Rita Mae Brown

I’ve become a big fan of Rita Mae Brown and her Mrs. Murphy Mystery series.  The series is “co-authored” with her cat Sneaky Pie Brown and the stories are humorous along with a fun mystery to boot.

The first book Wish You Were Here was published in 1990. There are now 18 books in the series featuring Harry Haristeen, the human sleuth, along her cats sleuths Mrs. Murphy, Pewter, and the dog Tucker.

For the horse loving fans she has also written a series Sister Jane Foxhunting Mysteries.

For more information on Rita Mae Brown visit her website: Rita Mae Brown

Published in: on April 21, 2009 at 6:07 pm  Leave a Comment  
Tags: , , , , ,

Lillian Jackson Braun – Mystery Writer

Ever popular author, Lillian Jackson Braun has a past almost as mysterious as her famous Jim Qwilleran cat series of mysteries. During the years of 1966 through 1968, Braun published her first three novels in the Cat Who… series and then seemed to disappear for almost 20 years.

Koko and Yum Yum have helped Jim solve 29 mysteries to date with #30 set to be released sometime in 2009. It’s title will be “The Cat Who Smelled Smoke”.

Braun writes a classic mystery that is fun to read and well, there are those two wonderful Siamese cats, too. All of her books are a joy to read with no terror or blood, just good old fashioned who done its!

The first 3 titles published by Lillian Jackson Braun were later published together in one book. The Cat Who Read Backwards, The Cat Who Ate Danish Modern, and The Cat Who Turned On and Off can be found in this book located in my shop: The Cat Who…

The Cat Who Wasn’t There can be found in paperback in my shop.

Published in: on October 12, 2008 at 8:02 pm  Comments (2)  
Tags: , , , , , ,

A New Squidoo Group

Today I’m going to go just a little off topic by inviting any of my readers to join my new Squidoo Group. It is a group for both collectors and sellers of Ephemera and Paper Collectibles.

The group is small right now with only 3 members and 10 lenses. The lenses are pretty darn cool though. Vintage magazine ads, wrestling programs, autographs, sheet music, and old hollywood magazines are covered in the lenses so far.

So, if you are a fellow lensmaster and have written a lens that would fit in this group, go on over and submit the lens or lenses and I’ll take a peak at them for you. Not only will I add you to the group but I’ll read and rate your lens for you too.

Just click this link to visit Ephemera and Paper Collectibles Group

Published in: on October 8, 2008 at 7:47 am  Leave a Comment  
Tags: , , , ,

Author Robert Ludlum – A favorite of mine

Robert Ludlum was an American author who penned 25 thriller novels. Born May 25, 1927 in New York City and passed on March 12, 2001 in Naples, Florida. He also published books under 2 known pseudonyms – Jonathan Ryder and Michael Shepherd.

Many of Ludlum’s books have been made into movies with the most recent being the Bourne series with actor Matt Damon.

Books written by Robert Ludlum:

  • The Scarlatti Inheritance (1971)
  • The Osterman Weekend (1972)
  • The Matlock Paper (1973)
  • Trevayne (1973, writing under the pen-name Jonathan Ryder)
  • The Cry of the Halidon (1974, writing under the pen-name Jonathan Ryder)
  • The Rhinemann Exchange (1974)
  • The Road to Gandolfo (1975, writing under the pen-name Michael Shephard)
  • The Gemini Contenders (1976)
  • The Chancellor Manuscript (1977)
  • The Holcroft Covenant (1978)
  • The Matarese Circle (1979)
  • The Bourne Identity (1980)
  • The Parsifal Mosaic (1982)
  • The Aquitaine Progression (1984)
  • The Bourne Supremacy (1986)
  • The Icarus Agenda (1988)
  • The Bourne Ultimatum (1990)
  • The Road to Omaha (1992)
  • The Scorpio Illusion (1993)
  • The Apocalypse Watch (1995)
  • The Matarese Countdown (1997)
  • The Prometheus Deception (2000)

A book club edition of The Holcroft Covenant can be found at The Paper Trail

A 1992 first edition of The Road to Omaha can be found at The Paper Trail

Published in: on September 17, 2008 at 7:52 pm  Comments (1)  
Tags: , ,

Hervey Allen author of Anthony Adverse

Hervey Allen was an American author whose life spanned from December 8, 1889 to December 28, 1949.

