Attending Authors
Transcription
Attending Authors
24 Years Celebrating the Traditional Mystery Guest of Honor Jan Burke Message from the Chair Verena Rose A Weekend of Mystery s impossible as it seems, a year has passed and we are about to start another weekend of mystery. As April 2012 draws to an end we are here at the Hyatt Regency to celebrate the 24th year of Malice Domestic and the traditional mystery. As in all of the past years the Board is confident that this year’s convention will live up to all those Malice Domestic conventions of the past. It’s impossible to believe otherwise, when you consider the individuals who will be honored this weekend. First, there’s Dana Cameron who will be our Toastmaster and my partner-in-crime throughout the convention. Dana and I are both very excited about introducing to you our Guest of Honor, Jan Burke; our Lifetime Achievement Honoree, Simon Brett, and our Poirot Honoree, Lee Goldberg. We’ll also be introducing you to Anne Hillerman who is accepting the Malice Remembers award in honor of her father, Tony Hillerman. Our Fan Guest of Honor is Ruth Sickafus who was a long-time member of the Board of Directors and someone very special to all of us. Let me tell you a little about a premier highlight of this year’s convention — the presentation of the first ever “Amelia” Award. When the Board decided that it wanted to create an award to be given to individuals the Board determined had contributed to the Malice Domestic community and exemplified what Malice Domestic represents, we were unanimous in our decision. We were all in agreement that the first of these awards would be given to Elizabeth Peters because without her Malice Domestic would not exist. During that same discussion the Board also decided that it wanted to name the award after Elizabeth Peters’ most famous creation, Amelia Peabody. And so the “Amelia” was born. The Board and I hope you’ll be at the Banquet this Saturday evening and join with us in honoring and applauding Ms. Peters and all that she has meant to Malice Domestic. A Malice Domestic 24 The Board and I would also like to indulge in a little self-promotion. As many of you are already aware, Rita Owen and I are working on a book entitled Malice Domestic...not everyone’s cup of tea: An Interesting and Entertaining History of Its First 25 Years. The book is being published by John Betancourt and Wildside Press and is scheduled for release at next year’s 25th Malice Domestic convention. As a small added bonus, Malice Domestic is offering a discount on copies that are pre-ordered on your Malice Domestic 25 Registration Form. We will have much more information about this wonderful project in the months to come. Now it’s time for me to let you get back to perusing the Program Schedule and checking out all of the goodies in your Registration Bag. I trust you’ll find much to catch your fancy. Have a great convention. Maliciously yours, Verena Rose Chair, Malice Domestic Ltd. 1 Table of Contents Guest of Honor: Jan Burke ............................................3 Toastmaster: Dana Cameron........................................10 Fan Guest of Honor: Ruth Sickafus ............................14 Lifetime Achievement: Simon Brett ............................16 Poirot Award: Lee Goldberg ........................................22 Malice Remembers: Tony Hillerman ..........................26 Amelia Award: Elizabeth Peters ................................30 Agatha Awards ............................................................38 A Brief History of Malice Domestic ............................44 William F. Deeck — Malice Domestic Grants ............46 Our Sponsors ................................................................48 Memories of Malice ......................................................49 General Information ....................................................50 Charity Auction ............................................................52 Convention Schedule ..................................................54 Attending Authors ........................................................66 Expert ............................................................................92 Minotaur Books/Malice DomesticTM Competition ......93 Dealers ..........................................................................94 ILLUSTRATION DEANE NETTLES Malice Domestic Board of Directors............................96 Pre-Registered Participants ........................................98 Friends of Malice ........................................................101 Malice Domestic, Ltd. organizes the convention for the education and entertainment of attendees. The responsibility for content of all sessions is solely and strictly that of the speakers and their remarks are not to be construed in any way as reflecting on the policies of Malice Domestic, Ltd. or its Officers, Directors, Committee Members, Advisors and Employees. ©2012 Malice Domestic Ltd. Copyrights of all essays revert to authors. All rights reserved. Malice Domestic 24 Program Book: Published April 26, 2012. Editor: Rita Owen, publications@malicedomestic.org. Design and production: Judith Barrett Graphics, Alexandria, Virginia. Printing: HBP, Hagerstown, Maryland. Printed with EcoSmart Green inks on recycled paper. 2 Malice Domestic 24 Guest of Honor Jan Burke “A Normal Person” By Laura Lippman n October 1996, lurking at my first-ever Bouchercon, I saw a woman walking through the streets of St. Paul. She was clearly deep in thought and although she looked like someone who would be kind to a stranger who interrupted her reverie, I decided not to disturb this hard-won moment of solitude. Later, however, I said to my husband: “You won’t believe this, but I saw Jan Burke walking down the street just like a normal person.” Sixteen years later, I am one of the many people lucky enough to count Jan Burke as a friend, but I still wouldn’t be surprised to turn a corner and see her walking on air, three or four feet above the terra firma that we lesser people tread. Jan is that rarest of combinations, to steal E.B. White’s formula: a good friend and a good writer. But she’s also a good person. I will get, in a moment, to the literary accomplishments that have earned Jan Burke recognition by Malice Domestic this year — the awards, the body of work, the insistence on pushing beyond boundaries, internal and external. Yes, the work alone would have been enough. To me, however, the thing that makes Jan remarkable is her insistence on giving back to our genre and the world beyond. Our friendship began when we were on the Mystery Writers of America board, a job where one literally phones it in — the monthly meetings were held by telephone conference. (One of the highlights was the inevitable moment when Cappy, Jan’s beloved dog, would erupt in barks at the postman. No, seriously, that was a highlight. Cappy died in 2010, but Jan still keeps canine company with Wylie and Britches, the latter of whom should probably have a Twitter account dedicated to his bouts of destruction, only he would inevitably eat his smartphone.) O Malice Domestic 24 Over my head, giddy with pleasure just at being asked to serve, I tended not to ask a lot of questions at first. Jan asked questions. Jan did her homework. Jan didn’t go along to get along. When an issue mattered to her, she dug in her heels and fought. Politely and respectfully, and with a ruthless knowledge of Robert’s Rules of Order, but without that horrible girlish tic of needing to be liked. I learned by Jan’s example that a volunteer’s job is to try to leave an organization better and stronger than when you found it. And she wasn’t done. When Jan finished her term on the MWA board, she started a nonprofit, the Crime Lab Project, whose mission is to raise public awareness about the real-life challenges facing public forensic science agencies. She would never call the CLP a one-woman show, but she is its public face and its social media liaison. Oh, and she happens to be one of our genre’s best writers, with fourteen books to date — twelve crime novels, one supernatural thriller and a book of short stories. Her awards include the Edgar®, Agatha and the Macavity, and it’s a rare year in the mystery world that doesn’t see Jan’s work nominated for multiple awards. If it sounds as if Jan has more energy than most people — well, she does. A night owl, she gets by on enviably small portions of sleep; our emails often cross in the early-morning hours, when I’m just getting up on the East Coast and she’s about to go to bed on the West Coast. Although not a native Californian, her life and work are rooted there. Those who have read her books, yet know nothing of her biography, will not be surprised to learn that she values family and is haunted by history, on the micro and macro levels. It is to Jan’s credit that many people think she was a reporter; her portrait of Irene Kelly rings so 3 Guest of Honor Jan Burke true that people assume she must have worked at a newspaper. In fact, she wrote weekly columns and contributed interviews to her local paper — but only after she started publishing fiction. What I did not realize, until taking this assignment, was that Jan’s interest in missing persons comes by way of personal history. She wrote to me: “Two of my cousins were missing for a time, and even though we knew shortly after they failed to come home from a hunting trip that they probably died in a boating accident on a lake, the lake was frozen and could not be searched until the spring. I talked to my aunt, their mother, about that wait and what she went through emotionally during that time. That made a lasting impression, and as I learned how much we could do that we don’t do to help find the missing, such cases mattered even more to me.” That level of empathy, that awareness of how grief snakes through our lives — these are the hallmarks of Jan’s work, even when her protagonist (spoiler alert) turns out to be a seeing-eye dog. (This particular story, “Unharmed” was inspired by a newspaper article. Jan happens to be a voracious consumer of news, especially the shoe-leather stories where reporters dig deep in documents to figure out how things really work.) She also would be the first person to stop me here and say: Do you have to make me sound like such a saint? So, in honor of Jan’s mischievous nature and fascination with history, I will note that she’s the kind of friend who knows that the saying “If you don’t have anything nice to say, come sit by me,” was embroidered on a pillow owned by Alice Roosevelt Longworth. Also, if you’re looking to sing a few show tunes and knock back a few drinks, and not necessarily in that order, you’ll want Jan on your team. A few years ago, at an awards ceremony, Jan came up and slipped something into my hand, saying only it was for good luck. It was a Zulu coin, meaningless and worthless to many people, but Jan knew that it would be valued by anyone who loves Mardi Gras in New Orleans. I keep that coin on my desk to this day, a reminder of the best luck of all: counting Jan Burke among my friends. To circle 4 back to E.B. White’s famous dictum: “It is not often that someone comes along who is a good friend and a good writer: Jan is both.” (Laura Lippman is the author of 17 novels, 10 in the Baltimore-based Tess Monaghan series. A New York Times bestseller, she has been awarded the Agatha, Edgar®, Anthony and several other awards for her work.) ✍ Bibliography SERIES Irene Kelly series Goodnight, Irene (1993) Sweet Dreams, Irene (1994) Dear Irene, (1995) Remember Me, Irene (1996) Hocus (1997) Liar (1998) Bones (1999) Bloodlines (2005) Kidnapped (2006) Disturbance (2011) NOVELS Flight (2001) Nine (2002) The Messenger (2009) SHORT STORIES “The Imitator,” A Study in Sherlock, ed. Leslie Klinger and Laurie R. King (2011) “The Fallen,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (August 2008) “Zuppa Inglese,” Murder at the Racetrack, ed. Otto Penzler (2006) “Call it Macaroni,” Murder Most Crafty, ed. Maggie Bruce (2005) (continued on page 6) Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 5 Guest of Honor Jan Burke Eighteen, Collected Stories, limited edition (2002); Mass market edition (2004) “Devotion” “The Mouse” “Lost and Found,” in Creature Cozies, ed. Jill Morgan (2005) “The Abbey Ghosts,” Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine (January 2001) “The Haunting of Carrick Hollow,” Crime Through Time III, ed. Sharan Newman and Miriam Grace Monfredo (2000) “The Man in the Civil Suit,” Malice Domestic IX, ed. Elizabeth Foxwell (2000) “An Unsuspected Condition of the Heart,” Irreconcilable Differences, ed. Lia Matera and Martin Greenberg (December 1999) “Miscalculation,” Death Cruise: Crime on the Open Seas, anthology ed. Lawrence Block and Martin H. Greenberg (1999) “A Man of My Stature,” Crime Through Time II, anthology ed. Sharan Newman and Miriam Grace Montefredo, with introduction by Lady Antonia Fraser (1998) “Two Bits,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (May 1998) “A Fine Set of Teeth,” Bound and illustrated, signed special edition; introduction by Michael Connelly ; audio version including music by Tim Burke (1997), Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine (October 1998) “Mea Culpa,” Malice Domestic VI, ed. Elizabeth Foxwell, presented by Anne Perry (1997); Audio version read by Reed Diamond (1999) “White Trash,” Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine (October 1996) “The Muse,” Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine (February 1995) “Unharmed,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine(Mid-Dec 1994) “Revised Endings,” Viva (Dutch language magazine) (1994); reprinted in Murderous Intent Mystery Magazine (Winter 1998) 6 “Ghost of a Chance,” Red Herring Mystery Magazine (Summer 1994) “Why Tonight?” Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine (MidDec 1993) “The Loveseat,” Spannen Gebundeld (1993), Dutch language anthology OTHER PUBLICATIONS Writing Mysteries: A Handbook by the Mystery Writers of America, ed. Sue Grafton, associate ed. Jan Burke and Barry Zeman (2002) Contributor, The Sunken Sailor, Malice Domestic serial novel, ed. Elizabeth Foxwell (2005) Contributor, In the Shadow of the Master: Classic Tales by Edgar Allan Poe, with essays, ed. Michael Connelly and presented by Mystery Writers of America (2009) Interviews, essays and other articles by Jan Burke have appeared in Clues: A Journal of Detection, Mystery Scene, Mystery News, Forensic Magazine and other publications Former weekly columnist, Long Beach Press-Telegram AWARDS Macavity Winner, Best Short Story, 1994: “Unharmed” Edgar® Winner, Best Novel, 1999: Bones Agatha Winner, Best Short Story, 2000: “The Man in the Civil Suit” Macavity Winner, Best Short Story, 2001: “The Abbey Ghosts” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Readers’ Award Winner: “Unharmed” RT Reviewers Choice Award, Best Suspense/Thriller: The Messenger RT Reviewers Choice Award, Best Contemporary Mystery: Bloodlines RT Reviewers Choice Award, Best Contemporary Mystery: Bones Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 7 Guest of Honor Jan Burke NOMINATIONS “The Fallen,” Barry Nominee, Best Short Story Kidnapped, RT Reviewers Choice Award, Best Suspense Bloodlines, Anthony Nominee, Best Novel; Barry Nominee, Best Novel Nine, RT Reviewers Choice Award, Best Suspense; Macavity Nominee, Best Novel Flight, Anthony Nominee, Best Novel; Nero Award Finalist Bones, Anthony Nominee, Best Novel; Named one of the best mysteries of the year by Library Journal (Best Books of the Year 1999) Liar, Agatha Nominee, Best Novel Hocus, Agatha Nominee, Best Novel; Macavity Nominee, Best Novel; Barry Nominee, Best Novel Goodnight, Irene, Agatha Nominee, Best First Novel; Anthony Nominee, Best First Novel Writing Mysteries, Agatha Nominee, Best Nonfiction Book, 2002 “Devotion,” Agatha Nominee, Best Short Story, 2002 “The Abbey Ghosts,” Edgar® Nominee, Best Short Story, 2001 8 “The Man in the Civil Suit,” Macavity nominee, Best Short Story “Mea Culpa,” Audie Award (as part of Malice Domestic 6 Audio edition) “Two Bits,” Anthony nominee, Best Short Story OTHER HONORS Distinguished Alumna, College of Liberal Arts, California State University, Long Beach California Forensic Science Institute Hall of Fame Guest of Honor, Malice Domestic 2012 Guest of Honor, Left Coast Crime, Los Angeles, 2010 Burbank Public Library, Burbank READS 2010, Goodnight Irene Guest of Honor, Mayhem in the Midlands, 2003 Guest of Honor, Deadly Ink, 2002 Romantic Times Magazine Lifetime Achievement Award for Contemporary Suspense Nominated for a Gumshoe Award, given by Mystery Ink each year to recognize the best achievements in the world of mystery fiction. Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 9 Toastmaster Dana Cameron Dana Cameron: Digging Below the Surface By Toni L. P. Kelner ’ve known Malice Domestic Toastmaster Dana her husband James. She then edited the heck out of Cameron for years, and can honestly say that she’s it, with James’s able help. At the same time, she was one of the best friends I could ever wish to have. reading mysteries and attending lectures and events She’s generous, loyal, a great conversationalist and to learn more about the nuts-and-bolts of crime ficenormously fun to spend time with. She is also, as her tion. (She even showed up at one of my talks, bless readers and fans know, an her heart. amazingly talented writer, Fortunately, I and I admire her greatly. didn’t scare But here’s the fascinating her off.) That thing about being friends amount of with Dana — I learn someeffort would thing new about her every be enough for time we get together. There most aspiring is so much more to her than authors, but you see on the surface. Dana went After a very early-morning hot-air Of course, that’s approeven further. balloon ride over the Göreme Valley (in Cappadocia), Turkey (2011) priate given Dana’s former She submitted life as an archeologist. She’s her manuscript often told the story of how to the prestishe was talking to a friend gious Bread about some of the incidents Loaf Writers’ that happen on site. Once Conference she was working at a dig in and was New England when a pot accepted — to hunter with a metal detecgive you a hint tor showed up, and when of what that Outside a Silk Road caravansary in he was challenged by one of means, in a Harran, Turkey (2011) her colleagues, he actually recent year, pulled a gun on them. only twenty-two percent of applicants got in, and Fortunately, it all ended without bloodshed, very few of those were genre writers. Dana was and the friend said, “You should write a book about determined to do everything she could to learn her this stuff!” Dana usually concludes with something craft, but she’s too modest to say how hard she’s like, “So I wrote a mystery.” As if any archeologist worked. could just put down her trowel and write mystery Dana’s first foray into urban fantasy shows a siminovels as exciting and layered as the Emma Fielding lar pattern. When she talks about her first Fangborn series! adventure, “The Night Things Changed,” she This is where you have to dig below the surface describes how writing the story was a revelation to find out what really happened between that because for once, she didn’t need to start with eureka moment and the publication of Site Unseen. In research. She could just make it up. As if just any fact, you have to go back before then, to realize that writer could come up with a completely fresh take on Dana had already written a nonfiction volume. But vampires and werewolves. there’s a big difference between scholarly work and Again, you have to dig to find out what else she mysteries, and Dana tackled this new task with did. Despite her admission that she didn’t have any everything she had. references to consult, she did check out anthropologiShe wrote the first draft in secret, not even telling cal studies on cross-cultural views of vampires and I 10 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 11 Toastmaster Dana Cameron werewolves. She also read vast amounts of modern urban fantasy and paranormal romance to see what other writers were doing. Only then did she devise the Fangborn. And of course, she neglects to mention the fact that an intriguing background was only the start of what became an award-winning short story. (“The Night Things Changed” won the Agatha and the Macavity and was nominated for the Anthony.) Her approach to writing “Femme Sole,” her first piece of noir fiction, was just as thorough. She’ll tell you she went historical for the Anna Hoyt stories because she already knew the era, but as you could guess by now, that’s only part of the tale. Dana doesn’t talk about the extra research she did, or her efforts to create a character who was true to her time, or the analysis of what noir means in terms of tone and world-view, rather than just using the hard-bitten private eye trappings. And again, she needed a plot and such to go with all that to get her those four award nominations. (Those would be the Edgar®, the Agatha, the Anthony and the Macavity.) Then there’s what Dana does to prepare for author appearances. If she’s participating on a panel, she’ll hit the web for information about her fellow participants, and if she has books by any of them, skims them to refresh her memory. If she’s moderating a panel, you can be sure she’s done even more in-depth research: reading at least one book by each participant, visiting participant’s blogs and web sites, and writing out her questions well in advance. I cannot imagine how much work she‘s done to make sure she does a good job as Toastmaster this weekend and I suspect she’s reread every one of Jan Burke’s books and as many of Jan’s stories as she could get her hands on. Now you might think Dana’s thoroughness only applies to her writing life, which is, after all, informed by her training as an academic and a scientist. Except that if that were true, how would you explain her approach to Christmas presents for my daughters? Like many people, she often gives gift cards, which is great. Kids love gift cards. But here’s the below-the- 12 surface part. She didn’t just grab a card at whatever store she was in. She found out that the girls are big into art and which art store in the area was the best so she could make a special trip to get the gift cards. Then she planned a day so she could take them to lunch and then to the art store. She even got them ice cream. It wasn’t just a present — it was an event! Now that I think about it, you could say that Dana herself digs below the surface in everything she does, so I guess it should be no surprise that we have to dig below the surface to fully appreciate her and her work. I hope that you enjoy getting to know Dana this weekend. I can guarantee that she’ll be charming and entertaining, but if you have a chance to follow her example and dig a little, you’re going to see for yourself what a treasure she is. (Agatha winner Toni L.P. Kelner is the author of the “Where are They Now?” mysteries, the Laura Fleming series and the forthcoming Family Skeleton books. She coedits anthologies with Charlaine Harris, including Home Improvement: Undead Edition. Toni is particularly proud that she and Charlaine acted as godmothers to Dana’s Fangborn stories — they published the first story in their anthology Wolfsbane and Mistletoe.) ✍ Bibliography SERIES Emma Fielding Archaeological Mysteries Site Unseen (2002) Grave Consequences (2002) Past Malice (2003) A Fugitive Truth (2004) More Bitter Than Death (2005) Ashes and Bones (2006), Anthony Award, Best PBO Malice Domestic 24 SHORT STORIES “The Lords of Misrule,” Sugarplums and Scandal (2006), Nominee, Anthony Award “The Night Things Changed,” Wolfsbane and Mistletoe, ed. Charlaine Harris and Toni L.P. Kelner (2008), Winner, Agatha Award; Winner, Macavity Award; Nominee, Anthony Award “Femme Sole,” Boston Noir, ed. Dennis Lehane (2009), Nominee, Agatha Award; Nominee, Anthony Award; Nominee, Edgar® Award; Nominee, Macavity Award “Swing Shift,” Crimes By Moonlight, ed. Charlaine Harris (2010), Winner, Anthony Award; Winner, Macavity Award; Nominee, Agatha Award “Disarming,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (June 2011) “Ardent,” Cape Cod Noir, ed. David Ulin (2011) “Love Knot,” The Wild Side: Urban Fantasy with an Erotic Edge, ed. Mark Van Name (2011) “One Soul at a Time,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (June 2012) “Mischief in Mesopotamia,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (forthcoming) ESSAYS “Lust! Love! The World at Your Feet! Why Libraries Are the Sexiest Places on Earth,” Mystery Readers Journal (Bibliomysteries), Volume 21, No. 3 (Fall 2005) “Blood Shows Up Nicely on Ivory,” Mystery Readers Journal (Academic Mysteries 101), Volume 22, No. 3 (Fall 2006) “Marvel University, or What I Learned from Reading Comics,” CrimeSpree Magazine #24 (May/June 2008) “Revolution, Starting at $6.95,” Edgar Allan Poe Awards Dinner Program, Mystery Writers of America, 2008 Malice Domestic 24 13 Fan Guest of Honor Ruth Sickafus Elegance, Style and Grace By Joni Langevoort ’ve always found it fun to type a random string of words into Google and see what comes up. I’m certain if I typed in “elegance,” “style” and “grace,” the first entry to pop up would be “Ruth Fields Sickafus.” The embodiment of all things stylish, Ruth is a lifelong lover of the arts. As a child in Kentucky, her passions were music (she began her piano lessons at age 8), writing (which she thought would be her career; she is in fact a published short story author) and reading, with her particular favorites being Nancy Drew, the “Campfire Girls” stories and the Ruth Fielding books by Alice Emerson. When Ruth was a senior in high school, she visited her sister at college and was introduced to several of her sister’s friends — one in particular had kind of a funny name and an engaging smile. She says of that meeting, “I remember thinking that he was big and blonde and good-looking. Well, it turned out that he wasn’t particularly big, and he wasn’t at all blonde, but I got one out of three right — he was good-looking”. She thought it was great that a college-aged guy was interested in her, but all too soon, Chuck Sickafus was off to Europe, fighting for his country in WWII. Ruth enrolled at Morehead State University, studying English, business and music, and upon graduation she stayed at Morehead as Assistant to the Dean. When the war ended, Chuck came home to attend Morehead himself, and he and Ruth married in 1946 — since then, Ruth has had the same funny name (“Ziegenfuss” in the original German, the name means “goat foot”). Chuck had been the official photographer for the 95th Infantry Division, but his primary passion, like Ruth’s, was music. He played French horn (and every other wind instrument) and enjoyed a long and storied career as a music educator, while Ruth’s love of I 14 music took her in a direction away from performing (“for which everybody should be grateful,” she says) and into administration. And what an extensive career she’s had! After moving to the Washington, D.C. area in 1956, Ruth became Executive Director of the People-to-People Music Committee, where she developed and implemented projects large and small to assist school music programs and performing organizations in more than 70 countries, primarily in the developing world. Her work earned her a citation from the State Department “in recognition of outstanding service in advancing understanding and goodwill between the people of the United States and the peoples of other countries”. Ruth was on the staff of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts at the time of its opening in 1971, and it was there she met and became friends with the celebrated operatic bass-baritone George London, who was serving as the Kennedy Center’s artistic director. When George was appointed Executive Director of the National Opera Institute, Ruth became the Institute’s first administrator, a position she held for twelve years. Upon George’s death in 1985, she helped his widow Nora establish the George London Foundation to support young opera singers, and has served for many years as a