About Eleanor Kuhns

Librarian and Writer Published A Simple Murder, May 2012

Death in the Great Dismal

After being delayed for several months because of COVID, the new Will Rees will be released in the United States on January 5.

The Great Dismal Swamp, the setting for the ninth Will Rees, is my favorite so far. Will and Lydia are asked by a friend, born free but sold down south and now escaped, to accompany him to the swamp to rescue his wife. Of course they agree, and several murders occur.

Yes, the swamp still exists. It is much smaller, though, than it was when George Washington first explored it (and first saw the potential for development.) But it still feels like a trackless wilderness. Bears and bobcats still live within the swamp as well as many species of birds and aquatic life. And insects, lots and lots of insects.

This is a peat bog and in some places the peat is fourteen feet deep. A man could be swallowed up with no one the wiser.

Many slaves escaped to the swamp. Estimates range from a few thousand to one hundred thousand. Many were caught but quite a few managed to make a life for themselves inside the swamp. These fugitives were called maroons.

When the escaped slaves fled to the swamp, they bedded down first under the pines. They grow only on the drier islands. Daniel Sayers, an archaeologist has been excavating these drier patches and has found evidence of small communities.

A tree in a forest

Description automatically generated

Most of the swamp resembles an impassible green curtain.

A large tree in a forest

Description automatically generated

Now the swamp is passable via boardwalks. This one leads to a memorial honoring the maroons.

A wooden bench sitting in the middle of a forest

Description automatically generated

Gender in Will Rees’s America

Several readers have expressed the opinion that Lydia should be the detective, not her husband. I can see their point. I think she is more intelligent than he is as well. But I chose Will Rees for some practical reasons.

Although women were not so circumscribed as they became later, in the Victorian times, they had little freedom. Everything they had, and I mean everything right up to their children and the clothes on their back, belonged to their husbands. The farm on which Rees and Lydia are living went to Lydia on the death of her first husband. She promised it to the Shaker community nearby. But when she married Rees, that farm became his property, leading to no end of issues with the Shaker community that expected to take possession.

And while we are on the subject of inheritance, it is important to realize that widows did not inherit from their husbands unless SPECIFICALLY MENTIONED BY NAME IN THE WILL. If they were not included, they became the responsibility of the eldest son and could be tossed in the street if he so desired.

Even their clothing was owned by their husband. I read one contemporary account of a woman who sought and obtained a divorce. She had to marry again in her petticoats.

Although there are accounts of women printers, silversmiths and more, most of them were the widows or daughters of the craftsmen who had taught them the skills. Only then could they actually work in these fields. No one would accept them as apprentices. (This has changed very slowly. I wanted to be a carpenter as a girl. The local trade school would not accept me because of my gender and told me to become a secretary.)

The other issue is travel. Rees is a traveling weaver; he goes from house to house and farm to farm to weave the yard spun during the previous winter. Even if Lydia owned a loom, she would be expected to weave at home. She would not have the freedom to leave that home, to investigate or for any other purpose, that her husband had.

Unfortunately, these were the challenges women faced. ( In many ways, they have not changed so greatly.) So Lydia has become a detective, but part of a team.

Interview with Fran Lewis

I had a great time discussing A Circle of Dead Girls.

For the audio or written versions, here are the links.

Here is the link for Fran’s written summary:  https://tillie49.wordpress.com/2020/10/06/the-circle-of-dead-girls/
And the link to the show.  https://www.blogtalkradio.com/fran-lewis/2020/10/07/circle-of-dead-girls

Blog Tour

Very excited to announce a blog tour for A Circle of Dead Girls.

Take a look at one of the tour stops.

List of tour stops: 
09/01 Interview @ BooksChatter

09/02 Showcase @ Brooke Blogs

09/03 Guest post @ Quiet Fury Books

09/04 Review @ Bring On Lemons09/05 Showcase @ Momfluenster

09/05 Showcase @ nanasbookreviews09/08 Review @ sunny island breezes

09/09 Showcase @ Im Into Books

09/10 Review @ Wall-to-wall Books

09/11 Showcase @ Books to the Ceiling

09/12 Showcase @ Sylv. net09/14 Showcase @ Tome Tender

09/15 Review/showcase @ Jane Pettit Reviews

09/16 Review @ Buried Under Books

09/17 Interview/Showcase @ CMash Reads

09/18 Review/showcase @ Novels N Latte

09/19 Review @ Book Reviews From an Avid Reader

09/20 Review @ Cheryls Book Nook

09/21 Review @ Thats What Shes Reading

09/22 Guest post @ Reading A Page Turner

09/23 Showcase @ Celticladys Reviews09/24 Showcase @ Nesies Place

09/28 Review @ A Room Without Books is Empty

09/29 Showcase @ The Pulp and Mystery Shelf10/07 Review @ Just Reviews

10/17 Interview @ Blog talk radio

Sign up at one of the stops for a $20.00 gift card to Amazon.

