Welcome
to my stop on the Virtual Book Tour, presented by Great Escapes Virtual Book Tours,
for Gold-Diggers,
Gangsters and Guns by Ellen Mansoor Collier. Please leave a comment or question for Ellen
to let her know you stopped by. You can
enter her tour wide giveaway by filling out the Rafflecopter form below. My review for all three books in the series
will post over the weekend.
SHAKEN, NOT STIRREDby Ellen Mansoor Collier,Author of the Jazz Age Mystery trilogy“Eat, drink and be merry” dictated the mood during the Shake, Rattle and Pour era of the Roaring Twenties—never mind Prohibition. To the rebellious “Lost Generation” of the Jazz Age, the 18th Amendment passed in 1919 (aka the Volstead Act) made liquor that much more appealing, not to mention attainable.Thanks to opportunistic bootleggers, moonshiners, and Al Capone-clones, gin mills and bars flowed with bathtub booze and home-brewed hooch. Originally created by the ancient Egyptians, cocktails not only helped to make bootleg liquor more palatable for public consumption, but stretched out a meager supply. Outrageous names added to the cocktail craze: Between the Sheets, Side Car, Fox Trot, Zanzibar, Clover Club, Palm Beach, for starters.Contraband cocktails served as the main ice-breakers, and often the raison d’etre, of spirited soirees during the not-so-dry decade. Savvy hostesses knew that mixed drinks helped loosen up the mixed company and, with a little help from her rum-running friends, her bar was always well-stocked for making whoopee. As Cole Porter would say, “Anything goes!”Prohibition may have padlocked the doors of the saloons and bars, yet it paved the way for a more egalitarian watering hole. Only the right card and password granted you entreé, behind unmarked doors and peepholes, into the speakeasy’s secret sect. Daring sheiks and shebas could imbibe giggle-water until they were blotto—or until the next police raid.Speakeasies sprouted like mushrooms—dark, damp and underground. By 1925, bon vivants could make the rounds at 100,000 blind pigs in New York City alone.Besides bars and boudoirs, cocktails played a starring role in theatres and in Hollywood. Real-life flapper and film siren Joan Crawford drank, danced and smooched with abandon in Our Dancing Daughters (1928) and its sequel, Our Modern Maidens. Scandalous! And what's a Noel Coward comedy, say, Private Lives or Blithe Spirit, without its ever-present props: the cocktail tray and “very dry martinis”?Don't forget everyone's favorite aunt—Rosalind Russell in Auntie Mame. How could she throw an all-night soiree during the so-called Dry Decade without her bootlegger’s help?Thirsty but resourceful quaffers most likely fashioned early shakers out of Mason jars, shell casings, or whatever container was at hand. Consider this frat joke published in Cornell’s Widow during the 1920s: “Do you fellows wash your own clothes at the house?” “Heck, no.” “Well, what's that washing machine for?” “That's no washing machine. That's our cocktail shaker.”With the repeal of Prohibition in 1933, speakeasies came out of the closet, only to be reborn as chi-chi cafes and must-see and be seen nightclubs. Undaunted by the Depression, New York’s cafe society flitted from the Stork Club to El Morocco to 21. In 1935, the original Old Mister Boston De Luxe Official Bartender’s Guide was published, just in time to capitalize on this intoxicating industry.During the 1930s, a new era of movie-making began, showcasing cocktail shakers as the au courant accessory of sophisticated Hollywood stars. These Art Deco artifacts may have their roots in Prohibition, but their popularity has spanned the decades, symbolizing carefree elegance and elan. During this Golden Age of glamour, Clark Gable and Myrna Loy were the King and Queen of Hollywood. Life was swell and swank while everyone drank, at least in the movies—and how! Depression? Who’s depressed?Like the matineé idols and stars of the day, cocktails, and the requisite shakers, were considered de rigueur for the Smart Set. No hard liquor for these oh-so-chic creatures of yesteryear. Recall Nick and Nora Charles exchanging witty reparteé in The Thin Man movies as they sipped dry martinis—what else? Witness Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire twirling to swing bands under a mirrored ball in a glittering 1930s ballroom. Talk about putting on the Ritz!Today cocktail shakers are no longer hidden behind closed doors, but are back in their rightful place at the bar. Elegant as an Erté etching, or just funky and fun, these colorful collectibles are meant to be displayed and handled—not just stored away like dusty museum pieces.And on a cool night when you’re sipping a Dubonnet and the moon is a silver smile in the sky, you can pretend it’s 1925 all over again: Suddenly you're snuggling with that special someone in the rumble seat of a new Packard, singing at the top of your lungs: “In the meantime, in between time: Ain't we got fun?”©Ellen Mansoor Collier
Gold-Diggers, Gamblers and Guns: A Jazz Age Mystery #3
by Ellen Mansoor Collier
Publisher:
DecoDame Press
Release
Date: May 18, 2014 (1st Edition)
Genre:
Cozy Mystery
File Size: 790 KB
Print Length: 268 pages
File Size: 790 KB
Print Length: 268 pages
ISBN:
978-0-98941-705-1
ASIN: B00KF3TJCM
ASIN: B00KF3TJCM
BUY LINKS: AMAZON | B&N | SMASHWORDS
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to Goodreads
About the book:
During Prohibition, Galveston Island was called the “Free
State of Galveston” due to its lax laws and laissez-faire attitude toward
gambling, gals and bootlegging. Young society reporter Jasmine (Jazz) Cross
longs to cover hard news, but she’s stuck between two clashing cultures: the
world of gossip and glamour vs. gangsters and gamblers.