member of the foundation’s advisory board. A longtime member of Sigma Alpha Iota, the international music fraternity for women, she has been awarded its highest honors. She served for four years as the director of the Washington International Competition, which awards prizes to young musicians at the beginning of their careers as performing artists. Ruth also served for 25 years as a volunteer with two major international student exchange programs, Youth for Understanding (YFU) and Future Leaders Malice Domestic 24 Exchange (FLEX), which brings high school-aged students from the former Soviet Republics to the U.S. for an academic year. And that ties nicely into another of Ruth’s great loves: travel! She and Chuck (her “bonny travel companion”) journeyed to more than 50 countries on six continents, lacking only a visit to Antarctica to make it seven for seven. One of the great joys of her life is her foster son John, whom she and Chuck sponsored when he was a young boy in Greece. They visited John many times in Greece and later in Germany, and watched him as he grew, married and became a father and a grandfather. John and his daughter made the trip from their home in Berlin to be with Ruth after Chuck’s death in 2010. Somewhere along the way, Ruth earned a second degree, in anthropology, which remains an interest of hers. She has always been an avid reader; from her early years with Nancy Drew, she moved on to Agatha Christie and Mary Roberts Rinehart, and then to Ngaio Marsh, Ellery Queen, John Dickson Carr, Josephine Tey, Craig Rice ... sound familiar to you Malice attendees? She began her service on the Malice board as secretary, and has also served as treasurer and archivist par excellence (she would cry to see the state of things since she left, so don’t tell her). In fact, there were more than a few tears from the board when she moved away from the area! Ruth is now a resident of Lexington, Kentucky, where she serves on the Executive Board of the International Book Project, which provides books to schools, libraries and non-profit organizations throughout the developing world, and is a member of the Board of Directors of the Kentucky chapter of the National Society of Arts and Letters. She is a strong supporter of the local opera scene, and is brushing up on her German with a tutor from the German department at University of Kentucky. I think if I added “great friend,” “superb administrator,” “musician,” “strong supporter of the Malice genre,” “world traveler,” “devoted foster mother” and “excellent writer” to that Google string, the first entry would still be “Ruth Fields Sickafus.” It is my great privilege — and indeed the great privilege of the Malice Domestic 24 Malice board — to present to you Malice 24’s Fan Guest of Honor, our friend Ruth Sickafus. (Joni Langevoort serves on the Malice board as Publisher and Advertising Liaison. She shares Ruth’s love of books, music, fabulous style and travel, but, unlike Ruth, can’t speak a word of German beyond, “Can I pay with this credit card?”) 15 Lifetime Achievement Simon Brett The Seventeen Faces of Simon By Peter Lovesey T 16 Scholarship to Wadham College, Oxford, to read history, and (typical of the syndrome) stopped being a historian, switched to English and was awarded a first class honors degree. Significantly, too, he joined the university drama society, and played a variety of roles with such distinction that in his final year he became President of the Oxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS). And now we come to the first of those seventeen mind-boggling personality changes. PHOTO BY CHRISTIAN DOYLE errific idea for Malice Domestic to honor Simon with the Lifetime Achievement Award. In truth, the man has recorded enough achievements to fill several lifetimes. A prolific author, he is heading fast for his hundredth book. These, as you know, are quality books. And he writes plays, verse, non-fiction, humor, parodies and short stories. Yet he never appears to show the strain. Meet Simon and he is laidback, affable, wonderful company, with a permanent smile. He’s never in a hurry to rush back to his laptop and write another Fethering mystery or the latest in his new Blotto and Twinks series. How is this possible? The truth had to come out some time and I’d better reveal it. Do you remember that old movie The Seven Faces of Eve, about a woman with multiple personalities? No, Simon didn’t write it. He’s the living, breathing sequel, The Seventeen Faces of Simon. There may be more identities I’m unaware of, but seventeen is enough to be going on with, making him a fascinating case study, unique in the annals of psychology. Fortunately multiple personality syndrome is a rare condition. And happily, in the case of Simon, it hasn’t yet made him dangerous to be with. He could so easily have become Dr. Jekyll and the Seven Mr. Hydes. The personas he inhabits are without exception harmless. The onset of Simon’s condition has been traced to his teens, although it wasn’t obvious at the time. After a conventional suburban upbringing, he won a scholarship to Dulwich College and began to show an interest in drama. No problem there. Many children want to act in the school play. It’s only with hindsight that we raise an eyebrow over his brilliant success as Titania, Queen of the Fairies, in A Midsummer Night’s Dream. A brilliant scholar, Simon won a Major Father Christmas. For a period of seven weeks in 1967, Simon metamorphosed into Santa Claus in a department store in Sutton. In red coat with hood, white beard and “Ho, ho ho,” he became Santa. “Only 22 and master of my own grotto!” he recalled later on his website. From then on, for the next forty years, he underwent a bewildering series of changes that can be summarised as follows: Radio Producer. Disguised with a beard (but not Santa’s) to make him appear older than he was, he infiltrated the BBC and produced a number of radio shows so successful that some of them are still running forty years on, though without Simon still at the helm. They included Just a Minute and I’m Sorry, I Haven’t a Clue, shows with a strong emphasis on impersonation and improvisation. Cosmologist. Still at the BBC, he launched himself into space with the pilot episode of a drama series called The Hitch-Hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Scripted by Douglas Adams, it was the most innovative radio program of its time, and still enjoys a cult status. Dorothy L. Sayers Expert. Another of his radio successes was a series called Lord Peter Wimsey, based on the Sayers oeuvre and starring Ian Carmichael. And here Malice Domestic 24 we get a glimpse of how Simon’s chameleon process functions. To quote him, “Working with actors gave me the idea of creating an actor detective.” Crime Novelist. The first Charles Paris novel, featuring a jobbing actor with a fondness for the bottle and an eye for a hidden clue, appeared in 1975. The title was not only extremely clever — Cast in Order of Disappearance — but has a resonance to my theme because by this time Simon was shedding personalities as if they were old coats. What a good thing the crime writer coat is the one he has never thrown away. Husband, Father and Grandfather. During his BBC Radio career, Simon met a studio manager called Lucy and married her in 1971. It may be noted in passing that Simon shaved off his beard for the wedding, but kept a moustache “that made me look like an unctuous Italian waiter trying to force Parmesan on one of his diners.” Not only is Lucy beautiful, charming and successful in her own right as Head of Development of the Chichester Festival Theatre, but she clearly has the devotion of a guardian angel, having tolerated the seventeen Simons and stayed married to them all for forty years. They have three grown-up and not at all confused children, Sophie, Alastair and Jack. And two grandchildren, Jake and Isla. Are you counting? We’ve already reached personality number nine: Child Care Adviser. And this isn’t merely a Dad taking his share of parenting. It’s a shelfload of books, my dears: Baby Tips for Dads, Baby Tips for Mums, Baby Tips for Grandparents, The Child-Owner’s Handbook and, to get the full perspective, How To Be A Little Sod, which became a bestseller and was adapted for television, starring Rik Mayall. TV Producer. From radio, it was an easy move to London Weekend Television, but it required a new image. “Surrounded by pushy whizz-kids, I shaved off the beard to look younger.” He produced several series, but “I found the television process painfully Malice Domestic 24 slow”. He spent much of the time with a calculator plotting his next and scary incarnation in 1979. Freelance Writer. Faced with earning a living by his own wits, Simon began a prolific period when the multiple personalities (including a few I haven’t mentioned) came to his aid. Books of all kinds, mystery, comedy, anthologies, spin-offs and take-offs, appeared at the rate of four or five a year. Charles Paris was his steady and unsteady detective through these years. Simon’s expert knowledge of the acting profession gives substance to the character, the puzzle and the fun. In 1988 he began a new series featuring Mrs. Pargeter, a crime-solving widow with a shadowy past. And for the twenty-first century, with The Body on the Beach, he started the Fethering mysteries set not a million miles from where he lives, at the foot of the South Downs. Then, with scarcely a pause for breath, he launched the sleuthing siblings Blotto and Twinks. The latest, Blotto, Twinks and the Dead Dowager Duchess, is hot from the press. Movie Man. Michael Caine has Simon to thank for A Shock to the System, the 1984 book that the movie of the same title was based on. Over the years other distinguished actors, like Prunella Scales, Bill Nighy and Rik Mayall, have all accepted roles created by our multi-talented author. Playwright. As if writing books were not enough, Simon is a prolific dramatist. His stage thrillers, Murder in Play and Silhouette, are regularly performed by companies who value a well-wrought plot. He has written five pantomimes — the uniquely British Christmas entertainment built around a children’s story. Each year he scripts a new play for his local literary festival at Arundel. For radio, he wrote the runaway success After Henry, starring Prunella Scales. It later transferred to television. Are you thinking this is all too much? A strain to read about? Hold on. Poet. You probably know that the late H R F Keating, a previous recipient of the Lifetime Achievement 17 Lifetime Achievement Simon Brett Award, once wrote an entire crime novel in verse. I have to tell you that Simon, in moments of creativity only he can aspire to, has written two novellas in verse, A Crime in Rhyme and Lines of Enquiry. And when invited to contribute to an anthology honoring Harry Keating, he came up with a third, Initial Impact. Chairperson. Naturally enough, his colleagues in the writing world look to a distinguished man of letters to represent them. Step forward Simon — Chairman of the Crime Writers’ Association, the Society of Authors and the Public Lending Right Advisory Committee. And on dark November nights in secret venues he dons an enormous scarlet cloak as President of the Detection Club and enacts a not-toosecret ritual to initiate new members. Chesterton, Sayers and Christie all wore the cloak before him and it may be the candlelight or the malign influence of Eric the Skull, but there are moments when Simon appears the embodiment of each of his predecessors — but that would make three extra personas, so I’d better not push it too far. Parodist. As editor of the Faber Book of Parodies (“When lovely woman stoops to folly, The evening can be awfully jolly”) it was inevitable that Simon himself should transmute into a parodist. His Wastepaper Basket Archive contained the discarded writings of the famous, including King Arthur’s attempt to do a seating plan with a Square Table; a crumpled sheet from Samuel Beckett (“Act One, Scene One: Enter Godot”); and Agatha Christie’s Last Will & Testament (it’s too long to quote, but ask him: it’s a classic). Country Gentleman. He lives in a Sussex village straight out of Agatha Christie in an eighteenth-century house once owned by the poet and novelist John Cowper Powys. For recreation he visits a nearby stately home at Petworth and plays Real Tennis, an arcane sport once said to have been played by King Henry V and certainly played by Henry VIII at Hampton Court. And he has three cats, Geoffrey, Castor and Pollux. 18 Oh dear. That’s seventeen faces of Simon and I’ve hardly scratched the surface. There is the crossword solver; the son-et-lumière man who lights up cathedrals; the compiler of the Hypochondriac’s Directory of Ill Health; the Faber Book of Diaries; and the promoter of the new-wave Scandinavian crime writer, Turgid Glümsdottir. Even as I write these words, more faces of Simon may be manifesting themselves. All I can suggest is that instead of presenting one teapot as this year’s Lifetime Achievement Award, you order a batch of thirty. (Peter Lovesey first came to Malice Domestic in 1992. He was Guest of Honor in 1996 and was given the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008. But his lifetime continues and his 2012 Peter Diamond mystery is Cop to Corpse.) ✍ Bibliography SERIES Charles Paris Series Cast, In Order of Disappearance (1975) So Much Blood (1976) Star Trap (1977) An Amateur Corpse (1978) A Comedian Dies (1979) The Dead Side of the Mike (1980) Situation Tragedy (1981) Murder Unprompted (1982) Murder in the Title (1983) Not Dead, Only Resting (1984) Dead Giveaway (1985) What Bloody Man Is That? (1987) A Series of Murder (1989) Corporate Bodies (1991) A Reconstructed Corpse (1993) Sicken and So Die (1995) Dead Room Farce (1997) Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 19 Lifetime Achievement Simon Brett Mrs. Pargeter Series A Nice Class of Corpse (1986) Mrs., Presumed Dead (1988) Mrs. Pargeter’s Package (1990) Mrs. Pargeter’s Pound of Flesh (1992) Mrs. Pargeter’s Plot (1996) Mrs Pargeter’s Point of Honour (1998) Feathering Series The Body on the Beach (2000) Death on the Downs (2001) The Torso in the Town (2002) Murder in the Museum (2003) The Hanging in the Hotel (2004) The Witness at the Wedding (2005) The Stabbing in the Stables (2006) Death Under the Dryer (2007) Blood at the Bookies (2008) The Poisoning at the Pub (2009) The Shooting in the Shop (2010) Bones Under the Beach Hut (2011) Guns in the Gallery (2011) Blotto and Twinks Series Blotto, Twinks and the Ex-King’s Daughter (2009) Blotto, Twinks and the Dead Dowager Duchess (2010) Blotto, Twinks and the Rodents of the Riviera (2011) NOVELS, NONFICTION, VERSE Frank Muir Goes Into... (1978) The Second Frank Muir Goes Into... (1979) The Third Frank Muir Goes Into... (1980) Frank Muir On Children (1980) The Fourth Frank Muir Goes Into... (1981) The Child-Owner’s Handbook (1983) Molesworth Rites Again (1983) Take a Spare Truss (1983) A Shock to the System (1984) Bad Form (1984) Dead Romantic (1985) People-Spotting (1985) The Three Detectives and the Missing Superstar (1986) The Wastepaper Basket Archive (1986) How to Stay Topp (1987) 20 After Henry (1987) The Three Detectives and The Knight In Armor (1987) The Booker Book (1989) The Christmas Crimes at Puzzel Manor (1991) How To Be A Little Sod (1992) Murder in Play (1994) Look Who’s Walking (1994) The Hypochondriac’s Dictionary of Ill Health (1994), with Dr. Sarah Brewer Singled Out (1995) Mr. Quigley’s Revenge (1995) Not Another Little Sod! (1997) The Tale of Little Red Riding Hood (1998) Silhouette (1998) Sleeping Beauty (1999) A Crime in Rhyme, and Other Mysterious Fragments (2000) Lines of Enquiry, and Other Literary Oddities (2002) Putting the Kettle On (2002) A Bad Dream (2004) Baby Tips for Dad (2005) Baby Tips for Mums (2005) Baby Tips for Grandparents (2006) The Penultimate Chance Saloon (2006) On Second Thoughts... (2006) A Small Family Murder (2008) ANTHOLOGIES The Faber Book of Useful Verse (1981) Frank Muir Presents The Book Of Comedy Sketches (1982) The Faber Book Of Parodies (1984) The Faber Book of Diaries (1987) The Detection Collection (2005) SHORT STORIES A Box of Tricks (1985) Crime Writers and Other Animals (1997) PLAYS AND TELEPLAYS After Henry (TV series) A Healthy Grave (2010) A Story Set in Stone (son-et- lumière, Chichester Cathedral) The Inner Soprano (2010) Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 21 Poirot Award Lee Goldberg Rack Up the Body Count By Tod Goldberg ’ve followed Lee Goldberg’s career with a fair amount of enthusiasm since the winter of 1971. This probably sounds a touch obsessive, particularly since Lee’s first book didn’t come out until 1985 (.357 Vigilante in case you missed it, which many, many people did, since it was written under the pseudonym Ian Ludlow), and in light of the fact that in the winter of 1971 I was a newborn. But, you see, that’s the advantage I have of being his brother: I’ve been hearing his stories for a very long time; some, over and over and over again. What I’ve taken particular note of over these many years is that I don’t want to make Lee angry, since he knows every conceivable way to kill a man. By my (conservative) count, over the course of just the last 25 years, my brother has murdered 750 people. You write 50 crime novels, produce a couple thousand hours of network television and then found an entirely new series of horror novels called The Dead Man, all of which contain multiple murders, well, you’re gonna rack up a body count. And let’s not forget that Lee also wrote a few episodes of The New Adventures of Flipper, which means only he knows how many herring died in order for his scripts (and his aquatic actor) to reach the screen. Even before he was killing people professionally, Lee was writing compelling crime fiction from the comfort of his childhood bedroom. What I remember most about growing up down the hall from my older brother was that it was very hard to get much sleep on the weekends. Unlike most teenagers who would be blaring music and having wild sex, Lee spent his weekend nights typing. His pseudonym then, for reasons I’ve either forgotten or blacked out, was Lee Bodine. Mr. Bodine’s most compelling work, as I recall, concerned an underwater sperm bank that was I 22 under attack by...something. I’m not sure what that something was anymore, nor how deposits were made at the underwater sperm bank, nor why someone thought that the world needed an underwater sperm bank (my recollection was that the sperm bank also doubled as some kind of paramilitary base, good training for Lee’s work on SeaQuest many years later), nor why anyone would need to attack the sperm bank, but I do recall Lee being very adamant about all of it being very important and believable, even if no one else did. Fortunately, Lee’s work has grown in sophistication over the years, in the process forging what can only be considered a wildly successful career. His words have consistently appeared on TV screens for parts of the last four decades — the 80s, 90s, 00s and the 10s — starting with Spenser: For Hire in 1987, when, at 25, a spec script he wrote with his longtime writing partner William Rabkin ended up getting picked up by the show and shot, which is roughly equivalent to Ford finding a scrap of paper featuring a child’s drawing of a car and deciding, what the hell, let’s call it a Mustang and mass produce it! Subsequently, Lee went on to write and produce for such shows as Hunter, Nero Wolfe, SeaQuest, 1-800-Missing, Diagnosis Murder, The Cosby Mysteries, Martial Law, Monk, Psych, The Glades and countless others. (He’d be upset if anyone mentioned his fine work on Baywatch, so, please, no one bring it up to him.) Of course, he also managed to write all those novels I mentioned earlier, including an astounding 14 (and counting) novels featuring the iconic (and madly idiosyncratic) detective Adrian Monk, another eight featuring Dr. Mark Sloan from Diagnosis Murder, and several standalone titles. And then there’s the nonfiction — books on unsold television pilots, an Malice Domestic 24 immensely popular textbook on writing for television, another on media tie-in novels — and, well, all the other stuff: the films he has in development, The Dead Man series, his championing of the ebook industry, his journalism, his work with the Mystery Writers of America. In short, I’m not entirely convinced Lee has ever slept more than four hours in a single night. Perhaps the one thing most people don’t know about Lee Goldberg is this: he is one of the most giving, caring and loyal people you could ever hope to know. His public persona may seem a touch on the cranky side — see the above note regarding his lack of sleep — but the truth is that he’s helped hundreds of writers get started in both TV and print, has stood up for the rights of writers in every format and is one of the most vocal opponents of those who would take advantage of unsuspecting writers. His passion has always been for mysteries and that shows itself in his prodigious creative output, but the real measure of my brother is how many people he’s lifted up and given an opportunity to over the years. He learned at the foot of a master in this regard — one of his earliest mentors, Stephen J. Cannell — and that trait is far more notable than any other. And, clearly, worthy of an award. When I told my brother that I, too, wanted to be an author, he gave me two very salient pieces of advice. He told me not to be an author, that instead I should learn how to be a writer, so that way I’d have several different ways of telling a story, be it fiction, nonfiction or a screenplay. That sounded smart, so I decided I’d do that, too. He then told me that I needed to create my own luck. And that the only way to do that was to work incredibly hard, be persistent in the face of rejection and be a professional. That seemed like good advice, too, so I’ve done that as well. Funny thing? He was right. One thing he didn’t mention, however, was that if you wanted to be really successful, it helped to have a seemingly bottomless well of ideas (other than that underwater sperm bank, of course). Problem is, the only person I’ve ever met who actually seemed to have the location of that well was my brother Lee and that was the one thing he hasn’t shared, so I’ve just kept looking, along with the rest of the world. Malice Domestic 24 The best way to honor a writer, I believe, other than with huge satchels of cash, is with their own words. And so, in honor of Lee’s Poirot Award, I offer back to him these words of his, from his book Successful Television Writing: “Most kids grow up watching TV. We grew up wanting to live it...We were just kids, but even then we knew wouldn’t end up being spies like Napoleon Solo on The Man From U.N.C.L.E., super cyborg heroes like The Six Million Dollar Man, or even debonair thieves like The Saint. But there was one TV character we knew we could be.... His name was Rob Petrie.” So, someone, please, make sure there’s not an ottoman on the way to the stage when my brother picks up his award, because lo and behold, he ended up Rob Petrie after all. (Tod Goldberg is the author of eleven books, including the novels Living Dead Girl, a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, Fake Liar Cheat and the popular Burn Notice series, as well as two award-winning collections of short stories, Simplify and Other Resort Cities. He directs the MFA program in Creative Writing & Writing for the Performing Arts at the University of California, Riverside, and can confirm that his brother Lee has snored for his entire life, despite protests to the contrary.) ✍ Bibliography SERIES Diagnosis Murder Series The Silent Partner (2003) The Death Merchant (2004) The Shooting Script (2004) The Waking Nightmare (2005) The Past Tense (2005) The Dead Letter (2006) The Double Life (2006) The Last Word (2007) 23 Poirot Award Lee Goldberg Monk Series Mr. Monk Goes to the Firehouse (2006) Mr. Monk Goes to Hawaii (2006) Mr. Monk and the Blue Flu (2007) Mr. Monk and the Two Assistants (2007) Mr. Monk in Outer Space (2007) Mr. Monk Goes to Germany (2008) Mr. Monk is Miserable (2008) Mr. Monk and the Dirty Cop (2009) Mr. Monk in Trouble (2009), Excerpt: “The Case of the Piss-Poor Gold,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (November 2009) Mr. Monk is Cleaned Out (2010) Mr. Monk On The Road (2011), Excerpt: “Mr. Monk and the Seventeen Steps,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (December 2010) Mr. Monk on the Couch (2011) Mr. Monk on Patrol (2012) Charlie Willis Series My Gun Has Bullets (1995), Reprinted (2003), Kindle Edition (2009) Beyond the Beyond (1997), Kindle edition (2009) (retitled Dead Space) NONFICTION Unsold TV Pilots (1992) Unsold Television Pilots 1955-1989 (1990) Television Series Revivals (1993), retitled Television Fast Forward in the 2010 ebook edition Science Fiction Film-Making in the 1980s (1994), cowritten with William Rabkin, Randy & Jean-Marc Lofficier Dreamweavers: Fantasy Film-Making in the 1980s (1994), co-written with William Rabkin, Randy & JeanMarc Lofficier Successful Television Writing (2003), co-written with William Rabkin Tied In: The Business, Craft, and History of Media Tie-In Writing (2010), editor STANDALONES The Walk (2004), Kindle Edition 2009 The Man with the Iron-On Badge (2005), Kindle Edition 2010 Top Suspense: 13 Stories by 12 Masters of the Genre (2011), contributor Thrillers: 100 Must Reads (2010), contributor Hollywood & Crime (2008), contributor The Dead Man Series Face of Evil, with William Rabkin (2011) Ring of Knives, with William Rabkin and James Daniels (2011) Hell in Heaven, with William Rabkin (2011) The Dead Woman, with William Rabkin and David McAfee (2011) The Blood Mesa, with William Rabkin and James Reasoner (2011) The Jury Series .357 Vigilante (1985), Kindle Edition 2010 (retitled Judgment) .357 Vigilante: Make Them Pay (1985), Kindle Edition 2010 (retitled Adjourned) .357 Vigilante: White Wash (1985), Kindle Edition 2010 (retitled Payback) .357 Vigilante: Killstorm, unpublished, released in a Kindle Edition 2010 (retitled Guilty) 24 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 25 Malice Remembers Tony Hillerman A Natural Storyteller By Carolyn Marino f you ever met Tony Hillerman, you know that he was down-to-earth, funny, modest, generous, wise and a consummate gentleman. If you read his work, you know that he was an extraordinary writer, a man of deep understanding and, as his daughter Anne says, “a natural storyteller.” He was unique. And he had a remarkable life. Tony Hillerman was born in 1925 in tiny Sacred Heart, Oklahoma. On growing up in the Dust Bowl, Tony said, “The Joads were the ones who had enough money to move to California.” He served as a combat infantryman in World War II and came home with the Silver Star, the Bronze Star and the Purple Heart. He was a hero. Years afterward, one of Tony’s great pleasures was attending the reunions with his former Army colleagues. After graduating from the University of Oklahoma in 1948, Tony worked as a newspaper reporter and editor, and then, with a MA degree from the University of New Mexico, he went on to teach there, where he was a beloved mentor and a convivial poker player. Along the way, he and his lovely wife Marie raised six children, five of them adopted. With all his accomplishments and distinguished career as a journalist and a university professor, Tony had another ambition — to try his hand at writing fiction. When he first decided to get serious about it, he visited the University of Georgia and read the unedited manuscripts of John Steinbeck. Steinbeck apparently crossed out a lot of what he’d written, and Tony observed, “You could really see the craftsmanship in his work.” He added, “You’d like to think the muse is with you, you’re a genius, and it’s just flowing out — but, hell, you’re just a carpenter, putting it together.” As with many aspiring novelists, the path to publication was a bit rocky. Tony sent the manuscript of what became The Blessing Way, his first novel, to his I 26 then-agent, who didn’t want him to write fiction to begin with. He waited three weeks and then called her to ask if she could sell