23 January 2026
Guest Interview with Kim Lengling, Author of 15 Ways Pets Teach Us Kindness: More Nuggets of Hope
22 January 2026
Guest Interview with Jocie McKade, Author of Let Sleeping Dogs Lie, A Hope and Pip Cozy Cyber Mystery
Tell us about your latest book
I’ve written over twenty novels, a few series and a few. Most of my writing features my warped sense of humor. Reading should be fun! My latest release is Let Sleeping Dogs Lie, A Hope and Pip Cozy Cyber Mystery. It’s a 21st century cozy mystery featuring a robotic dog, and a mysterious AI.
What is your preferred writing routine?
Routine? Authors have routines? LOL Who knew? My preference would be to write at a lovely log cabin nestled in the mountains. A wall of windows overlooking a pristine mountain lake.
Honestly, I work, and I write for blogs and magazines. I’ve written in the bleachers at kids band practice, in the doctor office waiting for my appointment, on my lunch hour, wherever I could get in a few minutes of writing time.
Today, I tend to write at my desk a few hours a day. I live on Dust Bunny Farm - no, not a big farm, but enough acreage to keep us busy. My goal is 2K words a day….alas, I don’t always make it. But when I do, words flow late into the night.
What advice do you have for new writers?
Write. No professional gets better at their profession without doing it, repeatedly and a lot. Also, continue to read. Make sure you read books that are out of your usual preference. Every author will teach you something about writing. But mostly, just write—even if it sucks. I believe it was Nora Roberts who said: “You can’t edit a blank page.”
What have you found to be the best way to raise awareness of your books?
Social media like Facebook, Instagram, etc. I work with Creative Edge Publicity which helps me get farther reach than I ever could on my own, and my newsletter is one of my best outlets for reaching readers.
Tell us something unexpected you discovered during your research.
My Hope and Pip mystery features a robotic dog and an AI. I love tech, but I’m constantly having to research to keep up! Honestly, whatever you see in the media about AI or robotics is roughly years behind the reality of where tech actually is. Pip my robotic dog in the series, was created as a service dog prototype.
Real service dogs have a ‘shelf life’. They generally are retired between 7-10 years as being a service dog to a human is an extremely stressful job. So Pip was created to be a replacement. He can be programmed to assist for multiple needs, never has to be fed, watered, walked, is allergy free, and just a hour of electricity can make him good as new. As needs change, he can simply be reprogrammed.
What I discovered in researching this, there isn’t a service dog—-yet, but what robotic dogs we do, is far more advanced than I ever anticipated.
What was the hardest scene you remember writing?
I would say it wasn’t a scene but a character…..the AI. It is a human consciousness within a network. Transferring her consciousness wasn’t supposed to work, but it did. I had to make her ‘real’, so she talks through a chapter or two and I’m hopeful that helps the reader relate more to her.
What are you planning to write next?
I’m working on the second book in the Hope and Pip series. The series takes place in Cincinnati, Ohio. While most cozies are set in small towns, there are many ‘neighborhoods’ in Cincinnati and it will is a place where new characters are introduced, along with the mystery.
Thank you for hosting me today.
Jocie McKade
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About the Author
Jocie McKade is the author of over twenty books. Her fiction writing has received several awards for mystery and romcom books. Her non-fiction work has appeared in dozens of magazines, online blogs, and she served as the Senior News Editor of Reader’s Entertainment News. Writing humorous cozy mysteries, and romantic comedy, Jocie can find humor in almost every inappropriate thing. She lives in the Midwest on Dust Bunny Farm with her family, and the world’s calmest Border Collie. When not writing, she grows ArnoldSwartzaWeeds in her garden, and plots strategic military maneuvers against hostile dust bunnies. Find out more at Jocie's website https://jociemckade.com/ and find her on Facebook and Instagram.20 January 2026
Book Review: The Alchemist's Daughter (Bianca Goddard Mystery Book 1) by Mary Lawrence
The first book in Mary Lawrence’s Bianca Goddard Mystery series, The Alchemist’s Daughter, is an engaging historical mystery that immerses the reader straight into the mud, smells, and dangers of Tudor-era London. This version of the past is a harsh, precarious world, where there are more rats than people, justice is arbitrary, and one wrong step can cost your life.
Our heroine, Bianca Goddard, is practical and intelligent, the daughter of a disgraced alchemist (who never appears in the book except as a shadow of her past). Her attitude to alchemy is a recurring question, and I suspect she would prefer not to be referred to as ‘the alchemist’s daughter.’
What makes this book stand out is its atmosphere. Mary Lawrence does an excellent job of bringing the dark side of Tudor London to life. We trudge through filthy streets, always on the lookout for cutpurses, and nature conspires to make life as difficult as possible. I particularly liked the inventive use of language, sometimes with made up words, and the 'Dickensian' undertones echoed in character names.
Bianca Goddard is a strong protagonist, compassionate and determined, but she’s also constrained by the realities of her time. Her scientific approach of observation and logical thinking sets her apart and makes her a refreshing lead in historical fiction.
