All HoTXSinC meetings are free, and the public is invited.
Our mission is to promote
the ongoing advancement, recognition,
and professional development of women crime writers. ~ SINC Mission Statement
SISTERS IN CRIME PRESENTS
AWARD WINNING AUTHOR
JAN BURKE
Jan Burke is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author. She has won the Edgar for Best Novel, and the Agatha, the Macavity, and the Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Readers Award for Best Short Story, among other honors.
Her books have been published internationally and have been optioned for film and television. She is the author of over thirty short stories.
Her work in nonfiction includes serving as the associate editor (with Sue Grafton) for MWA’s Handbook, Writing Mysteries. Her forensic science and criminal justice columns appear in Sisters in Crime’s InSinC Quarterly.
Macavity Winner, Best Short Story, 1994: “Unharmed”
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Readers’ Award Winner: “Unharmed”
RT Reviewers Choice Award, Best Suspense/Thriller: The Messenger
RT Reviewers Choice Award, Best Contemporary Mystery: Bloodlines
RT Reviewers Choice Award, Best Contemporary Mystery: Bones
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Sisters in Crime Heart of Texas Chapter meets monthly on the second Sunday of the month at 2:00 p.m. The February 10th meeting will be held at Westbank Community Library, 1309 Westbank Drive, Austin, TX 78746.
Sisters in Crime is an international organization of women and men whose mission is to promote the professional development and advancement of women crime writers to achieve equality in the industry. Speakers include published mystery authors and technical experts who help writers craft better mysteries and readers enjoy what they read. Meetings are free and open to all. For more information, check out the Sisters in Crime website at https://sinc-heartoftexas.com.
For information contact Joyce Arquette, Publicity (512) 266-6543
Having people talk about you
is an indication of
how much more exciting your life is than theirs. ~ Jan Burke
Upcoming Programs
And for 2019:
February: Jan Burke, Guest Speaker from SinC National Speaker’s Bureau
March: TBA
April: Colleen Ellis, Marketing Plans for Books
May: TBA
June: TBA
July: TBA
August: Ron Franscell, True Crime Writer
If the Internet has given us anything,
it’s some idea of how much psychosis goes undiagnosed. ~ Jan Burke
Review: Jan Burke’s Dear Irene
by Helen Currie Foster
Jan Burke’s Dear Irene presents Irene Kelly, indefatigable reporter for the Las Piernas, California, newspaper. Her new fiancé Frank, a Las Piernas cop, says the police are baffled by the horrific murder of a woman professor. Then a letter hits Irene’s newsroom desk: a mysterious letter from “Thanatos,” who teases, with hints from Greek and Roman mythology, as to why the professor died, and who the next victim will be, and why. Irene and Frank must battle over how private communications to the paper, or to the police, are handled between them as both follow separate leads. Irene desperately searches for clues to Thanatos’s motives as another victim dies. Meanwhile Thanatos stalks her; unseen, the killer lets her know she is seen, even entering her house while she sleeps.
The plot turns on a long-ago event during World War II at a daycare center run by an aircraft manufacturer. Irene homes in on a pattern, in the process meeting a series of remarkably vivid characters in abandoned houses, run-down diners, and elegant villas, while she narrows down the suspects. The ongoing domestic battle as Frank tries to protect his fiancée while she demands professional freedom provides comic relief and tenderness but also adds tension. I read this creatively plotted, fast-moving mystery by Jan Burke on the couch, in the tub, and in bed until I finished it, then was sorry it was over.
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Helen Currie Foster is the author of the Alice MacDonald Greer mysteries. She is immediate past president of Sisters in Crime Heart of Texas Chapter.
Someone was telling me
that no more applications were being accepted
for the position of God. ~ Jan Burke
HOTSHOTS! Wants You
HOTSHOTS!welcomes reviews and articles written by members. Query hotx2014 (at) gmail (dot) com.
Subscribe to HOTSHOTS!
