Last Stop on Bloody Lessons Tour: Review and a Giveaway
If you go on over to Christy’s Cozy Corners you will get one last chance to win, in this case a copy of Bloody Lessons!
Next to last stop on Bloody Lessons Blog Tour: An Author Interview
Today I am being interviewed over at Cozy up with Kathy, revealing all my deepest, darkest secrets!
What’s Love got to do with it?: Guest Post on Romance
Today I am over at Books and Kisses, writing about the use of romance in my Victorian San Francisco Mystery series. Do come over and visit.
Cozies, cats, and a giveaway
Today I start on a 7 day Cozy Book Tour, and I am visiting Melissa’s Mochas, Mysteries & More with a post entitled Can it be a Cozy without a Cat (or a Dog)? This post expands upon the ways that my Victorian San Francisco mysteries are cozies. Please come on over and leave a comment so you can participate in the giveaway of a print or ebook copy of Maids of Misfortune. M. Louisa Locke, October 2, 2013 October 2 – Mochas, Mysteries and More – Guest Post, Giveaway October 3 – Brooke Blogs – Review October 4 – rantin’ ravin’ and reading – Review, Guest Post, Giveaway October 5 – Shelley’s Book Case – Review October 7 – Books-n-Kisses – Review, Guest Post October 8 – Cozy Up With Kathy – Interview October 10 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – Review, Giveaway
Victorian San Francisco Mystery Series––Cozy-style
When I first published Maids of Misfortune, book one in my Victorian San Francisco Mystery series, I placed it in the historical and women sleuth mystery categories on Amazon. Since the book was set in the Victorian era, and the main protagonist was a woman who acted as an amateur sleuth, this was perfectly appropriate. At the time there was no “cozy mystery” sub-category in the Kindle store, and I didn’t use this term as a key word because I tended to think of cozy mysteries as contemporary mysteries with some sort of theme: like baking, quilting, or cats. To a degree, I wasn’t wrong, since when Amazon created the cozy mystery sub-category a few months ago its three sub-divisions were: animals, crafts and hobbies, and culinary. Nevertheless, as I began to understand my audience and discover what people liked Read more…
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