Posted in Blog Tour, Guest Post

Blog Tour and Guest Post for Ghost and the Haunted House by Carmen Radtke

 


Ghost and the Haunted House
(Genie and Adriana Darling Cozy Paranormal Ghost Mysteries)
by Carmen Radtke

About Ghost and the Haunted House


Ghost and the Haunted House (Genie and Adriana Darling Cozy Paranormal Ghost Mysteries)
Paranormal Cozy Mystery
4th in Series
Setting – Fictional small town in New England
Independently Published (May 29, 2024)
Print length ‏ : ‎ 194 pages
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0D47ZLQWP

Could quaint Cobblewood Cove be a hotbed for black magic?

Genie and her ghostly great-great-aunt Adriana have been too busy with their gelato business and helping with the restoration of the old speakeasy to notice that something isn’t quite right in their small town.

Until pranks with touch of the macabre haunt the neighborhood, right before Halloween.

But it gets worse.

When a locked room murder case points straight at a connection to dark forces, the sleuthing duo fears for the living – and the not-quite so departed.

Can they root out the evil in their midst before it ends Adriana’s happy afterlife – forever?

About Carmen Radtke

Carmen Radtke has spent most of her life with ink on her fingers and a dangerously high pile of books and newspapers by her side.

She has worked as a newspaper reporter on two continents and always dreamt of becoming a novelist and screenwriter.

When she found herself crouched under her dining table, typing away on a novel between two earthquakes in Christchurch, New Zealand, she realised she was hooked for life.

The shaken but stirring novel made it to the longlist of the Mslexia competition, and her next book and first mystery, The Case Of The Missing Bride, was a finalist in the Malice Domestic competition in a year without a winner. Since then she has penned several more cozy mysteries, including the Jack and Frances series set in the 1930s and the Genie and Adriana Darling series.

Carmen now lives in Italy with her human and her four-legged family.

GUEST POST

How (not) to write

Picture this. A quiet, airy room, with a mood board for pictures on the wall, a noticeboard with plot points, character names and a rough chapter outline next to it. The scent of freshly brewed coffee refreshes my senses, and peace reigns supreme while I create a whole world with the touch of my fingertips.

Except, it’s all fiction.

This is how I would love to work ideally, although my first choice will forever be scribbling away in my notebooks in the cafés of Montparnasse in the early 1920s, and then go home and type up my masterworks. Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald and Gertrude Stein have a lot to answer for.

At least my workspace is also slightly on the bohemian (translate: messy) side, and that no matter its size or location.

Reference books are piled up, in case my memory fails me. Crumpled pieces of paper with illegible notes abound – note to self: buy decent pens or work on your handwriting for goodness’ sake. Half a dozen small notebooks in which I keep notes on – well, anything.

Their actual usefulness is highly suspect due to the myriad of entries that make no longer sense.

One example: The source? An excellent question, you will agree. If you know the context. The source of the Nile? The source of money? That flaky pastry I can still taste on my tongue and feel on my hips? I’ve got no idea.

Alas, if I ever throw away these notebooks, their importance will reveal itself the instant the recycling van speeds away. At least it’s in a good tradition; wasn’t it J.K. Rowling who jotted down the original Harry Potter idea on a napkin?

The coffee mug is filled with herbal tea, to tell my brain once and for all that the coffee-break is over and a little bit of help would be nice, thank you very much.

Oooh, there’s a leftover biscuit. I’ll munch it, and then I’ll seriously get down to work. I promise.  Now let me just find the spoon to stir my tea, and check my emails one last time.

The funny thing is, on a good day it still takes me close to an hour from intending to write to physically put words onto the screen, but then I get lured in to this world that I not so much create as give in to. I write until my eyes blur, or the cat, an elderly rescue with lots of serious health issues, cries for attention.

That’s the hardest bit, the struggle to end a writing session. I’ve developed a way to write with the cat on my lap for a while, but there’s only so much time I can twist myself into a human pretzel before everything aches.

On a bad day, when all the words appear clumsy and ring wrong in my ears, I argue with my characters, and myself, and I curse myself for the mess on my too small desk. Because I can’t possibly be expected to create magic on the page under these challenging circumstances, right?

Now, if I could have that quiet, airy room, where no cat scratches at the door to complain about being shut out, or amble through the leafy streets of Paris on my way to my favourite writing jaunt or a congenial drink with like-minded people of style, wit and sophistication, surely it would be different. Instead, I sip the by now cold tea, give a bitter laugh, and walk away.

Luckily, I have something Hemingway didn’t have; a group of supportive writers who constantly check emails and Facebook to commiserate with me and others or cheer me on.

Which is why you find me still here, at my creatively arranged desk, marvelling at the worlds I can create, and the wonders I can find in my bohemian arrangement. I think I spotted a stapler I’ve been searching for ages.

It’s hard to believe I’ve written more than ten novels under these conditions, but there they are, ranging from period mysteries to contemporary, traditional to ghost cozy, and one work of literary fiction.

