Showing posts with label Foster. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Foster. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Murder on Oak Street - A Guest Post & Giveaway

I'm pleased to welcome Dr. Daniel O’Halleran to Cozy Up With Kathy. You can find Daniel on the pages of Murder on Oak Street by I. M. Foster. This book is the first in the South Shore Mystery series.

Dr. Daniel O’Halleran’s First Impression of Patchogue
By I. M. Foster


Good afternoon. My name is Dr. Daniel O’Halleran, and I’ve been asked to relate what prompted me to make the move to Long Island, as well as what my first impressions of Patchogue were. Regarding the first part of your question, there were really two reasons I decided to relocate. The indirect cause was my growing frustration with my job as a coroner’s physician in New York City. As coroners were not required to be doctors, the city employed physicians, such as myself, to determine the actual cause of death in suspicious cases. Alas, the system was overworked, resulting in many of my recommendations being poorly investigated or altogether ignored for the sake of expediency. But the thing that finally put the nail in the coffin, as it were, came when my intended left me standing at the altar. In retrospect, my guardian angel was certainly watching over me that day, for looking back, it was the best thing that could have happened. But enough of that. You also asked about my first impressions of Patchogue, Long Island.

To be honest, I’m not sure what I expected—a small country hamlet with a few stores on the main street perhaps. But the village I have come to call my home far exceeded whatever my imagination might have conjured up.

The Long Island Railroad has a stop right in the village, which is quite convenient, and I was met at a quaint but bustling station by my new employer, Dr. Sam Tennyson. From there we traveled a few blocks to my rooms on East Main Street. The Roe Hotel is quite a modern place and would rival many of the elegant hotels I have seen in New York City. Located in the center of town, it affords me easy access to Main Street and its establishments and offers all the comforts of home. Not only is there electric lighting throughout, but it boasts functioning indoor toilets and running water as well. I am told, it is also fitted with steam heating, though as the weather has become warmer, I cannot attest to that as yet. In addition, the hotel has an excellent dining room, billiard parlor, and a stable out back for ease in requesting transportation. Which reminds me, I really need to purchase my own horse and doctor’s buggy.

The cuisine in the restaurant downstairs is excellent cuisine, and the prices are quite reasonable, as is attested by the number of visitors that fill the hotel’s rooms on a regular basis. It appears the village is a popular destination for city folks who wish to escape the stifling heat of summer. One group that makes regular visits are the cyclists that pedal out from the city on weekends with the Roe Hotel as their destination. After enjoying a few days by the shore, they either pedal back to the city, or in many cases, take the railroad. I’m of a mind that the latter is a popular mode for the return trip since the Long Island Railroad has equipped special cars to accommodate their bicycles.

The village’s resort status does explain the number of hotels and restaurants. But I discovered one of its most enduring qualities the day after I arrived. That morning, I took a stroll down Ocean Avenue and was pleased to discover that the shore was but a few short blocks away. Patchogue sits on the Great South Bay, you see, and as such is allowing the gentle breezes that flow over a barrier island from the Atlantic Ocean to blow away the troubles of the day. A short ferry ride will bring me to Fire Island, and if I’m feeling playful, I can frolic in the Atlantic Ocean itself. Today, however, I’m sitting along the Great South Bay and contemplating the most endearing quality the village has to offer—Miss Kathleen Brissedon. But there I go again, getting off track.

A number of hotels and boarding houses line Main Street and Ocean Avenue, though, with the exception of a few like the Roe Hotel, most are only open during the summer season, truly giving the village the feel of a resort. I can see three of them as I sit here enjoying the early summer breezes: the Clifton House, the Ocean Avenue Hotel, and the Mascot House. All offer excellent accommodations, as well as summer activities, such as crochet and tennis. The Clifton House, for example, could accommodate 300 guests with views of the bay for as little as $2.50 a day or $15.00 a week. Tennis, crochet, and archery could be played on its vast lawn or the guests could enjoy a walk along the boardwalk. And for those not staying in the hotels, there are bathing pavilions to change into your bathing costumes. Why not just wear your swimming outfit to the beach? It may be 1904, but there is still some level of modesty required. One does not walk the streets in a bathing costume.

