Dear Readers, Julie
Cosgrove is my friend and a fellow Texas
author. And her books are wonderful.
Welcome back, Julie. How
did you come up with the idea for this story?
Baby Bunco is the second novel in the Bunco Biddies Mysteries
series. Each book has a “Buncos theme,” which is a dice game twelve of the
senior citizens in their retirement community gather to play every Thursday. A
baby Bunco is when a player rolls three of the same number, but not the number
in the round. In other words, if you are in the round where everyone is trying
to roll as many fours as they can, and you roll three twos, that is a baby
bunco, worth five points. If you rolled three fours that round, that would be a
regular bunco worth twenty-one points.
So I used that point system to develop a plot involving someone
leaving a newborn infant in a bathtub of an abandoned garden home. The unique
thing is the home is in Sunset Acres, the retirement community where the Bunco
Biddies live. Not exactly an everyday occurrence.
If you were planning
a party with Christian authors of contemporary fiction, what six people would
you invite and why?
Probably Marji
Lane , Cynthia Hickey, Lisa Lickel, Sharon
McGregor, Vicki Caine, and Nancy Mehl because they all write mysteries and we
could brainstorm plot twists.
A very good idea. Now
let’s do that for a party for Christian authors of historical fiction, what six
people would you invite and why?
(Julie’s cheeks turn
crimson.) I know you write that Lena , and
I have read a few of your westerns, so you are invited anytime. Maybe Anne
Greene as well, since she is in our American Christian Fiction Writers Dallas
area group. She writes Regency and Victorian novels. Penelope Marquez writes
stories set in Revolutionary times, and Rachel James, who lives in England , writes
about very early Medieval Anglo-Saxon times. Charlene Havel and Sharon Faucheux
teamed up to write Biblical fiction. That would be an interesting group because
their writing spans almost all of our human history, don’t you think?
Yes. That would be a
good group. Many times, people (and other authors) think you have it made with
so many books published. What is your most difficult problem with writing at
this time in your career?
Marketing them! Often times, I feel as if I am yelling into
the wind. There are so many wonderful Christian authors publishing novels out
there, I can hardly keep up. No wonder our readers can’t. I hope I can appeal
to the group who like cozies. Plus, my cozy mysteries, though faith-based, can
cross over to secular reading audiences. One renowned Christian reviewer
applauded this series because she said I didn’t awkwardly stick in a sermon in
the midst of a car chase. Of course she was exaggerating, but her point was my
characters live out their faith. It is a natural part of their personalities so
Christianity flows through the plot like a deep underground current in a river.
Tell us about the
featured book.
In Baby Bunco, the Biddies have just
helped to solve a murder case that happened in their retirement community of
Sunset Acres (as featured in Book One - Dumpster
Dicing.) Janie, their ring leader, suffers from what her paperback mystery
aficionado friend, Ethel, describes as mystery-itis. She has become addicted to
sleuthing. So when a baby is found abandoned in a vacant home’s bathtub, and a
young girl is found dead behind the convenience store across the highway on the
same day, Janie immediately suspects it is the birth of a new crime wave in
Alamoville. Now if only she can convince her son-in-law, who is the chief
detective who is the case—no pun intended.
Please give us the
first page of the book.
“Did you say she found a baby?” Janie stopped mid-roll, the
pink and white dice warming in her clutched fist. “Here in Sunset Acres, a
retirement community?”
Babs, seated to her left at the Bunco table, nodded. “That’s
what Mildred told me as we were walking up to your front stoop tonight. Right,
Mildred?”
“I went to collect a few more of my things since I’m staying
with Ethel, and no more than three minutes later the leasing agent pounded on
my door. ‘Come see,’ she motioned to me. Her eyes grew as wide as those mega
donuts at the Crusty Baker.” She thumped her pencil against her score pad and
groaned. “It took every ounce of gumption to follow her into that—ugh!—place
next door.” She quivered her shoulders.
Janie shifted her gaze to the woman sitting across from her.
“Ethel, you knew about this?”
“I did.”
“And you didn’t tell me?” Her voice elevated to echo-off
–the-ceiling volume. She humphed and pivoted to face the storyteller. “Mildred.
What happened?”
The other eight ladies halted their Bunco round. Each
swiveled to listen in, their eyes fixated on the first card table.
Mildred leaned. “I paused at the steps, determined to not go
inside. Only peek in from the front door. Then high-pitched, frantic cries came
from the direction of the bathroom. Well, I had to rush to its aid. Every
motherly fiber in my being dictated it.”
Murmurs and head bobs filtered through Janie’s living room.
Mildred sniffled. “Poor little thing. Alone, scared and red
as a beet from wailing so hard. That house is cursed, I tell you.”
Janie patted her hand. “Now, dear. Just because someone
murdered Edwin soon after he moved in there doesn’t mean...”
