Good Night, Angela and Flappers & Jelly Beans

Good Night, Angela is here!

Good Night, Angela

A homicide detective and a tabloid reporter suspect there’s more to the case than meets the eye when a popular Midwestern radio evangelist is kidnapped for ransom after she appears to a sold out crowd at Madison Square Garden.

Well, here we are, near the end of January and well into my least favorite season of the year, but it’s the weekend, yes? And there’s other good news to share. The third book in my 1920s romantic mystery series, Good Night, Angela, is now available at  Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBooksKobo and Smashwords.

Find the new book page, blurb, and an excerpt here.

Good Night, Angela is a stand-alone romantic mystery that can be read by itself, but if you haven’t caught the earlier books in the series, now may be a great time to start. Book One,  It Had to Be You, is priced to sell at $0.99 at Amazon and other ebook retailers.

FLAPPERS JELLYBEANSFlappers & Jelly Beans

Welcome to Flappers & Jelly Beans!  To celebrate the release of my new 1920s romantic mystery, Good Night, Angela, I’m talking about facts, fads, and headlines from America in the 1920s.

THE RED CARPET TREATMENT...

20th Century Ltd Red Carpet – Photo by Rickyrab via Wikimedia Commons

Ever wonder where the expression “getting the red carpet treatment” came from?

Today, we cross continents in a day, and if we’ve got the bucks, we can add some luxury by flying first class. But prior to World War II, commercial airline travel was still new and not very cushy. If one wanted to travel across land in first class style, that meant taking the train.

THE 20TH CENTURY LIMITED

During the first half of the 20th century,  a handful of trains were known the world over for luxury travel. In Europe one might hop aboard the Orient Express or Le Train Bleu.  In America, well-heeled travelers took the Commodore Vanderbilt, the Broadway, or the 20th Century Limited.

2oth Century Ltd 1920

2oth Century Ltd 1920

Aside from the Orient Express, no train was more famous than the flagship of the New York Central line, the 20th Century Limited.

The Century, as it was called, was a luxury express  that ran between Grand Central Terminal in New York City and La Salle Street Station in Chicago.  In 1902, when it made its first run, the trip took 20 hours. By the mid-1930s, the travel time had been cut to 16 hours, 30 minutes.

The Century boasted the newest Pullman sleeping and dining cars.  Staff included chefs, waiters, barbers, manicurists, ladies’ maids, and valets. The dinner menus rivaled the culinary standards at world class deluxe hotels—Russian caviar, filet mignon, lobster.

The passenger lists boasted the rich and famous: Theodore Roosevelt,  J.P. Morgan, Walter Chrysler, Coco Chanel, Enrico Caruso, Joan Crawford, Bette Davis, Bing Crosby.

One of its signature practices began in the 1930s. They rolled out a red carpet runner nearly the length of a football field for passengers boarding in New York. After that, the saying “getting the red carpet treatment” became synonymous with receiving first class customer service.

Barrymore & Lombard - Twentieth Century

Barrymore & Lombard – Twentieth Century

The Century had a British cocktail named after it—the 20th Century Cocktail—and, in 1934, a classic screwball comedy film, Twentieth Century, starring Carole Lombard and John Barrymore was set aboard the famous train.

Twentieth Century, (1 min. 58 sec. clip at TCM.com), 1934, Columbia Pictures, Carole Lombard and John Barrymore (Directed by Howard Hawks)

Other classic films with memorable scenes aboard the Century include Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest (1959, Cary Grant, Eva Marie Saint) and George Roy Hill’s The Sting (1973, Paul Newman, Robert Redford).

Times change, of course.  By the end of the 1950s, jet travel was becoming the norm, and train travel was losing its cachet.  The Century began to cater to more economical travelers. In December 1967, it made its final run to Chicago. The Century’s heyday was over, but its place in American history of travel will never be forgotten.

Traveling by rail in close quarters…

Good Night, Angela - January 27, 2017

Good Night, Angela – January 27, 2017

In Good Night, Angela, tabloid reporter Trixie Frank and homicide detective Sean Costigan put their no-hanky-panky-during-the-work-week rule to the test when their latest murder case requires them to travel overnight in close quarters to Chicago aboard the luxurious 20th Century Limited.

