Interview with Nancy Bilyeau
Please check out this interview with fellow Byrdcliffe writer Nancy Bilyeau about Dazzlepaint and the magical mountain that inspired it.
Please check out this interview with fellow Byrdcliffe writer Nancy Bilyeau about Dazzlepaint and the magical mountain that inspired it.
Did secret societies on both sides try to harness occult powers to win WWI? Did these conspiracies reach even to America – and as far as Woodstock, NY? Could the Fair Folk have been the most powerful secret weapon in the Great War? The answers to the first two questions are matters of undisputed historical
Coming in Feb — Now Available for Pre-order!
The Horseman’s Word is now available for sale at Amazon (paperback or eBook), Barnes & Noble (both), and Encircle Publication (paperback), as well as your local Indie bookstore.
So, so far my giddy book tour consists of three events, and I’d love it if you would join me at one. I’ll be reading and signing copies of The Horseman’s Word at: Wed., August 14 at 7 pm. Northshire Books, Saratoga Springs, NY. More information at https://www.northshire.com/northshire-bookstore-saratoga Saturday, September 7, at 4 pm. WITH
The Dragon Murder Case abounds with the usual suspects: The ingenue. The irresistible, but hardened, woman of mystery. The crazed beldame. The drunkard. And Leland – no, we’re still not past Leland yet. Then there’s the dragon, “the water-dragon, Amangemokdom, or sometimes Amangegach – was used as a bogey to frighten recalcitrant children.” No, really,
Arguably one of the least satisfactory characters of The Dragon Murder Case is Leland, the biracial son of “an Algonkian Indian — the Princess White Star, a proud and noble woman, who was separated from her people when a child and reared in a southern convent [and a] father [who] was an architect, the scion
Of Princess White Star and Princess Noamie
Okay, okay. There are those who called S.S. van Dine’s The Dragon Murder Case “one more stitch in his literary shroud,” and I can see the point. Man about town dives drunkenly into a bottomless pool that suffers from a mysterious Native American curse in full view of a dozen witnesses and never surfaces. Detection
Just Philo and Me. And Dragon Makes Three
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