Showing posts with label cookbook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cookbook. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

BryonySeries: Sue's Diner Through The Years

Sue's Diner is the fictional "go-to" eatery in the also fictional Munsonville, Michigan, a depressed fishing village in the northern part of the state, in the additionally fictional Beulah County, which is the primary setting in the BryonySeries.

Sam and Sue Barnes opened Sue's Diner on Sue's 30th birthday: October 29, 1926, according to the BryonySeries novel "Call of the Siren."

Sue had already gained the reputation of being the best cook and baker in the entire village, all skills she learned from her mother Sally Bass, who oversaw the kitchen at Munsonville Inn and previously held the "best" title.

Sue's Diner withstood the Great Depression and Munsonville's steady economic downturn through the next few decades, Nevertheless, Sue's Diner was still drawing customers from outside the village when Melissa Marchellis (the main character in "Bryony") moved to the fishing village in August 1975.

This was Melissa's impression of Sue's Diner (and then scroll past this first photo).

Her mother parked in front of a dingy, squat-looking building, Sue’s Diner. Brian turned and rolled his eyes. Melissa mouthed back, probably get food poisoning.

For a small, lakefront village restaurant, throngs of people packed the dining room. There were men in overalls and plaid shirts or business suits; women wearing faded, print dresses; and kids in jeans. Darlene asked the gum-cracking, pony-tailed hostess for a table, and the girl led the trio to a booth by the picture window overlooking Main Street. Melissa slid close to the fingerprinted window and glanced down. Clear tape sealed cracks in the vinyl blue-green seats. The table’s smooth top was speckled with gold and imbedded with coffee stains.

This next image is one Sarah altered back in 2009 (maybe 2010?) when she created the original BryonySeries website.

At the time, we had very little original art. So the hosting site we used at the time allowed us to purhase images from that site - and this was one of them, as it was the closest to a diner that Sarah could find.

We estimated the year Sue's Diner was established (we were off by a few years), and Sarah created its banner. Even today, Sue's Diner still serves fresh fish straight from the waters of Lake Munson (the diner's back yard), although Sam and Sue Barnes are long gone and Sue's Diner is owned and operated by the couple's stepgrandson Brian Marchellis.


Through the years (and the novels), Sue's Diner was the location where many characters in both "Call of the Siren" and "House on Top of the Hill" either worked at the diner, found it a terrific gathering place for gossip and news - or both.

Besides, the food was always good. 


Sue's Diner is also the to-go place for the fictional Ed Calkins and his comrades in all three of his BryonySeries Ruthless books: "Ruthless," "The Fifth," and "Recovering Ruthless."

It was late in the lunch rush at Sue’s Diner. Sheriff Matt was sitting near the counter of the lakefront venue having a quick burger, and several parties had finally had enough coffee to order their top of the mid-day meal. Ruthie seated the two suited men. Although they weren’t really regulars, she already knew they were barely ten percent tippers. Today was slow, and half the wait staff had gone home, which meant one waitress called it a day and the hostess/manager was now the one waitress covering all the tables. This included Matt, the two cheap suits, and the party of five that had all gone to the restroom at the same time, a strange thing for them to do because Sue’s Diner only had a single restroom. (From "Ruthless")


              I can’t think. I’m too hungry, which should explain why I’m here at Sue’s Diner. But, wait, Cah…I can smell the kitchen where eggs are beaten with milk and vanilla for French toast. I can smell the whole ham cut off from the bone and pieced onto a buttered pan. But none of that makes me hungrier. It’s the chicken they are preparing for lunch. I can smell the blood. (From "The Fifth")


The next instant there were in a different restaurant, already seated with two more guests who were startled but not surprised at the new arrival. The waitress who poured coffee into the four still empty cups, barely batted an eye.

“Late enough,” a short leprechaun of man said as he glared Ed. The man wore an orange suit and matching derby hat and tie and smoked a pipe that smelled like cherry tobacco. A woman with a notepad, pen, and smile sat beside him.

“I went to the wrong place,” Ed explained.

“Well, I’ll be paying for breakfast, but I already ordered your meals, as I have a store to open. I’ve ordered steak and eggs for Patrick, rare and scrambled; steak and eggs for Karla, well done, and easy over; mushroom stew for the nasty wood sprite…”

“Good to see you too, Eircheard.”

