HALLIE EPHRON: It's always a pleasure to welcome Edith Maxwell, in her myriad of guises, back to Jungle Red. Today she's celebrating her newest mystery, A POISONOUS POUR, the third Ceci Bartom mystery, which releases TODAY!
EDITH MAXWELL: Thanks for inviting me back to the top side of the blog, Hallie. I’m so pleased to celebrate A Poisonous Pour, the third Cece Barton mystery, which releases today!
The beautiful Alexander Valley is in the northern part of Sonoma County about ninety minutes north of San Francisco. It’s a rich wine-producing region but less well known than Napa. For this series, I made up the town of Colinas (appropriately ‘hills’ in Spanish), which I plopped down in the valley somewhere near Geyserville, Cloverdale, and Healdsburg. (Don’t look too hard at a map – another town doesn’t really fit.)
I needed to populate Colinas with businesses, restaurants, markets, and churches. By now, three books in, I wish I could visit some of those fictional places! First, I invented the Vino y Vida wine bar, which Cece owns and manages.
I pictured a cluster of antique adobe buildings backing up to the Russian River. The buildings have been reinforced and modernized. Vino y Vida (which mean, yes, ‘wine and life’) has a polished hundred-year-old redwood bar inside and an outdoor patio perched above the riverbank with a big old live oak tree shading it.
Wouldn’t you want to have a glass of wine or two there?
Two of Cece’s friends are a couple who relocated to California from cutthroat jobs in publishing and finance in New York City. Henry Cruvellier owns an art gallery in another of the adobes near Vino y Vida, and his husband Ed Ramirez, who’s from the area, owns and runs Edie’s Diner. Cece eats at the fifties retro diner a lot, and it’s good local place to pick up gossip.
My inspiration for the diner was the real Edie’s, where I ate many years ago a few hundred miles farther south in Corona del Mar, California. Ed’s version features more avocadoes and includes menu items like salmon bacon, perfect for pescatarian Cece.
My mouth waters when I think up some of the meals she orders, and I wish I could perch on one of the red stools at the counter next to her. I even include the real diner’s slogan, “God bless America and Edie’s Diner, too.”
Another fictional place Cece frequents is the Hoppy Hills brewpub. It has a side patio, and strings of hop-shaped lights give the area a warm glow. The beers are excellent, and they serve things like deep-fried artichokes. Yum.
JJ’s Automotive is featured in several of the books. Josie Jarvin only works on cars made before computers were in the engine compartment, and Cece takes her sixty-six Mustang convertible to Josie for service. As befitting California, Josie can open the back of the garage to essentially work in the fresh air. If I still had my dad’s sixty-seven VW Bug, I’d take it there.
There’s also a Japanese restaurant in Colinas run by Cece’s friend Yukiko, and a gourmet market and deli, Exchange Bakery and Gourmet Provisions. Their slogan is, “The Source for All Your Wine-tasting Picnic Needs—Except the Wine.”
Cece and friends head to the weekly outdoor farmer’s market on Sunday afternoons. In addition to year-round fresh produce, she shops at Sam the Cheese Man’s stall, picks up local olive oil and fresh bread, buys wine from the police chief, and always ends with a visit to Tia Tamale, the tamale food truck.
When I write those scenes, I don’t understand why I can’t teleport myself in space, time, and reality to grab my own fresh hot tamale in a little paper boat.
Photo credit Sharon Hahn Darlin, CC BY 2.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0]
Readers: What’s a favorite fictional place you wish you could visit? I’ll send one commenter a copy of the new book.
A POISONOUS POUR: At the Memorial Day weekend classic car show and wine tasting, northern California wine bar owner Cece Barton witnesses heated discussions with local vintage car owners and overbearing association director Regan Greene. After Regan is later murdered, Cece once again enlists her twin, Allie, as her partner-in-sleuthing to clear the name of Cece’s elderly but muckraking neighbor. But they have to act quickly to investigate various suspects in the case before the trail goes sour.
