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The
Brutal Telling
has debuted on the New York
Times bestseller list at number 19
Chosen by Barnes and Noble as their Main Selection,
which means it will be featured in each of their 770
stores across the United States, as well as on-line
and in their newsletter, which goes out to millions
of households.
the
American Booksellers Association - which is made up
of the hundreds of independent bookstores in the US
- had
chosen THE BRUTAL TELLING as a GREAT READ and named
it one of the books the ABA
is looking forward to selling this fall!
They named it an IndieNext
pick.
Starred Publishers Weekly Review


New
York Times Bestseller
The
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation has chosen THE MURDER
STONE (aka A RULE AGAINST MURDER) as its Canada Reads
CBC Book Club selection for August 09. This is the first
time they've chosen a crime/mystery novel, so it's a
terrific honour.
Shortlisted for the Arthur Ellis for Best Mystery in
Canada, 09
Starred
Kirkus Review
Starred Library Journal Review
Starred Library
Booklist
Review
An IndieNext pick (formerly BookSense) for February
09
THE MURDER STONE was The Globe and Mail's 2008 Mystery
of the Year.

THE
CRUELEST MONTH
has been nominated for the prestigious Anthony Award
for Best Mystery Novel in the US!
THE
CRUELEST MONTH
has been nominated for a Barry Award in the United States.
The list is chosen by the editors and reviewers for
two prominent crime fiction magazines in the US, Mystery
News and Deadly Pleasures. THE CRUELEST MONTH
is up for BEST NOVEL.
THE
CRUELEST MONTH
has been nominated for a Macavity Award, also for Best
Mystery novel in the US.
The
winners of all three awards (above) will be announced
at the crime/mystery convention, Bouchercon, in Indianapolis
in October 2009.
Winner
of the Agatha award for Best Traditional Mystery in
the US. The award was presented at the Malice Domestic
in Washington
D.C.
May 2009.
Robin Agnew at Aunt Agatha's bookstore in Ann Arbor
- a real force within the publishing community - has
put THE CRUELEST MONTH in her list of Top 10 books for
2008.
The Cruelest Month debuted at #1 on the IMBA bestsellers
list in the US
Shortlisted for the Arthur Ellis for Best Crime Novel
in Canada
Starred Kirkus Review
Starred Publishers Weekly Review
Starred Library Journal Review
Starred Quill & Quire
Stellar
reviews in the London Times, Sydney Morning Herald,
Singapore Strait
Times
An
India Today Book Club selection
Front
page and/or feature articles in Quill & Quire, Montreal
Gazette Book
Section, Macleans
Magazine


A FATAL GRACE was a finalist for the 2008 American Library
Association book of the year.
Winner of the AGATHA AWARD for BEST MYSTERY
Nominated for an AUDIE AWARD for BEST MYSTERY BOOK ON
TAPE - to be awarded
May/08
Bestsellers lists in US, Australia and Canada
One of the best books of 2007 - Deadly Pleasures Magazine
- US
Starred Reviews - Kirkus and Library Journal

Winner of the prestigious Anthony Award for Best First
Novel in the US.
Winner of the Barry Award, voted on by readers of Mystery
News and Deadly Pleasures Magazines in the US.
Winner: Dilys Award - 2007 given by the Independent
Mystery Booksellers Association (www.mysterybooksellers.com)
in the United States for the book they most enjoyed
selling in 2006
New Blood Dagger - 2006 for Best First Mystery, awarded
by the Crime Writers Association in Great Britain
Arthur Ellis Award - 2006 for Best First Mystery - awarded
by the Crime Writers of Canada
Bestseller lists in Canada and the IMBA
Named by Kirkus Review as one of the Ten Top Mysteries
of 2006
Starred Reviews
Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, Booklist
Book Clubs and libraries
I really love libraries and book clubs. If you
belong to either and would like me to come and speak,
or make an appearance by phone please let me know.
If your book club is planning to read one of my books
we have some discussion questions that you might find
stimulating. Just click
here and you can download them.
I've just received this link
to an interview I did a few months ago with the CBC
Radio programme Sunday Edition, hosted by Michael Enright.
I do quite a few interviews, and am a former interviewer
myself, so I know a really amazing one when I hear it
- or do it. He had me talking about things I never thought
I would - but in a way that didn't feel invasive or
purient. So when they just sent me the link (thanks
to Reynold Gonsalves, a producer on the show) I thought
I'd give you the option of listening.

