Showing posts with label Marja McGraw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marja McGraw. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Just Released: A CASE OF VOLATILE DEEDS



I was running all over the world wide web spreading the news about the release of A CASE OF VOLATILE DEEDS, my fourth Mitch Malone Mystery, and never put it on my own blog. The old adage is true: You can’t see what is right in front of you! Below is the blurb and some early reviews. A special thanks to Les Edgerton and Marja McGraw for the great reviews. 



A Case of Volatile Deeds Blurb: Mitch Malone finally scores a weekend dinner with a cute receptionist, but true to his reporter instincts, an explosion in a high rise office building makes him stand up his date as he runs for an exclusive. Mitch learns that much of what he knows about his date and her work aren’t what they seem. His world continues to twist when the police captain asks for his help and a city hall informant is found floating in the river. Mitch must keep his head down or a cute dog with a knack for finding dead bodies will be sniffing out his corpse.

Reviews:
“Mitch finds himself in a battle to the finish not knowing which are the good guys and which are the bad guys (and gals). Just when he figures out one mysterious thread from the tapestry unraveling before him, two more pop up, and the plot twists and turns in surprise after surprise. A don’t—put-it-down-until-the-last-page thriller destined to be on more than one “Best of 2013” lists.”
 Les Edgerton, author of Just Like That, The Bitch, The Rapist and writing books like Hooked: Write Fiction That Grabs Readers at Page One & Never Lets Them Go.

“A Case of Volatile Deeds by W.S. Gager takes twists and turns at every corner, always keeping you wondering. Mitch Malone is a reporter with a heart and a man of integrity, most of the time. This adventure takes him from cops to FBI agents and on to City Hall. Can Mitch find all the answers to a convoluted and deadly scenario? Trust me, you’ll want to follow this path with him.”
--Marja McGraw, Author of The Bogey Man Mysteries

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Mitch Malone Mondays: Marja McGraw


I stayed up all last night doing some research for this review. I'm a little blurry-eyed but hoping after a few doughnuts and I'll snap out of it. It was a Humphrey Bogart marathon. Today Marja McGraw talks about her writing.

Marja, your main character thinks he is Humphrey Bogart. Does he need to be checked into a facility with rubber walls?


Chris Cross bears a very strong resemblance to Humphrey Bogart, but he doesn’t actually believe that he is Bogey. He also enjoys vintage mystery movies. As a postman he was a little bored, and he began to imitate Bogey for the fun of it. As time went on, he began thinking that it might be interesting to become a private investigator like Bogey was in some of his movies. I think he just got carried away with the Bogey persona, and he found that it took him to places he hadn’t expected.

I write two series, including the Sandi Webster Mysteries and the Bogey Man Mysteries. Sandi is a young female P.I. In the latest Sandi Webster Mystery (The Bogey Man), Chris started watching her because some of her cases had gained quite a bit of notoriety. He thought he could learn from her. When Chris, the Bogey Man, became involved in a real murder case, Sandi helped him realize that just maybe he wasn’t quite cut out for the life of a private eye. The readers liked this character so much that I decided to give him his own series. Now he becomes involved in mysteries whether he wants to or not. He’s been joined by a new wife, a stepson and two Yellow Labrador retrievers.

Does his wife become involved in the mysteries, too?

Actually, the stories are told by Pamela Cross, so you see her point of view as well as the Bogey Man’s. While she does become involved, she also spends time trying to keep her seven-year-old son from being touched by the situations. In the meantime, their two Yellow Labs always seem to be front and center, and they do add a little humor to the stories. While Chris and Pamela Cross aren’t a modern Nick and Nora Charles, they do manage to create a stir when they look into crimes. They own a forties-themed restaurant, and it often becomes a setting for parts of the story.

What happens in your newest book? It just was released from Oak Tree Press, right?

Bogey Nights will be available in March of 2011. I’m pretty excited about it, to put it mildly.

