Saturday, May 12, 2012

Guest on Nancy Cohen's Blog: From Trivia to Sydney

The road from mystery trivia to Sydney Lockhart meandered, hill-climbed, and detoured. Good detours. Not linear, and with a mind of their own.
Stop by writer, Nancy Cohen's blog today. Nancy is hosting me on her site and has posted my article "From Trivia to Sydney." Read about how I began writing mystery trivia before moving on to write my own mysteries.


Post a comment on my blog on any day between April 30 and June 1 and your name will be entered in a drawing for one of my trivia books. Three names will be drawn, one for each book.

The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book has been updated and is being reissued by LL-Publications.  If you enjoy mystery trivia, check out my other two mystery-trivia books The Agatha Christie and Quiz Book and The Alfred Hitchcock Triviography and Quiz Book, also updated and just out.

Nancy J. Cohen is an award-winning author who writes romance and mysteries. Her humorous Bad Hair Day mystery series features hairdresser Marla Shore, who solves crimes with wit and style under the sultry Florida sun. 
Tomorrow is Sunday and . . . Sunday is always for The Birds.


Friday, May 11, 2012


Stop by Baker Street Beat today. Dan Andriacco is hosting me on his site and has posted my article about Irene Adler, the only woman who stumped Sherlock Holmes. 

Post a comment on my blog on any day between April 30 and June 1 and your name will be entered in a drawing for one of my trivia books. Three names will be drawn, one for each book.

The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book has been updated and is being reissued by LL-Publications.  If you enjoy mystery trivia, check out my other two mystery-trivia books The Agatha Christie and Quiz Book and The Alfred Hitchcock Triviography and Quiz Book, also updated and just out.

Dan is the author of the new Sebastian McCabe/Jeff Cody mystery series. The first two books, No Police Like Holmes and Holmes Sweet Holmes are two you won't want to pass up. 

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Blog Tour: Agatha Christie's other Life



During the month of May, I've invited a few authors to help kick off my mystery-trivia book tour. Today Mollie Cox Bryan, author of Scrapbook Secrets: A Cumberland Creek Mystery, is interviewing me on her blog. Stop by and find out about Agatha Christie's other life in my article "Digging for Ancient Treasures: Agatha Christie in the Middle East." 
I love Mollie's take on life: "A little pie. A little mystery. Life is good." Also, pick up a current issue of Mystery Scene magazine and read a great review on Scrapbook Secrets.

Post a comment on my blog on any day between April 30 and June 1 and your name will be entered in a drawing for one of my trivia books. Three names will be drawn, one for each book.

What’s Your Agatha Christie I.Q?, originally published in 1996 by Citadel Press, has been updated and is being reissued by LL-Publications. The new title is The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book If you enjoy mystery trivia, check out my other two mystery-trivia books The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book and The Alfred Hitchcock Triviography and Quiz Book, also updated and just out.
Tomorrow Dan Andriacco, author of the Sebastian McCabe/Jeff Cody Mystery Series, is hosting me on his blog site. Read about the woman Irene Adler, the only female to beat Sherlock Holmes at his own game. 

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Blog Tour: Interview by Ryder Islington


During the month of May, I've invited a few authors to help kick off my mystery-trivia book tour. Today Ryder Islington, author of Ultimate Justice, is interviewing me on her blog. Find out some surprising information about Agatha Christie, Alfred Hitchcock, and Arthur Conan Doyle; what gave me the idea to writer mystery trivia; what I do when I'm not writing, and the writing demon I constantly battle. 

Post a comment on my blog on any day between April 30 and June 1 and your name will be entered in a drawing for one of my trivia books. Three names will be drawn, one for each book.
What’s Your Agatha Christie I.Q?, originally published in 1996 by Citadel Press, has been updated and is being reissued by LL-Publications. The new title is The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book.  If you enjoy mystery trivia, check out my other two mystery-trivia books The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book and The Alfred Hitchcock Triviography and Quiz Book, also updated and just out.
Tomorrow Mollie Cox Bryan, author of Scrapbook Secrets: A Cumberland Creek Mystery, is hosting me on her blog site. Read about Agatha Christie in the Middle East: "Digging for Ancient Treasures." Stop by if you have time. 

