Tuesday, April 30, 2024

What Am I Reading These Days?


 

What am I reading these days? Mysteries!


By necessity. Although I do very much enjoy mysteries, in spite of my reading them of necessity. 


But why by necessity? Because I’ve started writing my next Magnolia Bluff mystery and if I don’t read in the same genre I’m writing in my mind starts coming up with ideas in the genre I’m reading. 


Don’t know why that happens, but it does. And I don’t particularly want flying saucers in my murder mystery.


And at the moment I’m reading the delightful Mr. and Mrs. North mysteries.


The Mr. and Mrs. North mysteries were the creation of Frances and Richard Lockridge.


The novels ran from 1940 to 1963, when Frances died and Richard decided not to continue the series alone.


The setting is New York City, where Pam and Jerry North live and get involved in the murder investigations of their friend, Homicide Lieutenant Bill Weigand.


These thoroughly enjoyable mysteries are pretty much unknown today. But the series was very popular in the ‘40s and ‘50s. The books spawned a Broadway play, a movie, a radio show that ran from 1942 to 1954. And a TV series that ran for 2 seasons (1952 to 1954), totaling 57 episodes.


What’s the attraction? Colorful characters with whom you fall in love, plenty of humor, a good measure of suspense, and clever whodunit storylines.


The books are great fun. Thoroughly entertaining. A pleasant way to spend a few hours. I can see why they were so popular in the 40s and 50s.


But like all old books some of the novels contain language and attitudes that are no longer accepted as belonging to proper society today.


So if you are easily offended by how our parents, grandparents, or great-grandparents may have acted or spoken — it’s probably best if you not read the books.


If you aren’t so offended, pick yourself up a few. You will be in for a rollicking good time.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!







CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with two bestselling novels. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.



If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes 







Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!




Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon!

Wednesday, April 24, 2024

My Favorite Pencils


 

I love pencils. Pencils with soft, creamy leads. The kind that flow across the paper as though they were ink: 3B to 6B work best for me.


It’s a bit difficult to find such in the sea of No. 2 (HB) pencils.


Why did the HB pencil become the standard? I have no idea. It’s a hard lead and leaves a faint, light line; unless you press the heck out of it. And who wants to do that? Tendonitis and carpel tunnel, you know.


So if one doesn’t use the old No. 2, what does one use? Good question, that. And I have a few answers.


Woodcased Pencils


The woodcased pencil dates back to the middle of the 1500s. But the pencil as we know it today was simultaneously invented in the 1790s by Joseph Hardtmuth in Austria and Nicolas-Jacques Conté in France.


There are dozens of pencil brands available, but only two are made in the USA. The companies are General Pencil Company and Musgrave Pencil Company.


Both companies make excellent pencils that are very easy on the wallet and whose quality matches or surpasses most of the foreign competition. They are the pencils I use almost exclusively.


Of the two companies, I prefer the pencils from Musgrave because I find their lead has a softer and creamier feel to it. It flows onto the paper like ink.


The 600 News and the Test Scoring 100 are my favorite Musgrave pencils. The lead in those two is soft and dark. Easy on the hands. No writer’s cramp. And I find them to be superior to the newly reintroduced and highly talked about Blackwing pencils, which are Japanese made. And run $2.50 per pencil compared to the 600 News at $1.17 and the Test Scoring at 85¢.


You can buy Musgrave pencils direct from the company: https://musgravepencil.com


Mechanical Pencils


I’m a big fan of mechanical pencils. They are very economical. Much more so than woodcased pencils. And their length never changes, so the feel is consistent in the hand. Plus, the pencil will last several lifetimes when given reasonable care. And the lead sticks are dirt cheap.


My go to pencils are a vintage Sheaffer and a vintage Mabie Todd “Fyne Poynt”.


They use .046 inch/1.1mm leads. The same size found in woodcased pencils.


