Where and how watch online world war z full movie. This is blog related to world war z movie. If you

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Friday, 19 November 2010

Handgun Tips for Writers

Posted on 23:38 by Unknown
by Ben Small
Dirty Harry S&W 629*
As a gunner myself, nothing (except maybe too many adverbs) makes me madder at an author than obvious mistakes about firearms, so easily corrected with a little research. I learned this first hand in Alibi On Ice, where I assumed all handguns had safeties. Luckily, my well-gunned editor safetied my error, then bounced it off my chest and learned me but good. "Son," he said, stretching out those three letters Southern-style, "if you're gonna write about fir'ahms...you ought to go buy some."

I thought he went on a bit long, frankly. A minor detail, that safety. I didn't need the history of safeties, who'd invented them, their various types and styles. I get it.

But he drawled on, "Well, have you ever carried one?" Silence. "A handgun, I mean." More silence. "Do you know how it feels?" All I felt was an embarrassed blush, a hot-flash, sorta. I'm sure I stained my tee-shirt. "Well, do you know how you sit, whether you change your gait?"

I remember I looked out the window, wondered if leaping would hurt. Well, not the leap, really, but the other end of it, the part down on the flagstones, the squashed-flat part. How much would that hurt, or would I notice at all?

"Do you touch it for assurance?" he said.

That one caught me.

I ignored my dirty mind for once. If I were carrying a weapon and I got nervous, wouldn't I touch it? Of course I would; I'd wanna know that baby was there, especially if I were new to being armed. In fact, I'd be self-conscious of it, act a bit too casual. I'd look at people, wondering if they knew...

He came at me again. "Do you check whether you've been printed?" A beat. "Do you know what that term means?"

If on Jeopardy, I'd have pushed the button.

My answer wasn't his point. "Son," he said, "you don't piss off gunners. Or people who know about guns. There are a lot of them." He took a breath. "And they'll catch your errors every time, point them out to you, paint you the fool." He paused. "You can't do that."

I thought about a Bang Ben Blog, sponsored by the NRA maybe. [Yeah, we authors are a bit self-possessed. We think people read our books.]

So, lest you follow my fate, heads-up. Here are some pointers.

A .22 caliber bullet -- unless it's a .22 Magnum, an entirely different round -- will not pass through a skull. It'll rattle around inside like a BB in a bottle, causing massive damage while it bounces and disintegrates, which is why the .22 caliber round is in the Mob Hall of Fame.

There's an enormous difference between a .357 fired from a semi-automatic weapon and one fired from a revolver. While their ballistics may be nearly identical, put these shells next to each other and they're Mutt and Fat Jeff.. The .357 case is much longer than the .357 Sig, and the .357 Sig case is much wider -- squat -- than the .357's. The .357 is a revolver shell; the .357 Sig belongs only in semi-autos; they don't date.

Shoot either a .357 or a .357 Sig indoors in a confined space without hearing protection and you'll be deaf...probably forever. Magnum rounds of any caliber are loud. That's why I do not recommend these rounds for home defense. More likely than not, if you need this weapon, you will not be wearing ears. Even outdoors, a magnum round in .357  or .44 will deafen you for awhile. But .38 Special rounds can be used in place of .357s in revolvers, as .44 Special rounds can used in place of Dirty Harry's .44 Magnum round. Shoot either the .38 Special or the .44 Special indoors in a closed room, and you'll be deaf, but you'll likely recover.

.38 Special and the .38 Super are not the same rounds. Some fools don't understand this.

The 10 mm is a hunting handgiun round. It's got good range. Originally developed after a disastrous FBI bank robbery in Miami, where agents died through blunder, bad luck and insufficient weaponry, the 10 mm got axed because too powerful, carried too far. Some ammo tinkerer at Smith & Wesson cut down the round case and powder charge, and the .40 S&W caliber debuted. A reasonable compromise: more stopping power than the .38 Special and 9mm,  but not as lethal as the 10 mm or the Mighty .45.

Shoot any gun inside a car, and say goodbye to your hearing.

Don't shoot a handgun sideways, you know, the way gangs wave them on TV. Even idiots should realize muzzle-flip will spray bullets sideways. Shoot your wife, and the second shot hits her mother. Uh, wait... There's an exception to this rule...

When firing a semi-auto, you will probably hold your support hand under your shooting hand, perhaps a bit forward so as to control muzzle-flip, which occurs when firing any handgun. Doing so with a revolver will leave your support hand burned, as hot gases release  from the side of the chamber. So when firing a revolver, put your support hand slightly behind your shooting hand, under it. Or shoot one-handed, called "Point and Shoot." Some pistols are better at Point and Shoot than others. Glocks, for instance. A Glock pistol grip is slanted differently than revolvers or most other handguns. Some like this Glock feature; some hate it. But if your perp or protag isn't used to shooting a Glock, the difference may affect his or her accuracy. Glocks shoot point-and-shoot well. So do Springfield XDs and XDms, or S&W M&Ps. Beretta, not so much. Yet, Berettas are supplied to our infantry troops.

Some guns will bite you, especially if you grip the pistol high or place your support hand too high. The Sig P210, perhaps the most accurate production handgun ever manufactured, is known for this, as is the Browning.
Sig P210
The thingee under the Sig above is a lanyard hole. You can wear the gun as a necklace, or tie it to a belt. The French like them.

Some manufacturers add a Beavertail to protect against hammer-bite. A Beavertail is shown below, immediately under the gun's hammer. The man who invented the Beavertail, Ed Brown, is perhaps the premier semi-auto handgun manufacturer in the world. The gun shown is one of Brown's. One of these new will set you back well over three grand.

All handguns are oily, some more so than others. The more premium the pistol, the more oily it will be. Semi-autos have numerous rubbing metal parts. So semi-autos are oilier than revolvers, Glocks being an exception. (More about Glocks later.) Premium guns are made to extremely tight tolerances, which is why they're so accurate. By the same token, because of these tight tolerances, you get oily.

Revolvers are often more accurate than semi-autos. That's because the cylinder is in a direct line with the barrel. Semi-autos must perform more functions than a simple revolver cylinder rotation and hammer release. They must extract a cartridge, lift another one, and line it up into the barrel. If you open a semi-auto up and take the barrel out, you'll see a wider area at the cylinder end than at the muzzle. Unless the semi-auto is made to extremely tight tolerances, as with the rare and very expensive Sig P-210, expect larger firing groups than with a revolver.

Most handguns, revolver or semi-auto, are more accurate than the shooter. Handguns are not accurate inherently. They have shorter barrel lengths than rifles, so have shorter sight-lines. In a NYC police shooting study performed some years ago, analysts determined that at a distance of under ten feet, only about twelve percent of police shots hit their target. But then, it's a fallacy that cops are good shooters. Most only shoot their firearms when forced to qualify, often only once a year. And in some cities, firing ranges are non-existent. So range time is hard to come by.

Hollow point bullets are safer than full metal jacket bullets. That's because a hollow point bullet will usually stay within the victim, causing massive damage. It usually will not penetrate and cause harm to bystanders behind the target. A full metal jacket bullet will usually pass through the target, causing harm to those even several hundred feet behind the target.

Glocks are abundant because they're cheap, they require little maintenance and they always go bang. Many shooters never bother to clean a Glock, and their pistols just keep firing. For this reason, one may not find much lube on a Glock. It doesn't require much. Ask what pistol cops prefer, and they'll probably respond Sig Sauer. That's because Sigs fit the hand so well. But a classic Sig will cost you almost double what you pay for a Glock, which is why police forces buy them.
Glocks are ugly, but they work

Glocks come in a variety of sizes and calibers, more so than any other pistol. For a Glock model chart, see below.



ModelCaliberCapacityOverall
Length
Height
Including
Magazine
WidthLength
Between
Sights
Barrel
Length
Weight
Without
Magazine
Empty
Mag
Weight
Full
Mag
Weight
Trigger
Pull
179 mm177.32"5.43"1.18"6.49"4.49"22.04 oz2.75 oz~9.87 oz~5.5lbs
17L9 mm178.85"5.43"1.18"8.07"6.02"23.63 oz2.75 oz~9.87 oz~4.5 lbs
199 mm156.85"5.00"1.18"6.02"4.02"20.99 oz2.46 oz~8.99 oz~5.5 lbs
2010 mm157.59"5.47"1.27"6.77"4.60"27.68 oz2.64 oz~11.46 oz~5.5 lbs
21.45 ACP137.59"5.47"1.27"6.77"4.60"~5.5 lbs
21SF.45 ACP137.59"5.47"1.27"6.77"4.60"26.28 oz3.1 oz~12 oz~5.5 lbs
22.40157.32"5.43"1.18"6.49"4.49"22.92 oz2.75 oz~11.46 oz~5.5 lbs
23.40136.85"5.00"1.18"6.02"4.02"21.16 oz2.46 oz~9.87 oz~5.5 lbs
24.40158.85"5.43"1.18"8.07"6.02"26.70 oz2.75 oz~11.46 oz~4.5 lbs
25.380 ACP156.85"5.00"1.18"6.02"4.02"20.11 oz2.40 oz~7.2 oz~5.5 lbs
269 mm106.29"4.17"1.18"5.67"3.46"19.75 oz1.98 oz~6.35 oz~5.5 lbs
27.4096.29"4.17"1.18"5.67"3.46"19.75 oz2.12 oz~7.23 oz~5.5 lbs
28.380 ACP106.29"4.17"1.18"5.67"3.46"18.66 oz1.98 oz~5.11 oz~5.5 lbs
2910 mm106.77"4.45"1.27"5.95"3.78"24.69 oz2.40 oz~8.29 oz~5.5 lbs
30.45 ACP106.77"4.76"1.27"5.95"3.78"23.99 oz2.50 oz~9.87 oz~5.5 lbs
31.357 sig157.32"5.43"1.18"6.49"4.49"23.28 oz2.75 oz~9.87 oz~5.5 lbs
32.357 sig136.85"5.00"1.18"6.02"4.02"21.52 oz2.46 oz~8.64 oz~5.5 lbs
33.357 sig96.29"4.17"1.18"5.67"3.46"19.75 oz2.12 oz~6.88 oz~5.5 lbs
349 mm178.15"5.43"1.18"7.56"5.32"22.92 oz2.75 oz~9.87 oz~4.5 lbs
35.40158.15"5.43"1.18"7.56"5.32"24.52 oz2.75 oz~11.46 oz~4.5 lbs
36.45 ACP66.77"4.76"1.13"6.18"3.78"20.11 oz2.40 oz~6.88 oz~5.5 lbs
37.45 GAP107.32"5.51"1.18"6.49"4.49"25.95 oz2.68 oz~9.53 oz~5.5lbs
38.45 GAP86.85"5.00"1.18"6.02"4.02"24.16 oz~7.76 oz~5.5lbs
39.45 GAP66.30"4.17"1.18"5.67"3.46"19.33 oz7.76 oz~5.5lbs


Glocks, and models based upon the Glock design, like the Springfield XD and XDm, are striker-fired pistols. Experts debate whether a Glock is a single-action pistol, which must first be cocked to fire, or double-action, in which cocking is part of the trigger action. The Glock is actually neither. As a striker-fired pistol, it and its brethren, are in a class by themselves.

Double-action, single-action pistols, often preferred by shooters, start in double-action, then once the first shot is fired, the pistol cocks itself for another shot. The DAK pistol, patented by Sig, is double-action only. The "K" stands for "Konstant," at least to most shooters. (It actually stands for the name of its inventor). DAK trigger-pulls don't vary. They're always the same, so a cop knows exactly where the trigger-break occurs in the shooting cycle. With double-action, single-action pistols, the trigger pull-weight for the first shot, unless cocked, will be greater than for the single-action shot. The difference adds variety and may surprise a novice -- or one who forgets the gun is cocked. The pull weight variable can be a much as six pounds or more.

Oops, forgot my finger was on the trigger. Just blew out my knee.

The longer the barrel of any pistol, the less recoil experienced. Trust me, shooting a short barrel .44 Magnum is not fun. I've seen videos of unsuspecting first-time shooters, and I chuckle as the barrel strikes their noggin.

Shoot any semi-auto with less than a firm grip and you won't get a second shot. That's because the action requires a firm resistance in order to cycle. What you'll end up with if you limp-wrist the shot, is what's called a stove-top, where the shell only partially ejects. You'll have to eject the magazine, clear the jam, re-insert the mag and re-jack the slide for the pistol to become operative again. And some semi-autos come with a grip safety, which will not permit the pistol to fire unless firmly grasped.

Speaking of jacking the slide, you cannot just insert a magazine and pull the trigger in a semi-auto and expect the gun to bang. First, you must rack (or jack) the slide. Professional trainers will instruct you to do this by pulling on the serrated back of the slide, rather than pushing back over the breech from the front serrations. That's because if you jack the slide from the front, you may catch part of your hand in the open breach. A very painful pinch, which will probably break the skin. I did it last weekend. Ouch! Talk about blood blisters... I turned to my shooting buddy and showed him my wound. He laughed and said, "Happens to us all, dude."

And it does.

Professional trainers recommend not using the slide-release button on the side of the pistol to rack the slide. There's no guarantee the buttoned release-pressure will be sufficient to load a round. Jacking the slide, i.e. pulling it back and releasing, does the best job. You know that round is ready.

Never, ever flip a revolver's cylinder back into place. You'll likely damage the cylinder, preventing rotation. You see this done on television and in the movies, but those folks don't care about reality; they're entertainment. Try that with someone else's revolver, and you'll make the owner very unhappy. Try it in a gun shop, and you may buy a new gun.


Classic Sigs and Glocks don't have safeties. Neither do revolvers.

The Colt Python has the smoothest revolver action ever created. No longer manufactured, they are the definition of "revolver cool."

Never carry an expensive gun, unless you want to lose it if you fire it at someone. Doesn't matter if you hit your target or not. The cops will take it, and they don't maintain custodial guns with quality care.

There are now four generations of Glocks, each one varying from the one before it. The latest, the fourth generation, is only available now in two models. This will change as Glock refurbishes their entire line. The primary difference in the fourth generation pistol is the choice of backstraps, i.e. the back of the grip. The intent is to allow shooters to choose a backstrap to fit their hand. It's a modification Glock picked up from Springfield's XD and XDm lines.

