

 


Describe your perfect evening. 

A little bit of work (not to feel guilty), a nice meal with some wine, a bit of TV/internet.

 


Where do you get your inspiration? 

For novels, I tend to start spinning out stories/narratives/ideas in my head (basically a bit of child-like fantasizing and story-telling), and, maybe, after a while, I might consider one is the germ of a decent idea and it might possibly work as a novel… For poetry, generally, it’s sitting down in front of the computer and a blank screen, and thinking of an image/scene/idea I can try to capture in words, but, more importantly, capture that very moment of creation itself.

 


What do you do when you get a writer's block? 

For novels, I think I’m OK. For poetry, it can happen. Then I just force myself to write something…anything… If it’s no good, I can discard it later. I have the belief it’s not good to sit down to write, and not to be able to. Better something bad (and at least, by doing so, keep yourself in practice) than leave a blank screen/piece of paper behind as you walk away…

 


Who is your favorite author?             
Jane Austen; Giacomo Leopardi (the Italian poet)

 


Best book you ever read. 

Pride and Prejudice; or The Portrait of Dorian Grey

 


Last book you read.

The Prisoner of Zenda

 


What would you do for a living if you weren’t a writer? 

I have taught English for many years, in particular latterly as director of an English language school for foreign students

 


Who is the one person who has influenced your personal life the most and why? 

I can only give the obvious answer here, namely, in my youth, my parents, and, now in later life, my wife and daughter. I haven’t really thought of how any of them have influenced my life in specific terms, it’s just that proximity with them sets the parameters of one’s life. That’s the way it is, isn’t it, and learning within those parameters to accept (or, at least, put up with) the good and the not so good… But life is never easy, is it?

 


If you could sit down and have a conversation with ONE person, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be and why? 

I don’t think it would be either anybody famous, or fictional, but maybe just a normal, average person from another era, with whom I could sit down and in a chat discover exactly how people in other times thought, felt, dreamt… Maybe someone from Victorian times, or someone from ancient Roman/Greek times.


 

What advice would you give someone who aspired to be a writer? 

Just to never, never give up. The other thing—always very difficult to do—is not so much to keep rewriting/editing what one has written, but to learn as a matter of course to trim/cut the language used. This is important in poetry, but equally so in prose. In prose, cut out unnecessary adjectives and adverbs, in poetry cut out /adjectives/adverbs/articles/anything you feel you can. (And here I have to own up I often don’t do as much as I should. It’s not easy to obliterate/erase one’s own words…is it?)


 

Do you have some links for us to follow you?

https://www.amazon.com/Alan-Hardy/e/B00GDDS4UGhttps://www.amazon.co.uk/Alan-Hardy/e/B00GDDS4UGalanhardyblog.wordpress.com; https://twitter.com/AlanWilliamHardy








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Tuesday, February 16, 2021

BOOK REVIEW: Building Up to Love by Joanne Jaytanie



Looking for a well-written, sweet romance revolving around the remodeling of a large Victorian home into a Bed and Breakfast? Then look no further than Building Up to Love, a Love List Book, by JoAnne Jaytanie. With characters you can’t help but love, this remodel job moves along quickly and enjoyably to a satisfying ending. 







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Monday, February 15, 2021

ART: 1920s Women’s Magazine Covers










 











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Sunday, February 14, 2021

SCHEDULE: Feb.15-19, 2021


 
Mon., Feb. 15 -ART:
1920s Women's Magazine Covers
Tues., Feb. 16 - BOOK REVIEW:
Building Up to Love
by Joanne Jaytanie
Wed., Feb. 17- INTERVIEW:
British Mystery Thriller Author
Alan Hardy
Thurs., Feb. 18 - ENTERTAINMENT:
Godless (Netflix)
Fri., Feb. 19 - BOOK:
February White Lies
Cat Collier Mystery Short Story
by Carol Ann Kauffman






VISIONANDVERSEDISCLAIMER:

Note:

Vision and Verse does not store any personal information like email addresses, home addresses, etc. We do not give any information to third parties. And cookies? We eat cookies.