Maddie Day writes the Cece Barton Mysteries and other gentle and historical mysteries; as Edith Maxwell, she writes Agatha-Award nominated short crime fiction. She’s a member of Mystery Writers of America and a proud lifetime member of Sisters in Crime. Originally a fourth-generation Californian, Maxwell/Day lives north of Boston with her beau and their cat Martin, where she writes, cooks, gardens, and wastes time on Facebook. Find her at edithmaxwell.com and at Mystery Lovers’ Kitchen.






Happy Book Birthday, Edith/Maddie . . . .
ReplyDeleteIt would be lovely to visit Narnia . . . or, perhaps, the Secret Garden . . . .
Thank you, Joan! Those places would be delightful.
DeleteFrom Celia: sending gallons of book birthday best to you, Edith. Your skills in setting up yet another brilliant fictional world continues to expand and I really appreciate your writing here.
ReplyDeleteNow where to travel?
For pure joy Bilbo Baggins 110 birthday party was a wonderous occasion and I would love to take part.
Thank you so much, Celia! Anything with Bilbo Baggins would be a treat.
DeleteTo get away from all the news, drama, and inhumanity we seem to face every day, I would love to go the England of Jeeves, Wooster, and Blandings Castle as imagined by P. G. Wodehouse.
ReplyDeleteThat would be fun!
DeleteCount me in!
DeleteI have all Wodehouse's books - and especially love the Jeeves/Wooster series. Reading about their adventures is my comfort "food". Plus the humor is the best.
DeleteI just read one funny quote about sleuths:
"I mean, imagine how some unfortunate Master Criminal would feel, on coming down to do a murder at the old Grange, if he found that not only was Sherlock Holmes putting in the weekend there, but Hercule Poirot, as well." Wooster.
I would go to Caerphilly, Virginia and play Extreme Croquet as featured in Book 7 of Donna Andrews’ Meg Langslow series, No Nest for the Wicket. I would have Meg fashion some nice decorative wrought iron pieces for me with her blacksmithing skills, visit her grandfather at the zoo, and take in whatever play her husband Michael was staging at the local college.
ReplyDeleteThose sound fun, Brenda!
DeleteHappy Book Birthday, Edith. You do create some wonderful locations that fit perfectly into their areas. (Too bad about the murders, though.) I would be delighted to visit either of your West Coast or East Coast towns. However, Middle Earth and Bilbo's big birthday bash sounds like the best fantasy location and I'd go with Celia!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Judy. I'll tag along to Middle Earth!
DeleteFrom Celia: thank you Judy what fun we can start on what to wear. Going with you and Edith will be exciting. I can't think
DeleteOf two I'd rather travel with.
I would go to live in The House in the Cerulean Sea. What a marvelous place to explore yourself and learn from others! Congrats on another wonderful Happy Book Day!-- Victoria
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Victoria. I don't know that fictional place!
DeleteEdith, The House in the Cerulean Sea is a fantasy by TJ Klune about a home for magic-using children whose families didn't want them because they were different. Helps folks to see "others" in a totally different light. And it is a powerful reminder that we have choices as to how we behave and what we do with out gifts. It is one of the best books I've ever read. -- Victoria
DeleteIt is from author TJ Klune, a popular young American magical realism author whose work is full of heart. I think THE HOUSE IN THE CERULEAN SEA is his most successful title. It is very good. I am also extremely fond of his UNDER THE WHISPERING DOOR.
DeleteI clearly have some reading to add to my TBR pile!
DeleteI always wonder whether I’d like to go to the London of Lyra in The Golden Compass. It always depends, doesn’t it? Congratulations on your 10 millionth book! You are amazing!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Hank! I barely got one word in with you this weekend, but both your honoree interviews were so well done, and I'm glad your plane finally got off the ground on your way there.
DeleteHappy book birthday! I would visit River Heights and meet Nancy Drew to solve a mystery! By the way today is her book birthday. She is 96! Jessie
ReplyDeleteCool, Jessie, and thank you!
DeleteGood morning, Edith/Maddie! So fun to see you "above the fold" today on JRW!
ReplyDeleteAnd congratulations on the new book, which reminds me that I have not yet started on this series. You are so productive it's hard to keep up!
Fictional places I would love to visit: well, now it is Colinas! What a charming place you have imagined, a California version of the sweet French village in the Madame Blanc series. Only more sun-drenched and hip. No passport required.