Much has been made of the new Springfield XD and XDm models, and rightfully so. The XD is a plastic gun like the Glock, and its design is based upon the Glock, but the Springfield has some refinements, notably three choices of backstrap, a Glock-like price, and a hard case, an auto-loader and a holster -- right-hand only -- all thrown in. The XDm is a similar gun, but with some additional refinements, such as a match barrel; smoother trigger; more capacity, and de-burring... so you don't catch in your draw.

More and more semi-autos are plastic, with steel barrels and slides. While some purists prefer all-steel semi-autos, the reasons for these changes are production cost related, and they're lighter than full metal versions -- an advantage if you carry in summer. There's no difference in quality, however, just weight, cost and a slight increase in perceived recoil.

After much deliberation and experimentation, the pistols I carry are a Glock 26 for concealed carry and car-gun, and a Springfield XDm when I carry openly, like at the range. (I don't usually carry concealed, just when I'm writing. I notice how I walk, sit and act. It's called practice. So I know what I'm writing about.)

One of the more interesting revolver designs in the last hundred years is Taurus the Judge, a five round pistol that shoots a .45 Colt Wild West style... or a .410 shotgun shell. Mix 'em up: bird, buck, slug or bullet. This revolver comes in various barrel lengths and in either a 2 1/2" chamber or a 3" chamber. I've owned both, and gave my brother in law -- a judge -- the smaller one. The pistol gets its name because judges like them. Varied, escalating rounds are measured responses to perceived threat levels -- just what you'd expect from a judge.

Besides, the look, smoke and fire of this dragon might scare an attacker to death. Just look at the size of the cylinder. Think of a three inch shotgun shell. Taurus the Judge might not kill a bear, but the bear would certainly take notice. Check out Kevin Bacon in Death Sentence, blowing off steel bathroom doors, or watch this video.


Taurus the Judge
Yes, it's a large pistol, not easily concealed. But the recoil of Taurus the Judge is less than you'd expect. It's got a soft rubber grip that absorbs much of the shock. The Judge is Taurus' fastest selling handgun ever. It's so popular as a home defense gun that three major ammo manufacturers now make special "Judge" rounds. While any shotgun shells of proper size will work in the Judge, these rounds take advantage of Taurus the Judge's rifled barrel. Most shotguns are smooth inside. The Judge has rifling, so important to make bullets spiral. These manufacturers now make rounds that hold .410 loads in a tighter pattern, taking advantage of the rifling. The Judge is lethal to twenty feet or so, unless loaded with .45 Colt or a slug. It's devastating at close range.

For some reason, .380s are all the rage. Just find ammo for one. But almost nobody recommends a .380 for defense, for while the bullet itself is almost the same as the 9mm, the .38 Special and the .357, the case and type and amount of powder behind the bullet make it the shrimp of the family. A hollow point .380 shell might not pierce a leather jacket, or even a heavy sweatshirt. And there's no guarantee a full metal jacketed round will penetrate far enough to do damage to an attacker. If pros or cops use them at all, it's usually as a third backup gun only -- for when all else has failed.

No, most cops will tell you the minimum caliber for home defense should be a 9mm or a .38 Special. A .45? Anyone shot by a .45 caliber bullet will go down. None of the smaller calibers provide that assurance. And over-penetration? Studies in ballistic jelly show a 9mm more likely to penetrate and keep going, because its got a smaller mass than a .45. Still, experts can argue about the issue all they want. Everybody knows the best home defense gun is a shotgun. But in a handgun, I'll take the .40 S&W or the .45. The Judge is loud, and I might burn the bedding. No, the .40 S&W looks like a good trade-off to me, unless one's talking about revolvers, in which case, I'd go .45. I don't think revolvers shoot the .40 S&W bullet.

9mm Parabellum = 9mm Luger = 9mm NATO. They're the same thing.

A .380 round would appear between the two little guys on the right
And yes, handguns even come in .223 (5.56 NATO). An AR-15 with no butt stock. Haven't seen a holster. Don't need one. Just put a sling on the thing and throw it over your shoulder.

Never put your finger on the trigger before you're ready to shoot. It just isn't done. Somebody says boo, you'll shoot your foot.

For a Rightie, shots patterning to the left mean either too much wind or too much trigger-finger. Shots patterning right mean too much wind or too little finger. Shots all over the place, mean you flinched. Warning: Flinch times vary; some people never open their eyes. People may die; maybe the flincher.

Don't make up a grain number, for powder or bullet, unless it's a wildcat round you know is feasible or it's a commercial or military round. If you don't know what "wildcat round" means, Google it. Some things are easy.

Any forensics expert will tell you, if you fire a handgun, you'll leave powder residue on your body and your clothing. If you're gonna have your perp wear plastic gloves, make sure of two things: They cover exposed skin, and your finger fits in the trigger-guard. Playtex long-arm plastic gloves might not be feasible. And don't go through an airport screener the day after you've been shooting. Those machine sensors are as sensitive to gun-gas as TSA junk-grabbers are to what Kim Kardashian's crammed in her cleavage.

And if you have questions, don't bother me. I'm in TSA training.


* Dirty Harry's gun was this model in blued form, known as the Model 29. In Stainless, it's the 629.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in Ben Small, handguns, Taurus the Judge | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)
Valentines Day 2014

Popular Posts

  • An interview with James M. Jackson
    Today I'm interviewing James M. Jackson, author of Bad Policy . 1. Give Us a brief bio—where you grew up, went to school, the kind of w...
  • The Perfect Place to Write
    Mountaintop ranch at 7,000 ft. Because I began my writing career as a news reporter, I could probably write in the middle of a traffic jam, ...
  • Interviewing Toby Speed
    Today I'm interviewing Toby Speed, a fellow Long Island Sister in Crime. Toby's first mystery, DEATH OVER EASY, is coming out Septem...
  • It's a Mystery To Me
    It's still a mystery to me how the plotters do it! I so admire their discipline and their technique. I'm a pantster writer and alway...
  • Writing and Other Priorities
    by Janis Patterson I try to write every day. Not because some writing guru or bestselling writer says it’s the only way to write or because...
  • I'm On a Blog Tour Too
    Like Beth Groundwater from yesterday's post, I'm also on a blog tour this month. I'll put a few of the upcoming stops at the end...
  • Dead by Midnight
    Carolyn Hart's new mystery/thriller,  Dead by Midnight , features recurring characters in the Death on Demand series, Annie and Max Darl...
  • The Magic Click
    by Janis Patterson Just to be upfront, know that I am a pantser. When I start a book I have a vague idea of what the basic shape of the stor...
  • How to Rescue a Stalled Plot
    We’ve all been there at one time or another. Your story’s going along great and all of a sudden you come to a complete stop as though a ston...
  • An Interview with Rabbi Ilene Schneider
    Today I'm interviewing mystery writer, Rabbi Ilene Schneider. Please visit and leave a comment. Tell us about yourself,  including where...

