Mysterious California

I love libraries.  I adore them, always and continuously. My abiding affection had a boost last night, with an event in the Sunnyvale (CA) library, where some of the staff remembered me as part of an event—oh, how many years ago could it have been?  Thirteen? Fourteen?—with Sisters in Crime authors.  This time it was…

Read More

Beekeeping for Beginners, and other points of view

                      A few years ago, I started playing with ways to work bits of third-person viewpoints into what are otherwise memoirs.  Those don’t actually fit, of course, since “I” have no way of knowing exactly what “he” is thinking, even if I’m standing next to…

Read More

Writing scared

I had another post ready for today, on Writer’s Wednesday, but then I received the first review for Pirate King, and I decided to talk about reviews instead. I’ve been lucky with reviews. I’m sure there are any number of loud and pointed complaints on my various books’ Amazon pages, but I take care not…

Read More

Search, and Re-search

Maybe the problem is, I need to embrace my inner A. S. Byatt.  Her 2009 Booker Prize shortlisted novel Children’s Story is, in addition to being a gorgeously written book, a huge information dump of Life Among the Fabians at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.  Fairy tale publishing, politics, sexual mores, pedagogy, the chemistry…

Read More

Passivity

Good fiction is active.  (I tell myself this as I slog through a first draft that feels about as active as mud.  Mud can be active, right?  Certainly anyone who has lived downhill from a mudslide would say so.) But yes, good fiction is active.  This is why writers are told to avoid the passive…

Read More

Wednesday (oops) on Writing

Today’s subject is deadlines, and the breaking thereof. Not really, although I do mean to post on Wednesdays, and this week got away from me.  Writer’s Wednesdays (or in this case, Thursday) here on Mutterings are my musings on various aspects of the writer’s trade and life.  This week: a venture into e-publication. ** Last…

Read More

Writing (or not) on the road

Today’s Wednesday on Writing will be brief, since I am in New York for The Edgars, and not only is writing on the iPad a laborious process, I also hit the ground running and have little time for a leisurely reflection on the writing process. Today I will be on a panel in the Edgars…

Read More

Coincidence

Today is Writing Wednesday here at Mutterings, and the day’s topic is the role of coincidence in crime fiction. Some of you will guess by this that I’ve been reading Kate Atkinson.  Her latest Jackson Brodie story, Started Early, Took the Dog, is the fourth in what is dutifully described as a series, following the…

Read More

The romance of research

An academic’s love letter to the stacks, to mark National Library Week. Now, I’m as appreciative as the next obsessive-compulsive recovering-academic of the vast riches of material becoming available online, thanks to all those Google scanners crouched in the basements of libraries around the world, madly feeding books through their machines.  I download obscure tomes…

Read More