Over the course of penning the Alyssa Chalmers mysteries, Jack and Frances mysteries, Eve Holdsworth mysteries, and now the Genie and Adriana Darling mysteries, I’ve researched different eras, different towns and countries, upper class and working class, and lived vicariously through my characters (including a certain amount of envy).

Yet I’m always excited to return to them. They’re my friends. Sometimes they defy me, or exasperate me, or lead me astray, but they’re always there. Even if I can’t chronicle their adventures in a café in Montparnasse.

My latest move allowed me to upgrade from a tray to a room with a mood-board on the wall. Alas, it’s also freezing in winter, stifling in summer, and too far from the cat to spend more than an hour or two there . . .

Author Links:

Website – www.carmenradtke.com

Facebook – www.facebook.com/Carmen-Radtke-1958399947738868/

Twitter/X – https://www.Twitter.com/CarmenRadtke1

Purchase Links: Amazon

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

July 1 – Mystery, Thrillers & Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

July 1 – Eskimo Princess Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 2 – Christy’s Cozy Corners – CHARACTER GUEST POST

July 2 – Socrates Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 3 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

July 3 – Books, Ramblings, and Tea – RECIPE

July 4 – OFF

July 5 – Angel’s Book Nook – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

July 5 – fundinmental – SPOTLIGHT

July 6 – Baroness Book Trove – REVIEW

July 6 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT

July 6 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – SPOTLIGHT

July 7 – Cozy Up With Kathy – REVIEW, AUTHOR INTERVIEW

July 7 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT

July 8 – Read Your Writes Book Reviews – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

July 8 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

July 8 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

July 9 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR GUEST POST

July 9 – Lady Hawkeye – SPOTLIGHT

July 10 – Sarah Can’t Stop Reading Books – REVIEW

July 10 – Boys’ Mom Reads! – CHARACTER GUEST POST

July 11 – Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

July 11 – Novels Alive – REVIEW

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Posted in Blog Tour, Guest Post

Guest Post and Blog Tour for Genie and the Ghost


Genie and the Ghost
(Genie and Adriana Darling Cozy Paranormal Ghost Mysteries)
by Carmen Radtke

About Genie and the Ghost


Genie and the Ghost (Genie and Adriana Darling Cozy Paranormal Ghost Mysteries)
Paranormal Cozy Mystery
1st in the Series
Independently Published (September 18, 2023)
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 218 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1916241077
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1916241077
Digital ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0CHFZYLW6

New York jewelry designer Genie Darling has returned to her childhood home in quaint Cobblewood Cove for one reason only: to sort through generations of old family heirlooms and hand anything of historical interest over to the local museum.

But after a failed mugging attempt, and the appearance of a beautiful but ghostly young stranger in a vintage evening dress, Genie realises there’s something suspicious – and spooky – going on.

The glamorous and friendly spectre turns out to be Genie’s own great-great-aunt Adriana, who died in 1929 in mysterious circumstances.

When there are more attempts on Genie and her home and her main suspect dies in a suspicious accident, she decides to get to the bottom of the mystery.

Does it have anything to do with Adriana’s death and reappearance?

With her unflappable, pet-whispering aunt and cat Cleo by her side, Genie sets out to lay this ghost to rest by solving the mystery and unmasking the culprits.

But digging up the past can be deadly …

GUEST POST

What’s in a name? Everything!

I can’t recall the last day I opened my emails or newsfeed without discovering an offer to help me a) plot my next book in a day, b) write a book in a week, c) become a six-figure author (I wish!).

It’s relentless. It’s also not even remotely going to become part of my writer’s life.

To set the record straight, I admire authors who can write a good or even great book in a week. Edgar Wallace, one of the most prolific and successful early British writers of sensational gangster, detective, and adventure novels, before the term pulp fiction existed, sometimes finished a book in three or four days. I read once that those were novels he dictated to a secretary. His collected works are over 170 novels, plus plays and short stories!

If I’m lucky, I reach over 2000 words a day if I have no other writing jobs to do.

As for plotting a book in a day, that’s the easier part. My outlines aren’t overly detailed, and by the time I jot down my notes, I’ve been working on an idea in my head long enough to know most things.

Motive and murder method? Piece of cake, sometimes literally.

What trips me up are the names. They have to be right for the character or nothings falls into place.

A rose by any other name might smell as sweet, but there’s a huge difference between an Hercule Poirot and a Hercules Perry. Hercule is debonair, Hercules a man who could easily suffer from an inferiority complex or megalomania.

My first mystery series, inspired by a true event, has Alyssa Chalmers as a sleuth. Since her adventures are set in the early 1862, she needed a name that fit in with the era. It also had to suit her personality yet be something that could easily be confused with another name like Alice or Ellen, by men who underestimated or dismissed her. Not bothering to learn how a person is called, is a sign of disrespect, or a hint that something is amiss …

I was lucky with Genie and the Ghost because I knew their names. Geneviève aka Genie was equally proud of her first name and resigned to the problems the pronunciation would cause. She’s fiercely independent, yet loyal to her mother who changed the spelling of her own name from Amy to the much more glamorous Aimée.

