Showing posts with label Judy Alter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Judy Alter. Show all posts

Friday, April 15, 2016

Guest Judy Alter- The Gilded Cage

Who inspired me to be a writer?


I inspired myself. I was read to a lot as a child and became an avid reader, spending summers at a Chicago public library branch. Every author whose books I read inspired me. By the age of ten I was writing short stories. College and graduate studies interrupted my writing, but I soon made my way back to storytelling. And I’ve been writing ever since and reading for inspiration.

Right now I’m reading Loving Eleanor by Susan Wittig Albert and thoroughly enjoying it. One of the all-time favorites that I re-read from time to time, always finding something new, is Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner. It’s a wonderful example of turning a real life into compelling fiction, although he was criticized for taking liberties with reality for the sake of fiction. It’s a fine line to balance.

What’s ahead for me? More mysteries, another historical novel, subject to be determined.


The Gilded Cage
Born to society and a life of privilege, Bertha Honoré married Potter Palmer, a wealthy entrepreneur who called her Cissy. He built the Palmer House Hotel, still famed today, and became one of the major civic leaders of the city. She put philanthropy into action, going into shanty neighborhoods, inviting factory girls to her home, working at Jane Addams’ settlement Hull House, supporting women’s causes.

It was a time of tremendous change and conflict in Chicago as the city struggled to put its swamp-water beginnings behind it and become a leading urban center. A time of the Civil War, the Great Fire of 1871, the Haymarket Riots, and the triumph of the Columbian Exposition. Potter and Cissy handled these events in diverse ways. Fascinating characters people these pages along with Potter and Cissy—Carter Harrison, frequent mayor of the city; Harry Collins, determined to be a loser; Henry Honoré, torn between loyalties to the South and North; Daniel Burnham, architect of the new Chicago—and many others. 

The Gilded Cage is a fictional exploration of the lives of these people and of the Gilded Age in Chicago history.
 
Getting the facts right in historical fiction:
The Gilded Cage was a work-in-progress for almost ten years. It began with my children’s book on Bertha (Cissy) Palmer who fascinated me because she was one of the first women to believe that great wealth carried an obligation to philanthropy.

Even though I was writing fiction, I had to do a tremendous amount of research. My fiction had to be set against an authentic background of Chicago history, which meant I had to know every detail about early Chicago, the eastern disdain for that flat city on a flat prairie and Chicago’s determination to prove itself sophisticated, the Great Fire, the Civil War when southerners were imprisoned in rough camps, the strife between workers and business moguls, the Haymarket Riot, and, finally, the Columbian Exposition where Cissy was president of the board of lady managers.

My novel is fiction with relationships, even romantic, that never existed, scenes and characters that I could only imagine. I had to balance the structure of a novel against the harsh realities of history. A list of sources is included in my Author’s Note at the back of the book. Conventional wisdom is that you never use everything you learned in your book or you’ll bore our readers with a treatise—but you have to do that research so that you are comfortable in the time and place.




About the Author
An award-winning novelist, Judy Alter is the author of several fictional biographies of women of the American West—Elizabeth Bacon Custer, Jessie Benton Frémont, Lucille Mulhall (first Wild West Show roping cowgirl), and Etta Place, the Sundance Kid’s girlfriend. In the Gilded Cage she turns her attention to the late nineteenth century Chicago to tell the story of Potter and Cissy Palmer, a high society couple with differing views on philanthropy and workers’ right. 

Alter is also the author of six books in the Kelly O’Connell Mysteries series: Skeleton in a Dead Space, No Neighborhood for Old Women, Trouble in a Big Box, Danger Comes Home, Deception in Strange Places, and Desperate for Death; the Blue Plate Café Mysteries—Murder at the Blue Plate Café, Murder at the Tremont House, and Murder at Peacock Mansion. With the 2014 publication of The Perfect Coed, she introduced the Oak Grove Mysteries.

Her work has been recognized with awards from the Western Writers of America, the Texas Institute of Letters, and the National Cowboy Museum and Hall of Fame. She has been honored with the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement by WWA and inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame and the WWA Hall of Fame.

