Dulce et decorum

By Laurie King / November 11, 2008 /

Remembrance Day in Commonwealth countries, Veteran’s Day here in the US. Ninety years ago, November 11, 1918, the guns fell silent for the first time in more than four years. In London, there was silence, and the bells rang, and people wept. I was 13 when the first US combat troops landed in Vietnam. That…

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Psychic hangovers

By Laurie King / November 10, 2008 /

After the excesses of the past couple of weeks, when I wrote and deleted countless furious posts, I was for a time written out. Now I feel slightly hung over. However, regularly scheduled programming will resume shortly. I just wanted to say that I really like you guys a whole lot. Some blogs would have…

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November 4

By Laurie King / November 5, 2008 /

Huge relief. Great pride. Dawning hope. Yes. We can.

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Zombies in the family

By Laurie King / November 4, 2008 /

I don’t talk about my two kids much here, because I’m a great believer in the family’s privacy, but you have to know how proud I am of them, right? Well, yet another example of how the two of them just make my heart glad appears on the local paper’s web site–here, just take a…

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Nothing at all about politics

By Laurie King / November 3, 2008 /

Every year in early October, my county holds an Open Studios for its artists, when people can wander around studios, buy things, talk to the artists, and generally enjoy the gorgeous autumnal sunny weather and have an excuse for hanging out with friends. My agent usually comes down from San Francisco for one of the…

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Fairy-tale politics

By Laurie King / October 28, 2008 /

If you missed the talk on politics and fiction that Rick Kleffel, Karen Joy Fowler, and I did on local KUSP radio last month, here’s the link. And because it’s politics time in the U. S. of A., here’s a superb essay by Rebecca Solnit (thanks to Ron Hogan at Galleycat) on the whole man/woman…

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Dirty tricks throughout the ages

By Laurie King / October 23, 2008 /

While the Republicans talk a good fight, the Democrats are on tenterhooks, waiting for a 2008 version of the Zinoviev letter to drop from a great height onto their heads. The Zinoviev letter was an early 20th century dirty tricks scandal (mentioned in Touchstone, in case it’s sounding familiar.) Four days before the 1924 general…

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Boucher Con meetings

By Laurie King / October 16, 2008 /

Eighteen months ago, I looked at the 2007 calendar and realized that I was not going to be published that year, for the first time since 1993. The mystery world tends to work on a yearly basis, with publishers happiest when they can schedule a regular offering from their authors. Not having a book out…

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Boucher Con and abroad

By Laurie King / October 14, 2008 /

Saturday at BoucherCon a number of us left the convention. Not through protest, you understand, or because there wasn’t enough going on there (hah!) but because the event planners had decided to add a library outreach, and share the riches of the convention’s crime writers with the city residents. Back in June, Ruth Jordan (blessed…

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The Once and Future Boucher Con

By Laurie King / October 13, 2008 /

I’m not finished posting about BoucherCon 2008, but I have to say that one of the high points of Friday was the business meeting. Now, before you picture LRK clutching a well-loved copy of Robert’s Rules of Order, it was entirely for selfish reasons that I enjoyed the meeting: vote was taken, and BoucherCon is…

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