In September, C&T Publishing released the first two books of my ten-book Quilting Cozy series: Tie Died and Running Stitches (2nd editions). The remaining eight books will be released within the next few months.
For my new followers, I’d like to give you some background about how this series was developed.
I’m a retired geriatric social worker, and during my thirty years of working with men and women facing the issues of aging, I learned a great deal about growing old. Sarah Miller was born out of my desire to share what I have learned. Sarah is the main character in the series and a woman of a certain age who has faced the loss of her husband, her young grandson, her job, and the home where she raised her family. Yet, Sarah is a survivor.
The story begins in Cunningham Village, a retirement community in the mid-west, and follows Sarah as she finds ways to make a successful adjustment to this new way of life. From taking classes at the community center, making lasting friendships, and even exploring the possibility of a romantic connection, Sarah remains steadfastly determined to continue to be a vital, active woman engaged in life. Although she never expected to become involved in crime solving, she willingly took on that new role as well.
Being an avid quilter myself, I also wanted to integrate that particular creative expression into the story and Sarah, always willing to go along with my wishes, took up quilting. She, in fact, makes the quilts (with my help, of course) for each of the book covers, as you will see as you read each book. (You will be able to make the quilts as well since the instructions are now included.)
Because I wanted to write about quilting and about relationships, I chose the cozy mystery format. A cozy is a light mystery without explicit sex, violence, or profanity. If the crime is murder, it tends to occur out of the view of the reader. Cozies are usually organized around a hobby and a group of friends in a small community who work to solve the mystery. In this series, the hobby is quilting, and the community is the retirement village featuring Sarah, her feisty friend Sophie, and their cohorts.
I wrote my first book at the age of seventy-five and often question why I waited so long. I love writing and especially love my characters who have become a part of my life. I actually miss them when I’m not creating their experiences. I suspect there’s a Book #11 in our future. I can feel it niggling around up there.
My first two books are currently available at C&T Publishing (Tie Died and Running Stitches). The other eight will be released over the next few months.
I love hearing from my readers, potential readers, and everyone else so please feel free to drop me a line: QuiltingCozy@gmail.com (or leave a comment below). Also please sign up to follow this website and blog so we can stay in touch.
Thank you for taking the time to learn more about my books. I look forward to hearing from you!
I love books about quilting
I do quilt with a small group of friends. I have attempted to write but just never got past eigth pages. I am 67 and think yet there might be hope for me yet.
I never got past the eighth page either until I stopped thinking about who was going to read it and whether I said it the right way. When I just started writing and not stopping and not re-reading what I wrote until I was all finished. It truly just started to flow after a while. I’ve read that some writers outline their whole book first. I don’t do that. I just start writing and see where it goes. And I know this might be hard to believe, but I NEVER know who ‘did it’ until close to the end when I suddenly realize who the bad guy is! And it doesn’t need to be a mystery. Relationship stories are fun to write too and you can ‘borrow’ from all your experiences in life. My characters are primarily mixtures of certain people I’ve known in my life. I just think that if writing is calling to you, you deserve to give it a shot. Glad to hear from you, Margie. I hope you stay in touch.
Another book release! So happy for you and for your readers. I’m reading this post at my sewing machine, machine quilting a charity quilt. I tried that blocked you demonstrated a couple of posts ago, had some left over layer cake squares and I really liked using the light and dark squares. They turned out great! Thanks for sharing the idea.
Glad you’re enjoying that block. It goes together really fast and I love the results. I’ll put the instructions on my next blog for people that might be interested. As for the books, C&T Pub will be issuing two every month until all ten have been released. This is exciting!