Thursday, November 2, 2023

What's in a name? by Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day

 JENN McKINLAY: As always, it is delightful to have out Reds friend Edith Maxwell (aka Maddie Day) here to celebrate her latest release!

Edith/Maddie: Thanks so much, Jenn, for hosting me on one of my favorite blogs. I’m delighted to be back on the front half to celebrate last week’s launch of Murder Uncorked, the first in the new Cece Barton Mysteries. I’m super-thrilled to finally have a series set in my native and beloved California, and I’m more than grateful you took time to read an advance copy and offer a glowing endorsement.

JENN: My pleasure. It's a wonderful mystery!

It’s been quite a celebratory week. On Friday evening we packed the house at Jabberwocky Books in Newburyport, MA for a launch party. I flew to San Francisco a few hours (literally) later. On Sunday the Pedroncelli Winery in the Alexander Valley opened their doors for my author event at a location not far from my fictional town of Colinas. 

The next afternoon I had a lovely conversation at Book Passage in Corte Madera with Rhys, a bookstore I’ve always wanted to do an event at. Tonight I’ll be chatting with Catriona MacPherson in Davis at The Avid Reader, with wine and cheese. Then I’ll retreat to San Francisco for a couple of low-key days with family and old college friends before heading back east.


Quite apart from release week, I support several fabulous charities in my area. The Merrimac River Feline Rescue Society (MRFRS) does great work accepting cats and adopting them out, as well as trapping, neutering, and releasing feral cats who really don’t want to be inside. I have adopted cats from the society and have volunteered for them.

The Pettingill House supports families in need with food, clothes, school supplies, and many essential services. And Amesbury’s Carriage Museum is our historical museum. It educates and entertains about my town’s industrial history, from water-powered nail factories through carriages and textile manufacturing to the early 1900s electric cars and other car bodies made right here.

All three organizations have silent and live auctions as part of their annual fundraising galas. I realized that, after I started going to auctions like the one at Malice, offering the right to name a character is super popular with readers. Who doesn’t want to see their own name in a mystery novel? (For the MRFRS auction, winners often choose to have their cat remembered instead of a human.)

The high bidder on my first naming offering was Diane Weaver. I had thought she would have a walk-on part as a farm customer in one of my first Local Foods Mysteries. To my surprise she ended up being an undercover DEA agent! The real Diane was delighted.


I offered naming rights for a Pettingill House auction a few years ago, and they called me up on stage to introduce the item. Cathy Toomey, a local real estate agent (whom we bought our house from eleven years ago) was the aggressive high bidder and became Catherine Toomey, shopkeeper and grandmother, in the next few Quaker Midwife Mysteries. 




I loved watching the numbers go up and up during the bidding. The donation is free to me and brings much-needed funds into the charity’s coffers.

A year ago, when I was about to send in the Murder Uncorked manuscript, Kelly Daniell was the high bidder at the Amesbury Carriage Museum’s Driving Through History auction. She happens to be the executive director of the museum and is the mom of two young children. When I asked what name she wanted me to use, Kelly said, “I can’t pick one kid over the other. So, name the character after me!” Me: “I can do that.” 

I’d already written the Sonoma County sheriff’s detective with a different name, but I had time to slide Kelly Daniell into the manuscript, instead. She and I had fun a month ago posing at this year’s fundraising event – which had, in case you can’t tell, a 1920s theme – in front of a 1927 Ford with its owner and a fellow antique car enthusiast.




I can’t wait to hear what Kelly thinks of her alter ego in the Alexander Valley. That same evening, I again offered naming rights to a character in my next book.




This time Pamela Fenner, a friend, small publisher, and staunch supporter of the museum, was the high bidder. Her bidding contest with another local resident exceeded any amount my character naming donations had previously raised (thanks for your generosity, Pam!). After the auction, she said she wanted me to use her late husband’s name. They had lived in northern California for some years, and she said he loved researching and making wine.

