Places have voices, just like authors do. Places have texture, flavor, smells, and that elusive quality of “feel.” For Erin Hart, it’s the bogland of Ireland. For G. M. Mailliet, it’s the English village, embodied in her fictional town of Nether Monkslip. For Cara Black, it’s Paris. Come to think of it, we should all have at least one book set in Paris. The tax write-off alone would be worth it. As for me, I seemed to have fastened onto the Hollywood sign as my icon. See? It’s right there on the header. No, I don’t live there, but every time I’ve been to LA in the past few years, I make a point to go there, and when I can, to rent in the neighborhood just below the sign, which is its own village within the Hollywood Hills specifically and LA generally. There are other villages within LA. You could even say that LA is at its best when you are intimately involved in one or another of its villages. My enchantment with this particular place began when I read that the iconic “HOLLYWOOD” sign used to read “HOLLYWOODLAND” and signified one of the early subdivisions that was meant to beckon the newly minted wealthy of the nascent movie industry. From there, I gobbled up the stories: Humphrey Bogart’s house in the storybook style, Bugsy Siegel’s illegal casino at Castillo del Lago (whose other famous resident, Madonna, outraged neighbors by painting a retaining wall in blaring crimson and yellow Continue Reading →
Posted in On Writing, Researching the Murder Mystery, Uncategorized
Report from Left Coast Crime 2014 Left Coast Crime this year was in Monterey, California. The days of the conference were filled with panels, capped off with interviews between well-known mystery writers. The day before the conference was a writing workshop, which I didn’t attend. The conference itself was a series of panels, each with four mystery authors and a moderator, the day capped off with an interview of one author by another. Some of these were stellar, inluding Sue Grafton, Louise Penny and Cara Black. For me, the interview with Sue Grafton was the absolute high point of the conference. She began writing when the mystery genre was low on female PI’s and, for that matter, female mystery writers. While I admit I haven’t read every one of her alphabet-based books (A is for Alibi, B is for Burglary, etc.) because they veer a bit farther into hardboiled than I usually read, the books of hers I have read have always been so well-written I wasn’t thinking about writing when I was reading them, meaning I was swept up in the story. After listening to her, I think I may pick up again–she’s gotten through W, and yes, she’s now at X. She claimed she was a bit hung-up on the letter, but if I were to hazard a guess, I think she’s teasing us a bit. (Plus, we were warned not to ask what happens after Z!) About halfway through the interview, I was delighted to hear her Continue Reading →
Posted in On Writing
Here’s a blog post for my alter ego, Magdalena Jones who writes cozy mysteries:
Posted in On Writing, Uncategorized and tagged cozy mystery, mystery plotting
Welcome to WordPress. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!
Posted in On Writing, Uncategorized