You can receive notification each time HOTSHOTS! is published
Our mission is to promote
the ongoing advancement, recognition,
and professional development of women crime writers. ~ SINC Mission Statement
Program: Mark Pryor on the Intersection
Between His Job as a Prosecutor
and Crime Fiction Writing Upcoming Programs Texas Book Festival: HoTXSinC Was There The Word on Our Members Who’s Blogging? HOTSHOTS! Wants You
Subscribe to HOTSHOTS! Nolo Contendere
Mark Pryor
on
The Intersection Between His Job as a Prosecutor
and
Crime Fiction Writing
Mark Pryor is a former newspaper reporter from England, and now a prosecutor with the Travis County District Attorney’s Office, in Austin, Texas.
He is the author of the Hugo Marston mystery series, set in Paris, London, and Barcelona.
The most recent is THE SORBONNE AFFAIR, a “flawlessly constructed whodunit,” according to Booklist. His previous novel in the series was THE PARIS LIBRARIAN, which the Toronto Globe & Mail says “has it all . . . a finely structured plot that’s one of Pryor’s best books yet.” The first Hugo Marston novel, THE BOOKSELLER, was a Library Journal Debut of the Month, and called “unputdownable” byOprah.com, and the series has been featured in the New York Times.
Mark is also the author of the psychological thriller, HOLLOW MAN,and its sequel, DOMINIC, published in January of 2018. He also created the nationally-recognized true-crime blog ‘D.A. Confidential.’ As a prosecutor, he has appeared on CBS News’s 48 Hours and Discovery Channel’s Discovery ID: Cold Blood.
Mark will have copies of his books to sell by credit card only.
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Sisters in Crime Heart of Texas Chapter meets monthly on the second Sunday of the month at 2:15 p.m. We meet at the IHOP at 1101 South MOPAC.
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Sisters in Crime is an international organization of women and men whose mission is to promote the professional development and advancement of women crime writers to achieve equality in the industry. Speakers include published mystery authors and technical experts who help writers craft better mysteries and readers enjoy what they read. Meetings are free and open to all. For more information, check out the Sisters in Crime website at https://sinc-heartoftexas.com.
For information contact Joyce Arquette, Publicity (512) 266-6543
I thought I could never write a proper book; I’d never done it before.
But I thought I could write a sequence. Then I had a chapter.
The next thing I knew I was turning acting down. ~ Tana French
Upcoming Programs
December: Party and Showcase of Members’ Writing
And for 2019:
February: Jan Burke, Guest Speaker from SinC National Speaker’s Bureau
If you rewrite a paragraph fifty times and forty-nine of them are terrible,
that’s fine; you only need to get it right once. ~ Tana French
If you’re writing a scene for a character with whom you disagree in every way,
you still need to show how that character is absolutely justified
in his or her own mind,
or the scene will come across as being
about the author’s views
rather than about the character’s. ~ Tana French
Texas Book Festival: HoTXSinC Was There!
Details in next month’s HOTSHOTS!
HoTXSinC’s TBF Coordinator K.P. Gresham setting up booth in Tent 4
HoTXSinC authors at Texas Book Festival, November 2018
I like writing about big turning points,
where professional and personal lives coalesce, where the boundaries are coming down, and you’re faced with a set of choices
which will change life forever. ~ Tana French
HoTXSinC will meet on Sunday, October 14, 2018 @ the Yarborough Branch Library 2200 Hancock Drive, Austin.