Categories

  • 'golden era of publishing' (1)
  • 'self publishing' 'kindle' 'nook' 'pubit' 'agatha nomination' novels 'short stories' 'kaye george' (1)
  • 'small press' publishing POD mushrooms 'Kaye George' (1)
  • 10 things you should never include in a crime novel (1)
  • 12/29/10 (1)
  • 13 Free Kindle mystery downloads (1)
  • 16 authors participating (1)
  • 1889 (1)
  • 1911 (1)
  • 4G (1)
  • 8-track player (1)
  • 9-11 (1)
  • 9/11 (1)
  • a book review by Jean Henry Mead (1)
  • a character named after you (1)
  • a Jean Henry Mead interview (1)
  • A Member of the Council (7)
  • A Murderer Among Us (1)
  • A Real Basket Case (1)
  • A Simple Step-by-Step Plan (1)
  • a thriller (1)
  • able danger (1)
  • Absinthe of Malice (1)
  • Accuracy (1)
  • ACMs (1)
  • advances (1)
  • adventure (1)
  • adversity (1)
  • aerial shootings (1)
  • Again (1)
  • Agatha Christie (2)
  • age (1)
  • agents (2)
  • Air Force Memorial (1)
  • Alafair Burke interview (1)
  • Alexandra Sokoloff (1)
  • All a Matter of Perspective (1)
  • Always Young Series (1)
  • Amazon (3)
  • Amazon Prime (1)
  • American Legion (1)
  • An Axe to Grind (1)
  • Analyzing fiction (1)
  • Ancient New Years celebrations (1)
  • And Don't Bring Jeremy (2)
  • Angel Lost (3)
  • Ann Charles (1)
  • Ann K. Albert (1)
  • Ann Parker (1)
  • Anne Francis (1)
  • Annie Tillery Mysteries (1)
  • apocalypse (1)
  • ARCs (1)
  • Armed Forces (2)
  • Arturo Sangalli (1)
  • aspiring writers (2)
  • Atbash (1)
  • ATF (1)
  • Atlanta Magazine (1)
  • atlantis (1)
  • atrial fibrillation (1)
  • attack (1)
  • audience (1)
  • author (2)
  • Author sales rankings (1)
  • Author-charcter interview (1)
  • authors (2)
  • autopsies (1)
  • Avery Aames (1)
  • Axel Brand (1)
  • B.F.Skinner (1)
  • Backstory (1)
  • bad guys (1)
  • Bad Policy (1)
  • bad weather (1)
  • balance (2)
  • barking rain press (1)
  • Barnaby Collins (1)
  • Barnes and Noble (1)
  • basketball (1)
  • Bears With Us (1)
  • Belarus (1)
  • Believable characters (1)
  • Ben Small (11)
  • Berkley (1)
  • berkley prime crime (1)
  • bermuda triangle (1)
  • Bernadine Fagan (2)
  • Beth Groundwater (1)
  • Beware the Jabberwock (3)
  • Beware the Jaberwock (3)
  • Bible codes (1)
  • bibliophile (1)
  • Big Dance With Death (1)
  • Big Five (1)
  • Big Six (1)
  • bikinis (1)
  • Birds (1)
  • birthday (2)
  • birthdays (1)
  • Blake Shelton (1)
  • blame (1)
  • Blessing or Curse (2)
  • blog (1)
  • Blog Book Tour Guide (1)
  • blog hop (1)
  • blog prizes (1)
  • blog stops (1)
  • Blog Tour (5)
  • Blog Tour for Bears With Us (1)
  • Blog Tour Tips (1)
  • Blog Tours (2)
  • blog writing (1)
  • blogger (1)
  • Blogger Gadget (1)
  • blogging (3)
  • blood clots (1)
  • Blood-Red Pencil blogs on e-books (1)
  • Bloody Dagger Award (1)
  • blurbs (1)
  • Bob Lee Swagger (1)
  • Bob Sanchez (13)
  • Book Cover Art (1)
  • Book covers (1)
  • book fairs (1)
  • Book Launches (1)
  • book marketing (2)
  • book promo event (1)
  • book release (1)
  • book review (1)
  • book reviews (1)
  • book selling (1)
  • Book Tea (1)
  • Book titles (1)
  • books (2)
  • bookstores (1)
  • Bouchercon (1)
  • bouncer (2)
  • brad pitt (1)
  • brain bleed (1)
  • brainstorm (1)
  • brainstorming (1)
  • branding (1)
  • bridge (1)
  • broca's Brain (1)
  • Bruce DeSilva (1)
  • Burke Hill (1)
  • Burying One's Head in the Sand (1)
  • But You Don't See Me (1)
  • caffeine (1)
  • California Writers Club (1)
  • camaraderie (1)
  • Candlesticks (1)
  • Carl Honore (1)
  • carl jung (1)
  • Carl Sagan (1)
  • Carlene Rae Dater (1)
  • Carolyn Hart (1)
  • Carrie Underwood (1)
  • Castle Doctrine (2)
  • Cattle Kate (1)
  • cattlemen (1)
  • Cause of Death (1)
  • CBS (1)
  • CC Sisters in Crime (1)
  • cell phones (1)
  • Central Coast Writing Conference (2)
  • chair yoga (1)
  • challenges to your writing (1)
  • change (1)
  • Chanukah Guilt (1)
  • character (1)
  • character building (2)
  • Character Development (1)
  • character driven mysteries (1)
  • characterization (1)
  • characters (1)
  • Charlaine Harris (1)
  • Charlene Knadle (1)
  • Charles McCord (1)
  • Cheese Shop Mysteries (1)
  • Cheryl Kaye Tardif (1)
  • Chiangmai (1)
  • child murderer (1)
  • childhood memories (1)
  • Children of the Fog (1)
  • Choke (1)
  • chracters (1)
  • Christian horror (1)
  • Christmas around the world (1)
  • Christmas craft or boutiques (1)
  • Christmas mysteries (1)
  • Christmas mystery (1)
  • CIA (3)
  • Clabbered by Camembert (1)
  • cliff-hangers (1)
  • cliffhanger (1)
  • closing lines (2)
  • clues (1)
  • cold (1)
  • cold case (1)
  • Cold War (2)
  • collage (1)
  • collaging (1)
  • Collorad (1)
  • colorado (1)
  • coming events (1)
  • common sense (1)
  • Community Spirit (1)
  • computer (1)
  • conferences (2)
  • contemporary romance (2)
  • contemporary romance. (1)
  • Contract (1)
  • Control-feed vs. Push-feed (1)
  • conversation (1)
  • Coroner (1)
  • Coster tothe Light (1)
  • Court cases (1)
  • court-martial (1)
  • cowboy romance. (1)
  • cozies (1)
  • cozy (1)
  • cozy mystery (8)
  • craft of writing (3)
  • crash investigation (1)
  • createspace (1)
  • creating (1)
  • creating character (1)
  • creating characters (1)
  • creative writing (2)
  • Creativity exercises (1)
  • Creepy stories (1)
  • crime fiction (1)
  • Crime Fiction set in Santa Monica (1)
  • critique groups (1)
  • cross-category novels (1)
  • crosswords (1)
  • cruise ships (1)
  • Curing write4rs block (1)
  • cut and paste (1)
