Drama Oz, the 14th Nicky and Noah mystery novel
by
Joe Cosentino
A young woman
leaves her Kansas farm with her trusted dog and embarks on the adventure of a
lifetime through a colorful new world inhabited by a good witch, wicked witch,
scarecrow, tinman, lion, and a wonderful wizard. There’s no better tale than
the The Wizard of Oz. That’s why it is still the most enjoyed children’s
story of all time. Most people have watched the renowned MGM movie starring gay
icon Judy Garland, Frank
Morgan, Ray Bolger, Jack Haley Jr., and Bert Lahr. The original books by L. Frank
Baum are still best-sellers. The first book chronicles Dorothy Gale’s visit to
Oz. Subsequent books continue Dorothy’s fantastical adventures in the magical
world. Reading them is like accompanying Dorothy on her wonderful quest. I
adored those books as a kid, and I still love them! They are like a treasure
chest of full of joy.
So it isn’t a
surprise that for my fourteenth Nicky and Noah mystery novel, I decided the
Treemeadow College theatre group would take a trip to a Wizard of Oz theme park
in one of my favorite places: Key West, Florida! If you haven’t been to Key
West, it’s a peninsula with white sandy beaches laden with foamy waves tickling
jagged rocks under an azure sky dotted with marshmallow clouds. Gorgeous white
seagulls and towering lighthouses herald gorgeous pink, violet, and gold
sunrises and sunsets. Quant guesthouses, theatres, and restaurants inhabited by
people open and affirming to all line the shore. So in my novel, our favorite
thespians stage an original musical adaptation of the much-loved classic entitled,
Friends of Dorothy in Key West. Gay Sherlock Holmes, Nicky Abbondanza,
is the wizard onstage and off, doing double duty as show director and playing the
Wizard. As Nicky says, “It takes a wiz!” Nicky’s gorgeous and devoted husband,
Noah Oliver, is cast as the Scarecrow sitting on a long pole (pun intended).
Their teenage son, Taavi, plays the role of the Tinman with a large can of
lube, and his best friend, Ty, counters as the Lion with a playful tail.
Nicky’s best friends, older couple Martin and Ruben, join the cast playing Aunt
Em and Uncle Henry “going down on the farm.” They also double as Glinda who
does it good and the Wicked Witch of the wild West. The young actress cast as
Dorothy is quite the diva. The young actors cast as Toto, the Munchkin Leader,
and the Winged Monkey Leader fully inhabit their roles and their G-string,
chaps, and loincloth respectively. Of course Nicky and his crew use their drama
skills, including playing wacky characters in investigative role-plays with the
suspects, to catch the killer before the witch’s fireball sends them up in
smoke.
For those of you who
haven’t yet ventured to the land of Nicky and Noah (and you should!), it’s a
gay cozy mystery comedy series, meaning the setting is warm and cozy, the clues
and murders (and laughs) come fast and furious, and there are enough plot
twists and turns and a surprise ending to keep the pages turning (as Nicky
would say) “faster than a Catholic adoption agency denying gay parents.” At the
center is the touching relationship between Professor of Play Directing Nicky
Abbondanza and Associate Professor of Acting Noah Oliver. We watch them go from
courting to marrying to adopting a child, all the while head over heels in love
with each other (as we fall in love with them). Reviewers called the series “hysterically
funny farce,” “Murder She Wrote meets
Hart to Hart meets The Hardy Boys,” and “captivating
whodunits.” One reviewer wrote they are the funniest books she’s ever read!
Another said I’m “a master storyteller.” Who am I to argue?
The premiere
novel, Drama Queen, was voted Divine Magazine’s
Readers’ Choice Award for Favorite LGBT Mystery, Humorous, and Contemporary
Novel of the Year! Subsequent novels won many Rainbow Award Honorable Mentions
and Favorite Book of the Month awards: Drama
Muscle, Drama Cruise, Drama Luau, Drama
Detective, Drama Fraternity, Drama Castle, Drama Dance, Drama Faerie,
Drama Runway, Drama Christmas, Drama Pan, and Drama TV.
As
a past professional actor and current college theatre professor/department
chair, I know first-hand the hysterically funny antics, sweet romance, and captivating
mystery in the worlds of theatre and academia. The Nicky and Noah mysteries are
full of them! I know you’ll laugh, cry, feel romantic, and love delving into
this crackling new mystery with more plot twists and turns than (as Nicky would
say) “a QAnon member hearing real news.”
I’m
more excited (as Nicky would say) “than a priest with an altar boy having a
robe malfunction” to share this fourteenth novel in the series with you. So follow the yellow brick road to a
girl with a dog who is one hot bitch, a wicked witch who would kill for a new
pair of shoes, a sexy Wizard who wants to bang the Scarecrow’s brains out, a
Tinman and Lion embarking on a mixed marriage, plenty of monkey business, and
murder!
