Author Topic: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28  (Read 19849 times)

Becke Davis

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Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« on: June 17, 2020, 02:27:51 am »
On Sunday, June 28 we will be focusing on Edith's short fiction:

Short Stories

The following stories of murderous revenge and other crimes were originally published in juried anthologies or magazines. Many have been republished as standalone short stories. And one of the most popular characters, Rose Carroll, went on to be featured in her own Quaker Midwife Mystery series.

“Blue Motel Room” is inspired by Joni Mitchell’s song by the same name. It appears in The Beat of Black Wings (April 2020), a collection edited by Josh Pachter in which all stories riff on Mitchell songs, at least one from each of her albums. When petty thief Robin Rousseau finds a desiccated hand in the safe she’s pilfering, she stays in her depressing blue motel room in Savannah long enough to dig up the truth before using her maps to head for the other coast.

“One Too Many” is Edith’s first story in one of the two big short crime fiction magazines. It appears in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (March/April 2020). In the story, a hyperpolyglot – someone who easily speaks a dozen or two languages – uses her talents, for better and for worse. On the EQMM blog, Edith explains about how she came to write the story, and what pantsers and language learners have in common. Listen to her read “One Too Many” on the EQMM podcast.

Black Cat Thrillogy #9: 3 Historical Mysteries collects three previously published Rose Carroll short stories.

“A Questionable Death” – a 2015 Agatha nominee for Best Short Story
“The Mayor and the Midwife” – a 2017 Agatha nominee for Best Short Story
“Adam and Eva” – told from the point of view of postmistress Bertie Winslow

“Sushi Lessons” is Edith’s second short crime fiction set in Japan, where she lived and taught English several decades ago – and where she learned to make sushi. It appears in Malice Domestic 14: Mystery Most Edible, and features a young American couple, an old fish lady, and a wickedly helpful bartender in a suburb of Tokyo.

“A Divination of Death” is Edith’s first short fiction set in West Africa, where she lived for two years. It appears in Malice Domestic 13: Mystery Most Geographical (Wildside Press), with a diviner, an American researcher and her Burkinabe translator, and murder in the village.

Edith’s story “An Ominous Silence” appears in Snowbound: Best New England Crime Stories (Level Best Books), with the tale of an 1890s midwife stuck on a train in Vermont in the winter, with a baby to deliver and a murder to solve.

“Murder in the Summer Kitchen” appears in Murder Among Friends: Mysteries Inspired by the Life and Works of John Greenleaf Whittier (2017). Midwife Rose Carroll once again brings her sleuthing powers to bear after a body is found in Whittier’s own summer kitchen. All proceeds benefit the John Greenleaf Whittier Birthplace Museum in Haverhill, MA.

Edith was honored to have “The Unfortunate Death of Mrs. Edna Fogg” included in Malice Domestic 12: Mystery Most Historical (Wildside Press). In the story, midwife Rose Carroll finds the body of a woman suffrage activist and tracks down the killer even as she does her job of helping women birth their babies.

Edith’s short story “The Mayor and the Midwife” appeared in Blood on the Bayou: Bouchercon Anthology 2016 edited by Greg Herren (Down & Out Books). When the mayor of New Orleans comes to Amesbury, Massachusetts in 1888, Quaker midwife Rose Carroll solves the mystery of his son-in-law’s death. The story was nominated for a 2016 Agatha award for Best Short Story.

“A Questionable Death” appeared in Kings River Life Magazine (2017), originally published in History and Mystery, Oh My! The story was nominated for a 2015 Agatha Award for Best Short Story, and follows midwife Rose Carroll and postmistress Bertie Winslow in 1888 Amesbury, Massachusetts as they unravel a tale of abuse and deceit.

In “Adam and Eva,” published in Kings River Life Magazine, September 2016, Rose Carroll’s friend Bertie Winslow narrates how the two of them work to solve a murder of a handsome young man stemming from a supposed love triangle in 1888.

Agatha-nominated and Amazon best-selling “Just Desserts for Johnny” (also available on Nook and Smashwords), a short story of exacting revenge on a literary thief, originally appeared in Kings River Life Magazine. Agatha-nominated editor and author Chris Roerden said this about the story: “Just Desserts for Johnny” by Edith Maxwell is a model short story, from the perfect opening line to the satisfying, twist end.  Love it!” The story was nominated for a 2014 Agatha Award for Best Short Story.

