Showing posts with label Anna MacLean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anna MacLean. Show all posts

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Review: Louisa and the Missing Heir by Anna MacLean


(Full length, historical cozy mystery)



Long before she will achieve fame as the author of Little Women, Louisa May Alcott is writing stories of a more dark and mysterious nature. But nothing prepares her for the role of amateur detective she assumes when the body of her dear friend, wealthy newlywed Dorothy Wortham, is found floating in Boston's harbor.

It's well known that Dorothy's family didn't approve of her husband, a confirmed fortune hunter, but Louisa suspects that some deeper secret lies behind her friend's tragic murder...



This is a fun read for all ages especially if any of you have read Little Women or any other of Louisa May Alcott stories. The many details of her life, those around her, her family and her friends are wonderfully shown in great detail. Then in addition, she adds in a wonderfully complex mystery. It was very enjoyable.

That she would take up sleuthing is a foregone conclusion. Her mind is extremely clever and as the story progresses, you will find yourself, along with her, trying to solve the mystery. Every time I thought I had solved it, I was proven wrong, as was she. However she was much ahead of me in figuring out what was going on. As she discovered something new, I would think, “Oh of course.” The fact is, I would not have been able to figure it out, although I was given the same clues as she was.

This is a tale of dark secrets, mysterious men, and a family torn apart with secrets. Louisa dares to confront the mores of the day, and does things that absolutely horrify many of the leading citizens. Her story includes so many facts about Boston in 1854 that I would swear that the author had actually lived there. As she pursues her hunt for the murderer, she is also in danger many times, but is able to handle each situation as it happens.

When she finally finds the murderer, I was surprised. I hadn’t even considered this person. What a cleverly written and fascinating mystery. It makes me want to read more of this series.

5 Flowers -- I loved this book! It's on my keeper shelf! I highly recommend it.



Friday, March 2, 2012

Virtual Book Tour and Giveaway: Louise and the Crystal Gazer by Anna MacLean

Today we're welcoming author Anna MacLean to the blog on her tour with Goddess Fish Promotions for the historical cozy mystery, "Louisa and the Crystal Gazer." We LOVED this book and you can read our review here.

Anna is giving away a gift basket to one randomly drawn commenter (and to the host with the most comments -- so help me win! You might win, too!). Comment today AND follow her tour (if you click on the banner over there on the left, it'll take you to a list of her tour stops) -- the more you read and comment, the better your odds of winning. You could be introduced to a great new author AND win a GC!

Anna was gracious enough to answer my questions. Take it away, Anna!

What made you decide to write about Louisa May Alcott in this setting?

Thanks so much for hosting me! The Crystal Gazer was a setting that had simmered in my imagination for a while. I have a long-standing interest in mediums and American spiritualism (I wrote a novel about medium Maggie Fox, The Sweet By and By, under my historical novelist name, Jeanne Mackin) so I thought it would be interesting to see what my Louisa May Alcott would do at a séance. Of course, she sees the fraud and the tricks instantly, while staying open to the wonderful mystery of human nature – ever so much more interesting than a mere apparition. P.T. Barnum then wandered in my imagination, so I included him as well. Louisa, in my mystery series, is always open to a good crime investigation, and Barnum is always open to the possibility of a new act.

How much research has gone into these books? Do you ever worry about getting some detail wrong?

I love doing research and at some point have to stop myself and get on with the story. The research for nineteenth century spiritualism was especially interesting. I found an early form of do-it-yourself manual that instructed American Victorians in the art of spirit painting, creating ectoplasm, and other parlor effects. The other details of daily life do need to be right, of course. Hardest for me was studying up on Victorian manners and protocol – when a woman is allowed to remove her hat and she must keep it on, how long a visit should be, what color gloves to wear, and things like that. They were quite specific, and any misstep in manners could cause quite a nasty stir. Louisa, as a young woman of ‘respectable’ family (and very limited means) had to watch her step, while still managing to keep a fair amount of freedom for herself.

Do you have any writing quirks or habits?

I must write in the very early morning, and if I’m disturbed I am unpleasant about it, to say the least. I completely understand why Louisa preferred to write in an attic, away from the rest of the family. I also talk to myself aloud as I write, voicing the dialogue and ‘listening’ for response. If I wrote in a public space like a coffee house people would probably move away from me.

What's your writing process? Outline? Plotter? Panster?

I just dive into that empty page (screen, really) and see what’s going to arrive. Somewhere in a later revision process I tease out the outline of the story to see if everything is in its correct place, but in the first draft I much prefer to just sit and write, no outline, no judgments, no road map. The joy of writing is discovering how to get from here to there in a story. It is as much about discovery for me as it is eventually for the reader – though I may ‘discover’ the plot and characters in several versions before I settle on the one that seems best.

