Spotlight & Giveaway: Frightened to Depths by K.B. Jackson

Posted January 22nd, 2025 by in Blog, Spotlight / 1 comment

Today it is my pleasure to Welcome author K.B. Jackson to HJ!
Spotlight&Giveaway

Hi K.B. Jackson and welcome to HJ! We’re so excited to chat with you about your new release, Frightened to Depths!

 

To start off, can you please tell us a little bit about this book?:

In book three of the Cruising Sisters mystery series, “Frightened to Depths,”
Charlotte is facing the one year anniversary of her husband’s death and the
revelations of his double life. For the past several months, she and her sister Jane
have been living full time and sailing the world on the luxury cruise ship where
he’d purchased a love nest for his mistress and their son.
The ship picks up a handful of new passengers while docked in New Orleans:
Jane’s old college professor, an odd duck writing a book about Louisiana folklore
(particularly the Rougarou, aka werewolf), along with legendary trumpet player
Alexander St. Jacques and his former bandmates that he ditched for stardom.
When Alexander is silenced by a silver bullet to the heart under a full Halloween
moon, there is no shortage of suspects.
 

Please share your favorite lines or quote(s) from this book:

It was an odd-looking mob: An eighty-year-old balding Dracula whose
natural hairline couldn’t support the iconic widow’s peak and thus had
crudely drawn it on with a Sharpie, an off-brand baby Yoda, Joe, the guy from
Tiger King, and three iterations of Lucys, a.k.a. Lucille Ball.

“No more murder investigating. Weren’t those your exact words?”
“That was land Jane. Land Jane forgot what it was like to be stuck on a
floating crime scene in the middle of the ocean.”

 

What inspired this book?

A friend of mine lived for a time on a cruise ship, playing trombone in the band.
He told me all sorts of wild stories about his time aboard, including how he met
his wife, a hairdresser on the ship from Denmark. When I got to book three, I
knew it was time to kill him off, and what better place for a jazz musician to be
setting sail from, but New Orleans?

 

How did you ‘get to know’ your main characters? Did they ever surprise you?

Charlotte and Jane were inspired by my grandmother Charlotte and her sister
Jane. I always loved their relationship. They made each other laugh, and they
were always there for each other. In fact, when their husbands retired, they bought
homes across the street from each other.
Charlotte (my protagonist, not my grandmother) lost her husband just prior to the
start of book one, Until Depths Do Us Part. That story was inspired by a real story
of someone I knew about twenty years ago. As Charlotte began to deal with her
grief, however, I found that her experience was her own. I learned about how she
could have not seen the signs of her husband’s betrayal, and how easy it can be to

go through the motions in your own life. As a woman in my early fifties living my
second act (I was a stay at home mom for nearly thirty years) I have been inspired
by Char’s desire to reconnect with herself and truly be the protagonist in her own
life rather than a bystander.

 

What was your favorite scene to write?

