Newsletter
Hello, Readers and Booksellers,
Sorry to disappoint
you, but it's Shirl again. This time I have a special reason for
writing what is usually my husband Jim's newsletter to you. Oh,
he'll be along in a month or so to regale you with tales of our
annual trip to Colorado and our friends horses whom he believes are
involved in a conspiracy to kill him, but I digress…
As I said, this is not
the normal newsletter. Rather, it's a call for some critical comment
and feedback. Remember earlier this year I mentioned that I was
attempting to persuade Jim to try his hand at writing a romance
novel? Well, for years he has helped my associate Carol Reynard and
me out, not just by editing our books, but by writing entire scenes
for them and even supplying plot outlines. Some we have actually
turned into books, such as McCrory's Lady,
which has recently been reissued by Leisure.
The past year or so,
he's been driving me crazy (well, crazier than usual). He's dumped
no less than eight full-length plot outlines on my desk. Some of
these are as long as 25 pages--single spaced pages! And you know
what--half a dozen of them are really quite intriguing.
To preserve my sanity,
to save my desk from collapsing under the weight of critical mass,
and to allow me to get on with my own work, I picked one of the
proposals Jim gave me and told him to write me three chapters of the
story. I threatened not to allow him to put so much as a birthday
card on my desk until he at least experienced what a fiction writer
goes through to produce a book. I refused to take no for an answer.
After all, when he was an English professor, the turkey published
four scholarly books and a ton of journal articles.
After months of
struggle, he has just finished those three chapters of
The River Nymph. I think they are quite
good. In fact, the main editing I had to do was to delete a lot of
the cuss words, a fault Jim's hero shares with his creator. Now I'd
like to see what you think. The story begins with a rather bizarre
card game on a river boat moored on the St. Louis levee in 1875.
From there Clint and Delilah have a number of funny and some
not-so-funny adventures as they travel up the Missouri to Fort
Benton in Montana Territory. Along the way they meet some
fascinating and colorful characters such as Liver-eating Johnson
(made famous in an old Robert Redford movie) and a group of
strutting Teton Sioux warriors whom Clint just about cures of their
nicotine habit in a "bang-up" fashion.
Click over to the
"Upcoming" section on this website and read the chapters. Then
please email me your verdict. Does Jim have a possible career as a
historical romance writer? Or, should he give it up and go back to
rolling drunks? Seriously, don't get me wrong. I'm lucky. Few
romance writers have husbands who not only care about their work,
but can really give them useful assistance. Still, even chocolate
peanutbutter ice cream (my absolute fav) gets to be too much of a
good thing when it's served up by the dump truck load!
Happy reading and keep cool this summer,
Don't forget to visit
http://www.dorchesterpub.com.
Shirl