Monday, December 16, 2013

Nice Review of Wedding Cake Killer

Review of Wedding Cake Killer in Kings River Life Magazine 

....There are a lot of twists and turns in this book. I tried to figure out who did it but then settled back and enjoyed the read instead. There are a number of good suspects which include Roy’s former victims. It’s nice to read a book where the characters are retirement age, still active and involved in the community and still falling in love....

Wedding Cake Killer came out in mass market paperback last month.


Thursday, November 28, 2013

Out of the Ashes -- A Thanksgiving Treat -- The Phantom Ranger and the Skateboard Gang

The only unpublished novel that was on my usb memory stick snug in my purse when the house burned down in '08 was a middle reader novel my husband and I wrote called THE PHANTOM RANGER AND THE SKATEBOARD GANG. Recently Cheryl Pierson and I started a new publishing company, Prairie Rose Publications, blending our talents. This is a publishing company strictly for women's western fiction. We quickly discovered that there was a need for more, so we also formed Painted Pony Books for the younger readers. THE PHANTOM RANGER AND THE SKATEBOARD GANG is just the first novel to be published under the Painted Pony Books imprint.

THE PHANTOM RANGER AND THE SKATEBOARD GANG By James and Livia Reasoner

Codi Jackson and her father have been forced to move again. Codi’s getting used to being the “new girl” in her fifth grade class—but that doesn’t mean she has to like it. Can’t life just be normal? With her mother out of the picture and her father working odd shifts as a police officer, friends are important—as long as they’re not the wrong kind.

When Codi and a classmate, Keith Wright, are assigned to work on a history project, Codi has to make some hard decisions about her popularity in her new school.

But everything changes when Codi picks up an old Texas Rangers badge that belonged to one of her ancestors and he appears right before her eyes! Her great-great-great-grandfather says he’s come to help her, but how? And how is she going to explain the ghost of her long-ago Gramps to her history project partner and her father?

  Trade Paperback          Kindle

Friday, November 15, 2013

Romantic Times Review of The Fatal Funnel Cake

RT rating 4 stars.

This mystery is nicely crafted, with a believable ending. The camaraderie of the Fresh-Baked Mystery series’ cast of retired schoolteachers who share a home is endearing....

Go here for the rest of the review.

Wednesday, November 06, 2013

Now Available in Mass Market Paperback -- Wedding Cake Killer by Livia J. Washburn


Wedding bells will be ringing in Weatherford, Texas, this Christmas when Phyllis Newsom opens up her home for her best friend’s wedding. And although the bride is wearing white, no one suspects that she’ll soon be wearing black....

After all the planning—and the cake tasting—the big day has finally arrived. Eve Turner, one of Phyllis’s boarders—and her best friend—is moving out and getting married to the affable Roy Porter. While she’s sad to see Eve go, Phyllis is more than happy to host the event in her home and to bake the bride and groom a delicious three-tiered coconut wedding cake. Even though a snowstorm in the forecast seems like a recipe for disaster, the day runs as smoothly as buttercream. 

But the marriage doesn’t last long past the honeymoon. When Roy’s found dead at a Weatherford bed-and-breakfast, Eve’s the top suspect. Now Phyllis must find out who iced Roy before her friend finds herself behind bars….  

I've been blown away by the reviews.  It has 25 reviews on Amazon and they're all 4 or 5 stars. 

PRAISE FOR THE FRESH-BAKED MYSTERIES

Engaging…a cozy distinguished by its appealing characters and mouthwatering recipes.”—Publishers Weekly

“The whodunit is fun and the recipes [are] mouthwatering.”—The Best Reviews

“Washburn has a refreshing way with words and knows how to tell an exciting story.”—Midwest Book Review

“Delightful, [with a] realistic small-town vibe [and a] vibrant narrative…A Peach of a Murder runs the full range of emotions, so be prepared to laugh and cry with this one!”—The Romance Readers Connection

“Christmas and murder. It’s a combination that doesn’t seem to go together, yet Washburn pulls it off in a delightfully entertaining manner.”—Armchair Interviews

“A clever, intriguing contemporary cozy.”—Romance Junkies

“I loved it!...Definitely for people who just love a good mystery.”—Once Upon a Twilight


Tuesday, November 05, 2013

Now Available -- The Fatal Funnel Cake by Livia J. Washburn


It’s time for the State Fair of Texas—and cooking contests galore! Fryers are heating up and stomachs are growling. But Phyllis Newsom had better watch out. Someone’s brought an appetite for murder....