I am currently writing Deadly Crush, the second Cece Barton mystery. Paul Fenner is now getting a second life as the chief of the Colinas Police department - a tall man who makes and sells wine on the weekends.




Pam had also won the Carriage Museum high bid a few years ago and asked me to name the character after her twin sister, Penelope Johnson, who at the time was in very poor health. Penelope died before the book came out, but she was delighted to know she would live on as a Westham police department detective in my Cozy Capers Book Group Mysteries.

I don’t plan to stop offering these auction offerings. Winners often need to be very patient, with the long lag time between when books are turned in and when they’re published. They don’t seem to mind. By the way, if you run one of these live auctions, plying guests with alcohol first lends itself to reckless bidding, just saying.

Readers: Reds, what real people’s (or animal’s) names have won a spot in your books? Commenters, what name would you use if you won this kind of auction? Have you ever won? 

I’d love to send one US reader a signed copy of Murder Uncorked (ebook to commenters outside the US).



As the manager of Vino y Vida Wine Bar in Colinas, Cecelia “Cece” Barton’s first Alexander Valley harvest is a whirlwind of activity. Her twin sister, Allie Halstead, who owns a nearby Victorian bed & breakfast, is accustomed to the hustle and bustle of peak tourist season. But Cece barely has a moment to enjoy her new home while juggling her responsibilities at the bar and navigating the sticky politics of the local wine association. Just when it seems things can’t grow any more intense, Colinas is rocked by a murder within the wine community . . . and Cece is identified as a possible suspect.

With her reputation and her livelihood on the line—and the Sonoma County deputy sheriff breathing down her neck—Cece has no choice but to uncork her own murder investigation. Tensions are already high in the valley, as a massive wildfire creeps toward Colinas, threatening homes, vineyards, and the vital tourist trade. And now, with a murderer on the loose, and Cece’s sleuthing exposing the valley’s bitterest old rivalries and secret new alliances, Colinas feels ready to pop. But with Allie’s help, Cece is determined to catch the killer and clear her name before everything she’s worked so hard for goes up in flames.


Maddie Day pens the Country Store Mysteries, the Cozy Capers Book Group Mysteries, and the new Cece Barton Mysteries. As Agatha Award-winning author Edith Maxwell, she writes the Quaker Midwife Mysteries and short crime fiction. A member of Mystery Writers of America and a proud Lifetime member of Sisters in Crime, Day/Maxwell lives with her beau and their sweet cat Martin north of Boston, where she writes, gardens, cooks, and wastes time on Facebook. Find her at EdithMaxwell.com, wickedauthors.com, Mystery Lovers’ Kitchen, and on social media:


99 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Maddie/Edith, on your new book/new series . . . it does sound like Cece has gotten herself into quite a mess; I'm looking forward to reading the book. [And I love a good twin story!]
    I've never won a name the character auction; if I did, I'd name the character after my granddaughter . . . .

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    1. Thank you, Joan! Cece's twin Allie also has adorable ten year old twin sons - so much fun to write.

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  2. Great news about the birth of Cece Barton, Edith! I spend a lot of time (too much time, I'd say) thinking about what to name my characters, and in spite of that, I sometimes realize well into the MS that I have used too many first names beginning with the same letter or a Swiss last name that is too confusing for most readers. Selling the names of characters for charity is a wonderful idea, but has it ever caused you to have to call a character something you secretly don't think fits or that reminds you of the meanest girl in the seventh grade? We all know that names in books have power. It's a compliment that people want to lend their names to a Maddie Day/Edith Maxwell book--AND pay for it!

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    1. Thanks, Kim. I have sometimes struggled to find the right character who I can use that donated name on. Once for a Quaker midwife book, the high bidder wanted to use the rather exotic name of her granddaughter. I was able to use her as a young woman, a recent immigrant, with some backstory that worked for that name. But that one was tricky.

