Showing posts with label Female Sleuths. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Female Sleuths. Show all posts

Saturday, March 4, 2017

GET A FREE EBOOK FROM THE LADIES OF LAUGHTER!

screenobooks 




 It's READ an E-BOOK Week on the Smashwords.com website and we're offering THERE'S SOMETHING WRONG WITH MISS ZELDA for FREE from March 5-11th.  THERE'S SOMETHING WRONG WITH MISS ZELDA is the third book in the Grandmothers, Incorporated cozy mystery series, and we bet that you will "cry laughing" as the adventures continue for our Ladies of Crime. Click on the book cover for THERE'S SOMETHING WRONG WITH MISS ZELDA and apply the coupon for your FREE COPY of this hilarious novel during this special week for readers. 

Saturday, January 14, 2017

THE FIRST FICTIONAL FEMALE DETECTIVE



Hope you enjoy this article from the Speed City Sisters in Crime Blog!

THE FIRST FICTIONAL FEMALE DETECTIVE

Who was the First Fictional Female Detective in Literature?  C. V. Rhodes, co-author of the Grandmothers, Incorporated cozy mystery book series  did some on-line investigation and here's what she found.

According to the website Crime Fiction Lover (www.crimefictionlover.com) the character's name was Mrs. Gladden, featured in a series of serials called The Female Detective by Andrew Forrester.  Mrs. Gladden was an undercover police agent who employed "subterfuge and logical deduction" to solve cases.  Set in London, England, the serials were published in 1864.  The work was definitely fiction since women weren't recruited to London's Metropolitan Police until 1923.

The website states that a few months later a second English writer, William Stephens Hayward, wrote another series of serial adventures featuring a woman protagonists named Mrs. Paschal.  In Revelations of a Lady Detective, Mrs. Paschal was a cigarette smoking, gun toting sleuth who takes her crinoline petticoat off to go down a sewer.  That was racy stuff in 1864.

It wasn't until 1888 that the first British novel featuring a female protagonist was published.  Described as a poorly written work of fiction, the name of the book was Mr. Bazalgette's Agent, by Leonard Merrick. 

It was a female author, Metta Victoria Fuller Victor, who wrote the first full length detective novel in America.  Published in the 1860s, ironically, her protagonist was a young attorney named Richard Redfield, a man.  It's with Redfield's help that a legendary detective from New York City--another man--solves a crime.  Go figure.
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Visit the Grandmothers, Incorporated cozy mystery series website at www.grandmothersinc.com




Tuesday, December 13, 2016

BLOG NEGLECT GUILT

Okay, Okay, we're guilty of blog neglect and we know it!

For the past year we've been busy finishing our latest Grandmothers, Incorporated adventure, Whose Knife is it Anyway? That's why we haven't been keeping up with our blog.  That's our story and we're sticking to it!  So here's the blurb for our ladies' latest escapade:

WHOSE KNIFE IS IT ANYWAY?

THAT'S WHAT BEA, HATTIE AND CONNIE WANT TO KNOW AS THE AMATEUR SLEUTHS BECOME EMBROILED IN A CASE OF "REAL" MURDER THIS TIME.

WHEN THE LADIES OF GRANDMOTHERS, INCORPORATED ARE TRAPPED IN THE WOODS WITH A GROUP OF FEUDING CHURCH LADIES, THEY WONDER IS A KILLER LURKING IN THEIR MIDST?

IT'S ANOTHER ROUND OF BELLY LAUGHS AS THE LADIES EMBARK ON A DESPERATE SEARCH TO DISCOVER WHOSE KNIFE IS IT ANYWAY?

Readers can find Whose Knife is it Anyway in Ebook format at the Barnes and Noble and Kobo book sites.  We'll keep readers informed when it appears on other sites.  

With the new year, we've made a commitment to do better when it comes to keeping  up with our blog.  We thank you for taking the time to view Mini Musings.