Our mission is to promote
the ongoing advancement, recognition,
and professional development of women crime writers. ~ SINC Mission Statement
@ the Yarborough Branch of Austin Public Library Program: Robert Ansley on Paranormal Research
New Venue for October 14: Yarborough Branch Library Upcoming Programs Texas Book Festival: It’s Time to Bring Your Books! HoTXSinC Authors @ Boerne Book and Arts Fest Ghost Story Contest Winner to Be Announced The Word on Our Members Who’s Blogging? Opportunities HOTSHOTS! Wants You
Subscribe to HOTSHOTS! Nolo Contendere
Robert Ansley
on
Paranormal Research
Robert Ansley is an actor, director, and producer of short films that have screened at many film festivals including SXSW, Tribeca, and Cannes. He started his crime fighting career in 1979 with the Austin Police Dept, and was promoted to Sgt. just three years later. Austin author Bruce Sterling noted in his book “Hacker Crackdown – Law and Disorder on the Electronic Frontier” that Robert was one of the first police officers in the nation to set up a sting operation to catch hackers committing computer crimes. In 1989 Robert was lured away by a small computer company called “Dell” to provide executive protection for Michael and his new wife Susan. In addition he eventually traveled the globe designing security systems and practices for Dell facilities worldwide. After suffering a serious spinal injury Robert retired and once he was on the mend he began pursuing his fascination for paranormal investigations. His company, Imagine Your Dreams LLC had been producing short films for festivals and now produces paranormal films for his new organization Austin Paranormal Research. Together with his business partner, Elizabeth Lloyd they investigate client claims of hauntings and Poltergeist activity in the greater Austin area. Their work has appeared in the prestigious magazine Paranormal Review, published by the Society for Psychical Research in London, UK.
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Plusthe winner of the HoTXSinC Ghost Story Contest will be announced.
Sisters in Crime Heart of Texas Chapter meets monthly on the second Sunday of the month at 2:15 p.m.
New Venue: The October 14 meeting will be held at the Yarborough Branch of Austin Public Library, 2200 Hancock Drive.
Future venues will be announced in next month’s HOTSHOTS!
Sisters in Crime is an international organization of women and men whose mission is to promote the professional development and advancement of women crime writers to achieve equality in the industry. Speakers include published mystery authors and technical experts who help writers craft better mysteries and readers enjoy what they read. Meetings are free and open to all. For more information, check out the Sisters in Crime website at https://sinc-heartoftexas.com.
For information contact Joyce Arquette, Publicity (512) 266-6543
HoTXSinC’s Short Ghost Story Contest winner will be announced at the meeting on October 14.
The winner will receive a $25.00 Target gift card and the Parrish Knife, first donated by Eugenia Parrish as the prize in a HoTXSinC short story contest in 2017. MK Waller, winner of the 2017 contest, is donating the knife back to HoTXSinC for the Ghost Story Contest prize.
The Word on Our Members
Four HoTXSinC members read from their works at Malvern Books on Novel Night, September 13. N. M. Cedeno read from THE WALLS CAN TALK;Laura Oles read from DAUGHTERS OF BAD MEN; and Sue Cleveland and DixieEvatt, aka MeredithLee, read from DIGGING UP THE DEADand SHROUDED.
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Alexandra Burt, Valerie Chandler, Laura Oles, MK Waller, George Wier, and Scott Montgomery appeared on a panel discussing Austin Mystery Writers’second crime fiction anthology, LONE STAR LAWLESS, at Tim Bryant’s BosslightBooks, in Nacogdoches, Texas, on September 20.
On September 19, Alexandra, Valerie, Laura, and MK attended ScottMontgomery’s interview with Craig Johnson, author of the LONGMIRE series, at Murder by the Book in Houston.
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GHOST NEXT DOOR IS OUT!
GHOST NEXT DOOR, by Helen Currie Foster, was published September 22, 2018. Now available on Amazon and at independent bookstores, this is the fifth novel in the Alice MacDonald Greer Mystery Series. During night-time fireworks at Coffee Creek’s first official barbecue cook-off, deep in Texas Hill Country, lawyer Alice MacDonald Greer trips over the body of a sharp-tongued food writer. The hotly competitive grill-masters all possess well-honed knives and stout alibis. With local law enforcement baffled, the mystery darkens when a malevolent stalker pursues Alice and her engaging but secretive client using arson, assault and highway terror. Alice finds herself needing far more than her legal skills to survive.