  • Dan Brown (1)
  • Danger Within (1)
  • Dangerous Impulses (2)
  • Dangerous Relations (1)
  • Daniel Silva (1)
  • DARK MUSIC (1)
  • Dark Shadows (1)
  • Dashiell Hammett (1)
  • Dave King (1)
  • Dead by Midnight (1)
  • Dead Red Cadillac (1)
  • Dead Red Heart (1)
  • deadlines (1)
  • Deadly Currents (1)
  • Death on Demand series (1)
  • DEATH OVER EASY (1)
  • death threats (1)
  • deciions about your writing career (1)
  • defense (1)
  • Dell Inspiron (1)
  • dental bridgework (1)
  • Deputy Tempe Crabtree (2)
  • Deputy Tempe Crabtree mysteries (4)
  • Deputy Tempe Crabtree mystery (1)
  • Deputy Tempe Crabtree series (2)
  • derecho (2)
  • Derringers (1)
  • Designed to Kill (1)
  • detail (1)
  • detective (1)
  • determination (1)
  • Diablo's Shadow (2)
  • Diane deGroat (1)
  • distracted (1)
  • distractions (1)
  • Do It Yourself Mystery (1)
  • double jeopardy (1)
  • double standards (1)
  • Dr. Allen Malnak (1)
  • Dr.Keith D. Wilson (1)
  • Drop Dead Zone (2)
  • drowning (1)
  • DUI (1)
  • E-books are trending (1)
  • Earl Staggs (7)
  • East Nashville tornado (1)
  • ebook marketing (1)
  • ebook publishing (1)
  • ebooks (1)
  • ECHOES IN THE DARK (1)
  • Edgar Allan Poe (1)
  • Edgar Award (1)
  • editing (2)
  • editing and rewriting (1)
  • editors (1)
  • Editors and publishers (1)
  • education (1)
  • elaine viets (1)
  • Elizabeth George (1)
  • Elizabeth Lynn Casey (2)
  • Ellen Liddy Watson-Averell (1)
  • Ellen Waston-Averell (1)
  • Ellery Queen (1)
  • emails (1)
  • emotion (1)
  • emotions (1)
  • Empty Time (1)
  • end of the world (1)
  • entitlement mentality (1)
  • Epicon (1)
  • Eppie award (1)
  • ereaders (2)
  • Escape on the Wind (1)
  • espionage (1)
  • Europe (1)
  • Evelyn David (1)
  • evoking a mood (1)
  • extra money (1)
  • F. M. Meredith (7)
  • F.M. Meredith (1)
  • Fabio (1)
  • Facebook (1)
  • Facebook Group (1)
  • Facial Expressions (1)
  • fall reading (1)
  • family (3)
  • family visits (1)
  • fans (1)
  • Fantasy (2)
  • Far East (1)
  • FAT CAT (2)
  • Fate (1)
  • FBI (2)
  • FBI agent (3)
  • February (1)
  • FedEx (1)
  • feel good (1)
  • fiction (1)
  • fictional characters (1)
  • field sobriety tests (1)
  • Final Respects (1)
  • finding time to write (2)
  • first degree murder trial (1)
  • fizzled plot (2)
  • Flogging Molly (1)
  • floods (1)
  • Floppy disc (1)
  • florida (1)
  • flying (1)
  • folklore (1)
  • forensic psychiatrist (1)
  • Forest Park (1)
  • Forever Young (3)
  • Forever Young - a Blessing or Curse (2)
  • Forever Young- Blessing or Curse (1)
  • Forever Young-Blessing or Curse (3)
  • Forever Young: Blessing or Curse (1)
  • Forever Young: Blessing or Curse (7)
  • formatting (1)
  • Fountain of Youth (2)
  • Fourth of July (1)
  • Frank (1)
  • Frank Scully (1)
  • Fred Russell (1)
  • free books (1)
  • free ebook (1)
  • free for Kindle (1)
  • Freebie (2)
  • freedom (2)
  • freedom of speech (1)
  • Fresno (1)
  • Fringe Benefits (1)
  • fun (1)
  • Game Face (6)
  • Geico commercial (1)
  • Gene Rodenberry (1)
  • Generational Differences (1)
  • genres (1)
  • Getting Back to Normal (1)
  • ghosts (1)
  • Girl of My Dreams (1)
  • Giving Thanks for Our Make Mine Mystery Bloggers (2)
  • Giving Up the Ghost (1)
  • Glock (1)
  • Golden Age of Mystery (1)
  • Good Grief in Lottawatah (1)
  • good mystery reads (1)
  • good things (1)
  • Google Plus (1)
  • Google+ (1)
  • Goose Hunting (1)
  • grammar (1)
  • grandkids (1)
  • Gray Wolf Mountain (1)
  • Greg McKenzie (8)
  • grizzlies (1)
  • Grover Cleveland (1)
  • Guadalajara (1)
  • guest authors (1)
  • guest blog (1)
  • Guilty Pressure of Crime Fiction (1)
  • Habits (1)
  • Halloween (1)
  • Halloween Mysteries (1)
  • handguns (1)
  • hangings (1)
  • Hank Phillippi Ryan (1)
  • Happy Halloween (1)
  • Happy New Year (1)
  • Hardboiled (1)
  • haunted houses (1)
  • Haymarket Affair (1)
  • HDTV (1)
  • Help (1)
  • Hemingway (1)
  • Her Handyman (3)
  • Her Handyman. (1)
  • Hercule Poirot (1)
  • heroines (2)
  • high concept (1)
  • High Desert California Writers Club (1)
  • historical mystery novel (1)
  • Hitler's Silver Box (1)
  • hoarders (1)
  • Holiday reads (1)
  • Holidays (1)
  • Holly Hunter (1)
  • Holy Land (1)
  • Home Defense (2)
  • Home Wreckers (1)
  • Homophones (1)
  • Honey West (1)
  • Hong Kong (2)
  • Honor Flight (1)
  • hook (1)
  • hope (1)
  • how to (1)
  • How to Resuce a Stalled Plot (1)
  • How to Write a Book (1)
  • humidifier (1)
  • Humor (2)
  • humorous mystery (2)
  • Hunter Files (1)
  • Hunting on Ice (1)
  • I See You (1)
  • I swear (1)
  • If Wishes Were True (1)
  • ignorance (1)
  • iguanas (1)
  • Ilene Schneider (1)
  • Incense and Muriel (1)
  • indie authors (1)
  • Indie publishing (1)
  • indies (1)
  • injustice (1)
  • inspiration (2)
  • International Worker's Day (1)
  • internet (2)
  • interrogation (1)
  • interview (1)
  • interviews (1)
  • intrigue (1)
  • Investigation (1)
  • Invisible Path (1)
  • Isle de Paris (1)
  • it's (1)
  • italics (1)
  • its (1)
  • J. Edgar Hoover (1)
  • J.D. Webb (1)
  • Jack Bates (1)
  • James Averell (1)
  • James M. Jackson (1)
  • James Patterson (1)
  • James Watson (1)
  • Janet Cantrell (1)
  • Janet Christian (1)
  • Japanese Americans (1)
  • jar (1)
  • Jaz LeMieux (2)
  • Jean Henry Mead (19)
  • Jean Herny Mead (1)
  • Jeff Bridges (1)
  • Jelly Belly (1)
  • Jenny Crusie (1)
  • Jenny Milchman (1)
  • jimmy hoffa (1)
  • Joe Konrath (1)
  • jogging (1)
  • John Nolan (1)
  • John Wayne (1)