it. She said no. Why? She said it was neither a mainstream novel nor a mystery. Tony wanted to rewrite it and asked if she had any advice. She suggested he “get rid of all that Indian stuff.” Fortunately, Tony didn’t listen. Harper & Row (now HarperCollins) published The Blessing Way in 1970 when Tony was 45 years old. He went on to write more than 30 books — novels, most of which featured Navajo Tribal Policemen Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee; children’s books; nonfiction, including his autobiography Seldom Disappointed, which won an Agatha Award in 2001; and he edited several fine collections and anthologies. His books have been published in more than thirty languages, and he’s won every major mystery award, in addition to being named Grand Master by the Mystery Writers of America in 1991. In recognition beyond the mystery field, there are many more awards, among them the Navajo Tribes Special Friend Award and the Public Service Award from the U.S. Department of the Interior. I had the privilege of being Tony’s editor at HarperCollins Publishers, and he was a delight to work with. Every so often my phone would ring, and a voice would come down the line saying “This is Hillerman.” (That’s how Tony always identified himself — a holdover from his days as a newspaper reporter, I believe.) He would describe the plot of the story he had in mind and we’d talk about it. Tony didn’t outline. He would do his research, think through the story and then put it down on paper. In 2005 HarperCollins celebrated Tony’s 35 years with the company. We issued special editions of his novels, featuring tributes from some of his fellow Malice Domestic 24 writers. “He just flat out knows how to tell a story and he does it with such grace that you can’t imagine the hard work that must go into every scene.” That’s what Sue Grafton wrote. Harlan Coben said, “He writes about remote, wide-open spaces and makes them feel as close as your heart. He takes the specific and finds the universal.” And from Michael Connelly: “By any definition Tony Hillerman is an American original....You hear the wind when you read his stories. You fly with the spirits into the night sky. To me his work is a beautiful treasure.” In his own, respectful way, Tony gave voice to a neglected part of our heritage. And he always did it in the context of a great read. It is impossible to imagine a literary landscape without Tony Hillerman. (Carolyn Marino is Senior Vice President and Executive Editor at HarperCollins Publishers.) Three-in-one Volumes The Joe Leaphorn Mysteries: Three Classic Hillerman Mysteries Featuring Lt. Joe Leaphorn: The Blessing Way, Dance Hall of the Dead, Listening Woman (1989) The Jim Chee Mysteries: Three Classic Hillerman Mysteries Featuring Officer Jim Chee: People of Darkness, The Dark Wind, The Ghostway (1990) Tony Hillerman: Three Jim Chee Mysteries: People of Darkness, The Dark Wind, The Ghostway (1993) Leaphorn & Chee: Three Classic Mysteries Featuring Lt. Joe Leaphorn and Officer Jim Chee: Skinwalkers, A Thief of Time, Talking God (1992) Leaphorn & Chee: Three Classic Mysteries Featuring Lt. Joe Leaphorn and Officer Jim Chee: Skinwalkers, A Thief of Time, Talking God (2001) Tony Hillerman: The Leaphorn & Chee Novels: Skinwalkers, A Thief of Time, Coyote Waits (2005) Tony Hillerman: Leaphorn, Chee and More: The Fallen Man, The First Eagle, Hunting Badger (2005) ✍ Bibliography SERIES Leaphorn and Chee Series The Blessing Way (1970) Dance Hall of the Dead (1973) Listening Woman (1978) People Of Darkness (1980) The Dark Wind (1982) The Ghostway (1984) Skinwalkers (1986) A Thief of Time (1988) Talking God (1989) Coyote Waits (1990) Sacred Clowns (1993) The Fallen Man (1996) The First Eagle (1998) Hunting Badger (1999) The Wailing Wind (2002) The Sinister Pig (2003) Skeleton Man (2004) The Shape Shifter (2006) Malice Domestic 24 OTHER NOVELS The Fly on the Wall (1971) Finding Moon (1995) The Boy Who Made Dragonfly (for children) (1972) Buster Mesquite’s Cowboy Band (for children) (1973) MEMOIRS, NON-FICTION, ANTHOLOGIES Seldom Disappointed: A Memoir (2001) The Great Taos Bank Robbery (1973) The Spell of New Mexico (1976) Indian Country (1987) Talking Mysteries (1991), with Ernie Bulow The Tony Hillerman Companion: A Comprehensive Guide to His Life and Work by Hillerman, Martin Greenberg (1994) The Oxford book of American Detective Stories (1996) Canyon De Chelly (1998) Best American Mysteries of the Century (2000) Best of the Western: Anthology of Classic Writing from the America West (1991) New Omnibus of Crime (2005) The Mysterious West (1995) 27 Malice Remembers Tony Hillerman ABOUT TONY HILLERMAN, NONFICTION, BY OTHERS Tony Hillerman’s Landscape: On the Road with Chee and Leaphorn, by Anne Hillerman with photos by Don Strel (2009) Tony Hillerman’s Navajoland: Hideouts, Haunts and Havens in the Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee Mysteries, by Laurance D. Linford, Tony Hillerman (2001); Expanded Third Edition (2011) Tony Hillerman’s Indian Country Map & Guide, first edition, by Time Traveler Maps, by Tony Hillerman (1998) Tony Hillerman’s Indian Country Map & Guide, second edition, by Time Traveler Maps, by Tony Hillerman (2003) The Ethnic Detective, by Peter Freese, including a detailed analysis of Listening Woman Tony Hillerman: A Critical Companion, Critical Companions to Popular Contemporary Writers series, by John M. Reilly (1996) BOOKS OF PHOTOS Kilroy Was There (2004) Hillerman Country (1991) Indian Country: America’s Sacred Land, by Bela Kalman (text by Hillerman) (1987) Rio Grande, by Robert Reynolds (text by Hillerman) (1975) New Mexico, photography by David Muench (text by Hillerman) (1975) FILMOGRAPHY The Dark Wind (1991) Skinwalkers (2002) Coyote Waits (2003) A Thief of Time (2004) Skinning the Night: American Mystery (DVD) 28 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 29 Amelia Award Elizabeth Peters The Life and Loves of a She-Writer By An Anonymous Source of Impeccable Virtue C 30 so that she could graduate, get married and have children. “Go forth and multiply,” ordered the Dean. Barbara met his gaze with blazing eyes and retorted, “No, I want to dig in sandboxes!” Without a second’s hesitation, she abandoned a potential career as an elementary teacher/wifey, took sanctuary in the Oriental Institution at the university and emerged at the tender age of twenty-three with a PhD in Egyptology. Alas, a speed bump popped up. In the post-WWII era, a woman with a degree in Egyptology was less likely to find a job than a talking gecko. Her head held high, her upper lip stiff, Barbara married. No additional information can be provided, since her husband was a covert agent of a U.S. intelligence bureau, and he’d have to kill us if I told you. During the course of the marriage, Barbara lived in Germany and in Rome. Unable to find gainful activity, she became increasingly driven to write. (This is a common malady of young readers; having ingested an overabundance of letters and words, they must expel them somehow.) Her first two nonfiction books were published and well-received: Temples, Tombs, and Hieroglyphs and Two Thousand Years in Rome. Giddy with success, Barbara flagged down the Gothic Express, climbed aboard and raced into countryside rife with shivering mansions, will o’ the wisps and things that go harrumph in the night. Ammie Come Home has become a classic in its genre and a movie adaptation starred Barbara Stanwyck and Richard Egan. Back in the U.S., Barbara settled down with two children, their names cleverly based on her penname ‘Elizabeth Peters’, and began to write left and right, day and night, upstairs, downstairs and in her chambers. We are talking prolific. She has demurely dismissed such a callous word, citing such motivation as PHOTO BY SHMULIK ALMANY aveat lector, gentle readers. The following should be taken cum grano salis, since the anonymous source often lapses into delectatio morose, best defined as peevish delight. We have come to praise Barbara Mertz (Elizabeth Peters), not to bury her beneath a heap of snips and snipes. Our goal is admirable. Let us keep that in mind. Barbara Mertz was born some time ago and abandoned in a carpet bag in a bus station in Illinois. In that she had not a tuppence to her name, she was taken by errant gypsies to her rightful parents in a small town that had but one sidewalk and vague potholes in the unpaved street. Since this so-called town of minimal import had no library to nurture her growing mind, her parents grudgingly tossed scraps of print and scurrilous novels into her crib to appease her. Soon she had mastered the fine print on airline tickets, the nutritional guidelines on cereal boxes, Zen and the art of motorcycle maintenance. Thus prepared with limited wit and wisdom, young Barbara was deported to Chicago, that toddlin’ town where Leroy Brown wrestled with junkyard dogs and baby bears wore colorless footwear. None of this interrupted young Barbara’s reckless determination to read everything that had ever been written or would ever be written in the future. Shakespeare, Dickens, Austen, Bronte, Alcott, Gibbon, Prachett, Tolstoy, et al were mere speed bumps in her impetuous drive to master the literary arts. It is possible, if not probable, that she may not have been able to pass a pop quiz on the Karamazov boys or Freud’s “Sexuality in The Aetiology of The Neuroses,” but her treasured collection of “King Tut, Super Pharaoh” comic books gave her an overinflated sense of her own power. The University of Chicago welcomed Barbara with a scholarship and a promise to educate her well Malice Domestic 24 rent, groceries and the cost of kiddie shoes. As of the last time I counted, she has written twenty-nine novels as Barbara Michaels and thirty-seven novels as Elizabeth Peters. She has used her academic knowledge to write the brilliant Amelia Peabody series, as well as the less fanciful but equally charming Vicky Bliss novels. She has written an entirety of one short story that gave her immense personal satisfaction. Life is good. Now arrives the time when I, the anonymous source of impeccable virtue, am supposed to rave about Barbara’s flair, her capacity to capture characters and settings with astounding depth, her mastery of word and phrase, her undeniable talent and, most importantly, her ability to sweep her readers into an alternative reality that is invigorating, complex, intriguing and always credible. Or I suppose I could carry on about her as an individual and the paragon of grace and charm (in public, anyway). Barbara has won the Lifetime Achievement Award presented by Malice Domestic, and is a Grandmaster of MWA. She has been honored with the Alumna Award from the University of Chicago and the Audiofile Award (with Barbara Rosenblat, reader). She was involved with the founding of the American Crime Writers League, as well as Malice Domestic. The Arkansas Mystery Writers’ Alliance has named her Super Hot Pooh Bah of Comedic Mystery Fiction, a highly coveted award given once a millennium. Enough of the sugar-coating, I say. What about Barbara Mertz in her own writ? Her major flaw is her generosity of spirit, carefully hidden underneath her clever wit. If any of her friends was to confide in her with a problem, Barbara would squander no time with further details and find the best solution. When a friend cries, Barbara has a tissue. When a friend hurts, Barbara offers solace. She is the epitome of grace under fire, unless you annoy her beyond her boundary of tolerance. Imagine the descent of the Valkyries, and picture Barbara leading the formation. If you mess with her friends, you will not sleep well. Grudges rival the Suez Canal in depth and significance. Walk softly and carry a big, pointed stick, for Barbara is armed with a potentially lethal parasol. Malice Domestic 24 This is not to imply that Barbara is menacing. I have never met anyone with such a delightfully twisted, keen-edged sense of humor. She and Charlotte MacLeod sharpened their hatpins and skulked in the shadows. She and Alexandra Ripley raged freely at antique jewelry shops and antiques auctions. She engaged in what became a five year fracas best known as “Sheep Wars” with a colleague; although Pax Ovinicas was proffered, Barbara and her evil assistant continue to harass this hapless participant whose name eludes me. She allowed herself to be dragged into the Whimsey Foundation, and was a founding member of GroucherCon. Now Barbara Mertz, Barbara Michaels and Elizabeth Peters live quietly in ménage à trois in an 18th century farmhouse in Maryland. Although some of the plumbing remains in the 19th century, the house has a glorious solarium and a secret tunnel. The gardens surround a gazebo, under which the bodies are buried. A marble statue of a...uh...scantily clad youth (okay, naked) oversees a reflecting pond. The koi provide sustenance for the herons, and the frog population is monitored by cats, raccoons and whatever else creeps in the night. This is the prowling ground of one of the most-beloved mystery writers of our time. I, merely as anonymous source of impeccable virtue, would like to conclude with a quote from Madam Mertz as she stood on the podium, accepting an award: “I may write fluff, but I write damn good fluff!” Can’t argue with that. ✍ Bibliography WRITING AS ELIZABETH PETERS SERIES Vicky Bliss Borrower of the Night Street of Five Moons 31 Amelia Award Elizabeth Peters Silhouette in Scarlet Trojan Gold Night Train to Memphis The Laughter of Dead Kings The Love Talker Summer of the Dragon Copenhagen Connection WRITING AS BARBARA MICHAELS Jacqueline Kirby The Seventh Sinner Murders of Richard III Die for Love Naked Once More Amelia Peabody Crocodile on the Sandbank Curse of the Pharaohs The Mummy Case Lion in the Valley Deeds of the Disturber The Last Camel Died at Noon The Snake, the Crocodile and the Dog The Hippopotamus Pool Seeing a Large Cat The Ape Who Guards the Balance The Falcon at the Portal He Shall Thunder in the Sky Lord of the Silent The Golden One Children of the Storm Guardian of the Horizon Serpent on the Crown Tomb of the Golden Bird A River in the Sky SHORT STORIES The Runaway (as Barbara Michaels) The Locked Tomb Mystery (as Elizabeth Peters) Elizabeth Peters, P.I. (as Elizabeth Peters) The Master of Blacktower Sons of the Wolf Ammie Come Home Prince of Darkness The Dark on the Other Side The Crying Child Greygallows Witch House of Many Shadows Sea King’s Daughter Patriot’s Dream Wings of the Falcon Wait for What Will Come The Walker in Shadows The Wizard’s Daughter Someone in the House Black Rainbow Here I Stay The Grey Beginning Be Buried in the Rain Shattered Silk Search the Shadows Smoke and Mirrors Into the Darkness Vanish with the Rose Houses of Stone Stitches in Time The Dancing Floor Other Worlds WRITING AS BARBARA MERTZ NON-SERIES The Jackal’s Head The Camelot Caper The Dead Sea Cipher The Night of 400 Rabbits Legend in Green Velvet Devil-May-Care 32 Nonfiction Egyptology Temples, Tombs and Hieroglyphs Red Land, Black Land Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic: A Celebration of the “Cozy” Mystery By Barbara Mertz f memory serves (and I have to admit, sometimes it doesn’t) Malice Domestic was founded as a result of a bunch of us sitting around one day kvetching about how, in our opinions, the MWA awards had come to be dominated by male writers and hard-boiled plots. The issue developed into an actual investigatory committee — The Gang of Ten, as we called ourselves — and finally a report which said there had been no deliberate bias against books by women. There was one dissenter. Me. Nonetheless, MWA had the right to professionally recognize and therefore promote whatever type of mysteries they chose. The obvious solution was to start another mystery group that would recognize the type of mystery MWA seemed to have forgotten. Thus did Malice Domestic come into being. The name was chosen to emphasize the nature of the mysteries we loved to read. These were domestic crimes that happened not to P.I.’s or professional agents, but to people like you and me; and the crimes were not necessarily murder. Malice can take a number of forms. It was a celebration of the “cozy” mystery, as exemplified by writers like Agatha Christie and Ngaio Marsh, with amateur sleuths operating in familiar settings. We had a wonderful time over the years fighting to get our cause recognized, usurping particular panels and giving speeches. One of my fondest memories is of Dorothy Cannell pounding on the podium and declaiming, “Yes, I write fluff! But I write Damn Good Fluff!” Dorothy Cannell, Joan Hess, Charlotte MacLeod and Sarah Caudwell were among the writers who joined the cause. A number of other dear friends allowed me to bully them into attending the first Malice Domestic convention. It would never have taken off without their presences. I Malice Domestic 24 Our first meeting was in humble surroundings — a hotel in NW Washington, where amenities were, to put it nicely, less than luxurious. But everyone had a good time, or pretended to. I was Guest of Honor — and we had a program book with my picture on it, and everything! So after that, what? For some of those involved, the answer was that the meeting was sufficient unto itself. My answer was that a) an award wasn’t worth a damn if it was the only one given only once and b) (on a less selfish note) one convention did not solve the original problem — the neglect of the cozy (which happened, at that time, to be mostly written by women) in awards circles. If I had known how much work would be involved in putting Malice on a permanent footing I might have had second thoughts. We got a committee together — and everyone was great. Beth Foxwell, Dean James, Mary Morman and Ron and Jean McMillen were there from the start. My official title was Author Liaison, but since we were a small group we each dealt with anything that happened to arise. I soon came up against various legal and logistical problems which, in my innocence, I hadn’t considered. If Malice was to continue it had to be insured against lawsuits, both frivolous and serious, it needed a permanent (read: better) home, it would require complicated scheduling arrangements for a growing list of authors on panels and signings, it would need greater revenue in order to meet the needs of a growing convention, and so on. In short — it needed a board — which was duly selected. We met weekly to deal with these and other matters. Eventually the convention site became the Hyatt Regency in Bethesda, which served our needs admirably, and where it remained for many years (I refuse to consider how many) until 33 Amelia Award Elizabeth Peters it was transferred to a Virginia location as being more convenient for those who came by train or plane. It wasn’t as convenient for me, but what the heck, I had been hanging around for a long time, and as age and aching joints began to take their toll, I gracefully bowed out of my position on the board. I admit that I am proud of my part in helping to make Malice what it has become — a force to be reckoned with in the mystery community promoting, recognizing and awarding the type of mystery that is still my favorite reading. But I certainly could never have done it alone — I made many friends who cared as deeply as I did about this genre and who worked as hard to promote it. When I look at that first program book I am awed by the prestigious names of those who attended — names that still resonate: Aaron Elkins, Sue Dunlap, Dorothy Cannell, Mary Higgins Clark, Joan Hess, Margaret Maron, Carolyn Hart, Robert Barnard, Simon Brett, Nancy Pickard, P. M. Carlson, Sharyn McCrumb and Charlotte MacLeod, to name only a few. I’m sure I’ve left someone out; but I thank all of you, named and unnamed, from the heart, and so, I know, do the readers whose mysteries you helped to support. 34 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 35 36 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 37 Agatha Awards 2010 2006 Best Novel: Bury Your Dead, Louise Penny Best First Novel: The Long Quiche Goodbye, Avery Aames Best Nonfiction: Agatha Christie's Secret Notebooks: 50 Years of Mysteries in the Making, John Curran Best Short Story: “So Much in Common,” Mary Jane Maffini Best Children/Young Adult Fiction: The Other Side of Dark, Sarah Smith Best Novel: The Virgin Of Small Plains, Nancy Pickard Best First Novel: The Heat of the Moon, Sandra Parshall Best Nonfiction: Don’t Murder Your Mystery, Chris Roerden Best Short Story: “Sleeping with the Plush,” Toni L.P. Kelner Best Children/Young Adult Fiction: Pea Soup Poisonings, Nancy Means Wright 2009 2005 Best Novel: The Brutal Telling, Louise Penny Best First Novel: The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, Alan Bradley Best Nonfiction: Dame Agatha’s Shorts, Elena Santangelo Best Short Story: “On the House,” Hank Phillippi Ryan, Quarry Best Children/Young Adult Fiction: The Hanging Hill, Chris Grabenstein Best Novel: The Body in the Snowdrift, Katherine Hall Page Best First Novel: Better Off Wed, Laura Durham Best Nonfiction: Girl Sleuth: Nancy Drew and the Women Who Created Her, Melanie Rehak Best Short Story: “Driven to Distraction,” Marcia Talley Best Children/Young Adult Fiction: Down the Rabbit Hole, Peter Abrahams Flush, Carl Haissen 2008 Best Novel: The Cruelest Month, Louise Penny Best First Novel: Death of a Cozy Writer, G.M. Malliet Best Nonfiction: How to Write Killer Historical Mysteries, Kathy Lynn Emerson Best Short Story: “The Night Things Changed,” Dana Cameron Best Children/Young Adult Fiction: The Crossroads, Chris Grabenstein 2007 Best Novel: A Fatal Grace, Louise Penny Best First Novel: Prime Time, Hank Phillippi Ryan Best Nonfiction: Arthur Conan Doyle: A Life in Letters, Jon Lellenberg, Daniel Stashower and Charles Foley Best Short Story: “A Rat’s Tale,” Donna Andrews Best Children/Young Adult Fiction: A Light in the Cellar, Sarah Masters Buckey 38 2004 Best Novel: Birds of a Feather, Jacqueline Winspear Best First Novel: Dating Dead Men, Harley Jane Kozak Best Nonfiction: Private Eye-Lashes: Radio’s Lady Detectives, Jack French Best Short Story: “Wedding Knife,” Elaine Viets Best Children’s/Young Adult Novel: Chasing Vermeer, Blue Balliett 2003 Best Novel: Letter From Home, Carolyn Hart Best First Novel: Maisie Dobbs, Jacqueline Winspear Best Nonfiction: Amelia Peabody’s Egypt: A Compendium, edited by Elizabeth Peters and Kristen Whitbread; designed by Dennis Forbes Best Short Story: “No Man’s Land,” Elizabeth Foxwell Best Children’s/Young Adult Novel: The 7th Knot, Kathleen Karr Malice Domestic 24 2002 1998 Best Novel: You’ve Got Murder, Donna Andrews Best First Novel: In The Bleak Midwinter, Julia Spencer-Fleming Best Nonfiction: They Died in Vain: Overlooked, Underappreciated, and Forgotten Mystery Novels, edited by Jim Huang Best Short Story: “The Dog That Didn’t Bark,” Margaret Maron and “Too Many Cooks,” Marcia Talley Best Children’s/Young Adult Novel: Red Card: A Zeke Armstrong Mystery, Daniel J. Hale and Matthew LaBrot Best Novel: Butcher’s Hill, Laura Lippman Best First Novel: The Doctor Digs a Grave, Robin Hathaway Best Nonfiction: Mystery Reader’s Walking Guide: Washington, D.C., Alzina Stone Dale Best Short Story: “Of Course You Know that Chocolate is a Vegetable,” Barbara D’Amato 2001 Best Novel: Murphy’s Law, Rhys Bowen Best First Novel: Bubbles Unbound, Sarah Strohmeyer Best Nonfiction: Seldom Disappointed: A Memoir, Tony Hillerman Best Short Story: “The Would-Be Widower,” Katherine Hall Page Best Children’s/Young Adult Novel: The Mystery of the Haunted Caves, Penny Warner 2000 Best Novel: Storm Track, Margaret Maron Best First Novel: Death on a Silver Tray, Rosemary Stevens Best Nonfiction: 100 Favorite Mysteries of the Century, Jim Huang, editor Best Short Story: “The Man in the Civil Suit,” Jan Burke 1999 Best Novel: Mariner’s Compass, Earlene Fowler Best First Novel: Murder, With Peacocks, Donna Andrews Best Nonfiction: Teller of Tales: The Life of Arthur Conan Doyle, Daniel Stashower Best Short Story: “Out of Africa,” Nancy Pickard Malice Domestic 24 1997 Best Novel: The Devil in Music, Kate Ross Best First Novel: The Salaryman’s Wife, Sujata Massey Best Nonfiction: Detecting Men Pocket Guide, Willetta Heising Best Short Story: “Tea for Two,” M. D. Lake 1996 Best Novel: Up Jumps the Devil, Margaret Maron Best First Novel: Murder on a Girl’s Night Out, Anne George Best Nonfiction: Detecting Women 2, Willetta Heising Best Short Story: “Accidents Will Happen,” Carolyn Wheat 1995 Best Novel: If I’d Killed Him When I Met Him, Sharyn McCrumb Best First Novel: The Body in the Transept, Jeanne Dams Best Nonfiction: Mystery Reader’s Walking Guide: Chicago, Alzina Stone Dale Best Short Story: “The Dog Who Remembered Too Much,” Elizabeth Daniels Squire 1994 Best Novel: She Walks These Hills, Sharyn McCrumb Best First Novel: Do Unto Others, Jeff Abbott Best Nonfiction: By A Woman’s Hand, Jean Swanson and Dean James Best Short Story: “The Family Jewels,” Dorothy Cannell 39 Agatha Awards 1993 1990 Best Novel: Dead Man’s Island, Carolyn G. Hart Best First Novel: Track of the Cat, Nevada Barr Best Nonfiction: The Doctor, The Murder, The Mystery, Barbara D’Amato Best Short Story: “Kim’s Game,” M. D. Lake Best Novel: Bum Steer, Nancy Pickard Best First Novel: The Body in the Belfry, Katherine Hall Page Best Short Story: “Too Much to Bare,” Joan Hess 1992 Best Novel: Naked Once More, Elizabeth Peters Best First Novel: Grime and Punishment, Jill Churchill Best Short Story: “A Wee Doch and Doris,” Sharyn McCrumb Best Novel: Bootlegger’s Daughter, Margaret Maron Best First Novel: Blanche on the Lam, Barbara Neely Best Short Story: “Nice Gorilla,” Aaron and Charlotte Elkins 1991 Best Novel: I.O.U., Nancy Pickard Best First Novel: Zero at the Bone, Mary Willis Walker Best Short Story: “Deborah’s Judgment,” Margaret Maron 40 1989 1988 Best Novel: Something Wicked, Carolyn G. Hart Best First Novel: A Great Deliverance, Elizabeth George Best Short Story: “More Final Than Divorce,” Robert Barnard Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 41 42 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 43 A Brief History of Malice Domestic Convention Guest of Honor Toastmaster Fan Guest of Honor Malice I (April 21–23, 1989) Barbara Mertz Robert Barnard Ellen Nehr Malice II (April 6–8, 1990) Patricia Moyes Sharyn McCrumb Phyllis Brown Malice III (April 26–28, 1991) Charlotte MacLeod Simon Brett Janet Rudolph Malice IV (April 24–26, 1992) Aaron Elkins Mary Higgins Clark Bill Deeck Malice V (April 23–25, 1993) Anne Perry Nancy Pickard Mary Morman Malice VI (April 22–24, 1994) Dorothy Salisbury Davis Dorothy Cannell Jim Huang Malice VII (April 28–30, 1995) Ellis Peters Edward Marston Dean James Malice VIII (April 26–28, 1996) Peter Lovesey Margaret Maron Shirley Beaird Malice IX (May 2–4, 1997) Carolyn G. Hart Joan Hess Judy & Jack Cater Malice X (May 1–3, 1998) Robert Barnard Katherine Hall Page Maureen Collins Malice XI (April 30–May 2, 1999) Mary Higgins Clark M. D. Lake Carol Harper Malice XII (May 5–7, 2000) Simon Brett Eileen Dreyer Sheila Martin Malice XIII (May 4–6, 2001) Margaret Maron Rita Mae Brown Patti Ruocco Malice XIV (May 3–5, 2002) Edward Marston Annette & Martin Meyers Gerry Letteney Malice XV(May 2–4, 2003) Barbara D’Amato Parnell Hall Donna Beatley Malice XVI* (April 30–May 2, 2004) Dorothy Cannell Jan Burke Linda Pletzke Malice XVII (April 29–May 1, 2005) Joan Hess Carole Nelson Douglas Anne Reece Malice XVIII (April 21–23, 2006) Katherine Hall Page Kate Grilley Kay McCarty Malice XIX (May 4–6, 2007) Rochelle Krich Kate Grilley Lee Mewshaw Malice XX (April 25–27, 2008) Charlaine Harris Lindsay Davis** Dan Stashower Elizabeth Foxwell Ron & Jean McMillen Malice 21 (May 1–3, 2009) Nancy Pickard Elaine Viets Laura Hyzy Malice 22 (April 30–May 2, 2010) Parnell Hall Rhys Bowen Tom & Marie O’Day Malice 23 (April 29–May 1, 2011) Carole Nelson Douglas Donna Andrews Anne Murphy Malice 24 (April 27–29, 2012) Jan Burke Dana Cameron Ruth Sickafus Malice 25 (May 3–5, 2013) Join us at the Hyatt Regency, Bethesda, MD — May 3, 2013–May 5, 2013 * A special category for Malice XVI honored Special Malice Remembers, Carole Anne Nelson ** International Guest of Honor 44 