An Alice MacDonald Greer legal thriller, full of smoke, music, mayhem and suspense.
A “simply outstanding mystery series.” Midwest Book Review.
“Hi there! Hallmark Publishing is open to unagented submissions of completed full-length novels through Labor Day (Monday, Sept. 3), 2018. We will also have an open reading period in February 2019. Follow us on Twitter, @HallmarkPublish, to be the first to learn about future calls for submissions.”
HOTSHOTS! Wants You
HOTSHOTS!welcomes reviews and articles written by members. Query hotx2014 (at) gmail (dot) com.
Subscribe to HOTSHOTS!
You can receive notification each time HOTSHOTS! is published.
Our mission is to promote
the ongoing advancement, recognition,
and professional development of women crime writers. ~ SINC Mission Statement
@ CAFE EXPRESS! Program: Dr. Kim Rossmo on Geographic Profiling Upcoming Programs
The 2018 Bulwer Lytton Fiction Contest The Writers’ Police Academy by K. P. Gresham
Search and Rescue K9 Units by N. M. Cedeño Texas Book Festival: Bring Us Your Books! Boerne Book Festival: Table for HoTXSinC Authors For Members Only: Short Ghost Story Contest Submission Deadline The Word on Our Members
Congratulations and Best Wishes Who’s Blogging? Opportunities Selected Sites
HOTSHOTS! Wants You
Subscribe to HOTSHOTS! Nolo Contendere
Bulwer Lytton Winner – Detective/Crime
Dr. Kim Rossmo
on
Geographic Profiling
of serial killers / rapists / terrorists
Geographic profiling is a criminal investigative methodology for analyzing the locations of a connected series of crime to determine the most probable area of offender residence. Its major function is suspect prioritization in serial murder, rape, and similar investigations. Such cases are difficult to solve because they involve stranger offenders. These “whodunit” investigations can involve thousands of suspects and often suffer from problems of information overload. In such situations, geographic profiling can assist in case information management. Crime locations are not distributed randomly in space but rather are influenced by the road networks and features of the physical environment. Consequently, when properly interpreted, crime sites can function as spatial clues. A focus on the crime setting – the “where and when” of the criminal act – offers a conceptual framework for determining the most probable area of offender residence. The area of research known as environmental criminology studies the interactions between people and their surroundings, and views crime as the product of offenders, victims, and their setting. The three theories underlying geographic profiling – crime pattern, routine activity, and rational choice – provide the foundation for understanding the target patterns and hunting behavior of criminal predators.
Dr. Kim Rossmo holds the University Chair in Criminology and is the director of the Center for Geospatial Intelligence and Investigation in the School of Criminal Justice at Texas State University. He has researched and published in the areas of the geography of crime and criminal investigations. Dr. Rossmo was formerly the Detective Inspector in charge of the Vancouver Police Department’s Geographic Profiling Section, which provided investigative support for the international law enforcement community. Dr. Rossmo is a member of the Police Investigative Operations Committee of the International Association of Chiefs of Police and is a Commissioner on the Austin Public Safety Commission. He has studied the geospatial structure of terrorist cells, patterns of shark foraging, and the geography of illegal border crossings. He has published books on geographic profiling and criminal investigative failures, and a crime atlas for Texas. Dr. Rossmo has been awarded the Governor General of Canada Police Exemplary Service Medal.
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Sisters in Crime Heart of Texas Chapter meets monthly on the second Sunday of the month at 2:15 p.m. We meet at Café Express at 3418 N. Lamar.
Sisters in Crime is an international organization of women and men whose mission is to promote the professional development and advancement of women crime writers to achieve equality in the industry. Speakers include published mystery authors and technical experts who help writers craft better mysteries and readers enjoy what they read. Meetings are free and open to all. For more information, check out the Sisters in Crime website at https://sinc-heartoftexas.com.