              “…and Ed…”

              Ed held up his hand. “Can’t eat yet, sorry. I had to forfeit my rightful share of blood last night in Trudy’s dream.”

              The short man growled at the interruption. “…. I ordered you czernina.”

              “What?”

              “Duck blood soup, hold the duck broth, extra blood, cooked rare. Didn’t you tell me your wife was Polish?”

              “Some of them.”

              “I ordered the corn beef hash, and the reporter here ordered pancakes with fresh strawberries and blueberries and a side of grilled ham. Now that we got the meal introduced, it’s time to start the meeting.” Eircheard leaned forward and folded his hands. “Each one of you has a superpower. Mine is paying for breakfast, something that seems in short supply around here. My name is Eircheard, I live near here, which is Sue’s Diner in Munsonville, which is in Northern Michigan. The reporter here has a name, but no one uses it. She’s known as The Goddess, and her superpowers are her vast vampire knowledge and her immunity to how vampires distort time. Both she and I belong in this time-scape and this geographic location. This contrasts with the two of you that had a bad dream last night and prompted my leprechaun ass to sit among you, reserve Sue’s Diner, and borrow staff from another time, to feed you all before the place opens.”

              “Wait…you said your name was Eircheard, as in Eircheard’s Emporium?” Karla interjected.

              “Please hold all applause until the introduction is complete, but yes. That is my shop and if you know something about it, keep it to yourself as anything you know would be in my future.”

              Pigface looked around. “So where are we now?”

              “I told you. A small, depressed fishing village small in Northern Michigan in 2008 at a diner that will be opening too soon if you kept launching questions at me. We’ve got to be out of here by 5 a.m. local time; it’s 3:10 right now thanks to Santa Claus’ ability to follow directions.”

              The Goddess took a sip of her coffe. “You were introducing our visitors from 2023?”

              “Yes, I was. This is Karla Dyer from Texas, whose superpower is finding portals and telepathy. She is accompanied by Patrick O’Patrick, who is an expert on submarines and finding financial activity. If things go favorably, both of you will return to your own time and place less the time you spent here. I expect you’ll be in Texas by 7 a.m. Texas time. Now, I would say to ignore the wood sprite over here because he wasn’t invited although we did expect him. His superpower is eating people and being a pain in the ass, and he doesn’t have a time or place because, according to him, he doesn’t exist except in your imagination.”

              “Eating people?” Karla asked skeptically with a sidelong glance at Glorna/John-Peter.

              “I’ll explain later,” the wood sprite told her, then looked to Eircheard and Ed. “I’m not going to say much; my six shooters do all the talking.”

              “And lastly, we have Ed Calkins, whom I called Santa Claus a moment ago,” Eircheard spoke loudly, annoyed by all the sidebars. “His superpower is being confused, which comes in handy more often than you might think…”

              “What’s with the waitresses’ feet?” Karla blurted out pointing to her iridescent. duck-like webbed feet.

              Eircheard threw up his hands and puffed angrily.

              “They are merrows,” Ed explained calmly. “Eircheard is far too cheap to hire human workers. Instead, he persuaded Irish mermaids to come through his portal and fix us breakfast. Of course, he had to borrow Sue’s Diner because he lacks the right kitchen.”

              “In other words, we’re trespassing.” Pigface said as he reached for the sugar bowl.

              “And breaking some labor laws too.” Ed assured him. “Are we going to get to the part where I’m ruthless?” (From "Recovering Ruthless:)

              


(Keep scrolling)

 



Today, readers stopping by the BryonySeries blog and website can visit Sue's Diner by preparing our recipe of the week, which we almost always feature on Wednesdays.

Most of those recipes come from the BryonySeries fundraising cookbook "Memories in the Kitchen: Bites and Nibbles from 'Bryony,'" which is a permanent fundraiser for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Will and Grundy Counties.

It is also a companion to the BryonySeries novel "Bryony," as it features recipes for all of the food references in both the 19th century and 1975, the time periods of the novel.

Some of the Sue's Diner recipes also come from our two other cookbooks (so far): "Squeak!" and "GRRR."