He was born as William Hervey Allen in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania and graduated from the University of Pittsburgh in 1915, where he also became a member of the Sigma Chi Fraternity.

Allen is best known for his work Anthony Adverse. He also planned a series of novels about colonial America called The Disinherited. He completed three works in the series: The Forest and the Fort (1943), Bedford Village (1944), and Toward the Morning (1948). The novels tell the story of Salathiel Albine, a frontiersman kidnapped as a boy by Shawnee Indians in the 1750s. All three works were collected and published as the City in the Dawn. Allen also wrote Israfel (1926), a biography of American writer Edgar Allan Poe.

For a period of time, Allen taught at the Porter Military Academy in Charleston, South Carolina. There he met and befriended DuBose Heyward.

In the 1940s he co-edited the Rivers of America Series with Carl Carmer.

Allen died in Miami, Florida from a heart attack while in the shower, and was found by his wife Annette.

Bibliography:

  • Anthony Adverse (1933)
  • Israfel (1926)
  • Action at Aquila ( 1938 )
  • The Forest and the Fort (1943)
  • Bedford Village (1944)
  • Toward the Morning ( 1948 )

Resource: Wikipedia

Published in: on August 5, 2008 at 8:41 pm  Leave a Comment  
Tags: , ,

Jean Marie Auel – A Favorite of Mine

One of my absolute favorite authors is Jean M. Auel. Her historical fiction is so remarkably well written thatClan of the Cave Bear you feel that you are truly there with pre-historic humans living life with them. She is a master in my eyes.

Jean Marie Auel was born in Chicago, Illinois on February 18, 1936. The second of five children of Neil Solomon Untinen, and Martha Wirtanen. Jean and her husband, Ray Bernard Auel, have five children and live in Portland, Oregon.

Auel has been a member of Mensa since 1964. She attended Portland State University and the University of Portland. While studying, she worked as a clerk (1965-1966), a circuit board designer (1966-1973), technical writer (1973-1974), and a credit manager at Tektronix (1974-1976). She earned an MBA in 1976 and has received honorary degrees from the University of Maine and Mount Vernon College for Women.

In 1977, Auel began extensive library research of the Ice Age for her first book. She joined a survival class to learn how to construct an ice cave, and learned primitive methods of making fire, tanning leather, and knapping stone from aboriginal skills expert Jim Riggs. Clan of the Cave Bear was nominated for numerous literary awards, including an American Booksellers Association nomination for best first novel.

After the success of the first book, Auel was able to travel to prehistoric sites and to meet many of the experts with whom she had been corresponding. Her research has taken her across Europe from France to Ukraine, including most of what Marija Gimbutas called Old Europe. She has developed a close friendship with Dr. Jean Clottes of France who was responsible for, among many other things, the exploration of the Cosquer Cave discovered in 1985 and the Chauvet Cave discovered in 1994.

Jean Auel’s books have been commended for their anthropological authenticity and their ethnobotanical accuracy.

Earth’s children Series:

  1. The Clan of the Cave Bear, 1980
  2. The Valley of Horses, 1982
  3. The Mammoth Hunters, 1985
  4. The Plains of Passage, 1990
  5. The Shelters of Stone, 2002
Published in: on July 29, 2008 at 10:02 pm  Comments (1)  
Tags: , , ,

Hoosier Author – Gene Stratton Porter

Gene Stratton-Porter (August 17, 1863 – December 6, 1924) was an American author, amateur naturalist, wildlife photographer, and one of the earliest women to form a movie studio and production company. She wrote some of the best selling novels and well-received columns in magazines of the day.