Monday, July 13, 2015

Monday Mystery Guest Judy Alter

You can climb any mountain….
Unlike Julie Andrews, I know I can’t climb mountains. If I put my mind to it, there’s probably a whole list of things I can’t do—like sky-diving, parasailing, triathlons, things like that. But it’s okay because I never wanted to do them. On the other hand, ten years ago my list included something I desperately wanted to do—write mysteries. I’m a lifelong fan of reading mysteries, and sometimes as I read I wished I could write like that. Other times, I thought, “I can write better than that!”
About 2002 my twenty-some year writing career appeared to have cratered. I’d been writing fiction and nonfiction about women of the American West, including longer fictional biographies of such women as Libbie Custer, Jessie Benton Frémont, cowgirl Lucille Mulhall, and outlaw Etta Place. But my agent died, and I had no success placing proposals or getting a new agent. I found myself writing educational books for the middle-school library audience. Interesting, paid a little money, and made me feel I was writing. But I wanted to write fiction.
I told myself if I could just see one mystery in print, I’d be content. I combined a story I’d heard about doctor’s wives (I used to be one), a college campus (I worked on a private university campus for nearly 30 years), and of course the requisite murder and romantic interest. It all came together pretty well, and I began the fruitless hunt for an agent. I didn’t let myself in for the 200 rejections some have but got about 20 rejections before I submitted to a fairly well-known mystery house as an exclusive—they kept the manuscript a year before rejecting. Lesson learned about exclusives. Then I found an agent—who also kept it for a useless year. Lesson learned about agents who start out wildly enthusiastic and end up indifferent. I gave up, wrote a second novel that was accepted almost immediately by a new small publisher. Skeleton in a Dead Space (2011) was the first of my Kelly O’Connell Mysteries, and last year I self-published that original academic novel, The Perfect Coed.
Now, just four years later, I have nine mysteries in print and four projects at various stages on my desk; two of them are mysteries. Retirement has helped me revitalize my writing career, but so has the confidence that I can do it. Who wants to climb Mt. Everest anyway?

Meet Judy Alter
 
Award-winning novelist Judy Alter is the author of six books in the Kelly O’Connell Mysteries series: Skeleton in a Dead Space, No Neighborhood for Old Women, Trouble in a Big Box, Danger Comes Home, Deception in Strange Places, and Desperate for Death. She also writes the Blue Plate Café Mysteries—Murder at the Blue Plate Café and Murder at the Tremont House and The Oak Grove Mysteries which debuted in 2014 with The Perfect Coed.
Her work has been recognized with awards from the Western Writers of America, the Texas Institute of Letters, and the National Cowboy Museum. She has been honored with the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement by WWA and inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame and the Western Writers of America Hall of Fame.
Judy is retired as director of TCU Press and the mother of four grown children and the grandmother of seven. She and her dog, Sophie, live in Fort Worth, Texas.
Desperate for Death (May 2015) is her latest release. Watch for a new book in the fall.


Desperate for Death
Just when Kelly's life has calmed, she faces yet another puzzle. Except the pieces in this one don't fit. First the apartment behind her house is torched, then a string of bizzare "accidents" occur to set her off-balance. Who is stalking her? Where does the disappearance of a young girl and her disreputable boyfriend fit in? And why are two men using the same name? Is the surprise inheritance another part of the puzzle? At a time when she is most vulnerable, Kelly can't make the pieces fit. Before Kelly can get the whole picture, she helps the family of a hostage, rescues a kidnap victim and attends a wild and wonderful wedding.

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Twitter: @judyalter









Monday, November 24, 2014

Changing horses in mid-stream by Judy Alter

Please Welcome Back Mystery Mondays! My first guest is Judy Alter.

Back in the 1990s I was riding high, publishing short western novels with Doubleday and then longer fictional biographies of women for Bantam—I was clearly a western writer especially fascinated by the stories of women of the American West. I wrote about the lives of Libbie Custer, Jessie Benton Frémont, a Wild West Show woman roper modeled on the famed Lucille Mulhall, and finally Etta Place of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid fame. And I was with a major publishing house. Besides I’d written a y/a nonfiction called Extraordinary Women of the American West—I had an inexhaustible supply of women for my fictional biography series.

Shortly after the turn into this century, it all fell apart. Bantam discontinued their program (or lost interest in my work); Doubleday just disappeared. The Etta Place book was actually published by Leisure in 2004, and then Leisure, not a major company by any means, went out of business. Some of my western titles are still available as e-books—Cherokee Rose, Libbie, Ballad for Sallie, Mattie, Sundance, Butch and Me, and Sue Ellen Learns to Dance, a collection of short stories. But I had been bucked off my short ride as a western author, and I began writing nonfiction work-for-hire for school libraries. Interesting but not creative. I wanted to invent the characters and worlds of fiction.

