Medieval/Tudor Recipe Mince Pie

Do you want to have a medievally good time? Perhaps entice your friends with some Tudor chow? Remember, do NOT throw the bones over your shoulder onto the floor. No one really did that. I’m afraid the 1930s movie THE PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY VIII with Charles Laughton’s Oscar-winning portrayal is responsible for that thinking. … Read more

Making Original Figures for Giveaways: 3D Printing

I thought it would be easy. But is anything really easy? I started out creating with good ole Sculpey a little Sherlockian figurine of a cute animal in the deerstalker and Ulster coat. At first I made a mouse, but there were too many comparisons to The Great Mouse Detective, so I thought to maybe … Read more

The Parallels Between Henry VIII and Donald Trump

As I was researching my King’s Fool Mystery series, where Henry VIII’s real court jester Will Somers is the reluctant sleuth, I couldn’t help but notice some parallels with what was happening today. My series focuses on Will Somers and is told through his eyes, so there may be a little softening of the view … Read more

Author Guest Post: A Lighthearted Look at Author Research Challenges

By Avery Daniels Hello and thank you, Jeri, for inviting me on your blog. Writing a novel is challenging. Not only do you need a compelling plot that moves along, keeping the reader’s interest, but you must bring characters alive that engage the reader’s emotions without dumping all the individual back stories at once. There … Read more

Collecting

I’m a bit of a collector. First it was jugs or pitchers, depending on which side of the pond you’re on. Then it was salt and pepper shakers, but I began to think that was too ordinary. So I switched to chickens. Chickens big time. And then vintage typewriters from the late nineteenth century into … Read more

Interview with Billy Boyle Author James R. Benn

Welcome everyone. Today, I am talking with bestselling author James R. Benn who writes the Billy Boyle WWII Mysteries. James is one of those really nice people out there. In fact, most all of my mystery-writing friends are pretty darned nice people. It must be that we get all our rage out by murdering people … Read more

Book Reviews and Reviewing

They are the bane of an author’s life. They are a necessary evil. But we gotta have them. Be they from industry magazines (Kirkus Review, Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, or Booklist) or from newspapers (USA Today, the New York Times Book Review), or consumer magazines (People, The New Yorker, etc.). I remember a time when … Read more

What’s it Like to be a Jester?

In the third of my King’s Fool Mystery series, REBELLIOUS GRACE, Will Somers, Henry VIII’s real court jester, finds himself called upon to use his skills to solve murders during Jane Seymour’s reign. But this was my conceit, because solving murders is not something that a jester ever would have done. So what do jesters … Read more