Born Geneva Grace Stratton in Wabash County, Indiana, she married Charles D. Porter in 1886, and they had one daughter, Jeannette.

She became a wildlife photographer, specializing in the birds and moths in one of the last of the vanishing wetlands of the lower Great Lakes Basin. The Limberlost and Wildflower Woods of northeastern Indiana were the laboratory and inspiration for her stories, novels, essays, photography, and movies. Although there is evidence that her first book was “Strike at Shanes”, which was published anonymously, her first attributed novel, The Song of the Cardinal met with great commercial success. Her novels Freckles and A Girl of the Limberlost are set in the wooded wetlands and swamps of the disappearing central Indiana ecosystems she loved and documented. She eventually wrote over 20 books.

Although Stratton-Porter wanted to focus on nature books, it was her romantic novels that made her famous and generated the finances that allowed her to pursue her nature studies. She was an accomplished author, artist and photographer and is generally considered to be one of the first female authors to promulgate public positions — in her case, conserving the Limberlost Swamp.

Catherine Woolley, author of the “Ginnie and Geneva” series of children’s books, may have named her character of Geneva Porter after Geneva Stratton-Porter.

One of her last novels, Her Father’s Daughter, was set outside of Los Angeles, California where she had moved in the 1920s for health reasons and to expand her business ventures into the movie industry. This novel presented a unique window into Stratton-Porter’s personal feelings on WWI-era racism, especially relating to orientals. She died in Los Angeles in 1924, along with her driver, when her limousine was struck by a streetcar.

A building at Purdue University Calumet in Hammond, Indiana is named in her honor. A rest stop along the Indiana Toll Road (U.S. Interstate 90) also shares her name. Her Wildflower Woods home on Lake Sylvan, Rome City, Indiana, and her Limberlost home in Geneva, Indiana, are now museums operated by the Indiana State Museum.

Resource for information: Wikepedia

Published in: on July 29, 2008 at 9:58 pm  Comments (1)  
Tags: , ,

Harper Lee authored To Kill A Mockingbird

Nelle Harper Lee (born April 28, 1926) is an American novelist known for her Pulitzer Prize–winning 1960 novel To Kill a Mockingbird, her only major work. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom of United States for her contributions to literature in 2007.

Harper Lee, known as Nelle, was born in the Alabama town of Monroeville on April 28, 1926, the youngest of four children of Amasa Coleman Lee and Frances Cunningham Finch Lee. Her father, a former newspaper editor and proprietor, was a lawyer who served on the state legislature from 1926 to 1938. As a child, Lee was a tomboy and a precocious reader, and enjoyed the friendship of her schoolmate and neighbor, the young Truman Capote.

After graduating from high school in Monroeville, Lee enrolled at the all-female Huntingdon College in Montgomery (1944-45), and then pursued a law degree at the University of Alabama (1945-50), pledging the Chi Omega sorority. While there, she wrote for several student publications and spent a year as editor of the campus humor magazine, Ramma-Jamma. Though she did not complete the law degree, she studied for a summer in Oxford, England, before moving to New York in 1950, where she worked as a reservation clerk with Eastern Air Lines and BOAC.

Lee continued as a reservation clerk until the late 50s, when she devoted herself to writing. She lived a frugal life, traveling between her cold-water-only apartment in New York to her family home in Alabama to care for her father.

Having written several long stories, Harper Lee located an agent in November 1956. The following month at the East 50th townhouse of her friends Michael Brown and Joy Williams Brown, she received a gift of a year’s wages with a note: “You have one year off from your job to write whatever you please. Merry Christmas.” Within a year, she had a first draft. Working with J. B. Lippincott & Co. editor Tay Hohoff, she completed To Kill a Mockingbird in the summer of 1959. Published July 11, 1960, To Kill a Mockingbird was an immediate bestseller and won great critical acclaim, including the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1961. It remains a bestseller with more than 30 million copies in print. In 1999, it was voted “Best Novel of the Century” in a poll by the Library Journal.

