Wednesday, August 13, 2025

A Shell of a Lot of Fun by Molly MacRae

 

 

Retail Murder, the summer 2025 issue of Mystery Readers Journal, is out! The issue is packed with dozens of entertaining and informative articles and essays talking about mysteries of all kinds that involve retail in one way or another. Mystery Readers Journal is the quarterly thematic journal of Mystery Readers International, the largest mystery fan/reader organization in the world. The journal and the organization are the brainchildren of Janet A. Rudolph, a tireless supporter of the mystery community. My essay from the Retail Murder issue is shared here with permission.

 

A Shell of a Lot of Fun by Molly MacRae

 

Right off the bat I’ll agree that working retail can be hell. Batty, too. Been there, have wanted to run screaming from it. Luckily for me, I can pretend I remember more of the good times than the stressful or wretched. Or I’ll whitewash the stressful and wretched times with a coat of humor. Call me a shop half full kind of person rather than half empty. Call me opportunistic too, if you want. I treat my retail background as compost and happily shovel bits of it into my stories as they grow.

Like my mysteries, my experience in retail sits firmly at the cozy end of the spectrum. I landed my first retail job in 1970 at the Chalet Food Shop, owned and run by Chuck and Judy. Why “Chalet” in a small northern Illinois town surrounded by farms? Because Chuck’s sister painted a picture of a Swiss chalet on the shop’s wall clock. The Chalet was a deli/grocery smaller than the gas station convenience stores you find along interstates today. Chuck and Judy said they hired me because they’d see me pass by every day on my way home from school and they could tell how cold out it was by how red my nose was. When I applied for a job they said they felt like they already knew me.

Chuck and Judy were two of the hardest-working, most good-hearted people I’ve ever known. Stir those two good people together, in one of their large cooking pots, and you get café owner Mel Gresham in my Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries. Step into Mel’s café in Last Wool and Testament (or any of the books in the series) and you’ll smell the fresh cinnamon doughnuts Chuck made every morning, the slow-roasting beef Judy slipped into the oven, and the pot of bean soup simmering on the stove. You might meet a few of the Chalet’s more memorable customers, too.

The yarn shop in those books has a secondhand name—the Weaver’s Cat—borrowed from a small shop my parents had for a few years. The yarn shop is also based on a shop my grandmother had, from the late-30s through the early-50s, called the Little Wool Shop. I never saw Granny’s shop, so the Weaver’s Cat in the books is very loosely based on it. That’s part of the fun of writing. Some writers are into world-building. I go for shop-building and small town-building.

My favorite retail experience was managing a small independent bookstore in an old grocery store in northeastern Tennessee. The bookstore was owned by another hard-working, good-hearted couple named Gary and Marie. They believed in getting books into people’s hands, supporting local authors, and giving back to the community. People LOVED that place, appropriately enough named The Book Place. The day Gary and Marie made the hard decision to close the store was one of the saddest ever. It was two years after Amazon caught on with the public and at the same time that every single big box store moved to town—with their oodles of wares and deep discounts—and opened their doors in the weeks before Christmas. The Book Place hung on as long as it could but in the end the shiny, the new, the big, and the cheap won out. That was thirty-six years ago and I still hear from people who mourn The Book Place. I mourn it, too.

Spot the Dog (Molly) and a young reader coloring at The Book Place May 27, 1995

But that brings up another good thing about writing—it can soothe the mourning soul. Still missing The Book Place, I built a new town, put a thriving little bookshop in it, and let four women pool their money to buy the shop. The catch for the women? The bookshop is in a town on the west coast of Scotland and the women live in central Illinois so they’ll have to uproot their lives. But it’s Scotland! The Highlands! A bookshop! What could possibly go wrong with such an idyllic opportunity? Quite a lot, it turns out, including murder, but the women sort it all out in Plaid and Plagiarism, the first book in my Highland Bookshop Mystery series. That series is my way of returning to bookselling and to Scotland where I lived in the mid-70s.

My newest retail/writing adventure is the Haunted Shell Shop mysteries. These books are set on Ocracoke Island, a real place, one of the fragile Outer Banks barrier islands off the coast of North Carolina. Ocracoke is known for its pristine beaches, pirate history, wild ponies, historic lighthouse, the resilience of the people who live there, and the village dating back to the early 1700s. When we lived in Tennessee, my husband and I took our boys there every summer. We’d walk to the lighthouse, walk down our favorite street—single lane Howard Street paved only with sand and oyster shells—eat lunch at the Jolly Roger on the harbor, and always, always stop in the shell shop.

That shop is gone, but don’t worry. I’ve built a shell shop of my own, called the Moon Shell, and put it in an old Ocracoke house on Howard Street. Recent widow Maureen Nash owns the Moon Shell. She’s a storyteller and a malacologist—a scientist who studies shells and the creatures who make them. You can visit her and the shop in Come Shell or High Water and There’ll Be Shell to Pay. If you’re lucky, you’ll also meet Emrys Lloyd, gentleman, pirate, and ghost.


Real-life retail is hard work and, quite often, a heartache. Writers can make life a bit easier for their shopkeeper sleuths, but those sleuths do have real-world problems. They have bills, inventory issues, staffing problems, problematic customers, murder. And then there’s the sad fact that they can’t always drop everything and run after clues during business hours. A writer’s workaround for that problem is to give the sleuths sidekicks of one sort or another. Ghosts, for instance. It turns out that ghosts aren’t all that different from the other characters in a book. They just happen to be dead (which has its own set of problems).

I like small things. I’m not all that big myself. And ever since learning about microcosms in a long-ago high school English class, I’ve liked them, too. Hearing the definition – a larger world or society illustrated in the form of a small world – flipped a light bulb on for me. That world-made-small construction is exactly what I love about stories and it’s probably why I gravitate toward mysteries in small towns with small shops. A shop, whether it’s selling books, sliced cheese, or seashells by the seashore, can give us the world in a compact package with all its friction, drama, failures, and triumphs. Throw in an unexplained death or two and retail mysteries can be a shell of a lot of fun.

 

The Boston Globe says Molly MacRae writes “murder with a dose of drollery.” She writes the award-winning, national bestselling Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries, the Haunted Shell Shop Mysteries, and the Highland Bookshop Mysteries.