Archive for ◊ 2010 ◊

Author: marniep
• Thursday, May 06th, 2010

In researching historical fiction, I’ve spent some time studying how they danced to reels. This is Conlon’s Reel (an Irish jig) performed by my good friend and amazing violinist, Jamie Bartschi. I hope you enjoy it as much as I do!

The direct link for the Conlon’s Reel video is here.

Author: marniep
• Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

Last week, the Chattanooga Times Free Press released an article about An Uncertain Justice entitled Novel Based on 1922 Walker County Slaying. On May 8th, the Marsh House is sponsoring the LaFayette Marsh House Ghost and History Walk. That’s Saturday evening. They’ve asked me to present at the old Walker County Jail about the last legal hanging in Georgia that took place there. Details on the event can be found here.

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Author: marniep
• Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Last night (April 12th) I spoke at the Catoosa County Historical Society about the history behind the last legal hanging in Georgia depicted in my latest novel, An Uncertain Justice.

The two videos below are the main portion of my presentation. Q&A lasted a while longer and I stayed an extra hour and talked with people, answering questions and signing books. I really enjoyed my time with the historical society members. They were incredibly friendly and responsive, and made me feel right at home.

Part 1

Part 2

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Author: marniep
• Friday, March 26th, 2010

Author, Michele Ashman Bell interviewed me recently for her blog. She asked me things like…

  • When did you first know you wanted to be an author?
  • What was the pathway like for you to get your first book published?
  • Were you ever discouraged along the way? If so, how did you deal with it?
  • Where do your ideas come from? How do you know the idea is good enough to write a book about it?
  • What words of advice do you have for other writers who desire to have their manuscripts become books in print?
  • What is your process of brainstorming a story? Do you just sit down and write, waiting to see what happens next? Or do you outline first?

To read the full interview to here.

Author: marniep
• Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

I’ll be speaking about the history and mystery behind “An Uncertain Justice” at the Catoosa County Historical Society on Monday, April 12, 2010 at 7pm. The meeting is at the Old Stone Church Museum on Old Hwy 2 US 41 in Ringgold, Georgia.

Press Release:

Ringgold, GA – In March 1922, Deputy Sheriff Joseph Morton was gunned down atop Lookout Mountain at the Durham Depot. The culprits — two young brothers, Ralph and George Baker — were swiftly apprehended. By April they were brought to trial and within a mere three hours a jury was selected, the brothers tried, and sentenced to death by hanging. Yet, one year later, only one brother would hang from the gallows in the Walker County Jail, taking an agonizing eleven minutes to die. It is little wonder that within less than a year, Georgia changed its official form of capital punishment to electrocution. In investigating trial transcripts, written accounts, and old newspapers, local author Marnie Pehrson has deduced Georgia may have hanged the wrong brother.

“There were so many conflicting accounts of this crime that I began asking myself, ‘What if they are all telling the truth from their perspective?’ This question led me on a quest for answers and toward solving an 88-year-old mystery that people of the time weren’t concerned about solving. Deputy Morton was the third lawman to be killed in an 18-month period in Walker County. The Governor of Georgia needed to make a statement and stop the madness. In their rush to make sure someone paid for the crime, they overlooked a key witness and didn’t think through all the evidence,” asserts Pehrson, the second great granddaughter of Joseph Morton.

Pehrson’s novel, An Uncertain Justice, brings together all the evidence and accounts she could find. She crafts a cohesive version of events that explains all the evidence, including the telegraph and telephone wires that mysteriously stopped working on the clear afternoon of the murder. Pehrson even uncovered an eye-witness account the defense did not use because the witness was a Mason.

In February 2010, Pehrson discussed her findings at the Walker County Historical Society at the LaFayette Library. Dr. David Boyle, President of the Society commented on the likelihood of a Mason’s testimony being ignored, “In 1922, the War Between the States was still within the memory of a lot of people. Walker County was very heavily split between the Union and Confederacy. Poor working farm people in the hills didn’t have much respect or care for the people down in the valley, who were more Southern and a number of them were slave holders and Masons. So you’ve stumbled into some Walker County History. Walker County has five distinct communities, and it never has been easy to govern. What one section wants, the other one doesn’t. When they were picking a jury, and they had to get a jury from the general population, it could be very political, cultural and post-Civil War.”

Pehrson contends that what many in 1922 asserted was a premeditated murder, may have been a heat-of-the-moment act by two drunken boys who’d just flubbed a train robbery. While the brother hanged for the crime was present and party to the murder, An Uncertain Justice portrays a convincing argument that he never fired a shot.

Author: marniep
• Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

In these videos, Southern author Jennifer Youngblood and I discuss the inspiration for our characters and how we develop them.

Part 1: Character Development

Part 2: Character Development