Showing posts with label Something Borrowed Somthing Bleu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Something Borrowed Somthing Bleu. Show all posts

Sunday, July 18, 2010

Sunday Salon: Something Borrowed, Something Bleu by Cricket McRae

When I first read the blurb for Something Borrowed, Something Bleu I was  intrigued. A cryptic suicide note delivered two decades late and a mission to find what had happened. Who wouldn't want to know more?

Sophie Mae Reynolds is busy with her homemade bath  product business and preparing to marry the love of her life, Det. Barr Armbrose. Her biggest worry is trying to keep her mother, Anna Belle Watson, from interfering in the wedding arrangements. Sophie wants simple, Anna Belle has other plans.

A frantic early morning call from Anna Belle has Sophie returning to her hometown of Spring Creek, CO. Seems Anna Belle has just received a suicide note from Sophie’s brother, Bobby Lee, who hung himself 18 years ago. The letter had been addressed to Bobby Lee’s girlfriend at the time, Tabby Atwood. Sophie’s Mom received it marked “Return to Sender.”

When Sophie arrives in Spring Creek she goes to visit Tabby, who is now married to Joe Bines, Bobby Lee’s best friend. The Bines operate a dairy and Tabby gives cheese making lessons.

As Sophie begins to make inquires about the events prior to her brother’s death, she uncovers more questions than answers. A murder occurs and Sophie believes it’s related to her brother’s death or at least the events surrounding his suicide, as well as two cold case deaths.

There are just enough surprises along the way to keep you guessing until the truth is revealed in a climatic heart-pounding conclusion. You’ll be on the edge of your seat as Sophie comes face to face with the killer and finally finds why her brother killed himself.

Something Borrowed, Something Bleu is the fourth installment in the Home Crafting Mystery Series, but is a stand alone book. Having not read the previous books in the series I wasn’t left out in the dark wondering about something that had happened in the other books. But after discovering Sophie and her trait for solving mysteries, I’ll be looking for the other three books in the series.

Author Cricket McRae gives readers a fast pace, smooth flowing story filled with helpful cheese making tips and delicious menus. For those bitten by the cheese bug, there are complete cheese making recipes on the author’s website (http://www.cricketmcrae.com)

Once you begin reading Something Borrowed, Something Bleu, it’ll be hard to put it down, except maybe to reach for a piece of cheese and a cracker, and quickly return to see what Sophie’s got herself into now.

Cricket McRae blogs at Hearth Cricket and her website is www.cricketmcrae.com

Something Borrowed, Something Bleu by Cricket McRae, Midnight Ink, @2010, ISBN: 978-0-7387-1996-2, Paperback, 278 pages


FTC Full Disclosure - This book was sent to me by the author in hopes I would review it. However, receiving the complimentary copy did not influence my review.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Guest Blogger, Cricket McRae

It’s my pleasure to welcome author Cricket McRae as the special guest blogger here today at Thoughts in Progress.

Cricket joins us today to celebrate her latest release. I ask her to tell us about her new book and the Home Crafting Mystery Series. Cricket will be dropping back by during the day to answer any questions you might have and respond to your comments.

Thanks for inviting me to Thoughts in Progress, Mason. How awesome that I get to be here on the release day for Something Borrowed, Something Bleu!

In the book, Sophie Mae returns to her home town of Spring Creek, Colorado (which bears an eerie resemblance to the town I live in now) when her brother's suicide note turns up after eighteen years. The violence of the past rears its head in the present as she delves into his life and death, juggles a cranky eleven-year-old, a Zenned-out father and a mother who is determined to plan a fancy wedding rather than allowing Sophie Mae and Barr to make a quick trip down to the courthouse. 

The impetus behind this fourth Home Crafting Mystery was threefold. I wanted to feature cheese making, bring Sophie Mae back to Colorado for one book, and finally address her brother's suicide.
 
The backdrops for my mysteries are colonial home crafts or pioneer skills. I couldn't write effectively about them if I weren't a bit crazily obsessed with them myself. So far I've written about soap making, food preservation, and spinning, and there's a story behind every one of those activities. There's a story behind the cheese making in Something Borrowed, Something Bleu, too.

When I lived in the Seattle area and still worked for That Big Software Company, I often spent my weekends getting back to basics and making things from scratch. Dipping candles, growing vegetables, putting up pickles and jams, that sort of thing. It wasn't until after I left that job that I began my handmade toiletries business (now defunct -- I'd rather write about it). But while I was still working I came across the section in Carla Emery's Encyclopedia of Country Living about cheese making. It was pretty basic, but it sparked a memory from Little House in the Big Woods where they make huge rounds of cheese and store them in the attic.

Online I discovered The New England Cheese Making Supply

Company. Fifteen minutes and a few dollars later I'd placed my order. The cultures, rennet and an instruction pamphlet arrived within the week. Fresh cheeses? Bah -- too easy. Much like I began writing novels rather than short stories, I plunged into the hard stuff that takes a lot of time and patience. I made Cheddar and Monterrey jack, which were actually quite easy, though tedious. They aged for months and finally I had my first taste. Pretty good, actually, and satisfying because I'd made them myself.
 
Since then I've taken classes on how to make mozzarella, feta, paneer, queso fresco, fromage blanc, etc. and still make those on a regular basis, as well as yogurt and piima-cultured butter. I just couldn't resist teaching Sophie Mae -- and maybe a reader or two -- how to do the same things.
 
As for setting the mystery where I live now, Sophie Mae's hometown is mentioned as being in Colorado in the very first book in the series, Lye in Wait. I'd lived in the Pacific Northwest for almost twenty years by then, and had no idea I'd move back to Colorado. But I did, and that provided me with the perfect opportunity to bring her home for one book.
 
In addition, her brother's suicide years before was one of the driving reasons Sophie Mae felt compelled to investigate the life -- and death -- of the neighborhood handyman who drank lye in her workroom in Lye in Wait. So the first book in the series set up the fourth. Yes, it was a way to avoid the dreaded Jessica Fletcher Syndrome, where more people are murdered in one small town than is remotely feasible. But as I wrote books two and three, I really wanted to know more about Sophie Mae's background, her family, and what happened to her brother. Something Borrowed, Something Bleu was the answer.
 
If you want to know more about the Home Crafting Mystery Series my website is www.cricketmcrae.com . And on my blog, www.hearthcricket.com , I talk about writing, food, gardening, and various domestic arts.

~Cricket

Cricket, thanks so much for blogging here today on the release of Something Borrowed, Something Bleu. Learning additional background on Sophie and the series has been interesting. Remember, Cricket will be available to answer any questions you might have about her latest release, the series or her writing.