Monday, November 28, 2011

DAY 4-HOLIDAY BLOG TOUR WITH ALICE DUNCAN

Welcome to the 4th day of our MYSTERY WE WRITE HOLIDAY BLOG TOUR featuring 15 dynamite mystery writers. If you leave a comment on each of our blogsites, you may win one of the 50 plus books that will be given away either during the tour or immediately following our last post on December 8th.

Today I’m featuring award-winning author Alice Duncan who lives with a herd of wild dachshunds (enriched from time to time with fosterees from New Mexico Dachshund Rescue) in Roswell, New Mexico. She's not a UFO enthusiast; she's in Roswell because her mother's family settled there fifty years before the aliens crashed. Alice no longer longs to return to California, although she still misses the food, not to mention her children, one of whom is there and the other of whom is in Nevada.

And now Alice is going to tell us why she prefers to live in the past, at least on paper.

~~~~~

Alice Duncan, award-winning author

Every now and then, when I’m sitting and ruminating about things whilst dachshunds cavort on, around, in front of and behind me (I’m serious about that. It gets downright annoying at times), I wonder why I can’t seem to force myself to write contemporary stories. The conclusion I inevitably come to is that I don’t like life as it is and prefer to make up life the way it probably wasn’t a long time ago. I mean, sure, people make up mysteries and romances about modern-day people, but I’m someone who not only doesn’t follow trends, but actually had to be told what a “Jimmy Choo” was. In other words, I’m hopeless in today’s world and like to get as far away from it as is humanly possible, as often as possible.

Therefore, I write historical novels. For several years I wrote historical romances set in the Old West (or my version of it). I had help in this endeavor from my mother, who grew up in Roswell, New Mexico, in the teens and twenties. Yes, I’m old. But my mother was old when she had me, her mother was old when she had her, and there’s room for at least three more generations in the spaces between my Swiss maternal grandmother and me. I won’t even talk about my paternal great-grandfather, who was a deserter from the Confederate Army. At least, I won’t do it here.

 Anyway, Mom used to tell me stories about growing up in Roswell, and it sounded as though she lived in the wild, wild west. When she was a little girl, ranchers ran cattle down Second Street (the main east-west street in town); she and her three brothers and one sister lived in a three-room house made of adobe brick; her mother (having been widowed two days after my mother was born) earned a living for the entire brood as a seamstress; my uncles occasionally went out on the desert and captured wild burros, which they’d then ride until they got bucked off; there was no electricity in town; and there weren’t even any trees to block the relentless spring winds. Heck, I wrote an entire novel (COOKING UP TROUBLE) about the spring winds here in Roswell (Mom said she’d sometimes arrive at school with her legs having been sanded raw by the blowing dirt, dust and pebbles), and another one (PECOS VALLEY DIAMOND) that began with kids running to stay under the shadows made by clouds so that they could be cooler during the vicious summer heat. Today when the wind blows, which it does constantly during the springtime, the only vicissitude I endure is finding shingles that used to be on my roof in my front yard. And, lucky me, I have air conditioning.

Hmm. The Good Old Days don’t sound like a whole lot of fun, do they? Well, they probably weren’t for the folks who lived in them. However, when it comes to history, a novelist can fudge a bit. In my western historical novels, for instance, I leave out the cholera epidemics, floods (Roswell is in the middle of the desert, the soil is like clay, and it takes a long time for water to soak in. Before a couple of dams were built in the thirties by the CCC, the place flooded once or twice a year), ptomaine poisoning due to lack of refrigeration, lack of antibiotics, etc. Mom told me about tent revivalists who used to visit town and the Chautauqua folks who’d lecture in Roswell, etc. Therefore, I decided to give Annabelle Blue, heroine of PECOS VALLEY DIAMOND (available on Kindle and Smashwords) and PECOS VALLEY REVIVAL (published in January of 2011 and a finalist in the New Mexico Book of the Year Awards), a lot of the stuff my mom used to talk about only without the grime, illness and so forth.



 









·         PECOS VALLEY REVIVAL (featuring Annabelle Blue and set in Roswell, NM, in 1923): http://tinyurl.com/3uafvqg

Oddly enough, once I moved to Roswell, I became nostalgic about Pasadena, California, where I’d lived for most of my life. Mind you, it was the smog, crowds, expense and general chaos of So. CA living that drove me away from it (I recall trying to shop for Christmas dinner after work once, and finding no parking anywhere even close to the market, much less in its parking lot, which was full to bursting. It was quite frustrating), but it used to be a beautiful, serene place where wealthy easterners wintered, and refugees from the motion-picture industry fled to escape their hectic lives. Of course, all those rich folks needed people like me (poor ones, in other words) to do their chores for them, so I decided to give Daisy Gumm Majesty, heroine of my “Spirits” books, a working-class background and a strong work ethic learned from her parents. The fact that she learned quite early in her life that rich folks can be just as gullible as poor ones, and that they sometimes have a good deal more money than sense, only added to the fun with Daisy, who’s a phony spiritualist. The latest Daisy book, GENTEEL SPIRITS, was published in July of this year.











·         GENTEEL SPIRITS (featuring Daisy Gumm Majesty, and set in Pasadena, CA, in 1922): http://tinyurl.com/3ndzcff


I chose to set my historical mysteries in the 1920s, because so very much was going on then. Women, after decades of trying, finally got the vote in 1920 (in Turkey, by the way, women got the vote in 1918. Go figure); the world had lately endured two ghastly crises (the Great War and the 1918-1919 influenza pandemic); radio was being invented and improved upon almost daily; baseball was truly the great American pastime; the sale and consumption of alcohol was outlawed, giving rise to bootlegging and the murdering gangs who fought for control of the illegal stuff; and young people had begun questioning the values of their elders with a vengeance. The last item on that list is probably as old as the human race itself, but in the twenties the rebellion of the “Bright Young Things” seemed to take on an almost hopeless ethos. After years of war, illness and death, lots of young people concluded there wasn’t anything they could do about life, so they might as well party (if you need proof of this, read F. Scott Fitzgerald’s books).

Unfortunately for her, Daisy Majesty, my favorite character to date in any of the books I’ve written, and who has appeared in five books to date, suffered through the worst of what life had to offer, too, but she couldn’t waste her life partying because she had a war-injured husband to care for and support. Although I have a lot of fun with the “Spirits” books, Daisy has many burdens to bear.

So now I get to write about both Roswell, NM, and Pasadena, CA (and Los Angeles, CA, in my Mercy Allcutt books), and still pretend that life was better in the Good Old Days. It’s mega-fun!










·         FALLEN ANGELS (featuring Mercedes Louise Allcutt and set in Los Angeles, CA, in 1926): http://tinyurl.com/3wh2a6t


Alice would love to hear from you at alice@aliceduncan.net. And be sure to visit her Web site at http//www@aliceduncan.net

 ·         PECOS VALLEY REVIVAL (featuring Annabelle Blue and set in Roswell, NM, in 1923): http://tinyurl.com/3uafvqg

·         FALLEN ANGELS (featuring Mercedes Louise Allcutt and set in Los Angeles, CA, in 1926): http://tinyurl.com/3wh2a6t

·         GENTEEL SPIRITS (featuring Daisy Gumm Majesty, and set in Pasadena, CA, in 1922): http://tinyurl.com/3ndzcff

