The latest Food Lovers' Village Mystery, As the Cookie Crumbles, was released last month and author Leslie Budewitz visited the blog. Today, however, I'd like to go back in time and shine a spotlight on the first book in the series, Death Al Dente.
From the back cover:
The town of Jewel Bay, Montana-known as A Food Lovers' Village-is obsessed with homegrown and homemade Montana fare. So when Erin Murphy takes over her family's century-old general store, she turns it into a boutique market filled with local delicacies. But Erin's freshly booming business might go rotten when a former employee turns up dead...
Murphy's Mercantile, known as the Merc, has been a staple in Jewel Bay for over a hundred years. To celebrate their recent makeover as a gourmet food market, Erin has organized a town festival, Festa di Pasta, featuring the culinary good of Montana's finest-including her mother Fresca's delicious Italian specialties
But Erin's sweet success is soured when the shop's former manager, Claudette, is found dead behind the Merc on the Fiesta's opening night. With rival chef James Angelo stirring up trouble, and rumors swirling that Fresca's sauce recipes were stolen from Claudette, Erin's mother is under close scrutiny. Now Erin will have to hunt down some new suspects, or both her family and her store might wind up in hot water...
Recipes Included.
Showing posts with label Budewitz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Budewitz. Show all posts
Tuesday, July 24, 2018
Sunday, June 10, 2018
Why Writing A Book is Like Being on a Diet - Guest Post
I'm celebrating a milestone birthday today so Leslie Budewitz is taking over the blog. Leslie writes the Food Lovers' Village Mystery series. As the Cookie Crumbles is the fifth book in the series and was released just 2 days ago!
Why Writing A Book is Like Being on a Diet
by Leslie Budewitz
Reason #1: You can only start on
Monday. Everyone knows that. If you start on Tuesday, or heaven forbid, Friday
at noon, you’ll just mess up the cosmic calendar. You’ll think it’s a Thursday
in December In Real Life, when it’s really a Wednesday in June, because it’s
December on the page. You’ll grab your coat before leaving the house when it’s
80 degrees out, because you left your characters shivering in a pickup without heat
on the backroads of western Montana in the middle of a snowstorm. You’ll be
sure you already made dinner and show up in the kitchen after a full day of
work expecting to eat, only to find the cupboards bare. You’ll have to order
pizza instead, and you know what that will do for your diet.
Reason #2: You’ve got to deal with the
saggy middle. Because of the pizza. And because writers sit a lot. It can be
almost impossible to figure out what your characters do next. What new problems
to throw at them. By a certain point in the tale, you’ve become fond of them,
and we don’t want to make people we like suffer and get mired in the muck. Take
them—and yourself—for a walk. Ask them questions and listen to the answers.
What are they thinking, who are they upset with, what would they do if cops and
calories were no objection. With any luck, while they’re telling you how to
track down the killer, they’ll also tell you about a great new invention: the
zero-calorie potato.
Reason #3: Both go better if you set
realistic goals and keep from comparing yourself to other people. Two pages a
day may be your two pounds a week. Alas, some days, you may feel like you’ve
gained it all back. Stick to the plan, and before you know it, you’ll have a
scene, a chapter, a complete manuscript—and you’ll need new pants!
Reason #4: At the two-thirds mark, you
will get a better idea. You will be absolutely certain that the pineapple and
brown rice diet is the one for you, and you absolutely must, right this minute,
start that novel about the man who sets fires in order to make work for
firefighters. Don’t do it! See Reason #3.
Reason #5: Remember why you’re doing
this. Because you’ve wanted to tell this story for even longer than you’ve
wanted to lose the extra weight and feel better about yourself. Because
achieving your goal will lower your blood pressure and lighten your heart and
your step. Because we are the stories we tell ourselves.
************************************************************************
As the Christmas Cookie Crumbles (A Food Lovers' Village Mystery)
by Leslie Budewitz
About the Book
Cozy Mystery
5th in Series
Midnight Ink (June 8, 2018)
Paperback: 288 pages
Erin is one smart cookie, but can she keep the holiday spirit—and herself—alive till Christmas?
