New Release Equals A Free Read!
Mid-Century Mayhem is now out! It's the start of a 4 book series that will take the reader from 1950s Detroit to Gothic backwoods in the 1970s to a Regency ballroom in the 1810s ...and beyond:
Modern day Nashville and 1950s Detroit clash worse than an IKEA futon and a plaid Barcalounger when a free-spirited interior designer and a strait-laced automotive engineer find themselves in another time. TOMS-wearing Olivia Haugen and Madras-shirted Kyle Daniels have no idea why they've ended up in 1954 Michigan, but it's probably not because of all the swank mid-century furnishings. Discovering the reason might have something to do with a wily salvage warehouse owner and her not-so-little shop of secrets.
If you'd like to read this Kindle book for free (and pretty please leave an honest review when you're done), shoot me an email and I'll send you a Kindle copy. Below is an excerpt from the first chapter to see if you're a 'mid-mod' fan. :)
excerpt by Bella Street
All Rights Reserved
“Oh,
my dear,
this is beyond anything I could ever imagine!”
Olivia Haugen
smiled, ignoring the wistful tightening in her chest. She watched as
her latest client, Mrs.
Prescott, moved
about the renovated room, be-ringed hands clasped in delight.
“The
colors, the tones, the
accessories...” The woman
motioned toward a massive starburst mirror positioned on the brick
expanse above the fireplace. “How did you ever find such a piece?
It ties
the whole space together!”
Olivia deepened her smile until her face ached.
“Oh, I have my connections.”
It was always the same. After pouring herself
into an interior design project for weeks—sometimes months—she
experienced a letdown at what should've been the biggest moment of
the job.
The Reveal.
And yet here
she stood with another satisfied customer, fighting a feeling of
dissatisfaction.
It was all
very silly. Olivia didn't know of another person as fortunate as
she'd been. She'd had a prosperous and
cultured upbringing, and now
her new business was humming
along without the growth plateaus most other entrepreneurs
experienced.
She had a growing list of customers.
She had a
great apartment in Franklin—a
jeweled hamlet just outside Nashville.
She had...Troy.
Her eye twitched as she thought of her
boyfriend.
Olivia
remembered seeing him just that morning,
splayed out on the couch. He
must've come
in late from his gig and didn't want to disturb her. The
light filtering through the kitchen shades
had lit
up the bangles on his arm
draped across his eyes.
She
touched
the
bracelets on her wrist.
He really was terribly good
looking.
“You know,”
Mrs. Prescott said, smoothing a wayward hair back into her updo, “I
have a friend who is really into this whole mid-century
trend.
She'll want a lot more than a retro mirror or lamp. She's a
huge Mad Men
fan, and has been talking
about redoing her entire
house in the fifties
style. She could really use someone with your connections. Can I give
her your number?”
“Absolutely,”
Olivia said, extracting a fresh business card from her many-pocketed
binder. “Shows like Mad
Men have
been great
for business.”
“I bet!”
Mrs. Prescott said, taking the card. “But I'll stick with the
modern day, thank you very much. A fifties
touch here and there is one thing, but I'm
not hoping for a return of machismo, suburban sprawl, and girdles any
time soon!”
Olivia bit
her lip. The Prescotts lived in an
Inglewood bungalow—that
had started out as a post-war
suburban tract
home.
How time changed perspectives.
“I draw the line at girdles,” Olivia said.
“However, Spanx are another thing entirely.”
Mrs. Prescott
giggled. “How right you
are.”
After another
turn around the renovated living room—and a bank
check for the balance of the
job—Olivia left the Prescott home. Instead
of returning to her apartment, she
headed to Connie's Collectibles
& Salvage on
Third
Avenue
South—an
odds and ends salvage
warehouse
where she found the bulk of her conversation piece items—including
starburst mirrors.
Olivia didn't
dwell on her unsettled
feelings as she drove.
She knew the shop's
proprietor, Constance
Presley, would
cheer her up with an amusing
insult or two—and want to
hear all about
the client's response to the
mirror. The older woman
(who disavowed any relation
to her famous namesake) had
become less of a materials contact and more of a friend over the last
few years. Olivia
tried to purchase the bulk of her items from Constance, rather than
shop all the other salvage shops and yards in the area. Loyalty was
combined with the fact that Constance simply had the most outstanding
inventory she'd ever seen in one place. And when Olivia needed a
special piece, somehow Constance
was able to come up with something perfect every time.
