Nostalgia City Mysteries

Mark S. Bacon

Category Archives: Mark S. Bacon

Dark ride, dark story: the mystery begins

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Here’s a chapter from my latest Nostalgia City mystery, Dark Ride Deception.

Max Maxwell, the CEO of Nostalgia City theme park, is holding an emergency meeting to discuss park secrets for new ride technology that have been stolen. The scientist who created the technology is missing.    

Chapter 7

     Maxwell roamed the conference room. Lyle often thought of him as an energetic, impulsive teenager housed in a short, wiry 75-year-old body. Or was he older? “When did we discover the hack?” Max said looking at Owings.

The senior vice president sounded matter-of-fact: “We went through the logs and access files Friday,” he said. “It’s routine. But after we found discrepancies, we reviewed all our systems over the weekend and we knew something was wrong.”

“Sort of an understatement, isn’t it Kerry?” Maxwell said. “We’ve spent millions on these plans already. Millions. We created programs, engineering studies, simulations, drawings, models. Yup, something is wrong all right.”

Lyle glanced at the woman seated across from him. Somewhere in her early forties, she parted her hair in the middle and it hung ragged on the sides. Jane Fonda in the ’70s? Or maybe something new. She sighed and lowered her head as Maxwell spoke. Was she to blame?

“I contacted the FBI,” Howard said. “Agents who specialize in economic espionage and computer crimes are coming out.”

“That’s fine Howard, but we have other problems too, don’t we? Our patents.”

Max looked at a man in a dark tailored suit and charcoal tie who could either be the park’s chief legal counsel or a mortician. “Usually we file for protection as we go along,” the man said, “and we have done this for some initial elements of the project we’re calling PDE. But there are issues.

“First, artificial intelligence is a complex and evolving element of the law. It’s not like seeking a patent for a new type of can opener. And software is challenging, too. If it’s tied to particular apparatuses or engineering creations, obtaining a patent is not as problematic. But we’re not just seeking a patent for a specific ride, are we?”

“So much for the jargon,” Max said. “Are you saying you couldn’t do it?”

“Of course not, but work on the project slowed for a while, and then it received a top priority. The innovation continued yet the legal department did not receive enough information, things we need to draft patent applications.”

“Max,” Owings said, “as you know, PDE was not finished. We were getting close, but there are a few challenges left and now we’re—”

“So you’re both saying our ass is hanging out. Our secrets are gone, and we don’t even have the ideas patented.” Max’s stare, always penetrating, seemed to bore through Owings and the attorney. Lyle wondered if they might soon be looking for work. Continue Reading →

Reading group guide for “The Marijuana Murders”

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Discussion questions

1.  How would you describe Kate’s relationship with Arthur Poole?  Does she act appropriately?

2.  The author mentions songs from the 1970s. Do these songs, and their artists, contribute to particular scenes or the overall focus of the book?  How important is the 1970s setting to the story?

3.  What factor’s influence the Nostalgia City CEO’s opinion of legalizing pot?

4.  Excluding Kate, how would you categorize the role of women in the book?

5.  How is the case for legalizing marijuana presented? Do you think the author has an opinion of legal pot?

6.  The author’s narrative technique is to alternate point-of-view chapters between Lyle and Kate. Was each character’s POV obvious with the change of chapters?

7.  When Arthur Poole says that heroin and cocaine are dangerous drugs it elicits laughs from his audience. Why is that? How does this establish what comes next at the public forum?

8.  This is a mystery. What was the biggest surprise in the book?

9.  How does the author differentiate the voices of the various characters? Is it effective?

10.  What do you think happened to Tony Guerra? Was the author specific enough for you about Guerra’s plight?

Desert Kill Switch wins fiction award

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Desert Kill Switch just received the first prize for fiction in the 2018 Great Southwest Book Festival.  An awards dinner will be held in April to honor the winners of the competition.

The book is set in the fictional central Arizona county of San Navarro, in Las Vegas and in Reno, Nevada.  It begins with a body, found in the Arizona desert, that disappears once sheriff’s deputies get to the scene.  While the desert murder remains a mystery, the story moves from Arizona to Nevada.  Protagonists Kate Sorensen and Lyle Deming travel from Reno to Las Vegas and back to Reno searching for the person who murdered Vegas car dealer Alvin Busick. 

Sorensen is accused of Busick’s murder and must find the killer before the police find her.

The book is the second in the Nostalgia City Mystery Series that takes place in Nostalgia City, a  theme park that re-creates an entire small town from the mid-1970s.  The third book in the series, The Marijuana Murders, will be published soon by Black Opal Books.

Desert Kill Switch was also nominated for a Top Shelf Magazine Indie Award for books from small publishers.