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Remembers Lifetime Achievement Poirot Amelia Chair Agatha Christie None None None Mary Morman Dorothy L. Sayers Phyllis A. Whitney None None Mary Morman Mary R. Rinehart None None None Gerry Letteney Margery Allingham None None None Gerry Letteney William Shakespeare None None None Ron McMillen Edgar Allen Poe Mignon G. Eberhart None None Ron McMillen Ngaio Marsh None None None Ron McMillen Josephine Tey Mary Stewart None None Beth Foxwell Richard & Frances Lockridge Emma Lathen None None Beth Foxwell Ellery Queen Charlotte McLeod None None Carol Whitney John Dickson Carr Patricia Moyes None None Carol Whitney Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Dick Francis None None Cindy Silberblatt Rex Stout Mildred Wirt Benson None None Cindy Silberblatt G. K. Chesterton Tony Hillerman None None Cindy Silberblatt Agatha Christie Elizabeth Peters David Suchet None Tom O’Day Erle Stanley Gardner Marion Babson Ruth Cavin & Thomas Dunne None Tom O’Day Ellis Peters H.R.F. Keating Angela Lansbury None Tom O’Day Craig Rice Robert Barnard Doug Greene None Verena Rose Georgette Heyer Carolyn Hart None None Verena Rose All Those Previously Honored Peter Lovesey Janet Hutchings & Linda Landrigan None Verena Rose Charlotte MacLeod Anne Perry Kate Stine & Brian Skupin None Louise Leftwich Ed Hoch Mary Higgins Clark William Link None Verena Rose Lyn Hamilton Sue Grafton Janet Rudolph None Verena Rose Tony Hillerman Simon Brett Lee Goldberg Elizabeth Peters Verena Rose Malice Domestic 24 45 Grants The William F. Deeck — Malice Domestic Grants for Unpublished Writers, 1994–2012 n October 1993, Ron McMillen, then chair of Malice Domestic, Ltd., announced on behalf of the Board of Directors, the creation of the Malice Domestic Grants for Unpublished Writers. “We see this as one way to foster quality Malice literature. We want to give back something to the field that has provided us with so much enjoyment, and encourage the next generation of Malice authors.” I The first grant was awarded to Jeffrey Marks at Malice VI in April 1994. Since that time, the grants have been awarded to 32 other aspiring mystery writers. On July 2, 2004, William F. Deeck, a longtime fan and supporter of the mystery genre and of Malice Domestic, passed away. On June 27, 2004, the Malice Domestic Grants for Unpublished Writers was named The William F. Deeck — Malice Domestic Grants Winners and Titles of Submitted Manuscripts 2012 2005 Sarah E. Bewley, Florida is Burning Cynthia M. Sabelhaus, Trite but True Hilary McGowan, A Cottage with a View Stacy Leigh Juba, Sign of the Messenger 2011 2004 Robin Templeton, Double Exposure Shirley Folwarski (writing as Clarissa Miller), Blood Is Stickier Than Holy Water Heidi Vornbrock Roosa (writing as McLean Jacobson), Hypothesis for Murder 2010 Patricia A. Gouthro, Lies My Professor Told Me Stephanie Evans, Standing on the Promises 2003 2009 Kimberly Gray, Ghost of a Chance 2008 Robin Hewitt, One Sweet Pickle (GRANT SPONSORED BY DONATION IN MEMORY OF DEAN BARTH) Linda Reeder, Bricks and Murder 2007 Dawn Dixon Cotter, Faux Finish Gigi Morrissett Pandian, Artifact 2006 Joseph W. Richardson, Gideon’s Inn (GRANT SPONSORED BY DONATION IN MEMORY OF CONNIE NIESER) Thomas E. Bonsall, Lilac Time Martha Crites, She Who Listens G. M. Malliet, Death of a Cozy Writer 2002 Elizabeth Berry, Inn Sight 2001 Terry Hoover, Sweet Alice Kyle Z. Bell, George Washington Died Here 2000 Susan Wrona Gall (writing as Wrona Gall), Canvas Shroud Carolyn Kourofsky, Through a Shooter’s Eye Elizabeth Duncan, Dead Posh (GRANT SPONSORED BY DONATIONS IN MEMORY OF DEAN BARTH) 46 Malice Domestic 24 Grants Program for Unpublished Writers in honor and in recognition of Bill’s advocacy of aspiring mystery writers. The winners of The William F. Deeck — Malice Domestic Grants for Unpublished Writers are listed below with the name of the manuscript the writer submitted to the competition. In some cases, the titles of those manuscripts also became the title of the published work. ✍ 1999 Claire M. Johnson, Murder Underfoot Anne White, An Affinity for Murder 1998 Marcia Talley, Sing It To Her Bones Matt Witten, Breakfast at Madeline’s 1997 Carol Hauswald, Avenging Angels 1996 Joan C. Curtis, The Internet Murderer Sujata Massey, The Salaryman’s Wife 1995 LeeAnna Lawrence, A Cousin Once Removed 1994 Jeffrey Marks, The Scent of Murder Malice Domestic 24 47 Sponsors Thanks, Sponsors! Malice just wouldn’t be the same without our sponsors! Their generosity helps Malice maintain and even improve its high standards while keeping registration costs within reach of the average mystery reader. Our deepest and most sincere appreciation is offered to the following contributors who have helped defray the costs of bringing you this year’s Malice Domestic. Their representatives will have special “Sponsor” ribbons attached to their badges — please stop them and tell them “Thank you”! SOUVENIR TOTE BAG HARPERCOLLINS PUBLISHERS MALICE DOMESTIC MALICE AT-A-GLANCE BOOKLET BERKLEY PRIME CRIME OBSIDIAN MYSTERIES NEW AUTHORS BREAKFAST MYSTERY SCENE MAGAZINE HOSPITALITY LOUNGE BEVERAGES HARPERCOLLINS PUBLISHERS SOUVENIR SHORT STORY BOOKLET CRIPPEN AND LANDRU MALICE PARTNERS IN CRIME ALFRED HITCHCOCK MYSTERY MAGAZINE ELLERY QUEEN MYSTERY MAGAZINE BOOK BAG CONTRIBUTORS ALFRED HITCHCOCK MYSTERY MAGAZINE AMERICAN GIRL BOOKS BERKLEY PRIME CRIME CRIPPEN AND LANDRU ELLERY QUEEN MYSTERY MAGAZINE FELONY & MAYHEM PRESS 48 HARPERCOLLINS PUBLISHERS MIDNIGHT INK MYSTERY SCENE MAGAZINE OBSIDIAN MYSTERIES POISONED PEN PRESS SIMON AND SCHUSTER Malice Domestic 24 Memories of Malice Absent Friends Malice remembers the following individuals who have enriched the Malice Domestic genre and the mystery world in general. May they rest in peace. Gilbert Adair, Author George Baker, Actor Beverly Barton, Author Lilian Jackson Braun, Author Milton T. Burton, Author Blaize Clement, Author Peter Falk, Actor Ron Faust, Author The Faithful Few The following 16 participants survived Malice I in Silver Spring and have returned for every Malice since — truly the triumph of hope over experience! Donna Beatley Lee Mewshaw Lenore Boehm Anne Murphy Jack Cater C. W. Pollard Judy J. Cater Anne Reece Anna S. Jeffrey Patricia Schutz Sheila J. Martin Janine Seitz Kay McCarty Gordon M. Shaw Liz Mellett Ruth C. Shaw Dorothy Gilman, Author Joe Gores, Author Edward Hardwicke, Actor Joyce Harrington, Author Reginald Hill, Author Diana James, Publicist H.R.F. Keating, Author Paul Lindsay, Author Judi McCoy, Author Enid Schantz, Bookstore Owner Craig Thomas, Author Michael Van Rooy, Author Ronald B. Watkins, Author Barbara Whitehead, Author Tom Wicker, Author Malice Domestic 24 49 General Information “No Smoking” Policy The Hospitality Lounge The hotel does not permit smoking. The Hospitality Lounge is open during most of Malice. It provides a comfortable place to relax and discuss your favorite books. You’ll find tables with “freebies” and information about authors, organizations and activities. Limited complimentary tea and coffee service will be available. The Hospitality Lounge is also where you’ll find the “volunteers” table. In addition to being the place where you sign up to volunteer your services, here is where you turn in your Agatha ballot (on time, please!), and turn in your evaluation form. (Yes, we read them.) You’ll also find the Silent Auction items in their own special section. Look for the display about Malice with information covering this year’s special activities and Malice 25’s honorees (after they are announced at the banquet). Hotel Check-in/out Check-in time at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, Bethesda, is 4 p.m. If rooms are available, you can check-in earlier. Check-out time is 12 noon. Late check-out is available on request on a space-available basis. Attended luggage storage is available at the bell stand. To Help Us Keep Things Running Smoothly We request that you do not corner authors and panelists immediately after a program session. This keeps them from proceeding to their next session or signing, prevents the next panel from starting on time, and generally disrupts the flow of events. Please help us stay on schedule. Green Room Book Signing Autograph sessions with attending authors are scheduled at various times during the convention. We ask that you please observe the following guidelines: • Limit all autograph requests to the autograph sessions. • Limit all autograph requests to three books per person at one time. You can re-enter the line as often as time permits. • Avoid blocking the hallways outside the signing area. • Autograph requests for Elizabeth Peters are limited to ONE book only. Agatha Awards Voting Only convention attendees may participate in the Agatha Awards voting. An official ballot is in your registration packet. If you lose your ballot, you lose your vote. The ballot box is located in the Hospitality Lounge. Ballots must be submitted by Saturday at 1:00 p.m. No exceptions! At that time, the ballot box is sealed and taken to a secret location by the Agatha Awards Committee, which does the official counting. The results are revealed at the banquet on Saturday evening and subsequently posted in the Hospitality Lounge. 50 Moderators and panelists are welcome to gather in the Hotel's Executive Boardroom, which has been designated as the Green Room, about 15 minutes prior to the start time for their panels unless they’ve made other arrangements in advance. Volunteers Volunteers should check in and pick up materials for their assignments at the “volunteers” table in the Hospitality Lounge. Anyone wishing to volunteer, who did not do so before the convention, can sign up on the chart for available slots. Volunteers who contribute four hours receive a special gift not available to others at Malice 24. Also, look for the sign-up sheet so you can be placed on the volunteers’ mailing list and get advance information about next year’s program. Evaluation Forms Your opinions count! Please fill out the evaluation form in your registration bag and deposit it in the appropriate box at the volunteers table in the Hospitality Lounge before you leave Sunday. Or you can also turn it in at the Agatha Tea and Closing Ceremonies. The Malice Board reviews these evaluations carefully in an effort to maintain our high standards and plan for future programming. Malice Domestic 24 Advance Registration Discount for Malice 25 Save time and money! Register for next year’s Malice while you’re here. A registration form with a discounted on-site convention rate will be available at the registration desk. Register now for Malice 25 and SAVE! We accept cash, check or credit cards while the registration desk is open. The registration desk will be open through the Closing Ceremonies, and this will be the last opportunity to take advantage of the onsite rate. Malice Domestic 24 51 Charity Auction Facts and Frequently Asked Questions Live Auction Silent Auction How do I register? Starting this year with Malice Domestic 24, we are simplifying the live auction registration process by assigning each attendee a number in our computer system. That number will also be the attendee’s Bid card number for the live auction. Attendees will receive their bid card at the time they sign in at registration on Thursday or Friday. There is no requirement to attend the live auction; however, the bid numbers are nontransferable. All on-site registrants will be assigned a number and given a bid card at the registration desk. When and where will the auction be held? The Malice Domestic 24 Silent Auction will be open on Friday, April 27, 2012, from 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. and on Saturday, April 28, 2012, from 8:00 a.m.–1:30 p.m. in the Hospitality Lounge. When and where will the auction be held? The Live Auction will be held on Friday evening, April 27, 2012, from 7:30– 9:00 p.m. in Waterford/Lalique. What organization will be receiving the auction proceeds? The John L. Gildner Regional Institute for Children and Adolescents has been chosen as Malice Domestic 24’s auction recipient. JLG-RICA is a communitybased public educational treatment and day/residential facility serving children and adolescents, ages 10–18 with severe emotional disabilities. It is located in Rockville, Maryland. Funds will be used to develop and support residential literacy programs. If I am the winning bidder how do I claim my item? You must claim your item(s) immediately following the auction at the auction check-out table. If you are unable to remain for the entire auction, please let one of the auction volunteers know before you leave the room. What organization will be receiving the auction proceeds? As with the live auction, the John L. Gildner Regional Institute for Children and Adolescents will be the recipient of the proceeds from the silent auction. Proceeds from this auction will be used to fund a Malice Domestic Scholarship for Graduating Seniors. How do I claim my item(s)? Winning bidders must report to the Hospitality Lounge Silent Auction check-out table between 2:00 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. on Saturday, April 28, 2012. A list of winning bidders will be posted in the hallway outside the Hospitality Lounge. How can I pay? You may pay for your item(s) with credit card, cash or check. Receipts will be available at time of payment. When and how will I receive my donor receipt? Starting this year, the committee will have receipts prepared and ready for distribution shortly after the conclusion of the auction. For any donors who are not at the convention, we will either e-mail or mail their receipts. How can I pay? You may pay for your item(s) with credit card, cash or check. Receipts will be available at time of payment. 52 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 53 Convention Schedule Thursday, April 26 3:00–3:50 p.m. Friday, April 27 You’ve Got Fan Mail: Honored Guests Discuss Mail from Fascinating Fans Verena Rose — Moderator Simon Brett Jan Burke Dana Cameron Lee Goldberg 8:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m. 4:00–4:50 p.m. Registration Malice 101: An Introduction to Malice For First-time Attendees Judy Cater Simply the Best: Our Agatha Best Novel Nominees Shawn Reilly — Moderator Donna Andrews Krista Davis G.M. Malliet Margaret Maron 9:30–9:45 a.m. 5:00–5:30 p.m. Volunteers 101: Important Information for Attendees Who Want to Help Out Judy Cater and Anne Murphy Opening Ceremonies 7:00–9:00 p.m. Early Bird Registration 9:00–9:30 a.m. 5:30 p.m. Dinner, On Your Own 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Hospitality Lounge & Silent Auction 7:00 p.m. Bar opens in Crystal Ballroom Foyer 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Dealers 7:30–9:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m.–11:30 a.m. Live Charity Auction Auctioneers: Katherine Hall Page and Hank Phillippi Ryan Malice Go Round: It’s Like Speed Dating , With Authors Jack Cater — Moderator 9:00–10:00 p.m. Welcome Reception 11:30 a.m. Lunch Break 1:00–1:50 p.m. A Toast to Dana Cameron: Toastmaster Interview Dana Cameron interviewed by Hank Phillippi Ryan 2:00–2:50 p.m. Tell Us What You Really Think, Lee: Poirot Awardee Interview Lee Goldberg interviewed by Rhys Bowen Saturday, April 28 7:00–8:30 a.m. New Authors Breakfast: Fans Get to Dine with This Year’s New Authors Host: Cindy Silberblatt (Food service begins at 7:00 a.m,; presentations begin at 7:30 a.m.) 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Registration 54 Malice Domestic 24 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Hospitality Lounge & Silent Auction (Silent Auction until 1:30 p.m. only) 8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m. Dealers 8:45–9:30 a.m. It’s An Honor: Guest of Honor Interview Jan Burke interviewed by Daniel Stashower 9:40–10:30 a.m. — PANELS Capitol Crimes: All Politics Is Deadly Audrey Liebross — Moderator Alan Orloff Andrea Penrose Maggie Sefton B. K. Stevens Dorothy St. James Make It Snappy: Agatha Best Short Story Nominees Melodie Johnson Howe — Moderator Dana Cameron Krista Davis Daryl Wood Gerber (Avery Aames) Barb Goffman Roberta Isleib The Sound and the Fury: Southern Mysteries Sandra Parshall — Moderator Erika Chase Christy Fifield Miranda James Leann Sweeney Lisa Wysocky Lights, Camera, Murder: Mysteries That Translate to the Stage and Screen Ellery Adams — Moderator Ellen Byerrum Kate Collins Hallie Ephron Lee Goldberg Cozy and Loving It: The Allure of Cozy Mysteries Ilene Schneider — Moderator Lorraine Bartlett Mollie Cox Bryan Juliet Blackwell Sheila Connolly Betty Hechtman 10:40–11:30 a.m. — PANELS Have Gun, Will Travel: Mysteries Set Out West Linda Rodriguez — Moderator Casey Daniels Anne Hillerman Robert Kresge Greg Lilly Kids Love A Mystery: Agatha Best Children’s/Young Adult Nominees Carolyn Mulford — Moderator Chris Grabenstein Matthew J. Kirby Shawn Thomas Odyssey Penny Warner Witches and Zombies and Ghosts, Oh My: Paranormal Mysteries Nicole Peeler — Moderator Heather Blake Bailey Cates Jennifer Harlow Maria Lima Small Towns, Big Secrets: Mysteries Where Everything Isn’t So Cozy B. K. Stevens — Moderator Dorothy Cannell Jane K. Cleland Jess Lourey Katherine Hall Page Sandra Parshall New Kids on the Block: Agatha Best First Novel Nominees Margaret Maron — Moderator Janet Bolin Kaye George Sara J. Henry Rochelle Staab Kari Lee Townsend (continued) Malice Domestic 24 55 Convention Schedule 11:35 a.m. Signings in the Crystal Ballroom Foyer area Also in adjacent Cartier/Tiffany rooms See Signing Schedule in At-A-Glance 12:00–1:15 p.m. The Poison Lady Presents Ethanol: An Alternative Means of Death Presentation by Luci Zahray, The Poison Lady (Bring lunch and eat during the presentation) 1:00 p.m. Agatha Voting Deadline 1:30 p.m. Silent Auction Bid Deadline 1:30–2:20 p.m. — PANELS Three Strikes, You’re Dead: Sports-Related Mysteries Alan Orloff — Moderator Maggie Barbieri Laura DiSilverio Beth Groundwater Sasscer Hill Making History: Agatha Best Historical Nominees Harriette Sackler — Moderator Rhys Bowen J. J. Murphy Ann Parker A Taste for Murder: Culinary Mysteries Becky Hutchison — Moderator Ellery Adams Janet Benrey Ron Benrey Liz Lipperman It’s Murder, Mon: Mysteries Set in Exotic Locales Charles Finch — Moderator Sarah Masters Buckey Rebecca M. Hale Laurie R. King Sujata Massey Michael Stanley Suffering for Their Art: What Authors Endure in the Name of Research Molly Weston — Moderator Claudia Bishop Sophie Littlefield Hank Phillippi Ryan Sarah R. Shaber Elaine Viets 2:30–3:20 p.m. — PANELS Murder on the Mean Streets: Urban Mysteries Triss Stein — Moderator Jack Bludis Jacqueline Corcoran Roberta Rogow Cathi Stoler Elizabeth Zelvin Just the Facts, Ma’am: Agatha Best Nonfiction Nominees Steve Steinbock — Moderator Leslie Budewitz John Curran Michael Dirda A. B. Emrys Charlaine Harris My, How You’ve Grown: How Characters Have Developed Over the Years Dina Willner — Moderator Jan Burke Joanna Campbell Slan Marcia Talley Victoria Thompson Living with the Seven Deadly Sins: Mysteries as Modern Morality Plays Art Taylor — Moderator Nancy J. Cohen R.J. Harlick Carolyn Hart Tracy Kiely Margaret Maron Elvis and the Commies: Sidekicks Who Provide Comic Relief Catriona McPherson — Moderator Joelle Charbonneau Deborah Sharp Lane Stone Lois Winston (continued) 56 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 57 Convention Schedule 3:30–4:15 p.m. Another Shirt Ruined: An Interview with Our First Amelia Award Honoree, Elizabeth Peters Inquisitors: Dorothy Cannell, Parnell Hall, Joan Hess and Daniel Stashower 4:20 p.m. Signings in the Crystal Ballroom Foyer area Also in adjacent Cartier/Tiffany rooms See Signing Schedule in At-A-Glance 6:30 p.m. Cocktails available in Crystal Ballroom Foyer and at the main bar on the Lobby Level 7:00 p.m. Agatha Awards Banquet Sunday, April 29 8:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m. Registration 8:30 a.m.–2:00 p.m. Dealers 9:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m. Hospitality Lounge 9:00 a.m. Guilty Pleasures, Innocent Sleuths: Mysteries Sweetened with Wine, Chocolate and Massages Joanna Campbell Slan — Moderator JoAnna Carl Mindy Starns Clark Vicki Doudera Jenn McKinlay They Love Lucy: If Lucy Ricardo Were a Sleuth Ruth M. McCarty — Moderator Karen Cantwell Jessie Chandler Cindy Sample Nancy Glass West Haunting Secrets in Spooky Places: Modern Gothic Mysteries C. Ellett Logan — Moderator Jan Burke Lillian Stewart Carl Vicki Delany Alma Katsu J.D. Shaw Tea, Scones and Death: Murder Comes to England Kathryn Johnson — Moderator Simon Brett Charles Finch Eileen Robertson Charles Todd (Caroline) Nancy Means Wright Shipping Service open 8:45–9:35 a.m. — PANELS 9:45–10:35 a.m. — PANELS Murder by the Book: No One’s Safe in the Book Industry John Betancourt — Moderator Lucy Arlington Kaitlyn Dunnett Con Lehane Molly MacRae The New Nick and Noras: Mixing Romance and Murder Stephanie Evans — Moderator Kate Carlisle Elizabeth Duncan Kathleen Ernst Christina Freeburn Barbara Graham (continued) 58 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 59 Convention Schedule 9:45–10:35 a.m. — PANELS (cont.) If It’s Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium: Travel Mysteries Gigi Pandian — Moderator Hilary Davidson Janice Hamrick Maddy Hunter Marie Moore Sarah Wisseman Occupy Malice: When Money is the Root of All Murder Avery Aames — Moderator Donna Andrews Mike Befeler Jeanne M. Dams Catriona McPherson Elena Santangelo Good Gals, Bad Attitudes: Mysteries with Kick-Ass Heroines James Lincoln Warren — Moderator Carole Nelson Douglas Darrell James Nora McFarland Jennifer McAndrews Thou Shalt Not Kill: The Intersection of Religion and Murder Harriette Sackler — Moderator Raymond Buckland Amanda Flower M. E. Kemp G. M. Malliet Sharan Newman Must Love Dogs: Mysteries Involving Man’s Best Friend Doris Ann Norris — Moderator Sparkle Abbey (Anita Carter) Sparkle Abbey (Mary Lee Woods) Esri Allbritten Linda O. Johnston Neil S. Plakcy Well-Schooled in Murder: Academic Mysteries Judy Hogan — Moderator Frankie Y. Bailey Debra H. Goldstein Camille Minichino Linda Rodriguez Robert Spiller 12:05 p.m. Dirty Little Secrets: An Inside Look at the Writer’s Life Aimee Hix — Moderator Elizabeth Lynn Casey Jeffrey Cohen Kate Gallison Robin Hathaway Toni L. P. Kelner Signings in the Crystal Ballroom Foyer area Also in adjacent Cartier/Tiffany rooms See Signing Schedule in At-A-Glance 10:40 a.m. Lunch Break Signings in the Crystal Ballroom Foyer area Also in adjacent Cartier/Tiffany rooms See Signing Schedule in At-A-Glance 12:30–1:30 p.m. 11:10–Noon — PANELS Down the Shore: Coastal Mysteries Trish Carrico — Moderator Michelle L. Johnson Jim Lavene Joyce Lavene John Reisinger Maggie Toussaint 12:05 p.m. Malice Board Meeting Open to all attendees Until 12:30 p.m. Tony Hillerman’s Landscape: A Slideshow Presentation in Honor of Tony Hillerman Anne Hillerman Don Strel 1:40–2:25 p.m. Interview of a Lifetime: Lifetime Achievement Interview Simon Brett interviewed by Parnell Hall 2:30 p.m. Agatha Tea and Closing Ceremonies 60 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 61 62 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 63 64 Malice Domestic 24 Malice Domestic 24 65 Attending Authors Avery Aames Avery Aames Esri Allbritten Avery Aames pens the Agatha Award winning, nationally bestselling “A Cheese Shop Mystery Series”. Avery is the pseudonym for Daryl Wood Gerber. Prior to her career as a novelist, Daryl (aka Avery) created the format for the TV sitcom Out of this World. She was also an actress and co-starred on Murder, She Wrote. She loves to cook, read, golf, and garden. She shares recipes at www.mysteryloverskitchen.com. Website: www.averyaames.com Esri Allbritten is the author of Chihuahua of the Baskervilles, first in the Tripping Magazine mystery series, which falls somewhere between Agatha Christie and Scooby Doo. In addition to sushi, bowling and madrigals, she enjoys discovering quirky, real-life towns and wreaking fictional havoc in them. Esri lives in Boulder, Colorado with her husband, Angel Joe; her cat, Musette La Plume, and her Chihuahua puppy, Josie O. Website: EsriAllbritten.com Esri Allbritten Sparkle Abbey Sparkle Abbey Sparkle Abbey is the pseudonym of mystery authors Mary Lee Woods and Anita Carter who write the Pampered Pets Mystery Series from Bell Bridge Books. They have had fun writing the series and hope readers enjoy the wacky world they’ve created. Book one in the series, Desperate Housedogs, is out now, book two, Get Fluffy, is coming soon, and will be followed by Kitty, Kitty, Bang, Bang and then Yip Tuck. Website: www.sparkleabbey.com Donna Andrews Donna Andrews Ellery Adams Ellery Adams Ellery Adams grew up on a beach near the Long Island Sound. Having spent her adult life in a series of landlocked towns, she cherishes her memories of open water, violent storms and the smell of the sea. Ms. Adams has held many jobs including caterer, retail clerk, car salesperson, teacher, tutor and tech writer, all the while penning poems, children’s books, and novels. She now writes full-time from her home in Virginia. Blog: www.cozychicksblog.com Website: www.elleryadamsmysteries.com Gloria Alden Gloria Alden 66 Gloria Alden is the author of “Cheating on Your Husband Can Get You Killed” which won the Love is Murder contest in 2011 and was featured in Crimespree Magazine. Her short story “The Professor’s Books” appeared in the Fish Tales anthology. Her first book, The Blue Rose, will be published this year. She lives on a small farm in northeast Ohio with two ponies, several cats and her collie, Maggie. Blog: www.writerswhokill.blogspot.com Website: www.gloriaalden.com Donna Andrews was born in Yorktown, Virginia and now lives in Reston, Virginia. The Real Macaw (July 2011, Minotaur) is the latest book in her Agatha- and Anthony-winning Meg Langslow series. Some Like It Hawk will be released in July 2012. Andrews serves as president of the Mid-Atlantic chapter of MWA and is a past president of the Chessie Chapter of Sister in Crime. She blogs with the Femmes Fatales. Blog: femmesfatales.typepad.com Website: donnaandrews.com Lucy Arlington Lucy Arlington Lucy Arlington is an avid reader, cook, and gardener. If she had her way, she’d divide her time between preparing delectables in her kitchen, traveling the globe on her scooter and sitting in a comfortable chair with a cup of coffee and a paperback until her legs cramped. Lucy is devoted to her husband and children. Lucy’s first cozy mystery, Buried in a Book, is set in a North Carolina literary agency called A Novel Idea. Websites: www.lucyarlington.com www.sylviamay.com www.elleryadamsmysteries.com/ Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Frankie Y. Bailey Frankie Y. Bailey Mike Befeler Frankie Y. Bailey is a criminal justice professor and author of nonfiction books about crime, history, and popular culture. Her mystery series features crime historian Lizzie Stuart, most recently in Forty Acres and a Soggy Grave (2011), set on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. Frankie is at work on a near-future police procedural series set in Albany, New York. A past EVP of MWA, Frankie is the current President of Sisters in Crime. Website: www.frankieybailey.com Mike Befeler is author of the Paul Jacobson Geezer-lit Mystery series including Retirement Homes Are Murder, Living With Your Kids Is Murder (a finalist for the Lefty Award for the best humorous mystery of 2009) and Senior Moments Are Murder. Mike is active in organizations promoting a positive image of aging and is vice-president of the Rocky Mountain Chapter of Mystery Writers of America. He lives in Boulder, Colorado, with his wife, Wendy. Blog: www.mikebefeler.blogspot.com Website: www.mikebefeler.com Mike Befeler Maggie Barbieri Maggie Barbieri Maggie Barbieri is the author of the Murder 101 series and a freelance college textbook editor. The series features college professor Alison Bergeron and her New York City detective boyfriend, Bobby Crawford. Love, murder and mystery combine to make this couple a modern-day Nick and Nora. Third Degree, the fifth installment in the series, was published in November 2010. Blog: www.thestilettogang.blogspot.com Website: www.maggiebarbieri.com