Earlier my daughter said she was going to cut her nails on the porch. Now my hearing isn't awful, but it's certainly not what it used to be. I heard that she was going to go cut her nails with a fork. I honestly sat there pondering how in the world she was going to do that, when I realized she'd gone out on the porch. Then did the mental smack of the head.
I'm presently working on one of our older westerns. I scanned it last week and I'm formatting and editing it for the Kindle. So my brain is in western mode.
Hearing her wrong got me to thinking. I know . . . not always a good thing. But, I can't help but wonder how many of the battles, gunfights, brawls, etc. from history, were caused by a good ol' misunderstanding. Someone just hearing something a little wrong. Of course this lead to me thinking about a new character to come to Wind River, a town we wrote a 6 book series about. This summer might be a good time to revisit Wind River, if we can just find the time.
Showing posts with label Westerns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Westerns. Show all posts
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Saturday, March 31, 2012
Growing Up Watching Westerns
I’m sure some of you have wondered how I got into western
writing. I grew up watching Gunsmoke, Paladin,
Bonanza, etc. My dad loved
westerns. Top this with the fact I enjoy
reading about history. I didn’t mind having
to read the history textbooks in school, in fact I may have been the only kid
that read the whole books. Now that math
textbook was a different matter.
My first toe into western writing came with writing Hallam.
The first Lucas Hallam story which was published as a mystery, but it had western touches.
Lucas was a riding extra/PI in the first stories which were set during the
1920’s in Hollywood. That story is
available as an ebook on Amazon and Barnes and Noble along with 3 other stories
I had saved on a usb drive I carried with me the day our house burned
down. This past week I have been
collecting our missing stories. The ones
published in Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, and
various anthologies. I’m hoping I can
scan them and make them available by this fall.
There are many Hallam stories and he is my favorite ol’ cowboy, but my
favorite town would have to be Wind River.
James and I worked on this series together.
We had all six books plotted before the first book had even sold. The publisher
insisted on one name for the author on the paperbacks, so we decided to use James’. When we republished them as ebooks, we used
both of our names. We were told that
they wouldn’t sell with two names. This
time, the publisher was wrong. They are
selling very nicely with both our names. While Wind River
seems like a just a western, we planned a long running mystery to be solved in
book six. If you’ve read the books, you
know how much fun we had writing them. If
you’ve only read a book or two, we wrote it where you would never know you missed
anything. But if you read all 6, you'll see what I mean. Lately I’ve been trying to decide if
we should revisit Wind River. I wonder
if there are six more books in the town . . . The first book is still only 99 cents for the Kindle and Nook.
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