Bernadette Calonego's Blog: Eventful - Posts Tagged "cold"
Cries from the Cold

There are still ice floes in the bay and heaps of snow everywhere but luckily I don`t need any crampons and long johns anymore.
When one is shedding something, one must feel lighter, I suppose. I think I'm shedding books (smile). I'm in the process of publishing a German mystery novel and an English title: "Cries from the Cold". The latter is a crime thriller set on the wild coast of Labrador, with RCMP detective Calista Gates as the main character. It is the first book of a series, my first series, by the way. "Cries from the Cold" can be pre-ordered now on Amazon, the paperback will be out in approximately three weeks, the e-book on June 25.
You probably assume that I'm fascinated by cold regions, and you are right. I've never been a person who can stand searing heat. I would probably be a good candidate for a heat stroke in that kind of temperatures. I just spent my first entire winter in Northern Newfoundland but it turned out to be an exceptionally mild winter for this area. I've come to realize that the crucial thing is to dress appropriately. Even a face covering, if necessary.
I've just read the mesmerizing book "Ghost of Everest", about a search expedition in 1999 that found the body of famous climber George Mallory who died in 1924 on the highest mountain on earth. Mallory had none of the modern clothing that today's mountaineers have. Just silk underwear and layers of sweaters made of wool, jackets made of canvas, simple leather boots and a pilot hat for his head. It is hard to imagine how Mallory could venture like this into the Death Zone on Everest. But he did.
I like to be adventurous, too, but with a calculated risk. The heroine of my latest book "Cries from the Cold", Calista Gates, cannot afford that luxury. She is thrown into the brutal Labrador winter without any ropes or guard rails.
Would you like to find out how she was doing?
Three more weeks to go!
After the Thaw
My latest author letter starts with this paragraph: " I remember a great short story that I read many years ago. This is a short summary: A murderer escapes a prison and the people in the entire region are in panic because of it. All of a sudden, there is a string of break-ins, and soon dead bodies are found. Victims of the murderer, it seems. There is no trace of the fugitive, however. He remains elusive. Winter comes and goes. As the snow melts, another dead person is found: It is the killer`s body. It turns out that the other murders were committed long after the escaped prisoner had frozen to death. The allegedly oh so innocent people in the area had exploited the situation in order to commit crimes that would be attributed to the murderer. A ingenious story."
Every month, I send out an author letter (for which you can sign up on the homepage of my website www.bernadettecalonego.com) with news that I normally don't share anywhere else. You get more than one glimpse of my life in a tiny fishing village on the northern tip of the island of Newfoundland.
The snow has disappeared now, but I haven't discovered any bodies like in the short story above. They are entirely on the pages of my mystery novels. But on the beaches, there are carcasses of seals that were crushed between the ice pans of the pack ice. Nature is not always benevolent. Nor are the humans.
In this rural, rugged existence of mine in an isolated, mostly COVID-free environment, everything is reduced to the essentials. With so few distractions and stimuli, I can concentrate on my writing - and publishing: My mystery thriller “Cries from the Cold” is almost ready to launch in the paperback version. Publication will be before the end of May. I’m so excited! You can also preorder the e-book that will be out June 25. It is the first case for detective sergeant Calista Gates. A German reader wrote to me: “I like Calista Gates, she is tenacious but very good at handling people and she also has a vulnerable side to her. I hope you keep her as a character in your next book.” I do, and now I have a Calista-Gates series! I hope to have the second book translated soon.
Four days ago, I discovered the first flowers under
the snow-free bleached old grass. My life is complete!
Every month, I send out an author letter (for which you can sign up on the homepage of my website www.bernadettecalonego.com) with news that I normally don't share anywhere else. You get more than one glimpse of my life in a tiny fishing village on the northern tip of the island of Newfoundland.
The snow has disappeared now, but I haven't discovered any bodies like in the short story above. They are entirely on the pages of my mystery novels. But on the beaches, there are carcasses of seals that were crushed between the ice pans of the pack ice. Nature is not always benevolent. Nor are the humans.
