The world of crime fiction offers something special to
readers and writers—a community of like-minded people and opportunities to get
together and share books and discussion of the genre. The characters in our
books seem just as real as the person sitting in the chair beside me, or the
mailman who drops mail in the box every morning, and readers care about these
characters sometimes just as much. During a conference in the 1990s a reader
asked me about Chief Joe Silva’s family in the Mellingham series. That simple
question led me to think harder about his family. The result was Last Call for Justice, which takes Joe
back for a family reunion, where an old grudge surfaces and an old crime is
solved.
Anyone who knows me knows I love talking and writing about
India. To date there are four novels in the Anita Ray series, beginning with Under the Eye of Kali. Readers can count
on a lot of local color as well as references to Indian food, and one of the
most fun things I did was write up a couple of recipes to give away at events.
Some writers have bookmarks and business cards; I have recipe cards. And
sometimes a member of a panel audience will suggest another Indian dish for me
to try.
Last week, at the Marstons Mills Public Library, I had the
pleasure of talking about crime fiction with two other writers to a small but
attentive audience. Connie Johnson Hambley, Carolyn Marie Wilkins and I write
very different crime novels, but we have similar experiences as writers. We ran
out of time to answer all the questions the audience members wanted to ask, so
here is an answer to one of the questions. Jill asked what British mysteries do
I enjoy reading? I didn’t have enough time to answer, so this blog post is for
Jill. Here’s a list of authors I hope to read this year—I have a stack of their
books ready and waiting. Now, if I just had more time . . .
Over the coming year, I hope to read books by M.C. Beaton,
Frances Brody, Anne Cleeves, Martin Edwards, Peter Lovesey, Charles Todd, Peter
Robinson, Ashley Weaver, and Jacqueline Winspear. I also hope to fit in one or
two books by Rhys Bowen, Peter Dickinson, Felix Francis, and Anne Perry. I’m
sad that Ruth Rendell is no longer with us, but I haven’t yet read all of her
books, so I still have some to look forward to.
These authors are only some of those whose books are lined
up on a bureau in the upstairs hallway. I’m working my way through them slowly
but surely. And if I go to my local library’s fall book sale, I’m sure to find
more to add to the list. But these names should be enough to get you, Jill, and
others started.
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