Showing posts with label Hechtman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hechtman. Show all posts

Sunday, June 7, 2026

Sconed to Death - A Spotlight

Sconed to Death (A Crochet and Crumpets Mystery) by Betty Hechtman

About Sconed to Death

Cozy Mystery 2nd in Series
Setting - Indiana
Publisher: ‎ Severn House
Publication Date: ‎ June 2, 2026
Print Length: ‎ 224 pages
A brand-new series from the queen of culinary cozies. Full to the brim with crochet, crumpets, and crime! The perfect ingredients for murder . . . Annie Hart has transformed the yarn shop she inherited into a thriving business and tea shop. Now she needs to sell it so she can move back to LA. She just has to ensure that young Toby Swanson is kept on as the supplier of their famous scones. Annie decides to secretly enter Toby in a new reality TV cooking show. But his application video takes a deadly twist when Annie and her business partner, Gray, discover a body on the beach while filming. Even worse, it looks like the young woman had been enjoying Toby’s cherry scones and the shop’s rose tea before her death. With the help of her misfit group of local yarn artists, can Annie find a killer and save her reputation? Readers who love super cozy culinary mysteries will eat up this new charming cozy mystery series.

About Betty Hechtman

 

Despite completing a Fine Arts degree, all Betty Hechtman ever wanted to be was a writer. She wrote a weekly column in her college newspaper and later wrote magazine and newspaper pieces, along with short stories and a prize-winning screenplay. She has published over thirty books across four cozy mystery series, all of which have yarn craft. She lives with her family in Southern California  

Author Links: 

Website: https://www.Bettyhechtman.com  

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

Blog: https://www.killerhobbies.blogspot.com  

Purchase Links Amazon Barnes and Noble

Thursday, September 21, 2023

Killer Hooks - A Guest Post

I'm pleased to allow Betty Hechtman to take over Cozy Up With Kathy today. Betty writes the Crochet Mystery series. KILLER HOOKS is the fifteenth book in the series and was released this week.


Location, Location, Location
By
Betty Hechtman

I don’t know about you, but for me where a book takes place is a big part of the story. I don’t like it when a city or area is mentioned once and other than an occasional street name thrown in, there is nothing more to let you know where the characters are.

Because I feel that way, I set my stories in places that I know well. The Crochet Mystery series takes place in Tarzana, California, which happens to be where both I and amateur sleuth, bookstore worker and crocheter Molly Pink live. The houses I write about are real places most of which I have been inside. It is always a weird feeling to see the inside of a place where I have been spending a lot of time in in my imagination. One of the Crochet Mystery plots centered around a huge house being built right behind Molly’s. It was based on what was actually going on behind my house. I had a good idea what the inside of the house being built would look like because despite it super high cost, it was being built from plans like a tract house. In other words, the houses would have slightly different designs, but basically the same layout. And thanks to a real estate website that showed houses for sale, I was able to see the inside of a house with a similar layout online. When the house behind mine was finished and went on the market, I was rushed over to the first open house. I couldn’t wait to see the inside of the real place where so much drama had taken place in my imagination. The real estate people left me to wander the interior by myself. Little did they know when I looked at the balcony off the master bedroom, all I could think about was that was where the murder in my book had happened.

Tarzana is in the San Fernando Valley and is really a community in Los Angeles, rather than a separate town and is situated at the base of the Santa Monica Mountains. It is one of the smaller Valley communities and has mixture of houses on twisty streets leading to the open space of the mountains and areas like Molly’s (and mine) that are on level ground. We have orange trees in our backyard left from when the whole area was an orange grove. I love the closeness to wilderness. I can be standing in line at a busy grocery store and five minutes later be walking in the Santa Monica Mountain surrounded by mysterious canyons and brush covered hillsides.

Ventura Boulevard is the main street that runs through Woodland Hills, Tarzana, Encino and points east. I admit to creating my own version of the stores in the Tarzana section for my books and making it sound a little more small townish than it really is.

It’s easy for me to describe Molly’s house, since it happens to be where I live. In KILLER HOOKS, the 15th Crochet Mystery, a lot of the action takes place at Molly’s house as it has become the center for her family. More than once I have looked at one of the couches in my living room expecting to see Molly in conversation with someone, and I can almost hear Molly’s mother and her singing group the She La Las practicing their routine.

Molly and I share a kitchen though I didn’t give her the weird stove set up that exists in the real room. Someone redid the house with more concern for look than practicality. The stove top is level with the surrounding counters and has cabinets above it. Instead of a hood and exhaust fan, there is a mechanism that comes up from the back of the stovetop that has an exhaust fan with a questionable ability to keep the heat off the cabinets above the stove.

Shedd & Royal Books and More, the bookstore where Molly works and the Tarzana Hookers meet is based on a Barnes & Noble that was in Encino and closed years ago. But it is still alive and open in my imagination.

The Writer for Hire series has a totally different location, but also one I am very familiar with. It takes place mostly in the South Side Chicago neighborhood of Hyde Park where Veronica Blackstone lives in a three-story walk up that is over a hundred years old. She inhabits the apartment I grew up in and still have. When I look at the black leather couch in that living room, I picture Veronica talking to her boyfriend Ben, or I see her trying to relax by sipping chamomile tea and crocheting. I can’t walk into the dining room without picturing her writers’ group gathered around the table.

In SENTENCED TO DEATH, the fourth Writer for Hire Mystery, which is coming out in paperback in October, the plot involves a house tour. I chose interesting houses that I had been inside when I was a kid. They are all different styles and I added a few touches of my own like an elevator and a secret passage. I was able to see what the insides of the houses look like now thanks to those online real estate sites. It was a strange feeling to see spots in the houses that I had been in and had memories connected to. I always wonder if there are somehow shadow vibrations of all that went on in a particular location.

