Category: Dana De Witte

  • Creating the Covers for Our Self-Published Books

    When we started our publishing company because we (Laurel, Susan, and Rachel) wanted to write fiction, we agreed that we were going to work on a shoestring budget. We aren’t full-time writers. We all do other things as well. After the initial setup costs to get the business up and running, we wanted to keep our expenses down. Doing our own proofreading and creating our own covers were ways to do that.

    Book two of our Dana De Witte Mystery Series is about a Revolutionary War reenactment gone terribly wrong. One of the reenactors is shot and killed with a musket ball from a replica weapon. This isn’t a spoiler—the shooting happens on page 1.

    We decided we wanted a very clean, striking image for the cover that highlighted the murder weapon—the loaded replica. We chose a dark red for the cover since that was a popular color during the Colonial Era. We wanted to give the cover a linen look, like book cloth. I (Susan) created the right size for the cover in Photoshop, then added a linen-look layer that I purchased from an Etsy seller to give the cover a woven-fabric look. It worked very well.

    From researching, I learned that two popular weapons during the American Revolution were the Brown Bess and the Charleville musket. But I didn’t want to create an exact rendering of either one for the cover. I’m not sure what the Meadesdeal reenactors were using, so I decided to base my drawing on both—with a little bit of one and a little bit of the other. The Brown Bess and the Charleville musket.

    Then, using my drawing tablet, I hand-traced my sketch onto a transparent layer in Photoshop and added stippling and cross-hatching details. I switched the color to a pinky, off-white so it would pop (but not too much) against the dark red background of the cover and positioned the transparency over the dark red cover layer. Next I added the fonts. Those I colored in white with drop shadows. I wanted the title to stand out more than the line drawing of the musket. I think it works.

    We’re hoping to one day be able to afford to hire someone to do our covers so we can devote more time to writing!

  • What Kind of Town Is Meadesdeal?

    Meadesdeal, North Carolina, is the imaginary town we’ve created as the setting for the Dana De Witte Mystery series. Meadesdeal is a town that thrives on tourists, and most of the economy of the town is built around attracting visitors. The main street shopping district was redesigned to resemble a European village with brightly colored half-timbered shops and brick-paved streets.

    I found this photo on Pexels, and it looks a little like what we imagine Meadesdeal to be like.

    An all-joinery furniture factory, an art gallery, and eclectic rows of shops would make Meadesdeal a fun place to visit. And the tiny town has an interesting history too. During the American Revolution, a young man was shot by firing squad for spying by a local Tory militia. Now, the town celebrates this event each year with a reenactment of the execution played by local townspeople. Unfortunately, there was a terrible accident this year, and the local man playing the part of the young patriot was killed when the replica weapons used for the reenactment were loaded with musket balls. Only it wasn’t an accident. It was murder!

    We’re planning book 3 now and, to save the reputation of Meadesdeal, the murder will not happen there. We don’t want to drive away the tourists!

  • Musket Ball Murder – On Sale Now!

    Our newest book in the Dana De Witte mystery series is out now on Kindle and available on Kindle Unlimited.

    In book one of the series, If He’d Never Seen, true-crime writer Dana De Witte helps bring a murderer to justice. Dana is back in the second installment of the Dana De Witte Mystery series, Musket Ball Murder.

    The small town of Meadesdeal, North Carolina, lives only in our imaginations and in our Dana De Witte Mystery books. We created it to be a picturesque spot in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. A place for tourists to shop and enjoy the scenery. But as appealing as it is, it holds many dark secrets. Musket Ball Murder begins with an unexpected death at a Revolutionary War reenactment. It’s an annual event for Meadesdeal, and tragically, the death of Dempsey Royce is witnessed by nearly everyone in town and hundreds of tourists who’ve come to town just for the event. With no shortage of witnesses, you would expect that the crime would be easy to solve, but nothing could be further from the truth. Dana soon learns that the death of Dempsey Royce maybe very well be bound up in events that happened many years ago—and maybe not even in Meadesdeal.

    Dana searches through Dempsey’s past to learn as much about him as possible to find his killer. She follows him to a long-ago New Year’s Eve party to celebrate the new millennium, uncovers the details of a failed video game startup business in Meadesdeal—a failure that led him to move away, and learns about other businesses he has been involved with over the intervening years. Could something in his past have led to his death? Has someone been patiently waiting to take their revenge? Or is it something more recent? Dempsey has only been back in Meadesdeal for a few months at the time of his death. What has he been up to and why is he back in town?

    Join Dana De Witte as she uncovers the truth of the death of Dempsey Royce.