I recently had a conversation with some of my friends from the library and we all agreed that we are fans, not of the most popular reality show (someone really needs to explain "Jersey Shore" to me), movie star, or rock group, but of men and women who create characters, towns and counties from their imaginations-authors. First, I don't need Oprah to tell me what to read, I've been selecting my own books since I was three. Secondly, many of the movies and television programs we enjoy wouldn't be there without these wonderfully creative people.
One of my favorite author stories is when I met
Charlaine Harris (
Sookie Stackhouse Vampire series author) at the ALA summer convention that was held in Chicago many years ago. This is before she wrote the series that would become "True Blood". I was wandering the vendor aisles and looked up and saw a woman coming towards me. What caught my eye was her necklace-a
cloisonne skull. I said "What an interesting necklace!" I then saw her
name tag and immediately followed it with "And I love your books." She wrote a series about a librarian, Aurora
Teagarden, who frequently stumbled on bodies. I know the
Sookie books are extremely popular but I do miss the character.
I have enjoyed the talks I have attended by Dr. Barbara
Mertz (Barbara
Michaels and Elizabeth Peters), who doesn't love the Amelia Peabody books that draw up on her doctorate in Egyptology. She is very entertaining as a speaker and her sense of humor frequently comes through her writing.
I just finished "A Christmas Mourning" by Margaret
Maron. She is a multiple winner of many awards and her character, Judge Deborah
Knott, and the various members of her family are part of my literary family. Each year I look forward to a new book in the series, it isn't just the mystery that is always engaging, but reading about what is happening in the life of Deborah, her husband Dwight and others in the fictional
Colleton County. Margaret was recently in a car accident and I know that many of her readers were concerned for her recovery. Check out her website at
http://www.margaretmaron.com. She frequently writes a blog entry and you can become a friend on
Facebook.
When I was helping to chaperon a group of students last spring, I met a Michigan author, Peg Herring, in Pennsylvania. I learned that she was on her way to the mystery writers' convention Malice Domestic. I was jealous and would have liked to climbed in her car instead of the van. Peg writes historical novels located in 16
th and 17
th century England. Her novel "Her Highness's First Murder" featured a young Elizabeth I, before she
ascended the throne. It was a well written book that received good reviews. She encouraged me to continue writing, as she wasn't published until after she retired from teaching. Peg's website is
http://www.pegherring.com.
Finally, my New Year's Resolution is to return my library books on time so I don't pay horrendous fines and to write more, maybe.