Monday, November 18, 2024
Tom Thomson Book Launch a huge Success! by Nancy M Bell
Friday, October 18, 2024
Book Launch for The Tom Thomson Mystery Announced.
I'm happy to announce that the book launch for The Tom Thomson Mystery will be on November 16, 2024 at 1pm MST. The Purple Platypus Bookstore 5003B 50 Avenue in Castor Alberta will be hosting me and I'm thrilled to work with Lynn Sabo, the owner. There will be refreshments and perhaps some swag.
Here is an advance reader's review:
Thomas Thomson was a Canadian artist best known for his
landscapes. He spent his summers capturing the scenery in Algonquin Park,
Central Ontario, first in oil sketches on small wooden panels and then
producing larger works on canvas during the winter in Toronto. His best-known
piece of work is The Jack Pine. What isn’t so well known is how Tom
died. On July 8th, 1917, Tom’s canoe was found overturned in Canoe
Lake, not far from where he set out. His body wasn’t discovered until July 16,
1917, also floating in the lake close to where the canoe was found 8 days
earlier.Was he murdered? Did he commit suicide? Or was his death accidental?
Nobody knows.
Nancy M. Bell has skillfully woven the threads of fact and
fiction in her rendition of what might have happened. Her protagonist is young
Harriet St. George, a very modern-minded young lady who loves escaping her
strict family, particularly her stern father. She also summers at Mowat Lodge
on Canoe Lake in the Park. She loves to tramp through the woods, canoe, fish,
and paint to her heart’s content. Her friend Winnie Trainor, also a summer
visitor, is sweet on Tom, while Harriet appreciates his skill as an artist and
does her best to emulate him. But then Tom is missing.
Harriet suspects the Lodge managers, Shannon and Annie Fraser, of being involved in illegal activities. Who should she turn to for help? Besides Winne, the Park Ranger, Mark Robinson, is the only person she can share her suspicions with. All the characters are clearly introduced and have their place in the story of the search for Tom. The ending is unexpected and dramatic, and some readers may not see it coming, but it is an entirely satisfying conclusion to a true Canadian mystery
VM Chatham
I thought I'd include a small excerpt as well, just to whet your whistle.
This is the Preface:
Hello, let me introduce myself. I am
Harriet Agnes St. George. I’m sure you’re wondering what I have to do with Tom
Thomson, or indeed, with the mystery surrounding his death. I’m a painter as
well and the wilds of New Ontario, that which you now know of as Algonquin
Park, is one of my favourite places to indulge my passion. Being the early
1900s it is unusual for a woman to wander about unchaperoned, and in the bush
at that. But let me assure you, I am no ordinary woman. I like to think I’m the
forerunner of a new breed of women who will strike out and demand to be allowed
to reach their full potential without the mostly unwanted advice of some male
figurehead. It is only in April of this year of our Lord, 1917, that women are
allowed to vote. About time too, in my opinion.
Let’s just say, it’s a good thing my dear Great
Aunt Lois left me a sizable amount of money in her will, in my name and solely
in my control. Much to my father’s anger and dismay. But I digress.
Tom Thomson and I used to haunt the same
places and tramp the same paths and portages, sometimes alone and sometimes
together. Winnie Trainor often accompanied one or both of us, most often Tom as
she had a soft spot for the man. Winne wasn’t a painter, but she did love to
fish and was always happy to help portage. And she did have a yen for Tom, as I
have mentioned.
So, leaving you with this bit of background
information, I will endeavor to tell the tale of Tom Thomson’s death and the
aftermath as I know it. The subject is still a painful one for me, so as you
will soon see, I have set the story down in third person rather than first.
It’s a way of distancing myself from the grief and the anger at the treachery
that ended Tom’s life and his career.
Harriet St. George stepped off the train at
the Canoe Lake Station and smoothed down her skirts. Tipping her head back, she
took a deep breath of the sharp air of early May. It was so wonderful to be
free from the restraints of her rather conservative family. Here at Canoe Lake,
Harriet could dispense with the cumbersome skirts and traipse through the bush
clad in trousers and a flannel shirt. Not to mention the much more comfortable
boots she wore while in the woods, exploring for the perfect site to set up her
portable easel and paintbox. She loved the French name for her paintbox: Pochade.
It rolled off the tongue so nicely. Harriet giggled and refrained from doing
just that. The locals already thought she was a bit strange, well except for
Winnie Trainor who also liked to gad about in trousers and spend hours fishing
out on the lake.
Shaking her head, Harriet turned to collect
her luggage, not much more than the aforementioned paintbox and a duffle
stuffed with what she would need for a summer of painting and fishing in the
Park. Hopefully, the Frasers of Mowat Lodge had received her telegram, and her
room would be ready when she got there. With the paintbox in one hand and the
duffle over her shoulder, she went in search of the park ranger, Mark Robinson,
who kept track of all comings and goings in the Park and had promised to
arrange her transport from the station to the Mowat Lodge.
The duffle was heavier than one would
expect, but that weight made Harriet’s heart light. Along with the few clothes
stuffed haphazardly in the bottom, most of the room was taken up with her
collection of oil paints, brushes, and thin wooden shingles that she intended
to use painting en plien aire. She’d copied that trick from a fellow
painter she’d met last summer. Tom Thomson tended to paint quickly, but with an
accuracy and feel that Harriet envied, any place he found a scene in the woods
that spoke to him he captured it on the shingle boards. Only later did he
transform the rough painting on the board into a canvas, usually over the
winter when he returned to Toronto.