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  3. Edith, congrats again on the new book! I've had a lot of characters named after readers through the course of my books. Sometimes they're major players and suspects. Usually, they get a smaller, bit part, although a couple of those are returning in future books. Sandy Giden (the fictional one) owned a motel in Vance Township in FAIR GAME of the Zoe Chambers series. She makes a repeat appearance in the upcoming WHAT COMES AROUND. And Laurie Kassim (again, the fictional one) was supposed to have a bigger role as Emma's new boss in the upcoming KEEP YOUR FAMILY CLOSE (Detective Honeywell #2), but the story didn't allow her much page time, so she'll be back for future books.

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    1. Thank you, Annette. I also like it when I can bring back the fictional character and subsequent books.

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  4. Congrats on your new series! If I could be a character in a book, I would be Paula with her loving cat Princess Belle who passed away this past March. I would love to see her remembered in a book, to see her live on through the joy of reading. Thank you for this chance at your giveaway. pgenest57 at aol dot com

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    1. That is very sweet, Paula. Or you could ask to have a cat named Belle in a book!

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  6. EDITH/MADDIE: Congratulations on the new series and your recent book events! You already know that I enjoyed reading an ARC of MURDER UNCORKED while at San Diego Bouchercon. It was also a nice coincidence that I was drinking a Seghesio zinfindel while reading a scene when Cece was pouring a glass of the wine. We both have good taste in California wines, lol.

    It's great that several characters in your different series have appeared thanks to winning naming rights at auctions. I will keep a lookout for Penelope and Paul's appearances in your future books. If I won naming rights at one of your auctions, I would pick one of my fellow avid mystery fiction reading friends, Merna Chernetz or Linda Mortsch. Either of them would be delighted to see their name in one of your books!

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    1. Thanks, Grace. That's a great way to honor an avid reading friend.

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  7. Yaaay for Murder Uncorked! I've been to one event for Edith just a few weeks back. It was for the latest Cozy Capers Book Group mystery series set on Cape Cod but there was talk about MURDER UNCORKED as well.

    I'm glad that the book is out for everyone to read!

    As for the auction questions, I've never won or even entered one of the contests. I'm not sure what name I would use though. I guess it would depend on who the character was going to be.

    Is the character going to be a recurring one or a one off? I know that when the TV show "24" was airing, if I'd ever had a chance to be on the show, I wanted to be one of the nameless bad guys who gets indiscriminately killed by Jack Bauer.

    So I guess if it was going to be a recurring character, I would use either of my parents for the name. But if it was going to be the guy who gets killed, I'd use my own name. Just make me a memorable dead guy and have me go out in some kind of indelibly amazing way.

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    1. And I'm looking forward to Edith's visit to my local library's mystery book club event on November 21st! It's for MURDER ON CAPE COD, the first Cozy Capers Book Group mystery but I have a feeling there will be some talk about CeCe Barton too!

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    2. Thank you, Jay! Going out on top as a bad guy - I like it.

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  8. Congratulations on the new book Edith--what fun you're having with your launch events! I am looking forward to reading this!

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    1. Thank you, Roberta! It's been a great launch week.

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  9. Edith, I am so excited to finally have your book in my hands after B&N screwed up my pre-order and it took a two hour phone call to straighten it out! It it on the tippy top of my TBR pile!!

    I love the local charities that you support through their auctions and your donations! It's clever, it's classy and it is good for a lifetime!! I have one question, do you know before the auction which character you will be naming or do you decide, once you see the name the winner has asked you to use, which character fits that name best?

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    1. Great question, Judy! I'll be checking back for Edith's reply.

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    2. yes great question Judy!

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    3. Thanks so much, Judy, and I'm glad you finally got the book.

      No, I have to wait to see what the name is and where it will fit. I always try not to make them villain or victim. With Paul Fenner, for example, I knew him in real life, and the police chief hadn't appeared in Murder Uncorked, so that role was open. I think it works well.

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    4. Neat! Names are evocative and powerful, aren't they.

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    5. Wait, you try not to make them the villain or bad guy? Oh now I definitely want to win one of these auctions. I would LOVE to be the bad guy or villain. Think of the author events and you telling everyone the bad guy is actually in the room with them. HA!

