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You are here: Home / Books / Miranda and The D-Day Caper Guest Post

April 9, 2020 · 11 Comments

Miranda and The D-Day Caper Guest Post

Books· Cozy Mystery

Thanks for sharing!

Welcome to the Great Escapes Virtual Book Tour for Miranda and the D-Day Caper by Shelly Frome. Stop by each blog on the tour for interviews, spotlights, reviews and more!

Miranda and the D-Day Caper

by Shelly Frome

This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive compensation at no cost to you.

Miranda and the D-Day Caper
Cozy Mystery
Publisher: Boutique of Quality Books (March 1, 2020)
Paperback: 338 pages

A modern day mystery with WWII tactics, old-time heroes and values, and the efforts of two amateur cousin sleuths from the Heartland.

On a sparkling spring morning in the Blue Ridge, small-town realtor Miranda Davis approached the tailgate market, intent on dealing with her whimsical cousin Skip’s unexpected arrival from New York. It turns out that Skip was on the run and, in his panic, grabbed his beloved tabby Duffy, recalling that Miranda had a recent part in solving a case down in Carolina. His predicament stemmed from intercepting code messages like “Countdown to D-Day,” playfully broadcasting the messages on his radio show over the nation-wide network, and subsequently forced to flee.

At first, Miranda tried to limit her old childhood companion’s conundrum to the sudden abduction of Duffy the cat. But the forces that be were hell-bent on keeping Skip under wraps by any means after he now stumbled close to the site of their master plan. Miranda’s subsequent efforts to decipher the conspiracy and somehow intervene placed both herself and her old playmate on a collision course with a white-nationalist perpetrator and the continuing machinations of the right-wing enterprise, with the lives of all those gathered for a diversity celebration in nearby Asheville and a crucial senatorial vote on homeland security hanging in the balance.


Guest post

Thank you to the author for providing this enthralling guest post! Be sure to read it. It made me break out in song…We’re not gonna take it; no we ain’t gonna take it! We’re not gonna take it, anymore!

Call in the Whistleblower

by Shelly Frome

A noted Midwestern creative writing instructor offers a unique approach to storytelling. He tells his charges to put aside all trendy plotlines (Gone Girl, The Girl on the Train e.g —driven by an untrustworthy narrator) as well as genre formulas. Instead, he insists that you try not to write. When whatever is going on out there in the world becomes so unbearable you find yourself saying, “I can’t take this anymore,” that’s the sure sign of readiness. You now have a viable generator that will sustain you.

We’re not gonna take it!

In a way, this tack is reminiscent of Paddy Chayefsky’s Oscar winning screenplay for Network (1976). Here we have the ravings of Howard Beal, a news anchor who can’t abide the commercialization of the news and exhorts viewers everywhere to stick their heads out the windows and shout “I’m mad as hell, and I can’t take it anymore!” There was so much going on at the time to rile people up, that folks everywhere were shown opening their windows and wholeheartedly following Howard Beal’s directive.

George Clooney in Michael Clayton

There are countless other examples. Like Michael Clayton (2007) Tony Gilroy’s Oscar nominated screenplay with best actor winner George Clooney in the leading role. In this tale, Clayton, deployed as a fixer for a prestigious law firm, starts to have second thoughts when he’s sent out one evening to get a client “off the hook” after a hit-and-run accident. He finds the man safe and cozy in his upscale McMansion claiming the victim had no business crossing the dark street in the rain. Later on, the firm’s chief litigator has a breakdown while representing a major chemical company during a multi-billion-dollar class action suit. It turns out this seasoned advocate is also having a crisis of conscience, realizing the company’s pesticides have had disastrous effects, and is convinced he’s been summoned to make amends.

The lesson centers on what it takes for a believable character to finally take on the powers that be. In one telling instance, as the forces of duplicity begin to close in on him, Clayton pulls over, drawn by the sight of a trio of horses at twilight grazing at the top of a rise; perhaps because they’re untainted, natural and free. This cinematic shot is all the more powerful because it’s both symbolic and wordless. Clayton no sooner reaches the horses when his car blows up far below; the chief litigator is subsequently done away with; and Clayton’s quest becomes that much more urgent.

