E. C. Morgan

A few views on writing, reading, literature and more specifically mystery fiction and my career.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Smatterings

I'm not too interested in writing holiday oriented stories, generally speaking. But I've just finished the rough draft of one for Christmas, and it is quite fun. Starts with the premise "What if being Santa Claus (the real one), was actually punishment for something?" Hmmmmm...........

I finished reading my first novel by John D. Macdonald, featuring Travis McGee. I know, I'm running behind, and have to say that now I know why those novels are so influential.

Robert B. Parker has a new novel out - High Profile, featuring Chief Jesse Stone. I've very much enjoyed the novels and am looking forward to reading this one. And look forward to seeing the television movie CBS is sure to make. Tom Sellek has played Stone in four movies and all have been excellent.

And an obit from last month I somehow missed:
GENEVA -Magdalen Nabb, a British author who wrote crime novels about a quirky Italian investigator, has died, her publishing house said Tuesday. She was 60. Nabb died of a stroke Saturday in Florence, Italy, where she had lived and worked since 1975, said Diogenes Verlag AG, her Swiss publisher.

Nabb's most popular novels featured the Sicilian-born police detective Marshal Salvatore Guarnaccia, who was described by Publishers Weekly as "an unusual protagonist for a crime novel: he's neither a Bond-like sophisticate nor a recovering loser."

She published 13 books in the series, the most recent being "The Innocent" in 2005. Her publisher said she had recently submitted a 14th book entitled "Vita Nuova," which is to be released next year.

Nabb said she started writing when Belgian author Georges Simenon stopped writing his acclaimed novels about French detective Jules Maigret in 1972. A lifelong fan of Simenon's, Nabb struck up a correspondence with the Belgian which continued until his death in 1989.

Nabb's publisher said the first copy of each of her books went to him, and "she couldn't write as fast as Simenon read" because he asked her after each new novel where the next one was.

Born in the village of Church in northwest England, Nabb studied art and pottery and later taught at an English art school. She came up with the idea for the character Marshal Guarnaccia while working in a pottery studio in the Italian town of Montelupo Fiorentino.

Nabb also published 13 books for children and young adults, including "The Enchanted Horse," "Twilight Ghost."

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

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