For information contact Joyce Arquette, Publicity (512) 266-6543
October: Robert Ansley on Paranormal ResearchandAnnouncement of Ghost Story Contest Winner
November: Mark Pryor, District Attorney and Author
December: Party and Showcase of Members’ Writing
And for 2019:
February: Jan Burke, Guest Speaker from SinC National Speaker’s Bureau
The 2018 Bulwer Lytton Fiction Contest
Grand Prize Winner
“Cassie smiled as she clenched John’s hand on the edge of an abandoned pier while the sun set gracefully over the water, and as the final rays of light disappeared into a star-filled sky she knew that there was only one thing left to do to finish off this wonderful evening, which was to throw his severed appendage into the ocean’s depths so it could never be found again–and maybe get some custard after.” ~ Tanya Menezes
Read the rest of the winners and dishonorable mentions here.
The Writers’ Police Academy
by K. P. Gresham
I’ve just returned from the tenth annual Writer’s Police Academy in Green Bay,
K. P. and Rob at fire demonstration
Wisconsin. The three-day forensics conference was packed with seminars, clinics, high intensity training courses and experts, experts, experts! Sisters in Crime is a major sponsor for this event, and I and my fellow Heart of Texas Sisters in Crime member, Rob Robertson, ran ourselves crazy for three days of non-stop learning!
The event was held at the Northwest Wisconsin Technical College’s Safety Training Academy using instructors from the Academy as well as specialists from around the United States. Lee Lofland, the founder and director of this fabulous experience, had one goal in mind when he put this event together. He wanted to bring law enforcement and writers together in a realistic setting. To quote the conference program, he “wanted to place writers behind the wheel of a patrol car in a pursuit (which I did!)…let them shoot rifles & pistols…fire a taser (again, something I did!), etc. He believes the best way to write believable make-believe is to live it. Writers can breathe more life into tales by adding the senses of touch, taste, sound & smell.”
Blood Spatter Demonstration
S.W.A.T. Gear Is Heavy
Jeffrey Deaver, Keynote Speaker
My personal takeaway from the exhausting three days of mayhem—putting out fires (literally), wearing S.W.A.T gear (Holy Toledo, it’s heavy!!!!!) and trying to apprehend a bad guy, checking out blood spatter investigation techniques—is that I AM GOING BACK! There’s no way I could get everything in that I wanted to do, and frankly I’m not sure I could’ve wrapped my head around one more fact.
By far the best part of the conference was getting to know the law enforcement professionals as well as my fellow writers. Unbeknownst to me, I found myself sitting at a bar between a Hollywood producer and a best-selling author talking about storytelling. When I figured out who they were, I almost choked on my margarita! The guest of honor at Saturday night’s banquet was international Best Seller, Jeffery Deaver. Talk about a writer who gets procedurals right! He was gracious and friendly, as were ALL of the specialists there to teach us.
Thank you to everyone who put this conference together! My writing will be better because of all your help and expertise!
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K.P. Gresham, author of the Pastor Matt Hayden Mystery series and Three Days at Wrigley Field, moved to Texas as quick as she could. Born Chicagoan, K.P. and her husband moved to Texas, fell in love with not shoveling snow and are 30+ year Lone Star State residents. She finds that her dual country citizenship, the Midwest and Texas, provide deep fodder for her award-winning novels. Her varied careers as a media librarian and technical director, middle school literature teacher and theatre playwright and director add humor and truth to her stories. A graduate of Houston’s Rice University Novels Writing Colloquium, K.P. now resides in Austin, Texas, where life with her tolerant but supportive husband and narcissistic Chihuahua is acceptably weird. She is a member of SINC Heart of Texas Chapter.
Search and Rescue K9 Units
by N. M. Cedeño
A representative of the Travis County Texas Search and Rescue K9 unit was kind enough to come and speak to Sisters in Crime, Heart of Texas Chapter this summer. She provided a wealth of information for crime writers on the workings of Search and Rescue K9 Units.