EXCERPT…

The hour grew late, and the observation car emptied. Sean and Trixie followed suit. They passed through an open section sleeper car with its lights dimmed and curtains pulled to reach their own car, which was likewise quiet.

When they found their compartments, Trixie opened her door first and was disappointed to find the lower berth had already been pulled down for the night.

Nuts. The service aboard the Century was far too efficient. She’d hoped to ask Sean for some gentlemanly assistance with her berth. Could she help it if, once they were inside her compartment, maybe the train went around a curve and they happened to fall together onto the open bed and nature took its course?

All right, yes. It was Monday, but they were alone, no one knew them and they had privacy. No nosy landladies with barking Fox Terriers and no night clerks at the Alhambra to clock their comings and goings.

“That’s some swell service,” Sean said from behind her in the corridor. “I guess that’s why they get the extra bucks for a ticket.”

Trixie bit her lower lip pensively. “Yes indeedy.” She yanked the door closed again and turned to face him. They were only inches apart. His hand rested against the door jamb above her head, fencing her in. She could feel his body heat. It drew her to him. Kiss me, kiss me, kiss me…

She smiled up at him sweetly. “Long day, huh? Tired?”

“Beat. You?”

“Bushed.”

His gaze dropped to her mouth, then climbed slowly back up to her eyes. “Time to turn in.”

“And how.”

Big palooka. He knew exactly what was on her mind. It was on his mind too. They’d been flirting since before dinner, but he wouldn’t be the first to crack. Would she?

***

Have a great weekend!

Photo Credits

Red Carpet – By Rickyrab (Own work) [CC BY-SA 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons

20th Century Limited – Public Domain via Wikimedia Commons – Image available from the United States Library of Congress’s Prints and Photographs division under digital ID det.4a33145

Twentieth Century – Cropped Lobby Card – By Columbia Pictures ([1]) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Good Night, Angela cover art design by Fiona Jayde Media. Learn more About Fiona here. Custom Photo Shoot and Cover Model Images from RomanceNovelCovers.com

Oy. Turkey Day Blessings and Flappers & Jelly Beans

Oy.

Just… oy.

a-gratisography-web-lg

Photography by Ryan McGuire, Gratisography

If you live in the U.S., you know what I mean. And if you live outside the U.S., you know what I mean. Seriously. It’s been two weeks since that thing happened, and I still look like this. –>

Yes. I’ve been frozen in a state of suspended animation. And, yes, it’s uncomfortable to no longer be able to blink. Or think. Or move.

But don’t worry. I’ll be fine.  It’s only four years.

Till then…

Counting my Turkey Day Blessings

Autumn Pumpkins

I’ve got plenty to be thankful for here at Light of Heart because I’m looking forward to another Thanksgiving holiday dinner with family and friends. What’s on the menu, you ask? Why, turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, baked corn, and pumpkin pie, of course. And NO politics.

innocent-flipped-copy

“Why won’t that stupid cat play with me?”

This will be our first Thanksgiving with our newest member of the family, Lexi, an energetic, seven-month-old Cockapoo we adopted in June.

Lexi’s favorite snacks include moccasin slippers, Pupperoni stix, pens, emery boards, Oinkie pig skin twists, and dollar store reading glasses.

Did I mention she’s energetic?

puppy-accessories-copy

Yes, those are Wee-Wee diapers. And yes, she refused to wear them. Don’t judge me.

We picked out Lexi from her litter when she was eight weeks old, then had to wait until twelve weeks to bring her home. Those weeks passed slowly. We were so excited, it’s possible we overdid it with the puppy accessories. –>

lexi-graduates_2_flipped-copyI don’t want to brag, but, as it turns out, Lexi’s quite a smart little Cockapootie. Here’s a picture of her diploma after she graduated puppy class in September. Her dad and I were so proud that day, I’m tearing up just thinking about it.