Squat brick
buildings—some crumbling
and some renovated—lined
the narrow streets as Olivia
wended her way toward the
warehouse. Yellow
sunshine washed the eclectic
scene
with a mellow
glow, even as dark thunderclouds piled up over the Cumberland River.
Olivia
parked on a side street and
left the air-conditioned chill of her car for the heavy humidity of a
Tennessee summer day.
By the time she opened
the beat-up
wood and leaded glass door of Connie's
Collectibles &
Salvage, she was dabbing at
sweat above her lip with the back of her hand and
wondering if her
Scandinavian blood would ever acclimate to the near-tropical
heat of the South.
Probably
not, if the natives complain as much as I
do about the weather.
The door
alarm—an electronic
version of Elvis' “Hard Headed Woman”—heralded
her arrival as she
stepped into the dim gloom of the shop, along
with a brief
sneezing fit due to years of
accumulated dust coating the
space.
“Bless
you,” came a gravelly voice from the
back room.
Olivia
squinted as the bulk of the
proprietor came into view. Constance
shuffled toward her,
a stray ray of dusty light gilding her sallow, wrinkled face and
grumpy
smile.
“Cleaning
lady didn't show again?” Olivia
asked, after another sneeze.
“It's your
allergies,” Constance
said, leaning her arms on the front
counter that had once been a
tavern bar. She
peered
at Olivia over the rims of her smudged bifocals.
They both
knew a cleaning lady was fictional,
but
Olivia hoped she might take the hint one of these years. How
Constance could survive in the musty old building was a mystery. Then
again, Olivia could admit she felt as
at home here as anywhere
else.
“Hey, Miss
Olivia.”
Olivia waved
at Henry, the nineteen-year-old
sole employee, before he
returned to the back of the warehouse—his
red hair lit from the skylight overhead.
She leaned on the other end of the counter and
eased out a sigh. “The client loved the mirror. Said it tied the
whole design together.”
“Of course it did,” Constance said dryly.
“That's why you get paid to find such treasures.”
“Well, if I get this next job, I'm
going to need a whole lot more of those treasures.”
“Hope it's Victorian this time. I got a ton
of the frou-frou stuff takin' up space in the back that I need to
move.”
“Mid-century. A total house redo.”
Constance groaned. “Everyone wants
mid-century. It's partly due to that damn Mad Men show. I
wonder if people realize it's set in the sixties, not the fifties.”
“Really? I didn't know that.” Olivia pulled
a stick of tangerine-flavored lip balm from her front pocket and
applied it with relish.
Constance rolled her eyes. “How can you do
period design and not know your history?”
Olivia smacked her lips together—knowing it
probably annoyed her friend. “I know all the period designers.
I know the right look and how to achieve it. Besides, I let the house
tell me what it wants.”
“You do not,” Constance said, sounding
scandalized.
“Yes, I do. I close my eyes and ask the house
to give me inspiration.”
“I thought your business name was just some
silliness to get attention.”
It was Olivia's turn to be scandalized. “Nice.”
“You know what I mean,” Constance grumbled.
“Anyway, you do whatever the client wants.”
“But I also get guidance from the house.”
Constance grunted. “What if the house tells
you it wants Parisian bordello?”
“It's not like that. The style of the house
is a big part of inspiration, but I get the vibe of the family—”
“And how much they can afford.”
Olivia sent her friend a dark look. “But when
it comes to colors, tones, themes... that's what I get from the
house.”
“So the walls actually talk and tell you
their favorite colors?”
“Well, sometimes I do get a sense of what the
history of the house is.”
“History,” Constance said sounding
unconvinced. “You mean when it was built—or the secrets that
happened inside?”
Olivia considered her answer. “Not secrets,
per se, but I can often tell if something sad happened there. Or if
the house is full of peace.”
“You sound full of something, all
right.”
“Classy,” Olivia said with a sniff.
“Admit it, you primarily go by whatever the
homeowner wants.”
“Of course, Miss No Romance In Your Soul.”
Naturally, Constance smiled at that. “I bet
people who have ranch homes often want Victoriana, and people in
trailers want Hollywood Glam.”