In Jewel Bay, all is merry and bright. At Murphy's Mercantile, AKA the Merc, manager Erin Murphy is ringing in the holiday season with food, drink, and a new friend: Merrily Thornton. A local girl gone wrong, Merrily has turned her life around. But her parents have publicly shunned her, and they nurse a bitterness that chills Erin.
When Merrily goes missing and her boss discovers he's been robbed, fingers point to Merrily—until she's found dead, a string of lights around her neck. The clues and danger snowball from there. Can Erin nab the killer—and keep herself in one piece—in time for a special Christmas Eve?
Includes delicious recipes!
About the Author
Leslie Budewitz is the author of the Food Lovers’ Village Mysteries and the Spice Shop Mysteries—and the first author to win Agatha Awards for both fiction and nonfiction. She lives in northwest Montana with her husband, a musician, and doctor of natural medicine, and their cat Ruff, a cover model, and avid bird-watcher.
Purchase Links Amazon B&N BookBub Kobo
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Tuesday, February 24, 2015
So many doorsteps, so many bodies ... Guest Post
So many doorsteps, so many bodies ...
By Leslie Budewitz
ASSAULT AND PEPPER by Leslie Budewitz, coming March 3 (Berkley Prime
Crime) first in the Seattle Spice Shop Mysteries
Just a pinch of murder... After the year from you-know-what, Pepper
Reece finds a new zest for life running a busy spice shop in Seattle’s Pike
Place Market. Her aromatic creations are a hit and everyone loves her
refreshing spice tea. Pepper is convinced she can handle any kind of salty
customer until a murder ends up in the mix.
In Talking About Detective Fiction, the late P.D. James wrote that
setting is important "since people react to their environment and are
influenced by it. ... [T]he place in which the body is found is particularly
revealing, and I regard the description of the finding of the body as one of
the most important chapters of a detective novel. To find a murdered copse is a
horrible, sometimes life-changing experience for most normal people, and the
writing should be vivid and realistic enough to enable the reader to share the
shock and horror, the revulsion and the pity."
ASSAULT AND PEPPER, first in my new Spice Shop Mysteries, is on its
way. No spoilers, so I won’t tell you where the body is found, but I don’t mind
saying the discovery rocks my protagonist, Pepper Reece, owner of the Seattle
Spice Shop in the Pike Place Market, right down to her bay leaves. Nothing in
her first year selling spice or her fifteen years managing staff HR at a giant
law firm prepared her for the shock of finding a man she knew dead in a place
she knows well.
(Although being a cop’s wife for
thirteen years did expose her to the seamier side of life. Especially when she
discovered him and a meter maid—she still can’t say “parking enforcement
officer”—in a back booth in a posh new restaurant practically plugging each
other’s meters when he was supposed to be working a shift for a friend. And of
course, it doesn’t help that he’s the bike cop on the Market beat.)
What’s even worse is when the
homicide detectives Spencer and Tracy, and yes, they’ve heard the jokes, and
no, they’re not amused focus in on one of her trusted employees. She considers
herself a good judge of people in both HR and retail, her livelihood depends on
it. How could she have been so wrong? The only other likely suspects seem—to
her, at least—just as unlikely. In investigating, Pepper is forced to confront
the limits of her own judgment and her ability to work with other people. In
the process, she learns new skills and draws on internal resources she didn’t know
she had.
As a reader and a writer, I pay
a lot of attention to setting. I also think it’s critical to explore how
finding a body, pursuing a killer, and encountering danger affect the sleuth.
While I’ve never witnessed a murder or found a murder victim, I have seen
people die of natural causes in unexpected places, and I’ve witnessed horrific
car wrecks. A good share of my legal practice involved personal injury work,
and I’ve been on the scene of fatal crashes shortly after they happened. Seen
the bodily fluids and the crumpled cars and the gouges carved across the road.