  • Johnny Depp (1)
  • jury duty (1)
  • Justice Department (1)
  • Jusu (1)
  • Kabul (1)
  • Katherine Hall Page (1)
  • Katherine Tomlinson (1)
  • kathleen kaska (1)
  • Kathryn Elizabeth Jones (1)
  • Kaye George (5)
  • Kaye George intervview (1)
  • keeping the action going (1)
  • Ken Kesey (1)
  • Kensington (1)
  • Keystone predators (1)
  • KGB (2)
  • Kill Leader (1)
  • Killer Career (11)
  • Killer Career on Kindle (2)
  • Killer Nashville (1)
  • Kindle (3)
  • Korean War Memorial (1)
  • KP Select (1)
  • L.J. Sellers (1)
  • Labor Day (1)
  • lands and grooves (1)
  • large print (1)
  • late (1)
  • Laura Bradford (2)
  • Lawrence Block (2)
  • Lazarus Syndrome or NDE (1)
  • LCC (1)
  • Lea Chan (1)
  • Leadville (1)
  • Lee Child (1)
  • Lefty Award Winner (1)
  • Lesley Diehl (1)
  • Let it Sew (2)
  • Lethal Business (1)
  • Libby McKinmer (9)
  • license (1)
  • License to Lie (1)
  • Life and Casualty Insurance Company (1)
  • Life events put a kink in things (1)
  • life getting in the way of writing (1)
  • lightning (1)
  • Linda Frank (1)
  • LInda Maria Frank (1)
  • Lingering Spirit (1)
  • Little Mountain (2)
  • Live at the Greek Theatre (1)
  • Loch Ness Monster (1)
  • Logan and Cafferty mystery-suspense series (1)
  • Logan and Cafferty mystery/suspense series (1)
  • Lois J.Peterson (1)
  • Lonely hearts (1)
  • Long Gone (1)
  • Long Island (2)
  • Long Island Sisters in Crime (1)
  • Lord of the Flies (1)
  • Lorelei Quinn (1)
  • Love (1)
  • Love is Murder Mystery Conference (1)
  • Loyalty Day (1)
  • luck (1)
  • Luke Bryan (1)
  • Lynn Cahoon (21)
  • Lyrical Press (1)
  • macular degeneration (1)
  • Made It Moment (1)
  • Madison County Writers Guild (1)
  • magic (2)
  • magnetizer (1)
  • Make It Legal (1)
  • Make Mine Mystery (24)
  • making time for writing (1)
  • Malice Domestic (2)
  • Malice Domestic finalist (1)
  • mall walking (1)
  • Manitou Springs (1)
  • Mar Preston (3)
  • Marathon Motor Works (1)
  • Mariah (1)
  • Marian Edelman Borden (1)
  • Marilyn Levinson (7)
  • Marilyn Merdith (1)
  • Marilyn Meredith (20)
  • Mariyn Meredith (1)
  • Mark Troy (24)
  • Mark W. Danielson (14)
  • marketing (1)
  • marketing plan (1)
  • Mass Shooting in Santa Monica (1)
  • Mauser (1)
  • May Day (1)
  • Maypole (1)
  • medical examiner (1)
  • Medicare fraud (2)
  • Meg London (1)
  • Melvin Morse (1)
  • Memorial Day (1)
  • Men of Mystery (1)
  • mercenary (1)
  • Mercury's Rise (1)
  • Merry Christmas (2)
  • Methodist Publishing House (1)
  • Metro Nashville Citizen Police Academy (1)
  • Mexican drug gangs (1)
  • Michael Crichton (1)
  • Michael Orenduff (1)
  • Microsoft Surface RT (1)
  • microwave (1)
  • Midnight Ink (1)
  • Miranda Lambert (1)
  • Miranda warning (1)
  • Misery (1)
  • Miss Marple (1)
  • Missing and Exploited Children (1)
  • Missing at sea (1)
  • Missing child (1)
  • mistreatment of writers (1)
  • misuse of words (1)
  • Mixed Messages (1)
  • mob (1)
  • Model 70 (1)
  • momentum (1)
  • Monument for the Matyrs (1)
  • Morgan Mandel (58)
  • Morgan Mandel's Website - http://morganmandel.com (1)
  • movie critics (1)
  • movies (1)
  • multiple projects (1)
  • muntaintop ranch (1)
  • murder (2)
  • Murder a la Christie (1)
  • Murder by the Old Maine Stream (1)
  • Murder in the Air (1)
  • Murder in the Main Woods (1)
  • Murder on the Interstate (4)
  • Murder on the Interstate Earl Staggs (1)
  • muse (1)
  • music (1)
  • mysteries (9)
  • Mysterious chocolate chip cookies (1)
  • mysterious dogs (1)
  • mystery (14)
  • mystery author. (1)
  • mystery authors (2)
  • Mystery Book Review (1)
  • mystery book reviews (1)
  • Mystery Lovers Kitchen (1)
  • mystery novel giveaway (1)
  • Mystery of Spider Mountain (1)
  • mystery settings (1)
  • Mystery We Write blog tour (1)
  • Mystery We Write fall blog tour 2012 (1)
  • Mystery We Write Virtual Holiday Book Tour (1)
  • mystery writer (1)
  • mystery writers (3)
  • mystery writing (2)
  • mystery writing craft (2)
  • Nancy Atherton (1)
  • Nancy Lynn Jarvis (1)
  • Nancy Williams (1)
  • Nashville (2)
  • Nashville Banner (1)
  • Nashville Magazine (1)
  • national geographic (1)
  • Natural Disasters (1)
  • Neanderthal (1)
  • neanderthal gene (1)
  • near death experience (1)
  • neil gaiman (1)
  • Nero Wolfe (1)
  • Nessie (1)
  • Netflix (1)
  • Networking (1)
  • new authors (1)
  • new book (1)
  • new mystery (1)
  • New Year's resolutions (3)
  • news (1)
  • newspaper reporter (1)
  • newspapers (2)
  • Nick and Nora Charles (1)
  • Night Shadows Press (2)
  • Nightfall (1)
  • Nightfalls (1)
  • No Bells (4)
  • No Boys Allowed (1)
  • No Dice (1)
  • No Escape (2)
  • Noir (1)
  • NOLA conference (1)
  • nomads (1)
  • nonfiction (1)
  • Northwest Angle (1)
  • Nosy neighbors (1)
  • nosy neighbors in mysteries (1)
  • not enough readers? (1)
  • Nothing better to do (1)
  • Notre Dame (1)
  • novels (2)
  • NSA (1)
  • Oakhurst (1)
  • obvious (1)
  • occupy wallstreet (1)
  • Officer Stacey Milligan (1)
  • On Demand (1)
  • On Writing (1)
  • One Trick at a Time: How to start winning at bridge (1)
  • opening lines (2)
  • Opryland Hotel (1)
  • Orange County (1)
  • orphan (1)
  • Outlining (1)
  • Overture to Disaster (1)
  • overwhelmed (1)
  • ownership (1)
  • pacemaker (1)
  • pantsing (1)
  • paranormal cozy (1)
  • paranormal romance (1)
  • paranormal thriller (3)
  • Paris (1)
  • Part 3 -- The Pistol (1)
  • password (1)
  • Pat Browning (2)
  • Pat Hernandez (1)
  • Patricia Gligor interview by Jean Henry Mead (1)
