My last blog was focused on how much, as an author, I have always loved Left Coast Crime.
But I might love it even more as a person alive in the world right now, because it’s a place I’m guaranteed to see some of my dearest friends, a place to get to know some authors better, and a place I know I will meet even more lovely, generous, decent, inspiring people, accidentally or on purpose.
I’m lucky to live in Los Angeles, which has a thriving mystery/crime community, but at LCC I get at least one chance a year to see my friends from around the country (including, as I wrote last time, a joyful reunion with MIE compatriot Annamaria Alfieri).
Here are a few of the many people I was so happy to see or get to know better. All of them are great writers as well and I can’t recommend their books enough.
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With Baron Birtcher. |
Baron Birtcher and I first connected online through our shared love of music, but it was getting to see each other at conferences where we really became solid friends and I had the chance to meet his fab wife, Christina.
D.R. Ransdell and I were on one of my very first panels, ever, and I’m always so glad to see her and her husband, David. Last year, James and I celebrated the end of the conference with them and this year I caught them just in from Europe and about to be off for Japan, so it was doubly lucky to get to see them both in Denver.
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D.R. was so lovely to me on our first panel together. Always love seeing her |
Although Tim Maleeny and I shared a publisher for a while, I only met him in person on a panel at LCC in 2020 (the ill-fated, best one day conference, ever). Last year, I was lucky enough to reconnect with him at LCC 2024 as well as a mystery event in North Carolina.
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I was lucky enough to read, and meet, Tim as well as Haris Orkin and Bill Fitzhugh, at LCC 2020. All hilarious and kind. |
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Me and Tim reconnecting at LCC 2024. |
I can thank Leslie Karst, someone I’m always so happy to see, for my friendship with Lefty Winner James L’Etoile.
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Leslie as autioneer. Photo courtesy of Darrell Hoemann Photography. |
Jim and I had seen each other many times, but we hadn’t really talked until Leslie’s late night drinks party at LCC 2022 in Albuquerque, where we realized we had a shared sensibility. Since then, he’s been one of my (and my husband’s) dearest and most supportive friends in the community.
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Jim wins! Congrats to him and all the nominees. |
And a great person to have a drink with. This year, I was lucky enough to sit down with Jim and Claire Booth, who was nominated for Best Novel as well. From now on, seeing her will be a priority at any LCC I attend.
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Will always be happy to be between Jim and Claire. |
I admire Lefty winner Tracy Clark’s writing so much that she’d always intimidated me a bit. But this year I was privileged enough to sit beside her both on a panel and at a dinner. Anyone who cracks me up like she did, is a friend for life.
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Me and Tracy on a panel with Matt Coyle, Glen Erik Hamilton, and Gar Anthony Heywood. Photo courtesy of Darrell Hoemann Photography. |
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What a dinner! |
Of course, Catriona MacPherson has always cracked me up, so I loved getting to see her at that same dinner. She is another reason to trek to wherever LCC happens to be.
Ditto for Glen Erik Hamilton, Matt Coyle, Cynthia Kuhn, Gar Anthony Heywood, John Copenhaver, Ellen Kirschman, Jennifer Morita, Laurie Sheehan, Leslie Budewitz, Janet Rudolph, Rob Osler, Dotty Morefield, Les and Leslie Blatt, new friends Jason Powell and Susan Shea, all the other writers on the Best Novel panel, and so many others I am forgetting while writing this at 4 in the morning. Naomi Hirahara, Jim Ziskin, Rachel Howzell Hall, Haris Orkin, Tim Maleeny, Wanda Morris, and the other writers who didn't get there, you were missed!
Carl Vonderau and I bonded at the first Bouchercon for both of us. It was so huge and overwhelming, so I’ve always been grateful he took the time to sit down with me. And this year, I also can thank him for this photo below.
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With Carl Vonderau, Tracy Clark, Sara Paretsky, and Priscilla Patten. |
In Denver, I was lucky enough to have a few chances to speak to someone who inspired me to write mysteries in the first place—Guest of Honor Sara Paretsky. I’ve always loved the V.I. Warshawski novels, not only because V.I. is such a badass, and because Paretsky manages to keep her very complex plots moving at a lightspeed pace, but especially because she manages to weave issues of social justice seamlessly into the books by connecting them organically to the stakes of the story, without preaching.
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I must have reread Indemnity Only five or six times when I was writing my first Cyd Redondo book, trying to see how she managed this in her debut. And though my books have a very different tone—taking a screwball approach to the issue of endangered species—I learned so much from her technique.
As a former entertainment reporter in Los Angeles, I know it’s not always wise to meet your heroes, but in this case, to see Paretsky interacting with authors and readers, to hear her speak about fighting the good fight, and to laugh with her, was a joy and a relief.
It’s not always easy to make new, real friends later in life. I am so grateful to LCC for the chance to do just that.
--Wendall
What a delight it was to visit with you over dinner -- that amazing, big, fabulous group dinner -- and have a real conversation!
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