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  10. Edith: I have so enjoyed following your launch week activities in California via Facebook this week. Such fun. And your naming-rights auction idea is fabulous -- for the person who wins and the organization who benefits. Were I to win, I might use Julia Penfold -- a mashup of my middle name and my mother's maiden name. For a cat, I would choose my lovely ginger cat Bountiful (Bounty for short), who lived to 18 years and 4 months. He's long dead, but lives on in my heart. Mega congrats on your new series starring Cece, who I am looking forward to meeting on the page.

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    1. Thank you, Amanda. I gave my late kitty Birdy a starring role in my Country Store Mysteries in book one, and Kensington puts their version of him on every cover (book 12 comes out the day after Christmas). I've loved having his sweet self live on.

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  11. Congratulations Edith! I love your gift of names to bidders for your favorite charities! And I love that Cece and her twin sister work together work together to solve the murder.

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    1. Thanks! It's fun for me to write a fraternal twin as a sidekick.

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  12. Congratulations on your new book! I’ve read all your books except this one.and I’m have a friend who turned adversity into hard won success. Against the odds, she overcame abuse and addiction, went back to school for her doctorate while raising a family and working for Community Mental Health. She succeeded in writing a program for women with substance abuse problems and eventually raised enough money to open 2 treatment facilities that allow women to keep their children with them through the recovery/reintegration process. She is a tireless, selfless fighter I would name for your book. Thanks for the chance.

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    1. What an awesome story, Lucy. She would be a great person to honor.

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  13. I know so many authors who, like edith, have had super experiences donating character names. But honestly I only did it once and while it earned a very nice amount for the charity I had a terrible time figuring out how to use the name. For me, character naming is complicated, and I often find myself having to do a global search-and-replace halfway through a novel because I realize I've misnamed a character. Having said that, BIG HUGE congratulations to Edith! MURDER UNCORKED sounds wonderful.

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  14. Congratulations, Edith. I used a reader name in my most recent Laurel Highlands Mystery, THICKER THAN WATER.

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  15. Like Amanda, I've also enjoyed your photos from California, Edith! Your travelogue, especially the photo of you and Rhys, and those of your old friends, makes me want to go back to California, tout suite. Enjoy hanging out with Catriona! Please pay extra attention to her garden, I'm so envious. Really looking forward to picking up your book next week at Crime Bake.

    Nancy Martin used the name Poppy Maslowski in one of her books, which, as a gardener, I quite enjoyed. It's like finding an Easter egg to spot a familiar name in a favorite author's work, and I've seen several over the years. It's easy to see why ( especially well-lubricated) auction participants want to see their own names in an adventure they may never have otherwise.

    Side note: I consider Zinfandel (not the "pink" stuff) the iconic American wine, in the same way as Chianti is Italian, Sherry is Spanish, Malbec is Chilean, and Champagne and Burgundy are French. I feel it isn't given enough credit. What do you all think?

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    1. Old vine zinfandel is my go-to California wine. And yes, I have tried many other wines during several trips to Sonoma & Napa county. And I have tried red & white wines at NY, VA and NC wineries but none of them really stood out.

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    2. The Alexander Valley is a great Zin location and I tasted some this week. Definitely a quintessential California varietal.

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  16. This is great! Congratulations on yet another terrific Lunt! Yes, I do this all the time, and there are auction names, and every one of my books.
    The very first one I remember was Urszula Masny-Latos , which was seemingly very difficult, until I made her a Zouzou Masny-Latos, a French couturier and that worked out wonderfully ! It’s sometimes difficult to make the names work – – so it can take a while. Other times they fit right in. And it’s really perplexing, why some are so instantly perfect and others aren’t . It’s not necessarily the more common names that work, either.
    And Diane Weaver is in one of my books as well, isn’t that funny?
    Again, congratulations on this, and all your wild success!

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    1. Nice job on the Zouzou. Our Diane gets around!