Something he’d said finally registered. “Did you say silver bullet?”
“Do not answer that.” Xavier stood in the doorway holding two paper
coffee cups.
“Hey, boss man. Thanks for the coffee.”
Xavier set one of the cups on Lonnie’s desk. He gave him a pointed
look. “Irving, how many times do I have to tell you not to share details of our
investigations with passengers?”
Lonnie nodded somberly. “I figured since it was Charlotte—”
“Especially Madame McLaughlin.” He side-eyed me. “Follow me.”
As he led me back to his private office, which was much less utilitarian
than the lobby, I noticed a barely perceptible shake of his head.
He was already exasperated with me, and I hadn’t even asked him a
single question.
“No coffee for me?”
“I did not know you were coming.”
“Well, we both know that’s a lie.” I plopped myself in a leather chair.
A slight smile twitched at the corner of his mouth as he sat at his desk.
“This is becoming a habit for you.”
“Barging into your office demanding information?”
“Finding corpses.”
A shiver ran down my spine. It was true, although I didn’t like to think
about it that way. “I always wondered how law enforcement handled seeing
so many tragic sights. I think I’ve begun to understand it.”
“What have you determined?”
“Compartmentalization.”
He tented his fingers. “This is quite perceptive. Intuitive. Of course,
you have already proven yourself to be so.”
“A compliment. I’ll take it.”
“However.” He exhaled and shifted in his chair.
“Here it comes.”
“You are not on my investigative team. You are a passenger on this
ship. You are a customer, not an employee. You are neither trained nor are
you licensed in any way to be involved.”
“So you’re saying I should go through P.I. training?”
“What? No, that is not what I am saying in any way.”
I sat back and gave him my sternest look. “When are you going to
come to terms with the fact that I’m an asset to you?”
My words must have caught him off guard, because he seemed to
struggle for a response.
“How about this. A compromise. Most of the time I’m just one of the
pampered passengers. I stay out of your hair. But when and if there’s a major
incident—such as a werewolf shot dead with a silver bullet under the light of
a full Halloween moon—perhaps you can deputize me for the duration of the
investigation or until we reach our next port of call.”
He opened his mouth to speak but I preempted his rejection.
“That way we don’t have to waste precious time doing this dance of
you pretending you don’t want my help and me pretending I’m not snooping
around where I’m not supposed to be.”

 

What was the most difficult scene to write?

(Mostly because it represents both endings and new beginnings. I sobbed
through the whole scene as I wrote it)

We stared silently as the sky began to illuminate with pink and orange. The
sun’s orb began as a tiny sliver and grew until it floated on top of the water’s surface
like a fireball bobbling in the ocean.
“The sun himself is weak when he first rises and gathers strength and courage
as the day gets on.”
I turned to face him. “Who said that?”
“Charles Dickens. The Old Curiosity Shop.”
“That story doesn’t exactly have a happy ending.”
“Endings—both happy and unhappy—are made in how we interpret the
events of our lives.”
“Another Dickens quote?”
“Mesnier.” He grinned. “My father. Heavily influenced by Aristotle.”
“It rings true.”
He scanned my face. “Are you happy?”
“What’s that other quote about happy endings and if you’re not happy, it’s
not the end?”
He gave a bemused smile. “I do not know this one.”
I slapped my palm on the railing. “I know what it is. Everything will be okay in
the end, and if it’s not okay, then it’s not the end.”
“Hmm. I suppose that could be true.”
I turned back toward the sunrise. “It has to be.”
“What was that? I could not catch your words in the wind.”
I shook my head. “Nothing.”

 

Would you say this book showcases your writing style or is it a departure for you?

I always try to incorporate humor, mystery, and romance, but I feel this book
allowed me to go a little deeper into the concept of grief.

 

What do you want people to take away from reading this book?

I just hope they have a really great time and close it with a smile on their faces.

 

What are you currently working on? What other releases do you have planned?

I’m currently working on a brand new project inspired by a real life missing
person case. I also have been asked to submit a yacht rock themed short story for
an anthology that will be releasing in 2026.
Book 3 in my Chattertowne Secrets series, “Secrets Will Link” releases in July
and my fourth middle grade (kids) book in the Agatha Award-winning Sasquatch
Hunters series, “The Sasquatch of Hurricane Ridge” will release in the fall.

 

Thanks for blogging at HJ!

 

Giveaway: Winner will receive An ebook copy of FRIGHTENED TO DEPTHS + one additional Tule ebook of the winner’s choice

 

To enter Giveaway: Please complete the Rafflecopter form and Post a comment to this Q: What is the number one place on your travel bucket list? Why do you want to visit?

 
a Rafflecopter giveaway

 
 

Excerpt from Frightened to Depths:

Chapter One

I spotted the lifeless figure as soon as I rounded the corner.

“Over here!” I called to whomever could hear me above the roar of the ship’s engines.

I rushed toward him, crouching to get a closer look.

Oh no. No!

A memory flashed of Jane and I dancing to his music in my bridal suite as I attempted to shake off my nerves hours before my wedding.

Music that was now forever silenced.

My heartbeat pounded in my ears as I stared into his dark, unblinking eyes, frozen in a state of fright. The only movement I detected came from the whiskers cloaking his face, ruffled by the brisk sea air.

