If you're in Springfield, be sure to check out one of the concerts. They're at 6:30 and 7:20 tonight, June 2nd, Friday, June 3rd, Saturday, June 4th, and Sunday, June 5th.
Find out more on their website:
I get to do a reading on Saturday at 5:30!
Today starts the International Carillon Festival held in Washington Park, Springfield, Illinois. I'll be signing books there--my recent Carillon Chase centers its action around the bell tower!
If you're in Springfield, be sure to check out one of the concerts. They're at 6:30 and 7:20 tonight, June 2nd, Friday, June 3rd, Saturday, June 4th, and Sunday, June 5th. Find out more on their website: I get to do a reading on Saturday at 5:30!
0 Comments
Andy's new book is out! Time to party! If you're in Tucson on Sunday, May 29th, join the fun. Here are the events: Sunday, May 29th 4:30-6:30 p.m. Unscrewed Theatre 4500 E. Speedway 4:30 to 4:40 Intros 4:40-4:50 Interview with violin teachers Wynn & David Rife 4:50 - 5:00 The Bell Dimension Deux Preview 5:00 - 5:10 A few words about Brotherly Love 5:10 - 5:20 DC4U Storyboard 5:20-5:30 Book Signing 5:30-6:30 Mariachi time! I’ll be hosting a virtual book launch for my new novel Carillon Chase on December 1st—a month from now—3-3:30 p.m. Arizona time. The novel traces Gina Campanello’s latest travel adventures. (You last saw her in Thai Twist, although she made a guest appearance in Substitute Soloist.) In this novel, Gina is excited to win an internship for a travel company. She expects they’ll send her somewhere really cool; she’s hoping for Paris. But as an intern, she has to take what she can get…. The book will be available mid-November. Come to the zoom meeting and hear about Gina's new trip! Zoom launch on December 1st, 3:00 to 3:30 p.m. Arizona time: https://zoom.us/j/4955877647 Two of my scripts made the quarter finals in competitions this month! Loving Mariachi made it to the quarter finals of the Filmmatic Screenplay Competition. https://www.filmmatic.com/comedyseason6 Venetian Love Tricks made it to the quarter finals of Scriptation. https://scriptation.com/blog/scriptation-showcase-script-competition-announces-2021-feature-shorts-quarter-finalists/ Fingers crossed for the semi-finals.... but at least these scripts got ahead of a lot of other ones. Piano piano si va lontano. Slowly, we go far. Just out--the new Desert Sleuth anthology SoWest: Love Kills. The Phoenix Sisters-in-Crime group gathers its best stories every two years. This year my short story "Nightshift" made the list. The tale is Meli's backstory. It explains the reason she no longer worries about a confrontation with her no-good husband. The story includes Rachel, whose journey started with Amirosian Nights, and Kique, who becomes Andy's sidekick starting with Dizzy in Durango. The stories were not only carefully chosen, but very carefully edited. We went through three rounds of revisions! But I'm happy to say I was excited with my final version. And in the anthology I'm in great company with other colleagues including Shannon Baker and Susan Cummins Miller. For murdering fun, pick up a copy on Amazon. Interested in ways music intersects with writing? Check out my recent talk for Kirk-Bear Canyon Library! I review a few uses of music in literature before reviewing how I've used music in the Andy Veracruz mysteries.
https://youtu.be/_SHEzV4h9qo Gymnastics is a perfect place to meet real people—who I can use in fiction! Read my blog post here. Big Blend Radio is run my a fun mother daughter team. The gals spend their days traveling! Good work if you can get it. Thanks to the Tucson Sisters in Crime (and Eva Eldridge!), I had the chance to do a live interview. My show airs on March 24th, 4pm Tucson time, but it will be available after that. We mostly discussed Mexico, mariachi, and men! Check out their website here. Listen to my interview here. This New Zealand mystery-thriller is a real knockout. Read my review here. Sometimes I wonder what’s wrong with me. Even though murder is thankfully far from my real life (knock on wood), I like nothing more than to cuddle up with a good murder mystery or follow Tom Barnaby through yet another murder spree in Midsomer. When it comes to my own writing, I haven’t finished my travel memoir because my hands simply prefer to write mysteries instead. But maybe I’m not so crazy after all. It turns out that there is a huge audience for a good mystery. I was reminded of this in class last week. I’d asked my college students to find fun examples of ads that we could use for our rhetorical analyses. One student confessed a penchant for Kentucky Fried Chicken ads. He’s followed the company for some time; somehow he’s amused by the Colonel and his various forms of persuasion. “KFC even put out a mini-movie,” he mentioned casually. “That would be fun to analyze too.” A mini-movie? By a chicken company? I would have dismissed my student’s interest as downright silly until he told the title: “A Recipe for Seduction.” By then I was intrigued. After class I went straight to Youtube. For the next sixteen minutes I was entertained by a young Colonel Sanders. Hired as a chef for rich snobs, he holds onto his dream of escaping poverty. His ticket to freedom: a winning chicken recipe. But he has more. A beautiful woman who falls in love with him. The beautiful woman’s mother, who thinks nothing of plotting murder. A rival who thinks nothing of committing said plotted murder to gain favors with both women. The mini-movie has more as well. It uses a full range of common mystery tropes from oversized kitchen knives to hidden rooms, and greed, so much greed—to tell a tongue-in-cheek story of a humble chicken cook. It doesn’t hurt that the story takes place in an enviably lush setting where all the attractive actors wear carefully designed costumes or that the Colonel himself is a well-known, impossibly cute actor (I’ll keep it a mystery). But the film is a thrilling reminder that, while writing and reading mysteries might be a ludicrous way of understanding the world, it’s a way many choose. Mystery lovers can’t help themselves. They willingly succumb to mysterious seduction. Sometimes, even to fried chicken. Check out my talk for January 19th! I get to kick off the author series at Kirk-Bear Canyon Library. The promo they prepared is below: Topic: "The Role of Music in Fiction" D.R. Ransdell (www.dr-ransdell.com) is the author of the Andy Veracruz mystery series, about a mariachi musician. She knows of what she writes -- she plays violin in a mariachi band, having honed her skills living in Mexico. She also has performed with the Southern Arizona Symphony Orchestra. A University of Arizona English professor, D.R. teaches writing, with a specialty in second language composition. She loves music, travel, learning new languages, and her cats. Check out D.R. Ransdell's books (available soon!) from your local Pima County library.
Join D.R. Randell & Friends on Jan. 19 at 7 PM If you would prefer to join us by telephone rather than video, reply to this email address. Friends of the Kirk-Bear Canyon Library is proud to sponsor D.R. Ransdell (as well as other forthcoming authors) as our guest. The Friends have supported the Kirk-Bear Canyon Library community for two decades. An annual membership is just $10. Here is how you can help support Friends.
JOIN/DONATE Thank you for supporting FKBCL, a 501(c)(3) organization. |
Big NewsPARTY WINE was out September 2023 Archives
March 2024
|