Did I mention she’s energetic? 🙂

Books, Books, Books…

It’s been quiet here at Light of Heart. As it turns out, 2016 hasn’t been the best year for my writing. It happens sometimes. The enthusiasm wanes, the words dry up, the ideas refuse to flow. It’s frustrating, but I’m hopeful 2017 will prove more fruitful.

Good Night Angela Romantic Mystery VertGood news, though. I have been working—albeit slowly–on the third book in my 1920s romantic mystery series, Good Night, Angela.

For reasons unknown, some books are more difficult to write than others, and this one’s been a bear. It’s gone through some revisions, several nips and tucks, and is now—fingers crossed—in its final formatting and proofing stage. It should be out before the end of 2016.

More to come on  Good Night, Angela soon!

1920s Fiction, 1920s romantic mystery, 1920s mysteryUntil then, if you’re in the mood for a seasonal romantic e-mystery  check out the first in the series, It Had to Be You, which opens on Thanksgiving Day, 1924.

Priced to sell at 99 cents at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, iBooks, and other ebook outlets. 

And don’t forget… For the holidays, you can gift ebooks virtually to fellow ebook readers on your gift list via Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

***

Last but not least, in honor of the upcoming holiday, here’s a rerun of a  Flappers and Jelly Beans post from Thanksgivings past.

FLAPPERS JELLYBEANS

***

Think the trend for pushing the winter holiday shopping season on consumers earlier each year is a modern phenomenon? Think again.

The opening scene in It Had to Be You takes place in Herald Square in New York City on Thursday, November 27, 1924.

It was Thanksgiving day and the first year R.H. Macy’s sponsored its Thanksgiving day parade. Except they didn’t call it that back then. They called it Macy’s Christmas Parade.

Macys

Macy’s at Herald Square (1942). From the Office of War Information Photograph Collection

Here’s a peek back in time from the following day’s papers:

“Santa Claus chose Thanksgiving Day this year to come to town. With a retinue of clowns… animals, and floats, the bewhiskered man in red, in sight of thousands of persons, arrived at 9 o’clock yesterday morning and three hours later was crowned ‘King of the Kiddies’ on the marquee above the entrance to Macy’s new store in Thirty-fourth Street near Seventh Avenue…”

Most of the participants that day were Macy’s employees, but they were joined by many others, marching bands as well as floats featuring The Old Lady Who Lived in a Shoe and Little Red Riding Hood. There were also animals borrowed from the Central Park Zoo—bears, elephants, donkeys.

But no giant balloons. Animal-shaped balloons made by Goodyear wouldn’t begin to replace the live animals until 1927. One of the first? Felix the Cat.

Another 1924 attraction that would feel familiar to us was the unveiling of Macy’s spectacular store window: “The Fairy Frolics of Wondertown.”

Some sources say a quarter million people attended the first parade. It was such a success, Macy’s decided to make it an annual event.

The world has changed, yes?
But maybe not as much as we think.

What are your favorite Thanksgiving traditions?

Macy’s Parade 1930s  – British Movietone Temp – Subscribe at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmRpYigmLBc

For those who celebrate, have a wonderful Thanksgiving!

Photo and video credits:

Suspended Animation Girl – By Ryan McGuire, Bells Design, from Gratisography

Pumpkins – Delynn Royer
Bummed Baby Lexi – Delynn Royer

Puppy Accessories – Delynn Royer
Lexi Graduates – Delynn Royer

Macy’s at Herald Square (1942). From the Office of War Information Photograph Collection
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division

1930s Macy’s Parade
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmRpYigmLBc
British Movietone Temp

It Had to Be You – Copyright © 2014 by Harlequin Enterprises Limited.
Cover Art used by arrangement with Harlequin Enterprises Limited ® and ™ are trademarks owned by Harlequin Enterprises Limited or its affiliated companies, used under license.

 

The Turkey Day Shuffle & Flappers & Jelly Beans

The Turkey Day Shuffleautumn pumpkin

My husband and one of my sons works in retail, so we’re well acquainted with irregular schedules and working weekends and holidays. But Thanksgiving was always the one holiday that seemed to work out. Mostly because stores close early that day.