When cozy mystery writers meet Edgar Allan Poe, the result is Edgar Allan Cozy. Each story in this suspenseful anthology is inspired by the work of Poe – “The Raven,” “The Lighthouse,” “MS. Found in a Bottle,” “The Cask of Amontillado,” “Annabel Lee” and Edith’s story, “An Intolerable Intrusion,” a riff on “The Tell-tale Heart. The stories are set in the fictional town of Raven Harbor, Maine. Edited by Sadie Hartwell.

The story “Pickled” in That Mysterious Woman (Mozark Press, November 2014) debuts Robbie Jordan outsmarting a murderer in her country store restaurant, Pans ‘n Pancakes, in southern Indiana from Edith’s Country Store Mysteries series (written as Maddie Day).

“A Fire in Carriagetown” is an Amazon best-selling historic crime short story (also available on Smashwords) that first appeared as “Breaking the Silence” in Best New England Crime Stories 2014: Stone Cold (Level Best Books, November 2013). The story features Quakers Faith Bailey, John Greenleaf Whittier, and the fictional story of who set a very real fire in 1888 in Amesbury, Massachusetts. The story won an Honorable Mention in the 2013 Al Blanchard Short Crime Fiction contest. It received a great review, too.

“The Stonecutter,” possibly Edith’s favorite piece of short fiction, is a murder story of middle-aged romance gone wrong in an increasingly dark New England fall. The story first appeared in Fish Nets: the Second Guppy Anthology, an anthology of crime stories (Wildside Press, April, 2013).

“Reduction in Force” describes murderous revenge after a corporate layoff, the first piece of fiction Edith wrote after being laid off from a job she’d held for fourteen years. It is available on Smashwords and Amazon and was originally published in Thin Ice: Crime Stories by New England Writers (Level Best Books, 2010).

“Yatsuhashi for Lance” is a short story about murderous revenge exacted after a betrayal in Japan. When Elise agrees to accept a package for her friend Lance, things go terribly wrong and change her life forever. It’s available on Smashwords and Amazon, and was originally published as “Obake for Lance” in Riptide: Crime Stories by New England Writers (Level Best Books, 2004).

No story, no paycheck. In the Amazon best-selling “An Idea for Murder,” crime fiction writer Dorothy finally hits on an idea for murder for her next story, which turns out to be fatal in real life, too. The story, also available on Smashwords, first appeared (written as Tace Baker)  in the Burning Bridges: A Renegade Fiction Anthology.

“The Importance of Blood,” also an Amazon best-seller and available on Smashwords, shows how identical twins’ differences in ambition and attachment to family can prove lethal. The story first appeared in the Burning Bridges: A Renegade Fiction Anthology.

“The Taste of Winter,”
a story of love and loss in later life, was published in the Larcom Review, Fall/Winter 2001.

« Last Edit: June 20, 2020, 01:07:27 am by Becke Davis »

Becke Davis

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Tuesday, June 23 & 30
« Reply #1 on: June 17, 2020, 02:29:41 am »
Scroll down at this link for a full short-short story: https://edithmaxwell.com/short-fiction/

This story won a holiday flash fiction contest in the North Shore Newspapers in 1996
and was awarded Special Recognition in the 1997 On My Own Time competition.

The Odakyu Line

Riding the subway was like surfing. Ruth liked to bend her knees and go with the movement of the brightly-lit car. She rode the up and down movement. She swayed from right to left, mastered the sudden slowing, steered into the gradual stops. She only let herself grab an overhead handle in case of emergency unbalance...

JRob

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #2 on: June 20, 2020, 07:24:23 am »
Edith's "One Too Many" story in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine's last issue was really good. And so much darker than her other work.


Becke Davis

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #3 on: June 20, 2020, 01:09:19 pm »
Edith's "One Too Many" story in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine's last issue was really good. And so much darker than her other work.

I used to subscribe to both EQMM and the Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. I periodically renew them (when I can afford it) but then I have trouble keeping up. I wonder if the last issue (with Edith's story) is still available? I'll check it out.

JRob

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #4 on: June 20, 2020, 06:13:46 pm »
Edith's "One Too Many" story in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine's last issue was really good. And so much darker than her other work.