And some recipes are simply exlusive "specials of the week" - and then gone.

As Sam Barnes once said ("House on Top of the Hill," Chapter 2: Roundtable), "Sue’s Diner (is) the best place in Beulah County to eat.”

Stop in and see for yourself.

Hapy Tuesday!



Thursday, May 8, 2025

Books of the BryonySeries: A Quick Overview

In January of 1985, I had an idea for a young adult vampire story featuring a 1970s teen who falls in love with a Victorian vampire for a trip back into time as his wife.

I never started playing with the story in earnest (although I did plenty of mental writing through the years), and I never imagined one idea would spawn dozens of books, a second writer for the series, two others working on collaboration, and many lovely creative types lending their talents to the entire experience.

But although the books overtook that one idea like the specially bred bryony vines overgrowing the old Simons Estate in the fictional Munsonville, Michigan, the series is actually quite organized and each  subseries has its own theme.

Here's a quick look. Each title is hyperlinked to Amazon since the BryonySeries book store is currently down.


The original BryonySeries "drop of blood trilogy

These books for young adults and older below originate from the expansion of the initial idea and revolve around the idea of "a drop of blood, a deceptive fantasy.

In addition to the trilogy, this initial subseries has a bonus short story and companion cookbook featuring recipes for all the food references in "Bryony," which is a permanent fundraiser for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Will and Grundy Counties.

Bryony

After her father’s sudden death, seventeen-year-old Melissa Marchellis moves onto the former estate of nineteenth century composer and pianist John Simons, where a mysterious mist stalks her, ghostly piano music plays in her bedroom, and visions of John Simons’ young wife Bryony, who died in childbirth, invade her dreams. Those dreams, Melissa discovers, are simply a distraction for the midnight feedings of John Simons, now a vampire. 

So, John proposes a trade: Melissa may visit the past as Bryony in exchange for minute samples of her blood to neutralize his vampire state. For a time, Melissa happily seesaws between her adolescent routine of school, slumber parties, and cute boys to dancing at balls, attending formal dinner parties, and hosting garden fetes. 

But fantasy and reality blur when her eccentric, middle-aged English teacher penetrates her dreams as Melissa’s dashing, young vampire chaperone; her brother Brian adopts a peculiar stray cat after a friend disappears in a midnight exploration of the dilapidated mansion; and another girl with a similar vampire pact is gruesomely murdered. 

Caught between the danger of her agreement and her escalating infatuation with John Simons, Melissa contends with other vampires and their agendas, while struggling with her feelings for an undead musician.

Visage

While grieving the abrupt end of her blood bargain with nineteenth century pianist John Simons, eighteen-year-old Melissa Marchellis packs sensible goals for her life and marches off to college, where her obsession flings her into a relationship with a music professor, a man with a shady reputation and an uncanny resemblance to John.

Meanwhile, Melissa’s peer support crumbles, as her friends make other choices for their lives. Shelly and Laura attend out of town schools. Ann forsakes her wealthy ambitions for a Munsonville boy. Julie is preoccupied with studying and dating a nice, but dull, psychology major. Katie runs away with an aging medicine man.

Melissa quickly cycles from pursuer to victim when the professor develops a mysterious illness requiring unusual treatments; neighborhood pets disappear at alarming rates; and she begins caring for a child with a number of disturbing qualities: a voracious appetite, abhorrence for meat, luxurious red hair that defies trimming, extreme intelligence, and musical abilities beyond its tender years.

As her world unravels, Melissa glimpses the horrifying truth beneath her choices. Will Melissa use that knowledge to finally break free from Bryony’s past?

Staked!

For seventeen-year-old John-Peter Simotes, prodigy of a college music professor that died from a mysterious illness and was staked by his best friend’s vampire-slayer father, growing up in a remote fishing village means tolerating an English teacher mother, enduring a Bible-thumping grandfather, working for a newspaper delivery uncle and a funeral director stepfather, playing with astral projection, and waiting for the right opportunity to rescue the princess trapped in a bedroom mirror.