This year, though, the unthinkable has happened. Not only is my husband’s store extending their hours, he offered to work so someone else can spend the day with their family. Which means…

Yes. We’ll be doing the Turkey Day Shuffle.

We’ve hosted our family dinner for almost a decade now, and we love doing it. So, we’ll be moving our Thanksgiving to Saturday. The calls have gone out, and the schedule shuffling has begun.

Books, books, books…

1920s Romantic Mystery

Goodbye, Tootsie Book Tour! Hosted by BVB Tours

Goodbye, Tootsie—the second book in my 1920s romantic mystery series—went on tour earlier this month and got some great reviews. I’m more thankful than ever for book bloggers who dedicate their time to reviewing and promoting books, especially those of indie authors.

Thanks also to the awesome Beck Valley Books, which does a fabulous job of organizing book tours.

If you have a moment, give these bloggers some traffic and enter my $20 Amazon Gift Card giveaway. Yes, it’s still running, and it’s free. (Expires November 29, 2015.) Do it. Do it now.  I’ll wait. 🙂

Follow the book tour. Read the reviews…

A Thanksgiving “Flappers & Jelly Beans” Tidbit

FLAPPERS JELLYBEANSIn honor of the upcoming holiday—no matter which day you celebrate it—here’s a remix from a Flappers and Jelly Beans post from Thanksgiving past…

***

Think the trend for pushing the winter holiday shopping season on consumers earlier each year is a modern phenomenon? Think again.

The opening scene of It Had to Be You takes place in Herald Square in New York City on Thursday, November 27, 1924.

1920s Fiction -It Had to Be You

Mystery and Romance in 1920s Manhattan

It was Thanksgiving day and the first year R.H. Macy’s sponsored its Thanksgiving day parade. Except they didn’t call it that back then. They called it Macy’s Christmas Parade.

Here’s a peek back in time from the following day’s papers:

“Santa Claus chose Thanksgiving Day this year to come to town. With a retinue of clowns… animals, and floats, the bewhiskered man in red, in sight of thousands of persons, arrived at 9 o’clock yesterday morning and three hours later was crowned ‘King of the Kiddies’ on the marquee above the entrance to Macy’s new store in Thirty-fourth Street near Seventh Avenue…”

Most of the participants that day were Macy’s employees, but they were joined by many others, marching bands as well as floats featuring The Old Lady Who Lived in a Shoe and Little Red Riding Hood. There were also animals borrowed from the Central Park Zoo—bears, elephants, donkeys.

But no giant balloons. Animal-shaped balloons made by Goodyear wouldn’t begin to replace the live animals until 1927. One of the first? Felix the Cat.

Macy’s at Herald Square (1942). From the Office of War Information Photograph Collection

Macy’s at Herald Square (1942). From the Office of War Information Photograph Collection

Another 1924 attraction that would feel familiar to us was the unveiling of Macy’s spectacular store window: “The Fairy Frolics of Wondertown.”

Some sources say a quarter million people attended the first parade. It was such a success, Macy’s decided to make it an annual event.

The world has changed, yes?
But maybe not as much as we think.
What are your favorite Thanksgiving traditions?

Macy’s Parade 1930s  – British Movietone Temp – Subscribe at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmRpYigmLBc

For those who celebrate, have a wonderful Thanksgiving!

Photo and video credits:

Pumpkins – Delynn Royer

Macy’s at Herald Square (1942). From the Office of War Information Photograph Collection
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division

1930s Macy’s Parade
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmRpYigmLBc
British Movietone Temp

It Had to Be You – Copyright © 2014 by Harlequin Enterprises Limited.
Cover Art used by arrangement with Harlequin Enterprises Limited ® and ™ are trademarks owned by Harlequin Enterprises Limited or its affiliated companies, used under license.

Flappers & Jelly Beans … 20s Fun, Fads & Entertainment

1920s FictionWelcome to Flappers & Jelly Beans!

