https://bookswelove.net/donaldson-yarmey-joan/
I was born in New Westminster B.C. and raised in Edmonton.I have worked as a bartender, cashier, bank teller, bookkkeeper, printing press operator, meat wrapper, gold prospector, house renovator, and nursing attendant. I have had numerous travel and historical articles published and wrote seven travel books on Alberta, B.C. and the Yukon and Alaska that were published through Lone Pine Publishing in Edmonton.
One of my favourite pasttimes is reading especially mystery novels and I have now turned my writing skills to fiction. However, I have not ventured far from my writing roots. The main character in my Travelling Detective Series is a travel writer who somehow manages to get drawn into solving mysteries while she is researching her articles for travel magazines. This way, the reader is able to take the book on holidays and solve a mystery at the same time.
Illegally Dead is the first novel of the series and The Only Shadow In The House is the second. The third Whistler's Murder came out in August 2011 as an e-book through Books We Love. It can be purchased as an e-book and a paperback through Amazon.
i live on a small acreage in the Alberni Valley on Vancouver Island.
There are approximately nine varieties of bluebell, but the United Kingdom is home to roughly half of the world’s bluebell population. This iconic springtime flower can take five to seven years to develop from seed into a bulb, then bloom into the flower most people know. They are a protected species, and there is a heavy fine for anyone found digging them up. It is also a surprisingly delicate plant. If careless footsteps crush the leaves, they can no longer photosynthesize and will die back from lack of nutrition. Some bluebells can be white or pink. Often a white bluebell is lacking its blue pigment, or it may be a version of the Spanish bluebell.
In Scotland, bluebells are known as harebells because folklore has it that witches turned into hares and hid amongst the flowers. That could be why it is sometimes known as Witches Thimble or Lady’s Nightcap. You may also have heard the folksong, The Bluebells of Scotland. If not, check out this YouTube clip https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eq14cPI0LW8. The bluebell is reputed to ring at daybreak to call fairies to the woods. If you pick a bluebell, those fairies could lead you astray, and you would be lost forever, so best not to pick them just to be on the safe side.
Symbolically, bluebells represent grace, everlasting love, good fortune, and truth. They epitomize Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love and beauty, and the Virgin Mary who represents calm and peace. They were also once dedicated to the patron saint of England, St. George. Bluebells stand for constancy, humility, and gratitude in the centuries-old language of flowers used throughout Europe and Asia. Might Shakespeare have been referring to the bluebell when he wrote of 'the azured hare-bell?'
Bluebells also have their practical uses. The
Elizabethans used starch from the bulbs to stiffen their ruffs. Gum from the
roots was used as glue for feathers and in bookbinding. Snake bites supposedly could
be cured by their juice, although the plant’s chemical makeup is potent and can
be toxic in large doses. Today bluebells inspire the perfume for hand creams and
soap and are used as dyes or pigments.
Whichever way you look at it, whether you
believe in witches and fairies or not, there is nothing more magical than sitting
in an English bluebell wood in springtime.
Victoria Chatham
NB: Images from author's collection.
My sister-in-law is a fan of the Whistling Pines cozy series. In an email she suggested the premise of a Whistling Pines cookbook fundraiser. A note to my consultant crew yielded a pile of cookbook recipe suggestions along with some interesting plot twists. But assembling a cookbook itself isn't a mystery. Brian Johnson, my tuba-playing, Whistling Pines consultant threw out the thought that some recipes are closely guarded secrets. His wife has a beet pickle recipe she won't even share with their children, and most chefs have a recipe they keep a closely guarded secret. If they're willing to prepare it on television, they premeasure the ingredients so the audience can see what goes into the mixer, even if the spice mixture and exact measurements aren't shared.
With those tidbits in mind, I started typing.
Two Harbors is buzzing when a former resident, now a world-famous culinary expert, announces his return home to broadcast a live cooking show, featuring ethnic recipes prepared by local cooks. Everyone knows that the secret pie recipe from the now defunct Oscar's Restaurant will be a feature, but will the recipe's owner share it on national television? That question is left unanswered when the recipe's owner is found dead, with hundreds of recipes strewn on her kitchen floor.
Other recipes are chosen for the television show, but as the broadcast nears, the celebrity host's checkered past becomes the new topic of the Whistling Pines rumor mill. One resident advises Peter, my recreation director/protagonist, that the host will likely be poisoned, shot, or blown up by people he wronged before his Hollywood departure. Knowing that the senior citizens of Whistling Pines tend to twist and exaggerate things, Peter isn't particularly concerned. He advises the police chief of the possible threat, and they're closely watching the crowd gathered for the television broadcast.
Not wanting to throw out a spoiler, let me say that the broadcast doesn't go entirely as planned. But what about the murdered baker? Hmm, does her death have anything to do with the cooking show, or is the motive for her murder related to something else entirely? Read Whistling Bake Off to find out. It might be the sweetest Whistling Pines mystery yet.
Check out my books, including Whistling Bake Off, at the BWL Publishing website https://www.bookswelove.net
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| Napoleon's Senate chair, Luxembourg Palace |
To find out more about her and her books: DianeScottLewis
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| Arranging a Dream: a Memoir by J. Q. Rose Click here to find JQ's books at BWL Publishing |
Hello and welcome to the BWL Publishing Author Insiders Blog.
in January 2021, BWL Publishing released my memoir, Arranging a Dream: A Memoir. In 2022, there is more to the story.
What is the story?
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| Arranging a Dream: A Memoir by J.Q. Rose |
From the back of the book:
In 1975, budding entrepreneurs Ted and Janet purchase a floral shop and greenhouses where they plan to grow their dream. Leaving friends and family behind in Illinois and losing the security of two paychecks, they transplant themselves, their one-year-old daughter, and all their belongings to Fremont, Michigan, where they know no one.