So when John-Peter accidentally discovers a diary written by his deceased great-grandmother, revealing her claims that a famous nineteenth century pianist and composer with a connection to the village and a resemblance to the music professor was actually a vampire, he and his best friend, Karla Dyer, decide to resurrect the vampire to prove her theory.

But experiments with magic and immortality do more than test the information set forth by a mentally unstable woman. They unlock the truth about John-Peter’s real identity, the evil motives of people he trusts, and the mission upon which he must embark to save them all.

Snowbell

While visiting an out of state friend, a snobbish teen decides to show up the locals by disproving their cherished ghost stories. However, her calculated prank becomes a terrifying night in a dilapidated mansion and a desperate wish that the legends were true.

Memories in the Kitchen: Bites and Nibbles from "Bryony"

In Denise M. Baran-Unland's young adult vampire novel, Bryony, seventeen-year-old Melissa Marchellis trades her blood with a Victorian vampire for a trip back into time as his wife, Bryony. 

Yet, as Melissa zig-zags between 1975 and the late 1890's, she encounters plenty of food. These range from the familiar dishes that grace her family's dinner and holiday tables to unfamiliar Victorian fare: beef tongue, stuffed pigeons, and boiled calves head. 

The recipes included in this collection reflect the culture of both time periods to give the reader an insight into the world of "Bryony."

Whether you read this cookbook to enhance the story's enjoyment or for menu ideas, may you thoroughly delight in each "bite and nibble."


Before The Blood

"Before The Blood" is a five installment prequel to the original "drop of blood" trilogy. It's part historical fiction, part gothic fiction, and part tragedy as it centers on four key characters and how they ruin their lives.

Its tagline reads: "Step into the past when dreams were still bright and the future was unwritten."

Before The Blood: John Simons

In Book One, read how nineteenth century pianist/composer John Simons goes from riches to rags to riches, and the price he pays along the way.

Before The Blood: Kellen Wechsler

In Book Two, read how Kellen Wechsler goes from rags to riches, and the lives he discards along the way.


In Book Three, read how little Bryony Marseilles, spoiled sheltered, and sickly, uses her introversion and imagination to make sense of her Utopia.

Before The Blood: Henry Matthews

In Book Four, read how Henry Matthews goes from rags to riches and what he sacrifices to serve the riches.

Before The Blood: Bryony Simons

In Book Five, read how Bryony Simons and those she loves destroy their dreams.

Before the Blood 

Get all five installments in one volume for a lower overall price. Just be aware the paper is white as opposed to cream and the print is very, very small.


Limbo

Its tagline reads: "What happens when time stops in a fishing village in Northern Michigan? The supernatural reigns."

This BryonySeries trilogy - in three separate and very unique novels - explore the time period of the very late nineteenth century through nineteen seventy-five, when all progress appears to stop in Munsonville, Michigan, giving the illusion that times has stopped.

The first novel spans a few short months. The second two span approximately forty years each. 

The third has an unusual structure: each chapter is (almost) a separate short story that (most of the time) moves the greater story forward. You would have to read it to know what I mean.

The Phoenix

Late 1895 in Munsonville, Michigan is all about survival and rebuilding: for the fishing village still reeling from deadly tragedies, for twelve-year-old Marie Clare who is grounded at Munsonville Inn with her dying father, and for two newly turned vampires foraging their meals from a dwindling supply of villagers. 

But to rise strong and unscathed, some will be sacrificed along the way. Who gets to live and thrive? And who decides?

Call of the Siren

Sue Bass is haunted by dreams of her father, who died in a boating accident before she was born, alluring dreams of water and song. But then a soft-spoken outside man with an inside plan comes to town, and Sue's sleepwalking fades, only to resurface with greater magnetism when he leaves. 

Two voices beckon. Which one will she heed?

House on Top of the Hill

Change comes slowly to Munsonville, and for Steve Barnes, who spends his entire life in the village, that's just fine. From boyhood to manhood, he savors the slow pace and friendly smiles, even while working by his parents' side from sunup to sundown to run the family diner.

The only blight is this fishing village's preoccupation with an empty mansion in the woods, whose tales of former glory and catastrophe fueled a rampage of ghost stories. Steve doesn't believe them, but some do – and no one can deny the power the crumbling old building holds over them.