In this rural, rugged existence of mine in an isolated, mostly COVID-free environment, everything is reduced to the essentials. With so few distractions and stimuli, I can concentrate on my writing - and publishing: My mystery thriller “Cries from the Cold” is almost ready to launch in the paperback version. Publication will be before the end of May. I’m so excited! You can also preorder the e-book that will be out June 25. It is the first case for detective sergeant Calista Gates. A German reader wrote to me: “I like Calista Gates, she is tenacious but very good at handling people and she also has a vulnerable side to her. I hope you keep her as a character in your next book.” I do, and now I have a Calista-Gates series! I hope to have the second book translated soon.
Four days ago, I discovered the first flowers under

Published on May 08, 2021 06:53
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Tags:
author-letternew-release, canada, cold, female-detective, ice, mystery, new, newfoundland, remote, rugged, suspense, thriller
My Headstrong Heroine

I live now with a roommate in our house. Her name is Calista Gates and she is the detective in my new mystery thriller series. I spend many hours with her, think about her, write about her, put her in place, let her move around, ask her what she wants to do. A very interesting roommate with strong views and a big heart. But she doesn’t always want to be the good cop. She is quite headstrong and wants room to develop new character traits. I’m very fond of her, and so are many readers. Which makes me happy.
I hesitated a long time to write a series with a female detective although I really wanted to. But I knew that my heroine had to be really captivating, likable, irresistible. Only if I was able to create a really convincing strong lead, my series could take off. I took the plunge, and Calista Gates was born. Will she win the hearts of my readers? Now that the series is a success in Germany and the first English translation has been published (title: "Cries from the Cold"), I am happy to see that she conquers the imagination of people.
I am not like Calista, in case you wondered. But we share one experience: culture shock.
I thought it would be interesting to send a big-city detective to a God-forsaken fishing village in Labrador in the middle of a bone-chilling winter. I can relate to the challenges she faces because of my own experiences in Newfoundland.
The dynamics in these insular settlements are very interesting. People live in each other's pockets, however a lot of things are swept under the carpet. They can resurface when it is least expected, and not always in a good way.
So whenever Calista Gates misses Vancouver and her family there, I take her into my bright, airy room at the back of the house and cuddle her. After some loving care, she is ready to take on a new murder case and a another fight for justice. Don`t we just love her?
CRIES FROM THE COLD
Published on June 23, 2021 04:24
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Tags:
bernadette-calonego, calista-gates, canada, coast, cold, female-detective, ice, isoltated, murder, mystery, secrets, small-town, thriller, winter
Put into perspective
In British Columbia where I spend part of the year (usually the winter), forest fires are raging and there is no end in sight. I am in Newfoundland still, watching the catastrophe from afar. Sometimes I remember the summers on the Pacific coast with awe. Swimming in the ocean, being able to wear light summer dresses, sitting in the garden, drinking iced coffee early in the morning, sleeping in the shade of tall trees.
But right now, I wouldn't want to be there. I used to complain about the short summers in Newfoundland on Canada's east coast. But I have turned into a fan. Yes, it is true, the ocean is way too cold for swimming in most places, and the lakes, too. But the beaches are so pristine and unspoiled. The water is crystal clear and the nicest spots are for me to take, with hardly any people.
Yes, it is often windy (just like now) and I have to wear hats which make everyday a bad-hair-day. It is impossible to read a book sitting outside. But the wind keeps the mosquitos away and cools me down on hot days. I think in Newfoundland, I have become a cold-weather person. I cannot stand the heat anymore.
Recently, I made a joke about my latest crime novel "Cries from the Cold": No cries right now, it is not cold, it is hot here. A friend from British Columbia asked: What do you call hot in Newfoundland? I said: wearing an undershirt in the house and having warm nights.
I know it doesn't sound like much but it's perfectly fine for me.
I will remember it when the first blizzard hits the Newfoundland coast in a few months.
CRIES FROM THE COLD: A bone-chilling mystery thriller.
But right now, I wouldn't want to be there. I used to complain about the short summers in Newfoundland on Canada's east coast. But I have turned into a fan. Yes, it is true, the ocean is way too cold for swimming in most places, and the lakes, too. But the beaches are so pristine and unspoiled. The water is crystal clear and the nicest spots are for me to take, with hardly any people.
Yes, it is often windy (just like now) and I have to wear hats which make everyday a bad-hair-day. It is impossible to read a book sitting outside. But the wind keeps the mosquitos away and cools me down on hot days. I think in Newfoundland, I have become a cold-weather person. I cannot stand the heat anymore.
Recently, I made a joke about my latest crime novel "Cries from the Cold": No cries right now, it is not cold, it is hot here. A friend from British Columbia asked: What do you call hot in Newfoundland? I said: wearing an undershirt in the house and having warm nights.
I know it doesn't sound like much but it's perfectly fine for me.
I will remember it when the first blizzard hits the Newfoundland coast in a few months.
CRIES FROM THE COLD: A bone-chilling mystery thriller.
Published on August 09, 2021 14:53
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Tags:
canada, cold, extreme-weather, newfoundland, pristine, wind
Snowbird
I don`t really see myself as one of the people who flee the Canadian cold and overwinter in places like Florida. But as a matter of fact, I am one of the so-called "snowbirds".
I spent the winter in the mild climate of the Sunshine Coast in British Columbia and I'm glad I did. The snowstorms in northern Newfoundland were relentless and frequent while I was away. Now that I'm back, there is still pack ice in the bay and huge piles of snow everywhere.
This is nevertheless the place I want to be now. Driving up from the airport in Deer Lake, I saw caribou and moose. And I stopped to take a video of the raging ocean which fascinates me endlessly. I almost froze my fingers doing it.
Today the sun is out. The locals haven`t seen it for the entire month of April. I have started to walk the neighbours' dog again and I take care of our foster cat. Covid has spread in the area which makes it difficult to meet people.
I've already encountered the first tourist, though. She asked me when the ice will be melted in the bay. I don't really know. Chances are that the wind will drive the floes out onto the North Atlantic before it melts.
During the winter months, I missed several polar bears wandering through the coastal communities. One of them climbed on a roof and when the lady in the house opened the door, there it was, in all its glory. She quickly shut the door! Her neighbour's surveillance camera caught it all on film.
There are snowbirds in the yard, too, and it is not me. When these birds turn up in northern Newfoundland, it is a sure sign of spring. I should know by now that spring looks very different here from anywhere else. This is one of the reasons why I`m happy to have arrived. It's an adventure!
Bernadette Calonego
I spent the winter in the mild climate of the Sunshine Coast in British Columbia and I'm glad I did. The snowstorms in northern Newfoundland were relentless and frequent while I was away. Now that I'm back, there is still pack ice in the bay and huge piles of snow everywhere.
This is nevertheless the place I want to be now. Driving up from the airport in Deer Lake, I saw caribou and moose. And I stopped to take a video of the raging ocean which fascinates me endlessly. I almost froze my fingers doing it.
Today the sun is out. The locals haven`t seen it for the entire month of April. I have started to walk the neighbours' dog again and I take care of our foster cat. Covid has spread in the area which makes it difficult to meet people.
I've already encountered the first tourist, though. She asked me when the ice will be melted in the bay. I don't really know. Chances are that the wind will drive the floes out onto the North Atlantic before it melts.
During the winter months, I missed several polar bears wandering through the coastal communities. One of them climbed on a roof and when the lady in the house opened the door, there it was, in all its glory. She quickly shut the door! Her neighbour's surveillance camera caught it all on film.
There are snowbirds in the yard, too, and it is not me. When these birds turn up in northern Newfoundland, it is a sure sign of spring. I should know by now that spring looks very different here from anywhere else. This is one of the reasons why I`m happy to have arrived. It's an adventure!

Bernadette Calonego
Published on May 04, 2022 06:15
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Tags:
cold, ice, newfoundland, north-atlantic, pack-ice, polar-bears, winter
Be careful out there!
If one, like me, lives close to the locations that appear in my crime novels, there is sometimes a strange overlap of reality and fiction.
If you have read my series, you know that my main character, Detective Sergeant Calista Gates, lives in St. Anthony, Newfoundland, in a house on a large, overgrown, former campsite. When I drove past it recently, the police were there and the ambulance drove past me. Later I learned that a woman had turned onto the main road from the entrance to the campsite and had overlooked an oncoming car.
She barely survived the collision. I saw a badly damaged pickup truck in the ditch. As soon as I recovered from the shock, I thought of Calista: I have to warn her to be careful when she turns from her property onto the road. Only after a few seconds did I remember that Calista doesn't live there in real life. That's how close you can be to the people you invent for a book.
Serious accidents always scare me. Recently, a fisherman's entire arm was ripped out when he operated a hydraulic winch for shrimp on a ship and the arm became entangled in a cable. The man was rescued by the Newfoundland Coast Guard, but the helicopter had to make a stopover in Gander so they could give the man blood transfusions. He almost bled to death during the transport. Life is dangerous, and not only in crime novels.
Bernadette Calonego
If you have read my series, you know that my main character, Detective Sergeant Calista Gates, lives in St. Anthony, Newfoundland, in a house on a large, overgrown, former campsite. When I drove past it recently, the police were there and the ambulance drove past me. Later I learned that a woman had turned onto the main road from the entrance to the campsite and had overlooked an oncoming car.
She barely survived the collision. I saw a badly damaged pickup truck in the ditch. As soon as I recovered from the shock, I thought of Calista: I have to warn her to be careful when she turns from her property onto the road. Only after a few seconds did I remember that Calista doesn't live there in real life. That's how close you can be to the people you invent for a book.
Serious accidents always scare me. Recently, a fisherman's entire arm was ripped out when he operated a hydraulic winch for shrimp on a ship and the arm became entangled in a cable. The man was rescued by the Newfoundland Coast Guard, but the helicopter had to make a stopover in Gander so they could give the man blood transfusions. He almost bled to death during the transport. Life is dangerous, and not only in crime novels.

Bernadette Calonego
Published on August 06, 2023 07:01
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Tags:
bay-of-evil, bernadette-calonego, canada, coast-guard, cold, dangerous, fisherman, mystery, newfoundland, winter
Shark!
Those who have read my mystery thriller "A Dark Chill" know that I have a soft spot for sharks because I think it is cruel to cut their fins off and let them die slowly in the water.
But I am very well aware that sharks are dangerous predators (they have an important role in the ocean's food chain). My fisherman had a scary encounter while he was jigging some cod in northern Newfoundland. Jigging means sinking a fish hook with the bait into the water while manually jiggling the fishing line up and down in order to attract the fish.
However, what my fisherman pulled to the boat was not only a cod but also a shark! The Poorbeagle shark had the cod with the fish hook in its mouth and didn't want to release it. So my fisherman had to get the fish hook from the cod and let both of them go. Since the shark kept its mouth closed, because it held the cod with it, it could not bite my fisherman. The very same day, however, a shark bit a fisherman in the arm in the exact same situation. The man had to be transported to the hospital.
Some other years, I've also been jigging cod, but I don't know how I would have reacted if a shark had wanted to take away my fish! I probably would have experienced more than "A Dark Chill"!
P.S. My new mystery thriller "Missing in the Dark" can be pre-ordered on Amazon for a really low price.
Bernadette Calonego
But I am very well aware that sharks are dangerous predators (they have an important role in the ocean's food chain). My fisherman had a scary encounter while he was jigging some cod in northern Newfoundland. Jigging means sinking a fish hook with the bait into the water while manually jiggling the fishing line up and down in order to attract the fish.
However, what my fisherman pulled to the boat was not only a cod but also a shark! The Poorbeagle shark had the cod with the fish hook in its mouth and didn't want to release it. So my fisherman had to get the fish hook from the cod and let both of them go. Since the shark kept its mouth closed, because it held the cod with it, it could not bite my fisherman. The very same day, however, a shark bit a fisherman in the arm in the exact same situation. The man had to be transported to the hospital.
Some other years, I've also been jigging cod, but I don't know how I would have reacted if a shark had wanted to take away my fish! I probably would have experienced more than "A Dark Chill"!
P.S. My new mystery thriller "Missing in the Dark" can be pre-ordered on Amazon for a really low price.

Bernadette Calonego
Published on September 23, 2023 04:45
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Tags:
canada, cold, fishing, mystery-thriller, newfoundland, northern, shark
Frozen
February, along with March, is the worst month when the snowstorms whip over Newfoundland and Labrador. Today is such a day, we expect 75 centimeters of snow. I can't see the other end of the bay in the white whirlwind.
So far, however, the winter has been manageable despite the cold. On the really bitterly cold days I wasn't outside at all.
I am lucky that right behind our house there is a hiking trail leading up a hill from which you have fantastic views. Up there, I can let the neighbors' dog, which I take for walks, run free. Maggie follows snow hares and mice and startles the hawk, which is also hunting.