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Review: The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book

Fellow writer, Ryder Islington, is reviewing my trivia book, The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book on her blog site. If you have time, stop by tomorrow, too. Ryder is interviewing me.


Post a comment on my blog on any day between April 30 and June 1 and your name will be entered in a drawing for one of my trivia books. Three names will be drawn, one for each book.
What’s Your Agatha Christie I.Q?, originally published in 1996 by Citadel Press, has been updated and reissued by LL-Publications. The new title is The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book If you enjoy mystery trivia, check out my other two mystery-trivia books The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book and The Alfred Hitchcock Triviography and Quiz Book, also updated and just out.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Blog Tour: Becoming Holmes

During the month of May, I've invited a few authors to help kick off my mystery-trivia book tour. Today John Desjarlais author of Viper, is hosting me on his blog. The title of my article, "Is it the Actor or is it the Role?" Seems like no matter who plays Sherlock Holmes, they easily fit into the deerstalker cap and without question BECOME the Great Detective. So, is stepping into the role of Sherlock Holmes as easy as stepping into a pair of Persian slippers? You decide. 
Post a comment on my blog on any day between April 30 and June 1 and your name will be entered in a drawing for one of my trivia books. Three names will be drawn, one for each book.

Kathleen Kaska’s The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book features hundreds of trivia about the world's most famous detective, answering such questions as whether or not Sherlock Holmes ever uttered the phrase "Elementary, my dear Watson". Kathleen draws upon the entire Sherlock Holmes canon, plus the hundreds of films and thousands of radio and television programs that featured the detective and his inimitable partner, Dr. Watson. The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book is enhanced with 75 separate quizzes, asking probing, intriguing, fun questions related to all of Conan Doyle's 56 stories and four novels.
Also look for Kathleen’s other two trivia book: The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book and The Alfred Hitchcock Triviography and Quiz Book. All three have been reissued by LL-Publications.
Tomorrow is Mystery Trivia Tuesday: How Well do You Know Sherlock Holmes?
Wednesday, writer Ryder Islington, is interviewing me on her blog site. Stop by if you have time.

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Sunday's for the Birds: Great Auk: In 5 Minutes They were Gone


Early on the morning of June 3, 1844, two great auks tended their nest on a rocky ledge on Eldey Island off the coast of Iceland, taking turns keeping their egg warm. At one time the flightless bird habited the coastlines and islands in Iceland, southern Greenland, Ireland and across the ocean to Newfoundland and as far south as Florida. But as men began to inhabit these areas, the garefowl, as the auk were often referred, were captured for their black and white plumage, as well as for food.
             Natural-history museums in the United States and Europe were offering bounties for endangered bird species, hoping to obtain skins or eggs to add to their collection before the birds became extinct. In 1830, museums in Iceland were paying 100 kronen (about 30 dollars in the mid-1800s) for each garefowl. In the next ten years, seventy skins and fourteen eggs were taken from Eldey Island, satisfying the market and generating reports that the species was no more.
            Four years later, collector Carl Siemsen received a request from a dealer in Europe, pleading for one more great auk skin. Siemsen urged fisherman Vilhjalmur Hakonarsson to gather a group of men for one more trip. Fourteen men set sail for Eldey Island. The rough seas threatened to bash the Hakonarsson’s boat as he tried to anchor near the rocky shore. Only one trip ashore in the dingy would be allowed. Jon Brandsson, Sigurdr Islefsson, and Ketil Kentilsson were chosen to go. When the men reached the nesting site, the great auks showed little sign of alarm. As they ambled away from their nests, Jon Brandsson cornered one and grabbed it easily. Islefsson and Kentilsson seized the second bird as it stood on the edge of the rock. In one swift motion, the necks of both birds were rung. Noticing a crack in the egg, Kentilsson tossed it over the cliff. In less than five minutes, the great auk was extinct.
            In his book, On the Trail of Vanishing Birds, Audubon ornithologist, Robert Porter Allen, relates this chilling account of blatant disregard for an endangered species in his last chapter, “The Long Flight Back.” Learning of this event was just one of the many inspirations that fueled Allen’s desire to make a difference in the world of bird conservation. 
     Tomorrow I return to my blog tour with John Desjarlais who is hosting me on his blog. My topic: 
Is stepping into the role of Sherlock Holmes as easy as stepping into a pair of Persian slippers?