Cheryl: When I was in graduate school at DePaul, I took a class called Narrative Shorts. I submitted one of the stories that I had written for class, "The Color of Cowboys," to Threshold, the DePaul literary magazine, and they published it in the 25th anniversary edition.
Moon Journal, a feminist magazine, published a personal essay on my participation in the Danskin Triathlon. "Mudface", a poem, was published in Off the Rocks, another Chicago-area magazine. Just this month Gaper's Block published "Strangers in Transit," a series of vignettes about riding the subway.
MB: There are flashes of humor throughout your mystery, Park Ridge: A Senior Center Murder. Do you do any humor writings?
Cheryl: I had been out of college for almost twenty years when I decided to get my master's degree. I signed on for some writing classes at Oakton Community College to warm up my slack academic muscles.
Professor David Koenig pushed me a bit to try my hand at humor. I sat down and knocked out a poem I thought was pretty funny:
Entertaining Thoughts of God
By Cheryl Hagedorn
God started his career at a carnival
Working with two dummies and a talking snake
Only to be replaced by a flaming sword act
He did six-week stint at a water show
Swore he’d never do that again
His magic act played the Palace (in Egypt)
Had a long gig in the desert (not Vegas)
Did a Top Ten list long before Letterman
Was host to several game shows:
Truth or Consequences, Jeopardy.
Last I heard was down to do a cooking show
When he got out of fortune-telling
Taught everything he knew to Nostradamus
Subject of several unauthorized biographies
Unauthorized because they couldn’t get the copy right.
Eventually became an icon
While I was still at Oakton, I entered the Skyway Writer's Festival and my humorous short story, "Lanita's Cooking," took 2nd place in the Non-Fiction category. I was pretty psyched since Melanie Rigney, who was then the editor of Writer's Digest Magazine, said:
"Lanita's Cooking" illustrates beautifully the power of the time-honored writingMB: Of all that you've written, What is your favorite?
adage, "Show, Don't Tell." Cheryl doesn't simply say her sister-in-law is a poor
cook--or that she forgot to cook part of the Thanksgiving meal. Cheryl describes
just how bad Lanita is, right down to those marshmallows. She doesn't just say
Lanita is southern--she illustrates her speech patterns. As a personality
profile, this piece of work is first-rate.
Cheryl: Since we were just talking about "The Color of Cowboys," I guess I would choose that one. I remember clearly getting poor marks on the original AND the second draft. I got angry because I felt the professor just wasn't understanding it at all. So I turned it upside down and inside out. She was right, I think. The last version had a lot more power.
MB: You have a dog and a cat, do you think that they will ever contribute to your books?
Cheryl: Lord, no! Mienne is an overweight Australian Cattle Dog who couldn't stop a bad guy unless he tripped over her accidentally. JeSuis's only awake activity is blinking.
MB: I noticed that you have discussion questions posted on your website, and that you discussed some of the answers to these questions on your blog. Has your book been used for a book discussion group?
Cheryl: The Park Ridge Senior Center -- yes, it's a REAL place -- discussed my book in January. That's the only group that I'm sure of. But if anyone is interested, they can check the website.
MB: What review do you feel best caught the spirit of your novel?
Cheryl: The Blind Bookworm, Alicia Verlager a.k.a. Kestrell, did a super job of "getting" my novel. Can I give you a quote?
MB: Congratulations! Thanks for stopping by."Park Ridge is a very different mystery than the one I was expecting. It is a story full of surprises, but the most notable surprise is that the author chose to create a mystery which goes beyond cardboard cutout characters and instead chose to write a mystery which exposes many of our cultural stereotypes about people over the age of sixty. Park Ridge demonstrates one of the lures of mystery fiction: it's ability to show us how mysterious we can be to one another."
Cheryl's book is available from BookLocker or any other online bookstore. It may also be ordered from your local brick-and-mortar.

2 comments:
I really enjoyed the poem. I gotta tell ya, Cheryl has an interesting outlook on the Big Guy. I'm not sure the nuns would appreciate it.
I, on the other hand, liked it a lot.
Ah, yes. The Big Guy.
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