Dealt with the families and friends as they adjusted to their losses. As
Baroness James of Hyde Park said, those experiences change us. In light-hearted
mysteries, or cozies, the challenge is to use those events to push the sleuth,
to dig deeper, to investigate without being maudlin or gory. It’s possible, by
focusing on character growth and development, on relationships, on motive and
justice.
Because ultimately, we read to
explore human experience. The full range of it the variety, the spice of life.
Some bitter, some sweet, and all of it deliciously mysterious.
READERS, how important is the discovery of the body to you? How much
emotional impact do you expect the protagonist to feel?
—
The first author to win Agatha
Awards for both fiction and nonfiction, Leslie Budewitz lives in NW Montana
with her husband, a musician and doctor of natural medicine, and their Burmese
cat, a book cover model and avid birdwatcher. For more tales of life in the
Great Northwest, visit her website www.LeslieBudewitz.com
Tuesday, August 5, 2014
A Visit to Montana with Leslie Budewitz
I'd like to welcome Leslie Budewitz to the blog today. Leslie writes the Food Lover's Village Mystery series. Crime Rib, the second in the series was released July 1st following last year's Death al Dente.
Kathy: I am very proud of WNY, you seem proud of where you live too. Can you tell me just some of the things that make Montana so special?
LB: First, the people. They’ve got an independent spirit, but are community-minded. Our town – I use the term loosely – is unincorporated, but looks like a town, with its original village and its highway businesses, its neighborhoods and outlying areas. It boasts a tremendous volunteer corps. We make a party and a festival out of nearly everything, from “Clean Your Fork” in the spring when we pick up trash and tidy the roads and parks to the self-explanatory “Decorating Day” in December and “Undecorating Day” in January. We’ve also got far more artists, musicians, and writers than you’d expect in a town of less than 5,000, which most long-timers attribute to a few key people who fostered that spirit in the 1970s. That creativity has become part of our community character, as well as an integral part of our economy, and I try to do my part to nurture it.
And of course, the incredible natural beauty and all the opportunities it offers for recreation. Taking a walk around here is like meditation.
Kathy: I love the idea of being a locavore and am lucky to live in an area with plenty of good fresh local food and beverages. I was, therefore, excited to hear about your Food Lovers' Village Mystery series. What made you decide to turn a general store into a boutique market of local food treats?
LB: Well, Erin did that – not me! Small towns face tremendous pressures in the modern world and to keep up, they’ve got to reinvent themselves occasionally or find a niche – just as businesses do. In my role as a lawyer, I once mediated a dispute between an employer and a manager who complained that the company was constantly changing things, bringing in new products and marketing campaigns, changing the store layout, bringing in new ideas just when he got comfortable with the old ones. The employer’s response was that businesses always have to change, to stay fresh and interesting to the customer. The manager just couldn’t get it – which is why we had a problem.
Erin Murphy, my main character, very much follows the manager’s philosophy. It’s obvious to her that the Merc is struggling because it’s lost its identity and must forge a new one. She realizes that folks won’t come downtown – aka the Village – for groceries unless she gives them good reason. It’s so much easier to slide in and out of the big grocery store on the highway. The tourists want an interesting experience, blending a touch of the familiar with the local and exotic. Summer folks – those who come here every year, sometimes following decades-old family traditions – have their own mix of needs. And the locals – well, they tie it all together. Finding the mix that suits everyone and keeps the money flowing is a real challenge!
And Erin’s mother Fresca can’t understand why things need to change – even though she invited, even begged, Erin to come home to change things!
Just as I was finishing Death al Dente, I needed a birthday present and thought “I’ll pop into the Merc and see what they have.” Then I remembered it only exists in my head and on the page. Either I’ve created a magical, welcoming spot---or I’ve gone off the deep end. You decide!
My neighbors have given me a little flak for creating a business where they’d like to shop---if it really existed. Business opportunity available!
Kathy: In Death al Dente there are rumors of a stolen recipe. Do you guard your recipes, or do you willingly share them all?