      I was wondering what Autocorrect was thinking when it thought it heard Lunt - launch, maybe? LOL.

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  17. Congrats Edith!!
    This is very timely. I was at my local library yesterday looking for your books. Either all were checked out or at other libraries - so a trip to my local bookstore is on my to do list.

    I love it when authors mention characters who are named in the book and are real people. Lucy does this a lot with many of her characters such as Lorenzo, the police chief, many of the local restaurant owners. It makes the story come alive and "real".

    Martin Walker mentioned a castle (A Castle Under Siege) that in real life was refurbished by a couple in France. I looked up their names and the history of the castle was fascinating. I feel I learn a lot about the locations and the peoples from them being named in fictional stories.

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    1. Aww, thank you, Anon. I love it when my books are all checked out! Where is your library?

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  18. Congratulations on the new book! It sounds wonderful. I would pick the name Rocket. She is my Basset Hound. The cutest little houndie in the world.

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  19. I’m not sure what name I would choose if I won an auction. It would be exciting to just randomly come across my name or that of someone I know in a book. I also like Judy’s question above.
    Do you gift a copy of the book to the auction winner?

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    1. I sometimes include a book in the donation. I was hoping Kelly could come to my local launch party but she was out ill. I'll get her book to her after I'm home.

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    2. Brenda, I also wondered if the auction winner gets a copy of the book too. Diana

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  20. The only time I've seen my name in print in a mystery is in the Acknowledgments in one of Heather Haven's books. I can't remember what I did to deserve that--maybe provided some proofing services? Heather is a fellow Sisters in Crime NorCal member (and a lovely person). As a non-author member of Sisters in Crime (I'm the chapter newsletter editor), I'd love to see my own name as a character in a book. I don't care whether I'm a nice character, a villain, or even a dead body!

    Edith, it was wonderful to meet you at Bouchercon. I'd love to read your new book and wish you continued success with all of your wonderful books.

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    1. Great to meet you, as well, Margie. I thanked Reds commenter Jay Roberts in the Acknowledgments in the new book!

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  21. Congratulations on the new series, Edith! Loved the photos! And the auctioning of names is a wonderful idea--for the reader and the charity. If I won such a prize at auction, I'd choose my sister, Marsha Teply. Short, feisty, wicked sense of humor, and fiercely loyal to those she loves. Ask her about the baseball bat if you ever meet her :-) (from Flora)

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    1. I'm trying for the fourth time to get this reply to stick: Thank you, and Marsha sounds like a great character!

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  22. What a delightful post! And I can testify, this is a fabulous new cozy series to dive into!

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    1. Look forward to reading the new Cece Barton mystery. How did you land on the name Cece Barton? I thought of the suffragist ? named Barton.

      Diana

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    2. The name popped into my head, Diana. They were given the name Cecilia and Alicia, and I thought Cece and Allie sounded like a good pair.

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  23. Congratulations on your new series, Edith / Maddie! Look forward to reading MURDER UNCORKED.
    So wonderful to see you at Bouchercon and I noticed that we both have matching eyeglasses colors.

    Wonderful topic today! This reminded me of a conversation I had with an author friend about three weeks ago. She mentioned that she borrowed my name for one of her characters in her cozy mystery novel and asked me if that was okay. I told her that it was a wonderful surprise and I wanted to read the page with my name. I read it and I told her I loved it. The character is different from the real me.

    Love it when I see names of real people as characters in novels. Currently writing my novel and the real people's names are well known people in their fields from history. They were living in the 1920s.

    Diana

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  24. I’ve had some really challenging names to work into historical settings. One high bidder wanted me to work in all three of her daughters called Jensen, Reagan and Danika. I suspect none of those names was normal in the 1930 s! I had to make them visiting rich Americans!

    I love it when the high bidder is my age as they will fit in nicely. One name was a brave resistance worker in the Paris Assignment and another a suffragist in the next Molly. Both suit their personalities so I was happy

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    1. Those are tricky, Rhys. You found a perfect solution!

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  25. More books from you to look forward to! That’s exciting! My eyes are completely healed now from my recent cataract surgeries, and I’m able to read once again. I’ve fallen behind in reading your books (or any books) , but I’m reading again, and your books are on my list!

    If I could name a character in a book, it would be my late sister. She would be tickled to have a character named after her!

    DebRo

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  26. It was great meeting on Sunday, Edith. Thanks for signing my extra book to my cousin. Hope your new grandbaby is growing and getting stronger everyday.

    If I had the opportunity to name someone in a book, I wouldn't pick myself. As much as I love my name and the granddad I'm named for, I wouldn't want the character to have spend the book correcting everyone when they mispronounced, it because I know the will. :-)
    Instead I would offer granddad Dean Dale or the grandma I never knew - Jeannette Alison Cook.

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    1. Great to meet you, too, Deana - and sorry about the mispronunciation!

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    2. Deana here, everyone does it.

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    3. I know how to pronounce it only because it was my Mom’s middle name. She said she was named after an author who had the same name, my grandmother enjoyed his books.

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  27. Deep sigh. I know others have reported this, but Blogger is eating my replies today, some of which I have put in twice. I am reading everything and trying! I'll see if my phone behaves any better. Grrr.

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    1. And just when I got your email - it appears someone else fixed it. Yay!

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  28. I already won a copy of your book Murder Uncorked and loved it. I am excited to see what Cece does in the next book. So please don't pick me as a winner. If I had the chance, I'd name one of your character's animals after my dog, Blue. aprilbluetx at yahoo dot com

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    1. A dog named Blue perfect! I'm delighted you loved my story, April.

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  29. Yay, Edith! I love Sonoma and I love wine, so I can't wait to read Murder Uncorked! And I love the photo of you and Rhys!

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  30. Very interesting, Edith! I would probably never win the bidding rights but perhaps it is just as well; no idea who I would choose. I remember a few years ago seeing a real person's name in one of Julia's books. His character was a bad guy, but in real life he was a wonderful person. Then I found out that Julia had simply chosen the name and had no idea about the real person, which makes sense since you can find people with the same name all over the country. Even in my state there is someone else with my name, a dentist, no less, but she pronounces the last name differently.

    Looking forward to reading your new series and finding all about Cece!!

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    1. OMG, Judi! There are 5 (no exaggeration) Judy Singers in this area! 2 or 3 in my zip code!! Sirius XM refused to believe that I was not the owner of the Audi. The harassment didn't end until I told them to cancel the service.

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    2. I can see where things can get just a tad bit, confusing, Judy!

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  31. These auctions sound like the ideal way to have fun and raise money.

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  32. Edith, congratulations on your new book/series launch! I’ve read your Country Store Mystery series and very much enjoyed it. I’m looking forward to reading about Cece (and the Alexander Valley and wine!). Having grown up in Northern California, I love reading about the area. I’m not sure who I would want to name a character after, but probably one of my parents. My late mom would get a kick out of being in a cozy mystery! And Edith/Maddie, it was nice to meet you at Bouchercon in San Diego. (I was one of the people in the Reds group that Friday morning.) — Pat S. P.S. I love the term “beau” to describe Hugh in your bio!

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    1. It was lovely to meet you in San Diego, Pat. Hugh and I aren't married (going on 20 years) and beau seems more appropriate for the over-seventy crowd than "Boyfriend!"

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  33. I haven't won an auction, but I have shown up in a few books over the years. Some times for making a donation. Sometimes just because. Lucy put me in the Christmas Key West book as a surprise, for example. Sadly, that's the closest I've come to Key West.

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  34. Pretty sure no one would want to use my name since no one can ever spell or pronounce it correctly. I know Jenn has used some of my fellow Mavens names.

    Recently saw my cousin’s husband’s name in the newest Miranda James. I had to take a picture for them.

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    1. I don't know, unusual names have their places!

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    2. Thanks but it’s amazing how badly people can mangle Poslusny.