Phyllis and her friends Carolyn and Sam are ready to whip up their best dishes and win some ribbons in Dallas. And they’re excited to learn that one of their favorite celebrity chefs—Joye Jameson of The Joye of Cooking—is broadcasting her TV show from the fair. When Phyllis’s funnel cake is picked as one of the best of that category, Joye invites her and the other finalists to prepare their delicious recipes live on the air.

But Phyllis’s moment in the spotlight is spoiled after Joye suffers a deadly allergic reaction from one bite of her funnel cake. Now she’s gone from top entry to top suspect. So in order to clear her name, Phyllis will have to turn up the heat on this investigation before the real killer slips through her fingers.... 



               

Sunday, October 06, 2013

Latest Cover Revision


Originally published under the pen-name Elizabeth Hallam. 

When smoke jumper Annabel Lowell's duties propelled her from San Francisco 2000 back to 1906, she faces one of the worst earthquakes in history. But she also finds the passion of a lifetime in fellow fireman Cole Brady. Now she must choose between a future of certain danger--and a present of certain love--no matter how short lived it may be... 

"A timeless and haunting tale of love" The Literary Times.



Monday, September 23, 2013

Revising Bookcovers




 The nice thing about ebooks is the fact you can change bookcovers. I took a couple of my older books and did a little tweaking.  Well, on SPIRIT CATCHER I did a little more than tweak.

With MENDING FENCES I changed the color of the font outline.  Amazing how a little change makes a big difference.  I also added some text about the book.  MENDING FENCES was a sweet romance novel set in the area my in-laws grew up in.  James and I had fun researching the area and looking at the fences that were cut in the fence-cutting war.

SPIRIT CATCHER ended up with new images and updated fonts.  I think it gave it a fresh new look. SPIRIT CATCHER is a steamier type of book, so maybe I should have added a shirtless cowboy.

Now Amazon has to catch up and post both of the new covers.

   

Friday, July 19, 2013

Naomi Washburn Teaching Scholarship

My mother, Naomi Washburn, passed away July 14th 2013. I've been trying to think of what I can do to honor her.  She grew up in a farming family, the second child of seven. Growing up, one of the things that really bothered her was having to be pulled out of school to work the fields. To help pay for her parent's farm, she worked as a field hand. Picked pretty much anything, including cotton. She loved school and hated missing any of it. She was also very smart and even though she missed school, she advanced a grade. This put her in the same grade as my dad.

After graduating from high school, she worked many jobs to put herself through college, becoming the first in her family to attend college. She earned an accounting degree, and after that she and my dad married and started having a family. She wanted to work to help support the family, but she didn't want to leave her children, so Mom and Dad took some hair stylist classes, built a beauty shop next to the house, and became beauticians with her taking care of the accounting and working in the shop next to my dad. One of the stories she loved to tell was about me climbing up to the top of the ladder when they were shingling the beauty shop roof. I was two years old and wanted to see what they were doing. My brothers and I were probably pretty annoying to my parents. Any time there was a big ruckus we'd bang on the wall that connected it to the beauty shop. I'm amazed they didn't kill us as much as we did this.

One of her customers was the current principal at the local elementary school, and she was also one of Mom's past teachers who encouraged her to go to college. She then encouraged her to go back to college and get a teaching degree, promising her that if she did, she would have a job waiting for her. Well, Mom went back to school and got her bachelor's degree in education around age 40, and she was hired to teach first grade at Walnut Creek Elementary by the principal who came to the beauty shop.

