Showing posts with label bailey cates. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bailey cates. Show all posts

Sunday, January 9, 2022

Spirits and Sourdough by Bailey Cates

Jenn McKinlay: Baking has always seemed magical to me - put in flour bring out cake - so I'm sure it's no surprise that one of my favorite cozy mystery series combines the two principles in the delectable and long running Magical Bakery Mystery series. Here's the wonderful author Bailey Cates to tell us more!


Bailey Cates: Hi all! Jenn, thanks for inviting me to the Jungle Reds. I love this eclectic, smart space that’s so full of moxie.

 

My latest book, Spirits and Sourdough, is the tenth in the Magical Bakery Mystery series. I try to marry the titles and the content of my books, though that doesn’t always work. Spirits and Sourdough, however, has both spirits and sourdough.




 

The sourdough starter that herbal witch and baker Katie Lightfoot brought to Savannah, Georgia from Akron, Ohio at the beginning of the series has had its own arc of sorts, gradually replacing the yeasts from where it began its journey with the yeasts of Katie’s new home, thus creating a new flavor profile over time.

 

The spirits in the title come from the ghost tour Katie goes on with other members of her spellbook club (read: coven). Savannah is known as the most haunted city in the United States, so at some point that had to play a major role in one of the books. In Spirits, the tour guide is a friend of one of the spellbook club members. She is a young woman who can literally see dead people. This makes her an excellent ghost tour guide since she can steer her clients toward brushes with the supernatural but leaves her feeling like an outsider. Katie also felt like an outsider until she discovered her magical gift of hedgewitchery. So, when the young woman tells Katie the ghost of a recently murdered woman wants Katie to find her killer, she steps into the investigation both to find justice for the victim – whom she knew – and to help the tour guide.

 

In addition, there’s the spirit of Katie’s deceased grandmother, who shows up regularly in the series. Also, Katie’s new husband’s guardian spirit has gone missing, so she’s trying to get him back. Lots of spirits made their way into this one.

 

Just as I don’t cast spells (though strongly believe in intentions) or have an actual familiar (don’t tell Cheesecat the Orange), I don’t have personal experiences with spirits. Except once, but I’ll get to that. I don’t know that I believe in ghosts. More like I don’t not believe in ghosts.

 

I’ve sought out paranormal encounters on occasion. One place was The Marshall House in Savannah, where there’s a rich history of hauntings and where the murder victim’s spirit comes to Katie’s tour guide. For me, there were no bumps in the night, no cold spots, no children trying to bite me in my sleep (part of the charming history I left out of the cozy plot). I live relatively near the Stanley Hotel, the inspiration for the Overlook Hotel in the Shining, and have stayed there overnight. I didn’t sleep well, listening for children running in the hallway, and hoped for at least a bit of dizziness in the famous stairway vortex. But nope. Nada.

 

However, twenty-some years ago I did see a jinn. Djinn. Genie. At least I think I did. It was in a Dubai hotel room on a business trip to vet translation vendors for the Arabic and Hebrew versions of Windows. I was jet lagged, under slept, punchy with exhaustion but too tired to sleep. I turned off the light and sat down to try to meditate myself out of the thrumming hyperactivity of my brain.




 

As soon as the light went out, I saw something flying around the room. It was a head and shoulders, the rest of the body trailing away to a tapered nothing. The face was genderless, but the hair was long, very long, and wild and red. It was dark, but I could tell the hair was red. The body, by the way, was not blue, which is how so many versions of jinns appear for some reason. Disney, I expect. I didn’t sense malevolence, but it didn’t seem particularly friendly, either.

 

A few swoops around the room, then it was gone.

 

It was disturbing for sure, not least because I thought I might have been hallucinating – a real possibility, given my state of mind. But I didn’t have a reference for the jinn, consciously, at least. Once home, I did some research. The history of the jinn is fascinating and varied, and I can’t possibly get into it here, but what I saw fit the bill. At the time, my previous concept of a genie was Barbara Eden in harem pants. Yep – dating myself, there.

 

So…did I see a spirit that night in Dubai? Maybe. Heaven knows lots of people believe in ghosts or other presences, and I can’t help but wonder about the possibility of other planes of existence that we humans simply aren’t aware of.

