Writing
about two 60-year old women amateur sleuths has been fun, but I always attempt
to involve them in social issues. Dana Logan, a mystery novel buff, and Sarah
Cafferty, a private investigator’s widow, inhabited my brain for a couple of years
before they were given birth on my computer. Living in my home state of California at the time, I placed them in the San Joaquin Valley in the central area of the state,
where dense Tule fog, agricultural sprays and bay area pollution have become
health hazards. It’s also a place where a serial killer can hide and kill at
his leisure.
I lived in
the valley for more than a dozen years and envisioned a killer disappearing
into the fog after taking someone’s life. In fact, it actually happened half a
mile from where I lived in a rural area, when a young woman was strangled in
her ranch house. It could have been me.
In A Village Shattered, the first book in
the series, I placed my aging sleuths in a retirement village where their Sew and So club members are
mysteriously dropping dead alphabetically. When Dana and Sarah realize what is
happening, they suspect that their own names are on the killer’s list. The
newly-elected sheriff—whose only previous experience was training police
dogs—is bungling the case, so Logan & Cafferty decide to put their crime
solving knowledge to work in order to not only save their remaining friends’
lives, but their own. Meanwhile, Dana’s journalist daughter shows up on her
doorstep, complicating matters.
I placed the
widows in a motorhome in Diary of Murder,
second book in the series, after they sold their homes in the retirement
village. While vacationing in Colorado , they
encounter a Rocky
Mountain blizzard after
learning that Dana’s sister, a mystery writer, has died. Her husband claims it
was suicide but Dana knows better. When they arrive in Wyoming , they go through the sister’s
possessions and find her diary, which details her husband’s infidelities as
well as her unhappiness at having married him. Dana then learns that her former
brother-in-law is involved in a vicious drug gang, and she and Sarah are nearly
killed themselves when they investigate.
The murdered
sister willed her mansion to Dana and the two women take up residence in Wyoming . During a
picture-taking trip to Gray Wolf Mountain,
their Escalade is shot at, resulting in a rollover. An old man comes to their
rescue in his decrepit pickup truck and they learn that he travels the mountain
to find wounded wolves to nurse back to health. Someone has been deliberately
shooting them and has recently begun shooting people. Logan & Cafferty
decide to help the old man, once again placing their own lives in danger.
In Murder on the Interstate, the two women
are traveling in northern Arizona ,
where they discover the body of a young woman in her Mercedes convertible. Her
killer shoots out their motorhome tires and a trucker who calls herself “Big
Ruby” McCurdy comes to their rescue. The three women follow the killer during
torrential rain in Ruby’s 18-wheeler, and discover that the killer is involved
in a homegrown terrorist group who plan to overthrow the government. While
attempting to discover how the murder victim is connected to the group leads
them into a flash flood and capture by the group.
In the fifth
novel, Murder in RV Paradise, Dana
and Sarah decide to vacation in an exclusive resort in northern Texas , where they find
the body of a beautiful woman who has entraps wealthy men to blackmail them.
There are more than a thousand residents of the resort so anyone could have
killed her. Interviewing the right ones seems an insurmountable task and the
amateur sleuths became suspects, themselves, in the murder. Sarah finds love
with a retired rancher and Dana’s quest to maintain her friendship status with
long-time pursuer, Sheriff Walter Campbell, is in serious jeopardy. When the
sheriff is seriously wounded, Dana rushes to his side and is persuaded to marry
him. But will she?
Bio:
Novelist and award-winning photojournalist Jean Henry Mead has published 20
books, among them the Logan & Cafferty mystery/suspense series as well as
the Hamilton Kids’ mysteries, Wyoming
historicals and nonfiction books. She first served as a news reporter and news,
magazine and small press editor while contributing the Denver Post’s Empire Magazine. Her magazine articles have been
published domestically as well as abroad.