Someday, she promised herself. Someday
women artists would be recognized as well as the men. She loved the vibrant new
style that was developing in the Canadian art world. Slipping away from the
traditional method of reproducing a scene in minute detail. The advent of
photography was slowly making that form of art less popular. Thomson’s use of
colour and bold strokes of paint intrigued Harriet and she vowed to attempt to
hone her own skills this summer.
“Oh, Mark. There you are,” she greeted the
tall, thin park ranger who stepped out of the station house.
“Miss St. George.” Mark acknowledged her
with a tiny bob of his head.
“Oh, please, it’s Harriet,” she chided him.
“Once I ditch these skirts you’ll be hard pressed to tell me from the locals.”
Harriet gazed at the thick bush and the pale blue early May sky, the lake where
the ice was just beginning to break up. “I do love this place.”
“Harriet, then, if you wish. I’m sure if
your father was here he wouldn’t approve of me being so familiar.”
“Pish posh on my father. I’m free for the
summer of his stuffy ideas of what is proper for a young lady.” She giggled. “I
have my Great Aunt Lois to thank for this freedom. She left me a generous
inheritance with strict instructions to use it as my heart desired. And I
desire to spend the summer here, in Algonquin Park, painting and fishing.
Watching the stars and moon shining over the lake.”
I hope you enjoy the tale. Until next month stay well, stay happy.
Wednesday, September 18, 2024
Fall is coming or is it here? By Nancy M Bell
To see more of Nancy's work please click on the image above.
September 2024 is almost half over. Do you think the calendar decides when summer is gone and fall is upon us? I honestly don't think nature pays much attention to our human machinations. I remember an August day back in 1978, I was sitting on my horse having just come out of the wooded valley behind the barn and looking over Bruno Bijoni's huge bean field. It was only mid August, but as I sat and let the sun fall in slanted beams around me and the breeze sweep across the land to lift my hair, there was the unmistakable scent of autumn in it. It's a hard scent to describe, more experienced than described. It's a mix of dry grasses, disturbed leaf litter under the trees, a cooling of the air moving over the tasseled heads of ripe corn waiting for the reaper and so many other nebulous but unmistakable nuances.
In my middle years, I so looked forward to the shortening of days, the cries of the wild geese overhead and the whisper of the wind in their pinions as they lofted off the trout pond. Summer was always full to the brim and the dusk of ten pm often found me still teaching a riding lesson, or schooling my own horses. Not to mention the myriad of chores that spring and summer brings. Haying in June when the weather was always hot and humid, repairing fences, showing horses, braiding manes and tails until after midnight with my own horse always done last after the students. So yes, the shortening days were welcome. A promise of respite and a chance to recharge.
When I was much younger, fall meant the time we spent at the cottage on Davis Lake in Haliburton was drawing to a close and that was not met with such relief. But oh, the glory of the maple trees burning orange and red and gold against the dark spruce and pine. Their colours reflected in the mirror stillness of the lake. In later years, it was the Rouge Valley that gifted me with the palette of autumn colour as I rode my horse along the well known and loved trails. Even now, so many years later, I can close my eyes and ride down Mosquito Alley, climb Spyglass Hill, look over the flats on the east side of the river from Souix Lookout, ride down the broad avenue that ran along the top of the ridge, the place where I could find trilliums and lady's slippers in the spring.
Some falls have been open and warm, holding autumn at bay and spreading honey-gold light and heat across the western prairies. Clouds of dust rising into the Alberta blue sky heralding the work of many combines bring in John Barley Corn, wheat, canola, rye and other crops. On those days, fall seems far away and winter even more distant. There is one thing I can always be certain of though, no matter when it arrives, fall will be a'comin' in with crispy days and sharper nights. Jack Frost will paint the trees with colour, although out here in the west it mostly shades of gold and yellow. I trust my nose and my senses rather than the calendar to tell me what season it is.
Here are some images to get you into the mood.
Tuesday, June 18, 2024
Going down the Rabbit Hole by Nancy M Bell
To find out more about my work please click on the cover.
Working on a historical mystery has its own rewards and challenges. There is so much information to track down and then process. How to fit it all together...what to keep...what to throw away...what to actually use in the story...
The process of tracking down the information and then verifying said information is an experience all on its own. I find myself following links and leads from one site to another and then oh my! looking for actual books, either hard copy or digital, to further add to the pile of data that needs to be sorted through.
Ultimately, I arrive at the bottom of the rabbit hole and I'm never sure if I'm any more enlightened than when I started. But of course, then the author has to start to shovel their way back to the surface, sorting the dross from the gold. I emerge into the light holding some tiny nuggets of gold (information I can actually use).
However, the journey is important because even though I may not use all the information directly in the final product, the finding and sorting of all the information helps me to formulate the background structure that I will ultimately pin my story to. It enriches the overall image and atmosphere I wish to create, a backdrop if you will, against which my mystery and the characters involved can play out the storyline.
Though, sometimes I do wish the rabbit hole was not quite so deep or the rabbit warren not quite so extensive.
The Tom Thomson Mystery releases from BWL Publishing in November of 2024. I think you'll find it interesting with a rather unique POV from my protaganist ~ Harriet Agnes St. George of Sprucedale Ontario who is spending her spring and summer of 1917 in Algonquin Park in what was known then as New Ontario.
Until next month stay well, stay happy
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