Tag Archives: Heebie-Jeebie Girl

The Heebie-Jeebie Girl will be (slightly) delayed

When you’re dealing with a worldwide pandemic, the release of one little novel seems kind of insignificant. At the same, losing yourself in a book is a wonderful way to pass the time while you’re hunkered down at home (you are practicing good social distancing and washing your hands, right?).

The bad news: Covid-19 has thrown printing and shipping schedules out of whack and delayed the release of The Heebie-Jeebie Girl in hardcover to June 9. The book is still available for pre-order from your favorite local independent bookstore–check out indiebound.org to find one near you.

The good news: The e-book version of The Heebie-Jeebie Girl will still be released as scheduled. Watch this website or follow me on Facebook or Twitter for details about the virtual launch party at 7:00 pm EST on April 23. (And mark your calendar for Wednesday, June 10, when we hope to have an in-person book launch at Loganberry Books in Cleveland, Ohio.)

I was fortunate to be part of a great Cleveland.com piece on how several local authors releasing books during the shelter-in-place orders are coping. And if you’re looking for other good reads, local writers and literary types have some suggestions.

No matter how you choose to read, I hope you’ll take a trip to Youngstown, Ohio, via The Heebie-Jeebie Girl. That city has a lot to say, literally–Youngstown is one of the narrative voices that tells the story of a little girl and her great-uncle who set out in 1997 Youngstown to find the guys who robbed her grandmother. As always, your reviews on Goodreads, Amazon, and any other online book discovery sites are a huge help.

I’ve never done a staggered book release like this, so I don’t know what to expect. These are strange times–none of us know how this will play out. Stay healthy and keep reading.

Life Imitating Art (and Vice Versa)

In Throw Like a Woman, which came out in 2015, the protagonist, Brenda, gets discovered as a pitcher when someone takes a video of her throwing smoke at a test-your-speed pitching game at a Cleveland Indians game. It seemed like a plausible if slightly improbable scenario. Lo and behind, I saw a list of the Best MLB Stories of 2019 and there was the story of a guy named Nathan Patterson, who threw 96 mph in a speed pitch challenge and ended up signing a contract with the Oakland A’s. Go figure.

So there’s your life imitating art moment. And sometimes art imitates life. Or we turn life into art, which is the case with the upcoming The Heebie-Jeebie Girl, which is based on some real family history. The story is set in 1977 Youngstown and revolves around a little girl with a talent for picking the daily lottery number. When her grandmother is robbed of her lottery winnings by two men who come to her house pretending to be from the water department, the little girl and her great uncle decide to try and find the perps on their own. Most of that synopsis is true. Years and years ago, one of my cousins really did go through a several-month period where she picked a lot of winning lottery numbers. And two guys pretending to be from the water department really did come to my grandmother’s house and rob her. Those events were the little seed that grew into a novel that I’ve described as ‘Crime and Punishment set in 1977 Youngstown, only with jokes and magic.’

If you come to a book talk for The Heebie-Jeebie Girl, you can hear more about the process of deciding how to turn these real life events into fiction. Or you can read it and try to guess what’s real and what is imagined. Hope to see you at an upcoming event!

Don’t forget to pre-order The Heebie-Jeebie Girl
or add it to your “to-read” list!

What does King Kong have to do with Thanksgiving?

That’s a question I’ve been asking myself since I was a little kid. When I was growing up, the local UHF station, WUAB, used to show the original King Kong every year on Thanksgiving. If you grew up in northeast Ohio, you probably saw it at least once. Both of my parents grew up in Youngstown, Ohio, which is also the setting for my upcoming novel, The Heebie-Jeebie Girl. I remember every Thanksgiving my parents would pack all six of us kids into the station wagon and drive the 65 miles from Cleveland to Youngstown to see my grandparents. And my other grandmother. And maybe an aunt or an uncle or two. And some cousins. I remember happy food comas and poring over the J.C. Penny Wish Book (google it), and, yes, trying to watch a little bit of King Kong. In a small nod to my childhood and my family, there is a scene in The Heebie-Jeebie Girl in which the young protagonist, Hope, and her great uncle Joe watch King Kong on Thanksgiving 1977.

It’s an odd film to associate with Thanksgiving and gratitude–I’m not even going to try and make a logical connection. I don’t think there is one. Maybe there doesn’t need to be. Maybe the UHF station didn’t show it every year, but in the Thanksgiving of my memory, it did. It’s a fond if incongruous memory.

I haven’t watched King Kong in years, and I haven’t had occasion to spend Thanksgiving in Youngstown for a long time either. I still love that city, so much so that I wrote a novel about it. The Heebie-Jeebie Girl comes out April 21. You can read more about it on Goodreads (maybe add it to your bookshelf) or pre-order from your favorite brick and mortar or online bookseller. No matter how you celebrate it, I hope you and yours have a wonderful Thanksgiving.