Showing posts with label a small town mystery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label a small town mystery. Show all posts

Sunday, May 16, 2021

New Release!

https://tinyurl.com/d6djw36f

Kate Morgan is helping her best friend, Beth, decorate for her parents’ fiftieth anniversary party at the Storyville Inn, which was formerly the Prescott mansion. While there, they learn the details of the legend surrounding the inn.

In the late eighteen hundreds, Elise Prescott disappeared from her home without a trace. Although there was speculation that her husband murdered her, there was no proof to substantiate the allegations. Now, ninety-five year old Ellen Prescott, Elise’s granddaughter, is obsessed with proving her grandfather’s innocence and clearing her family’s name before she dies.

When Ellen turns up missing and then is found dead in the woods behind the inn, the coroner rules it an accidental death. But her granddaughter, Jennifer, doesn’t believe that’s true. She asks Kate and Beth, who are fascinated with the legend and always eager to solve a mystery, to help her prove that her grandmother was murdered and to find her killer. 


Friday, December 27, 2019

A Snowy New Year's and a Murder

The house that inspired the book


Kate Morgan loves a good mystery. She’s an avid reader and she recently finished writing a murder mystery. Her novel takes place at the fictionalized version of Maple Ridge, the real life home of Chad Hollingsworth, the man Kate has been dating for the past year.

Chad has invited Kate to his parents’ annual New Year’s Eve party where Kate will meet the other members of his family. On the drive to Maple Ridge, he tells her, “I have to warn you. When the Hollingsworth family gets together, there’s always a lot of drinking and drama.” He has no way of knowing there will be a murder. 

In a strange twist of fate, there are numerous similarities between Kate’s manuscript and what actually happens. Kate is determined to separate fact from fiction by figuring out the identity of the killer. But she soon discovers that solving a murder in real life is a lot harder than figuring out whodunit in a mystery novel. 


Sunday, September 1, 2019

Coming soon!

Update: "Murder at Maple Ridge" is now available at amazon.com!


Kate Morgan loves a good mystery. She’s an avid reader and she recently finished writing a murder mystery. The story takes place at the fictionalized version of Maple Ridge, the real life home of Chad Hollingsworth, the man Kate has been dating for the past year.

Chad has invited Kate to his parents’ annual New Year’s Eve party where Kate will meet the other members of his family. On the drive to Maple Ridge, he tells her, “I have to warn you. When the Hollingsworth family gets together, there’s always a lot of drinking and drama.” He has no way of knowing there will be a murder. 

In a strange twist of fate, there are numerous similarities between Kate’s manuscript and what actually happens. Kate is determined to separate fact from fiction by figuring out the identity of the killer. But she soon discovers that solving a murder in real life is a lot harder than figuring out whodunit in a mystery novel.


In the next few days, I will be publishing my second Small Town Mystery, Murder at Maple Ridge. If you haven't read the first book in the series, here's the link: 







Tuesday, January 22, 2019

A Different Kind of Cozy

"Secrets in Storyville," a small town mystery, is the first book in a new series and it's a different kind of cozy mystery. There is no murder. The mystery is the family secret the main character, Kate, discovers. The idea for the book came to me after I watched an episode of "Finding Your Roots" on PBS. 

Kate Morgan, a single mother, lives in the small town of Storyville, Ohio where she grew up. A want-to-be author, she works as a sales clerk in the town’s only department store doing what she describes as “a job a monkey could do.” Although she’s bored with her job, she’s reluctant to consider making any major changes in her life. However, she’s about to find out that change is inevitable.

When Kate’s ten-year-old daughter, Mandy, tells the family she plans to do a family tree for a school project, the negative reaction of Kate’s parents and grandmother shocks her but also arouses her curiosity. Why are they so against Mandy’s project? Surely her family is too “normal” to have any skeletons in their closet.

Kate decides to support her daughter even if that means defying her parents. As she searches for the truth, she discovers some long buried family secrets that, if she decides to reveal them, will change her life and the lives of the people she loves - forever. 



 
5 Star Reviews:


"Secrets of Storyville is a good read on a rainy day. Pat Gligor’s writing style captured me. I had to put the book down a couple of times but couldn’t wait to get back to it. There’s enough foreshadowing that the plots twists didn’t come as a surprise, but I couldn’t wait to see how the protagonist was going to react to them. I did love that character."
Dac Crossley


"Kate Morgan has uneasily settled for her life as a single mom, and has always thought she had the perfect parents. But when her daughter decides to do a family tree for her school project, things between Kate, her parents, and her grandmother begin to get tense, especially when she starts dating a handsome stranger. When her daughter drops the family tree project for another, Kate continues to do genealogy research on her own, and what she finds sets her on a roller coaster of troubled emotions.
I really enjoyed reading this novel. It was hard to put down. The characters are wonderful, but then, Ms. Gligor is great at characterization. I loved Kate’s romance. The novel was easy reading with a satisfying twist at the end. I highly recommend it to everyone who is looking for a mystery, without murder."

Evelyn Cullet

"From the opening, Patricia Gligor took me to Storyville through Kate's eyes. To be taken "there" is a really important aspect for me to enjoy a story, I could visualize Storyville even knowing nothing about Ohio. I was also immediately captivated by Kate and her family. Really liked them. And her job situations and predicaments seemed so real. The plot was interesting, because I think there are many secrets in many families, and the story is in how you address them when found out, if they ever are. Also liked the good feeling I had at the end. Well done and enjoyable book. Definitely recommend."
Madeline Gornell