I don’t know where the name Adriana came from. All I knew was that it was her – slightly different, yet easy to remember.

But the secondary characters kept on causing trouble. The septuagenarian Schuyler sisters went through a couple of metamorphoses. For a few days, they were called Moira and Maisie. That didn’t feel right though, and the names changed to Dora and Daisy. Yet again, that didn’t work for my imagination. Only when they became Primrose and Marigold could I finally come to grips with them.

Most cozy mysteries rely on lovingly crafted puns. They’re part of the fun. My excuse for not embracing that more in my books is that my novels straddle the line between classic mystery and cozy.

So far, I have lots of notes in various notebooks and files that include tantalizing names and bare bones of ideas. I only wish they’d also come with explanations because there hardly ever is any context.

It seems that Agatha Christie, whose works have been my constant companion since I was eleven years old, also tried out names. She made lists in her notebooks and would cross out everything she dismissed.

A few people have been asking me if I ever model my characters after people I know.

I don’t, usually. If I’m acquainted with a person, I’m too close to them to put them through the wringer. It’s different if I observe people I’ve never met before and know nothing about apart from what I can see or hear. Last summer I spotted a man with dollar bills stuck in his hat band. He’s a candidate for a novel character.

Like most writers, I also keep track of those who’ve done me wrong. In one way or another, justice shall be served on the page.

One area where names are no problem for me and characters are taken from real life, is when it comes to animals.

Before I typed the first word, I was well aware that there’s a cat in the Darling household, and that she plays an important part in the life of Genie and Adriana. I called her Cleo in memory of a kind and caring cozy mystery writer who sadly passed away in 2022. Barbara Silkstone was one of the first novelists to reach out to me because she loved my books. When her health deteriorated, her first thought was how to ensure that her cat Cleo would be taken care of.

In my Jack and Frances series, corgi Tinkerbell insisted on appearing unplanned in Murder Makes Waves. He instantly became one of my favorite characters and series regular. His namesake was a hospice dog I used to see every week on a zoom call with a writer’s group. The original Tink made the most of every single day, and so does my fictional Tinkerbell.

So, while I won’t ever write a whole novel in a week, and six-figure author sounds unlikely, I stick to my process. That includes grappling with names. After all, false starts happen to the best of us.

Shakespeare’s troubles with “Romeo and Ethel, the Pirate’s Daughter” are one of my favorite parts in the romcom movie, “Shakespeare in Love”. Even though there’s no way I have of knowing if the bard had ever considered anything remotely outlandish for any of his plays, it sounds about right to me.

Ethel is a sitcom character. Juliet is a love interest for the ages.

And to me, Adriana will forever be a glamorous flapper living her best life almost a century after her demise.

About Carmen Radtke

Carmen has spent most of her life with ink on her fingers and a dangerously high pile of books and newspapers by her side.

She has worked as a newspaper reporter on two continents and always dreamt of becoming a novelist and screenwriter.

When she found herself crouched under her dining table, typing away on a novel between two earthquakes in Christchurch, New Zealand, she realised she was hooked for life.

The shaken but stirring novel made it to the longlist of the Mslexia competition, and her next book and first mystery, The Case Of The Missing Bride, was a finalist in the Malice Domestic competition in a year without a winner. Since then she has penned several more cozy mysteries, including the Jack and Frances series set in the 1930s.

Genie and the Ghost is her first paranormal cozy mystery.

Carmen now lives in Italy with her human and her four-legged family.

Author Links

Website – https://www.carmenradtke.com

Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/Carmen-Radtke-1958399947738868/

Twitter: https://www.Twitter.com/@CarmenRadtke1

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/carmenradtke

Purchase Link – Amazon

TOUR PARTICIPANTS

November 8 – Mystery, Thrillers, and Suspense – SPOTLIGHT

November 8 – StoreyBook Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

November 9 – Ascroft, eh? – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

November 9 – Eskimo Princess Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

November 10 – Read Your Writes Book Reviews – CHARACTER INTERVIEW

November 11 – Ruff Drafts – AUTHOR GUEST POST

November 12 – Cozy Up With Kathy – REVIEW

November 12 – FUONLYKNEW – SPOTLIGHT WITH EXCERPT

November 13 – Maureen’s Musings – SPOTLIGHT

November 13 – Sapphyria’s Book Reviews – SPOTLIGHT

November 14 – Baroness Book Trove – REVIEW

November 14 – Celticlady’s Reviews – SPOTLIGHT, EXCERPT

November 15 – Lady Hawkeye – SPOTLIGHT WITH EXCERPT

November 16 – MJB Reviewers – SPOTLIGHT WITH EXCERPT

November 16 – Hearts & Scribbles – SPOTLIGHT

November 17 – Literary Gold – AUTHOR INTERVIEW

November 18 – #BRVL Book Review Virginia Lee – SPOTLIGHT

November 18 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – SPOTLIGHT

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