~~~~~

 Thanks for chatting with us today, Alice. You've given us a lot of fascinating information that makes me want to read each of your books.

 Remember Readers; leave a comment on each of our blogs. This group is giving away over 50 books total, either during the tour or immediately afterwards. I’m giving a signed copy of my cozy mystery THE INCONVENIENT CORPSE and a signed copy of THE FOXY HENS AND MURDER MOST FOWL. Names will be drawn by random from those who take time to leave a comment.

Don't forget to click in tomorrow.

Hugs,

Jackie



17 comments:

Caroline Clemmons said...

Alice, Daisy is my favorite of your charachters, although I love each of your books.

Jackie, I'd love to win one of your books.

caroline@carolineclemmons.com

Jackie King said...

Caroline, I'm so glad you have stopped by. Your name is now in my black fedora for my drawing.
Hugs,
Jackie

Jackie King said...

Allice, Welcome to COZY MYSTERIES AND OTHER MADNESS. I'm so happy to have you visiting today.
Hugs,
Jackie

Alice Duncan said...

Thanks for having me here, Jackie!

And thank you, Caroline! I love people who love Daisy :-)

Marilyn Meredith a.k.a. F. M. Meredith said...

Hi, Alice, if I knew before I forgot that you once lived in Pasadena. I lived my first 5 years in So. Pasadena, and until I was 18 in L.A. Loved living there, wouldn't today. This was a fun post to read.

Marilyn

Earl Staggs said...

Very interesting information about Roswell, Alice. Someday you'll have to write the truth about all the ET aliens who live there.

Alice Duncan said...

Oh, boy, Marilyn! I lived most of my life in Pasadena or Altadena, and I still miss them, although when I went back for a couple of weeks during the summer, I remembered why I left :-)

I swear, Earl, I've never seen an ET alien in my life. However, if it weren't for them, Roswell would be even more of a dump than it already is. The city exists on tourists. Tourists and cows, 'cause of all the dairies.

jenny milchman said...

You're right--in some ways it's easier not to have to keep up. But I admire authors who can bring the past to life like you can.

Beautiful photo in your garden, too!

Anonymous said...

Reading about the past can be fun as long as we don't have to put up with its bad side.

boots9k at wowway dot com

Jacqueline Seewald said...

I prefer reading novels set in the past myself. You have a really interesting family background. Certainly Roswell, NM and Pasadena are great settings for novels!

Jackie King said...

Jenny, boots9k, and Jacqueline, all of your names are going into my drawing for free books.

Anonymous said...

I love the 20s too, love them as they are in your books, am very fond of Mercy & Daisy.

--Brenda

Jackie King said...

Brenda, I know you're writing to Alice, but she's working just now and will check in later.

I'm putting your name in my black fedora for my drawing at the end of the tour.
Hugs,
Jackie

Alice Duncan said...

So sorry I didn't get back to everyone sooner! Yes, I was working. Blah.

Thanks, Brenda, Jenny, Boots and Jacquie! I totally agree about not having to live with the bad side of the past, Boots. Heck, my mom told me about cholera epidemics here in Roswell when she was a kid, and kids dying of meningitis and all sorts of icky stuff like that. I'm happy we have antibiotics -- but I like to pretend things were better in the Good Old Days. Speaking of which, the days in which we're living will be somebody's good old days someday, I reckon. Sigh.

Marilyn said...

"Speaking of which, the days in which we're living will be somebody's good old days someday, I reckon. Sigh."

Oh, my gosh, I've never thought of that. Kind of a scary idea, Alice!

Anonymous said...

Jackie,
I love our names being in a black fedora! Thanks, Jackie and Alice for answering and for the fun of the chance and the interesting blog!!!!

--Brenda

Jackie King said...

Brenda, My hat is getting fuller each day. I may have to move to a 10-gallon hat.
Jackie