I would love to hang out in London with Deb's characters in the Kinkaid/James series, and travel around the countryside with them when they go outside the city. Always handy to have a driver comfortable with driving on the left, you know. The have a glass of wine at a cozy pub, sitting next to the fireplace, and watch the rain outside the windows.
Thank you, dear Karen! Yes, I'll come with you on the Kinkaid/James tour, especially for the pub drink.
DeleteThen forget the wine, we will have whisky!
DeleteOf course, I would accompany you to London to visit with Gemma and Duncan. For an out-of-town trip, I'd most like to visit with Duncan's parents and see their bookshop while we are there.
DeleteThe ultimate road trip, Judy! We should do it.
DeleteCongratulations Edith! Your small town in the beautiful wine country sounds absolutely delightful. Like Judy, I would go to Middle Earth, but particularly to Lothlorien. As I read and re-read the LOTR, I was always so glad to get there,--it sounded like paradise to me.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Gillian. I'll join you in Lothlorien, although I admit to being overdue for a re-read (I didn't discover those books until grad school, and that was nearly fifty years ago...).
DeleteLothlorien does sound peaceful and lovely. It would be an amazing journey!
DeleteGoing to Middle Earth sounds like a great place to get away too!
Deleteto...
DeleteCongratulations on the new book Edith! It sounds fabulous.
ReplyDeleteThe responses here went a whole different direction than I was originally thinking. Yes, once someone introduced the idea of fantasy worlds, of course Middle Earth is near the top of the list, along with Hogwarts. Originally, though, I was trying to think of fictional locations more comparable to what you have built. In that vein, I would maybe choose the rural North Carolina setting of Margaret Maron's Deborah Knott series, especially the Knott family farm.
Thanks, Susan. Yes, the Knott farm is a place one could almost visit in real life!
DeleteThe setting of Deborah Knott's books would work for me, too!
DeleteCongrats, Edith! Colinas sounds like a relaxing place to enjoy a vacation (minus those pesky murders, of course!). I'm with Allen Lee, I'd like to wander the streets of Minas Tirith. In the extended version of LOTR movies, he admits to spending hours just wandering through the set of Minas Tirith, it was so beautifully done. In the real world, Aix-en-Provence and environs, because of M.L. Longworth's mystery series.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Flora. I've been to Aix many years ago - a lovely corner of the world.
DeleteFlora: Thanks for a new French series for me to check out.
DeleteSouth Lick, Indiana! Lindaherold999@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteWell, yes, me too!
DeleteThe world of Harry Potter. Hogwarts, Diagon Alley, Hogsmeade.... All that magic and unusual things, what's not to love.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely, Alicia.
DeleteA few years ago I took the grandkids to Universal Studios east of LA toThe Wizarding World of Harry Potter which included Hogsmeade and Diagon Alley. It was truly like stepping in the book in a magical world.
DeleteI'd like to spend a few weeks living at Pamela's bed-and-breakfast in Bruno Courrèges's village of Saint Denis in the Dordogne. Martin Walker's "Bruno, Chief of Police" series has created such a lovely-sounding place and great set of characters that it would be a pleasure to hang out with them. But to really enjoy it, I'd have to speak better French. Sigh.
ReplyDeleteThat sounds delightful, Kait. I'll come with you, and our French will improve from the immersion!
DeleteOh, Edith, I'm so busy answering your great question that I forgot to congratulate you on A POISONOUS POUR! And now I can't wait to taste salmon bacon, which I've never heard of.
DeleteThank you so much, Kait!
DeleteKim,
DeleteI would love to spend a few weeks in Bruno village of Saint Denis in the Dordogne too. He has really created locations, restaurants, markets, people that make you feel you are there with them! So it'd be fun to actually follow in Bruno's footsteps.
Moi aussi!
DeleteA POISONOUS POUR sounds wonderful! I have been to a town on the Russian River with adobe buildings so I can easily visualize Colinas which I am now dying to visit. Other places I want to visit are those where I have never been but always wanted to go: Scotland with Jean Fairburn and Alasdair Cameron in Lillian Stewart Carl's mystery series, and Japan and Hawaii with Red Shimura in Sujata Massey's mysteries series.
ReplyDeleteAtlanta
Thank you, Atlanta. I too want to visit Scotland, and always Japan and Hawaii.
DeleteCongratulations on another book, Edith. There are so many little places in books - from countrysides to restaurants - that I'd love to visit, have a glass of wine/cider/cup of tea and relax with friends I've lost count. But a picnic in Narnia would be fantastic - as long as it's the Narnia post-White Witch. LOL
ReplyDeleteThanks, Liz! Great to see you this weekend.
DeleteIt was great to see you as well.
DeleteHappy book birthday, Edith. It’s a tie between bridgadoon and St. Mary’s Mead.
ReplyDeleteLook forward to reading your book.
Thank you, Diana. I'll go to St. Mary's Mead with you!
DeleteThe problem with Brigadoon is that it only exists for one day every one hundred years and once you are there you can’t leave without having the town permanently disappear.
DeleteYou can, however, watch the movie and enjoy the music and dancing of Gene Kelly and Cyd Charisse.
Congratulations on THE POISONOUS POUR! I would love to follow Lane Winslow in British Columbia from the Iona Whishaw series.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Emily!
DeleteEmily, of course! That sounds like a wonderful place to visit. Her latest book released just a few days ago.
DeleteSuch a great series. i was lucky enough to stay in Kelowna BC a few years back. When I read the series, I imagined the area.
DeleteHappy Book Birthday, Edith! A POISONOUS POUR is a wonderful book and a perfect continuation of CeCe Barton's story. (How do I know? Thank you for the ARC to prep for our conversation this weekend to celebrate your umpteenth launch!) The setting is perfectly captured Northern Cal and the food? Unbelievable! Congratulations on another terrific book. You are sure to please your loyal readers and fans and are sure to capture the hearts of new ones! Kudos!
ReplyDeleteAww, I'm blushing, Connie! Can't wait for our chat Saturday at Jabberwocky Bookshop in Newburyport at 5 pm (delivering a strong hint here for New Englanders...).
DeleteHi Edith, and congrats on your new book! Your fictional town sounds just perfect, and as I've been to Healdsburg, that's how I'm imagining it!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Debs - do imagine Healdsburg, but as it used to be, not so chi-chi as it is now.
DeleteOh, the wine country! The perfect place to murder someone :)!
ReplyDeleteLately, I've been thoroughly enjoying Leslie Karst's Orchid Isle mystery series (I LOVE being able to binge books like a BritBox series!), and I'd jump at the chance to visit the Big Island of Hawai'i.
Oh my, yes - Leslie's Hilo is a great place to visit!
DeleteI'm only 40 minutes south of the real Alexander Valley so beam me up for a visit to your sweet sounding fictional town and the foodie spots you've created, Edith!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Susan - we'll have a grand reunion there next time I am west!
DeleteWe live so many lives as writers, don't we? CeCe's sounds delightful. Congratulations, Edith, on the absolutely stunning book #38, A POISONOUS POUR.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Pamela.
DeleteI love traveling in books, but I do sometimes wish I could actually step into the settings and meet up with the lovely people . . . so many wonderful places and people, and times. I wouldn't mind some time with Rose in Boston . . . ;-)
ReplyDelete-- Storyteller Mary
. . . and now I can put my review on Am.
DeleteThanks, Mary. You are such a loyal fan!
DeleteIt seems most of these ‘idyllic’ small towns have rather high crime rates, especially murders. You’re also more likely to know either the victim or the perpetrator.
ReplyDeleteFor that reason I think I would feel safer in a larger city such as London where I would have the benefit of the expertise of Scotland Yard and a wonderful city with all its cultural opportunities and history to explore plus a scone or two.
Absolutely, Anon, although Colinas sees a lot of tourists, so locals have less fear of being murdered. ;^)
DeleteHappy Book Birthday! A glorious day! I would also love to teleport myself to your created town. How lovely a place to spend days, weeks, maybe even move there.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Paula - see you in Colinas!