Most Search and Rescue group members are unpaid volunteers. The volunteers go through training and must pass a fitness test in order to qualify to join the team. Dog handlers train their dogs to participate in the searches following training guidelines. There are three different kinds of S & R dogs: live find, trailing, and human remains detection (HRD). Searches may be categorized as wilderness, urban, or disaster. Police in cars or on foot handle most urban searches. Dogs are mostly used for wilderness and disaster searches.
The human remains detection (HRD) dogs are not referred to as cadaver dogs anymore. HRD dogs must be able to identify hundreds of odors that come from decaying human remains and be able to differentiate those smells from those of decaying animals. Training the dogs to identify these odors requires the handler to obtain appropriate materials for training exercises. These materials may be donated to the trainer by dental surgeons, midwives, and other doctors or organizations with access to amputated or removed body parts. Places such as the Forensic Anthropology Research Facility, also known as the Body Farm, at Texas State University’s Freeman Ranch, will allow dog handlers to use the facility for training only once a year. The dogs can identify these smells even when underground or mixed with other smells.
My dog, Petra, who is not a S&R dog. Picture by N. M. Cedeño.
Trailing dogs are usually on leashes and are following a scent trail looking for a missing person. These dogs are used when authorities know exactly where the missing person was last seen, giving them a starting point for using the dogs. The dogs are given a sample carrying the missing person’s scent to smell, such clothing the person wore recently. Then the dog is told to find that specific scent. Each person’s individual scent is distinctive, created by soaps, sprays, detergents, shampoos, conditioners, and their own skin particles. Relatives in the same home who use the same products may have similar scents. The dogs are trained to distinguish between the missing person and close relatives.
Live find, or live search, dogs are trained to find a person in a large area of land. They can be made to work in a grid pattern or can be sent to search an area independently, off leash. The dogs are fitted with GPS trackers so that the area they search can be followed and mapped. These dogs love their game of search and find so much that they will not stop unless their handler forces them to rest. Live search dogs are trained to find the missing person’s scent as it drifts in the wind. If the dog is working independently and locates the subject, the dog can be trained to either stay with the subject and bark, or run back and forth between the searchers and the subject, leading the searchers to the missing person.
Research has shown that lost people tend to follow specific patterns depending on their age, mental state, and what they were doing when they got lost. Search and Rescue operations will begin their search for a missing person based on what the research says the person is most likely to do. For example, small children, ages 1 to 3, tend to walk in circles. When they get tired, they lay down and go to sleep where they are. Children ages 3 to 6 get scared when it gets dark, find a protected area, and curl up in a ball. Hunters who think they know the area in which they are lost tend to keep walking, reasoning that if they keep walking, they will find their way back.
If a missing person stays still in one place, their scent will build up around them like a puddle or pool. When the wind blows the scent pool, it will be stronger, allowing a dog to find and follow the scent more easily. If the person keeps moving, the scent will be harder for the dog to follow, a small scattered trail, rather than a concentrated pool. This is why it is important to stop moving if you know that someone is looking for you. A search dog will find you faster if you stop moving.
Finally, if an area has been thoroughly searched by Search and Rescue and the missing person is not found, the search ends with the missing person declared “R.O.W.,” rest of world. The searchers know the missing person isn’t in the search area, therefore, he or she must be somewhere else, out in the rest of the world.
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N. M. Cedeño was born in Houston, grew up in the Dallas Metroplex, once lived in Amarillo, and currently lives near Austin, Texas. She writes mystery short stories and novels that are typically set in Texas. Her mysteries vary from traditional, to romantic suspense, to science fiction. She is working on the second novel in her Bad Vibes Removal Services Series. She is a member of SINC Heart of Texas Chapter.
