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Finally! If I Had a Hammer is a published! Thank you so much to my editor Shawn at Level Best Books for helping me bring 1963 to my readers! If you read book one where Dot was in secretarial school, she has graduated and started her first job at a construction firm. The only problem is they’re digging up more than old septic tanks at the demolition of a set of dilapidated rental homes. When I wrote If I Had a Hammer, I wanted to examine what a tragedy like the assassination of John F Kennedy does to the psyche of a group of people. Ellie, Dot’s cousin, goes through the worst time, but her emotions were her close to my heart the same way they were for people who suffered so much in the pandemic and even after 911. Then of course, there’s a murderer out there Dot has to catch, and there is always a chance that this time the murderer will catch her.
About the Book
A new job, a brutal murder, and Camelot has ended.
In 1963, Dot Morganâs life was changed forever. She witnessed the assassination of John F Kennedy through the lens of her boxy Kodak Instamatic camera, bringing traumatic aftereffects of the brutality that happened as they stood on the parade route in Dallas.
She starts her first real secretarial job with a boss who has no sympathy for her trauma. When Dotâs only work friend has a mysterious accident at a demolition site, she digs around on her own only to find very little love between two brothers and no one hammering out justice to find a murderer.
The suspects are all around Dot and as she tries to sift through their motives, her cousin Ellie is going through PTSD on her own, losing interest in work, and her fiancĂ© all the while quoting some of JFKâs finest speeches.
With so much change in her world, can Dot still tell the difference between good and evil?
Read an Excerpt
I looked up over a light brown building with straight white letters reading Texas School Book Depository. Above it was an ad for Hertz Rent-a-Car with a clock attached to it. It was straight up noon. The crowd was thickening as people found places to stand in a grassy area next to the street. It was almost as if the original landscaper had known this historic day would take pl.ace and designed the gradual slope along the road. According to the newspaper, Kennedyâs motorcade would arrive soon, and I felt the excitement building as we prepared to join the crowd. I pulled my arms through my sweater.
Ellie extended a hand to help me out of the yellow Checker cab. âAre you ready?â
âOh yes. Letâs go over there.â I pointed to one of the few open spots next to the curb. âHurry, before someone else gets it. I just hope we can hold the spot. There are some pretty big guys who might want to stand in front of us.â
Ellie smirked. âYou know what I always say. âKnee them in the crotch and they sing a new song.ââ
âSeriously, Ellie. Iâm not attacking some poor man just so I can stand in front.â
âYouâre right. I was trying to sound sophisticated, Maybe not here, but remember that. It might come in handy someday.â
I had decided to wear a new pair of black heels and felt them wobbling. We crossed the street and grabbed our spot just in time, causing another viewer to crowd in next to us. The smell of cigarette smoke circled us as people fiddled with cameras and readjusted black-rimmed glasses.
âJack Kennedy is so handsome.â Ellie placed her hand over her heart, popping it on her chest like a heartbeat. âToo bad heâs already taken.â
âStop.â I laughed. âI believe youâre already taken as well. Didnât I hear something about you and Al getting married next June?â
Ellie gave a sweet smile as her eyes drifted upward. âI canât believe that either. June. Thatâs just a little more than six months away.â
âWell, you deserve the happiness coming your way.â I patted my cousinâs shoulder. Ellie was in her thirties, practically spinsterhood in 1963. Finding Al, the electrician, had been the best thing for her. Love and marriage. It filled me with warmth. We were all living the American dream just like the characters in our favorite movies at the Rialto theater. The lyrics of âYoung at Heartâ drifted through my mind.
I sang a few lines from the song.
Ellie linked her arm with mine as she watched the street. A few cars drove by, but none that looked like a presidential motorcade. The breeze drifted across my exposed knees. A longer skirt would have shielded my knees, but I would endure the shivers for the sake of fashion.
âEllie, did you see that picture of Jackie in the paper? Sheâs gorgeous. I saw her tour of the White House on TV. Sheâs so classy and looks beautiful in everything she wears.â
âExcept she talks funny,â Ellie said, her Texas drawl turning âtalksâ into âtawks.â
âThatâs because sheâs from the East. She canât help it. Iâll bet she thinks Texans talk funny. Iâm sure they hear a lot of Texas twang coming from LBJ and Ladybird.â
âBut thatâs just music to anyoneâs ears,â Ellie said. âBe serious.â
I glanced up and down the parade route. âBen said he was going to be here. Maybe heâs farther down the street.â I pulled out my new Kodak Instamatic and hooked the leather strap around my neck. I raised the camera up to my eyes. âI hope I can get a clear picture of Jackie and John.â
âListen to you. You talk like you know them,â Ellie laughed. âJackie and John.â
âWell, in a way, I feel like I do. Theyâre Americaâs perfect family. I love them all. Jackie, John, Caroline, John-John.â
Ellie sighed and then drew in an excited breath with her hands clenched in front of her. âThis is so exciting.â People continued to crowd up to the curb. A tall man in a brown plaid sport coat, holding binoculars up to his black boxy glasses, elbowed me to move over. I could feel tension in the air that comes when people anticipate witnessing something spectacular.
Just then, a line of shiny black cars came into view, ambling down the street in our direction. The breeze turned into a slight wind. I leaned forward and squinted, trying to identify who was in each vehicle. I felt my heart race as I recognized John and Jackie Kennedy sitting in the back seat as the car was surrounded by men on motorcycles. She was stunning in a pink wool suit and matching hat. I felt special knowing Jackie and I had worn the same color on this memorable day. She, of course, looked so much better. John had a healthy tan and a wide smile on his face.
I raised my camera and willed the man in the brown plaid coat not to step in front of me. This was a moment I was sure we would always remember. I hoped I could wind the film cartridge fast enough to take several pictures. Maybe they would want to use them in the Camden Courier? I wanted a good one of John, and another of Jackie. Just like real people, I thought but really, they looked like royalty, sitting in the open top limousine with policemen on motorcycles riding silently alongsideâsort of a mobile palace guard. When the hood of the limousine was directly in front of me, I brought the Instamatic up and clicked to take a picture. I rolled the film to the next frame, took another, and repeated the process.
Suddenly, I heard a popping sound somewhere behind me. I rolled the film lever with my thumb, now an automatic action, then turned toward the sound, only to see people scrambling and running to higher ground. The sound I heard wasnât a pop. It was a gunshot. I looked back toward the motorcade and stood in horror as a man crawled over the back of the open convertible and the thing that caught my attention was the splotches of red invading Jackieâs beautiful pink suit. John Kennedy no longer sat smiling in front of me but was down in the seat on Jackieâs lap.
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