One of my perks from this was having even more books to read. She was assigned some pretty cool books to read in college. This was the reason I got my hands on CATCH-22 at age 12.

Mom loved teaching. She loved all of her students and put her whole heart into her job. They became her kids, too. Education continued to be very important to her. She wanted to learn more and do the best she possibly could at her job, so she went back to college evenings and summers until she had her masters degree. Along the way I was blessed to have her as my daughters' teacher. We told her she couldn't retire until the youngest was past first grade! She handled it in such a way that the other students really didn't believe they were her granddaughters. After that, Mom retired because Dad's health was bad at the time. She nursed him back to health, then volunteered at the schools, working mostly with the kids who had reading problems. She influenced  my daughters so much they both became teachers, one working in elementary education, and the other in high school science, while also getting her masters degree.

Mom started getting symptoms of Alzheimer's later in life, and then it became severe.  She still had lucid moments when she remembered us. It was hard to decide whether to remember her with donations devoted to finding a cure for Alzheimer's or to benefit education.  She was a very giving lady and helped many young people get their education, so the family decided to have a scholarship for an Azle High School student planning to become a teacher. If you would like to donate to this, I've added a Paypal button below.  Any amount would be greatly appreciated.

Naomi Washburn Teaching Scholarship


Saturday, June 29, 2013

Vacation Pictures - - Well Sort of Vacation

Family and the caretaker offered to take over my part of Mom's care for most of June so James and I could get caught up on work. We arrived at my parent's one room cabin around 6 pm on June 3rd.  That evening was spent getting everything unpacked and set up.
June 4th let the vacation begin -- I headed out to Sonic to get Route 44 unsweet teas. Sun hadn't been up long.
This is the bay that's across the street from Sonic.

James was already working when I brought his tea in.
Two chapters later - we were off to the beach.

Lunch then back to the cabin to work.

After supper in the cabin, we'd read or watch a DVD.
Next day James started the morning working in his pjs.


Loving that water.
Back to the work.
etc.
etc
etc
etc
etc
etc
etc
etc
etc
etc
I was happy to see they'd replaced the big blue crab at Rockport. 
There were more, but I think you're getting the idea.
Last day, needed to get a couple chapters before we could drive almost 400 miles home.
I packed the car so the cabin was empty of our stuff by the time James finished writing.  I must admit I'm not very rested because I was over on the right side of this cabin working with a laptop all the time he was also working.  But it's different because we take breaks for the beach. 

Until next time.




Thursday, May 16, 2013

More Fresh Baked Mysteries


 November 5, 2013

It’s time for the State Fair of Texas—and cooking contests galore! Fryers are heating up and stomachs are growling. But Phyllis Newsom had better watch out. Someone’s brought an appetite for murder.... Phyllis and her friends Carolyn and Sam are ready to whip up their best dishes and win some ribbons in Dallas. And they’re excited to learn that one of their favorite celebrity chefs—Joye Jameson of The Joye of Cooking—is broadcasting her TV show from the fair. When Phyllis’s funnel cake is picked as one of the best of that category, Joye invites her and the other finalists to prepare their delicious recipes live on the air. 
But Phyllis’s moment in the spotlight is spoiled after Joye suffers a deadly allergic reaction from one bite of her funnel cake. Now she’s gone from top entry to top suspect. So in order to clear her name, Phyllis will have to turn up the heat on this investigation before the real killer slips through her fingers....  

                

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

A Pair of Gothics by Dianne Price

I recently had the opportunity to read a couple of excellent Gothics by Dianne Price.  Dianne's novels were recently reprinted as eBooks and she allowed me to make the covers.  I tried to capture the dark and light of her stories. I thought they turned out nicely.

DYING LIGHT

An orphan, raised in an Episcopalian convent, impetuous, outspoken, Jenna Rowan has always had two dreams: to have a family, and to live by the sea. Merrick Hope, an old friend of the Mother Superior, offers Jenna a single solution to both dreams. “Marry my son, Brennan, who is the keeper of the Cape Hope lighthouse.”