There’s been some changes around here since my last Flappers & Jelly Beans post. Most notably, the February 23rd cover reveal for my 1920 romantic mystery, It Had to Be You. It now has its very own page with buy links HERE.

I also ventured (tentatively) into the world of pinning on PINTEREST and instantly lost a day of my life. (That is one seriously fun distraction. Seriously fun.) So, Pin People–and you know who you are–please stop by to visit my lonely fledgling newbie boards. One is devoted to the Jazz Age, of course! 

Now on to today’s post, a look back at some fads and entertainment trends of that fabulous frivolous decade, the 1920s!

One wildly popular form of entertainment back then, of course, is one we still love today… 

The Movies

In the 1920s, more movies were being churned out by Hollywood than at any other time in history. Somewhere between 600 and 800 American feature films were played on 20,500 movie screens across the country each year. By some estimates, half the U.S. population attended the movies once a week.

 So, who were the stars that kept 1920s audiences packing the movie palaces?  Last month, we met three top leading men—Douglas Fairbanks, Rudolph Valentino, and John Gilbert.  Now, meet their leading ladies…

The It Girls – Hollywood’s Leading Ladies

#1    GLORIA SWANSON  … Most Sought After Actress in Hollywood

Gloria Swanson

Gloria Swanson

By 1922, Gloria Swanson was already a star and, by the end of the decade, the highest paid actress in Hollywood. Audiences flocked to see her movies not only to watch her performances but to see what she wore. Her extravagant style was emulated all over the world.

In 1927, she turned down a million dollar contract to join the newly formed United Artists, a move that gave her freedom to produce her own films. In 1928, she produced and starred as a “fallen woman” in one of the most controversial films of the decade, Sadie Thompson.

Miss Swanson handily survived the transition from silent films to talkies and enjoyed an entertainment career that spanned more than half a century.

 #2  GRETA GARBO … Woman of Mystery

It was Louis B. Mayer who brought the 20-year old Greta Garbo to Hollywood from Sweden in 1925. She proved his instincts correct when she became an instant hit in her first Hollywood film, Torrent. In 1927, she appeared opposite popular leading man John Gilbert in Flesh and the Devil and became an international star.

Greta Garbo and John Gilbert

Garbo and Gilbert in Flesh and the Devil

Garbo starred in eleven films from 1925 to 1929. Audiences were mesmerized not only by her beauty but by each nuance of her subtle style of acting—the quirk of an eyebrow, the angle of a look…

Garbo transitioned smoothly to sound and enjoyed a stellar career through the 1930s. She retired in 1941, after which she became a real life “woman of mystery” known as widely for her reclusive lifestyle as her remarkable film career.

#3  CLARA BOW … The “It” Girl

Star quality. Charisma. It. In 1920s slang, “it” meant sex appeal.

Clara Bow in Wings

Clara Bow in Wings

Whatever you call it, Clara Bow had it.  Beauty, brains, sass and an uninhibited youthful vitality that spilled out all over the silent movie screen.

The Brooklyn born Bow first caught the attention of Hollywood and American audiences by playing flappers in films like Daughters of Paradise and Wine.  Her star caught fire in 1926 when she appeared in Mantrap.

In 1927, she starred in six more pictures, one of which—It—gave her the nickname she’s still known for today–The It Girl.  By 1928, Clara Bow was the number one box office draw–she was just 23.

Bow survived the transition to talkies in 1929, but by the early 30s, had begun to withdraw from Hollywood. In 1933, she retired from films.

***

What do you think? How do these ladies stack up to our “It” girls of today?
Remember, no cosmetic plastic surgery, implants or computer magic back then… Can their charisma and beauty compare?

 

Photo Credits:

Photo credit:  Russell Patterson [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Gloria Swanson by unknown studio photographer (RR Auction) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Flesh and the Devil Publicity Still By Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (work for hire) ([1]) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
By trailer screenshot (Wings trailer) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Flappers & Jelly Beans … 20s Fun, Fads and Entertainment

Welcome to Flappers & Jelly Beans!