 

What do you think? Have you seen or felt any kind of ghost or spirit? Do you believe in them? Do tell!

 


Thanks for letting me visit, everyone! It’s been a pleasure. For more information about me and my books, check out www.baileycates.com.


Bailey Cates writes the New York Times bestselling Magical Bakery Mysteries. As Bailey Cattrell, she also writes the Enchanted Garden Mysteries featuring aromatherapist Elliana Allbright. Bailey writes, gardens, cooks, and hikes in northern Colorado where she lives with her guy and Cheesecat the Orange.

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

Witches and Wedding Cake by Bailey Cates

Jenn McKinlay: I remember when I was lucky enough to read the very first Magical Bakery Mystery - Brownies and Broomsticks - I loved it and all of the volumes that have followed! And now, here we are celebrating number NINE! Congrats on your recent release, Bailey, and thanks for visiting us today. 

Bailey Cates: Hello everyone! I’m so delighted to be here (thanks, Jenn!) and to talk a little about the latest Magical Bakery Mystery (#9!), Witches and Wedding Cake. As you might guess from the title, this is the one where Katie Lightfoot and Declan McCarthy finally get married – though there are a few hiccups along the way. 

BUY NOW!

Like when his little sister finds the dead body of her ex-husband in a seedy motel room.
This is the second fictional wedding I’ve planned, and those are the only weddings I’ve planned. While I have a long-time partner, I’ve never been married, and at this point in my life don’t plan on it. The first wedding I wrote about was based on a lovely, simple ceremony I attended some twenty-five years ago. This time around, I researched carefully, asked for suggestions from friends (so many opinions!), and free-wrote a kind of interview with Katie to see what would best fit her character. She’s a bit of a free spirit, and it turns out she’s not too worried about tradition. 
Enter her soon-to-be sister-in-law, Eliza McCarthy. She’s the oldest of the five McCarthy offspring, all of whom are women except for Declan, who falls right in the middle. She’s a bit of a stick-in-the-mud, a strictly by-the-book sort, and right from the beginning, she takes issue with Katie’s plans. She doesn’t like that the bridesmaids are anything but “maids”, if you know what I mean, since all are either partnered, married, or divorced. They range from a very pregnant twenty-something to a spritely octogenarian. She doesn’t care for the mismatched vintage furniture supplied by the event rental company. (It’s a real company, and I fell in love with the dreamy pictures of distressed, white-painted tables and chairs on their website.) She’s upset that there isn’t a rehearsal or a rehearsal dinner planned. Eliza also doesn’t care for Katie’s plan to start the party – the wedding is in the backyard of her and Declan’s newly renovated carriage house – then pause it for the ceremony, and start it back up again after they’re officially hitched. Even the wedding cake, a tiered stand covered with seven different kinds of yummy cupcakes, isn’t traditional enough for her.
Katie is an only child, and she finds navigating the complexities of suddenly having four sisters thrust upon her somewhat challenging. As it happens, I’m an only child, so it’s not hard for me to imagine this. Perhaps because I have such a small family of origin, family is really important to me – both extended and made. Like Katie, I have a cadre of close friends I consider to be family, as well as cousins and my partner’s sisters. In the end, Katie manages just fine. Oh, and she also finds a murderer. 
Next up, I’m planning a fictional baby shower. This is another thing I’ve never done in real life, and I have to admit I don’t love attending baby showers where there are lots of games and such. Any suggestions for how to make this one unique and fun? I’d love to hear them!

Bailey Cates Cattrell 

Like many of her cozy characters, Bailey Cates believes magic is all around us if we take the time to look for it. She lives in Colorado with her guy and Cheesecat the Orange, a tabby who looks an awful lot like the one in her books. When not writing, she loves to cook, garden, hike and bike the gorgeous terrain outside her door, and occasionally play a round of mediocre golf. She’s currently working on the 10th Magical Bakery Mystery, Spirits and Sourdough. You can find out more about Bailey and her books at www.baileycates.com.

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Special event notices: 


Please join Lucy Burdette and Deborah Crombie *tonight* in 

conversation about Lucy's new book, THE KEY LIME CRIME. 

6 pm at Books and Books Key West. The event is free, but you'll 

need to register here...

Lucy Burdette and Deborah Crombie