JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: Susan McCormick and her Fog Ladies Mysteries are fan favorites here at JRW for a good reason. This time around, she's switching into suspense! In The Room at the End of the Hall, a surgeon winds up at the same the hospital where his alcoholic mother is receiving care. When things start to go very wrong, he begins to suspect his mother - or is it that he's the one mentally slipping away?
As usual, Susan leaves it to you, dear readers, to take a look at the book. She's here to talk about something almost as near and dear to our hearts as crime fiction: pets!
I love
dogs and try to include them wherever I can in my books, big dogs like the
Newfoundlands we have loved, little dogs the size of our Newfoundland’s tongue.
Cats make good characters, too, and the squint of a cat’s eye or the laziness
of his stretch can color a scene without a lot of words.
For my new novel, The Room at the End of the Hall, a mother/son suspenseful mystery, the pet
plays a significant part. Originally I wrote about a cat named Frank, and the
lonely main character poured out his troubles into Frank’s sympathetic ear.
Then I received advice that cats mean cozy, and if I kept the cat, my book
would be forever pegged as a cozy mystery. I love cozies; in fact I write an
entire cozy series, The Fog Ladies, replete with all the requisite cats
and dogs.
But this book is not a cozy. Frank became a tegu lizard, who listens
coolly and offers no support. I knew nothing about lizards, did a lot of
research, and along the way discovered that people have pets even more strange
than a mini T. rex reptile.
Strange
pet #1. Zebra. You may have seen the photograph in the paper this summer with a
forlorn zebra being airlifted in a sack by a helicopter. His owner had had him
less than a day, and the poor zebra, Ed, hightailed it to elsewhere. Ed was
found a week later and returned by air, and at writing, his owner was looking
for a more suitable home. What do you even feed a zebra? What do you do with
him? You can’t ride him. You can’t put him to work pulling a plow. Where are
his friends? Zebras travel in packs, and Ed was probably looking for his when
he took off.
Strange
pet #2. Lion (s), Tiger (s). Roar, a film by Tippi Hendren and Noah
Marshall, began as an idea about lions moving into a house in Africa and
culminated in the couple raising lions and tigers in California to star in the
movie. 400-pound Neil the lion roamed the house and slept in their bed, and one
photo shows five tigers in the bed as well. All told, 150 untrained lions,
tigers, cheetahs, and leopards took part in the filming, which lasted years.
Tippi once required 38 stitches to her neck, and her daughter, Melanie
Griffith, required 50 stitches to her face and almost lost an eye. Not ideal
house pets.
Strange
pet #3. Bear. I can’t talk about lions and tigers without mentioning bears. I
love bears. I could watch bears all day, all week, never leave the bear area.
Mark Dumas felt the same but went one step further and brought the POLAR BEAR
home, a baby from a mother who neglected her and a zoo that could not keep her.
Agee grew into an 800-pound fur ball, grew out of the house and into her own yard,
but still swam in the family pool. Mark Dumas was an animal trainer, so the
photo with his head in Agee’s mouth is apparently safe. Agee died this year at age 30.
Strange
Pet #4. Giant African Millipede. Described by The Spider Shop as “the perfect
starter invertebrate,” these creatures are slow, docile, and quiet. They are
not cuddly. They require a humid terrarium and millipede mulch and can live ten
years. Oh, and when alarmed, they secrete a toxic liquid, HYDROGEN CYANIDE,
enough to irritate the skin but not enough to kill. Unless a murder mystery
writer decided to collect it…
Do you have a strange pet? Or know of one? What’s the strangest pet you’ve seen?
(Note: Some of the pictures are from Pexels. Sadly, no picture of Ed, Neil, or Agee.)
The Room at the End of the Hall When rising star surgeon Michael Baker moves home to care for his estranged alcoholic mother, his life falls apart. One patient dies, another lands in the ICU, he loses his chairmanship, and the new chairwoman takes a nasty tumble on the roof. His mother cries murder, but did her alcohol-addled brain suffer one fall too many? Or… is he the cause?
Susan McCormick is an award-winning writer and doctor who lives in Seattle. She
writes a cozy murder mystery series, The Fog Ladies, and she also wrote Granny Can’t Remember Me, a lighthearted picture book
about Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, and The Antidote, a middle grade
to adult medical fantasy. She is married with two sons, and she loves giant
dogs, the bigger and slobberier the better. However, she will not house any
lions, tigers, bears, or millipedes. You can find her at her website, friend her on Facebook, and follow her on Instagram.
You can find her books and reviews at Goodreads and at Bookbub.
