Below is a brief blurb, synopsis, biography (of me) and possible front page photo:
Title of Book: Red
Flag Warning
Author Name: M. A.
Florence
Blurb:
An arsonist at large.
A coworker murdered. A forest
fire out of control. What began as Sophia’s
first field job in years quickly became an inferno of trickery and intrigue.
Synopsis:
Sophia Davis had trepidations about
her new field job in a tinder-dry forest.
Add eccentric co-workers, wildfire, arson and murder to the mix, and her
misgivings turn to alarm. Increasing
suspicion and distrust from her colleagues and the local community push Sophia
to search for the real culprit. As she uncovers
secrets and traces clues, a strong storm system pushes through and a red flag
warning, unknown until too late, puts Sophia’s life on the line.
Set in the precarious mountains and
wide-open valleys of eastern Oregon, Red Flag Warning showcases the realities
of wildfires in our western forests today.
Author Biography:
M. A. Florence has an MA in Biological Science and currently
teaches classes for the University of Phoenix.
She has worked as a botanist on field crews for the Bureau of Land
Management and Forest Service in Wyoming, Nevada, California and Oregon, as
well as botanical contract work in New Mexico.
Her previous publishing credits include short stories and poems in
numerous anthologies and literary journals.
She now lives in southwestern Utah with her husband and two cats.
Book Excerpt:
With growing apprehension, I
stared at the wispy, caramel-brown smoke column surging up from deep within the
Dragon Mountains. I hoped it was not
another arson, like the one we had in these same mountains a few weeks
back. Fire investigators had traced that
fire’s origins to a campfire deliberately set at the edge of a forest
thicket. Upslope winds, or perhaps the
arsonist’s own breath, had fanned the flames into the bone-dry forest, burning
over two hundred acres of pine, a few squirrels and at least one fawn before it
was brought under control.
Today the smoke
appeared to be coming from the Rock Creek area, where we worked last week. The forest there was also dry and thick as
dog-hair, and the narrow meadow straddling the creek had already turned to
straw. Rock Creek itself barely
trickled. It wouldn’t produce enough
water to put out a campfire, much less a forest fire.
This summer
comprised eastern Oregon’s seventh year of drought. Our normally lengthy growing season had
consisted of a dozen weeks in early spring and now, in early July, the parched
meadows and heavily littered forests had become tinder-dry, primed for a spark.
Under conditions like these, a stiff breeze could turn even a tiny blaze into a
raging inferno.
I called out to
our crew leader, “Hey Debra, it looks like there’s a fire over by Rock Creek.”
“That’s nice,”
she said, hunkered over her foot square study plot. Without pausing, she plucked out a grass-like
plant from the cracked earth and examined it.
I watched her identify the plant, write down its abbreviation on the
data sheet she had secured by a clasp on her clipboard, and then calmly reach
for another plant.
Irritated with
her dismissive attitude, I thought again about how much I didn’t want to deal
with Debra on top of all the problems arson and a possible early fire season
would entail, and added to it my new burden:
Jackie. Jackie had been hired to replace our crew’s soil scientist,
Tom. Today was Jackie’s first day and
she already seemed to be rubbing everyone the wrong way.
I glanced at the
smoke column again, noting how much it had thickened and darkened. The fire was
growing. I sniffed. Yes, wood smoke was definitely beginning to
overpower the usual fresh pine-scented breeze.
I called out
again, louder this time. “Debra, I don’t
think we should wait on this fire. If
you’re not going to call it in, I will.”
She expelled a
long, exaggerated sigh and then squinted up at me. Her stiff, wide-brimmed straw hat hid her slanted,
dark brown, East Asian eyes and most of her short, thick black hair. But it didn’t hide her frown.
“All right,
Sophia,” she said, speaking with a slight lisp on the letter ‘s.’ She could never pronounce my name quite
right. ‘Sophia Davis’ came out ‘Thopia
Davith.’
“I get the
message,” she continued. “I’ll make sure
it gets called it in as soon as I finish this section. It’s almost time for lunch, anyway.”
“Good,” I said,
happy to have at least that settled.
Bending down to count plants again, I tried to push out the fretting
that had been casting a shadow upon my thoughts all day. I was working on a soil-vegetation inventory
crew miles away from my two teenage children and a husband who loved to fight
fires. What if he was called away to
fight this one? How would I manage
everything then?
As the familiar
feeling of dread crept over me, I told myself to stop it right there. This was just a solitary smoke column, for
gosh sakes. And it might be a natural
fire, not arson.
I visualized a
single lightning strike on the talus slope above the creek, a fire that
wouldn’t go anywhere, and I consoled myself with such platitudes as ‘you’re
making good money, you can finally be a botanist again, you should be grateful
you even have a job.’ Then I forced myself to focus on the reason I was out
here to begin with.
On hands and
knees now, I baked under the unrelenting sun and swatted at biting insects
while classifying, counting and tabulating the meadow vegetation before
me. But my task couldn’t keep that
growing fire far from my thoughts. When
was Debra going to call it in?
Finally, Debra
stood up, dropped her equipment into a tidy little pile, and stomped over to me
across the brown grass. I sat back on my feet and looked up at her.
With a scowl on
her face, she snapped, “Okay, I’m done.
As soon as you reach a stopping point, get Tom and Jackie and meet the
rest of us at the road for lunch. I’ll
tell Luna about the fire on the way up.”
Relieved, I
nodded my acknowledgement and took a brief break to watch slender, long-waisted
Debra stomp off through vegetation so dry that it crackled with each step.
I soon completed
my last entry and laid down my clipboard and pencil. Standing up, I stretched the kinks out of my
back. It’s no fun getting old!
Possible front cover
photo:
Image from the website
article: http://dels-old.nas.edu/climatechange/mountains.shtml
Title: A wildfire sweeps through
Bitterroot National Forest in Montana.
Image
courtesy of John McColgan, USDA Forest Service.
Congratulations! It's good to hear you've kept plugging away. Keep us posted on the release date.
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