Will
the retiring business owners nurture Ted and Janet as they struggle to develop
a blooming business, or will they desert the inexperienced young couple to
wither and die in their new environment?
Most of all, can Ted and Janet grow together as they cultivate a loving marriage, juggle parenting with work and root a thriving business?
Follow Ted and Janet's inspiring story, filled with the joy, triumphs, and obstacles and failures experienced by these blossoming entrepreneurs as they travel the turbulent path of turning dreams into reality.
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| A snapshot of the flower shop on the first day we saw it in July 1975 |
I remember how thrilled I was when we decided to become shop owners. I remember how frightened I was to move away from Central Illinois where we had a team of supporters in our family and friends and the security of two paychecks.
The small town in West Michigan was filled with strangers. We knew nothing about the retiring owners. We had to trust and pray they were good people.
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| Sara, Easter 1976 16 months old |
We sold the business on March 1, 1995. You can imagine a lot transpired during those 19-plus years of working as business owners.
In 1982, we purchased property about two blocks from the original chalet-style flower shop and greenhouses and erected three greenhouses, each 50' x 150', for growing plants to keep up with the demand from our customers and to house a garden center. In 1986, we opened our new flower shop and garden center facility which was attached to the greenhouses.
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| The floral shop, garden center and greenhouses in one location 1988 |
Imagining the building that was going to be our new flower shop and garden center was one thing, but planning and building it were another. Dreaming of it was thrilling. Building it was frustrating when we couldn't get the builders to show up and get it done as quickly as we wanted to! Decorating the interior and ordering inventory, moving in...all those things and more were exciting and scary all at once. Figuring out how the design room should be set up, managing the shelving for the shop and garden center, decisions on how to create welcoming, but efficient spaces, were just a few of the responsibilities.
We celebrated our new facilities with the community with a grand opening in November 1986. That day and the excitement of our customers and visitors still swirls in my memory as one of the best days at the flower shop.
The plans for the new facility were birthed during a lunch date. Here's the excerpt from Chapter 29, Another Move, Arranging a Dream: A Memoir.
Within one year of occupying the new location, we were fed up
with running back and forth between the shop and greenhouses in two locations
and frustrated with the insufficient space in the design room, coolers, storage
areas in the chalet building. We decided in 1985 to build an expansive flower shop with a garden
center at the new greenhouse location.
We brainstormed on the place to locate the building on the
property, but nothing clicked until we met with our beloved salesman, “Ugly
Fred.” He called himself that memorable name to distinguish him from other
salesmen. When Fred started calling on us, we liked the tall, white-haired
Dutchman. He had experience owning a hardware store, and he shared helpful tips
on selecting and displaying products our customers needed. Interacting with him
through the planning and setting up of the products, he grew to become our
trusted friend and mentor.
At one of those lunch meetings at Samuel’s Restaurant, which
seemed to be our home away from home, we discussed the idea of moving the shop
to the greenhouse property.
“That makes sense to me,” he said. He grabbed a pen from his
shirt pocket and began sketching a drawing on a clean, white paper napkin.
“You can place the shop here.” He pointed to his drawing with
the building out front and to the side of the greenhouses.
“That would make room for a large area for the entrance and
parking.” Ted’s eyes shone with excitement.
“See, place a door into the greenhouses on this side, a door
on the east side into the garden center.” Fred sketched in the doors.
“And the entire front of the building would be the gift
shop,” I announced.
Fast and furious came more ideas for storage areas, work
areas, delivery space. God bless Ugly Fred and his napkin drawing. I wish I had
saved it.
At the ground-breaking ceremony in front of the greenhouses,
we invited Fred to be in the photo taken by the Fremont Times Indicator for an
article on the beginning construction of the flower shop. Our daughters, Ted
and I, Ken Frens, Fred and his boss at Mollema Wholesalers, and building
contractor Harold Smith smile brightly in the photo captured by the
photographer. What an exciting time to see the shop take form and become a
reality.
Now, the rest of the story in 2022:
The owners who originally purchased the shop in 1995 are still in business, however, they sold the shop and property to Aldis grocery store last month. Aldis will bring in the wrecking ball soon to knock down that building whose blueprint was first hand-drawn on a white paper napkin. Soon, our beloved facility will be a pile of rubble, then disappear into a landfill. All the evidence that the shop ever existed will be gone. I'm a bit melancholy about that, even if I haven't been working in the shop for 27 years.
I am glad I have wonderful memories of the times and photos of that era of my life because there is no longer any physical proof of those times. The original chalet building was knocked down several years ago. Only a grassy lot with a For Sale sign remains where the old shop was located.
Thank goodness, I have the memoir that leaves our legacy stories for our family and friends and future generations to read and learn about how we made our dream come true. It is a testimony to others to know that dreams can come true.
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My message to you is to consider jotting down memories for your family. Or record them using your phone. Your story could be an important piece to encourage others.![]() |
| Tell your life story! |
ARRANGING A DREAM: A MEMOIR
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| Janet and Gardener Ted |
Whether the story is fiction or non-fiction, J.Q. Rose is “focused on story.” She offers readers chills, giggles and quirky characters woven within the pages of her mystery novels, but truth in her memoir, Arranging a Dream.
JQ presents workshops on creative writing and life storytelling and takes the podium to encourage attendees to take the time now to write their legacy stories.
Blogging, photography, board games
and travel are the things that keep her out of trouble. She and her husband spend winters in Florida and summers up north with their two daughters, two sons-in-law, four grandsons, one granddaughter, two grand dogs, four grand cats, and one great-grand bearded dragon.