In Bogey Nights, Chris and his wife, Pamela, lose their forties-themed restaurant to a fire. After buying a 1920s brick house to convert into a new restaurant, they discover a body buried in the basement that’s rested there since 1942.

Because of Chris’ notoriety from the case he was involved in earlier, the victim’s family approaches him and asks him and his wife to find out what happened all those years ago.

You’ll appreciate this, Mitch. Bogey Nights includes a young female reporter who keeps sticking her nose into the case while Chris and Pamela try to keep her in the dark. She’ll be a semi-regular in the series because she hooks up with a friend of Chris’.

Anyway, it turns out that in the forties, when the victim was killed, the old house was used as a boarding house. There are plenty of suspects and twists and turns in this story.

Goodness, you know how to turn up the heat by mentioning a female reporter. Speaking of heat, you live in the desert. How does that help your writing process?

It doesn’t, really. Well, maybe when the temperatures are up in the 120s, which they frequently are. When it’s that hot I have plenty of incentive to stay indoors and work on my books.

How did you decide to write with a Bogart slant?

Oddly enough, I’m not really sure. I was looking for something different to write about and decided to include this character in one of the Sandi Webster books. I had so much fun creating someone who walked and talked like Bogey that I kept going with him. Of course, it doesn’t hurt that I’m a Humphrey Bogart fan. The dialogue is fun to write, but it did require a lot of research to come up with the forties slang. Also, Mr. Bogart has some very distinct habits – at least in his movies. For instance, he’d roll his upper lip under every once in a while, or he’d rock back on his heels in a way that only Bogey could do.

What are your plans for a new Bogey Man book?

I recently forwarded the new book to my publisher, Oak Tree Press. It’s about four little old ladies, known as the Church Ladies, who ask Chris and Pamela to find a missing friend. One thing leads to another, and before long they’re involved in a Murder for Hire plot. The Church Ladies want to be involved every step of the way, and Chris would like nothing more than to lock them in their rooms (so to speak), but of course he can’t. There’s a lot of action and fun in this one.

Any future plans?

Right now I’m working on a new Sandi Webster story. She and her partner, Pete, are stranded in an old ghost town. I’m having a great time with it.

Thank you, Mitch, for sitting down and talking to me. I’ve been reading about some of your adventures, and you’re quite a guy. W.S. Gager has done a fine job with you, and I appreciate her time, too.

Thank you for telling us about a Bogey look-alike. Wish I'd known that before the marathon movie night. For more on the Bogey books, http://www.marjamcgraw.com

Monday, November 8, 2010

New Author Connections

I can't believe it has been August since I last posted to my blog. Shame on me!!! I have some great reasons which I will be sharing soon. (A humorous look at my new life.) I have a lot of them ready just haven't gotten here to post them, but the dust is settling and I'm ready to come out of the closet or in my case, living in one. Stay tuned for that one.

I just wanted to publicly thank one of the newest authors to Oak Tree Press, Marja McGraw. I can't wait to get to know her more. We will be meeting in person at Love is Murder in Chicago in February. She just posted a great review on Amazon for my first book, A Case of Infatuation. She has a great blog at http://www.marjamcgraw.com
Check it out.

Here's the review...
When I picked up this book, I wasn't sure what to expect. And then I met Mitch Malone, a hard-nosed, lone wolf reporter who soon finds out that there's more to life than his reporting.

Saddled with a gorgeous intern, he heads to the scene of a double murder, where he discovers there's a very young survivor hidden away. With the help of the intern, the child and only potential witness is spirited out of the house and taken to Mitch's apartment in order to protect her.

Mitch works alone, so involving the hot intern is something new to him. Mitch also doesn't like kids, so he's breaking all of his own rules. And then he's accused of the murders and has to take his small entourage and go into hiding, and try to solve the murders and find the child's missing mother.

This book had just the right combination of humor, suspense and heart to make it an excellent story. I thoroughly enjoyed both the book and Mitch, and look forward to reading the next book in the series.


Thank you Marja!