Jenna is enthralled by the lighthouse and its breathtaking vistas of the pounding, surging, sea, but the sensory pleasure is dashed by her introduction to the haughty, enigmatic, hot-tempered Brennan Hope. Married life is not at all what she imagined. No husband in her bed, lonely breakfasts and suppers eaten in solitary silence, only the ringing sound of Brennan’s footsteps climbing the spiral staircase to the dome—to the light which must be kept burning—regardless of someone’s sabotage intended to make it fail.

Savage storms, accidents, half-truths, an aura of evil, loneliness, all take a toll on Jenna’s determination to hang onto her dreams. Somehow, she must win Brennan’s love and help him keep the light burning. But at what cost?

REVIEW
Gothic fiction is a classic genre that combines elements of both horror and romance, and it's been entertaining readers for decades. Dying Light is a perfect example of a Gothic  Dianne Price weaves a dark tale of faith, fear, and romance set in a lighthouse. You will find nothing offensive in this novel, which is nice. I do recommend this novel.

SAVAGE SEAHEDGE

Unprotected from wild, deadly storms, perched atop an island surrounded by the sea at high tide, Seahedge Manor is not just the ancestral home of the sinister Holt clan. It also marks the location of an ancient Indian burial ground . . . and the spirits that linger in that sacred ground may not be pleased with the interlopers.

Newly orphaned Drew Chase arrives at Seahedge with nowhere else to go. Her father is dead – drowned in the waters of the mighty Columbia River – and her uncle's family are her only remaining relatives. Her welcome is not a warm one, however, and it seems that the future has nothing in store for her but cruel trickery as she slowly comes to realize the depths of the danger in which she finds herself.

Whom can she turn to – her cousin Kit – handsome, attentive, but with a mercurial temperament? Or Duncan, the austere, remote half-breed with a burning secret? What threatens her most, the moaning revenants whose eternal rest has been disturbed . . . or an all-too-human menace lurking in the gloom of Seahedge Manor? Drew's life may well depend on the answer!

REVIEW
If you're a reader of Gothic romances, then you're sure to enjoy Dianne Price's Savage Seahedge. There's nothing offensive or racy in this mysterious tale set in the storm-tossed Pacific Northwest, so it's appropriate for all ages, yet it's still very dark and suspenseful. Drew Chase is at her wits end trying to deal with the circumstances she's been thrown into, and it's fun seeing how she keeps her faith while dealing with what life throws at her. 


   noolink            noolink

Friday, January 25, 2013

Character in 8th Fresh Baked Mystery up in Smoke

You never know what's going to happen when working on a novel.  Facts can change between the time you write the novel and the time it's published.  On the 8th Fresh Baked novel, facts changed just as I finished writing the novel.  The book is set at the State Fair of Texas.  Presently it's titled The Fatal Funnel Cake, which could change.  I had just finished a nice scene under the State Fair's legendary Big Tex when I saw on Facebook that he was on fire.  How was that possible?  He had been around since 1952. I turned on the news and not only had there been a fire, he was basically gone.  I was panicked.  The book was due to the editor in two days, and I had no idea how this was going to be resolved.  I sadly watched as they took Big Tex down the road in the back of a trailer, covered in a shroud.  I flipped from channel to channel getting different information from the news.  Online I searched hourly for new information.  Finally, I'd gathered all that I could and started rewriting, praying I could fake it close enough.  I knew I'd have one more chance to make changes when I receive copy-edited manuscript in the summer, but that there was a good chance I wouldn't know any more then.  I won't really know exactly how the new Big Tex will look until he's unveiled for the 2013 State Fair of Texas.  Still, how weird was it that he'd been around for 60 years and I finish the book he's in and then he's gone?  I wonder about these things . . . like why my fortune cookie was empty yesterday . . .

Another Review of Wedding Cake Killer

I love the baking and the camaraderie of the friends who share Phyllis' house. The mysteries are always well written and well plotted. WEDDING CAKE KILLER is no exception.

To read the rest of the review go to Fresh Fiction.