What your favorite thing about being an author?

When I first began writing historical fiction, mystery or otherwise, it felt to me as good as being able to live another lifetime. I could be anyone in any time and experience anything I cared to experience. I still feel that way. Writing enlarges my life and my empathy for others. It is, really, a kind of time travel.

Do you have anything new coming up you'd like to share?

I always have something in process on my desk but I’m superstitious. I don’t like to talk about it till I at least have a first draft. Sorry! When it’s ready, I’ll be sure and let you know. Thanks so much for these great questions!

What's Louisa and the Crystal Gazer about?

Gentle Reader,

In December of 1855, I found myself once again in Boston, temporarily separated from my beloved family, living as a seamstress by day and writing my secret "blood and thunder" stories by night. I welcomed the companionship of my dear friend Sylvia Shattuck, but was quite taken aback by her strange desire to contact her long-dead father through a medium.

Nevertheless, I found myself at the home of the city's most famous crystal gazer, attending a seance with none other than the notorious showman Mr. P T Barnum. But what began as an idle curiosity became a compelling investigation--for upon our second visit to the medium, Sylvia and I found she'd been murdered! And to solve the mystery of her untimely death, I first had to uncover the surprising truth about her life...

Louisa May Alcott


***

Jeanne Mackin is the author of several novels: The Sweet By and By (St. Martin’s Press), Dreams of Empire (Kensington Books), The Queen’s War (St. Martin’s Press), and The Frenchwoman (St. Martin’s Press). She has published short fiction and creative nonfiction in several journals and periodicals including American Letters and Commentary and SNReview. She is also the author of the Cornell Book of Herbs and Edible Flowers (Cornell University publications) and co-editor of The Norton Book of Love (W.W. Norton), and wrote art columns for newspapers as well as feature articles for several arts magazines. She was the recipient of a creative writing fellowship from the American Antiquarian Society and her journalism has won awards from the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education, in Washington, D.C. She teaches creative writing at Goddard College in Vermont, has taught or conducted workshops in Pennsylvania, Hawaii and New York and has traveled extensively in Europe. She lives with her husband, Steve Poleskie, in upstate New York.

Website: http://www.annamaclean.net

Facebook: http://www.facebook.authorannamaclean.com

Book Link: http://us.penguingroup.com/nf/Book/BookDisplay/0,,9781101506141,00.html?Louisa_and_the_Missing_Heiress_Anna_Maclean

Review: Louisa and the Crystal Gazer by Anna MacLean


(A full length historical cozy mystery published by Penguin Books)


A young Louisa May Alcott accompanies her friend Sylvia to visit Boston's most famous spiritual medium, Mrs. Agatha D. Percy, to contact Sylvia's long-dead father. Louisa isn't one to believe such foolishness-until one of the seer's predictions comes true.

Louisa and Sylvia visit the seer again, but Mrs. Percy's days of divination have been cut brutally short by a killer. Now, Louisa must solve the mystery of the crystal gazer's untimely death by uncovering the shocking truth about her life.


I cannot remember when I have enjoyed reading a book as much as I enjoyed this one. I felt as though it was actually written in that time and place by the real Louisa. It was so factual, and included so many little details that one would think only someone who lived in that time would have known.

Louisa became so real to me that that I felt I was actually living with her in that time. I was able to follow her thought processes as the mystery unfolded. This story actually included people who were alive then, and not just as part of the setting, they were included in the mystery. I got to know so much more than I had ever known about them before, it was an additional bonus to the story.

I followed Louisa as she moved step-by-step in her thinking process about the mystery. Because it was first person POV, it was written in a wonderfully clever way. I never once felt that I was being told a story, but that I was actually in on her thinking process as she tried to solve the murder.

The mystery involved a medium and spiritualist, of which there were many in those times. The people involved all wanted to contact a departed loved one, and of course the medium was a fraud. How she worked was important and also important was all the intertwined stories of the people who attended the séance.

Louisa determines to solve all the mysteries, while spending time working to help with Christmas presents for her family. She is so clever and, like Jo in little women, she is also writing to make a little additional money. She just can’t quit thinking and working on solving the case, even though the police think they have it solved. She is confident that they are wrong and she is right. It was so fun letting the story unfold. I found it difficult to put this book down. There were so many people that could have committed the murder, and I could not figure out who had done it. The end was a surprise in a way, but then looking back I could see how, if I had been just a bit more careful and alert, I should have known. All the clues were there for me to find.

If you enjoy reading about this time in our history, and if you loved any of the books that Louisa May Alcott wrote, you will love this one even more. I swear this author went back in time and lived in Boston while she wrote this story.

While my rating system only goes up to five, if I could give this MORE than five flowers, I would. It's that good.

5/5 Flowers