Especially when it changes everyone, including Steve, forever.


STANDALONE NOVELETTE


This BryonySeries standalone novelette just might be the most complicated book in the series. It's written in second person and mostly in present tense.

That's because the main character is an immortal shapeshifter and is grieving the loss of her mate, who was mortal. The story is written in lyrical quality as it takes the reader through the protagonist's grief journey.

The character also appears in "Before The Blood: John Simons," "Before The Blood Bryony Simons," and is mentioned several times in "The Phoenix."

Here are the opening lines of the book:

You place the snowy candle in the center of your palm and hold it high.

You gaze across the bubbly foam over the azure lake.

And you take the first step to

Who you are

What you lost

And why all your magic can’t bring it back.


Werewolves

Lycanthropic Summer

Caryn Rochelle loves werewolf stories and promised herself she would write the world's greatest werewolf love story before her eighteenth birthday. With the date just months away, Caryn has shredded more drafts than she's kept and is feeling desperate. 

But then she learns the town's most prestigious couple has a dark secret: they're keeping a savage boy her age locked in their basement. One glimpse and Caryn's inspiration skyrockets. Caryn knows she ought to report them, but... 

Can it really hurt to wait until she finishes her story?

Note: Strong language

GRRR: Twelve pawtasic werewolf-themed recipes

By Rebekah Baran

For an especially unique collection of whimsical werewolf recipes, look no further than “GRRR.” Recipes are simple to prepare and include snacks, sandwiches and desserts. They will make hungry people howl with delight.


Ruthless

By Ed Calkins, Steward of Tara, who is a real person, an author, and an Irish vampire character in the BryonySeries.

Ruthless

Step through the mirror. Step through at your own peril. 

It was clear enough that Ed Calkins was murdered while delivering newspapers. 

Trudy, a poet, sharp-shooter, dominatrix, alcoholic, and auxiliary police officer is certain she knows who did it. She remembers pointing the pistol and pulling the trigger, but she doesn’t remember why she shot her best friend. Is something supernatural haunting Munsonville? Or had something possessed her years ago when Eddie secretly won the lottery? 

In either case, he’d become a vampire, and she must face him again in a duel four days from now. In the meantime, Ed Calkins is bleeding to death and only has seven seconds to create a son for Melissa and John with the help of two others, who both live in his imaginary version of Tara in ancient Ireland.

 He must also ruthlessly battle agendas or myth and his own unruly imagination while time traveling recklessly through distant future and past. 

So step carefully through the mirror because you’re only guaranteed to learn three things.

- Ed Calkins is ruthless,

- A pistol is no silver bullet in a limerick fight,

- And if Ed Calkins asks you to marry him, he might not ask again.

The Fifth

Vampires in Munsonville elude the control of both the living and the dead.

And five particular vampires cause most of the trouble.

John Simons is about to be staked, but he’s already a suspect in five murders.

Henry Mathews is already staked but is still writing attack pieces for the Post.

Kellen Wechsler is responsible for at least one murder. But is he the puppeteer or just the puppet? If he is a puppet, who pulls the strings?

Susan Betts is just missing. Where did she go and why is Kellen looking so hard for her?

Ed Calkins, the world’ first Irish vampire, is psychotic just enough to be dangerous. As a ruthless dictator, he'll hurt your feelings.

But as five vampires are wreaking havoc, five living beings are working to keep Beulah County safe: Sherrif Matt, who’s unlikely to win reelection; Trudy, a capable, but alcoholic deputy; Marsha, a new deputy, inexperienced with the supernatural and carrying her own baggage; Eircheard, a leprechaun, willing to help at a price; and Glorna, a wood sprite, who replaced a recently killed occultist but should be somewhere – and someone – else.

Can these five living players bring law and order to the undead world? Or will vampires consume the blood of every living creature till there are no more?

Recovering Ruthless

If you knew your future, would it help at all?

If you are a dyslexic vampire trying to recover your sanity or a hypnotized imp trying to recover humanity, then maybe not. Maybe clinging to ruthlessness is all that can be done.

Because time in Munsonville never really works the way it should.

Sheriff Matt and his deputy Marsha are reunited after more than a decade of mystical calendar misunderstanding. It will take all they have to maintain order.