I collapsed onto the ship’s deck. My foot kicked a small object. It clanked and rolled a few inches from me. As the full moon emerged from behind the clouds, its glow reflected off the item, a piece of silvery metal lying on the ground beside his limp hirsute hand.

It was a bullet casing. Etched on the side in an old-fashioned scroll font was one word: ROUGAROU.

48 Hours Earlier

“Isn’t this nice?” my sister Jane asked as we walked past Jackson Square in the heart of the French Quarter.

Jane and I were back in New Orleans following a quick jaunt to Baton Rouge for the Louisiana Book Festival. We had one last night in the Big Easy before our residential cruise ship—the Thalassophile of the Seas—set sail again. Next stop: Port-au-Prince.

“Isn’t what nice? Do you mean the city?” I juggled a garment bag containing a formal ballgown in one hand with a pastry and a large chicory latte in the other.

“That, but also, isn’t it nice to be off the ship?” Jane had her own dress slung over her shoulder like a sack of flour.

“Are you already tired of a life at sea?”

“Not at all. It’s just a nice change of pace to be on terra firma for a few days. And of course, no murder.”

I laughed. “I watched the news last night. New Orleans isn’t exactly what I’d call murder free.”

“Sure, but we aren’t in the middle of those cases trying to solve them. Promise me, Char. No more murder investigations.”

I crooked my head to look at her. “You’ve got something on your face.”

Jane brushed her fingers across her mouth. “Powdered sugar is the glitter of the dessert world. One tiny bag of beignets has enough powdered sugar at the bottom to cover the surface of the earth, with enough left over to coat the moon as well.”

If she were being honest with herself, the bag of deep-fried donuts from Café Du Monde in the center of the French Market was far from tiny, and three full-sized beignets weren’t exactly what I’d call a light snack, especially at nine in the morning.

The bottom of the bag held more superfluous sugar than I’d used in a decade; I’d give her that. As a matter of fact, I had a box of powdered sugar on my pantry shelf left over from the great panic buying of Y2K.

“Don’t change the subject.” Jane wagged her index finger and then held up her pinkie. “Promise me.”

How binding was a pinkie promise? “I’d rather not.”

“Charlotte.” She jabbed her pinkie at me.

“Fine. I promise.” I linked my right little finger with hers.

After all, I’d never seen an episode of Judge Judy where the defendant was held to a pinkie promise.

“Char—”

“I said I promise.”

“Not that. I just wanted to check in with you. You just passed a major milestone, and we didn’t even talk about it.”

“Milestone?”

“Charlotte.” She looked down her nose at me.

My attempt at obtuse hadn’t fooled my sister. She knew me too well.

She meant my husband Gabe’s death, of course. The one-year anniversary. It wasn’t that I hadn’t remembered. I hadn’t known what to do with it.

How did one commemorate such a significant, yet complicated, loss?

Kyrie Dawn had put together a makeshift memorial service in the Azure Lounge. She claimed it was important for Quinton to honor his father’s memory, despite the fact he was only a toddler. I’d come down with a convenient migraine that day, but Jane had gone in my place and reported back to me.

The program had started with a short slideshow of photos set to their song, “Saving All My Love” by Whitney Houston—because, of course it was—but Kyrie Dawn only had the ones taken since she’d met Gabe, and I’d declined to submit any.

Between ten and fifteen people had shown to pay their respects. They’d known Gabe from the many sailings he and Kyrie Dawn had made in their love nest at sea. Most of those people hadn’t even known he had a wife until he died.

Of course, I’d only learned about the existence of Gabe’s longtime mistress and their son the same day two uniformed officers had shown up on my doorstep to tell me his car had hit a pole following a fatal heart attack.

So, yeah, it was complicated.

