SPEED CITY SISTERS IN CRIME

SPEED CITY SISTERS IN CRIME

Saturday, June 2, 2018

Deadbeat Performance Schedule Announced

Indy Fringe Fest has announced the schedule for six performances of Deadbeat, a one-act play written and produced by Speed City Sisters in Crime.  This is first project of its kind by any chapter of the national Sisters in Crime organization.  

All performances will be at the IndyFringe Basile Theatre, 719 E St Clair Street in Indianapolis.

Here is the schedule:

Thursday, August 16 at 9:00 p.m.
Saturday, August 18 at 9:00 p.m.
Monday, August 20 at 9:00 p.m.
Thursday, August 23 at 7:30 p.m.
Friday, August 24 at 6:00 p.m.
Sunday, August 26 at 7:30 p.m.

Monday, May 28, 2018

C.V. Rhodes to Keynote 1st Indy Book Fest June 16 at Indianapolis Central Library


Speed City Sisters in Crime member C.V. (“Crystal”) Rhodes will be the keynote speaker at  the First Annual Indy Book Fest, July 16 at the Indianapolis Public Library.
Ms. Rhodes will kick off a full day of programming on the theme “Words of Strength.  Sponsored by the Library’s African American History Committee, the program begins at 10 a.m. and concludes at 4 p.m. 
Author and publisher Valerie J. Lewis Coleman will be a featured speaker during breakout sessions.
Ms. Rhodes is an award-winning playwright and author. Written Word Magazine selected Rhodes as one of the Ten Up and Coming Authors in the Midwest. Her play “Stoops” won the BTA Award for Best Original Writing. She is the author of numerous romance novels. She and fellow Sister in Crime L. Barnette Evans co-write the humorous mystery Grandmothers Inc. series. They will be available to meet with readers and sign copies of their books.

Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Writing with a BANG! Gun Expert Paula Beeson Featured at May 26 Meeting: GUESTS INVITED

PAULA BEESON:  “Gun Basics for Writing: Authentic Pistol-Packin’ Prose"

Saturday, May 26, 2018

12:30p.m.- 1:30p.m.

Barnes & Noble, 8675 River Crossing Blvd, adjacent to Keystone at the Crossing.


            Paula Beeson is an NRA Certified Firearms Instructor. As owner of the Kokomo-based Safe Shotz, LLC, Paula offers individual and group classes, teaching gun-conscious citizens the correct way to handle a variety of firearms — including pistols, rifles and shotguns — with an emphasis on safety and responsibility.

            During her presentation for Speed City Sisters in Crime, Paula will discuss the types and purposes of various firearms, their proper handling, safety precautions, and what to expect and how to react when firearms are drawn. She will demonstrate how to look down the sights, rack the slide, cock or de-cock,and tell whether a weapon is loaded or unloaded.  She will provide the audience with non-usable replicas for a hands-on experience.

            Paula invites members to bring two minutes of their best “pistol-packin’ prose” to share aloud
during the program. She will follow each reading with a critique, informing the writer whether
their prose was on target or where they missed their mark.

            Paula has more than 35 years’ experience with firearms. She is an NRA Range Safety Officer, as well as a 4-H and Indiana Department of Natural Resources Hunter Education Instructor. Check out her website at www. safeshotz.com and her Facebook page, www.facebook.com/safeshotz, where you will find
all kinds of safety-related topics.

            And … DON’T FORGET: Bring two minutes of your best scene involving a gun!

Friday, May 11, 2018

May Writing Contests

(Licensed for non-commercial reuse)
The Writing Cooperative website provides a monthly list of writing contests in all genres. It is a great
resource for writers looking for an outlet. 

The website lists 34 contests for May.  Here's a link. It's worth a look.  CLICK HERE

Thursday, April 26, 2018

In Memoriam: Suzanne M. Harding


Post By Janet Williams

Years ago, Suzanne M. Harding lived in a log cabin in the foothills of the San Juan Mountains in New Mexico, miles from the nearest library and on the other side of the mountain from a bookstore.

During one particularly blustery winter she found herself trapped at home as snowfall periodically closed local roads. That’s when she took up her pen and, in her own words, “began writing a mystery out of a sheer need to read a new story.”

With that, the former teacher, cab driver, secretary, art director and chef launched herself into a new career—mystery writer.

Suzanne, a mentor and friend to many writers in Indiana and elsewhere, died Tuesday, March 27, 2018 in her northside Indianapolis home of natural causes. She was 72. She was a long-time member of the Speed City Chapter of Sisters in Crime. 

To the end she was doing what she loved—writing.

“Suzanne was driven to write with a purpose and with skill. She understood the craft of writing and wanted to pass that talent along to anyone who was interested,” said Diana Catt, one of the original members of In Mysterious Company, a writing critique group founded by Suzanne. “She wanted to mold fledging writers into successful, fulfilled authors. I will miss her wisdom and friendship.”


Suzanne had more than thirty short stories published in various online magazines and in print magazines and anthologies, including those produced by the Speed City Sisters in Crime chapter.  Under her byline, S. M.  Harding, her most recent short story, “You Belong with Me,” appears in the Bella Books anthology, Happily Ever After.

Her novel, I Will Meet You There, the first in a mystery series set in southern Indiana, was published in 2015 by Bella Book. The second, A Woman of Strong Purpose, appeared in 2016 and the third, Speak in Winter Code, in 2017. Suzanne was working on other books in the series.

She taught classes at the Writers’ Center of Indiana and participated in panels for its annual Gathering of Writers, as well as at Indy Author’s Fair and Magna Cum Murder, a mystery writer’s event held annually in Indianapolis. She gave the “First Book” talk at the Antioch Writers’ Workshop in Dayton, Ohio. She edited and contributed an essay to Writing Murder, a collection of essays by Midwestern authors about writing crime fiction.

“What I loved most about Suzanne was that she had a voice and she wasn’t afraid to use it,” said Brigitte Kephart, an Indianapolis writer who was a member of In Mysterious Company. “So much wisdom spilling from her mouth like a fountain and I, will be ever, a creek run dry from her passing.”

Suzanne had a deep influence on the Indianapolis writing community as a teacher, mentor, friend and inspiration.

“Suzanne taught me the importance of discipline, of sitting myself down and doing the hard work of writing,” said Janet Williams, a journalist and writer who met Suzanne at a class at The Writer’s Center.

"Suzanne was a tremendous mentor and leader of our critique group," said D.B. Reddick, also a member of In Mysterious Company.  "All of us would agree that she helped to make us better writers."

Suzanne will live on in her words, “Writing is like following the strands of a spider web. Each filament—setting, character, POV, tension, dialogue, plot, voice—is separate, yet they crisscross and it takes every one to make the whole story strong.”