What of the book on the Sheriff’ Matt’s desk? Although the novel was rewritten at some time in the future, the story will happen in the next two months.

What of the new girl – ten-year-old Beth – and her shoplifting ways?

And what will it take for an alcoholic to quit drinking, a compulsive gambler to quit betting, a vampire to quit biting, a farm to reemerge, a leprechaun to stay married, and an ancient order to reestablish?

This is the story of a ruthless recovery.

Bonus: Denise Unland's Irish Genealogy

The completely fictional Irish back story of one BryonySeries author is told in just fifty-three humorous pages.


Girls of the BryonySeries

All eight of these protagonists first appeared as teens in the BryonySeries "drop of blood" trilogy.

In this series, each girl is eleven and faced with a problem only she can solve.

Julie and the Too-Hard Homework

Eleven-year-old Julie Drake impulsively choose “psychologist” as her lifelong career after becoming fascinated with one in a thriller she wasn’t allowed to see. But despite studying hard, Julie only makes so-so grades – and college isn’t in her family’s budget. Even worse, Julie’s mother is pressuring Julie to take piano lessons, which Julie hates. 

Julie doesn’t know what to do – until she gets her first client.

Katie and the Big Fear

Eleven-year-old Katie Miller has lots of fears. She’s afraid of the dark, strange noises, strong winds, and thunderstorms. And Katie is especially afraid of the big house in the woods. The villagers say it’s full of ghosts, and the stories they tell gives Katie nightmares. 

So Katie decides to stay home, where she thinks she’s safe – until fear comes looking for her.

Summer Sisters

Eleven-year-old Bryony Marseilles and her strict father live alone in a big house. Bryony doesn’t realize she’s lonely until she spends three months with a large family of girls at their farm. For the first time, Bryony can run free and enjoy the company of her peers. She learns people and situations aren’t always what they seem – and that people, even Bryony, can change.

Karla Joins In

Eleven-year-old Karla Dyer has one goal in life: to be like everyone else. But that’s hard to do when your father was killed slaying a vampire, and your mother is making it your mission to take his place in the world. Karla and her mom live in his old motor home, which is rotting away, and Karla must study grimoires and crystal balls after a full day of school. 

Karla just wants to hang out with her friends. Is that too much to ask?

Brainy Ann (Available late 2025 or early 2026)

Eleven-year-old Ann Dalton has everything a girl could want. She is pretty and smart. She has her own room with bookshelf walls filled with her favorite books. Her parents are loving and kind; her friends are trustworthy and loyal; she’s teacher’s pet; and even her little brother isn’t bad for a brother. But her support is collapsing, and everyone says it’s Ann’s fault. 

Ann thinks they’re just jealous of her. Is she right?

A Room for Laura (draft)

Eleven-year-old Laura Jones lives in a small house with her large family. No one seems to mind, except Laura, who loves to draw and dream. Laura is frustrated with her lack of privacy and jealous of her friends who have their own bedrooms. 

But then Laura comes face-to-face with the one person in the world who can help her – and things begin to change.

Changes for Shelly (draft)

Eleven-year-old Shelley Gallagher loves both her parents equally. That’s the problem. Shelley’s parents fight a lot. They scream and throw stuff at each other, which scares Shelley and makes her cry. Even worse, they expect Shelley, an only child, to choose sides. 

One day, someone really gets hurt. Now Shelley must decide whose side she’s really on.

Melissa and the Hidden Treasure (draft)

Eleven-year-old Melissa Marchellis has a terrible life. Her little brother is too annoying. Her father is too old and too sick. Her mother is too busy working and caring for Melissa’s father to pay much attention to any of them. And way too often, Melissa can’t hang out with her friends because she must entertain her brother or sit with her father – literally sit with her father, since he hates television and conversation. 

One day, she finds a dusty old box. And life is never the same again.


The Adventures of Cornell Dyer

Join the incredible, impossible, and marvelous Cornell Dyer as he unravels mysteries, untangles myths, and decides what to have for lunch.

Supernatural Super Sleuth Professor Cornell Dyer first appeared in the BryonySeries in "Visage" as a man in his fifties in the latter part of of his sleuthing career.