Janet Benrey Janet Benrey Aileen G. Baron Aileen G. Baron A retired Near Eastern archaeologist, Aileen G. Baron is the author of the Lily Sampson series, set in the Middle East during WWII, featuring archeologist Lily Sampson. Her latest books are The Scorpion’s Bite, the third book in the Lily Sampson series in which Lily is doing an archaeological survey of Trans-Jordan for the OSS, and The Gold of Thrace, a standalone, about the intrigue and deceit in the antiquities trade. Website: www.aileengbaron.com Lorraine Bartlett Lorraine Bartlett Malice Domestic 24 Lorraine Bartlett must be absolutely crazy. Why else would she write three different mystery series under three different names? In addition to the Victoria Square Mysteries, she writes the Jeff Resnick Mysteries as L.L. Bartlett, and The New York Times bestselling, Agatha-nominated Booktown Mysteries under the name Lorna Barrett. Websites: www.LorraineBartlett.com www.Lorna Barrett.com Janet has co-written (with her husband Ron) three cozy mystery series, including the Royal Tunbridge Wells Mysteries, the Pippa Hunnechurch Mysteries and the Glory, North Carolina Mysteries. In 2011, they launched Greenbrier Book Company, LLC, a small publisher whose list of 50+ titles includes mystery novels — eBooks and some paper books — written by five popular authors. Janet, previously a literary agent, serves as Greenbrier Book’s acquisitions editor. The Benreys live in North Carolina. Website: benrey.com Ron Benrey Ron Benrey Ron has co-written (with his wife Janet) three cozy mystery series, including the Royal Tunbridge Wells Mysteries, the Pippa Hunnechurch Mysteries and the Glory, North Carolina Mysteries. In 2011, they launched Greenbrier Book Company, LLC, a small publisher whose list of 50+ titles includes mystery novels — eBooks and some paper books — written by five popular authors. Ron’s latest nonfiction book is Know Your Rights — a Legal Survival Guide for Non-Lawyers. The Benreys live in North Carolina. Website: benrey.com 67 Attending Authors John Betancourt John Betancourt Jack Bludis John Gregory Betancourt owns Wildside Press, an indy publishing company. He writes the “Pit Bull” Peter Geller series (running in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine) as time allows, and won a Black Orchid Award for his story “Horse Pit.” In a former career, he was a bestselling science fiction author. He has more than a million books in print. Jack Bludis has sold sixty novels and novellas and nearly 450 stories in various genres using many pseudonyms. His best works are mysteries in his own name, including the Shamus-nominated Shadow of the Dahlia and The Last Sellout, the final book of the Brian Kane trilogy. Both are now available in paperback along with his collection that includes the story “Munchies” which was nominated for both the Shamus and Anthony Awards. Jack Bludis Claudia Bishop Claudia Bishop Mary Stanton (Claudia Bishop) is the author of more than forty novels, twentytwo of them mysteries. The fifth in the popular Beaufort&Company series, Angel Condemned, was published early in 2012. The eighteenth in the Hemlock Falls series, Dread On Arrival, is scheduled for April 2012. Both series are from Berkley Prime Crime. A long time resident of upstate New York, Mary lives in West Palm Beach, Florida. Janet Bolin Janet Bolin Juliet Blackwell Juliet Blackwell Juliet Blackwell is the NYT bestselling author of the Haunted Home Renovation mystery series (If Walls Could Talk, Dead Bolt) and the Witchcraft mystery series (Secondhand Spirits, A Cast-off Coven, Hexes and Hemlines and In a Witch’s Wardrobe, coming 6/12). As Hailey Lind, Juliet penned the Art Lover’s Mystery series, including Agatha-nominated Feint of Art. A former anthropologist, artist and social worker, Juliet served as two-term president for Northern California Sisters in Crime. Website: www.julietblackwell.net Heather Blake Heather Blake 68 Heather Blake writes the paranormal Wishcraft mysteries featuring Darcy Merriweather, a novice witch with the ability to grant wishes and a knack for solving crimes. The first book in the series, It Takes a Witch, debuted in January. Heather Blake is the pen name of two-time Agatha nominee Heather Webber, who writes the humorous Nina Quinn landscaping mysteries and the popular romantic mystery series featuring psychic Lucy Valentine. Website: www.heatherblakebooks.com Janet Bolin writes the Threadville Mystery series for Berkley Prime Crime. Willow Vanderling runs a machine embroidery boutique in Threadville, a dream village for crafty people, fabriholics and textile artists. In Dire Threads (June, 2011), Willow’s threats come back to haunt her. In Threaded for Trouble (June, 2012), a killer sewing machine lives up to its name. Like Willow, Janet plays with machine embroidery and rescued dogs on the shores of Lake Erie. Website: www.ThreadvilleMysteries.com Brynn Bonner Brynn Bonner Brenda Witchger/Brynn Bonner resides in North Carolina and both her literary fiction and mysteries reflect the landscapes and genuine people of her southern heritage. Witchger is currently under contract with Pocket/Gallery for two books based on a young female genealogist protagonist. Writing as Ellen Harris she penned six books in the Mysteries of Sparrow Island series for Guidepost Books. Her short stories have been featured in EQMM, Futures, Now and Then, Crossroads and other publications. Blog: thevinylcall.blogspot.com Website: brendawitchger.wordpress.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Rhys Bowen Rhys Bowen Sarah Masters Buckey Rhys Bowen is the bestselling author of three mystery series. Rhys’s books have won an amazing 13 awards, including Agatha Best Novel, out of 31 nominations, including for the Edgar® Best Novel. She currently writes two mystery series, the Molly Murphy novels, about an Irish immigrant in 1900s New York City, and the lighter Royal Spyness mysteries about a penniless minor royal in 1930s Britain. Rhys was born and raised in Britain but now divides her time between California and Arizona, where she goes to escape from the harsh California winters. Sarah Masters Buckey’s new mystery, Clue in the Castle Tower: A Samantha Mystery, takes place in early 1900’s England. When a first edition of Paradise Lost disappears from a manor, Samantha tries to discover the thief — and untangle the truth behind a fabled ghost. Sarah’s eight historical mysteries for young readers include The Light in the Cellar, a 2007 Agatha Award winner, and The Stolen Sapphire, an Edgar® Award nominee. She lives in New Hampshire. Sarah Masters Buckey Raymond Buckland Duffy Brown Duffy Brown Duffy Brown loves anything with a mystery. While others girls dreamed of dating Brad Pitt, Duffy longed to take Sherlock Holmes to the prom. She has two cats, Spooky and Dr. Watson, and conjures up who-done-it stories of her very own for Berkley Prime Crime. Iced Chiffon, out October 2012, is the first book in the Consignment: Murder series. Duffy writes romance as Dianne Castell and is a USA Today bestselling author. Website: DuffyBrown.com Raymond Buckland Leslie Budewitz Mollie Cox Bryan Mollie Cox Bryan Malice Domestic 24 Mollie Cox Bryan is a food writer with a penchant for murder. Scrapbook of Secrets: A Cumberland Creek Mystery (Kensington Publishing) is her debut novel — the first in a trilogy. Mollie’s second cookbook, Mrs. Rowe’s Little Book of Southern Pies (Ten Speed Press/Random House 2009) is a regional bestseller. She’s also regular essayist on WVTF Public Radio and restaurant reviewer for the Daily News Leader, Staunton, Virginia. Website: www.molliecoxbryan.com Raymond Buckland has authored eleven novels and almost sixty nonfiction books. He has been translated into seventeen foreign languages. His first book was published in 1969. He loves the Victorian era and his two series (The Penny Court Enquirers and Bram Stoker’s Dark Mysteries), together with his standalone Golden Illuminati, are all set in that time frame. An ex-Brit, he finds the research side of writing almost as satisfying as the writing itself. Website: www.raybuckland.com Leslie Budewitz Leslie Budewitz lives in northwest Montana and watches deer and chickadees from her office windows. A practicing lawyer who loves helping writers get the legal details right, she’s the author of Books, Crooks & Counselors: How to Write Accurately About Criminal Law and Courtroom Procedure (Quill Driver, 2011). Her short stories have appeared in Ellery Queen, Alfred Hitchcock and elsewhere. Her cozy series, The Food Lovers’ Village Mysteries, will debut from Berkley Prime Crime in 2013. Website: www.LawandFiction.com 69 Attending Authors Ellen Byerrum Ellen Byerrum Lillian Stewart Carl Ellen Byerrum writes the popular Crime of Fashion mysteries, set in bustling Washington, D.C., The City That Fashion Forgot. Featuring Lacey Smithsonian, who solves crimes with fashion clues, Death on Heels (Number 8) takes Lacey out of her comfort zone and into the Wild West. While researching fashion, Byerrum has collected her own assortment of 1940s styles, but laments her lack of closet space. She has been a D.C. news reporter and playwright and holds a Virginia P.I. registration. Website: www.ellenbyerrum.com The Mortsafe, sixth and shortest of the Alasdair Cameron/Jean Fairbairn series, takes place in mysterious underground Edinburgh. Of The Blue Hackle, Publisher’s Weekly says, “...Carl’s spirited fifth mystery featuring American travel journalist Jean Fairbairn and her Scottish fiancé, retired detective inspector Alasdair Cameron (after 2009’s The Charm Stone)...to diverting effect.” Lillian is the author of numerous other mystery and fantasy novels and short stories, all available in electronic and paper form. Website: www.lillianstewartcarl.com Lillian Stewart Carl Dorothy Cannell Dorothy Cannell Dorothy Cannell was born in Nottingham, England, and came to the U.S. in 1963. She married Julian Cannell, and lived in Peoria, Illinois, from 1965 to 2004. They then moved to Maine where they reside with their dog Teddy and a cat named Killer. They have four children, Warren, Jason, Rachael, who reside in central Illinois, and Shana, who resides in Maine. Among them, there are ten grandchildren. Kate Carlisle Kate Carlisle Karen Cantwell Karen Cantwell Karen Cantwell writes the Barbara Marr Mystery Series, which includes Take the Monkeys and Run, Citizen Insane and Silenced by the Yams. Like Barbara Marr, Karen is a mother living in the suburbs. Unlike Barb, she has never found monkeys in her trees or a severed human head in her neighbor’s basement, and for this she is very thankful. Karen loves to hear from readers. Website: KarenCantwell.com Trish Carrico JoAnna Carl JoAnna Carl 70 JoAnna Carl writes the Chocoholic mysteries. In these a young woman who is business manager for her aunt’s chocolate company solves mysteries in a Lake Michigan resort community. The lighthearted traditional mysteries also feature lore or information about the history, science and trivia of chocolate. Carl is a pseudonym for Eve K. Sandstrom, who earlier published six mysteries under her own name. She has attended Malice Domestic for twenty-plus years. A native Californian, NYT bestselling author Kate Carlisle worked in television production for many years before turning to writing. A lifelong fascination with the art and craft of bookbinding led her to write the Bibliophile Mysteries featuring Brooklyn Wainwright, whose bookbinding and restoration skills invariably uncover old secrets, treachery and murder. A recipient of the acclaimed Daphne du Maurier award, Kate also writes romance for Harlequin Desire and loves to visit with readers on Facebook. Website: www.katecarlisle.com Trish Carrico Trish Carrico has been fascinated by words since she learned to read at age three. As a girl, she went from rewriting the endings of her favorite books to reviewing books for her high school paper. Later on, after a stint in the theater and public service, she was an editor and wrote freelance articles for The Washington Post. Her story, “Death Near the Rim of Heaven,” appeared in Chesapeake Crimes: They Had It Comin’. Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Elizabeth Lynn Casey Elizabeth Lynn Casey Mindy Starns Clark While spending a rainy afternoon at a friend’s house more than thirty years ago, Elizabeth Lynn Casey fell in love with writing over a stack of blank paper, a box of crayons and a freshly sharpened number two pencil. From that moment forward, she never wanted to do anything else. Today, Elizabeth writes the Southern Sewing Circle Mystery Series and the upcoming Amish Mysteries (writing as Laura Bradford). She lives in New York with her family. Website: www.elizabethlynncasey.com Jane K. Cleland Jessie Chandler Jessie Chandler Debut author Jessie Chandler is the Vice President of the Twin Cities chapter of Sisters in Crime. In her spare time, Chandler sells unique, artsy T-shirts and other assorted trinkets to unsuspecting conference and festival goers. She is a former police officer and State Patrol dispatcher. Jessie resides in Minneapolis with her partner of 16 years. Website: JessieChandler.com Jane K. Cleland Jeffrey Cohen Joelle Charbonneau Joelle Charbonneau Joelle Charbonneau has performed in a variety of opera and musical theatre productions across Chicagoland. She now teaches private voice lessons and uses her stage experience to create compelling characters in her books. Skating Over the Line featuring Rebecca Robbins (who Kirkus calls the “Midwest’s laid-back answer to Stephanie Plum”) hit shelves in September 2011. The first of her new Glee Club mystery series, Murder for Choir (Berkley), will debut July 3, 2012. Website: www.joellecharbonneau.net Dolled Up for Murder is the seventh book in Jane K. Cleland’s Josie Prescott Antiques Mystery series [St. Martin’s Minotaur]. Her new short story, “Last Supper,” which introduces a 12-year-old detective, appears in the June 2012 issue of Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine. “Josie” stories have also appeared in the magazine. Jane chairs the Wolfe Pack’s literary awards, which include the Nero Award and the Black Orchid Novella Award, granted in partnership with AHMM. Website: www.janecleland.net Jeffrey Cohen Jeffrey Cohen writes the Haunted Guesthouse mystery series (An Uninvited Ghost, Night of the Living Deed) under the name E.J. Copperman. As himself, he writes the Double Feature Mystery series (Some Like It Hot-Buttered, A Night at the Operation) and the Aaron Tucker Mystery series (For Whom the Minivan Rolls, As Dog Is My Witness). He lives in New Jersey and considers himself relatively normal. But then, it’s all relative, isn’t it? Blog: heydeadguy.typepad.com/heydeadguy Website: www.ejcopperman.com Nancy J. Cohen Erika Chase Erika Chase Malice Domestic 24 Erika Chase, in a parallel life AKA Linda Wiken, is a former mystery bookstore owner. Her first Ashton Corners Book Club mystery, A Killer Read, hit the shelves in April. Read and Buried is slated for November 2012 release. Her short stories have appeared in the seven Ladies’ Killing Circle anthologies and in magazines, and she’s been short-listed for an Arthur Ellis Award from Crime Writers of Canada. Website: www.erikachase.com Nancy J. Cohen Nancy J. Cohen is a multi-published author of romance and mystery whose first book won the HOLT Medallion Award. Titles in her popular Bad Hair Day Mysteries have made the IMBA bestseller list, while her imaginative sci-fi romances have garnered rave reviews. A featured speaker at libraries and conferences, Nancy is the author of over fifteen titles. She is listed in Contemporary Authors, Poets & Writers and Who’s Who in U.S. Writers, Editors, & Poets. Website: www.nancyjcohen.com 71 Attending Authors Kate Collins Kate Collins Tom Crowley Kate Collins is the author of the national bestselling Flower Shop Mystery series. Her books have made The New York Times Extended Bestseller List, Barnes & Noble bestseller lists, and the Independent Booksellers bestsellers list. Kate’s latest mystery, Nightshade on Elm Street, #13 in the Flower Shop Mystery series, will be released November, 2012. Kate’s mysteries are available in print, digital and large-print editions, and romances in digital. Blog: www.cozychicksblog.com Website: www.katecollinsbooks.com Tom Crowley’s origins are in Milwaukee, though virtually his entire adult life has been spent living in Asia. His education was at Marquette University and Johns Hopkin’s SAIS in Washington, D.C. His career has spanned service as an infantry officer in Vietnam, in the Foreign Service and the commercial world. His writing reflects his varied experiences in Asia. He resides in Kensington, Maryland, and Bangkok. His most recent book is Viper’s Tail. Website: www.mettavisions.com Tom Crowley John Curran Sheila Connolly Sheila Connolly After exploring careers ranging from art historian to investment banker to professional genealogist, Sheila Connolly began writing mysteries in 2001, and is now a full-time writer. She writers the Orchard Mystery series, set in Western Massachusetts, as well as the Museum Mystery series, based in Philadelphia. In addition, she’s working on a new series set in Ireland that will debut in 2013. Sheila lives in Massachusetts with her husband, daughter, and three cats. Blog:www.poesdeadlydaughters.blogspot.com Website: www.sheilaconnolly.com John Curran Jeanne M. Dams Jacqueline Corcoran Jacqueline Corcoran is the author of mysteries A Month of Sundays and Backlit and middlegrade fantasy Time Witch. Forthcoming novels include mystery Maiming of the Shrew and YA Memoir of Death and Love Triangles are Murder. Jacqueline has also published three self-help books and eleven textbooks. Website: www.jacquelinecorcoran.com Jacqueline Corcoran John Curran won the Agatha, Anthony and Macavity for Agatha Christie’s Secret Notebooks and is Agatha- and Edgar®-nominated this year for Agatha Christie: Murder in the Making. He previously edited the Agatha Christie Newsletter and acted as consultant to the National Trust during the renovation of Christie’s former home, Greenway House in Devon. He is writing a PhD thesis on The Golden Age of Detection at Trinity College, Dublin where he lives. Website: www.johncurran.info Jeanne M. Dams Jeanne M. Dams writes “cheerful mysteries” in two series. Her protagonist Dorothy Martin is a sixtyish American, living and sleuthing in contemporary England. (The first “Dorothy” book won the 1995 Agatha.) Hilda Johansson, by contrast, is a young Swedish immigrant in South Bend, Indiana in the early 1900s, housemaid to the Studebaker family. The latest Dorothy is The Evil That Men Do; look for The Corpse of St. James’s soon. Hilda’s newest adventure is Murder in Burnt Orange. Website: www.jeannedams.com Amy Corwin Amy Corwin 72 Amy Corwin is a member of Mystery Writers of America and Romance Writers of America and has been writing for the last ten years. She writes historical mysteries set in the 19th century, featuring the fictional inquiry agency: Second Sons. In 2012, her first contemporary mystery, Whacked!, will be released in hardcover from Five Star/Gale. Website: www.amycorwin.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Casey Daniels Casey Daniels Vicki Delany Casey Daniels once applied for a job as a tour guide in a cemetery. She didn’t get it, but she did get the idea for the Pepper Martin mysteries. Pepper solves mysteries for the ghosts in the cemetery where she works. Book #8 Wild, Wild Death, was published in January. Casey is also Kylie Logan, who writes the Button Box mysteries. Book #1 was Button Holed and Hot Button will be out in June. Website: www.caseydaniels.com Vicki Delany is one of Canada’s most prolific and varied crime writers. She writes everything from standalone novels of gothic suspense (Burden of Memory) to the Constable Molly Smith books (In the Shadow of the Glacier, Among the Departed), a traditional village/police procedural series set in the British Columbia Interior, to the lighthearted Klondike Gold Rush Series, the most recent of which is Gold Mountain. Vicki lives in Prince Edward County, Ontario. Blog: klondikeandtrafalgar.blogspot.com Website: www.vickidelany.com Vicki Delany Hilary Davidson Hilary Davidson Hilary Davidson won the 2011 Anthony Award for Best First Novel for The Damage Done. She also earned a Crimespree Award and nominations for Arthur Ellis and Macavity awards. The sequel, The Next One to Fall, was published by Forge in February 2012. Hilary’s short stories have been featured everywhere from Ellery Queen to Thuglit. A Toronto-born travel journalist and the author of 18 nonfiction books, she has lived in New York City since October 2001. Website: www.hilarydavidson.com Michael Dirda Michael Dirda Michael Dirda is a Pulitzer Prize-winning book columnist for The Washington Post and a frequent contributor to several literary periodicals. He is the author of the memoir An Open Book and of four collections of essays: Readings, Bound to Please, Book by Book and Classics for Pleasure. His most recent book, published by Princeton University Press, is On Conan Doyle. He is currently teaching a course on the adventure novel at the University of Maryland. Krista Davis Krista Davis Malice Domestic 24 Krista Davis writes the Domestic Diva mystery series for Berkley Prime Crime. Her first novel, The Diva Runs Out of Thyme, was nominated for an Agatha. The sixth book in the series, The Diva Digs Up the Dirt will be released on June 5th. Her short story “Dead Eye Gravy” was published in Fish Tales, the Guppy Anthology. Krista lives in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia with three dogs and two cats. Blogs: mysteryloverskitchen.com & killer characters.com Website: divamysteries.com Laura DiSilverio Laura DiSilverio Laura DiSilverio served twenty years as an Air Force intelligence officer before retiring to write and parent full time. She writes the Mall Cop mysteries (Berkley Prime Crime) and the Swift Investigations PI series (Minotaur). Her first PI novel, Swift Justice, was a finalist for the Lefty Award for Best Humorous Mystery of 2010, and The Writer magazine featured her as a Breakthrough author. Find her on Facebook. Website: www.lauradisilverio.com 73 Attending Authors Vicki Doudera Carole Nelson Douglas Vicki Doudera Kaitlyn Dunnett Top-producing realtor Vicki Doudera uses high-stakes, luxury real estate as the setting for a suspenseful series starring crime-solving, deal-making agent Darby Farr. A broker with a busy coastal firm since 2003 and former Realtor of the Year, Vicki’s latest, Deadly Offer, takes Darby to a winery where murder, mayhem and Merlot all mingle. As in the popular Killer Listing and A House To Die For, Darby Farr discovers that real estate means real trouble. Website: www.vickidoudera.com Kaitlyn Dunnett is the author of the Liss MacCrimmon Scottish-American Heritage Mysteries. The latest entry is Scotched (October 2011), in which the murders take place at the First Annual Maine-ly Cozy Con! Kaitlyn lives on a Christmas tree farm with her husband and three cats. As Kathy Lynn Emerson, she wrote the Agatha award-winning How to Write Killer Historical Mysteries and the Face Down series featuring 16th century herbalist Susanna Appleton. Website: KaitlynDunnett.com Kaitlyn Dunnett Carole Nelson Douglas A. B. Emrys Literary chameleon Carole Nelson Douglas reinvented Irene Adler as a formidable divadetective and remade Las Vegas twice: “slightly surreal” for Midnight Louie, feline PI, and his human quartet of crime-solvers, and “post-apocalyptic from Hell” for Delilah Street, PI (Paranormal Investigator). Carole’s sixty novels have won many awards and made mystery, fantasy and romance bestseller lists, including USA Today. An exreporter, she loves reading, writing, research, cats, vintage clothing and just desserts. Website: www.carolenelsondouglas.com A. B. (Barbara) Emrys taught writing and popular literature at Columbia College, Florida State University and the University of Nebraska. Her short fiction and nonfiction have appeared in many journals and anthologies, currently forthcoming in Whacked! (Rainstorm Press). She guestedited an upcoming issue of Clues on paranormal mysteries, and her study of mystery form, Wilkie Collins, Vera Caspary and the Evolution of the Casebook Novel (McFarland) is nominated for an Agatha. A. B. Emrys Hallie Ephron Elizabeth J. Duncan Elizabeth J. Duncan Elizabeth J. Duncan’s first work of fiction, The Cold Light of Mourning, won the Minotaur Books /Malice Domestic Competition and was nominated for both an Agatha Award (USA) and Arthur Ellis Award (Canada). The third novel in the series, A Killer’s Christmas in Wales, was published in 2011. Elizabeth lives in Toronto with her dog, Dolly, and spends several weeks each year in North Wales where her books are set. Hallie Ephron Kathleen Ernst Kathleen Ernst 74 Hallie Ephron writes books she hopes will keep readers up nights. Her two latest, Come and Find Me and Never Tell a Lie, are both Mary Higgins Clark Award finalists. Never Tell a Lie was adapted into a movie for the Lifetime Movie Network. She coauthored five Dr. Peter Zak mysteries and wrote the Edgar®-nominated Writing and Selling Your Mystery Novel. Website: hallieephron.com The Chloe Ellefson mysteries reflect the decade Kathleen spent as a curator at a large historic site. Old World Murder and The Heirloom Murders will soon be followed by The Lightkeeper’s Legacy. Kathleen’s next children’s mystery will be published in 2013. Honors for her work include Agatha and Edgar® nominations. Kathleen lives and writes in Wisconsin, but takes great pleasure in research trips to new locales! Website: www.kathleenernst.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Christy Fifield Christy Fifield Christina Freeburn Christy Fifield writes the Haunted Gift Shop series for Berkley (Murder Buys a T-Shirt). As Christy Evans, she is the author of the Lady Plumber mysteries; and she’s multipublished in speculative fiction, romance and young adult for Tsunami Ridge Publishing as (her actual name) Christina F. York. The genre hopping isn’t really her fault: she’s a Gemini. Christy lives with husband and fellow writer J. Steven York on the Oregon Coast under strict feline supervision. Blog: christy-evans-mystery.blogspot.com Website: www.yorkwriters.com Christina Freeburn’s romantic suspense series, New Beginnings, features a skiptracing business specializing in relocating abused women. The first two books, Lost Then Found and Led Astray, are available. Under C.A. Freeburn, she republished Dying for Redemption, a detective novel featuring PI Callous Demar whose agency is located in Limbo. She has had three mystery novels published and her first novel, Parental Source, was a 2003 Library of Virginia Literary Award nominee. Website: www.theselfrescueprincess.wordpress.com Cristina Freeburn Charles Finch Charles Finch Charles Finch recently moved back to the States from England, and lives in New York with his wife and their Yorkshire terrier, Lucy. He is the author of the bestselling Charles Lenox series of Victorian mysteries, the most recent of which, A Burial At Sea, was called “rousing, baffling, and thrilling” by The New York Times. His first literary novel, The Last Enchantments, will be out in 2013 from St. Martin’s Press. Website: facebook.com/charlesfinchauthor Kate Gallison Kate Gallison Amanda Flower Amanda Flower Malice Domestic 24 Former Best First Novel Agatha Nominee Amanda Flower is the author of India Hayes Mystery Series featuring a sarcastic librarian-sleuth. In Murder in a Basket, India tries to solve a basket weaver’s murder and find a home for a labradoodle with a sizable trust fund. Summer 2012, Amanda will debut the Appleseed Creek Mystery Series (B&H Publishing), which takes place in Ohio’s Amish Country. In 2013, she will write as Isabella Alan for NAL. Websites: www.amandaflower.com, www.isabellaalan.com Winner of the New Jersey Studies Academic Alliance fiction prize for 2010, Kate Gallison writes the Emily Daggett Weiss silent movie mysteries under the name of Irene Fleming. As Kate Gallison she wrote the acclaimed Mother Lavinia Grey books and a series about a Trenton private detective. She lives quietly in Lambertville, New Jersey, with her husband and the obligatory cat. She is descended from a convicted Salem witch. Blog: crimewriters.blogspot.com Website: www.kategallison.com Kaye George Kaye George Kaye George, Agatha nominated short story writer, is the author of Choke, Mainly Murder Press, as well as A Patchwork of Stories, a collection of her previously published stories. Other stories are in Fish Tales: A Guppy Anthology and in All Things Dark and Dastardly. She reviews for Suspense Magazine, and writes for several newsletters and blogs. She gives workshops on various subjects and more stories appear here and there. She lives near Austin, Texas. Website: KayeGeorge.com 75 Attending Authors Barb Goffman Debra H. Goldstein Chris Grabenstein 76 Barb Goffman Barbara Graham Barb Goffman is a short-story author who’s branching into novels. She’s had four stories nominated for the Agatha Award, including “Truth and Consequences” this year. Her newest story, “The Lord Is My Shamus,” appears in the just-released Chesapeake Crimes: This Job is Murder. Barb recently finished her first novel, Call Girl. She is Malice Domestic’s program chair, secretary of her local MWA chapter and a past president of her local Sisters in Crime chapter. Website: www.barbgoffman.com Barbara Graham began making up stories in the third grade instead of learning to multiply and divide. A native Texan, she later lived in Denver, New Orleans and East Tennessee. Inspiration for Silersville (home of her imaginary friends) comes from her Tennessee period. An unrepentant quilting addict, she lives in Wyoming with her long suffering husband and two dogs. Her motto is, “Every book needs a dead body and every bed needs a quilt”. Website: www.bgmysteries.com Barbara Graham Debra H. Goldstein Beth Groundwater Debra H. Goldstein hates to be pigeonholed. Judge, author, litigator, wife, stepmom, mother of twins and civic volunteer are words that have been used to describe her. Maze in Blue, her debut mystery, set on the University of Michigan’s campus in the 1970’s, is the first of Chalet Publishers’ Denney Silber series. She also has won nonfiction and fiction awards for “Maybe I Should Hug You,” and her short stories “Malicious Mischief” and “Legal Magic.” Blog: www.debrahgoldstein.com/dhgblog.html Website: www.DebraHGoldstein.com Beth Groundwater writes the Claire Hanover gift basket designer series (A Real Basket Case, a Best First Novel Agatha Award finalist, and To Hell in a Handbasket) and the Rocky Mountain Outdoor Adventures series starring whitewater river ranger Mandy Tanner (Deadly Currents, March 2011, and Wicked Eddies, May 2012). The third books in both series will appear in 2013. Beth enjoys Colorado’s many outdoor activities, including skiing and whitewater rafting, and loves talking to book clubs. Blog: bethgroundwater.blogspot.com Website: bethgroundwater.com Beth Groundwater Chris Grabenstein Rebecca M. Hale Chris Grabenstein is the Anthony and Agatha Award winning author of the John Ceepak mysteries for adults and the Haunted Mystery series (Random House) for children. His new caper series for young readers, Riley Mack and the Other Known Troublemakers, was just published by HarperCollins. Pegasus Crime will publish the seventh Ceepak mystery, FUN HOUSE, this May. Chris is thrilled to see The Black Heart Crypt nominated for an Agatha this year. So is his mother. Website: www.ChrisGrabenstein.com Rebecca M. Hale is The New York Times bestselling author of How to Wash a Cat (the Cats and Curios Mystery series), starring her cats, Rupert and Isabella. The fourth book in the lineup, How to Tail a Cat, is due out July 2012. Rebecca also writes the Mystery in the Islands series, set in the U.S. Virgin Islands. The first title, Adrift on St. John, publishes March 2012. Website: www.facebook.com/Rebecca.M.Hale.author Rebecca M. Hale Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Parnell Hall Charlaine Harris Parnell Hall is the author of the Puzzle Lady crossword puzzle mysteries, the Stanley Hastings private eye novels and the Steve Winslow courtroom dramas. eBook vs Book is his latest video on YouTube. A native of the Mississippi Delta, Charlaine Harris has lived her whole life in various southern states. Her first book, a mystery, was published in 1981. After that promising debut, her career meandered along until the success of the Sookie Stackhouse novels. Now all her books are in print, and she is a very happy camper. She is married and has three children. Website: charlaineharris.com Parnell Hall Charlaine Harris Janice Hamrick Janice Hamrick RJ Harlick Janice Hamrick is the author of the Jocelyn Shore mystery series. Her first novel, Death On Tour, is the winner of the MWA/Minotaur First Crime Novel award and nominee for both the 2012 Mary Higgins Clark award and RT Reviewers’ Choice First Crime Novel award. Her second Jocelyn Shore mystery, Death Makes the Cut, will be published in July 2012. Janice lives in Austin, Texas, where she is busy completing the third novel in the series. Website: www.janicehamrick.com Carolyn Hart Carolyn Hart Carolyn Hart is the author of 47 mysteries. Death Comes Silently, the 22nd Death on Demand title, is new this spring. Hart’s books have won Agatha, Anthony and Macavity awards. She also writes the Bailey Ruth Raeburn and Henrie O series. The first in the Bailey Ruth series — Ghost at Work — was named a notable book of 2008 by PW. She lives in Oklahoma City with her husband, Phil. Website: www.CarolynHart.com RJ Harlick Robin Hathaway RJ Harlick writes the acclaimed Meg Harris mystery series set in the wilds of Quebec. Like her heroine Meg Harris, RJ loves nothing better than to roam the forests surrounding her own wilderness cabin or paddle the endless lakes and rivers. The fourth book, Arctic Blue Death, was a finalist in the 2010 Arthur Ellis Award for Best Novel. A Green Place for Dying, the fifth and latest in the series, has Meg scrambling to find a missing native woman. Website: www.rjharlick.ca Robin Hathaway’s first novel, The Doctor Digs a Grave, won the Minotaur Books/Malice Domestic Competition in 1997 and an Agatha Award in 1998. Since then Robin has published five Dr. Fenimore mysteries and three novels in her Jo Banks series. The third in this series, Sleight of Hand, won the 2009 Deadly Ink “David Award.” Robin recently completed a standalone espionage novel set during WWII in southern New Jersey. She lives in New York City. Website: www.RobinHathaway.com Robin Hathaway Jennifer Harlow Jennifer Harlow Malice Domestic 24 Jennifer Harlow, author of Mind Over Monsters, first in the F.R.E.A.K.S. Squad series, spent her childhood scaring herself with horror movies and books. She grew up to earn a degree at the University of Virginia which she put to use as a radio DJ, crisis hotline volunteer, bookseller and government investigator, among others. In her free time, she continues to scare the beejepers out of herself watching scary movies and opening her credit card bills. Blog: blog.jenniferharlowbooks.com Website: www.jenniferharlowbooks.com Betty Hechtman Betty Hechtman All Betty Hechtman ever wanted to do was to make something out of nothing. Like taking a ball of yarn and turning it into a scarf, or taking a dictionary full of words and turning them into a mystery series. Writing the national bestselling crochet series featuring Molly Pink and the Tarzana Hookers for Berkley Prime Crime is a dream come true. Website: www.BettyHechtman.com 77 Attending Authors Sara J. Henry Sara J. Henry Judy Hogan Sara J. Henry’s first novel, Learning to Swim, features a woman living in the Adirondacks who rescues a small child — and then must figure out what to do with him. Learning to Swim is a finalist for the Agatha, Barry and Mary Higgins Clark awards, with its sequel scheduled for November 2012. Sara grew up in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and now lives on a dirt road in Vermont with at least one too many dogs. Website: www.SaraJHenry.com Judy Hogan has served as publisher (Carolina Wren Press), teacher of creative writing and freelance editor. She chaired the Committee of Small Magazine Editors and Publishers, 1975-78, and presided over the North Carolina Writers’ Network, 198487. Judy has five volumes of poetry from small presses, and two prose works. Killer Frost, her first mystery novel, a finalist in the 2011 Best First Malice Domestic competition, will be published Sept. 1, 2012, by Mainly Murder Press. Blog: postmenopausalzest.blogspot.com Website: judyhogan.home.mindspring.com Judy Hogan Joan Hess Joan Hess Joan Hess has been seen around town in a blue Mustang convertible, and she intends to dye her hair to match said car. Although this is a secret, she and Dorothy Cannell were detained briefly by local police officers, and then kept under surveillance for the next two hours. Her latest books are The Merry Wives of Maggody, Mummy Dearest and Deader Home and Gardens (2012). Melodie Johnson Howe Sasscer Hill Sasscer Hill Sasscer Hill lives on a Maryland farm and has bred racehorses for many years. A winner of amateur steeplechase events, she has galloped her horses on the farm and trained them into the winner’s circle. Her first novel, Full Mortality, was a finalist for both Agatha and Macavity Best First Mystery Awards. Her second novel, Racing from Death, was recently released. Blog: SasscerHill.blogspot.com Melodie Johnson Howe Maddy Hunter Anne Hillerman Anne Hillerman Anne is the author of five published books including Tony Hillerman’s Landscape: On the Road with Chee and Leaphorn, and her newest, Gardens of Santa Fe, both created with husband-photographer Don Strel. Anne is the co-founder of Wordharvest Writers Workshops which offers the annual Tony Hillerman Writers Conference in November. The eldest of mystery author Tony Hillerman’s six children, she is touring the Southwest this year with Roads Scholar programs in honor of her dad. Website: www.annehillerman.com Maddy Hunter Maddy Hunter is the Agatha Award-nominated author of the nationally bestselling Passport to Peril mysteries. After a hiatus of four years, she’s back on bookstore shelves with Dutch Me Deadly, the seventh adventure in her comedic globetrotting series that features Emily Andrew-Miceli and her band of zany Iowa senior citizens. Follow Maddy on her Facebook fan page. Website: www.maddyhunter.com Roberta Isleib Roberta Isleib 78 Melodie Johnson Howe’s new book for 2012 is Shooting Hollywood: The Diana Poole Stories. Diana Poole, after the death of her husband, returns to the only career she knows — acting. Hollywood can be a brutal place for an actress in her early forties especially when she discovers crime in the world of glamour and greed. Ms. Howe has been nominated for two Barry Awards, an Edgar®, an Anthony and an Agatha. Website: www.MelodieJohnsonHowe.com Roberta Isleib (aka Lucy Burdette) is a clinical psychologist whose books and stories have been short-listed for Agatha, Anthony and Macavity awards. She is a pastpresident of Sisters in Crime. Her Key West food critic mystery series debuted in January with An Appetite for Murder. Death in Four Courses will follow in September. Blog: www.jungleredwriters.com Website: www.lucyburdette.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Smita Harish Jain Kathryn Johnson Smita Harish Jain has published three short stories: “Cosmic Justice,” Chesapeake Crimes 4; “The Body in the Gali,” Mumbai Noir; and “An Education in Murder, Chesapeake Crimes 5 — and is currently working on her first novel, a mystery set in Mumbai, India. When she isn’t writing or working at her day job, she is cheering her husband on at triathlons. One day, she will probably write a mystery set at a triathlon in Mumbai. Kathryn Johnson has written over 40 novels for major U.S. publishers and teaches the popular Extreme Novelist courses at The Writer’s Center, Bethesda. She is a former Agatha Award finalist. The first of her new series of Victorian thrillers, written as Mary Hart Perry for HarperCollins, launches August 1, 2012. The Wild Princess, set in 1871 London, features Queen Victoria’s fourth daughter, Louise. Kathryn also offers mentoring/editorial services for fiction authors. Blog: www.writebyyou.blogspot.com Website: www.writebyyou.com Kathryn Johnson Darrell James Darrell James Darrell James is a fiction writer with residence in both Pasadena, California, and Tucson, Arizona. His short stories have appeared in numerous book anthologies and have garnered a number of awards, to include finalist in the 2009 Derringer Awards. His debut novel, Nazareth Child, was recently published by Midnight Ink/Llewellyn Worldwide. His personal odyssey to publication appears in the Writer’s Digest book How I Got Published, with J.A. Jance, David Morrell, Clive Cussler and other notable authors. Website: www.darrelljames.com Miranda James Miranda James Malice Domestic 24 Dean James is a multi-award-winning author of over twenty books of mystery fiction and nonfiction. He has written as Jimmie Ruth Evans and Honor Hartman. Writing as Miranda James, he is The New York Times bestselling author of Murder Past Due (Berkley Prime Crime 2010) and Classified as Murder (Berkley Prime Crime 2011). This new series features widowed librarian Charlie Harris and his Maine coon cat, Diesel. Website: www.catinthestacks.com Michelle L. Johnson Michelle L. Johnson Michelle L. Johnson’s debut mystery, The Footloose Killer, was released in March of 2012. It is the first in a series starring Detectives Lexi Sawyer and Morgan Pryce. She is currently working on two novels and a memoir and also edits for two publishing houses. Michelle has owned two independent bookstores and managed another. She resides in Virginia Beach, the perfect setting for her detective series. Blog: www.michellejohnson35.wordpress.com Website: www.michelleljohnson.com Linda O. Johnston Linda O. Johnston’s first published fiction, in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, won the Robert L. Fish Memorial Award for Best First Mystery Short Story of the year. Linda now writes romance and mystery novels. Linda’s Pet Rescue Mysteries, a spinoff from her Kendra Ballantyne, Pet-Sitter series for Berkley Prime Crime, features Lauren Linda O. Johnston Vancouver, a determined pet rescuer who runs a no-kill shelter. In this cozy series, “no-kill” refers to animals, not people. Blog: KillerHobbies.blogspot.com Website: www.LindaOJohnston.com 79 Attending Authors Alma Katsu Alma Katsu Laurie R. King Alma Katsu’s debut The Taker (Gallery Books), a historical suspense novel with a supernatural element, was named a top ten debut of 2011 by American Library Association-Booklist and made U.K. bestsellers lists. The Reckoning, the second book in the trilogy, is coming out in June 2012. Ms. Katsu is a former senior intelligence analyst. Website: www.almakatsu.com Laurie R. King is a third generation Californian with a background in theology, whose first crime novel (1993’s A Grave Talent) won the Edgar® and Creasey awards. Her yearly novels include a historical series about Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes, from Agatha-nominee The Beekeeper’s Apprentice to 2011’s Pirate King. Her books have won the Edgar®, Creasey, Wolfe, Lambda and Macavity awards, and appear regularly on The New York Times bestseller list. Website: www.LaurieRKing.com Laurie R. King Toni L.P. Kelner Toni L.P. Kelner Toni L.P. Kelner is the author of the “Where are they now?” and the Laura Fleming novels. She is a prolific short story writer, and along with Charlaine Harris, co-edits fantasy/mystery anthologies. Toni has an Agatha teapot and Romantic Times Career Achievement Award on her mantel, and has been nominated for the Anthony, the Macavity and the Derringer. She lives in Massachusetts with her husband, author Stephen P. Kelner, Jr. and their two daughters. Website: www.tonilpkelner.com Matthew J. Kirby Matthew J. Kirby is a writer of books for young readers, and a school psychologist. His middle grade novel Icefall is nominated for the 2011 Best Children’s/Young Adult Agatha award, as well as the Edgar® Award in juvenile fiction, and won the Parents’ Choice Award Gold Medal. Website: www.matthewjkirby.com Matthew J. Kirby Robert Kresge M. E. Kemp M. E. Kemp M. E. Kemp is the author of a series of historical mysteries featuring two nosy Puritans as detectives. Her fifth book, Death of Cape Cod Cavalier, will be out in the Fall of 2012. Kemp’s short stories and articles have appeared in national and regional magazines. Kemp lives in Saratoga Springs, New York. Website: mekempmysteries.com Robert Kresge Robert Kresge is the author of two Warbonnet Mysteries, Murder for Greenhorns, a finalist for the 2011 Bruce Alexander Award for Best Historical Mystery, and Painted Women, both set in 1870s Wyoming and featuring sleuths Monday Malone and Kate Shaw. This is Rob’s ninth Malice, his first as an author. A D.C. native, he served 30 years in the CIA and was a founding member of the Counterterrorist Center. He now lives in Albuquerque. Website: www.robertkresge.com Tracy Kiely Tracy Kiely 80 Tracy Kiely graduated with an English degree from Trinity College in 1990. This accomplishment, however, merely prompted job interviewers to ask, “How fast can you type?” Her standard answer of “not so fast” usually put an end to further questions. That’s when she thought writing a novel might be a good idea. Tracy’s novels combine her love of the English cozy and all things Jane Austen. Her latest, Murder Most Persuasive, was released September 2011. Website: Tracykielymysteries.com Jim Lavene Jim Lavene Jim Lavene, and his wife/partner Joyce, celebrated his 40th anniversary and their 60th novel published in 2011 with A Spirited Gift, Book 3 in the Missing Pieces Mystery series from Berkley Prime Crime, now a National Bestseller. He enjoys travel, collecting dragons and spending time with his grandchildren. He is president of the only North Carolina chapter of Sisters in Crime, Murder We Write, in High Point. Website: www.joyceandjimlavene.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Joyce Lavene Joyce Lavene Greg Lilly Joyce Lavene and her husband/partner Jim are currently writing three mysteries for Berkley Prime Crime, including the Renaissance Faire series, the Missing Pieces series and a new series, the Sweet Pepper Fire Brigade Mysteries which begins in 2013. She enjoys going to yard sales with her daughters, looking at antiques and photography. She recently finished working on the second Cape Fear Crime Festival mystery conference in Wilmington, North Carolina, along with Jim and author Judy Nichols. Website: www.facebook/Joyce and Jim Lavene Greg Lilly writes the Derek Mason Mystery series where family ties can lead to strangulation. The latest release, Scalping the Red Rocks, was nominated for the Lambda Literary Award. He’s also the author of the novels Devil’s Bridge and Under a Copper Moon. His current project is a standalone mystery set in 1690s and present-day Virginia. Greg is a workshop presenter, magazine editor and publishing house representative. He writes and lives in Williamsburg, Virginia. Website: www.GregLilly.com Greg Lilly Maria Lima Vivian Lawry Vivian Lawry Vivian Lawry, author of Dark Harbor: A Chesapeake Bay Mystery, is Appalachian by birth and a social psychologist by training. Her short fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in more than thirty literary journals, ranging from Apalachee Review to Xavier Review. She is currently serving as president of the Central Virginia Chapter of Sisters in Crime. Website: VivianLawry.com Maria Lima Maria loves to read, write and watch genre TV and feels very lucky that people actually pay her to do at least one of these things. Maria’s Blood Lines series, set in the Texas Hill Country, is published by Pocket Books. You’ll also find her in various genre-based essay anthologies from Smart Pop Books among other collected works. She loves to mix mystery, fantasy and magic in everything she writes. Website: www.marialima.com Clyde Linsley Con Lehane Con Lehane Con Lehane has published three crime novels featuring New York City bartender Brian McNulty: Beware the Solitary Drinker, What Goes Around Comes Around and Death at the Old Hotel. His latest effort, Murder at the 42nd Street Library, features librarian Raymond Ambler (a friend of the aforementioned McNulty) and will appear in 2012. Over the years, he (Lehane, that is) has worked as a college professor, union organizer, labor journalist and bartender. Website: www.conlehane.com/reviews.html. Clyde Linsley is the author of four mysteries, the last three of which are set early in the 19th Century and feature Josiah Beede, the “boy hero” of the Battle New Orleans. He is at work on a book set around the Mississippi River. He and his wife live in Northern Virginia. Clyde Linsley Liz Lipperman Audrey Liebross Audrey Liebross, a federal government procurement attorney by day, is finishing a novel, Chicken Soup Justice, in which Rabbi Cindy Katzmann solves the murder of an elderly lady. Audrey’s latest short story is “Passing Through” in Chesapeake Crimes: They Had it Comin’. The mother of three sons, Audrey lives in Annandale, Virginia. Audrey Liebross Malice Domestic 24 Liz Lipperman Liz Lipperman lives north of Dallas with her high school sweetheart hubby, close to her kids and grandkids. A retired nurse, she spent many years chasing the romance genre until she gave in to all those pesky villains who kept popping up in her stories. Last year the first book of her Clueless Cook Mysteries debuted from Berkley. She also writes steamy romantic suspense under the pseudonym, Liz Roth. Blog: www.mysteriesandmargaritasblogspot.com Website: www.lizlipperman.com 81 Attending Authors Sophie Littlefield Sophie Littlefield Molly MacRae Sophie Littlefield earned an Edgar® nomination as well as an Anthony Award and an RT Book Award for her first novel, A Bad Day for Sorry. In addition to the Stella Hardesty mystery series, she writes the post-apocalyptic Aftertime series and paranormal fiction for young adults. Her most recent mystery is A Bad Day for Scandal (Minotaur, 2011). Sophie lives in Northern California. Website: www.sophielittlefield.com Look for Last Wool and Testament, the first in Molly’s new Haunted Yarn Shop Mysteries — the series that puts the woo-woo in the wool — coming from Penguin/NAL in September 2012. In the meantime, read Lawn Order, hailed by The Boston Globe as “murder with a dose of drollery.” Molly’s short stories have appeared in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine since 1990. After twenty years in northeast Tennessee, she now lives with her family in Champaign, Illinois. Website: www.mollymacrae.com Molly MacRae C. Ellett Logan C. Ellett Logan C. Ellett Logan spent the first half of her life in the Deep South, an experience that informs her settings and troubles her characters southern-Gothic-style. Today, she’s a member of the Chesapeake Chapter of Sisters in Crime (board member for the previous three years) and Mystery Writers of America. Her short stories show off in Chesapeake Crimes anthologies (Wildside Press). Her novel, Miasma, part of The Quagmire Murder Mysteries, is set in Georgia’s low country. Website: www.celogan.com G.M. Malliet G.M. Malliet G.M. Malliet is a two-time Anthony nominee who won the Agatha for her first book, Death of a Cozy Writer, which initially won the Malice Domestic grant. Wicked Autumn (Minotaur 2011) is her first book in the new Max Tudor series. Library Journal and The Boston Globe named it one of the top ten crime novels of 2011. It was a Shelf Awareness Reviewer’s Choice for one of the top ten books of 2011. Website: www.GMMalliet.com Margaret Maron Jess Lourey Jess Lourey Jess Lourey is the author of the humorous Murder-by-Month mysteries set in Battle Lake, Minnesota, and featuring amateur sleuth, Mira James. Jess has been teaching writing and sociology at the college level since 1998. She is a member of Sisters in Crime and serves on the national board of Mystery Writers of America. In a starred review of November Hunt, her seventh book, Booklist says, “It’s not easy to make people laugh while they’re on the edge of their seats, but Lourey pulls it off!” Website: www.jesslourey.com Margaret Maron Sujata Massey Sujata Massey 82 Margaret Maron lives and writes on her family’s century farm in “Colleton County,” North Carolina (28 novels, 2 collections of short stories). She has served as president of Sisters in Crime and MWA. Her books are on the reading list for several university courses in contemporary Southern literature. She does not have a law degree. Website: www.MargaretMaron.com Sujata Massey is elated to return to Malice after a five year absence! She’s author of the Rei Shimura mystery series, which in past years gathered six Agatha nominations and one win. Since last here, she’s published Shimura Trouble, the tenth Rei mystery (print and ebook); and The Convenience Boy and Other Stories of Japan (ebook). Coming soon are The Sleeping Dictionary, a standalone historical suspense novel set in colonial India, and an eleventh Rei novel. Website: www.sujatamassey.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Jennifer McAndrews Jennifer McAndrews Catriona McPherson Jennifer McAndrews is a two-time Daphne du Maurier Award of Excellence finalist and a Romance Writers of America Golden Heart finalist. Her love of mystery began in middle school, and despite occasional forays into romance fiction, Jennifer is happiest weaving puzzles on the page and leaving a trail of clues for the reader to follow. She resides in the greater New York metro area with her husband, children and an assortment of pets. Website: www.jennifermcandrews.com Recovering academic, Catriona McPherson, is the author of six mysteries set in Scotland in the 1920s, featuring the posh but poor, brisk but kind, lost but learning, private detective Dandy Gilver. St. Martin’s Press launched the series in the U.S. last year with Dandy Gilver and The Proper Treatment of Bloodstains. Catriona is as Scottish as a plaid haggis but has recently moved to northern California. Website: www.dandygilver.com Catriona McPherson Cricket McRae Ruth M. McCarty Ruth M. McCarty Nora McFarland Ruth M. McCarty’s short mysteries have appeared in several anthologies. She received honorable mentions in AHMM and mysteryauthors.com for her flash fiction and won the 2009 Derringer for Best Flash Story for “No Flowers for Stacey” published in Deadfall: Crime Stories by New England Writers. She is former editor at Level Best Books, a past president of the New England SinC, a member of MWA and a founding member of the New England Crime Bake. Website: www.ruthmmccarty.com Nora McFarland Jenny Milchman Nora McFarland is the author of The Lilly Hawkins Mysteries from Touchstone/Simon & Schuster. The third book in the series, Going to the Bad, will be released in August 2012. Nora has worked in national news at CNN as well as local news in Bakersfield, California. She loves movies almost as much as books and has an MFA from USC’s School of Cinematic Arts. She lives in Macon, Georgia. Website: www.noramcfarland.com Jenny Milchman is a suspense writer from New Jersey. Her debut novel, Cover of Snow, is forthcoming from Ballantine, with short stories to be published in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine and Adirondack Mysteries II. Jenny is the Chair of ITW’s Debut Authors, and the founder of Take Your Child to a Bookstore Day. She features bestsellers, Edgar® winners and independent authors on her blog. Jenny teaches writing and publishing and co-hosts the series Writing Matters. Websites: jennymilchman.com suspenseyourdisbelief.com Jenn McKinlay Jenn McKinlay Malice Domestic 24 Cricket McRae Cricket McRae enjoys traditional colonial home crafts like soap making, food preservation, spinning and herbalism. She studied philosophy, English and history and held positions ranging from driver’s license examiner to soap maker. After traveling the world as a localization program manager, now she sticks close to home and writes the Home Crafting Mystery Series and, as Bailey Cates, the Magical Bakery Mysteries. In between, she cooks, bakes and tends to a dozen garden beds. Website: www.cricketmcrae.com Jenn McKinlay is The New York Times bestselling author of the Cupcake Bakery mysteries and the Library Lover’s mysteries. Her free time is spent reading everything, baking cupcakes, pruning her orchard, knitting and felting handbags and skateboarding with her hooligans. She lives in sunny Arizona in a house that is overrun with kids, pets and her husband’s guitars. Website: www.jennmckinlay.com Jenny Milchman 83 Attending Authors Rosemary and Larry Mild Rosemary and Larry Mild Carolyn Mulford Rosemary and Larry Mild’s latest novel is Cry Ohana: Adventure and Suspense in Hawaii, where murder, blackmail and passion thrust a Hawaiian family into the tentacles of Honolulu’s dark side. They also co-author the Paco and Molly Mysteries: Boston Scream Pie, Locks and Cream Cheese and Hot Grudge Sunday. Just out: Rosemary’s memoir on love, lessons and political betrayal: Miriam’s World-and Mine, a tribute to their daughter lost on Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. Website: www.magicile.com Carolyn Mulford edited national and international magazines before becoming a freelance writer and editor. Recently she changed her focus to fiction. A short story, “Crossing the Bridge,” appeared in Chesapeake Crimes 3 in 2008. Her YA novel, The Feedsack Dress, became Missouri’s Great Read at the 2009 National Book Festival. In 2013 Five Star will publish Show Me the Murder, a mystery featuring an ex-spy who copes with crime and personal crises in rural Missouri. Website: www.CarolynMulford.com Carolyn Mulford Camille Minichino Camille Minichino, a retired physicist turned writer, is the author of the Periodic Table Mysteries. As Margaret Grace, she writes the Miniature Mysteries; as Ada Madison, she’s launched an academic series featuring Professor Sophie Knowles, math teacher at fictional college in Massachusetts. Soon, every aspect of her Camille Minichino life will be a mystery series. Camille also works at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and is on the faculty of Golden Gate University in San Francisco. Website: www.minichino.com J.J. Murphy J.J. Murphy Sharan Newman Marie Moore Marie Moore Shore Excursion (April 2012) is Marie Moore’s debut novel, the first in a series featuring New York-based travel agent Sidney Marsh. Sidney escorts senior citizens on a Baltic cruise, but soon discovers that there is a killer on board, targeting the High Steppers, and quite possibly herself. Like Sidney, Marie Moore is a native Mississippian, and a former travel agent, who has visited over 60 countries. Marie is a member of Sisters in Crime. Website: www.mariemooremysteries.com Sharan Newman Sharan Newman is a medievalist and the author of the award-winning Catherine Levendeur mystery series, set in medieval France. She has also written nonfiction: The Real History Behind the Da Vinci Code and The Real History Behind the Templars. A mystery, The Shanghai Tunnel, set in 1868 Portland, Oregon, is as close to modernity as she wishes to go. Her latest nonfiction is The Real History of the End of the World. Website: www.sharannewman.com Shawn Thomas Odyssey Shawn Thomas Odyssey 84 J.J. Murphy is the author of the Algonquin Round Table Mysteries, which feature Dorothy Parker as a wisecracking sleuth. An award-winning health care writer in Pennsylvania, J.J. Murphy is also a longtime Dorothy Parker fan. J.J. started writing the Algonquin Round Table Mysteries after the birth of twin daughters, as an escape from toddler television. Website: www.roundtablemysteries.com Shawn Thomas Odyssey’s magical mystery novel The Wizard of Dark Street has been nominated for both an Agatha and an Edgar® award, and is an ABC New Voices selection for 2011, with a sequel due out Spring 2013. Shawn is also a professional music composer for film and TV, with works including HBO’s Deadwood and the video game release of Kung Fu Panda. Websites: shawnthomasodyssey.com, thewizardofdarkstreet.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Alan Orloff Alan Orloff Sandra Parshall Alan Orloff’s debut mystery, Diamonds for the Dead, was a Best First Novel Agatha Award finalist. He writes the Last Laff mystery series for Midnight Ink (Killer Routine and the recently-released Deadly Campaign), and writing as Zak Allen, he’s published The Taste and First Time Killer, both eBook originals. He’s the treasurer of the Mid-Atlantic Chapter of MWA, and belongs to ITW and The Writer’s Center (Bethesda, Maryland). Website: www.alanorloff.com Sandra Parshall will always have a warm spot in her heart for Malice Domestic because she won the Agatha Award for Best First Novel for her debut book, The Heat of the Moon. Since then she has published three more entries in her Rachel Goddard series, including the latest, Under the Dog Star. She lives in McLean, Virginia, with her husband and cats. Website: www.sandraparshall.com Sandra Parshall Nicole Peeler Katherine Hall Page Katherine Hall Page Katherine Hall Page’s series features amateur sleuth/caterer, Faith Fairchild. The Body in the Belfry (1990) won an Agatha for Best First; “The Would-Be Widower” (2001) won Best SS; and The Body in the Snowdrift (2005) won Best Novel when Katherine was Malice XVIII’s Guest of Honor. The Body in the Boudoir, the 20th book in the series, and Have Faith in Your Kitchen: a Faith Fairchild Cookbook are out now. Website: www.katherine-hall-page.org Nicole Peeler Andrea Penrose Gigi Pandian Gigi Pandian Gigi Pandian’s debut mystery novel, Artifact, was awarded a Malice Domestic Grant. Artifact comes out in August 2012 and is the first in a series featuring treasure-hunting Indian-American historian Jaya Jones. Jaya also appears in Gigi’s mystery story, “The Shadow of the River,” in the Fish Tales anthology. Gigi is a graphic designer in the San Francisco Bay Area, where she served on the board of Sisters in Crime’s Northern California chapter for four years. Website: www.gigipandian.com Andrea Penrose Ann Parker Malice Domestic 24 Andrea Penrose made her debut into the world of historical mystery last spring with Sweet Revenge, the first book in a Regencyset series featuring two unconventional aristocrats as amateur sleuths. Her second book, The Cocoa Conspiracy, came out in December 2011. A graduate of Yale, she has an MFA in Graphic Design from the Yale Art School, and also writes historical romance under the pen name Cara Elliott. Blog: www.wordwenches.typepad.com Website: www.andreapenrose.com Neil Plakcy Ann Parker Ann Parker’s award-winning Silver Rush mystery series (Silver Lies, Iron Ties, Leaden Skies, and Mercury’s Rise) features saloonowner Inez Stannert in 1880s Colorado. Ann’s ancestors include a Leadville blacksmith, a Colorado School of Mines professor and a gandy dancer. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area (although she’d prefer to be in Colorado), where she does science writing by day to pay the bills and pens historical mysteries at night to satisfy her soul. Website: www.annparker.net Nicole Peeler, author of Tempest Rising, writes the Jane True series for Orbit Books. She’s also an assistant professor of English Literature and Creative Writing at Seton Hill University, where she teaches in Seton Hill’s MFA in Popular Fiction. When she’s not teaching, she’s traveling. She is on Twitter as nicolepeeler. Website: nicolepeeler.com Neil Plakcy Neil Plakcy is the proud papa of a golden retriever who is just as sweet as Rochester in In Dog We Trust and The Kingdom of Dog, though not quite as smart. Fortunately he doesn’t have Rochester’s talent for finding dead bodies. A native of Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where the Golden Retriever mysteries are set, Neil is working on a third mystery, and Sam is curled behind his desk chair. Website: www.mahubooks.com 85 Attending Authors John Reisinger John Reisinger Roberta Rogow Former engineer John Reisinger is the author of Master Detective, the true story of Ellis Parker and the Lindbergh kidnapping. Master Detective has also been published in Taiwan and China. John’s Max Hurlock Roaring 20s mysteries are based on real cases. Death on a Golden Isle is set on Jekyll Island, Georgia, and Death of a Flapper is based on a real-life locked room murder. John lives on Maryland’s Eastern Shore with his wife Barbara. Blog: johnreisinger.wordpress.com Website: www.johnreisinger.com Roberta Rogow has had stories published in both Science Fiction and Mystery anthologies. Her most recent novel, The Root of the Matter (Deadly Ink Press, 2010), is set in Gilded Age New York City. Roberta recently retired after 37 years as a Children’s Librarian in public libraries in New Jersey. Roberta Rogow Hank Phillippi Ryan Eileen Robertson Eileen Robertson Eileen lives in Gosport and worked as a lecturer at Highbury College and at Portsmouth University. She has had several plays performed in the Portsmouth Arts Centre and has always had an interest in writing. It was not until her husband, William, suffered a stroke that she had to change her career to that of a caregiver. Although this was not easy it did give her the opportunity to focus on her writing. Hank Phillippi Ryan Harriette Sackler Linda Rodriguez Linda Rodriguez Linda Rodriguez has published one novel, Every Last Secret (Minotaur Books), winner of the Malice Domestic First Traditional Mystery Novel Competition, and books of poetry, Heart’s Migration (Thorpe Menn Award) and Skin Hunger. She received the Midwest Voices & Visions Award, Elvira Cordero Cisneros Award, Ragdale and Macondo fellowships. Rodriguez is a member of Latino Writers Collective, Wordcraft Circle of Native American Writers and Storytellers, International Thriller Writers and Sisters in Crime. Blog: www.LindaRodriguezWrites.blogspot.com Harriette Sackler Harriette Sackler is a longtime member of the Malice Domestic Board of Directors and serves as grants chair. She is a past Agatha Award nominee for “Mother Love,” her short story that appeared in Chesapeake Crimes II. Look for her new stories scheduled for publication in Chesapeake Crimes V and in Fishnets. Harriette lives in the D.C. suburbs with her husband, Bob, and their five pups. Cindy Sample Cindy Sample 86 Hank Phillippi Ryan is investigative reporter for Boston’s NBC affiliate, winning 27 Emmys and 10 Murrow awards. A bestselling author of four mystery novels, Ryan won the Anthony, Macavity and two Agatha awards for her crime fiction. Her newest book is Drive Time. She’s on the national board of MWA and vice-president of national Sisters in Crime. Her new mystery, The Other Woman, begins a new series September 2012 from Forge Books. Website: www.HankPhillippiRyan.com Cindy Sample is a former mortgage banking CEO who decided plotting murder was more entertaining than plodding through paperwork. Her humorous mystery series set in the California gold country features single soccer mom, Laurel McKay. Dying for a Dance, the sequel to Dying for a Date (2010) is a 2012 Lefty nominee for best humorous mystery. Cindy is past president of Sacramento SINC and co-chair of Left Coast Crime 2012. Website: www.cindysamplebooks.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Elena Santangelo Elena Santangelo Sarah R. Shaber Elena Santangelo’s novel Fear Itself (2011) is the latest addition to her Possessed Mystery series, which began with Agatha Award finalist By Blood Possessed. Fear Itself features ghosts from the Great Depression, murder in Pat’s hometown, a cat with more than nine lives and a dog who only understands Czech. Elena also won the Agatha Award for Best Nonfiction with Dame Agatha’s Shorts: An Agatha Christie Short Story Companion. Website: www.elenasantangelo.blogspot.com Sarah R. Shaber is the author of Louise’s War and Louise’s Gamble (May 2012), the first books in a new series set in Washington, D.C. during World War II. Shaber is also the author of the Professor Simon Shaw series. Her first book, Simon Said, won the Minotaur Books/Malice Domestic Best First Traditional Mystery award. She also edited Tar Heel Dead, a collection of short stories by North Carolina Mystery writers. Website: www.sarahrshaber.com Sarah R. Shaber Deborah Sharp Ilene Schneider Ilene Schneider Rabbi Ilene Schneider, Ed.D., one of the first women rabbis ordained in the U.S., hasn’t decided what she wants to be when she grows up. She is currently Coordinator of Jewish Hospice for Samaritan Hospice, Marlton, New Jersey. Chanukah Guilt is the first Rabbi Aviva Cohen mystery. She has completed the second, Unleavened Dead, and is working on the third, Yom Killer. She is also the writer of Talk Dirty: Yiddish. Website: rabbiauthor.com Deborah Sharp Deborah Sharp left USA Today to write the funny ‘’Mace Bauer Mysteries,’‘ set in rural Florida. Think Stephanie Plum as a ‘gator trapper with two cousins named Bubba. Red carpet parties and feather boas kicked off Deb’s latest book, the movie-themed Mama Sees Stars. She appeared recently on NBC‘s Today show, where she revealed she identifies too strongly with her wacky Mama character. She and husband Kerry Sanders live in southern Florida. Website: www.DeborahSharp.com J. D. Shaw Maggie Sefton Maggie Sefton Maggie Sefton is the The New York Times bestselling author of the Berkley Prime Crime Knitting Mysteries. Unraveled, 9th in the series, made the The New York Times Bestselling Hardcover Fiction List after its June 2011 release. All of the mysteries in the successful series have been Barnes & Noble Top Ten Bestselling Mysteries. “Readers will enjoy visiting with Kelly and her knitting buddies, who, in their carefree way, resemble the cast of Friends.” — Publisher’s Weekly Blog: www.cozychicksblog.com Website: www.maggiesefton.com J. D. Shaw Joanna Campbell Slan Joanna Campbell Slan Malice Domestic 24 Jane (J.D. Shaw) is the author of two standalone young adult mysteries: The Secrets of Loon Lake and Leave No Footprints with another, Miss Millie’s Murder, coming out this Fall. The stories deal with teenagers who find themselves in strange situations not of their own making, such as escaping from a dangerous and abusive family or finding themselves suddenly homeless. But sometimes the safe havens they find are anything but safe. Website: jdshawmysteries.com RT Book Reviews calls Joanna Campbell Slan one of “mystery’s rising stars.” She is the author of The Jane Eyre Chronicles, a new series that picks up where Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre left off with Death of a Schoolgirl (Berkley, August 2012). Joanna’s first book in the Kiki Lowenstein series, Paper, Scissors, Death (Midnight Ink, 2008), was an Agatha Award finalist. The fifth Kiki book, Ready, Scrap, Shoot, is out now. Website: www.JoannaSlan.com 87 Attending Authors Robert Spiller Robert Spiller Daniel Stashower Robert Spiller is the author of the Bonnie Pinkwater mysteries. His math teacher sleuth uses Mathematics and her knowledge of historic mathematicians to solve murders in the small Colorado town of East Plains. Radical Equations, the fourth in the series, was released in February 2012. Robert lives with his wife Barbara in Colorado Springs. Blog: Spillerwrites.blogspot.com Website: rspiller.com Daniel Stashower is a two-time Edgar® and Agatha award winner whose most recent nonfiction books are The Beautiful Cigar Girl and (as co-editor) Arthur Conan Doyle: A Life in Letters. Dan is also the author of five mystery novels, and was the toastmaster of Malice Domestic XX. His short stories have appeared in numerous anthologies, and in The Best American Mystery Stories. He lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife and their two sons. Daniel Stashower Dorothy St. James Mystery author Dorothy St. James makes her home on an artsy island community in South Carolina with her husband, two dogs and fluffy cat. She holds an undergraduate degree in Wildlife Biology, a graduate degree in Public Administration and Urban Planning and is a certified master gardener. She’s worked in all branches and all levels of govDorothy St. James ernment including local, regional, state, federal and nonprofit. Dorothy currently writes the White House Gardener Mystery series. Website: www.dorothystjames.com Triss Stein Triss Stein Triss Stein had a story, “Greenmarket Violinist,” in the 2011 anthology Murder New York Style: Fresh Slices; another, “NYPDaughter,” in the original Murder New York Style, and has completed the first book in a new series about Brooklyn neighborhoods, history, family life and crime. She thinks of it as “urban cozy.” She also wrote two older published mystery novels and managed the recent Sisters in Crime research study of mystery readers. Website: www.murdernystyle.com Rochelle Staab Rochelle Staab Rochelle Staab, a former award-winning Top 40 radio programmer and music industry marketing executive, blended her fascination with the supernatural and her love for mystery in Who Do, Voodoo?, her debut novel and the first in her Mind for Murder Mystery series for Berkley Prime Crime, featuring psychologist Liz Cooper. Bruja Brouhaha, the second novel in her series, will be released in August 2012. Website: www.rochellestaab.com Michael Stanley Michael Stanley 88 Steve Steinbock Steve Steinbock Steve Steinbock is a lifelong reader, collector and historian of detective fiction. He holds an MA in Judaic studies, and in 2010 was awarded an honorary doctorate by Hebrew Union College. Steve is a contributing editor for AudioFile Magazine, and serves as book critic for Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, a position that was once held by Anthony Boucher, the namesake of Bouchercon. He lives with his family in Maine. Website: www.themysteryplace.com/eqmm/jury South African born Stanley Trollip is half (with Michael Sears) of the writing team, Michael Stanley. They have published three Detective Kubu mysteries: A Carrion Death, The Second Death of Goodluck Tinubu and Death of the Mantis, which is shortlisted for an Edgar® and a Barry. Before becoming a writer, he was a professor interested in how computers can facilitate learning. He is a pilot and has enjoyed many flying safaris throughout southern Africa. Website: www.detectivekubu.com Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors B.K. Stevens B.K. Stevens Sylvia A. Straub B.K. (Bonnie) Stevens has published almost forty short stories, most in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine; her most recent story is “Thea’s First Husband” (June). One Shot, an e-novella published by Untreed Reads, is a humorous whodunit that takes a satirical look at issues ranging from gun control to reality shows. Bonnie’s awards include a Derringer and first place in a suspense-writing contest judged by Mary Higgins Clark. Bonnie and her husband, Dennis, live in Virginia. Website: www.bkstevensmysteries.com Sylvia Straub’s short stories, “Dog’s Best Friend” and “Vena’s Rules of Engagement,” appeared in Mozark Press anthologies. Prior to writing fiction, she earned a doctorate in theoretical linguistics. The French Review published her article on French syntax. Later, she turned to nonprofit management and served as CEO of two national and one international professional associations. She is completing an ecclesiastical mystery; an earlier version won second place in Shepherd University’s writing competition. Sylvia A. Straub Leann Sweeney Cathi Stoler Cathi Stoler Cathi Stoler’s first mystery/suspense novel, Telling Lies, takes on the subject of stolen Nazi art. Other novels include The Hard Way, a story about the international diamond trade and Keeping Secrets, which delves into the subject of hidden identity. Short stories include “Fatal Flaw” and “Out of Luck,” which was published in Murder New York Style: Fresh Slices. Cathi is a member of Mystery Writers of America and the New York Chapter of Sisters in Crime. Website: www.cathistoler.com Leann Sweeney is the author of two cozy series from NAL/Obsidian, the Cats in Trouble mysteries and the Yellow Rose mysteries. Her newest release is The Cat, The Wife and The Weapon. She lives in Texas with her husband, her inspirational cats and a dog that thinks she’s a cat. Website: www.leannsweeney.com Leann Sweeney Marcia Talley Lane Stone Lane Stone Lane Stone’s debut mystery, Current Affairs: A Tiara Investigations Mystery was published by Mainly Murder Press. She lives in Sugar Hill, Georgia, and Alexandria, Virginia. When not writing she’s enjoying characteristic baby boomer pursuits: hiking in various countries and playing golf. Her volunteer work includes raising money for women political candidates. She’s a proud member of both the Chessie and Atlanta chapters of Sisters in Crime. Website: www.LaneStoneBooks.com Marcia Talley Art Taylor Art Taylor Malice Domestic 24 Marcia is the author of The Last Refuge and ten previous Hannah Ives mysteries. A winner of the Malice Domestic grant and an Agatha nominee for Best First Novel, Marcia won an Agatha and an Anthony for her story “Too Many Cooks” and an Agatha for the story “Driven to Distraction.” She edited two mystery collaborations, and has published more than a dozen short stories. She lives in Annapolis, Maryland and winters in the Bahamas. Website: www.marciatalley.com Art Taylor’s short fiction has appeared in several national magazines (including Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine and North American Review), online at Fiction Weekly, Prick of the Spindle, and SmokeLong Quarterly, and in various regional journals/newspapers. His story “A Voice from the Past” was shortlisted for the 2010 Best American Mystery Stories anthology. He regularly reviews mysteries and thrillers for The Washington Post Book World and contributes frequently to Mystery Scene and other publications. Website: www.arttaylorwriter.com 89 Attending Authors Joseph L.S. Terrell Joseph L.S. Terrell, who makes his home on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, is the published author of five books. The most recent are mysteries: Overwash of Evil (Bella Rosa Books, 2011), Tide of Darkness: ‘The Lost Colony Theater’ Murders (2010, Bella Rosa Books); and a young adult/adult thriller, The Other Side of Silence (2007, Bella Rosa Joseph L.S. Terrell Books). He is at work on another mystery, also set at the Outer Banks. Kari Lee Townsend Kari Lee Townsend Victoria Thompson Victoria Thompson Edgar®-nominated author Victoria Thompson writes the Gaslight Mystery Series, set in turn-of-the-century New York City and featuring midwife Sarah Brandt and detective Frank Malloy. Her latest is Murder on Fifth Avenue, May 2012. She also contributed to the award winning writing textbook Many Genres/One Craft. A popular speaker, Victoria has taught at Penn State University and currently teaches in the Seton Hill University master’s program in creative writing. Website: www.victoriathompson.com Diane Vallere Diane Vallere Caroline Todd Caroline Todd New York Times bestselling author Charles Todd writes the Inspector Ian Rutledge Mysteries and the Bess Crawford Mysteries, (Morrow). The 14th Rutledge, The Confession, came out January 3 and the 4th Bess, An Unmarked Grave, is scheduled for June. Two books a year as well as numerous short stories keep Caroline and Charles busy when they aren’t researching in Britain. They’re on Facebook. Website: www.charlestodd.com Maggie Toussaint Maggie Toussaint 90 Formerly an aquatic toxicologist contracted to the U.S. Army and currently a freelance reporter, Southern author Maggie Toussaint loves writing mysteries. She’s published four romantic suspenses and four mysteries, with Death, Island Style and Murder in the Buff her most recent releases. Her debut release, House of Lies, won Best Romantic Suspense in the 2007 National Readers Choice Awards. She’s a board member for Southeastern Mystery Writers of America. Blog: mudpiesandmagnolias.blogspot.com Website: www.maggietoussaint.com Kari Lee Townsend lives in central New York with her understanding husband, her three busy boys and her oh-so-dramatic daughter :-) She is the National Bestselling Author of The Fortune Teller Mysteries for Berkley Prime Crime. Book one, Tempest in the Tea Leaves, received 4-1/2 stars from RT and is nominated for Best Amateur Sleuth of 2011. Small towns, mystical elements, quirky characters and a few chuckles along the way are her cup of tea. Blog: mysteriesandmargaritasblogspot.com Website: karileetownsend.com Diane Vallere is a fashion-industry veteran with a taste for murder. Her short story “Identity Crisis” was published in Fish Tales: The Guppy Anthology (Wildside Press, 2011), and Designer Dirty Laundry, the first in her Style and Error series, comes out June 1, 2012 (Polyester Press). She started her own detective agency at age ten and has maintained a passion for shoes, clues and clothes ever since. Website: www.dianevallere.com Elaine Viets Elaine Viets Elaine Viets’s bestselling Dead-End Job series is a satiric look at a serious subject — the minimum-wage world. Her character, Helen Hawthorne, works a different lowpaying job each book, from telemarketer to hotel maid. Publishers Weekly called her hardcover debut “wry social commentary.” Final Sail, Elaine’s eleventh Dead-End Job mystery, debuts at Malice. Elaine’s second series features mystery shopper Josie Marcus. Elaine won the Agatha, Anthony and Lefty Awards. Listen to her “Dead-End Jobs Show” at www.mixcloud.com/tag/elaine-viets Malice Domestic 24 Attending Authors Lea Wait Lea Wait Nancy G. West Maine author and antique dealer Lea Wait writes the Shadows Antique Print Mystery Series starring protagonist Maggie Summer. Shadows at the Fair was honored by a “best first” Agatha nomination. Her latest, Shadows of a Down East Summer, finds Maggie back in Maine, finding clues to a current murder in the diary of a young woman who posed for Winslow Homer in 1891. Lea also writes historical novels for ages 8-14. Also on Facebook. Website: www.leawait.com Nancy G. West, author of poetry on NPR and award-winning suspense, presents the new Aggie Mundeen mystery series. Past thirty and terrified of approaching middle age, Aggie writes an anti-aging advice column. Before anyone learns she’s the author, she has to get in shape — unpleasant but feasible until she stumbles into murder. Whoever dreads aging, tries to stay fit or has loved the wrong man will appreciate Aggie in Fit to be Dead and Dang Near Dead. Website: www.nancygwest.com Nancy G. West Penny Warner Penny Warner Penny Warner’s mystery series features event planner, Presley Parker, is set in the San Francisco Bay Area, and include How To Host a Killer Party, How To Crash a Killer Bash, How To Survive a Killer Séance and How To Party With a Killer Vampire. Her middle-grade mystery, Code Busters Club: The Skeleton Key, features four kids who solve a mystery by cracking codes in each chapter. Website: www.pennywarner.com Lois Winston Lois Winston James Lincoln Warren James Lincoln Warren James Lincoln Warren’s stories have appeared frequently in Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine and Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine. He is the most recent winner of the Black Orchid Novella Award, given by Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine and the Wolfe Pack, the Nero Wolfe fan organization, for his story “Inner Fire,” which will be in the July/August 2012 issue. He is a past President of the SoCal Chapter of Mystery Writers of America. Website: www.swordquill.com Sarah Wisseman Chassie West Chassie West Malice Domestic 24 Chassie West’s sixteen books for young adults included two in the Nancy Drew Files. She entered the adult market with romantic suspense for Silhouette, then the Leigh Ann Warren series, two of which, Sunrise and Killing Kin, were Edgar® and Agatha nominees. Next was a novella in Bark M for Murder, a Mystery Guild Alternate Selection. No Reason for Goodbyes — Messages From Beyond Life, nonfiction about after-death communication, was released January 2011. Website: www.ChassieWest.com Award-winning author Lois Winston writes the critically acclaimed Anastasia Pollack Crafting Mysteries. Assault With a Deadly Glue Gun (January 2011) received starred reviews from Publishers Weekly and Booklist. Kirkus Reviews proclaimed Death by Killer Mop Doll (January 2012) filled with “...oodles of laughs and an