Olivia tucked the lip balm in the front pocket
of her jeans. “I may have had a few of those jobs in the past. What
can I say? I had to pay the bills.”
Constance nodded. “People want what they
want, and I have a theory that says it has more to do with emotion
than something they saw on Pinterest.”
“Sounds like you're coming around to my way
of thinking.”
Constance waved the notion away as if it were a
bothersome fly. “Do you ever ask yourself why design themes and
motifs are attached to eras?”
“Sounds like a college class I once took,”
Olivia said. “An era can define the design, right? Like the Arts
and Crafts movement was a protest to the Industrial Age...or
something like that.” She wrinkled her nose. “Actually, I'm not
sure I passed that class.”
“Cute. But you need context. Design can't be
disconnected from history. Ask yourself why Mid-Century Modern is
defined by starbursts and clean lines and chrome.”
Olivia figured it was a trick question, and at
the same time wondered why her friend was badgering her with a random
history lesson. Constance usually complained about politics and the
weather. “Um, the space-age thing happening at the time?”
“That's part of it. There's also the desire
for a clean slate after a hard-fought war. Plus, technology was
happening at an unheard-of pace. Plastics and insecticides were
prolonging life for millions—”
“Plastic and pesticides? Are you serious?”
“They helped bring about the longevity and
prosperity that allows us to indulge in organics and all that natural
nonsense today.”
Olivia grimaced. “You're not making sense.”
“What I'm saying is that for you—for
everyone born—history starts at the moment they become aware of
their own perceptions. The past is discounted. Everything is about
today.”
“I thought we were talking about the
past.”
Constance raised a brow. “The past as you
see it—not so much as it really was. Take it a step further. Why do
certain era's styles trend decades later? Why is the stuff I once
couldn't give away worth hundreds or thousands now?”
“TV shows?”
“That show just capitalized on what was going
to happen, trend-wise, anyway.”
“Then you must mean nostalgia.”
“I mean nostalgia,” Constance said, “which
is based on emotion. Sometimes it's a timing thing. People in their
forties and fifties start remembering the 'good old days' of their
youth and want the comfort of that style surrounding them. The world
is changing so fast and even if the good old days weren't so good,
they are still more bearable than the unknown.”
“But it's not like clockwork.”
“Naw, it's a bit more free-form than that.
Plus there are the skipped eras. I mean, no one wants a redo of the
eighties.”
Olivia laughed. “I think there was some
flirtation, but it didn't last.”
“That just proves my point. Sometimes trends
are psychological. The eighties were a time of transition, fortunes
rose and fell, there was a cold war, and it all felt very uncohesive.
Makes sense—aside from its overblown style—that there's not a
huge demand to return to those days. But in the 1950s, the country
was booming. We'd just won a world war, and there was a new
opportunity for prosperity. Everyone was thinking positive. There was
a can-do spirit. Look at economic times now and you can see why
there's a longing for times when things were lookin' up.”
“Huh.”
Constance peered over the rim of her glasses.
“Are you listening to anything I'm saying?”
“Of course.”
The shop owner snorted.
Olivia clapped her hands together. “Regardless
of the reason behind the trends, I know you won't let me down when it
comes to period pieces.”
“I'm
tellin' you,
you're not the only one after those
pieces. Buyers
been cleaning me out all year. Prices are up, too,
due to demand. And, frankly,
I'm gettin' too old to go
traipsing around after the stuff.”
“Well, I don't have the redecorating job
yet,” Olivia said. “Just a lead.”
Constance
went around to the other side of the counter and pulled out a large
black binder. “Give me a list of everything you might need and
I'll see what I can do.”
“Like I
said, I don't have the job.” Olivia
picked up a pen and approached the pages of the binder. Constance
often kept a wish list for her regular customers, and Olivia had a
whole section devoted to her personal
requests. Spinning the
binder around, she wrote: Mid-Mod
inventory—all
of it.
Constance
grunted when she read the flourish-y
writing. “Very droll.”
Slapping the binder closed,
she said, “You might need to start trolling Craigslist
and eBay, and see if you can
supplement your needs from
online inventory. And you
know there are other shops in Nashville.”
“You haven't let me down yet, Constance.”
Another
grunt. “You should start
thinking about what you want for yourself
one
of these days—”
Olivia put up
a hand. “Let's not spoil a
lovely afternoon by going down that
rabbit hole.”
“It's about
to storm,” Constance said, dutifully
changing the subject. As if
manifested by her words, the sunlight disappeared and
a rumble of thunder could be heard in the distance. She pursed her
lips. “So I guess you're
heading home to that feckless man-friend of yours. Clayton, wasn't
it?”
“It's Troy.” Olivia tilted her head.
“Clayton was last month.”
Constance rolled her eyes. “I'm going to
start making a list so I can keep track.”
“It's not that bad,” Olivia protested.
“Don't be dramatic.”
“If it's a
lack of drama you want, you should lay off artists and musicians.”
The shop
owner sniffed. “You should
be looking into more mature men like—”
“Your
nephew
Kyle—that pinnacle of malehood and maturity, or
so I've heard.”
“It wouldn't kill you to at least meet the
man one of these times.”
“And disappoint you when he fails to pique my
interest?”
“You can't know that,” Constance said,
exasperation in her tone.
Olivia arched
a brow. “You said he's an engineer. And thirty
years old. Could he sound any more exciting?”
“He's level-headed, has a great career—”
“And is
such a catch that he's still
single at his advanced age.”
“Don't get smart with me.”
Smirking, Olivia shrugged. “I've heard this
before. It's all a retread.”
“That's what you get here in spades. Retro
retread.”
Olivia patted her lightly on her head. “Let's
keep the retro to home décor, shall we?”
Constance
crossed her ample arms over her chest, her expression mulish. “I'm
not kidding about the demand
of mid-century inventory. You're going to have to find another access
point if you want the good stuff. And
grab one of those umbrellas
by the door or
you'll get yourself soaked to the skin.”
***
Kyle Daniels pressed himself against the brick
storefront behind him, his body just inches out of the sudden
downpour. The slight overhang of the building, however, failed to
stop the rain from splashing onto his shoes. He frowned. The shoes
were new—as were his pressed trousers, which were becoming speckled
with moisture.
That
ridiculous door jingle
sounded and he peered through the sheet of rain to see a customer
leaving the salvage
shop, umbrella poised high
over her head.
Not just any
customer. He'd seen
that white-blond hair and lithe figure before.
Olivia Haugen—the answer to all his dreams,
according to Great Aunt Constance.
Kyle had
caught a glimpse of her
a few times—usually
leaving the shop—and every time he saw her, his impression was the
same. She was artsy, high-strung, and flighty.
And he hadn't even met the woman.
Just the way
her pale hair floated around her face vexed
him. How could she stand it getting in her eyes all the time? She
drifted
down the sidewalk in
a vague, dreamy way—even
in the rain. Didn't she
realize she could trip on
the broken sidewalk? Or get mugged by a stray criminal? She seemed
completely unaware of her
surroundings.
And when he
saw her climb into a yellow and blue Mini
Cooper, painted with the bold lettering of House
Whisperer Inc.,
he had all the information he needed to come to a reasoned, logical
conclusion.
She was a nonstarter.
A pointless pursuit.
Besides that,
he knew in his gut that
she'd never give him the time of day. He'd
come in contact with
females of her ilk before, and knew a meeting with her would be
accompanied by an
amused yet dismissive look
coupled with the usual disdain for his attire. Madras shirts and
Dockers apparently provoked rolled eyes and barely suppressed
snickers. Kyle figured she'd go for the type of guy in skinny jeans
and V-neck
T-shirts that
revealed a bony
sternum.
And there would be hair gel. Lots of it.
Sorry,
Aunt Constance. This dream of yours will just have to crawl into a
corner somewhere and
die.
It wasn't as
if he were looking for a female. His job kept him too busy, and none
of the women he'd ever
met had interest in a mature, stable relationship. At least not the
three women who worked in
the automotive safety
engineering department at
the Nissan plant in Smyrna.
His
mind flinched from the memory of the office lady who'd asked him out
to a John Mayer concert because
her favorite song was “Your Body Is A Wonderland.”
Talk about a nonstarter.
Right now he needed to perform his bimonthly
check-in of his remaining next of kin.
Whether she liked it or not.
If you'd like to read more, click the email link in the earlier part of the post and let me know. I'll send Mid-Century Mayhem to your Kindle.
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