• About The Mild Mannered Professor Mysteries
  • Shorts

The Mild Mannered Professor Mysteries

~ Wholesome stories about unwholesome motives and deeds with occasional notes about writing.

The Mild Mannered Professor Mysteries

Monthly Archives: March 2014

The Great Auditorium–occasional note

24 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Frances St.Clair in About the The House at Mt. Tabor, So why a cozy mystery?, The House at Mt. Tabor

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Auditorium Organ, Gordon Turk, Ocean Grove, Ocean Grove NJ, The Auditorium Organ in Ocean Grove NJ, The Great Auditorium in Ocean Grove NJ

THE GREAT AUDITORIUM easily dominates the social, religious and cultural life of Ocean Grove, New Jersey.  It plays an important role in 190 MOUNT TABOR WAY, too.

Popular hymn writers visit Ocean Grove each summer, including the historic figures mentioned in Chapter 3. During the Centennial year of the Great Auditorium, an evening service celebrated their hymns. But Senior Artist in Residence and Music Director, Peter deMeer, is fictional, as is his title. Since 1974, the resident organist for the Great Auditorium has been Dr. Gordon Turk, a prominent American concert organist.

The Auditorium Organ is one of the world’s great organs. Since 1974 it has been expanded to 186 ranks and 11,550 pipes. The work was initiated and guided by Dr. Gordon Turk and Organ Curator, John R. Shaw. Dr. Turk presented the Organ Centennial Concert to mark the organ’s dedicatory recital held on July 3, 1908. The project of restoring and expanding the organ is a story in itself.

Dr. Turk offers organ recitals on most Wednesday evenings and Saturday afternoons during July and August. Attending a recital in the Great Auditorium with the sea air blowing through the open doors on three sides is a memorable experience.

Jay Ward Thomas III, speaker for Camp Meeting, is also a fictional character as is his great uncle, Jay Ward Thomas.  In the book, the senior Thomas is remembered as a famous inspirational writer and speaker who was a frequent visitor to Ocean Grove and spoke at the Great Auditorium.  The Camp Meeting Association has been host to many such guests, but not these two!

The list of famous people who have performed at the Great Auditorium, included in chapter 3, is not fictional. It only begins to capture the range of personalities who have been there.  Family entertainment and cultural events in the Auditorium and at the Grove are scheduled every summer and may be found on the Ocean Grove website http://www.oceangrove.org.

As an aside: I recall when Peter, Paul and Mary were regulars at the Great Auditorium. Their songs of hope and call to action inspired me from the time I was a college student. When they performed at my university in the late 1960s, I couldn’t afford tickets. I’ll never forget the review of their performance that appeared in the university’s student paper. The headline read something like: Mary! And those other guys. Mary! Peter Yarrow, Noel (Paul) Stookey and Mary Travers reminded us that folk music can be a force for social action. Their website carries a loving tribute to Mary, who died in 2009.

Further Reading: Troy Messenger looks at the history of Ocean Grove through performance in Holy Leisure: Recreation and Religion in God’s Square Mile (University of Minnesota Press, 1999; Temple University Press, 2001).  Wayne T. Bell, Cindy L. Bell and Darrell A. Dufresne’s book The Great Auditorium, Ocean Grove’s Architectural Treasure documents the history and significance of the structure itself.

A Street Named Mt. Tabor Way–occasional note

17 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Frances St.Clair in About the The House at Mt. Tabor, The House at Mt. Tabor

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

NJ, Ocean Grove, streets in Ocean Grove, streets with Biblical names

Mount Tabor Way is an actual street in Ocean Grove, NJ, though the house number 190 doesn’t exist–or at least it didn’t in 1994, the 100th Anniversary of The Great Auditorium. Graced by many lovely Victorian homes and Greenleaf Park, the street begins at Pilgrim Pathway and stretches to #143, where it turns into Benson Avenue.  It’s a bright, cheerful street, even in the winter when the trees have long-since lost their foliage and their branches create lace patterns against the sky. I chose the street as the setting for 190 MOUNT TABOR WAY because I’ve stayed in one of the houses there, the house that inspired the title.

