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Blog Tour & Review: Nightmares Can Be Murder by Mary Kennedy

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The Strange and Wonderful World of Dreams

by Mary Kennedy

When I told my friends and colleagues about my new Penguin series, The Dream Club Mysteries, I was surprised at the outpouring of interest and support.  Everyone, it seems, is fascinated by dreams, curious about their meaning and dying to discuss their own dreams.  Are dreams really the “royal road to the unconscious” as Sigmund Freud proposed? Can they give us new insights into our own deepest thoughts and most hidden emotions?  Or are they simply random firings of neurons as the brain rests and recharges itself, taking a few hours to deal with the “residue of the day?”

I knew I had to write a book about dreams and especially about “dream clubs,” which  are quite popular here in the northeast. In The Dream Club Mysteries, a group of Savannah women meet once a week to share their dreams, eat some delicious pastries and solve a murder or two.

Ali Blake, who runs a vintage candy shop right off the Historic District, founded the Dream Club. When business was flat, she invited her high powered MBA sister, Taylor, to join her in Savannah in the hopes that she could pump up business. Taylor was a skeptical about dream interpretaion at first, but now she’s becoming a believer.

There’s a good mix of characters in the club; the Harper sisters, who are well into their eighties and know everything about anyone who has lived in Savannah for the past fifty years, Sam Stiles, a local policewoman, and Sybil Powers, who fancies herself a “dream hopper.” If you’ve never heard of a dream hopper, it’s someone who claims she can “visit” other people’s dreams. And of course, there’s a hunky private detective, Noah Chandler who helps with the investigations.

Sometimes the Dream Club meetings are full of surprises.  In Nightmares Can Be Murder, the first of my Dream Club Mysteries, Lucinda Macavey, a prim and proper headmistress of a girls’ school in Savannah, recounts a most unusual dream. She finds herself shopping in the frozen food aisle of the local supermarket— stark naked!  Nothing could be more out of character for the shy Lucinda and the dream club members offer various interpretations.

Appearing naked in dreams is actually quite common. The dreamer finds herself in a public place “without a stitch on,” and yet onlookers seem not to notice. Dreams don’t follow the rules of logic and time and space don’t exist in dreams. Also, there is no “backstory” in dreams. The dream exists in the present. Lucinda doesn’t ponder how she got to the supermarket, how she could have possibly driven there naked, how she could have left the house without clothes or why no one stopped her. She is just “there,” in the immediate situation in the supermarket and has to deal with it.

So how did the dream club handle Lucinda’s dream in my mystery novel?  The dream members agree that being naked is a metaphor for feeling helpless and vulnerable. Maybe Lucinda has a deep dark secret that she doesn’t want exposed?  Maybe she has hidden urges that she doesn’t dare acknowledge?

Lucinda seems to be a very proper Southern lady, but in her dreams, she has been thrust into her worst nightmare—appearing naked in public. Lucinda joins in the discussion and admits that she has been experiencing some stress lately. She took early retirement from the Academy and she’s not sure of her future plans.  Uncertainty—in any form, whether it relates to a job or a relationship or finances– can lead to anxiety and that might explain Lucinda’s dream. (Other things might explain Lucinda’s anxiety, but I can’t say more without revealing the plot.)

If you think you might enjoy reading more about the Dream Club and the clever way the members rely on their insights to solve a few murders, I hope you’ll read Nightmares Can Be Murder. You might be in for some surprises, and I guarantee you will look at your dreams in a whole new way!

About the Author:

MKENNEDYMary Kennedy is a clinical psychologist in private practice and lives on the East Coast with her husband and eight neurotic cats. Both husband and cats have resisted all her attempts to psychoanalyze them, but she remains optimistic. Visit her website at www.marykennedy.net

 

 

 

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Business consultant Taylor Blake has returned to Savannah, Georgia, to help her sister Allison turn her dream of running an old-fashioned candy store into a reality. Allison is also interested in dream interpretation and invites Taylor to her Friday night Dream Club, where members meet once a week to share and analyze their dreams.

When a local dance instructor, Chico Hernandez, is found dead in his studio, and the murder scene has an eerie resemblance to one of the dreams shared at their meeting, Taylor can’t help but be intrigued. And when her sister, who was briefly involved with the dance teacher, becomes the prime suspect, Taylor and their fellow club members can’t be caught napping. It’s up to them to dream up a solution to the murder before Allison faces a real-life nightmare.

Amazon/B&N

Jennifer’s Review of Nightmares Can Be Murder

Review (4 Stars): This was a very interesting mystery for me because this was the first book I’ve seen where the characters solved a murder using their dreams.  Taylor Blake and her sister, Allison, run a candy store in Savannah and become embroiled in a mystery when the local dance instructor is found murdered in his studio across the street.  Ali soon becomes the prime suspect in the murder and it is up to Taylor and her dream club to decipher the clues to find the killer before it is too late.

I have never read a mystery that used dreams to help solve a murder and I enjoyed learning the symbolism behind each of the character’s dreams that contributed to clearing Allison’s name.  The dream aspect of this mystery made the story very complex and I loved all the plot twists and turns.  The only downside to this mystery was the pacing in the beginning of the book but things definitely picked up by the end to wrap up the mystery up neatly.  I’m looking forward to reading the second book in the series to see how these characters develop and what interesting things I learn next about their dreams.

2 Responses to Blog Tour & Review: Nightmares Can Be Murder by Mary Kennedy

  1. mary kennedy September 3, 2014 at 7:49 am #

    Hi Jennifer, so happy to be featured on your site. Hope everyone enjoys Nightmares!

  2. Lori September 3, 2014 at 10:05 am #

    A dream club sounds interesting especially if it is a murder mystery. For the most part I cannot remember my dreams but there are times when I do. Even if I put a notebook by my bed, I still can’t remember them.

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