The narrative sometimes pauses to explore secondary characters, which adds depth but can interrupt the momentum of the mystery, but the plot remains compelling, and the resolution satisfying without feeling contrived.
The Alchemist’s Daughter is a solid start to a mystery series. It’s best suited for readers who enjoy historically grounded crime stories, a strong sense of place, and protagonists who solve problems with brains rather than bravado. If you like your historical mysteries dark, detailed, and rooted in real-world logic, this book is well worth picking up.
Tony Riches
About the Author
Mary Lawrence lives in Maine and is the author of five Bianca Goddard Mysteries set in Tudor London featuring a cast of commoners. Bianca uses her wits and a smattering of alchemy to solve murders in the slums of Southwark. Suspense Magazine named The Alchemist’s Daughter and The Alchemist of Lost Souls "Best Books of 2015 and 2019” in the historical mystery category and each mystery has been a top 100 best-selling historical mystery. Her articles have appeared in several publications most notably the national news blog, The Daily Beast. Fool is a standalone Find out more at www.marylawrencebooks.com and find her on Facebook and Instagram
19 January 2026
Blog Tour Excerpt: Therein Lies the Pearl, by Catherine Hughes
17 January 2026
Guest Interview with Diann Floyd Boehm, Author of Rise! A Girl's Struggle for More
16 January 2026
Blog Tour Interview with Avien Gray, Author of Rough Diamond – Rough Justice
15 January 2026
Special Guest post by Mary Lawrence, Author of the Bianca Goddard mysteries
Alchemists in Tudor England
The Noble Art, or Alchemy, was as much a philosophical belief system as it was a rudimentary science. Evolving over several centuries and across three continents, it encompassed the studies of chemistry, religion, mathematics, and mysticism. By the sixteenth century, alchemy had reached its zenith in this early modern age known as the Scientific Revolution. While important scientific instruments were developed after the Tudor dynasty had ended, the advancement of rudimentary chemistry was made possible by alchemists during this time.
So, how were alchemists viewed and what hardships did they endure during the sixteenth century?
Paintings give clues to the men and their science. We see dimly lit laboratories scattered with crockery and retorts. Wizened alchemists bend over cauldrons intent on their science. Alchemists were notoriously secretive, using symbols, strange imagery, and indecipherable language to record and shroud their findings.
Alchemy’s basic tenet is the creation of a philosopher’s stone which could transform base or imperfect metals (like tin or copper), into perfection (silver or gold). From this “stone” an elixir of life could be developed which would grant immortality. If gold or immortality could be achieved, Henry VIII wanted in on it. He required all alchemists to be licensed and they were expected to report any progress to him. In fact, he employed several alchemists to work in the Royal Mint.
However, public attitudes toward alchemists ranged from adulation to suspicion. There were alchemists who approached their work rationally, and there were those who hoped to stumble upon the secret in a haphazard and often dangerous manner. Most all alchemists drained their financial resources in their futile pursuit, and as a result, families often suffered in poverty and lived with the uncertainty of losing their home. In addition to financial instability, fires caused by uncontrollable chemical reactions were also a source of constant danger not only to themselves, but to their neighbors in adjoining structures.
A successful alchemist would tout himself as a powerful manipulator of nature--one whose pursuit would benefit mankind. Plenty of charlatans employed their knowledge of solvents and simple chemical reactions to perform tricks that awed. Plenty of patrons parted with their money believing the alchemist was on the brink of discovery. Indeed, Ben Jonson’s play in 1610, The Alchemist, was about how one alchemist succeeded in procuring more gold from wealthy patrons than he ever did extracting it from base metals.
In a time when being accused of heresy could end one’s life, it was important that alchemists assume a pious attitude. Reverence for God and their noble art was necessary to avoid being accused of sorcery. Alchemists believed one must have the right destiny to succeed and failure was a fault of personal character. They were forever trying to prove to themselves and to God, that they were worthy of the great discovery. The improbability of success creating the philosopher’s stone was assured, and in my mind, this certainty makes for a provocative group of men forced to confront constant failure, poverty, and denial.
My own background is in medical science. Combining what I learned about the beginning of scientific inquiry with my interest in Tudor England seemed a natural path for me to follow. The result is my own bit of alchemy--the Bianca Goddard Mysteries, set in the final years of King Henry VIII and featuring the daughter of an infamous alchemist.
Mary Lawrence
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About the Author
Mary Lawrence lives in Maine and is the author of five Bianca Goddard Mysteries set in Tudor London featuring a cast of commoners. Bianca uses her wits and a smattering of alchemy to solve murders in the slums of Southwark. Suspense Magazine named The Alchemist’s Daughter and The Alchemist of Lost Souls "Best Books of 2015 and 2019” in the historical mystery category and each mystery has been a top 100 best-selling historical mystery. Her articles have appeared in several publications most notably the national news blog, The Daily Beast. Fool is a standalone Find out more at www.marylawrencebooks.com and find her on Facebook and Instagram