Both pencils twist to push the lead forward. To load the pencil, simply retract the pusher a bit, insert the stick of lead, then retract all the way. 


The Sheaffer and Mabie Todd are my favorites out of the small collection I have. The Sheaffer has a beige-yellow base with red, gray, and black swirls; a black end cap; and silver-colored clip and front cone. The Mabie Todd is black, with gold-colored clip, mid-ring, and front cone. Both are very stunning pencils.


Occasionally I’ll use a lead holder. My interest in them goes back to high school drafting class.


To load a lead holder, you press a button at the back of the pencil body which extends the “claw” from the front. You then insert the lead and let go of the button. The “claw” holds the lead in place.


What’s especially nice about lead holders is that they are about the same length as a new woodcased pencil — and they never get shorter!


The Joy of Pencils


Pencils are a cheap alternative to pens. They produce a fairly consistent line, won’t skip or blob on the paper, won’t dry up, will write at any angle, will always start (I hate when a pen won’t write), and they don’t leak (making them great to use on airplanes, and safe to put in your shirt pocket).


I love pencils and find that I reach for them more often than a pen these days.


Find yourself a good vintage mechanical pencil on eBay and you’ll have a companion for life.


Or visit the Musgrave website and pick up the best woodcase pencils available today.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!






CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with two bestselling novels. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.


If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes 









Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!


Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon!

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

A Chance of a Ghost Review


I’m offering you a vacation. To beautiful Magnolia Bluff, Texas. In the heart of the Texas Hill Country. Beautiful scenery. Wineries. A quaint little town. With murder and ghosts.


My fellow Underground Authors, Rob and Joan Carter, have their book, A Chance of a Ghost, on pre-order for only 99¢.


It’s Book 23 in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles series and it’s a spooktacularly thrilling mystery.


I just finished reading an ARC. And it didn’t disappoint. What’s especially fun about A Chance of a Ghost is that we get to see how ghost “busters” actually work.


Rob and Joan are members of the Tampa Bay Spirits, a group that investigates paranormal activity. And they bring their experience to the newest murder mystery in the Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles.


Mike and Maureen Donovan, (fictional) members of Tampa Bay Spirits, depart Tampa and find themselves in Magnolia Bluff to help Mike’s cousins rid their newly renovated home of whatever it is that is making doors slam and things move.


But they no sooner arrive than Mike has a premonition that someone in town is going to die. And that’s something they hadn’t counted on.


Mike and Maureen meet Harry Thurgood, the owner of the Really Good Wood-Fired Coffee and Ice Cream Emporium (known as the Really Good to the locals), and Mike begins to suspect that Harry is the man who is to be murdered: burned to death in his own coffee shop. And probably not while roasting coffee beans.


Then the Donovans meet Bertram and George, the ghosts who have been causing all the ruckus trying to get someone’s attention to help Bertram solve a century old mystery.


The Carters take us on a twisty-turny rollercoaster of a ride as Mike and Maureen try to help the ghosts move on and prevent Harry from becoming living barbecue.


In addition, we learn how paranormal investigators actually work. How they try to contact the dead and discover what they need in order to stop haunting a house. We also discover that not all spirits are friendly Caspers.


There is plenty of suspense, action, and thrills in A Chance of a Ghost. It’s an entertaining page turner that I found regretting having to put down. You know, like to eat or sleep.


So grab your copy today! It’s on pre-order for only 99¢ on Amazon.


Then put on your deerstalker and get your infrared cameras ready.


Comments are always welcome! And until next time, happy reading!





CW Hawes is a playwright; award-winning poet; and a fictioneer, with two bestselling novels. He’s also an armchair philosopher, political theorist, social commentator, and traveler. He loves a good cup of tea and agrees that everything’s better with pizza.



If you enjoyed this post, please consider buying me a cup of tea. Thanks! PayPal.me/CWHawes 








Justinia Wright Private Investigator Mysteries on Amazon!


Magnolia Bluff Crime Chronicles on Amazon!