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The Good Old Summertime

When the Sheriff of Ste. Genevieve County, Missouri, dies in a wagon accident, Julia Nye is determined to investigate. From her nominal position as a typist in the City of St. Louis Police Department, she is sure of only a few issues surrounding the Sheriff’s death: that lawmen don’t break laws, even those they dislike; that prohibition is a passionate issue but not one worth killing for; and that the investigation itself is certainly not a deadly undertaking. She recruits two male reporter friends and the trio finds out, each person in a different way, that those sureties may not hold.

 

 

St. Louie Slow Drag

In the steamy August of 1910, St. Louis is rocked by murders and arsons in aneighborhood home to Negroes, brothels and ragtime. (The slow drag is a ragtime style.) The tensions threaten the friendships among a trio of quasi-amateur sleuths: Julia Nye, suffragist and typist at police headquarters, and reporters William McConnell and Carl Schroeder. After the trio pulls together to thwart the racists who try to burn the neighborhood, disappointed religious fanatics decide to finish the job, with Julia’s murder to be the spark for riot and destruction.

 

 

Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl

In 1910, Chicago is trying to rid itself of the white slave trade, and the deaths of two factory girls in St. Louis brothels signal that the vice has shifted to St. Louis in the person of a slick factory owner.  Our three sleuthsrespond: suffragist Julia Nye usually types for the St. Louis police, but now agrees to go undercover in the factory; reporters William McConnell and Carl Schroeder head to Chicago to uncover the man’s background. What William and Carl discover convince them to get Julia out of the factory at the same time that Julia overhears her new boss plan to end the men’s investigations by making sure they don’t return to St. Louis.  The threats all around send Julia down the same path as the women she’s trying to avenge.

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Judged Best Self-Published Novel by the James River Writers (Virginia) in 2016

 

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Bread and Roses

In the spring of 1911, Julia Nye wants very much to investigate the death of her friend and labor activist, society ally Geneva Whitten. But it won’t be easy. The new Chief of Detectives isn’t having any female help despite Julia’s record of unconventional aid to the St. Louis Police Department in 1910.  On top of that, the other union activists seem to have a secret plot afoot and Julia’s new husband no longer wants to hear about her investigative trials.  Combining her detective career and marriage may not work out as Julia had planned. The infamous Triangle factory fire of March 1911 becomes a sobering reminder of the stakes involved in the affair.

 

 

 

 

The book titles all reflect music of the period.  The first is a shortened version of the popular 3/4 time ballad, “In the Good Old Summertime.”  The second title is a combination of Scott Joplin and Scott Hayden’s “Sunflower Slow Drag” and Tom Turpin’s “St. Louis Rag.”  Turpin, a ragtime virtuoso in St. Louis in the day, becomes a major character in St. Louie Slow Drag.  Scott Joplin makes a cameo appearance in the early chapters. “Heaven Will Protect the Working Girl” is a popular vaudeville number of the day.  “Bread and Roses” is a labor song particularly identified with the Women’s Trade Union League, an entity involved in the plot of the fourth novel. The song contains the famous phrase, “give us bread but give us roses.”

THE GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME

When the Sheriff of Ste. Genevieve County, Missouri, dies in a wagon accident, Julia Nye is determined to investigate. From her nominal position as a typist in the City of St. Louis Police Department, she is sure of only a few issues surrounding the Sheriff’s death: that lawmen don’t break laws, even those they dislike; that prohibition is a passionate issue but not one worth killing for; and that the investigation itself is certainly not a deadly undertaking. She recruits two male reporter friends and the trio finds out, each person in a different way, that those sureties may not hold.

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Questions for The Good Old Summertime discussions

 

  1. Julia Nye is so enthusiastic and confident about her police work potential at the start of this story. How does that change? Is she responsible in some way, as she quietly fears, for the mayhem that follows her desire to investigate?
     

  2. It would seem to most readers that Julia has two potential suitors in Carl and William. But, it’s not at all clear that Julia sees it that way. Discuss the romantic entanglements and offer your predictions.
     

  3. Along the same line, Julia thinks it important to her self-image to avoid—maybe disdain—romantic entanglements. What does this say about the era? (Julia might be described as a “new woman,” willing to work outside the home for a career, not just for killing time until marriage.)
     

  4. What is your intellectual and emotional reaction to Terence Kelley? Is he the villain? Or is he another victim?
     

  5. Julia raises a fascinating question that gets lost in the mayhem. What happens when a law enforcement officer gets involved in illegal activity—presumably because he doesn’t believe in the particular law? Sheriff Picard does not technically break the law because he stays in wet Ste. Genevieve County. But he makes money from assisting the Klines in breaking the law in Perry County. Lots of people would turn a blind eye: Carl Schroeder, Chief Wright, even Sheriff Carrey, apparently. How do we react to laws we consider destructive of our culture? Prohibition may sound archaic and not worth fighting over. Insert the issue that makes this real for you: abortion, using illegal immigrants to profitably harvest your crop, marijuana laws, whatever.

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