#MyrtleMondays: Premeditated Myrtle Unboxing!

Today’s #MyrtleMondays post is a happy surprise! I had Something Else planned, but you’ll just have to wait (oooh, suspense!), because…

I got my AUTHOR COPIES!!! The shipment almost languished after the abrupt exodus of everyone from my publisher’s physical offices, but an industrious elf (or, most likely, a hardworking team of #Essential Elves) managed the impossible, and got me a box! I’m excited to bring you some glimpses of the beautiful (BEE-YOO-TI-FUL!!) hardcovers of Premeditated Myrtle. My editor was exactly right when she said that the digital images we’d seen heretofore do not do justice to just how amazing these books look in person.*

You can watch the Unboxing Video here:

 

I wrote the words, and had Thoughts on the cover, but want to call out the incredible design work by the team at Algonquin Young Readers. Jacket design by Laura Williams, cover art by Brett Helquist, title delightfully hand-lettered by Leah Palmer Preiss (go see her wonderful artwork–you will get lost there for hours!). I am enchanted by the whole package of the orangey-yellow (perhaps goldenrod?) cover contrasted with the deep inky purple jacket–it all looks so inviting! I hope you think so, too.

But I think this might be (one of) my favorite part(s):

The series number on the spine!! When I’m pulling mysteries off library shelves, I like to know which one to grab next. Some books make you hunt all over to find out what order they were published in! The Myrtle Hardcastle Mysteries can be read in any order you like, but I know some readers prefer to read sequentially. They’ve made it beautifully easy!

The inside of the book is spectacular too, with stunning page layouts, Very Fancy Fonts, and some extra surprises, all designed by Carla Weise. You can tell everyone who worked on these books had a lot of fun.

And we can’t wait for you guys to get Premeditated Myrtle into your hands, too!

*e-book readers, do not despair: The electronic copies are just as gorgeous! I promise. You just can’t stack them up quite as well.

#MyrtleMondays: Now a #DoubleMyrtle!

Every great mystery story has a surprise twist. Here’s mine:

It seems the world and the news are changing daily right now, doesn’t it? There’s been a bit of a shakeup in Myrtle’s universe, as well–but it’s a Very Exciting One, Indeed! As shipping companies, warehouses, and other businesses are adjusting their schedules to prioritize food and medical supplies, the fantastic folks at Algonquin Young Readers have decided that what will serve the Myrtle Hardcastle Mysteries series and our fans and readers best, is a Spectacular, Once-in-a-Lifetime,

TWO-BOOK LAUNCH EXTRAVAGANZA! 

Yes, that’s right. You heard it here first, folks: on October 6, 2020, BOTH Premeditated Myrtle AND Myrtle Hardcastle Mysteries Book 2 will be coming out AT THE SAME TIME!! Yes, I’m shouting–and I’d love for you to shout it from the rooftops, too!

Each book is available for pre-order now at your favorite booksellers, or directly from Algonquin Young Readers.

I will have lots more exciting Book 1 *and* Book 2 news (including a fabulous cover reveal for Book 2) in the coming weeks, so make sure to subscribe here for updates, and follow #MyrtleMondays and #DoubleMyrtle on Facebook and Instagram. I’m getting ready to turn in Book 3 in a couple of weeks, and I’m stocking up on research materials and fun things to share for Book 4, which will be here before we know it!

More soon,

Making it through Tough Times

This has been making the rounds on social media this week:

It’s funny, and yet… it’s not so funny. Many Makers’ homes look a lot like that already, and it’s a reflection of one particular way we cope with stress and crisis. We make stuff. Our current bewildering global health catastrophe is no different: makers everywhere are stepping up, hunkering down, sewing, building, crafting, singing to their neighbors, DIYing necessary medical equipment. When everyone is stuck at home (you’re staying home right now, right?! That’s the only way to flatten the curve and ensure our overburdened medical systems don’t collapse)… when we’re all stuck at home, disconnected from much of our support network, facing anxiety, uncertainty, and disappointments, how are we responding? What can we do? What should we do?

We should pay attention to intelligent, science-based news sources. We should take precautions to protect our communities. And, at times, we should step away from the terrifying news, slip into our sewing rooms or music rooms (well, at least some little nook in your house you can go to blare your trumpet without incurring glares from your siblings or roommates!), our workshops, our gardens, our kitchens… and make things. We should make things.

Some yarn that Charlotte might have produced….

You might choose to make practical things: raid your pantry for forgotten ingredients so you can get creative with meal planning in this time of minimizing shopping trips. Or you could choose to use your sewing skills to help sew protective masks for hospital staff. You might design and create a board game to play with your family while you’re sheltering in place. Or you might decide to cheer your neighbors or grandparents with impromptu musical performances, like we’ve seen from Italy and Spain.

My husband’s homemade sauerkraut and salsa

Or perhaps this time is too raw and scary, and your making needs to be more isolated from the front lines, more private and personal. And that’s OK, too. Scientific studies have proven the physical, mental, and social benefits of creativity and creating. It reduces stress. It allows us to process challenging events. It keeps us mentally sharp as we age. But Makers everywhere can speak to the ineffable benefits of Making, as well. In my Morris Award acceptance speech, I spoke about how Making fights entropy, the breakdown of systems over time, the tendency of things (everything!) to collapse into chaos and disorder. Kind of what it feels like is happening right now, yes?

Right now, making has even more immediate and practical benefits. It can take our minds off the crisis for a while, and it can help pass time we might otherwise spend consumed with worry. It can help distract you, it can keep your kids busy, it can entertain us in novel ways as we’re learning to live apart… together.

Making is an affirmation

Making is taking Positive Forward Action, as my first editor liked to say—putting a steady stream of positive energy into the universe: adding beauty, expressing your love, helping others, taking a step that says, Everything else is falling apart, but here. I made something. And that is a powerful act of rebellion against entropy, a bold statement of belief and hope in the face of crisis. Whether you choose to share your making or keep it personal, it’s worth doing.

If you’re a regular Maker, your home is most likely already filled with plenty of supplies to keep you busy right now. But if it’s not, this probably isn’t the time to be buying more. It’s a great time to Make Do! Figure out what you can make with what you have. As my niece says when rescuing things from the recycling bin, ART PROJECT! You might take this time to learn a new craft–or you might fall back on comfortable hobbies you know well. I’m currently pretty swamped with work, with a new book coming in a few weeks, a new book due right before that, and another deadline this month—so my recreational Making has been scaled down to things I can do without much concentration, when I can grab a few minutes here and there. Anything harder than a little hand stitching just feels too epic right now. But even just that little hand stitching makes me feel more settled. Embroidery is the craft I turn to most often in times of stress and grief, and it’s always been able to soothe and comfort me and bring me back to myself.

A little hand quilting from this week

Making can help. It can help you. It can help your community. It might even help the universe. So pick up your paintbrush, break out your drum set, start a journal about this unprecedented historical event. Make cakes, make gardens, make paper chains. Make plans. Make solutions. Make vaccines and ventilators and more good science. The universe is counting on Makers to save us, in ways big and small.