  • Peg Cochran (1)
  • pen names (1)
  • Penny MacKenzie (1)
  • Perdido Key (1)
  • persistence (2)
  • personal mysteries (1)
  • perspective (1)
  • pet peeves (1)
  • Peter Pan (1)
  • Philip Marlowe (1)
  • physical exam (1)
  • PI's (1)
  • Pilikia Is My Business (1)
  • pills (1)
  • piracy (1)
  • platform (1)
  • plot (1)
  • plotting (2)
  • Plotting vs. Pantsing (1)
  • Plug your mysteries (1)
  • Point of Impact (1)
  • point of view (1)
  • Police accuracy (1)
  • police misconduct (1)
  • Porterville Art Assocaiton Christmas Boutique (1)
  • Post Cold War (1)
  • post-Cold War (1)
  • post-Cold War thriller (2)
  • premise (1)
  • preparation (1)
  • presentation (1)
  • pride (1)
  • priorities (1)
  • procrastination (1)
  • progress (1)
  • Progressive Mystery (1)
  • promoting (2)
  • promotion (4)
  • proofing (1)
  • Providence (1)
  • PSWA (2)
  • PSWA Conference (1)
  • PSWA Writing Conference (1)
  • PTSD (1)
  • publication (1)
  • Publicists (1)
  • publicity (2)
  • publisher bashing (1)
  • publishers (1)
  • publishing (3)
  • publishing etiquette (1)
  • publishing novels (1)
  • Publishing today (1)
  • publishing traditional agents BookEnds Berkley (1)
  • Pullman Strike (1)
  • pyramids (1)
  • Pythagoras (1)
  • QR codes (1)
  • Quirks (1)
  • quirky characters (1)
  • quotation marks (1)
  • quotes (1)
  • R.P. Dahlke (1)
  • Raging Water (6)
  • Ramona DeFelice Long; Greenville SC (1)
  • Randy Rawls (1)
  • Randy Rawls (4)
  • Rascal (1)
  • reaching readers (1)
  • readers (1)
  • readers behaving badly (1)
  • reading (2)
  • real estate mysteries (1)
  • realting to characters (1)
  • Rebecca Dahlke (1)
  • recharging your creative batteries (2)
  • recovery center (1)
  • red flag (1)
  • red herring (1)
  • red herrings (1)
  • Release date (1)
  • research (1)
  • respect (1)
  • restless gene (1)
  • Retro TV (1)
  • Return of the Fae (1)
  • reviews (1)
  • revision (1)
  • Rhode Island (1)
  • Rhonda Dossett (1)
  • Richard S. Wheeler (1)
  • Ridgecrest (2)
  • Ridgewriters (2)
  • rifling (1)
  • Rip-Off (2)
  • Risky Business (1)
  • Rita Mae Brown (1)
  • Rob Walker (1)
  • rocks (1)
  • Rocky Bluff P.D. (2)
  • Rocky Bluff P.D. crime series (2)
  • Rocky Bluff PD Mysteries (2)
  • role model (1)
  • Roman Circus (1)
  • romance with supernatural elements (1)
  • romances (1)
  • romantic comedy (1)
  • royalties (2)
  • royalty statements (1)
  • running (1)
  • Ryder (1)
  • Saint Nick (1)
  • San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department (1)
  • Santa (1)
  • Santa Monica (1)
  • Sargent Shriver (1)
  • Sasscer Hill (1)
  • Saturday Evening Post (1)
  • scams (1)
  • scandal (1)
  • scary (1)
  • Scheduling (1)
  • School Bus Safety (1)
  • Scrambled (1)
  • screenwriters (1)
  • searing heat (1)
  • seasonal mysteries (1)
  • Secret of the Scroll (3)
  • Secrets in the Fairy Chimneys (1)
  • self publishing (1)
  • self-publishing (2)
  • senior sleuth novels (1)
  • seniors (1)
  • series bible (1)
  • setting (1)
  • setting in mysteries (1)
  • sex (1)
  • sexy women (1)
  • SF Writer's Conference (1)
  • Sgt. Derek Pacifico (1)
  • Shamus Award (1)
  • Sharon Ervin (1)
  • sherlock holmes (1)
  • sherlocke holmes (1)
  • Shooter (1)
  • shooting accuracy (1)
  • shopping (1)
  • short mystery (2)
  • Short Mystery Stories (1)
  • Short Stoires by Earl Staggs (1)
  • Short Stories (6)
  • Short Stories of Earl Staggs (1)
  • short story (1)
  • short story collection (2)
  • Shotgun Home Defense (1)
  • should you care about the numbers? (1)
  • Sid Chance (4)
  • sidekicks (1)
  • Sig Sauer (1)
  • signings (1)
  • Skype (1)
  • sleuth (1)
  • sleuths (1)
  • small business saturday (1)
  • small press (1)
  • smart phones (2)
  • smart women (1)
  • Smashwords (1)
  • Smudge (1)
  • So you want to be a writer (1)
  • soccer (1)
  • Social media (3)
  • Sol Stein on Writing (1)
  • solving the mystery (1)
  • Sookie Stackhouse (1)
  • South Korea (1)
  • southern sewing circle mystery (2)
  • Soviet Union (1)
  • spam (1)
  • Sports Illustrated (1)
  • Spring cleaning for writers and readers (1)
  • Spring Fling 2012 conference (1)
  • Springville Community Club (1)
  • spy story (2)
  • St. Louis (2)
  • Star Trek (1)
  • Stephen Hunter (1)
  • Stephen King (2)
  • Steve Osborn (1)
  • Stirring up dust (1)
  • Story ideas (1)
  • Story Map (1)
  • Storytelling (2)
  • stress (1)
  • Stupid Kindle Stories (1)
  • Submerged (1)
  • submission requirements (1)
  • Success at last (1)
  • sudoku (1)
  • suicide (1)
  • suicide prevention (1)
  • summer (1)
  • summer vacation (1)
  • sunset (1)
  • Supernatural horror (1)
  • Supernatural Mystery (1)
  • surgery (1)
  • suspense (1)
  • swear (1)
  • Sweetwater Valley (1)
  • Sylvia Dickey Smith (1)
  • tablet (1)
  • tagging (1)
  • tags (1)
  • taking notes (1)
  • Talk Dirty Yiddish (1)
  • Tall Chambers (1)
  • Tana French (1)
  • Taurus the Judge (1)
  • taxes (1)
  • Taylor Swift (1)
  • Temporary Roommates (1)
  • Ten Little Indians (1)
  • Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (2)
  • Tension and humor (1)
  • Terry Ambrose (1)
  • Tess Gerritsen (1)
  • Texas (1)
  • Texas Aggies (1)
  • The Andromeda Strain (1)
  • The Arranger (1)
  • The Bad and The Murderous (1)
  • The Beverly Hillbillies (1)
  • The Bloggers of Make Mine Mystery (1)
  • The Bull Rider's Brother (8)
  • The Bull Rider's Manager (7)
  • The Chameleon Chase (1)
  • The Dead Genius. The Hotel Dick (1)
  • The Devil' Foothold (1)
  • The e-book phenomena (1)