Many street names in Ocean Grove take their names from the Hebrew and Christian Bibles. Many Christians believe Mount Tabor is the mount where Jesus was transfigured. A description of the mount and Biblical references may be found at the Sacred Destinations website: http://www.sacred-destinations.com/israel/mount-tabor. (The site is ecumenical and offers descriptions and pictures of the sacred places of all faith traditions.)

The street may be most famous as the original site of Mrs. Wagner’s Home Made Pies. Once located at 124-126, a business that eventually moved to Brooklyn, NY and closed in 1969.  Mrs. Wagner’s original site is part of the Historical Society’s Women’s Trail http://www.oceangrovehistory.org/WomansTrail.html.

So why a cozy mystery?occasional note

13 Thursday Mar 2014

Posted by Frances St.Clair in So why a cozy mystery?, The House at Mt. Tabor

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

amateur women sleuths, cozy mysteries, mother daughter mysteries

I didn’t set out to write a cozy mystery, I had a story to tell. When it came time to label the story, cozy mystery seemed the best description.  Usually, a cozy mystery is a small town story featuring an amateur sleuth. Very often the sleuth is a woman who happens to be a keen observer and who has her wits about her—a Miss Marple, for example. The sleuth is able to fly in under the radar because she isn’t seen as particularly threatening.

Like other cozy mysteries, THE HOUE AT 190 MOUNT TABOR WAY is a wholesome story that deals with unwholesome motives and events without getting overly explicit about sex and violence.  But, caution to the reader: upon entering into the languid description of Ocean Grove and the house at 190, it isn’t a good idea to gear down with Carrie and her daughter Elizabeth.  Things aren’t going to be as uncomplicated and comfortable as they seem. There are details to be noticed along the way. Carrie and Elizabeth aren’t noticing them at first, to their regret and almost to their peril. But forewarned, the reader may notice them.

In a cozy mystery, there’s a puzzle that has to be solved.  One of the things I enjoy in a good mystery is trying to solve the puzzle first, before the author tells all! Maybe even before the sleuth. To get herself and Elizabeth out of harm’s way, Carrie has to grapple with two unrelated but interlocking puzzles. In the final chapter, Elizabeth tells her that in the ancient genera of the Chinese mystery, there are three unrelated plots that the detective must untangle. Carrie has untangled two. Elizabeth offers her opinion about the third, but I wouldn’t want to spoil your fun. Hopefully, you’ll have a chance to read the whole story. I am actively seeking a publisher. For now, I’m posting the first three chapters. I’ve also included links about the very real context, Ocean Grove, New Jersey.

 

Recent Posts

  • Death of a Mentor
  • Occasional note: Postpartum Blues and Black Holes
  • Thanks for the support
  • Jay Ward Thomas–occasional note
  • Memorable Breakfasts–occasional note

Recent Comments

Frances St.Clair's avatarFrances St.Clair on Occasional note: Postpartum Bl…
Frances St.Clair's avatarFrances St.Clair on Thanks for the support
Liesl's avatarLiesl on Thanks for the support
Frances St.Clair's avatarFrances St.Clair on A Street Named Mt. Tabor Way…
Liesl's avatarLiesl on A Street Named Mt. Tabor Way…

Archives

  • November 2015
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014

Categories

  • About the The House at Mt. Tabor
  • Characters
  • Shorts
  • So why a cozy mystery?
  • The House at Mt. Tabor

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Recent Posts

  • Death of a Mentor
  • Occasional note: Postpartum Blues and Black Holes
  • Thanks for the support
  • Jay Ward Thomas–occasional note
  • Memorable Breakfasts–occasional note

Recent Comments

Frances St.Clair's avatarFrances St.Clair on Occasional note: Postpartum Bl…
Frances St.Clair's avatarFrances St.Clair on Thanks for the support
Liesl's avatarLiesl on Thanks for the support
Frances St.Clair's avatarFrances St.Clair on A Street Named Mt. Tabor Way…
Liesl's avatarLiesl on A Street Named Mt. Tabor Way…

Archives

  • November 2015
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014

Categories

  • About the The House at Mt. Tabor
  • Characters
  • Shorts
  • So why a cozy mystery?
  • The House at Mt. Tabor

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • The Mild Mannered Professor Mysteries
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • The Mild Mannered Professor Mysteries
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar