Christina Dodd
Chains of Fire




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The End of the Road




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When I Get Where I'm Going




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Scoop to Kill




Michele Bardsley
Cross Your Heart




Emma Wildes
My Lord Scandal




Addison Fox
Warrior Avenged




Amanda McCabe
Improper Ladies




Donald Bain, Jessica Fletcher
Murder, She Wrote: A Fatal Feast




Joanne Rendell
Out of the Shadows




John Shors
The Wishing Trees




Susan Holloway Scott
The Countess and the King




Jo Davis
I Spy A Naughty Game




Suzanne Arruda
The Crocodile's Last Embrace




Marie Treanor
Blood on Silk




Karen E. Olson
Driven to Ink


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Karen E. Olson
http://www.kareneolson.com

Books:
Driven to Ink, September 2010
Pretty In Ink, March 2010
The Missing Ink, July 2009
Shot Girl, November 2008
Dead of the Day, November 2007


Karen E. Olson

Check out Karen's 2010 appearances.

Born in New Haven, Connecticut, I grew up in the city's suburbs. Early on, I developed a love of books and great pizza. I wrote my first "book" when I was 9.

I went to Roanoke College in southwestern Virginia to study literature. In addition to reading a lot of dead white male British writers, I worked on the school newspaper. Woodward and Bernstein had inspired me, and I still wanted to write fiction, but thought I could supplement that with a newspaper job.

I found a job as a reporter at a weekly newspaper in Old Saybrook, Connecticut. That was when I discovered my salary made me eligible for food stamps. I also realized I wouldn’t be taking down any presidents, since my first story was an interview with the town’s new dog warden and then I spent a lot of time at planning and zoning and school board meetings. I hopped from small paper to small paper, until finding out I could make a decent wage working nights as a copy editor.

Being a vampire wasn't so bad, and I started writing fiction in the middle of the night when I got home from work.

I had been reading a lot of Oprah-type books, in which women characters spent a lot of time being victims. I discovered that in mysteries, the women protagonists were smart and didn't allow themselves to be victimized. I decided that was the sort of protagonist I wanted to create.

Annie Seymour is a tough-talking, smart police reporter at the fictional New Haven Herald. She’s not as cynical as she thinks she is, but she has strong ethics and a curiosity that’s necessary to be a good journalist. I wanted her to live and work in New Haven, because it has such diverse neighborhoods, a gritty past and great restaurants.

Annie and I have a common bond in that we're both longtime journalists, but she's a much more fearless reporter than I ever was. She's also chosen to continue to be a reporter, whereas I discovered I really enjoyed editing and page design.

I left the newspaper business in 2006 after a 20-year career. I now edit a medical journal part-time at Yale. It was not an easy decision to make, but it’s made life a lot more simple, and I have more time to devote to my fiction writing. Also, unlike Annie, I've settled down with my husband, a former journalist now political flack for a high-ranking elected state official, and our daughter.

I have to admit, however, we do both enjoy the thrill of a good story.



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