After Downtown Gang leader Johnny Jack Nounes is released
from jail, all hell breaks loose: Prohibition Agent James Burton’s life is
threatened and he must go into hiding for his own safety. But when he’s framed
for murder, he and Jazz work together to prove his innocence. Johnny Jack
blames her half-brother Sammy Cook, owner of the Oasis speakeasy, for his
arrest and forces him to work overtime in a variety of dangerous mob jobs as
punishment.
When a bookie is murdered, Jazz looks for clues linking the
two murders and delves deeper into the underworld of gambling: poker games,
slot machines and horse-racing. Meanwhile, Jazz tries to keep both Burton and
her brother safe, and alive, while they face off against each other, as well as
a common enemy. A soft-boiled mystery inspired by actual events.
About
The Author:
Ellen Mansoor Collier is a Houston-based freelance magazine
writer and editor whose articles and essays have been published in a variety of
national magazines. Several of her short stories have appeared in Woman’s
World.
During college summers, she worked as a reporter for a Houston community
newspaper and as a cocktail waitress, both jobs providing background experience
for her Jazz Age mysteries.
A flapper at heart, she’s worked as a magazine
editor/writer, and in advertising and public relations (plus endured a hectic
semester as a substitute teacher). She graduated from the University of Texas
at Austin with a degree in Magazine Journalism and served on UTmost, the
college magazine and as president of WICI (Women in Communications).
FLAPPERS, FLASKS AND FOUL PLAY is her first novel, published
in 2012, followed by the sequel, BATHING BEAUTIES, BOOZE AND BULLETS, released
in May 2013. She lives in Houston with her husband and Chow mutts, and visits
Galveston whenever possible.
“When you grow up in Houston, Galveston becomes like a
second home. I had no idea this sleepy beach town had such a wild and colorful
past until I began doing research, and became fascinated by the legends and
stories of the 1920s. Finally I had to stop researching and start writing,
trying to imagine a flapper’s life in Galveston during Prohibition.”
Author
Links:
Tour
Schedule
July
16 – Michele
Lynn Seigfried, Author – Guest Post
July 17 – Chloe Gets A Clue - Interview
July 18 – Queen of All She Reads – Review, Guest Post
July 19 – readalot blog – Review
July 20 – Cozy Up With Kathy – Interview
July 21 – Back Porchervations – Review
July 22 – Shelley’s Book Case – Review
July 23 – Cicero’s Children – Interview
July 24 – Community Bookstop – Review
July 25 – Lori’s READING CORNER – Guest Post
July 26 – off
July 27 – Omnimystery News – Interview
July 28 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – Spotlight
July 29 – Book-n-Kisses – Guest Post
July 17 – Chloe Gets A Clue - Interview
July 18 – Queen of All She Reads – Review, Guest Post
July 19 – readalot blog – Review
July 20 – Cozy Up With Kathy – Interview
July 21 – Back Porchervations – Review
July 22 – Shelley’s Book Case – Review
July 23 – Cicero’s Children – Interview
July 24 – Community Bookstop – Review
July 25 – Lori’s READING CORNER – Guest Post
July 26 – off
July 27 – Omnimystery News – Interview
July 28 – Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book – Spotlight
July 29 – Book-n-Kisses – Guest Post
How fun--music that matches my guest post! Many thanks for featuring GOLD DIGGERS today. Ain't we got fun?
ReplyDeleteEnjoy! Ellen
So sweet. I love Doris Day she's a peach at 90 years young. I will be singing that song in my head all day now.
ReplyDeleteMe too--I love that song! BTW the buy links aren't working--would you mind fixing them? Thanks again!! E
ReplyDeleteFun post
ReplyDelete