No strange pets here . . . dogs [Golden Retrievers], cats . . . the girls had hamsters [what was I thinking? They were forever escaping from their cages, hiding in dresser drawers, and biting fingers.]
ReplyDeleteI've known people who kept snakes as pets, but it's hard to imagine cuddling up with a snake . . . . .
Congratulations, Susan, on your new book . . . .
We had hamsters, too! We started with two, then they multiplied. Ours sometimes hid in the walls when they escaped, which could be a fatal mistake. I don’t know why they weren’t content in that cage, with its hamster wheel. Well, I guess I do know why, thinking about it now.
DeleteThat millipede gave me the creeps. Many years ago in Japan a large praying mantis took up residence on the inside of our front window screen, but I wouldn't call her a pet, exactly.
ReplyDeleteI'm a confirmed cat lady. We're down to one these days, a big gentle fellow named Martin. No felines bigger than that in my house!
Congratulations on the new book. Please say more about how/why you decided to make a change in genre.
A praying mantis. Creepy! See below to the answer to your genre question.
DeleteDon't know of any strange pets. Susan, congrats on your new suspense book release.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dru Ann!
DeleteSUSAN: Congratulations on the new book! No recent strange pets for me.
ReplyDeleteI did have a painted turtle for 2 years as a kid. I picked him up one day after our family when strawberry picking north of Toronto.
Turtles are lovely. Have to keep them warm, though, like a lizard.
DeleteCongratulations on the book. It sounds wonderful! Let's see, dogs, cats, turtles, gerbils, finches, babysat a four foot snake for a friend but it made the gerbils nervous. OK, me, too.
ReplyDeleteIck, ick!
DeleteMy daughter had a pet hedgehog named Barbie. Unfortunately, Barbie got cancer and became anorexic. The vets at the vet school at Iowa State, where my daughter was a student, couldn’t save her.
ReplyDeleteDogs in books are the best.
I enjoy the Fog Ladies and am excited to read this new novel of suspense.
A hedgehog is right up there with strange pets!
DeleteAt this point in my life, I have no pets, although I would love to have a dog, or seven…
ReplyDeleteWhen I walk at the beach, I sometimes see a tattooed man walking along the sidewalk with a long yellow snake wrapped around his neck. I try to keep my distance, just in case the snake isn’t the peaceful critter it appears to be.
I like dogs. That’s it. No cats or hamsters or gerbils or turtles or goldfish!
DebRo
Since dogs (and cats) exist, why bother re-inventing the perfect pet wheel?
DeleteI was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease and felt like my world was falling apart. Over time, my memory and daily functioning declined, and I feared the worst. Thankfully, I discovered a treatment program from "www. earthcureherbalclinic .com". With consistent use of their natural remedies and guidance, I began to notice real improvement. Today, I am completely free from Alzheimer’s symptoms. I’m beyond grateful to Dr. Madida Sam at Earth Cure Herbal Clinic for giving me my life back. You can email them at "info @ earthcureherbalclinic . com". What’s even more amazing is that a very good friend of mine, who had been suffering from Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS) and epilepsy, also found healing through Dr. Madida Sam’s treatment program. After struggling for years with no lasting solution, she is now completely symptom-free as well. We both owe our health and renewed hope to the care and expertise of Earth Cure Herbal Clinic.
ReplyDeleteHi, Susan, fun essay today. I had no idea Tippi Hedren was such a nut! Maybe those birds made her lose her mind. My husband's best friend wrangled the white tiger mascot for the Bengals, back when they had such a thing. He used to drive it around with its head hanging out the window, freaking people out. Before I ever met him. Another friend, Catherine Hilker, made a career out of training cheetahs and using them as ambassadors for the Cincinnati Zoo. She and her husband even created a cheetah preserve in Namibia. I'd trust cheetahs before any of the other big cats.
ReplyDeleteOn our safari in Kenya a few years ago there was one of those giant centipedes on the path to our lodge. They are HUGE, and look more like a small snake than an insect.
My husband is a wildlife photographer whose pioneer nature photog father wrote a weekly column on local natural history for over 50 years. People would bring them injured animals, or what they assumed were abandoned babies. So when I met him they had qgrey foxes, flying squirrel, and a skunk. Later there was a mink, more than one red fox, a coyote, rabbits, and a couple grey squirrels. I spent many nights feeding babies and trying to keep them alive. My all-time favorite animal we had charge of was Henry the barred owl, who was just amazing. Now we are content to observe critters roaming free, thank goodness!
Wow! That is completely fascinating! What an incredibly unusual life… For both of you!
DeleteThat is amazing! An owl? A SKUNK!
DeleteThe skunk never sprayed anyone. She was in an enclosed area (a large wire cage from a former private zoo), and skunks only spray if they are threatened and feel they have no other choice.
DeleteMost of the animals lived at the studio, but the tiny babies would travel back and forth between our home and the studio 1/2 a mile away. You have to feed them around the clock, and it is so hard to keep them alive.
That is so interesting.
DeleteThe Room at the End of the Hall sounds creepy and intriguing. When my niece was doing a grade school science project, she borrowed someone's pet tarantula.She was studying the physical effects of pictures of spiders, an actual tarantula and the movie Arachnophobia on somebody who is afraid of spiders--her dad. The movie was the worst. My last dental hygiene appointment was fascinating. The young hygienist began by talking about her pet opossum. She had found an injured opossum and learned how to care for it, became certified to rehab them and has raised several possums over the years. Then she told me about her spider room. She has 24? pet spiders in their own little terrariums. Some are very large. It certainly gave me something to think about as she cleaned my teeth.
ReplyDeleteSpider room? Okay, that is someone with a whole bunch of strange pets!
DeleteWe have raised possums. They are the one and only animal I've seen that truly give me the creeps. They're prehistoric.
DeleteI just looked at pictures of opossums. Spooky is right!
DeleteCongratulations, Susan, on the new book and new genre. I love dogs, even though I no longer have one, which I truly miss. I do have two indoor cats but because my indoor/outdoor cats are no longer with us, I am overrun with mice and chipmunks and rabbits. Those killer cats really kept the populations down. So now I have a birdfeeder and watch the birds, that are not really pets. A deer is frequently around. Yesterday I had it in my head that she recognizes the sound of my car. I am probably a little bit demented.
ReplyDeleteYour own deer. Lovely.
DeleteThat Millipede will haunt my dreams forever.
ReplyDeleteSame!
DeleteIsn’t it disgusting! I looked at many pictures for this post. Imagine my dreams.
DeleteMy husband and I were house hunting many years ago in the neighborhood we eventually landed in. One house we went into had a formerly lovely screened porch off the front. The current owners had made it into an aviary. You can only imagine the floor. As long as we were there we went on upstairs to see the bedrooms. The selling agent opened a door and said "this is the master bedroom" and ushered us in without coming in herself. We entered and besides the bed, the only things in the room were four or five aquariums but without fish. Each one had a large snake in it. We left.
ReplyDeleteAs we did eventually buy in the neighborhood, I know that that house did sell at some point but I have no idea to whom or how!
Atlanta
That is very funny and leads me to think it could be the basis for another blog post—strange things I’ve seen at an Open House. We once saw a wall we swear was splattered with blood, poorly washed.
DeleteI almost forgot about this: when I was a child we had neighbors for a few years who had a pet monkey. We lived in an apartment complex, and pets were not allowed!
ReplyDeleteDebRo
What? Wow!
DeleteWe have a tegu. His (her?) name is Mango and he (she?) spend most of the time buried under wood shavings in his (her?) cage. Sometimes Mango comes out to play. We also have a Russian tortoise named Sebastian; he's not too bright and spend most of his time banging against the glass wall of his cage, unwilling to believe he cannot get on the other side. Then there's Ben, the bearded dragon -- one of a long line of bearded dragons who have graced our household. Ben likes to stand nobly staring off into the distance like the hero of a 1950s western (cans horse, of course). Before Mark moved out, he had snakes -- lots of them, including a ball python; Mark and snakes are now safely ensconced in Albuquerque, where at least three more snakes have joined them. We are down to just one cat, Sage, who has staked out his territory on the top of the refrigerator; Sage gets upset if you do not stroke her. We only have two dogs now -- Happy, a beagle mix, and Jolly, a Golden Retriever. Happy is neurotic and Jolly likes to prance around with a sock or a facecloth in her mouth -- neither dog appears very bright. Past dogs included German Shepherds, Chesapeake Bay Retrievers, a Great Dane, and various mutts. When they lived in Maryland, Christina and Walt also had dwarf goats. Granddaughter Erin moved to her own apartment earlier this year, taking with her two hedgehogs (Pine Cone and Potato), a miscellaneous ball of black fur Erin truly believes is a dog (Duncan), and Newcat (which Erin got just after Willow, her cat since she was three years old, passed away). Across the bridge in the next town, granddaughter Amy has two dogs, Macaroni and Chicken Nugget; Chicken Nugget has issues and has to take a truckload of Prozac. Amy and my daughter Jessie also have five (maybe six) cats -- one of which I have never seen because she hides under the bed. They used to have two pugs (who shared half a brain), Annie and Mr. Beefy; we really miss those sweeties. Granddaughter Kaylee has just the one cat, Azazel. Kitty and I had dogs, McGillicuddy, an incontinent Pekinese, and Declan, an old man of a Black Lab. When we were first married and living in the inner city, my mother-in-law gifted us Yancy, a German Shepherd who hated men; once someone tried to break into our apartment, but the door was chained, and Yancy had a great time trying to pull the burglar through the door; the burglar managed to get away (leaving a lot of blood) and robbed the place next door. Over the years we had a gazillion cats, often Siamese. One of the cats, Maggie, was THE BEST CAT IN THE WORLD, but had to be put down on the same day the Twin Towers fell (I cried more for Maggie that day than for all those lost in the Towers). Most recently, for three years we re-homed Willow, who was getting too old to put up with the other animals; Willow would snuggle up to us, purring like crazy, but would never get on out laps.
