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The unforgettable Elizabeth
Daniels Squire, a native of Raleigh, North Carolina, and a graduate
of Vassar College, created the character of Peaches Dann, the absent-minded
detective who is one of the most original crime solvers. An Agatha
Award winner, Liz was working on her ninth mystery at the time of
her death in February 2001.
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"Not for one minute do I believe that
the Old Chinese curse: 'May you live in interesting times,' is
actually a curse," said Elizabeth Daniels Squire, describing
her lifetime.
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She continued, "My life has been interesting
every minute, which is why I constantly
steal bits of it to weave in with my fiction - like a flood here
or an encounter with a rattlesnake there.I grew up in a newspaper
family in North Carolina with an editor-grandfather so controversial
he was shot at, and so lucky that the bullet missed. I grew up
hearing the latest news discussed at the dinner table before it
ever got as far as the front page. I married a newspaperman and
went on to be a reporter myself, covering everything over the
years from school boards to murder trials. I also did a syndicated
newspaper feature on the hands of celebrities for a while which gave me a chance to meet and take
the hand prints of such fascinating folks as Salvador Dali, Helen
Hayes and Carl Sandburg. Yes, I do believe people's talents and
likely prospects show in their hands. You can even tell quite
a bit watching celebrities wave their hands on television.
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Next I became a mystery writer. Which means
I still have the chance to keep exploring all sorts of intriguing
subjects.
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I write about an absent-minded sleuth.
(O.K. It's true, I myself am absent-minded, but work hard to compensate.)
Her name is Peaches Dann and so far she's won me an Agatha Award
and an Anthony nomination. T hose
were for a short story: "The Dog Who Remembered Too Much" (Malice
Domestic IV). In my sixth novel in the series, Where There’s a
Will, Peaches is called upon to help out a dysfunctional family
that seems to have been jinxed by inheriting millions. To solve
murders, my poor mountain sleuth has to take a fancy cruise, so
to do research I had to go on a cruise. You can see how dedicated
I am to my art. But Number five in the series, Is There A Dead
Man In The House? simply fell in my lap. You see, I watched the
restoration of a real 1790’s house in Tennessee, took one look
at some of the artifacts that came to light, and was hooked. I
knew this was a setting for a mystery! The house had almost been
offered to the fire department to burn down for practice. Luckily
someone discovered that beneath more recent ramshackle additions
was a solid old house, perhaps the oldest one in Middle Tennessee.
I felt as if it had been saved just for my sleuth! I especially
enjoyed reading the archaic language of the old newspapers that
were pasted to the attic walls as insulation with headlines like:
"Crazed By Liquor, Man Battles Police". The subhead pointed out
the reputed bootlegger fared badly with his own product. A story
about dueling deaths in seven Southern states was half-hidden
by an ad for Thedford's Black Draught laxative. All grist for
the mill. Is There A Dead Man In The House? is fiction, but many
of the clues are real. In the same way, the skeleton found under
the house is based on a real skeleton, buried elsewhere in 1849
and proudly shown to me by Nick Fielder, Tennessee state archealogist.
It's great how folks, from members of a local historical society
to the county archivist, will help a mystery writer.
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I have been a library trustee and I love
even the smell of books. I enjoy talking to library and other
groups, a favorite subject being: Why it's a great thing to base
a mystery series on your own worst fault, particularly if you
come from the South. I'm a member of The Carolina Crime Writers,
Mystery Writers of America, and Sisters in Crime. I'm a graduate
of Vassar. And I have dipped into all sorts of interesting courses
here and there, at the University of North Carolina for example.
Formal education is helpful, but every minute of life is education,
especially if you live in interesting times."

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