These short chapter books for ages eight and up share some of Cornell's adventures as he solves one mystery at a time.

Timothy is a storytelling consultant on all the books except one ("Mistical" Being) where Rebekah stepped into that role.

Plus, many more titles are on the to-do list.

Cornell Dyer and the Missing Tombstone

A tombstone with a Viking helmet engraving vanishes. Mysterious brown-outs plague a seacoast village. Supernatural super sleuth Cornell Dyer is certain the historical society leader knows more than he is telling. 

Will Cornell learn the secrets and stop the curse?

Cornell Dyer and the Necklace of Forgetfulness

A heartbroken lover wants to forget. Supernatural super sleuth Cornell Dyer desperately tries to solve a mystery as his memory vanishes. Meanwhile, he keeps showing up at places he's certain are clues but can't recall how or why he arrived. 

In this "back to front" story, Cornell races his fading mind to save the day - but which will win?

Cornell Dyer and the Eerie Lake

A cry for help. A glowing green ball. An old tired town with a mysterious old dump. A tale of heartbreak. Before supernatural super sleuth Cornell Dyer can figure out the questions, one man disappears and another dies. 

To find the answers, Cornell must cross the lake - but all who tried never came back. Will Cornell survive and solve the mystery?

Cornell Dyer and the Never Robbers

 After a band of robbers steal the motor home of supernatural super sleuth Cornell Dyer, time becomes strange and unpredictable. Events replay themselves with variations. Watches and light sources can’t be trusted. People disappear, and a man who claims to know everything suddenly appears. 

Cornell is certain soot, a tire swing, and his first unsolved case are somehow connected. But will he solve the mystery before he fades from memory?

Cornell Dyer and the Flu

It’s Christmas Eve and a very sick Cornell Dyer is stuck in the hospital, frustrated because he can’t find the vending machine and because he’s too sick to solve his latest supernatural mystery. 

Another patient tries to help Cornell, not with food and medicine, but with a journey into realms Cornell doesn’t want to go.

Cornell Dyer and the Whispering Wardrobe

While investigating a home with mysterious whispers, supernatural super sleuth Cornell Dyer stumbles upon its source: an antique wardrobe in a room all by itself. But when Cornell steps inside, he discovers the wardrobe is more than a wardrobe and a whisper is more than a whisper. 

Even if Cornell solves the mystery, will he ever go home?

Cornell Dyer and the Old Folks Home

Cornell Dyer needs a break from solving supernatural mysteries. So he heads to Paradise Falls for a well-deserved vacation at a beach resort, where he meets another sleuth as skilled as he. But dark secrets can lurk even in a sunny paradise, secrets the tanned and energetic natives don’t want him to know. 

It takes two to solve the mystery – but will the sleuthing team live that long?

Cornell Dyer and the "Mistical" Being

When asked to banish ghosts in a backyard lake, supernatural super sleuth Cornell Dyer encounters one mystery after another: a ghostly mist with eyes, a ghost town, and a town that keeps changing its name. 

Delving into each one will change Cornell's life. Is he ready?

Cornell Dyer and the Calcium Deficient Bones

When supernatural super sleuth Cornell Dyer finds himself between sleuthing jobs, he fills the time by teaching science while the real teacher is ill. But in a school that’s supposedly getting remodeled, Cornell encounters one mystery after another: vanishing classroom skeletons, plants that come and go, and a piano for every student. 

Cornell is certain his classroom holds the answer – and that he is one of the clues.

Cornell Dyer and the Howls of Basketville

Howls. Shadows. Disappearances.

Something is roaming the run-down town of Basketville, Michigan, and Detective Sherman Homes is struggling to connect the dots. So he asks supernatural super sleuth Cornell Dyer for help - but the mystery bites back. 

Brains or beast: which will win?

Cornell Dyer and the House of Horreur (Available late 2025 or early 2026.


Bertrand the Mouse

Have you met Bertrand the Mouse? He’s always on the go and happy to lend a helping…paw…to bring the joys of reading to children.

Bertrand first appeared in the BryonySeries in "Staked!" as part mouse and part red herring. His entire mission is to make books approachable and fun for children (and the young at heart).