I used to subscribe to both EQMM and the Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. I periodically renew them (when I can afford it) but then I have trouble keeping up. I wonder if the last issue (with Edith's story) is still available? I'll check it out.

I'd think you could order back issues from their website.

JRob

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #5 on: June 21, 2020, 07:44:08 am »
Let me just add that I would definitely be ordering a copy if some publisher ever decided to collect Edith's short stories into a printed book.

EdithMaxwell

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #6 on: June 28, 2020, 05:58:17 am »
Edith's "One Too Many" story in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine's last issue was really good. And so much darker than her other work.

Thanks, Jay. I do like to explore darker themes in my short stories!

JRob

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #7 on: June 28, 2020, 07:30:24 am »
Edith's "One Too Many" story in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine's last issue was really good. And so much darker than her other work.

Thanks, Jay. I do like to explore darker themes in my short stories!

Edith, and with "One Too Many",  you show that you do it so well!

Becke Davis

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #8 on: June 28, 2020, 02:42:02 pm »
Edith's "One Too Many" story in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine's last issue was really good. And so much darker than her other work.

Thanks, Jay. I do like to explore darker themes in my short stories!

Yay! I have several issues of Malice Domestic short story collections, but I didn't have 12, 13 or 14. I found copies online and just ordered them, as well as Fish Nets, the Guppy Anthology.

Edith, this is from your website: "“The Stonecutter,” possibly Edith’s favorite piece of short fiction, is a murder story of middle-aged romance gone wrong in an increasingly dark New England fall. The story first appeared in Fish Nets: the Second Guppy Anthology, an anthology of crime stories (Wildside Press, April, 2013)." 

What was it about "The Stonecutter" that made it a favorite of yours?

Those books won't arrive for a couple weeks, but I'll check back in to this thread after I get a chance to read them. Meanwhile, I've been going through bins and boxes in the garage to see if I could find any old Ellery Queen mystery magazines. I didn't find those, but I did find an issue of Mystery Scene from 2013.

Edith, I'm looking forward to reading your stories as soon as I get my hands on them! 

EdithMaxwell

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #9 on: June 30, 2020, 06:43:03 pm »
Quote
Edith, this is from your website: "“The Stonecutter,” possibly Edith’s favorite piece of short fiction, is a murder story of middle-aged romance gone wrong in an increasingly dark New England fall. The story first appeared in Fish Nets: the Second Guppy Anthology, an anthology of crime stories (Wildside Press, April, 2013)." 

What was it about "The Stonecutter" that made it a favorite of yours?


I guess I liked the way the language flowed in that story, and how it got darker with the daylight diminishing through the fall. Thanks for asking!

Becke Davis

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #10 on: June 30, 2020, 06:52:25 pm »
Quote
Edith, this is from your website: "“The Stonecutter,” possibly Edith’s favorite piece of short fiction, is a murder story of middle-aged romance gone wrong in an increasingly dark New England fall. The story first appeared in Fish Nets: the Second Guppy Anthology, an anthology of crime stories (Wildside Press, April, 2013)." 

What was it about "The Stonecutter" that made it a favorite of yours?


I guess I liked the way the language flowed in that story, and how it got darker with the daylight diminishing through the fall. Thanks for asking!

I have always been a big fan of mystery short stories, so I'm very much looking forward to adding yours to my collection!

Becke Davis

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #11 on: July 07, 2020, 10:13:54 pm »
Yay! I received a couple of the short story collections I ordered this week, so I was able to read Edith's short story, "The Stonecutter" and "The Unfortunate Death of Mrs. Edna Fogg." I enjoyed them both, although the latter story was very sad. I'm hoping to get my hands on more of Edith's short stories, now that I know where to look for them!

JRob

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #12 on: July 08, 2020, 04:03:12 am »
I still have a ways to go when it comes to reading Edith's short stories.

JRob

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Re: Edith Maxwell/Maddie Day: Short Fiction, Sunday, June 28
« Reply #13 on: May 25, 2021, 02:54:49 pm »
Since I have all of Edith's series books thus far, I decided it was time to track down the published books containing short stories she has written.

I have picked up THE BEAT OF BLACK WINGS, the Malice Domestic 2014 Anthology and just today a copy of THAT MYSTERIOUS WOMAN arrived in the mail!