Despite the shock of his death, the revelations that he’d been keeping all sorts of things from me, and the added bonus of humiliation over his betrayal, I’d waded through the year of firsts like the stalwart I always tried to be. I’d braced myself against each wave. Thanksgiving had been spent consoling our nephew Andy following the death of his fiancée on their wedding cruise. On Christmas morning, Jane and I had assisted in serving more than eight hundred of Seattle’s less fortunate with an organization called Cozy Connections. On Gabe’s birthday, Jane had booked us a full day at the spa. Our anniversary required a bit more alcohol and chocolate, but I’d been prepared.

There was something different about crossing that threshold into year two that I couldn’t quite reconcile.

“Have you thought about therapy?” Jane asked.

“I talked to someone.”

“I mean ongoing.”

“I have you for that.”

“Char, I can’t be responsible for your mental—”

“Of course, I don’t expect you to be. I’m fine, Jane. Really. Good, even. Now, here’s the plan. We do brunch at Brennan’s, dinner at Commander’s Palace, and finish off with drinks and jazz someplace.”

“We can put a pin in that conversation, but you need to talk about it, preferably to a professional.”

I gave a noncommittal murmur. If I started honestly dealing with my feelings about the situation, there was a good chance I’d drown under them.

Jane sighed and shook her head. “So, your plan is to roll ourselves back up the gangplank tomorrow because we’ll have eaten our way across this entire city?”

I smiled at her, relieved she wasn’t pressing the issue further. “Exactly.”

We turned into Pirate Alley at Royal Street. Navigating the cobblestone in my heeled boots proved challenging. The cast iron lampposts that bordered each side of the path were unlit, and although the sun was attempting to peek through the clouds, the alley itself was appropriately shaded for its reputation as a haunted playground for the wandering spirits of pirates, novelists, priests, and prisoners.

Rumored to have once been the stomping grounds for pirate Jean Lafitte and his cohorts from the marshy islands of Barataria Bay, Pirate Alley was now a prominent stop on any New Orleans ghost tour.

“I read in the guidebook that the ghost of William Faulkner is purported to haunt this alley.” Jane shivered for dramatic effect. “That’s almost scarier than running into the ghost of a pirate.”

“Your disdain for him is as legendary as it is inexplicable.” I nodded at a cream-colored building with baby blue doors ahead of us. “Speak of the devil.” A small blue-and-gold sign hung above the doorway. FAULKNER HOUSE BOOKS. “Wanna peek inside?”

Jane brushed powdered sugar from her navy-blue sweater. “Not if it’s only Faulkner.”

“I believe they have rare and collectible books as well. Perhaps we’ll see the ghost of old Billy-boy writing at his desk, and you can tell him why you despise his work so much.”

“I’m always down for that.”

As we entered the store, a young woman greeted us from the counter in the back, which was lighter and brighter than I’d expected for a seller of antiquated books. Usually, those shops smelled like mildew and soot and were dimly lit by incandescent bulbs dating back to the time of Edison flickering their archaic filament’s grand finale. This place had fresh paint, polished chandeliers, and gorgeous woodwork.

It was narrow, but meticulously organized shelves reached all the way to the tall ceiling.

I deeply inhaled the scent of my first love: books. “Do you miss it?”

“Do I miss what?” Jane shoved the beignet-less bag into her purse. She caught me staring at her, and she grimaced with embarrassment. “You never know when a spare cup of powdered sugar might come in handy.”

“You mean like pocket sand, but instead it’s purse sugar?”

She gave a bewildered smile. “What? What does that even mean?”

“You know, like in those old martial arts movies, where they’d keep a handful of sand in their pocket in case they needed to throw it in the eyes of their adversaries for a quick getaway.”

“Not a bad idea. I can think of a couple times recently when that would have come in handy. Now what were you asking? Do I miss what?”

“Do you miss the library? The book world? The creak of a hardcover upon its inaugural opening?” I added that last part because I knew it would bug her to no end.

Her horrified expression was comical. “What kind of monster cracks the spine of a book?”

I was that kind of monster. “Tell me again why you can’t stand Faulkner.”

Jane glanced at the woman behind the counter. “Shh. You can’t disparage Faulkner in front of Faulknerites. They’re rabid in their devotion to him, although I can’t imagine why.”