Resource information obtained from Wikipedia

Published in: on July 29, 2008 at 9:55 pm  Leave a Comment  
Tags: , ,

Meredith Nicholson – Indiana Golden Age Author

Meredith Nicholson (1866–1947) was an important figure in Indiana’s “Golden Age” of literature, which extended roughly from 1880 to 1920. One of the “Big Four” writers—with James Whitcomb Riley, George Ade, and Booth Tarkington—Nicholson authored twenty-eight books, all but two of which were published between 1903 and 1929, a period in which he wrote full time. Most of these works were best-selling novels, but he also produced a history, a book of short stories, four collections of essays, two books of poetry, and a co-authored play. His third novel, The House of a Thousand Candles (1905), a thrilling adventure/mystery story set in northern Indiana, was by far his most popular and most successful book. Translated into five languages and still in print today, it has sold more than half a million copies.

Nicholson and Riley
In 1929, however, Nicholson’s writing stopped, apparently as a result of the financial devastation experienced by the family in the stock market collapse. Soon afterwards, Nicholson suffered an even greater loss in the death of his beautiful and talented wife, Eugenie, who had been his inspiration and helpmeet throughout his writing years. Jobless, nearly destitute, and forced in 1931 to give up his home on North Meridian Street, Nicholson’s prospects at the outset of the Great Depression seemed dim indeed. A lifelong Democrat who had been active behind the scenes in the campaigns of others, Nicholson turned for help to his political friends who came into power at that time. Nicholson’s longtime friend and personal physician, Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch—who was also a former gubernatorial candidate and current chairman of the Democratic state committee—became his chief promoter. McCulloch enlisted the help of their mutual friend, future governor Paul V. McNutt. In 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, who knew Nicholson only by reputation, responded to their entreaties with the offer of a diplomatic appointment to Paraguay. As a result, at the age of 66, Nicholson began a new career as a diplomat. Although surprisingly successful, his years abroad would prove star-crossed. After a transfer to a more favorable post in Venezuela in 1935, Nicholson found the rising path of his new career suddenly veering downward under mysterious circumstances in 1938 with his demotion to Nicaragua. It was there, in 1941, that he decided to end his service abroad. Nicholson’s nearly eight years as an American diplomat began in October 1933. No known record explains his selection for the Paraguayan mission: he seemed to be both a deserving and qualified candidate for this remote and low-profile position. A month of “instruction” at the State Department provided the new diplomat with general details of the situation in Paraguay and taught him the basic protocols for a minister of his rank. Then, literally on the eve of his departure, Nicholson married his secretary, Dorothy Wolfe Lannon, of Marion, Indiana. This action proved fateful, both in terms of Nicholson’s initial success in dealing with Latin Americans and, more ominously, in terms of his subsequent demotion.

Taken from an article by Ralph D. Gray published in the Indiana Magazine of History December 2006
Indiana Magazine of History

Published in: on July 19, 2008 at 12:33 am  Leave a Comment  
Tags:

Elizabeth Moon – A Science Fiction Author

Elizabeth Moon, born March 7, 1945 is an author of both American Science fiction and fantasy novels. She grew up in McAllen, Texas. In 1969 she married Richard Sloan Moon.

She served in the US Marine Corps where she attained the rank 1st Lieutenant during her active service. She has a Bachelor’s degree in History and also obtained a B.A. in Biology. Moon started writing as a child and at the age of six she attempted her first book. She began writing Science Fiction in her teens.

Elizabeth first became serious about her writing in her mid-thirties. Her first novel was The Sheepfarmer’s Daughter . Most of her books have a military science fiction theme.

One of her series that is a favorite of mine is the Vatta’s War series.

A few titles by this author:

  • Trading In Danger
  • Change of Command
  • Generation Warriors
  • Surrender None

A few online book shops that carry Elizabeth Moon Books:

The Paper Trail

Baen Books

Heartland Digs & Finds

Published in: on July 18, 2008 at 11:49 pm  Comments (1)  
Tags: ,
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.