DeleteI think hanging out in Long Piddleton with Richard Jury, Melrose Plant, and the gang at the pub would be hilarious. Colinas sounds wonderful too!
ReplyDeleteLet's do it, Pat.
DeleteDang it, I need to stop reading the blog on an empty stomach. Now I want tamales and small-batch cheese and a glass of wine (which would definitely impede my afternoon writing!)
ReplyDeleteRight now, I would be very happy to spend some time in Colinas, as long as I wasn't one of the tourists who gets murdered. I love northern California and I've never gotten to spend enough time there!
I promise I'll keep you safe from murder, Julia!
DeleteCongratulations on your release, Edith! I am now longing for a trip to northern California!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jenn. Let's go!
DeleteCongrats on the new book--can't wait to read it. I love fictional places like Three Pines (though bad things seem to happen to good people there a lot). Mostly I like books that are set in real places but writers take some leeway, often adding a fictional place or two. Once I visited the Cotswolds and went from town to town just to see what Dick Francis was writing about.
ReplyDeleteAh, Dick Francis - my mom would have LOVED that trip. He was one of her favorite authors.
DeleteGerri, what a great idea for a trip. I love the Cotswolds - my favorite little town is Lower Slaughter. So quaint and so English.
DeleteFrom Celia: Gerri, I'm a huge Dick Francis fan from his very first books back in the 1960's. I have all his books except the most recent. I need to find a good home for them soon
DeleteCongrats!! I loved your other books so this will be a great read.
ReplyDeleteThank you so very much!
DeleteHappy Book Birthday, Edith! Colinas sounds like a terrific place. There are so many fictional places I enjoy reading about, most have already been mentioned here. Like Deb's Duncan and Gemma's world in the U.K., Bruno's Saint Denis in the Dordogne, Verlaque and Bonnet's Aix-en-Provence, Gamache's Three Pines, Leslie Karst's Orchid Isle, Leslie Budewitz's Food Lovers' Village, and Spice Shop worlds, oh and China Bayle's herb shop in Pecan Springs by Susan Wittig Albert. The list goes on forever. My eternal thanks to all the writers who allow us to armchair-travel to all these places every day!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lynn! I also love Leslie's worlds - all of them!
DeleteCabot Cove, Maine. It would be so interesting to visit the murder capital of North America.
ReplyDeleteTotally!
DeleteSo many great places! As for me, a round trip to The Emerald City, please.
ReplyDeleteOoh, please take me along, Hallie. And thanks again for hosting my celebration!
DeleteCongratulations on your new release, Edith! I would like to visit Nancy Coco's Mackinac Island and stay at the McMurphy Hotel and learn how to make fudge from Allie. I know Mackinac Island is not a fictional place, but it's one of my favorite places.
ReplyDeleteDianne, Nancy's take of Mackinac is micro-fictional, and I'd also love to visit there.
DeleteI’m fresh off the long wifi-deficient train ride from the Seven Hells of Beppu and alighted to find you have a new book out! I hope it’s not too late to say woo hoo & congratulations! And thank you for asking a question that’s so easy to answer: thanks to Amazon, I’m about to pay a visit to that wine bar in Colinas!
ReplyDeleteAww, thank you, Jonelle! My trip home from DC yesterday was long and blessedly not wifi-deficient, but was followed by an hour and a half drive to where I live because traffic. My back does NOT like sitting for eleven hours.
DeleteCongrats on the new book. I would want to visit the fictional town of Charm from Bree Baker's Seaside Cafe mystery series.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations, Edith-- missed your book birthday because yesterday was our cat's 7th birthday--is that a good enough excuse? I'd go to any of the places people have mentioned, and also your bike shop on Cape Cod
ReplyDeleteI want to visit Jane Lawless' restaurant in Ellen Hart's series.
ReplyDeleteI want to visit Pans N' Pancakes from the Maddie Day Country Store mystery series.
And I want to visit Quark's on Deep Space Nine.
I've read A POISONOUS POUR and it was fabulous.
Congratulations on your newest book! I'm excited to read it.
ReplyDeleteI always thought it'd be fun to visit Mitford in Jan Karon's series.
Definitely South Lick, Indiana!
ReplyDelete