Bertrand and the Lucky Clover

Bertrand is tired of fighting for his share of cheese. But when Frances, a very wise cat, offers a solution, Bertrand's luck begins to change.

Bertrand's First Book of Numbers

In this first book of counting and addition, Bertrand shows the joy of playing with numbers. And when he runs out of items to count, he turns to the reader for help.

Bertrand Gives Back

Bertrand puts the "fun" in fundraising by showing young readers the different roles they can play in working for a good cause.

Bertrand's Silly ABC Book

Learn the ABCs with Bertrand the Mouse. Bertrand poses with examples of each letter in this rhyming alphabet story.

Bertrand Spends the Night 

Some children enjoy spending the night at a friend's house. Some are still uncertain about leaving home. Either way, they can experience the joys of a sleepover when they "stay overnight" with Bertrand and his best friend.

Bertrand's First Book of Adventures 1


What do adventures look like for a crocheted mouse? Take a pictorial journey with Bertrand in his first compilation of experiences and see.


Bertrand's Second Book of Adventures 2

What do adventures look like for a crocheted mouse? Take a pictorial journey with Bertrand in his second compilation of experiences and see.

Bertrand's Day at the Lake


Bertrand can't wait to spend a day at the lake. He learns that safety comes first and that water fun has hidden treasures.

Bertrand Faces His Fear


Bertrand was enjoying fall until he saw a scary Halloween decoration. But with Uncle Barty’s help, Bertrand confronted his fear and found the fun in the holiday.


Bertrand and the Christmas Surprise 


It's Bertrand's first Christmas, and he can't wait to meet Santa. But instead of the man in the red suit, Bertrand comes face to face with a bit of Christmas magic.

Bertrand and the Hunt for the Great Golden Egg of Cheese 

One night, Bertrand dreamed the Easter rabbit left a golden egg in the grass, just for Bertrand. He woke up that morning wondering if it were true. So he decided to find out for himself.

Bertrand's Shakespeare ABCs 

Learn the ABCs of Shakespeare with Bertrand the Mouse. Bertrand sets the stage to understanding Shakespeare by posing in scenes that correlates with alphabetically arranged elements of the works of William Shakespeare.

Squeak: Twelve mouse-themed recipes


By Rebekah Baran


Wash your hands, put on your apron, and join Bertrand the Mouse in preparing twelve recipes that will delight humans and crocheted mice alike. Recipes either feature cheese or mouse shapes. Cooking safety tips are included.



In conclusion, here is a reference book to the entire BryonySeries.

Welcome to Munsonville: The People, Places, and Things of the BryonySeries

Welcome to Munsonville: The People, Places, and Things of the BryonySeries is a guide to the entire series as of 2023. Its pages contain, in alphabetical order, hundreds of references for the people, places, and things that appear in the first phantasmic series of titles for all ages. 

Enjoy the journey!



Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Building the BryonySeries World

For those who are new to this blog, I posted my first blog post on August 1, 2010, and have blogged nearly daily ever since.

And while I've (overall) shared posts on the topics I listed on that first blog, I recently realized I've moved away from sharing much about the actual substance, crafting, and content of my books.

I'm hoping to reverse that on Tuesdays going forward (I hope).

So while I'm working on some of those said blogs, here are twenty-one posts from the first five months of the BryonySeries blog, back when we started it in 2010, more than a year before we published the first book.

Most of the posts are very brief - a couple of paragraphs at best. But they provide a nice glimpse into the building blocks of the BryonySeries world.

Happy reading!


That Lightning Bolt Moment

The Research Into Bryony

What is "Bryony?"

Woods, Water & Michigan, Part 1

Why a Bryony Cookbook

Some Traditional Vampire Lore

Woods, Water & Michigan, Part 2

Leeches 101

Woods, Water & Michigan, Part 3

A Peek Inside the Bryony Cookbook

Why Vampires

De-Romanticizing Vampires

Vampire Bat Facts

Teen Vampire Readings

Strange Foods

Someone Finally Asked It

How the Real Ed Calkins Became a Fictional Vampire

The Language of Fans

Snowbell

Jack the Cleaning Man

Storytelling and Storehouses of Memories