Hi from Deni, guest blogging for Robin.
Since I have a bazillion deadlines---and, boy, do I know why they're called DEADlines--- I thought I'd blog about the items on my desk. Which, of course, I'm looking at as I write this blog.
I think writing should be fun, so the items on my desk tend to make me smile. First and foremost, one's gaze is drawn to a statue of Edgar Allen Poe, looming over a red Staples "That was easy" button.
I have two personas. Denise Dietz writes mysteries that have no socially redeeming values whatsoever, and Mary Ellen Dennis writes historical fiction that is ageless. Deni's mysteries and Mary Ellen's historicals always include romantic elements, inspired by their mutual best friend, lover and husband, Gordon Aalborg. Gordon's office is upstairs, in the loft, and he often sends Deni emails suggesting they meet for coffee (in the kitchen). Meanwhile, his photo graces her desk, along with Cat Tracks, Deni's favorite "Gordon book."
Deni has a wonderful photo of her actress sister, Eileen Dietz, who played the possession scenes (and The Demon) in "The Exorcist" and inspired Deni to write Fifty Cents For Your Soul, which Publishers Weekly called "Hollywood noir."
Deni likes to listen to show music. On her desk she has a stack of CDs that include Les Mis, Candide, Once Upon a Mattress, Phantom of the Opera, and a dozen other Broadway shows. She also has the Dixie Chicks, Harry Chapin, and Barbra Streisand. Mary Ellen prefers Celtic music and drove Deni daft by listening non-stop to Loreena McKenna's "The Highwayman" while writing The Landlord's Black-Eyed Daughter.
Mary Ellen has a huge framed poster of Daniel Day Lewis in The Last of The Mohicans. Deni, who once sang professionally and had a reviewer compare her to Judy Garland, has Judy Garland memorabilia. Deni's poster shows The Wizard of Oz's Dorothy in a biker bar, with the caption: TOTO, I DON'T THINK WE'RE IN KANSAS ANYMORE.
Deni and Mary Ellen share the same desk. Aside from their individual piles of research books, photos, notebooks and scrap paper, aside from their computer screen, keyboard, modem, phone and printer, they share a stuffed "deadline vulture" that perches on top of the modem. Deni named it Michael Seidman after her first editor. Deni and Mary Ellen share a heavy rock, ostensibly a paperweight, that has CREATE chiseled on its surface. They also share a small ceramic tortoise; it reminds them that if you only write one page a day, by the end of the year you'll have written a book. Both write more than one page a day. Deni likes the stress of deadlines, Mary Ellen prefers to finish her manuscripts before she sends them to her agent (they share the same agent). Deni owns a small ceramic frog in a witches hat, seated behind a crystal ball. The frog inspires her to write Toe of Frog (AKA "The Da Vinci Toad"), her sequel to Eye of Newt. In that book readers will meet a reincarnated Rottweiler who is afraid of doorbells and songs from the 1970s.
Leaning against the wall is Deni's Lamb Chop hand puppet, given to her by a fan who read Chain a Lamb Chop to the Bed, the third Ellie Bernstein "diet club" mystery (the 4th in the series, Strangle a Loaf of Italian Bread, will be out in May).
Finally, Mary Ellen collects angels. Her favorite angel holds a piece of paper with a Luciano de Crescenzo quote: "We are each of us angels with only one wing and we can only fly by embracing each other."