A man in a tan trench coat and a fedora entered the shop, his head down. He hustled back to the clerk. “Bon matin, Angelique. How are you today?”

“Fine as always. I was wondering if I’d see you today. The month is coming to an end and I’ve only seen you twice.”

“I’ve been fully engrossed in a project, and this is the first I’ve poked my head out of my office in days.”

“Sounds fascinating. How can I help?”

“I’m looking for folklore stories about the Rougarou.”

I jerked my thumb toward the counter. “She’s otherwise occupied. You’re fine. Tell me where this abject hatred of one of America’s most significant writers of all time originated.”

“I had a professor at UDub who was obsessed with Faulkner, and I was obsessed with the professor, so I read everything I could get my hands on. I didn’t get it. I thought I must have accidentally picked up the works of some other guy named William Faulkner. But no, it was him, and it was nothing special. I just think he’s overrated. Have you read Spotted Horses? There’s literally no arc to the story. It’s just a bunch of guys at a horse auction. Nothing happens.”

“The Sound and the Fury is an important novel. You have to admit that.”

“I do not. Reading that book reminded me of what happens when parents feed ice cream to their preschoolers before coming to story time at the library. A blathering of nonsense with zero pauses to take breaths, along with a meandering plot.” She wandered over to one of the mahogany shelves and ran her finger across the broken spines of several classics. “This is a tragedy.”

“They’re just well-loved, that’s all. The way books are supposed to be.”

She snorted her derision. “Blasphemy.”

“By the way, what was that professor’s name? You’ve never mentioned him. I wonder if I ever had him.”

She sighed the smiling sigh of a schoolgirl’s crush as she turned away from the bookshelf. “Emmett Guidr—oh my good gawd!” Her gaze widened.

I whipped my head around to see what she was gaping at.

“It’s him!”

“Who? Faulkner’s ghost?” I scanned the bookstore but saw no apparitions.

Jane knocked over a display of books, causing both the clerk and the man at the counter to look at her with alarm.

“I can’t believe it,” she whispered.

A flash of recognition crossed the man’s face.

Jane swayed. She placed one trembling hand on the display table for support.

“I can’t believe after all these years, it’s really him.”

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
 
 

Book Info:

Murder is never smooth sailing…

Charlotte McLaughlin assumes she’s finally shed all her tears on the first anniversary of her husband’s passing. After all, she’s living in his luxury suite on a private cruise ship, visiting exotic ports, and living her best life with her sister, Jane.

Certainly, she’s done with murder mysteries, too.

Then, while docked in New Orleans, Jane reunites with an old crush who—surprise!—joins their cruise. He’s an odd duck with an obsession to write a book about Louisiana werewolves, and it’s turning the sisters’ companionship into a snarling catfight. It’s almost a relief that Emmett is the prime suspect when a trumpet player booked as a headliner for this sailing is silenced forever by a silver bullet to the heart.

But the band members themselves also had plenty of reasons to seek their leader’s death, and Jane stands by her man, leaving Charlotte alone again. Is Charlotte merely hoping Emmett is the killer so she can hang on to her new normal—or should she risk a permanent rift by pursuing her hunch to protect Jane’s life?

Book Links: Amazon | B&N | iTunes | Kobo | Google |
 
 

Meet the Author:

Kate B Jackson (K.B. Jackson) is an author of mystery novels for grownups and mystery/adventure novels for kids. She lives in the Pacific NW with her husband and at least one of her four grown children at any given time. Her debut middle grade release is “The Sasquatch of Hawthorne Elementary” (Reycraft Books) about a twelve-year-old boy hired by the most popular girl at his new school to investigate what she saw in the nearby woods. Book one in the Chattertowne Mysteries series, “Secrets Don’t Sink,” (Level Best Books July 2023) introduces Audrey O’Connell, a small town feature reporter who, when her former boyfriend’s body is found floating in the local marina, uncovers the depths to which some will go to keep secrets submerged.
Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | GoodReads |

 

 

 

One Response to “Spotlight & Giveaway: Frightened to Depths by K.B. Jackson”

Please leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.