Mr. Smith Goes to Washington

It’s interesting to note that in real life this kind of intrepidness doesn’t always hold. Not long ago, a junior Republican Senator from Arizona, upset with the current machinations of the White House, addressed his colleagues in the Senate, urging them to take heart and speak truth to power. Getting no response, he shrugged off his campaign as a hopeless cause. In contrast, during a point in Lewis Foster’s best original story Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939), a novice junior senator (Jimmy Stewart) collides with the political corruption in Washington, crying out on the Senate floor that “a lost cause is the only cause worth fighting for!” After a futile, uphill battle, this naïve common man eventually triumphs.

#MeToo

In this same light, today’s #MeToo- like movements have finally, at long last, been set in motion as women banded together for a hitherto lost cause.

As it happens, in my recent effort entitled Miranda and the D-Day Caper I literally couldn’t take it anymore, longing for days gone by when the small town virtues of truth, decency and the longing to right a great wrong were easily identified with. When two cousins from the Heartland left their comfort zone to take on the powers that be, became thwarted at every turn and, finally, when all seems lost, blew the whistle.

I guess I’m such an incurable storyteller that I couldn’t help myself and had to find some way to step in.

About the author

Shelly Frome is a member of Mystery Writers of America, a professor of dramatic arts emeritus at the University of Connecticut, a former professional actor, a writer of crime novels and books on theater and film. He is also a features writer for Gannett Media’s Black Mountain News.

His fiction includes Sun Dance for Andy Horn, Lilac Moon, Twilight of the Drifter, Tinseltown Riff, Murder Run, Moon Games and The Secluded Village Murders. Among his works of non-fiction are The Actors Studio and texts on the art and craft of screenwriting and writing for the stage. Miranda and the D-Day Caper is his latest foray into the world of crime and the amateur sleuth. He lives in Black Mountain, North Carolina.

Author Links 

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/AuthorShellyFrome

Amazon: www.amazon.com/Miranda-D-Day-Caper-Shelly-Frome-ebook/dp/B07WPG7R3K

Twitter:   https://twitter.com/shellyFrome

GoodReads:   https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1358660.Shelly_Frome

BookBub:   https://www.bookbub.com/authors/shelly-frome

Instagram:   https://www.instagram.com/explore/tags/shellyfrome/

Purchase Links – Amazon B&N  Kobo Apple Books IndieBound IPG

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Literary Gold – SPOTLIGHT

 

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Thanks for sharing!
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Comments

  1. Sarah L says

    April 9, 2020 at 1:33 am

    Looks like an interesting book.
    Thanks for the contest. 

    Reply
  2. Shelly Peterson says

    April 9, 2020 at 3:12 pm

    Sounds like a good read.

    Reply
  3. Debbi Wellenstein says

    April 11, 2020 at 2:38 pm

    This sounds really good. Thanks for the giveaway!

    Reply
  4. Nancy says

    April 11, 2020 at 11:45 pm

    Your book featuring sleuthing cousins in North Carolina sounds very fetching! I’d love to read it!

    Reply
  5. Sandy Klocinski says

    April 12, 2020 at 7:03 am

    Looks like an awesome book! Thanks for the opportunity to win

    Reply
  6. Cynthia C says

    April 12, 2020 at 7:59 am

    Sounds like an interesting story.

    Reply
  7. Marissa M says

    April 12, 2020 at 11:31 am

    Sounds like a great read and I love the cover!

    Reply
  8. BILL HOFF says

    April 12, 2020 at 7:05 pm

    My daughter would enjoy this book

    Reply
  9. Sarah L says

    April 12, 2020 at 10:52 pm

    subscribe Literary Gold email: slehan at gmx dot com

    Reply
  10. Rosanne says

    April 13, 2020 at 3:34 am

    Thank you for hosting this giveaway to promote your book

    Reply
  11. gloria patterson says

    April 13, 2020 at 4:31 pm

    I would enjoy this book and I can jsut see the two cousins in my mind

    Reply

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