I’ve been a devoted mystery reader since Nancy Drew first caught my attention, but I always thought someone else wrote mysteries, not me. I had tried one once, an agent (who knew less about publishing mysteries than I did) failed to sell it, and I gave up. Eventually though I decided I could write a mystery as well as some I read, and I launched myself into the world of mysteries.

After westerns, believe me, it was an entirely different world, requiring knowledge and connections I had no idea about—me, who considered herself a seasoned writer. I was humbled and overwhelmed, but I followed some good advice and joined Sisters in Crime and the Guppies subgroup and set about learning to fit into this new world. It was a long learning curve, following the wrong agents, submitting to the wrong publishers, agreeing to exclusive agreements—I made all the mistakes a newbie can make. Along the way I volunteered as a monitor for SinC and eventually became a member of the Guppy Steering Committee. I was making friends in this new world.

One thing I learned is the mystery community, while tremendously supportive of each other, is highly competitive—there so many more titles and authors working in the various sub-genres. I gave up on the agent-pushed career with a major New York firm (they had all consolidated anyway) and went with Turquoise Morning Press because they were enthusiastic about my work. To date, they’ve published five books in the Kelly O’Connell Mystery Series and two in the Blue Plate Café Mystery Series, with one Kelly O’Connell waiting in the wings.

Turquoise Morning changed their focus recently to romance fiction only, and with The Perfect Coed, I turned to indie publishing. The Perfect Coed is that original manuscript that failed, rewritten many times. What is it we keep telling new Guppies? Perseverance! Getting published as a mystery author has been a bumpy but exciting ride. Some days I think I’ll retire from my retirement career, but I’m having too much fun. And though I will never achieve the skill or status of Mary Higgins Clark and a few others, I’m comfortably at home in the world of mysteries.


A brief excerpt from The Perfect Coed:

Susan Hogan drove around Millsap, Texas, for two days before she realized there was a body in the trunk of her car. And it was another three days before she knew that someone was trying to kill her.

On the second day, she noticed a slightly unpleasant, sweet but foul odor in the car as she drove south on Main Street, headed for the Oak Grove University campus and her eight o’clock American lit class. Susan’s 1998 Honda Civic often had mysterious odors that were all her own fault. Now her mind ranged over the possibilities—leftover spaghetti and meatballs that she’d put in an icebox dish to bring to school for lunch, maybe a to-go box from her favorite Thai restaurant in Fort Worth, spilled coffee since she drank hers with cream.

No matter. She was late for her class, so she opened the windows to let the cool air of the October morning blow through the car as she passed through the town. Oak Grove was one of those towns kept alive and even attractive by the presence of a small university. Main Street was landscaped with trees, benches, and some brick paving. Boutiques and small cafes sat next to a bookstore, a lawyer’s office, and the traditional old brick-and-stone bank. Just before the campus, the street curved uphill through a city park. It was, Susan always thought, a perfect place to live and teach. She didn’t really care if it was second-tier, not as prestigious as some of the bigger universities in the state. She’d been here almost eight years, and Oak Grove was home by now.

“I’ll clean the car tonight,” she told herself, “before Jake sees it or smells it.”



About Judy Alter:

Judy Alter is the author of five books in the Kelly O’Connell Mysteries, the newest being Deception in Strange Places; two books in the Blue Plate Café Mysteries; and the new Oak Grove Mysteries, beginning with The Perfect Coed, a mystery set on a university campus. Judy is no stranger to college campuses. She attended the University of Chicago, Truman State University in Missouri, and Texas Christian University, where she earned a Ph.D. and taught English. For twenty years, she was director of TCU Press, the book publishing program of the university. The author of many books for both children and adults primarily on women of the American West, she retired in 2010 and turned her attention to writing contemporary cozy mysteries.

She holds awards from the Western Writers of America, the National Cowboy Museum and Hall of Fame, and the Texas Institute of Letters. She was inducted into the Texas Literary Hall of Fame and recognized as an Outstanding Woman of Fort Worth and a woman who has left her mark on Texas. Western Writers of America gave her the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement.

The single parent of four and the grandmother of seven, she lives in Fort Worth, Texas, with her Bordoodle, Sophie.

Find Judy at:

Amazon / TurquoiseMorning Press / Smashwords /

Web: http://www.judyalter.com/

Blogs: http://www.judys-stew.blogspot.com; http://potluckwithjudy.blogspot.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Judy-Alter-Author/366948676705857

Twitter: @judyalter

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5446.Judy_Alter