It’s almost time for the 2018 Book Festival! Starting at our September 9th Chapter meeting, I encourage everyone to bring the books you would like us to feature at our Heart of Texas Sisters in Crime Booth.
Here are the specifics.
Please bring no more than 10 copies of each book you want to sell, a short synopsis of that book, and a short bio about you! You can throw in any business cards, flyers, cha-chas or other publicity giveaways if you so desire.
Help us help you sell your books! If you are working the booth, please remember to enclose an 8 x 10 publicity photo of yourself (can be black & white or color).
If you have any questions or need to make separate arrangements for getting your books to us, please call me at 713-962-9992 or email me at kpgresham(at) aol (dot) com.
The last day to turn in your books for the festival is at our October 14th meeting. Thanks for all of your support!
Sisters in Crime Heart of Texas Chapter meets monthly on the second Sunday of the month at 2:15 p.m. We meet at Café Express at 3418 N. Lamar.
Boerne Book Festival: Table for HoTXSinC Authors
THE BOERNE BOOK FESTIVAL – OCTOBER 6, 2018 – 10:00 A.M. – 6:00 P.M. We have been invited to share in Boerne’s rich literary tradition. HoTXSinC WILL HAVE A TABLE AT THEIR BOOK FESTIVAL. We are asking for volunteers to work either of two shifts: 10:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m. or 2:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Please contact Fran Paino at franpaino.com if you can volunteer for either or both shifts. Booksellers must be present at the HoTXSinC table in Boerne to sell their books. Standard rules apply: Sellers must be current members in both local and national levels.
For Members Only: Short Ghost Story Contest Submission Deadline
Just a friendly reminder for those who are interested in entering our ghost story contest. All submissions due no later than Sunday, September 9th. They can be handed in at the meeting OR, preferably, sent to either Noreen Cedeno , noreenm74 (at) yahoo (dot) com, or Fran Paino, franpaino (at) gmail (dot) com
Submission should be double spaced, one inch margins and MAXIMUM 6,000 words.
The winner will be notifed in advance. The prize for first place is a $25 Target gift card plus the Waller Knife, and announced at the October regular meeting.
The contest is open to current, paid members only and excludes the board of directors.
Authors ofAustin Mystery Writers‘ second crime fiction anthology, LONE STAR LAWLESS, will appear atThe Bosslight in Nacogdoches, Texas, on September 20.
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Congratulations and Best Wishes
… to our friends Manning Wolfe and Bill Rodgers on their marriage
“Hi there! Hallmark Publishing is open to unagented submissions of completed full-length novels through Labor Day (Monday, Sept. 3), 2018. We will also have an open reading period in February 2019. Follow us on Twitter, @HallmarkPublish, to be the first to learn about future calls for submissions.”
‘In November, when most of us settle in for a long, chilly winter, participants at the Kauai Writers Conference gather at the Marriott Resort to learn and network, kayak and surf, and stroll across white sands under palm trees. “We have such a rich and diverse faculty that writers are torn,” explains conference director David Katz. “Should they go see a best-selling author or go to the beach?”’
OR Ask Kathy to register for you. hotx2014 (at) gmail (dot) com
No Lo Contendere
Members, send news to hots2014(at) gmail (dot) com. Include both past and upcoming events. Include pictures if you have them.
Also send head shots and a list of your book titles/short story titles to Kathy for theHOTXSINC author page.
And send titles/authors of books (articles, websites, blogs) you’ve read or are reading, and that you recommend to other Sisters in Crime.
HOTSHOTS! welcomes reviews and articles written by members. Email hotx2014 (at) gmail (dot) com.
2018 Bulwer Lytton Fiction Contest
Winner – Crime/Detective
“He glanced at his unsuspecting guests, his slight smile hiding his hateful mood, his calm eyes hiding his evil intentions, and his smooth skin hiding his tensed muscles, skeletal structure, and internal organs.” ~ Dave Agans, Wilton, NH