older, more centered version of Stephanie Plum.” Lois is also published in women’s fiction, romantic suspense, and nonfiction and is an awardwinning crafts and needlework designer. Blog: www.anastasiapollack.blogspot.com Website: www.loiswinston.com Sarah Wisseman Archaeologist Sarah Wisseman writes the Lisa Donahue mysteries based upon her experiences working on excavations and in museums. Two of her books (Bound for Eternity and The Fall of Augustus) are set in a fictional Boston museum and two are set in the Middle East (The Dead Sea Codex and The House of the Sphinx). The Bootlegger’s Nephew (Hilliard and Harris 2012) will be published any day now, but definitely in time for Malice! Website: www.sarahwisseman.com 91 Attending Authors Nancy Means Wright Nancy Means Wright Elizabeth Zelvin Nancy Means Wright has published 17 books, including 5 mysteries from St. Martin’s Press, and most recently two historicals: The Nightmare (Perseverance,’11) and Midnight Fires, ‘10). Her children’s mysteries received an Agatha Award and Agatha nomination. Short stories have appeared in American Literary Review, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine and elsewhere. Longtime teacher, actress-director and Bread Loaf Scholar for a first novel, Nancy lives with her spouse and two Maine Coon cats in Middlebury, Vermont. Website: www.nancymeanswright.com Elizabeth Zelvin is a New York City psychotherapist whose new mystery is Death Will Extend Your Vacation. Her previous mysteries were Death Will Get You Sober and Death Will Help You Leave Him. Three of Liz’s short stories have been Agatha nominees. Another was nominated this year for the Derringer Award for Best Short Story. Liz’s CD of original songs, titled Outrageous Older Woman, has just been released. Look for a new story in EQMM. Blog: www.poesdeadlydaughters.blogspot.com Website: www.elizabethzelvin.com Elizabeth Zelvin Lisa Wysocky Lisa Wysocky Books and horses! Award-winning author/horse trainer Lisa Wysocky coauthored Front of the Class, which also aired as a Hallmark Hall of Fame movie. Lisa’s My Horse, My Partner helps horse/human partners bond, and Lisa combines horses and country music in Horse Country. Her fun, debut equestrian mystery, The Opium Equation, received rave reviews from Midwest Book Review, The Library Journal, etc. Lisa is a Nashville-based PATH instructor who educates horses for therapeutic riding. Website: www.LisaWysocky.com Eric Yoder Eric Yoder 92 Eric Yoder is the award-winning author of two books of short mysteries for elementary and middle school markets, 65 Short Mysteries You Solve with Science and 65 Short Mysteries You Solve with Math. A third book, of more science-based mysteries, will be published this fall. He is a reporter for The Washington Post who has written or edited numerous nonfiction books and has written about a wide variety of topics for many magazines, newspapers and online sites. Expert Luci Zahray aka The Poison Lady Luci Zahray is a registered Pharmacist with a Masters Degree in Toxicology from Texas A&M University. A fan of the mystery novel since childhood, she has combined her vocation with her avocation to tell hundreds of people how to kill someone. Using her personal collection of poisons as props, Luci has presented programs to writers groups throughout the Midwest and Canada, including Dark & Stormy in Chicago, Magna Cum Murder in Muncie, Bouchercon in Toronto and the MWA Chicago Chapter. Malice Domestic 24 Competition Minotaur Books/Malice Domestic™ Competition for the Best First Traditional Mystery Novel ince the early years of Malice Domestic, Minotaur Books, a part of St. Martin’s Press, has been sponsoring this competition. Although Malice’s name is featured, the competition is conducted solely by Minotaur Books. It is open to any professional or non-professional writer, regardless of nationality, who has never been the author of a published traditional mystery, as defined by Minotaur Books’ guidelines, and is not under contract with a publisher for publication of a traditional mystery. The late Ruth Cavin, senior editor and associate publisher of Thomas Dunne Books, said, “In 1988, when we received word of the first Malice convention, Tom Dunne, who with Bob Randisi of Private Eye Writers S of America had created the Best First Private Eye Novel contest, quickly realized that we needed another contest for books with less sex and violence, suspects who were somehow related personally...in other words, ‘Malice-type’ books. We did it with informal permission from Barbara Mertz and her fellow founders, and over time, with the invaluable assistance of our volunteer judges, it became a justenough formalized arrangement to make everyone happy.” Additional information and guidelines for this competition must be obtained from Minotaur Books. The website link to the Minotaur Books/Malice DomesticTM Competition is: www.minotaurbooks.com/writingcompetitions. 1990 1998 2006 Piano Man by Noreen Gilpatrick Murder with Peacocks by Donna Andrews A Stranger Lies Here by Stephen Santogrossi The Winter Widow by Charlene Weir 1999 2007 Jackpot Justice by Marilyn Wooley 1992 2000 Copy Cat Murders, retitled to Posted for Murder by Meredith S. Cole The Man Who Understood Cats by Michael Allen Dymmoch The Gripping Beast by Margot Wadley* 1993 2001 Something to Kill For by Susan Holtzer In the Bleak Midwinter by Julia Spencer-Fleming 1994 2002 Lie Down With Dogs by Jan Gleiter Murder Off Mike by Joyce Krieg 1995 2003 Simon Said by Sarah Shaber Southern Fried by Cathy Pickens 1996 2004 Final Closing by Barbara Lee Eight of Swords by David Skibbins 1997 2005 The Doctor Digs a Grave by Robin Hathaway Murder in Exile by Vincent O’Neal 1991 Malice Domestic 24 2008 Dead Posh, retitled to The Cold Light of Mourning by Elizabeth J. Duncan 2009 The End Game, by Gerrie FerrisFinger 2011 Every Last Secret, by Linda Rodriguez *Sadly, Margot Wadley died in an auto accident shortly after she won. 93 Dealers The Book House Felony & Mayhem Press Mystery Loves Company 11 North U.S. Rt. 15, shop #5 Dillsburg, PA 17019 717-432-2720 220 West 98th Street, #9E New York, NY 10025 Fax: 212-656-1227 ljsbookhouse@earthlink.net Contact: Joanne or Larry Klase Located on Rt. 15 halfway between Harrisburg and Gettysburg. 25,000 plus hardbacks and paperbacks. Areas of specialty: History, Mystery, Children’s and vintage paperbacks. Hours: Mon. and Tues. 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; Wed. and Thurs. 10 a.m.–6 p.m.; Fri. 10 a.m.-7:30 p.m.; Sat. 10 a.m.–4 p.m.; First and Third Sun. 10 a.m.–4 p.m www.FelonyandMayhem.com Contacts: Maggie Topkis (books@felonyandmayhem.com) 202 S. Morris Street Box 160 Oxford, MD 21654 410-226-0010 or 800-538-0042 Buzzy Multi Media 5603-B West Friendly Avenue Greensboro, NC 27410 Telephone: 877-845-4534 www.buzzymultimedia.com info@buzzymultimedia.com Buzzy Multimedia – Your Premiere Source of Sci-Fi & Fantasy Audio Books...Funny T-Shirts! Crum Creek Press/The Mystery Company 1558 Coshocton Ave #126 Mount Vernon, OH 43050 Fax: 740-204-3180 www.crumcreekpress.com staff@crumcreekpress.com Contact: Jim Huang Crum Creek Press is a boutique firm that strives to uphold traditional publishing values in a dynamic environment. We publish contemporary mysteries in the classic style, offering reprints and original work in hardcover, paperback and digital editions. We also publish reference books for mystery lovers, books that have allowed voices from across the genre to share their love and enthusiasm for mysteries. 94 Julia Musha jmusha@felonyandmayhem.com) Felony & Mayhem publishes “the best in intelligent mystery fiction,” with a definite tilt toward the literary end. We offer reprints of titles that had previously — and inexplicably — gone out of print; first paperback editions of books previously published in hardcover; and first U.S. editions of books previously published overseas. Look for our first original title next year. Flying Coyote 1307 Hornsbyville Road Yorktown, VA 23692 757-898-1504 flyingcoyote@earthlink.com Contact: Phyllis White Flying Coyote deals in matted images, objets d’art and books relating to predators. Frozen Light 4459 S. Gary Ave. Tulsa, OK 74105 918-492-1212 or 918-381-4449 www.frozenlight.biz Contact: Mona Betz Sterling silver jewelry and exotic adornments gathered from all over the world. www.mysterylovescompany.com blog: www.mysterysalon.com Contact: Kathy Harig Visit us in historic Oxford, on Maryland’s Eastern Shore. We feature new, gentlyused books, signed first editions and collectible mysteries. We host author events, and do custom gift baskets. Check our monthly lists of new releases and email your order to: mysterylovescompany@gmail.com. Follow us on Facebook. Novel Places 23341 Frederick Road Clarksburg, MD 20871 301-972-3060 www.novelplacesusa.com pat@novelplacesusa.com Contact: Patrick Darby Located in the original John Clark Trading Post of Clarksburg’s Historic District, Novel Places offers a wide variety of new and used books. We specialize in children, mystery, and science fiction categories. Join us for our book groups and author signings. Be a part of the family with vintage service, where we find books a good home. Scene of the Crime Books 20 Hawthorne Avenue St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada L2M 6A9 905-646-0214 www.sceneofthecrimebook.com Contact: Don or Jenn Longmuir We’ve been selling books online for 15 years primarily on ABE but you can also find us on Alibris, Amazon.com, Ebay and Biblio. In 2004, we opened a brick and mortar store where authors such as Linwood Barclay and Kelley Armstrong had regular signing events. But in 2006 we closed the store and moved everything home. We specialize in signatures and first editions. If you’re ever in the area please give a call — we are home most days. Malice Domestic 24 Sisters in Crime Undiscovered Treasures Wildside Press P.O. Box 442124 Lawrence, KS 66044 785-842-1325 9619 Pierrpont Street Burke, VA 22015 703-978-1959 www.SistersInCrime.org sinc@sistersincrime.org Sisters in Crime (SinC) is an international organization founded in 1986 to promote the professional development and advancement of women writing crime fiction. Today, SinC is made up of more than 3,000 members and 48 chapters worldwide — authors, readers, publishers, agents, booksellers, librarians and others who love mysteries. This year, we’re celebrating 25 years of opening doors to strengthen the voice of women in the mystery field. We hope you’ll join us. For more information, Sisters in Crime is online at www.sistersincrime.org. SinC into a great mystery! cowanc1028@earthlink.net Contact: Chris Cowan Undiscovered Treasures carries jewelry ranging from hand-strung semiprecious/pearl sets and silver through “costume” pieces. 9710 Traville Gateway Dr. #234 Rockville, MD 20850 301-762-1305 phone 301-762-1306 fax Malice Domestic 24 www.wildsidebooks.com wildsidepress@gmail.com Contacts: John Betancourt, Carla Coupe Wildside Press is an independent publishing company with more than 13,000 books in print in a variety of genres, including Mystery, Science Fiction and Classics. 95 Malice Board and Committees Board of Directors Chair Verena Rose I grew up in a family of readers — particularly my father who loved reading all sorts of things. I read lots of books about history and fiction and eventually discovered that I was mad for mysteries. I became aware of Malice Domestic around the time it was celebrating its 5th or 6th year but I didn’t attend my first convention until Malice Domestic VIII. That year Margaret Maron was Toastmaster and Peter Lovesey was Guest of Honor and I spent the evening at the Agatha Awards banquet completely mesmerized. Only three short years later and I found myself elected to the Board of Directors as Author Liaison for Malice XI. Over the past fourteen years, in addition to Author Liaison I have served as Program Chair, Treasurer, Agatha Awards Committee Chair and in recent years as the Chair of the Board of Directors. Suffice to say, Malice, for me, is a labor of love. In addition to all of my usual duties for Malice, to commemorate the 25th anniversary of Malice Domestic I asked Rita Owen to Co-Edit with me a book to be published in time for Malice Domestic 25 entitled Malice Domestic...not everyone’s cup of tea: An Interesting and Entertaining History of Its First 25 Years. As always I take every opportunity to spend time with my grandchildren, Justin and Abbey. Secretary Janet Blizard Janet recently retired after a 40-year career with the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice. For the last 20 years, she was actively involved in the implementation of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Janet survived law school by reading mysteries. She “discovered” mystery conventions at Malice Domestic II, has attended almost every Malice since then, and has been a member of the Board for the last 10 years. When she is not reading, Janet is an avid fan of the Boston Red Sox and a loyal employee of the Siamese cat who runs her home. Treasurer Angel Trapp Angel is still fairly new to Malice. She is enjoying functioning as both Treasurer and Auction Chair. Angel has her own accounting company and enjoys working closely with her clients. Angel is actively working with and contributing to KEEN Greater D.C., a local nonprofit volunteer-led organization that provides one-to-one recreational opportunities for children and young adults with developmental and physical disabilities. Angel loves to travel with her husband, Jason, and she is also looking forward to getting to know everyone at Malice and getting more immersed into the Malice community. 96 Convention Events Coordinator Marian Lesko Marian Lesko who previously served as Treasurer for Malice will be starting her second year in the position of Agatha Chair and Dealer Liaison and is looking forward to another wonderful event with Malice 24. When not performing the tasks required for Malice Marian is employed full-time with a local Maryland CPA firm. In addition to reading mysteries, Marian enjoys cooking, travel and time spent with family. Grants Chair Harriette Sackler Harriette Sackler is a longtime member of the Malice Domestic Board of Directors and serves as grants chair. She is a past Agatha Award nominee for “Mother Love,” her short story that appeared in Chesapeake Crimes II. Look for her new stories scheduled for publication in Chesapeake Crimes V and Fishnets. An avid pet lover, she is vice president of House with a Heart Senior Pet Sanctuary. Harriette lives in the D.C. suburbs with her husband, Bob, and their five pups. She has two married daughters and loves thoroughly spoiling her two grandbabies, Ethan and Makayla. Hotel Liaison Caroline L. Craig Caroline Craig is a third-generation native of the Washington, D.C. area and has been an avid reader since the age of four. Retired after 35 years as a civil servant, she worked as a comptroller for the Department of Defense (DoD), the last 24 years for the Missile Defense Agency (formerly Strategic Defense Initiative Organization). She attended Arlington County Public Schools and graduated from Madison College (now James Madison University) with a double major of Russian language and political science and a minor in Soviet studies. She has two sisters and two brothers-inlaw who also live in the D.C. area. A long-time mystery reader, she was a volunteer at Malice for several years before being elected to the Board in 2007 and currently serves as the Hotel Liaison. Publisher Liaison Joni Langevoort A lifelong fan of books in general and mysteries in particular, Joni is a recovering lawyer whose license hangs on the wall of the laundry room, right over the litter boxes. The proud mother of Kate (an au pair living in Paris) and Jackson (a student at Penn State), Joni keeps busy by serving on several charitable boards, volunteering, taking piano lessons, scrapbooking, worrying about her children, watching ice hockey games live and on TV, and, of course, reading. She and her Georgetown Law Center professor husband Don live in Virginia with one dog, four cats and thousands upon thousands of books. Malice Domestic 24 Committee Chairs/Board Advisors Author Liaison Donna Andrews Like Meg Langslow, the ornamental blacksmith heroine of her series from Minotaur, Donna Andrews was born and raised in Yorktown, Virginia. These days she spends almost as much time in cyberspace as Turing Hopper, the artificial intelligence who appears in her technocozy series from Berkley Prime Crime. In the fall of 1997 she started on the road to publication by submitting her first completed mystery manuscript to the Malice Domestic/St. Martin’s Press Best First Traditional Mystery contest. Upon learning that Murder with Peacocks had won, she acquired a copy of Peterson’s Field Guide to Eastern Birds and settled down to have fun in her fictional world for as long as she could get away with it. Her books have won many awards, and appeared on The New York Times bestseller lists. The most recent, The Real Macaw, was released in July 2011, and Some Like It Hawk will be released in July 2012. Andrews is president of the Mid-Atlantic chapter of MWA and a member of Sisters in Crime and the Private Investigators and Security Association. Andrews spends her free time killing innocent weeds in her garden and corrupting her mind with computer games. Programs Barb Goffman Barb Goffman loves being Malice program chair, not only because it allows her to organize things and tell people what to do (who doesn’t like that?), but also because she believes that the best crime stories are those of the domestic variety. Mothers. Husbands. Sisters. Pals. All are fair game when Barb chooses her victims. She’s had several short stories published, four of which have been nominated for the Agatha Award, including one this year. She’s a co-coordinating editor of the awardwinning Chesapeake Crimes anthology series, the latest of which, Chesapeake Crimes: This Job is Murder (Wildside Press 2012), was just released. Barb has also recently completed her first novel, Call Girl. She lives in Virginia with her miracle dog, Scout (a three-time cancer survivor!). Website: www.barbgoffman.com Malice Domestic 24 Publications Rita Owen Rita Owen retired after a career in human resources and Six Sigma. A native of Washington, D.C., her passions include reading (mysteries, of course), quilting, family history and genealogy, writing, folk music and friends and family. She lives in New Jersey, where she teaches quilting and designs original quilts as well as designs and manages a website and newsletter for Budding Star Quilts in Lebanon, New Jersey. She has been providing signage support to Malice for seven years and publications for four years. It should be mentioned that she has hooked a number of quilting friends on Malice mystery authors and in return, those friends provide volunteer help preparing materials for Malice. She’s delighted to be aunt and great-aunt to seven nieces and nephews and eight (with number nine on the way) great-nieces and great-nephews. She’s also hooked on her Kindle. Volunteers Anne Murphy Anne and her retired nuclear engineer husband Joe have three wonderful sons, three beautiful daughtersin-law, three gorgeous granddaughters, three handsome grandsons, and an Irish wolfhound with a sense of humor. A charter member of Malice Domestic and survivor of the Silver Spring Sheraton, she often wonders what life might have been like had she ignored Sheila Martin and Kay McCarty when they insisted, “This Malice Domestic thing sounds like fun. Let’s go!” Registration Services Shawn Reilly Simmons Shawn Reilly Simmons has been working with Malice since 2003, starting out as PR Chair and then moving on to the position of Registrar. She now handles Registration Services and Malice PR. Graduating from the University of Maryland with a degree in English Literature, she then moved to New York City and worked in sales and marketing. She lives in Frederick, Maryland, with her husband, son and two English Bulldogs. Shawn’s website is www.GroundFloorPromotions.net. 97 Pre-Registered Participants (Authors in bold) Avery Aames Sparkle Abbey Dominick Abel Marilyn A. Ackley Cathy Adams Ellery Adams Judith Akers Claudia Albert Gloria Alden Esri Allbritten Carolyn Allen Zak Allen Sheila Anderson Mary Andrasco Donna Andrews Jim Archambault Kris Archambault Lucy Arlington Bill Aronoff Carol Aronoff Patsy Asher Doris Austin Frankie Y. Bailey Irma Baker Sandy Balintfy Maggie Barbieri Kaye Barley Joye Barnes Elizabeth Barrett Lorna Barrett Ella Barrick Lorraine Bartlett Donna Beatley Lynn Beene Penny Beene Mike Befeler Jo Beichler Susan Belsky Janet Benrey Ron Benrey Paula Benson Dorothy Bermudez Carol Bessette John Betancourt Mona Betz Vicky Bijur Joshua Bilmes Jane Bird Terri Bischoff 98 Claudia Bishop Debbie Bishop Juliet Blackwell Heather Blake Les Blatt Leslie Blatt Janet Blizard Jack Bludis Lenore Boehm Amanda Bolenbaugh Emily Bolenbaugh Janet Bolin Nikki Bonanni Brynn Bonner Rhys Bowen Jeanne Munn Bracken Laura Bradford Judy Brancheau Jennifer Brehl Lucy Brett Simon Brett Duffy Brown Sarah Brown Mollie Cox Bryan Debby Buchanan Sarah Masters Buckey Raymond Buckland Maxine Buckles Leslie Ann Budewitz Lucy Burdette Jan Burke Tim Burke Geraldine G. Burket Ellen Byerrum Valerie Caires Ellen Callahan Dana Cameron Laura Campos Dorothy Cannell Karen Cantwell Diane Card Lillian Stewart Carl JoAnna Carl Kate Carlisle Trish Carrico Anita Carter Elizabeth Lynn Casey Bailey Cates Jack Cater Judy Cater Mary Chamberlain Susan Robinson Chan Jessie Chandler Joelle J. Charbonneau Erika Chase Cathy Chatham Lexa Christopher Debbie Clark Mindy Starns Clark Jane Cleland Jeffrey Cohen Nancy J. Cohen Helen Coker Lavinia Coker Jayne Colangelo Kate Collins Maureen Collins Sheila Connolly E. J. Copperman Jacqueline Corcoran Amy Corwin Carla Coupe Chris Cowan Caroline Craig Ann Crowe Tom Crowley John Curran Leigh S. Curry Jeanne M. Dams Casey Daniels Patrick Darby Hilary Davidson Marie Davies Christine Davis Krista Davis Nancy M. Davis Rebecca G. Davis Rosalia R. de Williams Lynn Deardorff Stacia Decker Patricia Deewey Vicki Delany Janet Desjardins Mary Elizabeth Devine Louise Dietz Susan A. Dill Deborah Dingboom Michael Dirda Laura DiSilverio Linnea Dodson Vicki Doudera Carole Nelson Douglas Laney Doyle Pat Drucker Maxine Drusch Susan M. Duchek Ann Duff Elizabeth J. Duncan Kaitlyn Dunnett Jeanne Durrer Pam Edmondson Sheryl Ehrlich Kathy Lynn Emerson A. B. Emrys Hallie Ephron Kathleen Ernst Karen S. Esibill Christy Evans Donna Evans Jimmie Ruth Evans Stephanie Evans Sue Evans Sharon D. Ewing Peggy Fedder Sally Fellows Nancy Fifield Christy Fifield Charles Finch Kendel Flaum Margery Flax Irene Fleming Amanda Flower Christina Freeburn Kate Gallison Prentiss Garner Pauline Gary Kaye George Daryl Wood Gerber Jan Giles Barb Goffman Lee Goldberg Debra H. Goldstein James Goodwin Chris Grabenstein Margaret Grace Barbara Graham Beth Groundwater Malice Domestic 24 Chris Gulhaugen Jaya Gulhaugen Robert Guzman Elizabeth Gwiazdowski Rebecca M. Hale Parnell Hall Janet Hamlet Janice Hamrick Peggy Hanson Kathy Harig Tom Harig RJ Harlick Jennifer Harlow Charlaine Harris Ellen Harris Linda Harris Carolyn Hart Honor Hartman Robin Hathaway Mary Hawkes Betty Hechtman Maureen Heedles Freida Heisser Sara J. Henry Anita Herbert Joan Hess Sasscer Hill Anne Hillerman Marjorie Hilton Lois Foster Hirt Aimee Hix Judy Hogan Angie Hogencamp Sarah Hogroian Sue Horowitz Melodie Johnson Howe Jim Huang Linda Hull Maddy Hunter Karen Hurley Becky Bartlett Hutchison Roberta Isleib Smita Harish Jain Darrell James Miranda James Dean James Anna Jeffrey Nancy Jo Heidi Johnson Malice Domestic 24 Kathryn Johnson Michelle Johnson Linda O. Johnston Janet Kargol Alma Katsu Kathleen Kearns Toni L.P. Kelner M. E. Kemp June Kennedy Tracy Kiely Karen Kiley Judith Kindell Laurie R. King Joanne Klase Larry Klase Victoria Koski Rob Kresge Jan Kurtz Norma Kurtz Danielle LaBue Shirley J. Landes Joni Langevoort Jim Lavene Joyce Lavene Vivian Lawry Alan Leathers Cheryl Leathers Angela Lee Laurie Leff Con Lehane Kit Leider Marian Lesko Kelly Letourneau Judith Levitan Vera Libeau Audrey Liebross Greg Lilly Maria Lima Hailey Lind Clyde Linsley Liz Lipperman Sophie Littlefield C. Ellett Logan Kylie Logan Don Longmuir Jen Longmuir Jess Lourey Dru Ann Love Molly MacRae (continued) 99 Pre-Registered Participants Ada Madison G. M. Malliet Colleen Manning Sherry Markowitz Margaret Maron Diane Martin Sheila J. Martin Sujata Massey Sherri Mayer Jennifer McAndrews Kay McCarty Ruth McCarty Nora McFarland Jenn McKinlay Hulda McLlachlen Catriona McPherson Cricket McRae Liz Mellett Bonner Menking Lea Mesner Gail A. Metzgar Marvin E. Metzgar Lee Mewshaw Joe Meyers Jennifer Milchman Larry Mild Rosemary Mild Camille Minichino Gwynyth Mislin Valerie Moon Marie Moore Susan Morrison Carolyn Mulford Seileen Mullen Anne Murphy J J Murphy Elaine Naiman Karen E. Neary Sharan Newman Doris Ann Norris Betty Occhiogrosso Francesca Occhiogrosso Marie O’Day Tom O’Day Shawn Thomas Odyssey M. E. O’Neill Alan Orloff Kathleen Owen 100 Rita Owen Katherine Hall Page Gigi Pandian Mary Faith Pankin Ann Parker Nancy J. Parra Sandra Parshall Nicole Peeler Andrea Penrose Mary Hart Perry Elizabeth Peters Nancy Petersen Caroline Petrequin Donna Jeanne Phillips Deanna Pivoroff Neil Plakcy Joy Poger C. W. Pollard Lynn Pooley Janet Powell Alice Pradin Sherry Prather Twyla Racz Maggie Range Pam Rau Anne Reece Barbara Reisinger John Reisinger Audrey Reith Eileen Robertson Dianne Rodman Linda Rodriguez Roberta Rogow Verena Rose Natalee Rosenstein Dodie Ruskie Sammi Russell Linda Smith Rutledge Hank Phillippi Ryan Cynthia Sabelhaus Ralph Sabelhaus Harriette Sackler Cindy Sample Eve K. Sandstrom Christine Sannerud Elena Santangelo Peggy Rae Sapienza Joni Sauer-Folger Sinya Schaeffer Ilene Schneider Patricia Schutz Sandy Sechrest Maggie Sefton Janine Seitz Kristin Sevick Sarah R. Shaber Deborah Sharp Gordon Shaw J. D. Shaw Ruth Shaw Judith Sheard Colleen Shogan Ruth Sickafus Cindy Silberblatt Shawn Simmons Brian Skupin Joanna Campbell Slan Robert Spiller Dorothy St. James Rochelle Staab Denise Stablein J. B. Stanley Michael Stanley Mary Stanton Stanley Trollip Daniel Stashower Cheryl Steimle Triss Stein Steve Steinbock B. K. Stevens Dennis Stevens Robert W. Steventon Kate Stine Cathi Stoler Lane Stone Sylvia A. Straub Don Strel Verna Suit Patricia Summers Leann Sweeney Marcia Talley Art Taylor Mike Taylor Robin Templeton Victoria Thompson Sheila M. Tierney Debra Todd Charles Todd (Caroline) Maggie Toussaint Kari Lee Townsend Angel Trapp Arleen Trundy Elizabeth Vaccaro Robert Vaccaro Diane Vallere Patricia Valoon Donna Van Dyke Mary Van Dyke Polly Van Hyning Susan E. Van Hyning Elaine Viets Katie Voegerl Carrie Voorhis Josephine Wagner Lea Wait Penny Warner James Lincoln Warren Beth Wasson Courtney Waverick Doreen L. Weaton Heather Webber Chassie L. West Nancy Glass West Molly Weston Phyllis White K. G. Whitehurst Pam Wieland Linda Wiken Joyce Wilcox June Williams Dina S. Willner Lois Winston Sarah Wisseman Brenda Witchger Michael Withiam Mary Lee Woods Bonnie Wojnowski Cynthia Wong Nancy Means Wright Lisa Wysocky Eric Yoder Christina F. York Marisa Young Luci Zahray Elizabeth Zelvin Malice Domestic 24 Friends of Malice Helen Barer Fred Barnes Diana Barnes Wendy Bartlett Barbara Berman Julie Hyzy Tammy Kaehler Jackie King Christine Lanphere Marilyn Levinson Edith M Maxwell Veronica Moschetti Cathy Pickens Sharon Potts Hannah Reed Deb Baker Mary Saums Pamela A. Simon Richard Steelman Joseph L.S. Terrell Cathy Wiley Barbara Witek www.MaliceDomestic.org Malice Domestic 24 101 See you next year at Malice Domestic 25! May 3–5, 2013 Check the Malice website for hotel information. Special Discount for those who register and pay at this year’s Malice: Forms are available at the Registration desk. Use credit card, cash or check. Comprehensive Registration (includes Agatha Banquet) $295 until 12/31/2012 — $320 1/01– 4/15/2013* Basic Registration (no Banquet) $245 until 12/31/2012 — $270 1/01– 4/15/2013* * if space is available Deadline all registrations: 4/15/2013 www.MaliceDomestic.org 102 Malice Domestic 24 Notes Malice Domestic 24 103 Notes 104 Malice Domestic 24