Heading back into the heart of the village along the brick-paved streets, I might stop for a bite to eat at Newins Restaurant or an egg cream at McBride’s Pharmacy, touted as having the largest and best soda fountain in all of Suffolk County. Or maybe spend a moment at Ginoochio’s and pick up a nice batch of strawberries before visiting Miss Brissedon at the local library. In addition to general stores like Hammond and Mills, the village includes a tailor and shoemaker and shops specializing in clothing. I just bought an everyday suit at C. F. Howell’s Furnishings for gents, though I’ll see the tailor, Mr. Stark when I’m ready for a good suit. I have been considering taking a look in Swezey’s Department store for a ready-made suit, however, just to use for recreational activities like bicycling.

Swezey’s is a large store of multiple floors, containing just about any item you might want, much like Macy’s department store in Manhattan. Mother is pleased to hear there is a theater, and Father enjoys the apple turnovers from Schoenfeld’s bakery that I bring along whenever I make a visit to Brooklyn.

In addition to the individual shops, Patchogue is also known for some larger concerns. Bailey’s Lumber Yard is the largest lumber yard on Long Island and has its own boats and railroad cars to ship its goods all over New York. And a bit further down on West Main, the Lace Mill produced the nation’s finest lace curtains and tablecloths and supplied jobs for hundreds of local residents.

I’d best get going now if I hope to catch Miss Brissedon at the library, especially since I plan to stop by Al Seitz’s Tonsorial Parlor for a haircut and close shave. I want to look my best for Miss Brissedon. Perhaps we can catch the ferry across to Fire Island for a picnic.

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 Murder on Oak Street (A South Shore Mystery) by I. M. Foster

About Murder on Oak Street 

Murder on Oak Street (A South Shore Mystery)
Historical Cozy Mystery 1st in Series
Setting - New York
Publisher: ‎ Inez M. Foster (November 12, 2022)
Hardcover: ‎ 503 pages

New York, 1904. After two years as a coroner’s physician for the city of New York, Daniel O'Halleran is more frustrated than ever. What’s the point when the authorities consistently brush aside his findings for the sake of expediency? So when his fiancĂ©e leaves him standing at the altar on their wedding day, he takes it as a sign that it's time to move on and eagerly accepts an offer to assist the local coroner in the small Long Island village of Patchogue.

Though the coroner advises him that life on Long Island is far more subdued than that of the city, Daniel hasn’t been there a month when the pretty librarian, Kathleen Brissedon, asks him to look into a two-year-old murder case that took place in the city. Oddly enough, the case she’s referring to was the first one he ever worked on, and the verdict never sat right with him.

Eager for the chance to investigate it anew, Daniel agrees to look into it in his spare time, but when a fresh murder occurs in his own backyard, he can’t shake his gut feeling that the two cases are connected. Can he discover the link before another life is taken, or will murder shake the peaceful South Shore village once again?

About I. M. Foster

I. M. Foster is the pen name author Inez Foster uses to write her South Shore Mystery series, set on Edwardian Long Island. Inez also writes historical romances under the pseudonym Andrea Matthews, and has so far published two series in that genre: the Thunder on the Moor series, a time-travel romance set on the 16th century Anglo-Scottish Borders, and the Cross of Ciaran series, which follows the adventures of a fifth century Celt who finds himself in love with a twentieth-century archaeologist.

Inez is a historian and librarian, who love to read and write and search around for her roots, genealogically speaking. She has a BA in History and an MLS in Library Science and enjoys the research almost as much as she does writing the story. In fact, many of her ideas come to her while doing casual research or digging into her family history. Inez is a member of the Long Island Romance Writers, the Historical Novel Society, and Sisters in Crime.

Author Links: 

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

X: https://www.x.com/IMFosterMystery  

Threads: https://www.threads.net/imfosterauthor  

Purchase Link - Amazon 

  a Rafflecopter giveaway

Tuesday, April 6, 2021

A Dead Man's Eyes - An Interview

I'm pleased to welcome Lori Duffy Foster to Cozy Up With Kathy today. Lori writes the Lisa Jamison Mystery series. A Dead Man's Eyes is the first book in the series and will be released next week.

Kathy: In A Dead Man's Eyes we meet Lisa Jamison, a reporter who is the single mom of a teen age daughter. Do you think that Lisa would have handled things differently if she wasn't a reporter?


LDF: If Lisa had not been a reporter, she might never have known her ex-boyfriend, the father of her daughter, was murdered. The cops labeled it a drug killing. Any other reporter might have given his death a paragraph or two and forgotten about it until an arrest was made. Most people don’t have that much time for the news. They read the headlines and the biggest stories of the day. That’s about it. A brief about a murder is easily overlooked. Even if Lisa had noticed the story and realized the victim’s identity, she would not likely have the resources to investigate further.

Kathy: Lisa winds up fighting for her family in a morbid, black market world she never knew existed. Were you aware of this type of black market before you began your book?

LDF: That’s a hard one to answer without spoilers. I knew this particular black market existed, but I had no idea how large it was and how much it encompassed. I was shocked and mortified by what I learned. It is not a world I would ever want to get too familiar with, that’s for sure! 

 

Kathy: Do you consider A Dead Man's Eyes to be more of a thriller or mystery?

LDF: A Dead Man’s Eyes is more of a mystery, but it is fast-paced, like a thriller.

 

Kathy: What first drew you to mysteries?

LDF: I never intended to write mysteries. I am intrigued by human nature, how we become the people we are, why we make certain decisions, how we communicate (or miscommunicate) with each other. But I was a crime reporter for six of my eleven years as a journalist and crime kept making its way into my fiction until it stole the show. Crime fascinates me. It is probably the best arena for studying human nature. We like to believe that there are good people and bad people and that we are safely on the side of good, but it is far more complicated than that.


Kathy: Do you write in any other genres?

LDF: I do! I have also written two standalone thrillers and one novel that is an historical courtroom drama. I also have a nonfiction book, Raising Identical Twins: The Unique Challenges and Joys of the Younger Years. I self-published that one with permission from our identical boys.


Kathy: Tell us about your series. 


LDF: The series focuses on Lisa Jamison, a journalist who ran away from her drug-addicted parents at 15, got pregnant, and then landed in foster care after witnessing the tragic death of a friend. She is successful in her career and has given her daughter the life she never had, but she has never confronted her past and it’s all starting to crash down on her, beginning with her ex-boyfriend’s murder.


Kathy: Do you have a favorite character? If so, who and why?

LDF: I hate to pick a favorite because I love them all, but I really do enjoy Dorothy. Dorothy came into Lisa’s life as babysitter for her daughter Bridget, and then became Bridget’s live-in nanny. By the time the novel begins, Bridget is 16 and no longer needs a nanny. Dorothy is “Grandma Dorothy” to Bridget and Lisa’s best friend. She is an artist with secrets of her own and an inner strength that can only come from the worst of hardships.


Kathy: Did you have a specific inspiration for your series?

LDF: I do. The idea came years later, but it started with a house fire on a city street in Syracuse. I had already interviewed the occupants, who escaped unharmed, and was waiting for a chance to talk with the fire chief when an obviously pregnant 15-year-old began talking with me. She was in foster care, but she was determined to keep the baby and make something of herself. She struck me as extraordinary—smart and capable—and her name seemed familiar. I looker her up in my old notes when I returned to the newsroom. She shared a name and age with a girl who had witnessed a fatal game of Russian roulette. I forgot her name over time, but I never forgot her. She is the main inspiration for the novel along with a couple of colleagues who were single moms and successful, one with a toddler-in-tow and no father in the picture. That is not easy in journalism.


Kathy: What made you decide to publish your work?

LDF: It never occurred to me that I wouldn’t publish, even when I was a kid. I knew it would happen eventually if I worked hard enough. I am very self-critical though, so I have always liked the idea of gatekeepers, people in the business who would decide when my work was ready for a broader audience. I know the system is not always fair, that success on the journey to publication often involves luck, but I have always needed that kind of validation. So, even though I self-published a nonfiction book, I knew I would not self-publish fiction. I am happy for people who can do it and I know I could have been published years ago if I had taken that route, but I think the timing is right for me now and that the wait for worth it.


Kathy: If you could have a dinner party and invite 4 authors, living or dead, in any genre, who would you invite?

LDF: That’s a tough question because there are a lot of really awesome authors I already have shared dinner or a drink with, thanks to writing conferences. So, I will focus on those I’ve not met in person: Margaret Atwood, Anita Shreve, John Irving and Jamie Ford. Jamie Ford would have to bring his wife, too, though. She is at least as interesting as he is.


Kathy: What are you currently reading?

LDF: I am reading three books right now. I just started Marco Carocari’s debut novel Blackout and Lisa Jewell’s Then She was Gone. I have physical copes of those books. I am reading Watership Down on my Kindle because my twins are reading it for school. I like to read what they read, so I can discuss the books with them.


Kathy: Will you share any of your hobbies or interests with us?

LDF: Sure! We live on 151 acres in the middle of nowhere. I love to hike around the property and take photos to share on social media. Hiking anywhere is one of my favorite things to do. My husband and I also enjoy gardening and making maple syrup. I used to be a runner with races every weekend and at least one marathon a year. I had planned to start racing again when my kids were older, but I was derailed by two foot surgeries and lots of weight gain. I am trying to get back on track. I love running and I miss it.


Kathy: Name 4 items you always have in your fridge or pantry.

LDF: I always have Jasmine rice, chocolate chip morsels, green peppers and Vidalia onions on hand.


Kathy: Do you have plans for future books either in your current series or a new series?

LDF: I am under contract for five more books with Level Best Books – two more in the series and three standalones. The second in the series is finished, but I am only halfway through the third. So that is what I am focusing on now. I have an idea for a fourth and it is so hard not to skip ahead! One of my standalones is an historic courtroom drama set in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State in the 1920s. I would love to write another like that.


Kathy: What's your favorite thing about being an author?

LDF: I love writing. I wish I could just write and write and write, and that someone else would do the rest.

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Blurb:

Lisa Jamison has done well for a single mom who got pregnant at fifteen.

She’s a reporter at a well-respected newspaper and her teenage daughter is both an athlete and honors student. Though their relationship is rocky these days, Lisa has accomplished what she set out to do. She has given her daughter the kind of life she never had.

But all that changes when Lisa sees her daughter in the eyes of a dead man.

The cops call it a drug killing, but Lisa doesn’t believe it. She knows her ex-boyfriend was no drug dealer even though she hadn’t seen him in sixteen years. Lisa ignores warnings from her medical-examiner friend. She fails to heed barely veiled threats from the sheriff of a neighboring county. Instead, she risks her life and the lives of her daughter and their closest friend on a dangerous quest for answers.

The investigation leaves Lisa fighting for her family in a morbid, black market world she never knew existed. She learns that trust is complicated and that she, despite her cynical nature, has been blind. She trusted the wrong people and now she might have to pay with her life.

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Bio:

Lori Duffy Foster is a former crime reporter who writes from the hills of Northern Pennsylvania, where she lives with her husband and four children. She was born and raised in the Adirondack Mountains of New York State, where a part of her heart remains. Her short fiction has appeared in the journal Aethlon, and in the anthologies Short Story America and Childhood Regained. Her nonfiction has appeared in Healthy Living, Running Times, Literary Mama, Crimespree and Mountain Home magazines. A Dead Man’s Eyes, the first in the Lisa Jamison mystery/suspense series, is her debut novel. Look for book two in the series, Never Broken, in April of 2022. She is also author of Raising Identical Twins: The Unique Challenges and Joys of the Early Years. Lori is a member of Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, The Historical Novel Society, International Thriller Writers and Pennwriters She also sits on the board of the Knoxville (PA) Public Library.

Instagram @lori.duffy.foster

Twitter @loriduffyfoster

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4824786.Lori_Duffy_Foster


Buy links:

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Dead-Mans-Eyes-Jamison-Mystery/dp/1953789250/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=lori+duffy+foster&qid=1617500527&s=books&sr=1-2

Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/a-dead-mans-eyes-lori-duffy-foster/1138999040

Apple Books: https://books.apple.com/us/book/a-dead-mans-eyes/id1557869449?id=1557869449&ign-itsct=books_toolbox&ign-itscg=30200

IndieBound link: https://www.indiebound.org/book/9781953789259