ReplyDeleteOkay, you win!! So many strange pets! And great names. Potato. Newcat. Classic.
DeleteCongrats on the book, Susan. No strange pets here. Just a lazy retired greyhound, Koda, who is now missing 15 teeth (don't pity him too much - it involved a week of peanut butter and cheese for snacks; the whole process traumatized me more than him). Pretty typical of greyhounds; bad teeth. I had another dog, Casey, who was a beagle-lab mix years ago. Another great dog.
ReplyDeleteI had hamsters growing up. And a guinea pig (that was a nightmare). A cat briefly, until it scratched my little brother's face. I still maintain it was his fault for sticking his face in the cat's. My daughter had fish - too much work. My nephew now has a hamster after two failed fish experiments, but wants a dog.
I dated a guy who had a python. The relationship was very, very brief.
Something for a young man to think about when he chooses a pet. Labrador? Python? Which to choose, which to choose…
DeleteI didn’t know Greyhounds had bad teeth.
Yep, they aren't prone to the health problems that plague other large dogs, like hip dysplasia, but for some reason they are prone to dental problems. Go figure. But he has plenty left to eat his favorite apple-yogurt flavored biscuits!
DeleteDo you bake those yourselves? If so...the things we do for our dogs!
DeleteNo strange pets in our family. I agree with edit and Hank about the millipede - brr. I will try NOT to dream about little feet making marching noise tonight.
ReplyDeleteI can hear and feel them now.
DeleteIn the photo, it looks like your giant dog carried the mug cup to the table? I was reminded of the dog Nana in Disney's Peter Pan movie.
ReplyDeleteStrange pets? Only on farms or science museums, not suburban homes or apartments in the city. I have seen lizards at the Lawrence Hall of Science in Berkeley, California. There was a tv series where the siblings bought a ferret from someone in the alley. It is (or was) illegal to own a ferret.
Albert could do many things, but he could not make his own coffee.
ReplyDeleteSusan, I posted this in the second comment of the day, but perhaps you didn't see it.
ReplyDelete"Please say more about how/why you decided to make a change in genre." Thanks!
That is a great question, and thank you for asking. The change in genre really came more from having an idea that didn’t fit into the cozy category. Most of my books involve medicine of some kind, but I wanted to set this one in a hospital, and I loved the mother/ son team. I wanted it to be faster paced than a traditional cozy, and I wanted to have a little bit more flexibility than the traditional cozy framework. Readers of my Fog Ladies series can probably see some features of that in this book. I guess a writer’s style bleeds through no matter what.
DeleteGrowing up, for a while we had button quail in a large cage in the front room (too cold for them outside). I have no idea why? We ate their eggs, but they were too tiny to be a real food source.
ReplyDeleteThat, too, is a very unusual pet!
DeleteNever had any unusual pets - we really never had a pet at all until my last years of high school, because repeated military postings made it difficult. BUT! I can advise if you want your sleuth to have a pet, keep it as low-maintenance as possible. I gave my main characters a dog a few books back, and when editing my most recent manuscript, I had to go back and make sure the readers knew the dog had been let out and was being cared for every time anyone went charging after the bad guys!
ReplyDeleteExcellent points! When I was first writing about Frank, I had the (dead) girl (isn't there always a dead girl) let him roam free. Then I learned this was a no-no, and had to write that bit out and make him a glass cage. I also had to sneak in that there was a heat lamp, that Frank was eating healthy lizard food, etc, etc.
ReplyDelete