From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julie Smith (born November 25, 1944 in Annapolis,
Maryland) is an American mystery writer, the
author of nineteen novels and
several short
stories. She received the 1991 Edgar Award for Best Novel for her sixth
book, New Orleans Mourning (1990).[1]
Biography
Smith worked as a journalist for sixteen years, beginning as a
reporter for the New
Orleans Times-Picayune. She then moved
on to the San Francisco Chronicle,
where she eventually became the first woman hired for the newsroom since World War II and
spent the next ten years as a general assignment and court
reporter. She later worked for the Santa Barbara News-Press,
for Banana Republic as
an advertising and catalogue copy writer, and for the San Francisco District Attorney's office as a public information
officer.
She quit the Chronicle in 1979 to form a freelance writing and editing firm called
Invisible Ink with several other aspiring fiction writers,
including Marcia
Muller.[1]
In 1982 Smith published her first novel.
In 1991, she became the first American woman since 1956 to win
the Edgar for Best Novel. Her latest novel is P.I. On A Hot Tin
Roof (2005), and New Orleans Noir, an anthology she
edited, was published in 2007.
She currently lives in the Faubourg Marigny section of New Orleans.
In 2006 she founded Writerstrack.com, a course of writing
instruction done through conference calls.
Works
Novels
- Death Turns A Trick (Walker & Co., 1982)
- The Sourdough Wars (Walker & Co., 1984)
- True-Life Adventure (Mysterious Press, 1985)
- Tourist Trap (Mysterious Press, 1986)
- Huckleberry Fiend (Mysterious Press, 1987)
- New Orleans Mourning (St. Martin's Press, 1990)
- The Axeman's Jazz (St. Martin's Press, 1991)
- Dead in the Water (Ivy, 1991)
- Other People's Skeletons (Ivy, 1993)
- Jazz Funeral (Fawcett/Columbine, 1993)
- New Orleans Beat (Fawcett/Columbine, 1994)
- House of Blues (Fawcett/Columbine, 1995)
- The Kindness of Strangers (Fawcett/Columbine,
1996)
- Crescent City Kill (Fawcett/Columbine, 1997)
- 82 Desire (Fawcett/Columbine, 1998)
- Louisiana Hotshot (Forge, 2001)
- Louisiana Bigshot (Forge, 2002)
- Mean Woman Blues (Forge, 2003)
- Louisiana Lament (Forge, 2004)
- P.I. On A Hot Tin Roof (Forge, 2005)
Short
stories
- "Grief Counselor", Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine, 1978;
reprinted in Miniature Mysteries: 100 Malicious Little Mystery
Stories, edited by Isaac Asimov, Martin H. Greenberg, and
Joseph D. Olander (Taplinger, 1981), and in Last Laughs: The
1986 Mystery Writers of America Anthology, edited by Gregory
McDonald (Mysterious Press, 1986)
- "The Wrong Number", Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine,
1979
- "Crime Wave in Pinhole", Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery
Magazine, 1980; reprinted in The Arbor House Treasury of
Mystery and Suspense, edited by Bill Pronzini, Barry N.
Malzberg, and Martin H. Greenberg (Arbor House, 1981)
- "Project Mushroom", Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine
1983; reprinted in 101 Mystery Stories, edited by Bill
Pronzini and Martin H. Greenbery (Avenel, 1986)
- "Red Rock", Raymond Chandler's Philip Marlowe: A Centennial
Celebration, edited by Byron Preiss (Knopf, 1988)
- "Blood Types", Sisters In Crime, edited by Marilyn
Wallace (Berkley, 1989)
- "Cul-de-Sac", Sisters In Crime II, edited by Marilyn
Wallace (Berkley, 1990)
- "Montezuma's Other Revenge", Justice for Hire, edited
by Robert J Randisi (Mysterious Press,
1990)
- "A Marriage Made in Hell", Eye of a Woman, edited by
Sara Paretsky (Delacorte Press, 1991)
- "Silk Strands", Deadly Allies, edited by Marilyn
Wallace and Robert J. Randisi (Bantam, 1992)
- "Strangers on a Plane", Unusual Suspects, edited by
James Grady, (Black Lizard Press, 1996)
- "The End of the Earth", Detective Duos, edited by
Marcia Muller and Bill Pronzini (Oxford University Press,
1997)
- "Where The Boys Are", Mary Higgins Clark Mystery
Magazine, September 1998
- "Too Mean to Die", Blue Lightning, edited by John
Harvey (Slow Dancer Press, 1998)
- "Fresh Paint", Irreconcilable Differences, edited by
Lia Matera (HarperCollins, 1999)
- "Always Othello", Mary Higgins Clark Mystery Magazine,
June 1999
- "Let's Go Knock Over Seaside", Murder and Magnolias
(HarperCollins 2000)
- "Kid Trombone", Murder And All That Jazz (Signet,
2004)
Essay
- "Splendor in the Mildew", A Place Called Home, edited
by Mickey Perlman (St. Martin's Press, 1996)
Progressive
novel
Edited
- New Orleans Noir (Akashic, 2007)
References
- ^ a
b
Lindsay, Elizabeth
Blakesley (2007), Great Women Mystery Writers (2nd,
revised ed.), Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing Group,
pp. 238–240, ISBN
0313334285
External
links