  • The Fear Artist (1)
  • The Good (1)
  • the hanging of Cattle Kate (1)
  • The Heat (1)
  • The Hunter Files (1)
  • The importance of suspense (2)
  • The Innocent Never Knew (1)
  • The Lone Ranger (1)
  • The Madonna Ghost (1)
  • The Mystery of the Missing Blank (1)
  • The Mystery Writers (1)
  • The Next Big Thing (1)
  • the occupy movement (1)
  • The perfect place to write (1)
  • The Pit and the Pendulum (1)
  • The Poksu Conspiracy (2)
  • The Pot Thief series (1)
  • the power of secrets (1)
  • The rest of the story - Progressive Mystery Ending (1)
  • The Surest Poison (1)
  • the Sweetwater tragedy (2)
  • The Thin Man (1)
  • The William Tell Overture (1)
  • The Woman in Black (1)
  • The Writer's Dream (1)
  • the writing life (1)
  • their (1)
  • there (1)
  • they're (1)
  • thorns (1)
  • Thorns on Roses (1)
  • three mystery series (1)
  • Three Rules of Dialogue (1)
  • thriller (5)
  • thrillers (2)
  • thrillers. (1)
  • thunderstorms (1)
  • Tides and Tiding (1)
  • Tiger Woods (1)
  • Tim Hallinan (1)
  • Time (1)
  • time management (2)
  • Titanic 2012 (1)
  • Title for collection (1)
  • Title IX (1)
  • titles (1)
  • To Hell in a Handbasket (1)
  • too many writers? (1)
  • TOPGUN (1)
  • tornadoes (1)
  • torsional vibration (1)
  • tough women (1)
  • traditional books (1)
  • traditional publishing (1)
  • Tragedy (1)
  • transitions (1)
  • travel (2)
  • traveling (1)
  • Trayvon Martin (1)
  • Tricia Lea (1)
  • twins (1)
  • twists and turns (1)
  • Twitter (1)
  • two things (1)
  • Two Wrongs (3)
  • Uganda (1)
  • unbelievable (1)
  • unexpected (1)
  • Unfinished Business (1)
  • Unleavened Dead (1)
  • unsolved mysteries (1)
  • Untreed Reads (1)
  • Using Bad Weather to Your Advantage (1)
  • vacation break (1)
  • Val Lyon (2)
  • Vicki Britton (1)
  • video recorder (1)
  • Viet Nam (1)
  • villain (1)
  • villains (2)
  • Vinspire Publishing (1)
  • virtual blog tour (1)
  • virtual book tour (1)
  • Visalia Taste of the Arts (1)
  • Vision boards (1)
  • W. Soliman (2)
  • Walgreen's (1)
  • wartime (1)
  • Washington DC (1)
  • Water for Elephants (1)
  • Weather (1)
  • Weather villains (1)
  • weddings (1)
  • weddngs (1)
  • Wendy Soliman (2)
  • Westerners: Candid and Historic Interviews (1)
  • what is your audience? (1)
  • What Makes a Book Great? Morgan Mandel (1)
  • What you don't know (1)
  • where to watch (1)
  • Where To Watch World War Z (2)
  • Where To Watch World War Z Full Movie Online (1)
  • white rabbit (1)
  • Who'll Kill Agnes (1)
  • why mysteries (1)
  • Why Should I Care? Morgan Mandel (1)
  • why write (1)
  • Wi-Fi (1)
  • William Kent Krueger (1)
  • Willow Bridge Bookstore (1)
  • Winchester Model 70 (1)
  • windstorm (1)
  • WIP (1)
  • wolves (1)
  • woman private eye (1)
  • Women sleuths (1)
  • woo-woo (1)
  • word of mouth (1)
  • words (1)
  • Worked for Me (1)
  • working (1)
  • World Trade Center Attack (1)
  • World War II (1)
  • World War II Memorial (1)
  • World War Z (2)
  • World War Z full movie (2)
  • World War Z full movie online (2)
  • World War Z HD (2)
  • World War Z HQ (2)
  • World War Z movie (1)
  • World War Z no limit (1)
  • World War Z online (1)
  • world war z review (1)
  • Write what you know (1)
  • writers (5)
  • writers block (1)
  • writers conferences (1)
  • Writers Homicide School (1)
  • writers voice (1)
  • writing (13)
  • writing a children's mystery (1)
  • writing a mystery series (1)
  • Writing a series (1)
  • writing advice (2)
  • writing aid (1)
  • Writing and Selling a Mystery Novel (1)
  • Writing block (1)
  • writing characters (1)
  • Writing craft (2)
  • writing distractions (1)
  • writing groups (1)
  • writing habits (1)
  • writing heroes (2)
  • writing hints (1)
  • writing jumpstarts (1)
  • writing mysteries (2)
  • writing new book (1)
  • Writing on a mountaintop (1)
  • writing research (1)
  • writing rules (1)
  • writing time (2)
  • writing tips (2)
  • writng (1)
  • written by Jean Henry Mead (1)
  • wrting (1)
  • Wyoming (1)
  • Wyoming Territory (1)
  • Yahoo (1)
  • year in writing (1)
  • yin yang (1)
  • yoga (1)
  • yoga for writers (1)
  • Zagros Mountains (1)
  • Zoned For Murder (1)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2013 (114)
    • ►  July (17)
    • ►  June (18)
    • ►  May (13)
    • ►  April (17)
    • ►  March (17)
    • ►  February (15)
    • ►  January (17)
  • ►  2012 (174)
    • ►  December (14)
    • ►  November (15)
    • ►  October (18)
    • ►  September (19)
    • ►  August (16)
    • ►  July (12)
    • ►  June (6)
    • ►  May (15)
    • ►  April (17)
    • ►  March (13)
    • ►  February (16)
    • ►  January (13)
  • ►  2011 (185)
    • ►  December (14)
    • ►  November (17)
    • ►  October (21)
    • ►  September (15)
    • ►  August (14)
    • ►  July (13)
    • ►  June (12)
    • ►  May (16)
    • ►  April (15)
    • ►  March (17)
    • ►  February (13)
    • ►  January (18)
  • ▼  2010 (30)
    • ►  December (17)
    • ▼  November (13)
      • Progressive Mystery Begins Today by Morgan Mandel
      • Lonely Hearts
      • The Three Rules of Dialogue
      • Giving Thanks
      • TEN YEARS, FOR PETE’S SAKE!
      • Handgun Tips for Writers
      • Old-Fashioned Outlook
      • Who Do You Love? by Mark Troy
      • Second Half of My Blog Tour
      • Trending by Morgan Mandel
      • Giving Something Back
      • Invisible Path
      • Making Extra Money by Writing???? by Christine Duncan
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile