Thursday, February 22, 2024

MEANS, MOTIVE, AND OPPORTUNITY by Diane Vallere

Jenn McKinlay: One of my favorite cozy mystery authors is here today! The amazing Diane Vallere and she is going to get us all clear eyed and motivated and tell us all about her latest Samantha Kidd Mystery -- RANCH DRESSING! If you read yesterday's post, you know this is exactly what I needed to read today. Take it away, Diane!

 
Diane Vallere: The first time I worked with a professional editor, she asked me about my character’s motivation. “What does she want?” she asked. 

“It’s a mystery,” I replied as if the answer to her question was obvious. “She wants to find the killer.” (The “duh” was implied.)

I am ashamed to admit that it took more than that one book to understand what she meant. Oh, sure, I quickly latched on to a fear of failure, and how my character was afraid to not succeed. And that carried me through a book or two, while my character succeeded in exposing the killer but failed at life, learning that failure was sometimes necessary for growth. It’s not a bad lesson to learn, but after a few books, it turns out, our readers actually want to see our characters succeed at life too!



Think about it. Life throws daily challenges at us. Some we win, and some we…keep trying to win. We only give up on the things that aren’t important enough to keep us motivated. But when there’s something we want—which may, by the way, be finishing our manuscript or to losing ten pounds or finally understanding how to style our naturally curly hair (ahem)—that motivation works like a fresh battery to keep us plowing forward even when things get tough. 

Ever get a great idea, something you just know will change your life? You just need to learn how build a bookcase/make fresh bread/change your sparkplugs/cut your own hair/become fluent in French/join a professional society/exercise for an hour each day. And you start out with the best of intentions, you buy the best supplies/ingredients, you pay your dues, you sign up for Duolingo. You sandwich your new habit between existing ones like James Clear suggests in Atomic Habits. You stick to your new routine because it’s important.

Until one day, it’s not. 

Your bookcase is partially built, you’ve been feeding sourdough starter for a month the only thing you make is a sourdough pancake. Your hair is lopsided, and you still don’t know the difference between savoir and connaĆ®tre. It’s not because you’re lazy, or too old to learn, or the principles of chemistry chose to boycott your sourdough starter, it’s because you lost your motivation. None of these things mattered enough to power you toward your ultimate goals. 

I don’t know about you, but my past is littered with partially finished projects that never got off the ground. (Case in point: there’s a partially re-rooted Barbie head sitting next to my desk as we speak.) But I find the time to write. And when I’m not writing, I can work on creative graphics for hours without ever realizing time has passed. Research is like a Vitamin B shot that powers me when I need a pick-me-up. Most of us never worked as hard as we do on the thing we love to do, to the extent that it doesn’t feel like work.   



In RANCH DRESSING, that same character who feared failure, who needed a few books to discover her motivation, goes on a trip to a dude ranch that her father-in-law is thinking of buying. She has no interest in the cowboy life, or western wear, or anything more than the Louis L’Amour books she packed, but the one thing Samantha Kidd cares about is solving other people’s problems. So when she’s relegated to the sidelines—just relax, read your book, we’ll handle this—her desire to help out becomes more than a desire, it becomes a mandate. The more she’s told not to get involved, the more she must. She can’t help herself—she’s that motivated. 

What about you, Reds? What projects have you let languish on the shelf and what keeps you motivated? 



DIANE’S BIO & SOCIAL MEDIA LINKS:

National bestselling author Diane Vallere writes funny and fashionable character-based mysteries. After two decades in luxury retailing, she traded fashion accessories for accessories to murder. As past president of the national Sisters in Crime organization, she edited the Agatha-Award-winning essay collection PROMOPHOBIA: Taking the Mystery out of Promoting Crime Fiction. Diane started her own detective agency at age ten and has maintained a passion for shoes, clues, and clothes ever since.

SOCIAL MEDIA HANDLES:

FB: https://facebook.com/dianevallereauthor

IG: https://instagram.com/dianevallere

YT: https://youtube.com/dianevallere

Website: https://dianevallere.com


RANCH DRESSING BLURB:

When fashionista Samantha Kidd’s father-in-law arranges a week on the dude ranch he’s aiming to buy, Samantha preps for blue skies and clean living. But all too soon she learns life on the ranch is anything but calm. When the owner is found dead inside one of the stables, all signs point to murder.

As Samantha wrangles clue after clue, she smells something rotten—and it’s not manure. In her quest for the truth, she encounters quirky cowhands, brazen barrel racers, and suspicious horseplay—not to mention a social paradigm straight from the eighteen hundreds. 

Can Samantha bring justice to the wild west of eastern New Jersey, or will a renegade ranch dweller get away with murder?

BUY LINKS:

Bookshop.org 

Amazon

Apple

Barnes & Noble

Google Play

Kobo

ENTER THE GIVEAWAY

PREORDER GIVEAWAY: https://www.dianevallere.com/ranch-dressing-preorder-contest

1. Preorder RANCH DRESSSING

2. Fill out form on my website


53 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Diane, on your newest book . . . it does sound as if Samantha has gotten herself involved in quite a mystery. I'm looking forward to reading about her adventures . . . .

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    1. Hi Joan, thanks for the comment. I hope you enjoy Samantha!

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  2. I'm with you, Diane in that I always, always get the writing done. Dealing with the stacks of papers here and there, the boxes of photographs, the closets? I start, give up, and read a book or bake some muffins. Or I don't even start...

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    1. Hi Edith, it's interesting when we stay motivated and when not, right? Those side projects...

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  3. Congratulations, Diane! The new book sounds like fun!

    I'm taking a forced sabbatical from writing for the next 4 weeks to tackle all the not-fun stuff that I haven't been motivated to complete. Tax prep. Research into medicare supplements (NOT the fun kind of research...unless I can figure out how to use it in a murder mystery). Making a long list of doctor appointments (annual checkups). Finding someone to tackle a home improvement task. Maintenance on my car. By the time I get through this list, I'll be HIGHLY motivated to get back to writing!

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    1. FOUR weeks, Annette? I can't even...

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    2. Annette, Good luck with that sabbatical! They never work out for me, and it's always a little more difficult to get my mojo back once I return to the computer. It's amazing how little projects can expand to fill an entire day...

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  4. Congratulations on your new book, Diane. What a fun location to write (and read) about -- a dude ranch!

    As for unfinished projects, I'll just say yup, I have those. Including my comment on Jenn's essay yesterday (which I loved) about leaving things 90% done: apparently I keyed in my comment and then forgot to 'publish' it -- on second thoughts, maybe that's not even 90% done, maybe that's just 100% mindlessness? Oh well, today is a fresh chance for starting and maybe finishing a few things...

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    1. Hi Amanda, yes, that dude ranch research was fun!

      When I read Jenn's post yesterday, I thought I'd found my soul mate (I think of mine as 85% so she's got 5% on me). Fresh chances to start anew are always good!

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  5. Diane, love your books! Your Madison Knight series is wonderful; love the Doris Day connection. Having spent some time at my friends' dude ranch in Wyoming, I'll look forward to reading Samantha Kidd's take on ranch life. The clothes alone are worth it, right? A murder to solve is a bonus.

    I'm trying hard to stop leaving so many loose ends trailing around my life. My friends here know about a project we are going through now, finishing part of the basement of the house we built five years ago. It's been a source of worry for these last few years, and it's finally close to being done and USED for the purposes we need the finished space for. Then maybe I can tackle some of the other unfinished projects connected to it.

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    1. Hi Karen, Thank you!!! Good luck finishing that basement project, just imagine how you'll get to enjoy it when it's finished!

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  6. Welcome Diane, and what a smart editor you had! I'm always trying to get clear about Hayley Snow's motivation--I think it's especially hard with an amateur sleuth, don't you?

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    1. Hi Lucy, yes, I was lucky to have a savvy editor early on. Yes on amateur sleuths and their motivation, and it's even more challenging the more cases they "solve," right?

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    2. Lucy, that really is the crux of amateur sleuths in cozies. If they don't have a good reason for investigating, then there is something missing from the story. I have quit more than one series when that is the case.

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    3. And you can only make the amateur sleuth a suspect so many times.

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  7. They have ranches in Nee Jersey? Who knew? Sounds like a fun premise for a book. The thing I am concentrating on finishing right now is my current read before my library loan expires. The Running Grave by Robert Galbraith is quite a tome, but so good. I’ll need a fun cozy after this!

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    1. Yes, they have dude ranches in New Jersey! (And the country's longest running rodeo, which surprised me!) Book reading goals are the best because they're so satisfying when they're done, right?

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  8. Diane, congratulations on your new book! You are a new-to-me author. I always ask myself how that can happen, especially when Jenn and Karen love your books. I'll look for book #1 in one of your series and dive in!
    As for finishing projects? Ask me in a month. I am getting advice (thanks, Celia!) and trying hard to choose the right course to get to the finish line without a complete understanding of what is at stake. The saying "one man's trash is another man's treasure" does not necessarily apply to brothers and sisters nor to their junk.

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    1. Hi Judy, nice to *meet* you!

      Yes, projects and junk piles seem to grow exponentially with siblings! Thanks for the comment!

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  9. Congratulations, Diane. Like you, I always get the writing done - one way or the other. Now if only the same thing could be said of cleaning the bathroom.

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    1. Hi, Liz! Mine is the laundry. It sits in the corner, mocking me. Motivation does not always correlate to need or obligation, right?

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    2. Right. After all, if I close the lid, the toilet looks fine.

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  10. What a fantastic cover!

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  11. Diane, I'd love to hear about the research you did for this book. Dude ranch? Sounds like fun.

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    1. Hi Hallie, in addition to binging all of Yellowstone and watching a lot of classic westerns, I attended the Cowtown Rodeo a handful of times and dove deep on a few ranches in the area. All entirely new to me! Research is my favorite part :)

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  12. If you dreamed of being a sophisticated “business woman” (1960s) in NYC, I suggest the advertising slogan of that time from Peck & Peck..”There is a certain kind of a woman who is a very efficient procrastinator.” Surely a help mantra when things pile up and energy runs low. Elisabeth

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    1. "efficient procrastinator" Love this! Definitely a helpful mantra!

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  13. Hi, Diane, and thanks for passing on that piece of advice about my characters' motivation. My detectives are cops, so finding the murderer is their job, but there needs to be more pushing them to solve a difficult case than just that. A good reminder as I sit here planning Book #5.

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    1. Hi Kim, I've found, when I get stuck, dialing back and thinking about motivation usually unsticks me :) There's always something they want, and it might not be the thing they're in the process of getting--which makes for a good, complicated story!

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  14. Congrats on the publication of a new Samantha Kidd mystery, Diana, and as usual, you have a gorgeous cover. Honestly, you should offer a poster with all of them together - it would make a killer (no pun intended) art giveaway!

    I seem to be primarily motivated to play mahjong solitaire and cuddle with my dogs - sadly, I am unable to turn this into a career. I guess I have to lean on my primary writing motivation: I want to read a Russ and Clare book, but no one else is authoring them, so I have to step into the gap.

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    1. Thank you, Julia! I'll think about that poster idea!

      I often get more motivated to play Freecell than anything else, which, like you, I've found is not a paying gig. Good thing you're stepping up for Russ and Clare. It's (sometimes) a dirty job, but someone's got to do it!

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  15. Hi Diane! I remember your clothes at my first Malice Domestic. And that cover of Ranch Dressing is perfect - the lipstick color matches the color of the coat.

    What keeps me motivated? Good question! Wish I knew the answer.

    Diana

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    1. Hi Diana! Samantha is nothing if not dressed perfectly for any occasion :)

      Ah, motivation, if only we knew!

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    2. Shoot! I forgot to sign in again. It's me, Diane

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  16. So looking forward to Samantha on the ranch. Congratulations, Diane, it looks like a marvelous book.

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  17. It's so hard for me to get started on my job. It's much less so when I sit down to read. Yes, I can get distracted there, too, but it is much easier to set the distractions aside.

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    1. Mark, I need to find a way to shift around the things that hoover up my time so I have more time to read! Sounds like you've worked that part out of your schedule.

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    2. I turn mean if my reading gets interrupted. LOL.

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  18. Hi Diane! I can't wait to see what Samantha gets up to with her handsome father-in-law. What is Nick doing while all this is happening? Years ago we went to a small, local rodeo near Oil City, PA. We all crammed into my husband's pickup to go. Got there and we were invited to park very close in the 4WD section. We laughed because it was practically a bog from all the rain. Normal vehicles would have to have been towed out. Loved the rodeo. Especially since it was (and is) a big deal in my home town.

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    1. Hi Pat! Let's just say Nick takes to the cowboy life easier than Samantha :)

      Funny story about the small rodeo! It *is* an experience, isn't it?

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  19. I love everything about this mystery - character, setting, and that book cover - wow, just wow! Congrats, Diane, and thanks so much for joining us today!

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  20. Diane, what an adorable cover!! And I had no idea they had rodeos in New Jersey! Love the motivation tip. Although, like Kim and Julia, my characters are cops, they still need motivation to solve the crime on top of "it's my job."

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    1. Funny how just being hired and paid to do a job isn't enough motivation, isn't it?

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  21. Ranch Dressing sounds enjoyable. Many days, I begin with a list that must get done, usually inside the house. We won't discuss the outside! Doing laundry, moving winter stuff to storage, ordering prescriptions, running the dishwasher, etc. take priority while rearranging bowls in my kitchen cabinet have languished at the bottom of that list for 3 days now. The big items get done, but the decluttering is really tough although having them sitting on the island in my kitchen is really inconvenient. I find that I get more done late at night after I have read or watched some TV. Maybe the dead of the night stimulates something in my psyche? Does anyone else end their day like this?

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    1. Alicia, I get it--sometimes, when I get the bug to do things late at night, I'm super-productive. And waking up the next morning to a vacuumed house or clean dishes is always a plus!

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