LB: I think the recipe sections in the back of the books answer that question! I’ve never quite understood the recipe-hoarder mentality, or the cooks who share but intentionally leave out a secret ingredient. After all, isn’t sharing the love as much a part of cooking as taste and nutrition?
Kathy: In Crime Rib Erin Murphy looks forward to enjoying the 35th Annual Jewel Bay Summer Art and Food Festival. I love festivals and go to a few myself. Do you go to many festivals? Do you have a favorite? Is the festival in Jewel Bay based on a real festival somewhere?
LB: Our short season means we need to celebrate when we can, especially if we want to entertain those tourists. So every town and city in Montana has its festivals: Dog & Grog, Buzzard Days (“celebrating nature’s cleaners” – I’m not making that up), Homesteader Days, Pioneer Days, Strawberry Fest, Sweet Pea Festival, your choice of Huckleberry Days, Pow Wows, Mountain Men Rendezvous, and more. Jewel Bay’s festival combines them all, but it owes its biggest debt to the local festivals.
Kathy: What first drew you to cozy mysteries? Do you write in any other genres?
LB: As a lawyer and aspiring mystery writer, I’d been helping writers who had questions about legal issues in their fiction for years – how would a fictional detective get a search warrant, when are Miranda warnings required, could a particular character inherit from another, and so on. I wrote columns in writers’ newsletters and started my blog, www.LawandFiction.com/blog , and then wrote my first book, Books, Crooks & Counselors: How to Write Accurately About Criminal Law & Courtroom Procedure (Quill Driver Books, 2011), winner of the 2011 Agatha Award for Best Nonfiction. I love helping other writers. But while writing Books, Crooks, I realized I wasn’t through writing mystery, that I still wanted to tell my own stories. I love all variety of mystery, but decided to focus on the cozy because it combines everything I love about fiction.
Cozies combine plot, character, and setting with fun and community. The amateur sleuth uses her knowledge of the community to investigate, realizing that her skills and connections give her access to information that law enforcement lacks. She helps them and they close the case because of her – they restore external order, through the justice system, but she restores social order. And ultimately, the cozy mystery – whether it’s set in a small town or a particular segment of a big city – is about community. And food!
Kathy: Tell us about your series. Do you have plans for future books either in your current series or a new series?
LB: The Food Lovers’ Village Mysteries are set in Jewel Bay, Montana, a lakeside resort community on the road to Glacier National Park. They feature Erin Murphy, manager of The Merc, a specialty local foods market located in her family’s century-old building, the town’s first grocery. Death al Dente was published a year ago and won the 2013 Agatha Award for Best First Novel. The second, Crime Rib, was published July 1, 2014. Delighted to say both are national bestsellers. The third Village book, still untitled, will be published in July 2015, and I hope there will be more.
Assault & Pepper, first in the Seattle Spice Shop Mysteries, will be published in March 2015. Pepper Reece runs the Spice Shop in Seattle’s famed Pike Place Market, specializing in herbs, spices, and a pinch of murder.
Each series is published under a three-book contract with Berkley Prime Crime, the leading publisher of cozy mysteries. I’d love to keep telling both Erin’s and Pepper’s stories, but whether the series continue after the third book depends on the publisher – and reader interest.
Kathy: Do you have a favorite character? If so, who and why?
LB: Erin and Pepper each embody aspects of my own experience – I’m a Montana girl who moved to Seattle for college and a legal career, then returned home in my early 30s. Each of the other characters, major and minor, has their own genesis. In the Village series, I particularly enjoy exploring the relationship between Erin and her mother Fresca, and between Erin and her estranged friend from childhood, Detective Kim Caldwell. Candy Divine and Ned Redaway are pure fun, and even grim Sally Grimes has her moments! And then there are the two men vying for Erin’s romantic attention---Rick Bergstrom and Adam Zimmerman. I hope they all come to life on the page for the reader as they do for me!
Kathy: If you could have a dinner party and invite 4 authors, living or dead, in any genre, who would you invite?
LB: Hmm. I’ll call my friend Marianne Forrest to cater so I can sip wine and enjoy the conversation. Best not to try to cook and serve while awestruck. Now, because I haven’t met any of these writers, I can’t tell how well they’d get along---a factor in any guest list. I can pretty much guarantee this list will change in five minutes, when I remember someone I forgot---which is part of the fun of questions like this!
So today, the list would go like this: Toni Morrison, American novelist and Nobel prize winner for literature. I’ve read her 2008 novel A Mercy several times and am due for another trek back in time with her. Mary Oliver, American poet of the heart and of landscape. I suspect she’s quite shy, so if she wants to bring her dog---whom she often writes about---I’d stock up on liver treats. Ted Kooser, former American poet laureate. I wrote him a fan letter once and he wrote back. And Wallace Stegner, the late novelist and essayist whose Angle of Repose and Big Rock Candy Mountain are to me the essential novels of the West.
Now you may notice the lack of mystery writers. That’s because I get to see my favorite living writers at Malice Domestic, the annual convention celebrating the traditional mystery, where we also celebrate our favorite writers of the past. But if you give me a bonus pick, I’d invite Agatha Christie. And my agent, Paige Wheeler, and my editor, Faith Black, who would kill me if they didn’t get to join us.
What are you currently reading?
I’ve been immersing myself into “kitchen lit” – chefs’ memoirs and journalists’ explorations of food. A few recent favs: Back of the House: The Secret Life of a Restaurant by clinical psychologist and food writer Scott Haas, Cooked, by Michael Pollan, and Blood, Bones & Butter by Gabrielle Hamilton, chef and owner of Prune in New York City. I’m also pouring through spice catalogs and histories for my Spice Shop series.
Kathy: Will you share any of your hobbies or interests with us?
LB: At the moment, writing and my law practice take most of my time, but I also love to paint. My media are watercolor, dye on silk, and pastel. The birch grove on my website (www.LeslieBudewitz.com) is one of my paintings. Mr. Right and I love to hike and sail as well, and of course, we love to cook, to create new recipes, and to share them with our friends and family.
Kathy: Name 4 items you always have in your fridge or pantry.
LB: Kalamata olives, good cheese, crackers, and chilled white wine, preferably pinot grigio or a good NW Chardonnay.
Kathy: What's your favorite thing about being an author?
LB: Not wearing shoes to work. And getting to play for a living. Writing is my passion and my privilege, and I’m so grateful to the readers who make it possible!
Kathy: I am very proud of WNY, you seem proud of where you live too. Can you tell me just some of the things that make Montana so special?
LB: First, the people. They’ve got an independent spirit, but are community-minded. Our town – I use the term loosely – is unincorporated, but looks like a town, with its original village and its highway businesses, its neighborhoods and outlying areas. It boasts a tremendous volunteer corps. We make a party and a festival out of nearly everything, from “Clean Your Fork” in the spring when we pick up trash and tidy the roads and parks to the self-explanatory “Decorating Day” in December and “Undecorating Day” in January. We’ve also got far more artists, musicians, and writers than you’d expect in a town of less than 5,000, which most long-timers attribute to a few key people who fostered that spirit in the 1970s. That creativity has become part of our community character, as well as an integral part of our economy, and I try to do my part to nurture it.
And of course, the incredible natural beauty and all the opportunities it offers for recreation. Taking a walk around here is like meditation.
Kathy: I love the idea of being a locavore and am lucky to live in an area with plenty of good fresh local food and beverages. I was, therefore, excited to hear about your Food Lovers' Village Mystery series. What made you decide to turn a general store into a boutique market of local food treats?
LB: Well, Erin did that – not me! Small towns face tremendous pressures in the modern world and to keep up, they’ve got to reinvent themselves occasionally or find a niche – just as businesses do. In my role as a lawyer, I once mediated a dispute between an employer and a manager who complained that the company was constantly changing things, bringing in new products and marketing campaigns, changing the store layout, bringing in new ideas just when he got comfortable with the old ones. The employer’s response was that businesses always have to change, to stay fresh and interesting to the customer. The manager just couldn’t get it – which is why we had a problem.
Erin Murphy, my main character, very much follows the manager’s philosophy. It’s obvious to her that the Merc is struggling because it’s lost its identity and must forge a new one. She realizes that folks won’t come downtown – aka the Village – for groceries unless she gives them good reason. It’s so much easier to slide in and out of the big grocery store on the highway. The tourists want an interesting experience, blending a touch of the familiar with the local and exotic. Summer folks – those who come here every year, sometimes following decades-old family traditions – have their own mix of needs. And the locals – well, they tie it all together. Finding the mix that suits everyone and keeps the money flowing is a real challenge!
And Erin’s mother Fresca can’t understand why things need to change – even though she invited, even begged, Erin to come home to change things!
Just as I was finishing Death al Dente, I needed a birthday present and thought “I’ll pop into the Merc and see what they have.” Then I remembered it only exists in my head and on the page. Either I’ve created a magical, welcoming spot---or I’ve gone off the deep end. You decide!
My neighbors have given me a little flak for creating a business where they’d like to shop---if it really existed. Business opportunity available!
Kathy: In Death al Dente there are rumors of a stolen recipe. Do you guard your recipes, or do you willingly share them all?
LB: I think the recipe sections in the back of the books answer that question! I’ve never quite understood the recipe-hoarder mentality, or the cooks who share but intentionally leave out a secret ingredient. After all, isn’t sharing the love as much a part of cooking as taste and nutrition?
Kathy: In Crime Rib Erin Murphy looks forward to enjoying the 35th Annual Jewel Bay Summer Art and Food Festival. I love festivals and go to a few myself. Do you go to many festivals? Do you have a favorite? Is the festival in Jewel Bay based on a real festival somewhere?
LB: Our short season means we need to celebrate when we can, especially if we want to entertain those tourists. So every town and city in Montana has its festivals: Dog & Grog, Buzzard Days (“celebrating nature’s cleaners” – I’m not making that up), Homesteader Days, Pioneer Days, Strawberry Fest, Sweet Pea Festival, your choice of Huckleberry Days, Pow Wows, Mountain Men Rendezvous, and more. Jewel Bay’s festival combines them all, but it owes its biggest debt to the local festivals.
Kathy: What first drew you to cozy mysteries? Do you write in any other genres?
LB: As a lawyer and aspiring mystery writer, I’d been helping writers who had questions about legal issues in their fiction for years – how would a fictional detective get a search warrant, when are Miranda warnings required, could a particular character inherit from another, and so on. I wrote columns in writers’ newsletters and started my blog, www.LawandFiction.com/blog , and then wrote my first book, Books, Crooks & Counselors: How to Write Accurately About Criminal Law & Courtroom Procedure (Quill Driver Books, 2011), winner of the 2011 Agatha Award for Best Nonfiction. I love helping other writers. But while writing Books, Crooks, I realized I wasn’t through writing mystery, that I still wanted to tell my own stories. I love all variety of mystery, but decided to focus on the cozy because it combines everything I love about fiction.
Cozies combine plot, character, and setting with fun and community. The amateur sleuth uses her knowledge of the community to investigate, realizing that her skills and connections give her access to information that law enforcement lacks. She helps them and they close the case because of her – they restore external order, through the justice system, but she restores social order. And ultimately, the cozy mystery – whether it’s set in a small town or a particular segment of a big city – is about community. And food!
Kathy: Tell us about your series. Do you have plans for future books either in your current series or a new series?
LB: The Food Lovers’ Village Mysteries are set in Jewel Bay, Montana, a lakeside resort community on the road to Glacier National Park. They feature Erin Murphy, manager of The Merc, a specialty local foods market located in her family’s century-old building, the town’s first grocery. Death al Dente was published a year ago and won the 2013 Agatha Award for Best First Novel. The second, Crime Rib, was published July 1, 2014. Delighted to say both are national bestsellers. The third Village book, still untitled, will be published in July 2015, and I hope there will be more.
Assault & Pepper, first in the Seattle Spice Shop Mysteries, will be published in March 2015. Pepper Reece runs the Spice Shop in Seattle’s famed Pike Place Market, specializing in herbs, spices, and a pinch of murder.
Each series is published under a three-book contract with Berkley Prime Crime, the leading publisher of cozy mysteries. I’d love to keep telling both Erin’s and Pepper’s stories, but whether the series continue after the third book depends on the publisher – and reader interest.
Kathy: Do you have a favorite character? If so, who and why?
LB: Erin and Pepper each embody aspects of my own experience – I’m a Montana girl who moved to Seattle for college and a legal career, then returned home in my early 30s. Each of the other characters, major and minor, has their own genesis. In the Village series, I particularly enjoy exploring the relationship between Erin and her mother Fresca, and between Erin and her estranged friend from childhood, Detective Kim Caldwell. Candy Divine and Ned Redaway are pure fun, and even grim Sally Grimes has her moments! And then there are the two men vying for Erin’s romantic attention---Rick Bergstrom and Adam Zimmerman. I hope they all come to life on the page for the reader as they do for me!
Kathy: If you could have a dinner party and invite 4 authors, living or dead, in any genre, who would you invite?
LB: Hmm. I’ll call my friend Marianne Forrest to cater so I can sip wine and enjoy the conversation. Best not to try to cook and serve while awestruck. Now, because I haven’t met any of these writers, I can’t tell how well they’d get along---a factor in any guest list. I can pretty much guarantee this list will change in five minutes, when I remember someone I forgot---which is part of the fun of questions like this!
So today, the list would go like this: Toni Morrison, American novelist and Nobel prize winner for literature. I’ve read her 2008 novel A Mercy several times and am due for another trek back in time with her. Mary Oliver, American poet of the heart and of landscape. I suspect she’s quite shy, so if she wants to bring her dog---whom she often writes about---I’d stock up on liver treats. Ted Kooser, former American poet laureate. I wrote him a fan letter once and he wrote back. And Wallace Stegner, the late novelist and essayist whose Angle of Repose and Big Rock Candy Mountain are to me the essential novels of the West.
Now you may notice the lack of mystery writers. That’s because I get to see my favorite living writers at Malice Domestic, the annual convention celebrating the traditional mystery, where we also celebrate our favorite writers of the past. But if you give me a bonus pick, I’d invite Agatha Christie. And my agent, Paige Wheeler, and my editor, Faith Black, who would kill me if they didn’t get to join us.
What are you currently reading?
I’ve been immersing myself into “kitchen lit” – chefs’ memoirs and journalists’ explorations of food. A few recent favs: Back of the House: The Secret Life of a Restaurant by clinical psychologist and food writer Scott Haas, Cooked, by Michael Pollan, and Blood, Bones & Butter by Gabrielle Hamilton, chef and owner of Prune in New York City. I’m also pouring through spice catalogs and histories for my Spice Shop series.
Kathy: Will you share any of your hobbies or interests with us?
LB: At the moment, writing and my law practice take most of my time, but I also love to paint. My media are watercolor, dye on silk, and pastel. The birch grove on my website (www.LeslieBudewitz.com) is one of my paintings. Mr. Right and I love to hike and sail as well, and of course, we love to cook, to create new recipes, and to share them with our friends and family.
Kathy: Name 4 items you always have in your fridge or pantry.
LB: Kalamata olives, good cheese, crackers, and chilled white wine, preferably pinot grigio or a good NW Chardonnay.
Kathy: What's your favorite thing about being an author?
LB: Not wearing shoes to work. And getting to play for a living. Writing is my passion and my privilege, and I’m so grateful to the readers who make it possible!
***************************************************************************
For more tales of life in the wilds of northwest Montana,
and bonus recipes, visit her website and subscribe to her newsletter. Website:
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