And
I love to hear from readers. So drop me a line. I’ll share it with Nicky and
Noah! http://www.JoeCosentino.weebly.com
DRAMA OZ (the 14th Nicky and Noah mystery)
a comedy/mystery/romance novel by JOE COSENTINO
E-book and Paperback: 215 pages
Language: English
Genre: MM, contemporary, mystery, comedy, romance, theatre,
musical theater, Wizard of Oz, theme parks, Key West
Heat Level: 2
Cover Art: Jesús Da Silva
ISBN-13: 9781005487485
ASIN: B09X1Y8XSW
Release date: June 1,
2022
The Treemeadow College theatre crew
stage an original musical adaptation of The Wizard of Oz,
entitled Friends of Dorothy, at a summer theme park in Key West. Quickly
cast and crew members melt away like a witch submerged in water. Nicky, as the
Wizard on stage and off, must save the show and figure out whodunit. Once
again, our favorite thespians will need to use their drama skills to catch the
killer before a witch’s fireball sends them up in smoke. You will be applauding
and shouting Bravo for Joe Cosentino’s fast-paced, side-splittingly funny,
edge-of-your-seat entertaining fourteenth novel in this delightful series. It’s
a scorcher! So follow the yellow brick road. The stage lights are coming up in
Oz on a girl with a dog who is one hot bitch, a wicked witch who would kill for
a new pair of shoes, a sexy Wizard, a Scarecrow sitting on a big pole, a Tinman
with a giant can of lube, a Lion with a long tail between his legs, plenty of
monkey business, and murder!
Excerpt of Drama
Oz, the 14th Nicky and Noah mystery novel, by Joe Cosentino:
A
rooster’s crow heralds the start of a new morning on a farm in Kansas. A small
elderly woman wearing a housedress matching the gray bun on her head comes out
of the farmhouse. At the sight of her overflowing bucket, penned pigs, goats,
cows, and horses come to attention for their morning meal. A tall, thin, aging
man in black overalls sticks his pitchfork into a pile of hay as gray hair
covers his forehead. Aunt Em and Uncle Henry share a, “Good morning.” Lively
country western music plays, and they belt out a hand-clapping song, “Goin’
Down on the Farm,” which leads to bump and grind choreography between the
couple and the animals. When a horse rubs against her, Aunt Em hollers, “Who do
I look like, Catherine the Great?”
“You’re
way older than the eighteenth-century Russian empress, my love,” Uncle Henry
retorts.
“Stop!”
Hello Nicky-and-Noah fans, it’s me, your favorite armchair (or rather play
director’s chair) sleuth, Nicky Abbondanza, PhD, which in my case stands for
Pretty Hot Detective. I’m not a real detective. I actually solve all of
my cases. This one’s number fourteen. But who’s counting? Me! I’ve directed
plays, musicals, a runway show, bodybuilding competition, movies, and even a
television pilot at Treemeadow College in picturesque Vermont, where I am a
Professor of Play Directing in the Theatre Department. However, I’m not in
Treemeadow now. Where am I? Here’s the story. My handsome, loyal, and wonderful
husband, Noah Oliver, Associate Professor of Acting, and I planned a lavish
summer vacation cruising (no pun intended) the Mediterranean with our teenage
son, relentless thespian and co-sleuth Taavi Kapule Oliver Abbondanza. Reality
and a migraine struck when Noah and I remembered our salaries as college
professors. So recalling our free trips to Alaska (for staging a murder mystery
dinner show on a cruise) and Hawaii (for directing a luau show), Noah and I
discreetly let theatre producers know we might be available for summer stock.
In other words, we begged for a job. We turned down offers from Arab and
African nations where being gay is a crime punishable by death. We’re funny
that way. Instead, we took a (slightly) less risky job in a blue dot in the red
state of Florida: the new Wizard of Oz Theme Park in Florida’s Key West.
The park features beloved costumed characters chased around the yellow brick
road by screaming children wielding the Wicked Witch of the West’s crystal
ball, Dorothy’s slippers, and the Tinman’s oil can purchased at exorbitant
prices from the Emerald City gift shop. Park activities include Throw a
Fireball at the Scarecrow, Drop a House on the Wicked Witch of the East, Burst
Glinda’s Bubble, and Munch with a Munchkin. The themed restaurant features
Green Witch Warts, Flying Monkey Droppings, and Uncle Henry’s Jellyroll with Aunt
Em’s Bread Box. The thrilling ride attractions enable visitors to spin in a
tornado and land on a Munchkin, dive into Toto’s basket, and ride in a hot air
balloon with a Wizard full of hot air. But I digress. Back to the only thing
that really matters—the theatre!
At
the center of the park is an enormous enclosed theatre that would make any
tax-exempt billionaire televangelist green (pun intended) with envy. So, the
park management hired me to direct an original musical production of the
much-loved classic based on the original books by L. Frank Baum. The stories
where Dorothy’s slippers are chic silver, and her post-adventure comeback line
is simply, “I’m so glad to be home again.”
My
first decision was to cast the most charismatic and talented actor I know as
the Wonderful Wizard of Oz—the wonderful me. At forty-six with the body and
maturity of a twenty-one-year-old (both courtesy of the gym at Treemeadow
College) and hailing originally from Kansas, I was a perfect fit for the
Wizard—unlike my costume. With my olive skin, dark hair, and over six-feet tall
status, I admit I looked quite dapper in the Wizard’s three-piece Victorian
suit which matched my emerald eyes. My tapered trousers were trim in the waist,
hips, and inseam. Hence the big problem—or the big asset depending on the
situation. You see, my nearly foot-long penis—unaroused—though Noah’s treasure,
has been a costumer’s nightmare. So while our costume designer, Gabriela Boada,
and her daughter and assistant, Ava, took out my slack’s inseam (causing it to
be an outseam), I wore my contemporary dress slacks.
My
thirty-nine-year-old youthful (grr!) husband’s milk-and-honey face turned to
scarlet until I cast him as the Scarecrow (and the cast’s acting coach).
Actually, Noah, having grown up in a Wisconsin dairy farm, was perfectly cast
as Dorothy’s first friend in Oz. Our seventeen-year-old son, Taavi, threatened
to put a curse on me from his native Hawaii until I offered him an oilcan and
the role of the Tinman, Dorothy’s second cohort in Oz.
My best friend, department chair, and mentor,
Martin Anderson, filled out a pink slip (no pun intended) with my name on it
until I asked him to write the new musical, which he appropriately titled, Friends
of Dorothy. I cast Martin’s husband, Ruben Markinson, in the dual roles of
Uncle Henry and the Wicked Witch of the West. This prompted Martin to strap me
into his chairlift and use his diaper as a slingshot to lob his C-PAP machine
at me until I cast Martin as Aunt ‘Em and Glinda the Good Witch of the North.
Their sixteen-year-old son, Ty Wilde Anderson Markinson, strangled me with
Martin’s compression stockings until I cowardly gave him the role of the Lion.
And we were off to see the Wizard.
So
here I sit, front row center at the technical dress rehearsal of our
extravaganza as the evening hours drift by like piercing arrows to my brain.
Everything is coming together as smoothly as a QAnon member storming the
Capitol under orders of a past Republican president.
Martin
pointed to the dancer playing the horse. The young man’s bare torso and full
brown jockstrap gave “hung like a horse” a new meaning. “That horse is even
more hung than you, Nicky. And a whole lot friskier!”
I
typed on my electronic tablet, “Why didn’t the twister cart off Aunt Em?”
Buy Links
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1140329
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/drama-oz-joe-cosentino/1141319010?ean=2940165828058
https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/drama-oz-a-nicky-and-noah-mystery
Praise for the Nicky
and Noah mysteries:
“Joe Cosentino has a
unique and fabulous gift. His writing is flawless, and his plot-lines will have
you guessing until the very last page, which makes his books a joy to read. His
books are worth their weight in gold, and if you haven't discovered them yet
you are in for a rare treat.” Divine Magazine
“a combination of
Laurel and Hardy mixed with Hitchcock and Murder She Wrote…
Loaded with puns and one-liners…Right to the end, you are kept guessing, and the conclusion still has a surprise in store for you…the best modern Sherlock and Watson in books today…I highly recommend this book and the entire series, it’s a pure pleasure, full of fun and love, written with talent and brio…fabulous…brilliant” Optimumm Book Reviews
Joe Cosentino was voted
Favorite MM Mystery, Humorous, and Contemporary Author of the Year by the
readers of Divine Magazine for Drama Queen, the first Nicky and
Noah mystery novel. He is also the author of the remaining Nicky and Noah
mysteries: Drama Muscle, Drama Cruise, Drama Luau, Drama
Detective, Drama Fraternity, Drama Castle, Drama Dance, Drama Faerie, Drama
Runway, Drama Christmas, Drama Pan, Drama TV, Drama Oz; the Player Piano
Mysteries: The Player and The Player’s Encore; the Jana Lane
Mysteries: Paper Doll, Porcelain Doll, Satin Doll, China
Doll, Rag Doll; the Cozzi Cove series: Cozzi Cove: Bouncing Back,
Moving Forward, Stepping Out, New Beginnings, Happy
Endings; the In My Heart Anthology: An Infatuation & A
Shooting Star; the Tales from Fairyland Anthology: The Naked
Prince and Other Tales from Fairyland and Holiday Tales from Fairyland;
the Bobby and Paolo Holiday Stories Anthology: A Home for the
Holidays, The Perfect Gift, The First Noel; and the Found At Last
Anthology: Finding Giorgio and Finding Armando. His books have won
numerous Book of the Month awards and Rainbow Award Honorable Mentions. As an
actor, Joe appeared in principal roles in film, television, and theatre,
opposite stars such as Bruce Willis, Rosie O’Donnell, Nathan Lane, Jason
Robards, and Holland Taylor. He received his Master of Fine Arts degree from
Goddard College, Master’s degree from SUNY New Paltz, and is currently a
happily married college theatre professor/department chair residing in New York
State.
http://www.JoeCosentino.weebly.com
Web site: http://www.JoeCosentino.weebly.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/JoeCosentinoauthor
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JoeCosen
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4071647.Joe_Cosentino
Amazon: Author.to/JoeCosentino
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