Showing posts with label Alfred Hitchcock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alfred Hitchcock. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 06, 2012

Today's Mystery Author Guest: Kathleen Kaska


As promised yesterday, fellow mystery author Kathleen Kaska is visiting my blog today. To read her bio and see her photo, please page down to yesterday's post.

Above is the cover photo for one of her three mystery trivia books, The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book, and cover photos for her others on Sherlock Holmes and Alfred Hitchcock are below. Here's what Kate Stine, editor of Mystery Scene magazine, had to say about Kathleen's book on Agatha Christie:

"Kathleen Kaska covers every aspect of the Queen of Crime's life and career in The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book. She has packed an astonishing number of quotes, characters, plots, settings, biographical details, and pure fun into these quizzes. As Poirot might say, your 'little grey cells will get the exercise!' This book, fiendishly clever and remarkably researched, is pure gold for fans of Agatha Christie."



Below is Kathleen's article on how to write trivia. Please feel free to ask her a question or let her know what you think of the article or her books in the comments. Enjoy!

Not Just Trivia
by Kathleen Kaska

Midge loved Edward, who loved Henrietta, who loved John, who loved Veronica, who was not his wife. Jealousy and rejection led to a tangled murder sorted out by none other than our favorite Belgian, Hercule Poirot.

While writing What's Your Agatha Christie I. Q.? (2nd edition renamed The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book), I wrote a variety of questions: multiple choice, matching, true/false, short answer, as well as crossword puzzles. I felt it wasn't enough to offer readers mere facts about Christie’s writing and her life. Reading the straightforward questions in other trivia books piqued my curiosity—I wanted to know more—but there was no more in the offering in these books.

So, when I began writing my first trivia book, I dug deeper to discover the who, what, where, when, why, and even how, of Christie’s writing. I wanted to disseminate the information in a creative and entertaining manner without spoiling the endings. For example, my first quiz summaries thirty Agatha Christie plots, giving teasers of the mysteries like the one above which describes the chain of unfortunate lovers. I used this method for the quizzes, “Murders, Motives, and Victims,” “Aliases,” and “Murder Settings.” In featuring Christie’s ten most popular mysteries, I categorized the information into characters, clues, and circumstances.

With The Alfred Hitchcock Triviography and Quiz Book, I began most quizzes with behind-the-scenes anecdotes describing Hitchcock’s practical jokes, bizarre antics, and innovated filming techniques. For example, while filming Psycho, Hitchcock closed his eyes and ordered his prop man to stab several different types of melons so Hitch could capture the right sound for the frightening shower scene. He decided on the casaba melon. This book also includes a chronology of Hitch’s life and career and a detailed filmography of all fifty-three feature films.

The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book gives the reader a plethora of information on where Arthur Conan Doyle got his ideas for many of his Holmes stories. The crime in “The Red-Headed League” was based on a well-known bank robbery staged by Adam Worth, who ran an intricate crime network in the United States between the 1860s and 1870s. Conan Doyle kept a collection of articles on file, a practice he later gave to his Great Detective. In this book, I added a grading scale at the end of each chapter, a chronology of Holmes’ life, and a list of Sherlock Holmes societies located around the world.

I also sprinkled “Did You Know” facts throughout all three books. These facts give the reader an even deeper insight into the lives of these three creative geniuses.

Did you know that Arthur Conan Doyle was a sports enthusiast? He was one of the first to introduce snow skiing to Switzerland.

Did you know that due to the constant wet conditions on the set for the filming of Lifeboat, Tallulah Bankhead complained bitterly of her discomfort. To appease his actress, Hitchcock allowed her to be filmed sans underwear? Bankhead’s immodesty almost cost the studio major publicity with the Ladies’ Home Journal, whose reporters were invited on the set.

Now, try your hand at these three quiz questions.

1.  What is the title of the Agatha Christie mystery where ten strangers are invited to an isolated island off England’s Devon coast? It wasn’t quite the vacation they’d hoped for.

2.  What Hitchcock movie’s climax scene takes place on a studio replica of a national monument in South Dakota? Hitch was not allowed to film on site since the U. S. government prohibits the defacing of a national monument.

3.  What was the name of the street urchin Sherlock Holmes used to assist in him gathering evidence?

You probably nailed these three questions. How about three more from the Holmes’ trivia quiz “A Study in Statistics?” I classified these as difficult.

1.  At which bank does Holmes have an account?

2.  How many windows are in Holmes’ setting room?

3.  What after-dinner drink does Holmes enjoy on occasion?

If you answered these correctly, you are a true Sherlockian!

Thanks, Kathleen! Now, who has a comment or question for her? Or an answer for one or more of her quiz questions?


Tuesday, June 05, 2012

Tomorrow's Guest: Kathleen Kaska


Tomorrow, I am hosting an interesting author guest who writes mysteries, but she'll be talking about her nonfiction mystery trivia books. Kathleen Kaska is the author the Classic Triviography Mystery Series, which includes The Sherlock Holmes Triviography and Quiz Book, The Alfred Hitchcock Triviography and Quiz Book, and The Agatha Christie Triviography and Quiz Book. All three books have just been reissued by LL-Publications. Kathleen also writes the award-winning Sydney Lockhart mystery series set in the 1950s. Her first two mysteries, Murder at the Arlington and Murder at the Luther, were selected as bonus-books for the Pulpwood Queen Book Group, the largest book group in the country.

In her guest post tomorrow, Kathleen talks about how to write trivia. After you read her post, feel free to ask her a question or leave a comment for her in the comments.