To get in the mood for the April release of my 1920s romantic mystery, It Had to Be You, I’m offering up facts, trivia, and slang from that fabulous frivolous decade.  Today and in coming weeks, we’ll take a peek at some fads and entertainment trends of the Prohibition era.

Fun, Fads, and Entertainment1920s Romantic Mystery

By 1920, Americans were still shell-shocked from the Great War and an influenza pandemic that, combined, took an estimated 700,000 American lives. Is it any wonder that they were eager to put the old decade behind and indulge in some mindless fads and entertainment?

Like never before, the times and the technology were ripe to meet their demand.

You Oughta Be in Pictures … The Movies

Advertising. Radio. Tabloids. They all helped to create and feed the new American hunger for modern products, pastimes and entertainment. So did a young West Coast movie industry that was ready to crank out feature films as fast as audiences could consume them. And that was fast. By 1928, Hollywood was churning out somewhere between 600 and 700 films a year. The movie palaces—over 20,000 of them—were packed.

 So, who were the stars that kept 1920s audiences flocking back for more?  The action heroes? The sex symbols? The funny men?

Strong, Silent and Sexy — Hollywood’s Top Leading Men

#1    DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS … THE KING OF HOLLYWOOD

Douglas Fairbanks - Robinhood

Douglas Fairbanks in Robinhood

Before Clark Gable, there was Douglas Fairbanks, the first “King of Hollywood.”  He was known best for his manly, swashbuckling  roles in adventure films like The Thief of Bagdad and Robinhood, but it was his marriage to “America’s Sweetheart” Mary Pickford that served up juicy fodder for the gossip columns.

Fairbanks and Pickford were the Brangelina of their time–the first stars to immortalize their hand and foot prints in cement in front of Grauman’s Chinese Theater. They also teamed up with D.W. Griffith and another mega-star, Charlie Chaplin, to form their own motion picture studio under a name we recognize today—United Artists.

# 2   RUDOLPH VALENTINO … THE SHEIK

Rudolph Valentino

Rudolph Valentino 1921

If Fairbanks was the All-American tough guy of the silent screen, Rudolph Valentino was his counter point. Shooting to stardom by playing sexy Latin lover-types in hits like The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse and The Sheik, Valentino caused women to swoon and men to shake their heads in bafflement. He was so popular, the word “sheik” became slang for any young man with sex appeal.

Valentino’s career ended abruptly when he died in New York City at age 31 of complications from peritonitis. His viewing turned into a mob scene, with an estimated 100,000 mourners lining the city streets. Stories of distraught fans, including rumors of some suicides, made the news.

#3  JOHN GILBERT … THE GREAT LOVER

Garbo and Gilbert

Garbo and Gilbert in A Woman of Affairs 1929

One of Valentino’s rivals for the title of Greatest On-Screen Lover was John Gilbert.

Gilbert’s career took off  in 1924 when he starred in the war epic The Big Parade, and his reputation as a great screen lover was sealed when he appeared in 1926 with Greta Garbo in Flesh and the Devil.  Their on-screen chemistry led to a rocky on-again off-again real life romance that fueled gossip columns as well as ticket sales for two more popular Garbo-Gilbert silent films.

The rapid decline of Gilbert’s career soon afterwards  has been credited to the arrival of sound, but it may have been just as likely due to studio politics and a tumultuous personal life.  Like his film rival, Valentino, Gilbert died too young, at age 38, of a heart attack.

So, what do you think? How do these guys compare to today’s screen idols? Johnny Depp? Ryan Reynolds? Hugh Jackman? Leonardo DiCaprio?
Could Valentino make women swoon today?

Next up? The “It” Girls …. Hollywood’s Top Leading Ladies.
Care to guess who will make the list?

Until then, I’m “23-skidoo” outta here! Have a great rest of the week. 🙂

***

Photo credits:

Fairbanks by United Artists, cinematographers Arthur Edeson & Charles Richardson [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Valentino by [Wisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research] [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons
Garbo and Gilbert by Studio (Golden Age, tobacco card image) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons