Elisabeth Grace Foley

Historical Fiction Author

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Five Things I Learned In the Greenhouse

April 30, 2024 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 8 Comments

If you’ve read this blog for a while you may remember that for a couple of recent years I worked at a local farm-and-garden-center. During that stint I wrote a blog post on a handful of humorous and thoughtful reflections sparked by the autumn end of the business. As spring comes on this year, and I make plans for my own garden, I’ve found myself reflecting on some things I noticed or learned during the spring seasons of that job.

– 1 –

I love flowers. I mean I really love flowers. I used to be under the impression that I just liked them moderately, but handling them and tending them every day just exploded a sheer sense of delight in the colors, the delicacy, the vibrancy, the shape and form and scent of leaves and blossoms, and a fascination with learning about the different varieties and how to grow them. I found a whole new creative outlet in choosing and arranging flowers for pots and window boxes. My favorite experiences were getting to put together some custom-ordered pots on my own, and helping people who would come in with a vague idea of what they wanted and say, “I’d like these colors, and about this height, and they need to be good with partial shade—what do you suggest?” This year my goal for my own flowers is to design some large deer-resistant pots in a particular color scheme, and as I make my lists of plants and plan how to arrange them in the pots, it’s pretty neat to realize how much knowledge I picked up on the job and how I can now put it to use as I need it.

– 2 –

There is no official limit to the number of times you can hit your head on the same hanging plant in one day. Yes, I know this from experience.

– 3 –

Pruning is not such a delicate task as I’d always thought. Before the greenhouses opened in the spring, we would trim back vining and creeping plants to keep them from sprawling too far out of their pots before opening day, and it amazed me how ruthlessly you can cut back plants like wave petunias, verbena, and even rosebushes in the early stages and then see them redouble and triple in size again. (It’s also, I must admit, easier to get comfortable with pruning when doing it on a large scale, and with someone else’s plants, instead of one small plant of your own where you’re nervous that one wrong snip will ruin it for the year!)

– 4 –

In sales, visibility is king. As an entrepreneur who has to grapple with marketing for my own books, this was interesting to notice. In a greenhouse with four rows of tables running lengthwise (meaning three aisles for customers to walk), the plants on the two middle tables (on either side of the main aisle) always seemed to sell fastest. Of course, it helped that many of the most popular flowers, like petunias, impatiens, and begonias, were originally on display there—but as the season went on and space opened up on those middle tables, other things were shifted into that space, and often a plant that had hardly sold at all suddenly started going like hotcakes once it was in that more visible position. Similarly, when a few plants of a type that didn’t sell very much were brought outside and displayed where customers’ eyes fell on them as they arrived, you’d often see an increase in people buying them. You can’t sell something if people don’t know it exists—and not everyone is there to go hunting in every corner.

The implications for indie book sales are interesting. It’s true, the internet gives us the ability to sell a product to a customer anywhere in the world, but in actual fact, there are far fewer book buyers who go hunting for just the perfect book than there are book buyers who buy because a book is in an easily visible position—e.g. on a bestseller list, a deal-of-the-day promotion, et cetera—caught their eye, like a dahlia or a geranium displayed right at the entrance to the greenhouse. It’s an interesting subject to ponder for entrepreneurs selling through a middleman, where we aren’t the ones in charge of which flowers get placed on the middle tables, so to speak. How can we best seek situations where we are?

– 5 –

The American home gardening industry is largely based on consumerism and disposability.

Now, don’t get me wrong. I think it’s a great thing for people to enjoy planting flowers around their home, and I wouldn’t dream of discouraging it. But think about it for a minute. The vast majority of flowers bought at garden centers are annuals, which at the end of every season are pulled out and thrown away—meaning avid gardeners are spending hundreds and even thousands a year on new flowers. What’s more, all these plants are started in plastic trays and transplanted into plastic pots—thousands and thousands of plastic containers which will ultimately end up thrown away. Even though smaller businesses re-use containers to save expenses, sooner or later they end up brittle and broken and on their way to a landfill. I’m not suggesting we forswear annual plants, but when you compare the overwhelming disposability of American gardening in general with, say, a traditional English garden where perennials and shrubs form the backbone and annuals are finishing touches—it’s worth considering the ultimate costs.

Filed Under: Life in general, Lists

Cover Reveal: The Smoking Iron and Other Stories

April 2, 2024 by Elisabeth Grace Foley 3 Comments

It’s finally time to reveal the cover and release date for my next book!

The Smoking Iron and Other Stories, my newest collection of Western short stories, will be coming your way on May 10th, 2024. And the cover…drumroll please…

A new bride faces questions about her marriage in the shadow of a prairie blizzard.

A minister’s decision to raise sheep in cattle country stirs up controversy among his new congregation.

A spunky ranch girl matches wits with a thief.

A World War II veteran struggles with wartime scars while assuming the responsibilities of the family ranch.

And in the title story, a man is found shot beside a branding fire and a young rancher is accused of murder—but what crime was really committed there?

If you enjoy classic Western short stories in the tradition of Dorothy M. Johnson, Elmer Kelton, and Louis L’Amour, you’ll love these seven stories capturing the grit, gumption, and buoyant spirit of the Old West.

The plan is to have ebook pre-orders sometime around the middle of April, with the full ebook and paperback release on May 10th. (Update: ebook now available for pre-order!) In the meantime, you can add it to your to-read shelf on Goodreads!

Filed Under: Short stories, The Smoking Iron and Other Stories, Westerns

New Adventures With Mrs. Meade

February 12, 2024 by Elisabeth Grace Foley Leave a Comment

A year or so ago, I thought the Mrs. Meade Mysteries series was basically dead in the water. I’d tried to start Book 6, but didn’t get anywhere with it; and though I was determined to write it at some point so I would have two complete volumes of three stories, I had no idea when it might happen. I was resigned to working on other things and just waiting for Mrs. Meade’s next moment to come, even if that ended up being years in the future.

Then, last November, I suddenly started writing Mrs. Meade short stories!

I’d always thought it would be nice to write some short stories for the series, but the ideas for them had just never come. Now, they came. And what’s more, they actually got themselves out onto paper. So far, I’ve written two short stories and released them as free ebooks, and I have ideas for a few more waiting in the wings. It really is fun getting to play around with small adventures for Mrs. Meade and the other residents of Sour Springs, which don’t require the amount of plotting and planning that a novelette or novella does! I’m looking forward to doing more. Meanwhile, you can download the first two for free at your favorite ebook retailer:

Mrs. Meade and the Invisible Lodger

Mrs. Meade and the Invisible Lodger

Mrs. Meade’s landlady has an unnerving problem: her new lodger doesn’t seem to exist! No one in Sour Springs besides Mrs. Henney has ever seen him—so where does he go when he leaves the house every morning? The obvious solution is to lay the question before Mrs. Meade.

This is a stand-alone short story, which can be enjoyed in any order with the Mrs. Meade Mysteries or by readers new to the series.

Kindle | Kobo | Smashwords

 

Mrs. Meade and the Schoolboy Prank

When the Wellmans receive a letter from their son’s boarding-school informing them that Allen has been accused of stealing from a classmate, they promptly head for Denver to investigate. The situation looks bad, since almost the whole rest of the school have perfect alibis. It’s fortunate that Mrs. Wellman thought to bring along her friend Mrs. Meade to see if she can spot the solution…

This stand-alone short story can be enjoyed in any order with the rest of the Mrs. Meade Mysteries, but does feature characters introduced in Book 5, The American Pony.

Kindle | Kobo | Smashwords

 

Filed Under: Mysteries, Short stories, The Mrs. Meade Mysteries

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