Reviews!

I am still having a difficult time concentrating on reading a book, I hope to get back into it at some point. Still doing book promotions just not reviews Thank you for your understanding during this difficult time. I appreciate all of you. Kathleen Kelly July 2024

11 October 2024

Emma Madison, Master Meddler by Pat McDermott Michener Book Spotlight!


When she ran away in 1947, Jasmine Holmes was young and beautiful. Now she's home again: sick, broke, divorced, her life in ruins—a perfect project for her aunt Emma Madison, master meddler. But small-town secrets live long in darkness, and the ones Jasmine guards may be the darkest of all.


How to fix Jasmine? 

True, her reputation as the town tramp was well deserved. When she fled tiny Medford for Las Vegas nine years ago, it was in a cloud of scandal. Once Emma rescues Jasmine from a hospital bed and her niece's eight-year-old daughter from foster care, few townsfolk welcome her return. And when Jasmine recovers and begins nursing the dying wife of her once-supposed lover, Medford erupts in a veritable volcano of gossip.

Lovers from a decade ago appear, then a new suitor. Soon emotions of desire, jealousy, spite and fear roil the once-peaceful community. During her brief stay, Jasmine sets the lives of many on trajectories they never could have expected. And although her own journey may be long and arduous, love and joy wait at the end, thanks to an elderly lady with the remarkable ability to take things gone wrong and set them to rights. Subtly influencing the course of events—watching, waiting, and then pulling the strings with perfect timing—is Jasmine's sage and savvy aunt, the redoubtable Emma Madison


Dear reader:

Have you ever heard of something and thought: "Wow! What a story!" or, "Wouldn't this make a good story?"

In “Emma Madison, Master Meddler", I've stitched together many such stories from a long and interesting life. Fame and fortune are not the reason I wrote this novel. It was because, after bits, pieces and then large chunks of it assembled in my mind, the two main characters - Emma Madison and her niece, Jasmine Holmes - nagged me endlessly to do it! So, it was not so much a project as an itch that needed scratching, with the result being a book.

My background is journalism. You'll laugh when you hear the name of my first employer once I graduated from university! It was a nation-wide newspaper for teenagers called "Canadian High News". After some gentle persuasion they changed the name, and I changed jobs. It was clear that working on newspapers or magazines was not for me because, for a newbie, there was little money in it. I switched to public relations (called "the dark side" by reporters and editors, both of which I was formerly).

After some years learning the ropes, I started Toronto corporate communications firm MarketLink Communications with a business partner. Our firm had a successful run for 25 years, with major clients and many small firms we helped to grow. And during all this time I wrote and wrote: speeches, magazine and newspaper articles, employee and consumer communications, videos, reports and more, most every working day. You can see how it might get to be a habit!

When I wrote "Emma Madison" I was guided by a quote from author/journalist Mark Bourrie. He wrote, “I see no point in writing a book that doesn’t tell a good story, or one that is not driven by fascinating characters.”

So I have done my very best to ensure that “Emma” is not only a novel strong on plot and full of memorable characters, but a good and satisfying read. And as the reader, you will be the final judge of that.

I have three amazing and talented adult children, Carl, Greg and Julia, and live happily on a 65-acre farm overlooking Georgian Bay where I am at work on my next novel.

Read an excerpt

It was 10:20. The social worker from Children’s Aid had

 arrived at ten. The doctor and head nurse were there

 with her to observe the mother and daughter reunion.

 Afterward they absented themselves to the office to

 review last moment details before the discharge, or in

 cases involving a dependent child, what was commonly

 referred to as, “the hand over”.


“What are your thoughts?” the doctor inquired. The

 head nurse was a 20-year veteran of the institution. 

He was her junior by ten years and had come to value her 

opinion

“She hasn’t een a model patient,” the nurse said, in

 her first major understatement of the day.

 “However, she’s as well as we can get her and

 she’ll do better on the outside. As we discussed, so

 far as we know the manic episode was a one-time

 occurrence. There’s a good chance it might never

 happen again.”


The doctor fanned the sheaf of papers in the patient’s file.

 “I see it’s the aunt who’s taking her and the child.

 I hope she’s not too elderly. It says

 here she used to be a librarian.”


“I hope she’s got some physical strength,” said the

 nurse, and then they exchanged looks that

 expressed doubt about the physical strength of

 librarians.


Had Emma known about this conversation, it

 would have explained why, when she walked into

 the reception room used for discharge

 purposes, with its sickly green walls and stick

  chairs, she noticed that the doctor and nurse 

seemed visibly relieved

Was it possible they thought she wouldn’t come?


In fact, they were cheered to see that although her

 hair was iron-grey, the aunt seemed to be a strong

 physical specimen with no apparent handicaps, at

 least half a head taller than the patient. And as

 they spoke with her in private, before bringing in

 their patient and her daughter who were waiting in

 an anteroom, they found she had an equally strong,

 no-nonsense personality.


“Now tell me everything I need to know,” she

 demanded authoritatively, then took notes and

 asked for explanations as needed. She requested a

 repeat of the medications. “I don’t want to use our

 local pharmacy. Too many nosy people working

 there.” The doctor willingly obliged.


She didn’t cringe or complain when the final invoice

 was presented by the secretary but simply pulled

 out her chequebook and wrote a fat cheque. So,

 although the aunt was in her sixties, the doctor and

 nurse concluded that her vitality and seeming

 intelligence boded well for the continued recovery

 of their patient. And that was a relief because,

 unless medicated, the patient had wreaked havoc

 in the wards once she started to improve, and now

 they could discharge her into capable hands with a

 more or less clear conscience.


A door opened. Emma turned as soon as she heard

 the familiar sweet, melodious voice.

“Hello, Auntie.”

Emma had carefully composed her face into a

 cheerful expression of greeting. Now she was glad

 she had. At the very instant she saw her niece she

 was overwhelmed by emotions: sorrow and pity and

 a sudden urge to cry. 


She stood up from her chair.

 She embraced Jasmine, feeling her skeletal

 thinness, and held her close for a minute while she

 swallowed the lump in her throat. Memories surged

 up, bringing tears she suppressed inside tightly 

closed eyes.


“Why Jasmine Holmes!” she exclaimed, as she held

 her out at arm’s length. “Just look at you, so skinny!

 I’m going to take you right home and fatten you

 up!” 

No comments:

Post a Comment

AddToAny

View My Stats!

View My Stats

Pageviews past week

SNIPPET_HTML_V2.TXT
Tweet