The bays were not frozen over for a long time, and I asked my fisherman if there had been years without ice on the ocean near the settlements in northern Newfoundland (yes, there were, but rarely). Now the most daring among us are already driving their snowmobiles over the thick ice cover on the water. In some places, however, ice floes have piled up and besiege the shore like hungry crocodiles.
During an excursion in the snow, we made an interesting, albeit sad find: a dead whale was pushed to the shore. Some locals claim it is a sperm whale. I can't say for sure, because it would have been too dangerous to get any closer to the poor animal on the ice.
Instinctively, people turn to things that offer warmth, coziness and distraction. I bake Swiss apple pie with puff pastry, play cards with the neighbors, meet other women for a coffee chat, keep the wood fire burning in the oven, plan a vacation in warmer regions and read exciting books (biographies, adventure stories and crime novels). By the way, if you subscribe to "Bernadette's Letter" on the homepage of my website bernadettecalonego.com/eng, you will learn even more about my everyday life in northern Newfoundland. Lots of love from Noddy Bay!
So far, however, the winter has been manageable despite the cold. On the really bitterly cold days I wasn't outside at all.
I am lucky that right behind our house there is a hiking trail leading up a hill from which you have fantastic views. Up there, I can let the neighbors' dog, which I take for walks, run free. Maggie follows snow hares and mice and startles the hawk, which is also hunting.
The bays were not frozen over for a long time, and I asked my fisherman if there had been years without ice on the ocean near the settlements in northern Newfoundland (yes, there were, but rarely). Now the most daring among us are already driving their snowmobiles over the thick ice cover on the water. In some places, however, ice floes have piled up and besiege the shore like hungry crocodiles.
During an excursion in the snow, we made an interesting, albeit sad find: a dead whale was pushed to the shore. Some locals claim it is a sperm whale. I can't say for sure, because it would have been too dangerous to get any closer to the poor animal on the ice.
Instinctively, people turn to things that offer warmth, coziness and distraction. I bake Swiss apple pie with puff pastry, play cards with the neighbors, meet other women for a coffee chat, keep the wood fire burning in the oven, plan a vacation in warmer regions and read exciting books (biographies, adventure stories and crime novels). By the way, if you subscribe to "Bernadette's Letter" on the homepage of my website bernadettecalonego.com/eng, you will learn even more about my everyday life in northern Newfoundland. Lots of love from Noddy Bay!


Published on February 15, 2025 05:39
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Tags:
canada, cold, frozen, ice, ice-floes, newfoundland-snowstorms, snow, village-life, whale, winter
Eventful
Right now, I am multitasking, juggling several books at the same time, emerging from one, diving into another one.
My new mystery novel "Stormy Cove" is released on May 24. But another things is happe Right now, I am multitasking, juggling several books at the same time, emerging from one, diving into another one.
My new mystery novel "Stormy Cove" is released on May 24. But another things is happening: My next novel that is set in the Arctic is being edited. And I am already thinking of a future novel with cowboys, horses and a series of unexplained high-profile accidents/murders in it.
Sometimes, when people inquire about my books, I mix up my heroines`names or the locations or even the plot. That is what happens when you are pulled out of your quiet and solitary occupation of writing, and all of a sudden you find yourself out in the open, surrounded by people and bombarded by questions. But I enjoy that part, too, I really do. I just have to manage the transition.
What I am really looking forward to is the exchange with my readers. It is amazing what they come up with and what a particular book means to them and their lives.
All I can say: Bring it on. ...more
My new mystery novel "Stormy Cove" is released on May 24. But another things is happe Right now, I am multitasking, juggling several books at the same time, emerging from one, diving into another one.
My new mystery novel "Stormy Cove" is released on May 24. But another things is happening: My next novel that is set in the Arctic is being edited. And I am already thinking of a future novel with cowboys, horses and a series of unexplained high-profile accidents/murders in it.
Sometimes, when people inquire about my books, I mix up my heroines`names or the locations or even the plot. That is what happens when you are pulled out of your quiet and solitary occupation of writing, and all of a sudden you find yourself out in the open, surrounded by people and bombarded by questions. But I enjoy that part, too, I really do. I just have to manage the transition.
What I am really looking forward to is the exchange with my readers. It is amazing what they come up with and what a particular book means to them and their lives.
All I can say: Bring it on. ...more
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