Blog Tour

Very excited to announce a blog tour for A Circle of Dead Girls.

Take a look at one of the tour stops.

List of tour stops: 
09/01 Interview @ BooksChatter09/02 Showcase @ Brooke Blogs09/03 Guest post @ Quiet Fury Books09/04 Review @ Bring On Lemons09/05 Showcase @ Momfluenster09/05 Showcase @ nanasbookreviews09/08 Review @ sunny island breezes09/09 Showcase @ Im Into Books09/10 Review @ Wall-to-wall Books09/11 Showcase @ Books to the Ceiling09/12 Showcase @ Sylv. net09/14 Showcase @ Tome Tender09/15 Review/showcase @ Jane Pettit Reviews09/16 Review @ Buried Under Books09/17 Interview/Showcase @ CMash Reads09/18 Review/showcase @ Novels N Latte09/19 Review @ Book Reviews From an Avid Reader09/20 Review @ Cheryls Book Nook09/21 Review @ Thats What Shes Reading09/22 Guest post @ Reading A Page Turner09/23 Showcase @ Celticladys Reviews09/24 Showcase @ Nesies Place09/28 Review @ A Room Without Books is Empty09/29 Showcase @ The Pulp and Mystery Shelf10/07 Review @ Just Reviews10/17 Interview @ Blog talk radio

Sign up at one of the stops for a $20.00 gift card to Amazon.

More about Maine

I thought I would post additional pictures. Both my husband and I are hikers and we have taken quite a few people hiking. We hoped our family and friends would love this state the way we do.

Just FYI: Maine is allowing visitors from the Northeast (States that have reduced the rates of COVID) to come to Maine without quarantining.

Forest in Maine and a shot of the rocky coast of Maine. This is in Acadia National Park, one of my favorite places.

Maine

I realized – and I’m not sure why it took me so long – that although I have blogged about many many topics, I have not discussed Maine. My detective, Will Rees, is a Mainer and many of my books are set in this state.

At the time the books are set, Maine is not yet a state of its own. Originally populated by tribes of the Algonquin Nation, whose names remain in names like Androscoggin, Passamaquoddy, Penobscot and more, Maine was considered part of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It was officially called the District of Maine. Maine was brought into statehood as part of the Missouri Compromise of 1820. (Maine came in as a ‘free’ state. The following year, Missouri came in as a slave holding state, thereby keeping the balance between free and slave.)

Maine is called The Pine Tree State for obvious reasons.

Maine has a long, and rocky coastline.

Although part of the temperate climate, and frequently warm and humid in the summers, it also has a long cold and snowy winter. I have seen it snow the last week of April, and not a dusting either but several inches.

But winters in Maine have their own beauty.

Animal Stars of the Circus

Since the rebirth of the circus in Great Britain was begun as an equestrian show, it is no surprise than many animal species have long been the stars of the animal world. At first, the horse was supreme. Horse acts continued right through to the modern age.

But, along with clowns and acrobats, animals acts were added to entertain the audience between equestrian feats. And, before the exotic animals became a feature of the circus (the elephant was first brought to the United States in 1794), dogs, pigs and bears were pressed into service as acts. Again, similar to the horse, these animals have continued to mainstays of the circus.

Almost from the first, less common animals were featured. In 1779, Philip Astley (a Serjeant-Major who set up the first circus in Great Britain after a century), put a zebra on display. Other exotics, elephants, camels, monkeys, and eventually the big cats were added to the exhibitions.

With the expansion of the European powers into Africa, the types of animals employed expanded. Wild animals, especially the big cats, became a profitable business. It was not a big jump from exhibiting the animals to including them to performances. To the acrobats, jugglers and ropedancers was now added a menagerie of animals, many of them dangerous. Of course, with the animals, came animal trainers.

Some of these animal performers became big stars. In the 1940’s Jumbo, the elephant became so popular that jumbo, meaning colossal, became part of the language.

Blog Tour

Very excited to announce that I am participating in a blog tour for the Mystery Writers of America. A group of us were chosen to participate with a short reading from our latest work. I chose a passage from A Circle of Dead Girls.

Your can see the postings on Facebook, (https://www.facebook.com/mwanewyork), on Twitter  (https://twitter.com/mwanewyork)  or YouTube  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHQbBSG3fd3UJoPYQU4Kpxg