And my Yarn Retreat series takes place at a slightly sinister hotel and conference center on the tip of the Monterey Peninsula. Cloudy skies and lots of fog add to the moody atmosphere where not everybody who checks in, checks out. I was just up there recently soaking up the atmosphere and looking at the wind-swept cypress trees that always make me think of someone running away with their hair trailing after them. 

There are no generic landscapes in my books and I like to think that the plots couldn’t take place anywhere else other than where I had set them.
 
**********************************************************************
Betty Hechtman is the national bestselling author of the Crochet Mysteries, the Yarn Retreat Mysteries, and the Writer for Hire Mysteries. Handicraft and writing are her passions and she is thrilled to be able to combine them in all of her series. Betty grew up on the South Side of Chicago and has a degree in Fine Art. Since College, she has studied everything from improv comedy to magic. She has had an assortment of professions, including volunteer farm worker picking fruit on a kibbutz tucked between Lebanon and Syria, nanny at a summer resort, waitress at a coffee house, telephone operator, office worker at the Writer’s Guild, public relations assistant at a firm with celebrity clients, and newsletter editor at a Waldorf school. She has written newspaper and magazine pieces, short stories, screenplays, and a middle-grade mystery, Stolen Treasure. She lives with her family and stash of yarn in Southern California. See BettyHechtman.com for more information, excerpts from all her books, and photos of all the projects of the patterns included in her books. She blogs on Fridays at Killerhobbies.blogspot.com, and you can join her on Facebook at BettyHechtmanAuthor.

************************************************************************

 Killer Hooks: A Crochet Mystery by Betty Hechtman

About Killer Hooks

Killer Hooks
A Crochet Mystery Cozy Mystery 15th in Series
Setting - California Beyond the Page (September 18, 2023)
Paperback: ‎ 230 pages

When a baby girl is dropped off on Molly Pink’s doorstep, her life is thrown into disarray as she is putting together a troublesome author event at the bookstore where she works.

The author is a demanding former Hollywood columnist whose book is filled with upbeat stories, but who wants to promote a true crime podcast she is about to launch based on the dark side of what she left out of her columns.

At the same time, Molly’s son has asked her to investigate a potential investor in his production company. The baby, who happens to be Molly’s estranged granddaughter offers her an opening into an elite mommy group, a member of which is the wife of the person Molly is to investigate.

When the columnist dies suddenly, Molly finds herself in the crosshairs of an unfamiliar detective who considers her the prime suspect. Molly recruits the help of the Tarzana Hookers to help with all.

About Betty Hechtman

Betty Hechtman is the national bestselling author of the Crochet Mysteries, the Yarn Retreat Mysteries, and the Writer for Hire Mysteries. Handicraft and writing are her passions and she is thrilled to be able to combine them in all of her series. Betty grew up on the South Side of Chicago and has a degree in Fine Art. Since College, she has studied everything from improv comedy to magic. She has had an assortment of professions, including volunteer farm worker picking fruit on a kibbutz tucked between Lebanon and Syria, nanny at a summer resort, waitress at a coffee house, telephone operator, office worker at the Writer’s Guild, public relations assistant at a firm with celebrity clients, and newsletter editor at a Waldorf school. She has written newspaper and magazine pieces, short stories, screenplays, and a middle-grade mystery, Stolen Treasure. She lives with her family and stash of yarn in Southern California. See BettyHechtman.com for more information, excerpts from all her books, and photos of all the projects of the patterns included in her books. She blogs on Fridays at Killerhobbies.blogspot.com, and you can join her on Facebook at BettyHechtmanAuthor.

Website: https://www.BettyHechtman.com  

Purchase Links - Amazon - B&N - Kobo -

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Location, Location, Location

While characters and plot are of extreme importance in a mystery series, its location can often play an important role as well. The vibe of a book may change if the setting is set in a small town rather than a big city or is urban instead of rural.

A series may be set in a real location. The White House Chef Mysteries by Julie Hyzy, for example, are set in Washington DC while Betty Hechtman has a setting in Los Angeles, California; Tarzana to be more precise. Writers must be careful when using real locations. Inaccuracies in the setting may be picked up by readers familiar with the area. Artistic license aside, nothing annoys me more when I see glaring errors in book.

Some cities are characters unto themselves; San Francisco, New Orleans, and New York City are iconic places that bring their own style to the story when mysteries are set there. Juliet Blackwell brings the magic of San Fransisco to her Witchcraft Series. The vibe of New Orleans can be felt in the Piece of Cake Mysteries by Jacklyn Brady and Laura Childs' Scrapbooking Mysteries. You can feel the rush of New York City in Cleo Coyle's Coffeehouse Mysteries.

Some authors create fictional towns. In this way they can set the stage exactly as they need it, creating the perfect town for them. Oftentimes they will set this fictional town near real places-to add verisimilitude and pull interest for readers attracted to those real locations. Lorraine Bartlett's Victoria Square mysteries are set in McKinley Mill, New York. While you won't find this town on a map, it is based on a real town, and the books sometimes talk about the nearby real cities of Rochester and Buffalo.

Some authors use a variety of locations in a single series.The Passport to Peril series by Maddy Hunter features a travel organization-so each book goes on a trip. Changing settings like this also makes all the murders a little more plausible as well. We don't have to willingly suspend our disbelief as much. It's a bit more likely to stumble across murders worldwide than to have them all occur in your own small town backyard.

I enjoy settings both fictional and real. I love to read about places I've been...or wish to go... and I especially love books set in towns I know and love. What about you? Do you enjoy reading mysteries is settings you know, or do you prefer to explore the unknown?