Posts by Laurie King
The BUZZZZZ about Library Week!
Next week is National Library Week here in the USofA—with a theme of, “Unlimited possibilities @ your library®”—and this year, wishing to explore those possibilities, we’re doing something a little different. Yes, there will be giveaways, but—we’ll focus on middle schools. Do you have a middle school student in your family? Do you teach middle…
Read MoreMary Russell’s War Journal (thirty-six): Russell off to War
6 April 1915 A slight hitch in my plans has occurred with the discovery that identity papers are not readily forged by a person with naught but an amateur’s workshop. However, by asking around among the village troublemakers, I discovered a man in Eastbourne who can provide the necessary documents, and I have paid…
Read MoreMary Russell’s War Journal (thirty-five): The march of women
30 March 1915 In the past week, the Times has continued to shrink in pages, and expand in its messages of desperation. Letters from the Front speak of A DOCTOR IN THE BATTLE LINE and his AMBULANCE WORK UNDER FIRE, from Neuve Chapelle: “It has been quite impossible to write lately, as there has…
Read MoreTalking Dreaming Spies
For those of you who didn’t get a chance to see one of my Dreaming Spies tour stops, the good folks at Anderson’s Books in Naperville, IL have posted a nice interview about writing the book, the Bodleian library, being inducted into the Baker Street Irregulars, Russell’s Twittering, and writing Sherlockian erotica, all over on…
Read MoreMWA cooks
So, this crime writer walks into a kitchen… Or maybe a bar—it depends on what story you’re after, and what you’re hungry (or thirsty) for. Whether it’s drinks to curl your hair or a soup to warm your heart, Kinsey Millhone’s peanut butter & pickle sandwich or Valentine Wilde’s chicken fricassee, or maybe a cup…
Read MoreMary Russell’s War Journal (thirty-four): Conquest and carburetters
23 March 1915 This week has taught some interesting lessons, both in practical knowledge and, perhaps more valuable in the long run, in the subtle relationships between the sexes. Dr X and I (I decided I should probably not use his name, since my presence as his chauffeur is probably against a string of…
Read MoreExpressing interest in the future
Mad as this may seem, you can now pre-order a copy of The Murder of Mary Russell: a book I have yet to finish, a book without cover art, a book more than a year from ending up in your hands. A book with more questions than answers. It all feels rather Kickstarter-ish, doesn’t it?…
Read MoreBook tours & Cons
A funny thing happened on my way to Dreaming Spies… Months and months ago, I said to Random House that I didn’t think a tour was really necessary for this novel, since it would be the first Russell & Holmes in 2 ½ years and people might be interested in it even…
Read MoreMary Russell’s War Journal (thirty-three): Keeping one’s head down
16 March 1915 The juxtaposition of War with an attempt at maintaining the bastions of normal life is at times painful. For example, last Tuesday’s Times (which I did not receive until late on Wednesday) contained the following: NEW PROFESSIONS FOR WOMEN. That section of the field of labour hitherto regarded as the exclusive…
Read MoreThe Weaker Sex
I have had four lovely days of down time after a couple weeks of flitting about the countryside, and now that my laundry is clean and I’m almost caught up with emails, I think I’ll take off again. Today is Orinda and Sacramento, then Thursday I’m joining the migration towards Portland and Left Coast Crime…
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