Mildred shot from her seat and paced, her arms flaying in
circles, resembling the duck windmill on top of the antiques barn down the
road. “Ever since I relocated into Sunset Acres, it’s been one thing after
another. Edwin murdered, then my nephew Bobby arrested, and now an abandoned
newborn in a bathtub? This is supposed to be a quiet retirement community.”
“Maybe because you live on Solar Boulevard .” Annie huffed. “Nothing
weird ever happens on my street, Sunrise Court, except for an occasional stray
golf ball. Then again, if you kept your nose out of everyone’s business...” Her
voice trailed off with a smug cock of her head.
“My nose?”
The other ladies mumbled to each other.
Ethel blew a whistle through her teeth. “Okay, everyone calm
down. We all lived through the ruckus of one of our neighbor’s brutal murder
last month. It’s not Mildred’s fault. Nor mine or Janie’s that this happened...”
Betsy Ann raised her hand, as if her legs once again dangled
from under her desk in Ms. Everett’s kindergarten classroom.
Janie rolled her eyes. “What?”
“Well, it is sort of our fault.” She pointed to Janie, Ethel
and herself. “We helped solve the case and Bobby did wind up in the middle of
all of the commotion. That’s why he threatened you and tried to break into your
house.” She folded her hands and gazed down at them. “I’m just saying...”
“Duly noted.” Janie felt the healing, pinkish wound on her
neck where his knife grazed her skin. “I must add, my dear son-in-law, Chief
Detective Blake Johnson, appreciated all of our...” her hands encircled the
room “…research, sleuthing and cunningness. He told me so.” A smile curled
along the edges of her mouth. “Besides, it did beat back the doldrums a while,
right?”
A few silvery head bounced in agreement as the condo
sprinkled with giggles. Annie crossed her arms and harumphed.
Janie eased over to Mildred and led her back to her
designated chair. She patted her on the shoulders and scanned the room, making
certain every slightly glaucoma-pressed or cataract-corrected eye fixated on
her. “Now we must figure out who placed a newborn baby in a vacant garden home
bathtub and why?”
Babs cocked an eyebrow. “We do?”
“Absolutely. Let’s face facts. Someone put the little thing
in a home in our community so she would be discovered. Therefore it is our
responsibility...”
A fun read so far. How
can readers find you on the Internet?
My website is www.juliebcosgrove.com
It will link you also to my blog, Where
Did You Find God Today.
I have an Amazon author page, as well as a Goodreads author
page. I’m also on Linked-In, Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. Most of my
fiction and nonfiction is featured on the Texas Association of Author’s webpage. Just search
Julie B Cosgrove and you’ll track me down.
Baby Bunco (Bunco Biddies) (Volume 2) - paperback
Readers, here are links to the book. By using one when you order, you help support this blog.
Baby Bunco (Bunco Biddies Mystery Book 2) - Kindle
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What a great book...I would love to read it! Thank you for the opportunity.
ReplyDeleteMelanie Backus, TX
This sounds terrific. I'd love to read more.
ReplyDeleteLinda in So Cal
lkish77123 at gmail dot com
Thanks,Linda. I hope you get a chance to read more. Book1, Dumpster Dicing, came out six months ago and Book 3 will be out next summer!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Melanie. Hope you can, too!
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed the visit with Julie. I love her books and this one was a fun one. Don't include me in the drawing since I have read it.
ReplyDeleteLoved the first in the series! These gals have "spunk" and nose for solving!
ReplyDeleteLinda B.
https://bricesmicechristianbookreviews.blogspot.com/
Ah, thanks, Linda. You made me smile. Thanks for your support and FB likes!
ReplyDeleteOh sounds good. north platte nebraska.
ReplyDeleteThis series sounds like so much fun. I would love to win the Kindle version of Baby Bunco. Actually, I'd love to learn how to play bunco, too.
ReplyDeleteBonnie in AZ
This sounds like a fun book. Thank you for sharing the first page.
ReplyDeleteConnie from KY
cps1950 (at) gmail (dot) com
Thanks, Bonnie & Connie.
ReplyDeleteBunco is an easy game rolling three dice. You see how many ones you can roll. When you stop rolling them, it's the next person's turn. So it goes until someone rolls three ones for a Bunco. Then you move to rolling twos, etc. In the books I explain how to play it in more detail.
My group are all Christian ladies so we cheer each other on, witness as we roll the dice, and pray together over scrumptious pot luck meals. FUN evening.
This sounds like a fun mystery! Thanks for the instructions on Bunco. I have also wondered how it is played.
ReplyDeleteBeth from IA
I love playing Bunco. This sounds like a book I'd love to read thanks for the chance to win a copy. Live in ND
ReplyDeleteEnter me!!
ReplyDeleteConway, SC.
Wow, this sounds like fun! Would love to read it and learn more about this author!
ReplyDeleteJeanie in Phoenix