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  35. Congratulations on the debut of a new series, Edith - and that cover is absolutely stunning!

    I love offering names as fundraisers, and several have inspired me to create different characters - one woman won at the St. Patrick's School fundraiser (my kids' elementary school) and wanted it for her aunt, who had a very elegant, very Italian name. She became a missionary nun who meets my heroine at an ecumenical lunch and gets the whole plot rolling! The aunt and the donor were both very pleased.

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    1. That's great, Julia, and thank you. One of my winners asked if I would name characters after her mother and her aunt, both deceased but both huge cozy mystery lovers - and they had read some of my books. I said of course, and added two sisters.

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  36. I love this and how fabulous that you are able to do this for three charities! Well done.

    I've pulled a page from your book for our local Humane Society. I recently dropped off a box of anthologies that featured one of my cat stories. My thought was for the society to sell the books. The manager was super excited and asked if I would mind if they held one out to auction at their upcoming fund raiser. Of course I agreed - they'll hold the rest of the books back from sale until after the fundraiser. That was when I remembered your name the character donations. I broached the subject and they jumped right on it. I'm curious to see the results.

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  37. Congratulations Edith/Maddie! I got to have my two cats written into a book once. It was so exciting to see Lucky and Eclipse immortalized like that. I have thoroughly enjoyed every book I've read that " either one of you" has written . I'm sure this one will be no different.

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    1. Aww, thank you for that, Laurie - and how fun to have both cats written in!

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  38. Congratulations on the new book and the new series. What an incredible idea to auction names! I've never heard of that, but I think it's so cool.

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    1. Obrigada, Elizabeth! I certainly didn't invent the idea, but it's a good one.

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    2. It sure is. It's delightful. Murder Uncorked sounds terrific.

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  39. Edith, congratulations on your new series and the first book in it. I'm sure it will be a success like your other great series. It's on my list of reading when I am able to feel like reading again.

    I do think that one of the most popular auction items is getting a character named after you in a book. It's also one of the biggest money-makers in auctions, like at Bouchercon. When someone (and there usually is at least one) really wants to win that, it can be fun to see how high they're willing to bid.

    Although I haven't had a character named after me (I guess I'm a cheapo), I have had some amazing honors. Edith used my mother's jam cake recipe in her book Strangled Eggs and Ham and gave my mother and me credit where she lists her recipes from the book. And, something that was totally unexpected and is just overwhelmingly a loving and beautiful thing is that Catriona McPherson has dedicated her new Last Ditch Motel book, Hop Scot (#6) to my family and especially my treasured son Kevin who died last May. Authors touch our hearts and minds in so many ways.

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    1. I saw that dedication, Kathy - very touching. And it was a delight to include your mom's and your recipe in that book! I hope you lose yourself in the respite of reading again soon. Hugs.

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  40. If I ever won a character auction I would probably have it be my maternal grandmother who I dearly miss. cherierj(at)yahoo(dot)com

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  41. 🎉 📚 CONGRATULATIONS Edith- Maddie📚 🎉
    I enjoy just finished another of your Book's📚 Your writing reads effortlessly, fun and enjoyable. I have sooo many of yours on Kindle but just adore my prints📚🎉 I am old school dear daughter says.
    This new Series sounds intriguing. Your Nacho book was in California, although an entire series is going to be tremendously fun.

    The Charity is Spectacular 🎉 How Marvelous to bid, donations go to go to a good cause and name characters something memorable. I was touched at the back stories of naming after her husband and sister. Will you put things like that in Author notes?
    If not I will print this bit out and stick in my book. I love the backstory if writing that goes into book's.

    I helped an Author once by reviewing an analyzing a part of a new Jewish character so nothing came across offensive. It was a cozy 💗 he did fabulous slid my name in the back. That was nice but I never knew it till year's later😂😅

    Wishing You Blessings for much Success 🎉
    Kathy

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  42. My name has made it into V. M. Burn's books! I won a contest.

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  43. Congratulations on a new series! Can hardly wait to read it.

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