If you wish to receive emails from me sent from time-to-time
with my very latest news and information regarding book
tours etc, please subscribed to our new free Newsletter
distribution service.

Recently the
Toronto Globe and Mail asked me to write a piece for
their new column on Romantic Love. Here it is. Hope
you enjoy it!
This
is the fourth of a 12-part series featuring Canadian
writers' true tales of love.
Globe and
Mail, August
7, 2008
Ralph,
Ralph.
Dear
God, Ralph had sent me 50 roses for my 50th birthday.
And my husband, whose name wasn't Ralph, was holding
his card. This wasn't a promising start to my second
half-century, nor, it must be said, to our romantic
getaway to Hovey Manor.
Up
until this moment Hovey Manor had been our sanctuary,
our haven. The place we went to celebrate or when the
world proved a little too harsh, a little too sad. It's
a grand old inn on the shores of Lac Massawippi, in
Quebec's Eastern Townships, where the perennial gardens
slope to the waterfront and we can eat lobster rolls
and crème brûlée on the wide veranda.
It always reminds me of my husband. Gracious, elegant,
gentle, quiet. It's easy to overlook and once found
never forgotten.
We'd
been married at Hovey. Actually, we were "technically"
married in an intimate service in the tiny Anglican
chapel on the hill, where we had to pay the organist
not to play and the minister had tried to interest us
in an insurance policy, a little sideline of his. But
when I think of our wedding I think of the rose garden
filled with people we love.
Michael
and I had met fairly late in life. I was 36 and he was
60. I worked at CBC Radio, hosting the noon show, and
had become justifiably famous for both the 1 o'clock
time signal and the hog market reports. Michael was
the head of hematology at the Montreal Children's Hospital
and every day tried to cure children with cancer. So
we had a great deal in common. Though, as bright as
he clearly is, I must admit to being much better at
guessing games.
On
one of our first dates we were in the living room of
my Plateau Mont-Royal home when he took my hand and
said, "You know, there's quite a big age difference
between us."
"I
know," I said, looking into his serious and adorable
blue eyes. Eyes that had seen far more than I ever wanted
to imagine.
"I
want you to know that I'm 60 years old."
To
be honest, that didn't surprise me. What he said next
did.
"And
I know you're, what? 45? 50?"
I
could've brained him. I was 36. It's true that giving
the hog market can age a gal, but really? And, what
made it even worse, I could tell he was trying to be
polite.
It
was at that moment I knew I was in love. Instead of
braining him, I kissed him. Perhaps, it's true, in an
effort to stop him from guessing some more. 55? Maybe
he thought he was the young one?
As
the years went by people stopped mistaking us for father
and daughter, though why they thought we'd be holding
hands, as we always do in public, or kiss on the lips,
is beyond me. At the Royal Academy in London last year,
I was standing beside Michael and asked if it had senior's
tickets and the woman said yes, and handed us two.
Somehow,
and I'm not clear how this has happened, Michael seems
to have gotten younger and I seem to have aged, so that
his initial guess appears to be coming true. I'm lapping
him.
Hovey
Manor was where we went on our first weekend away. Shortly
after that we went to a Christmas party at the Children's
Hospital. All the kids were in the centre of the room
opening gifts and playing. The room was ringed by parents
and nurses. Some kids had no hair and lugged IV drips,
others looked perfectly healthy. Across the divide I
saw Michael. He was watching the kids and then he very
softly, very slowly turned his face to the wall. I'd
never seen a grown man do that before. He looked as
though he'd been naughty and was being punished. I walked
around the singing, clapping kids and as I approached
I realized why he'd done that.
He
was crying.
I
stood with him and handed him a Kleenex and when he
was ready he turned back to the room, his swimming eyes
glued to the children. All he said was, "I know
who's going to live and who's going to die."
Michael
took me to Hovey when my mother died, and he took me
there to propose. We went there to celebrate when I'd
finished the first draft of my first book, Still Life,
not yet appreciating that my idea of "finished"
and the rest of the publishing world's was quite different.
Hovey
had held us as we navigated between Scylla and Charybdis,
between families uneasily blended and egos too easily
hurt. As we tried to fit two hurt people together and
tried not to produce even more pain.
Michael
had lost his first wife, Sheilagh, to cancer a few years
earlier. They'd married young and had three boys and
just as the boys were all leaving and they were about
to get their lives back, Sheilagh was diagnosed. Michael
of course knew immediately, as soon as the doctor told
them the extent of it. He took a year off work to travel
with her and say goodbye to all the people and places
she loved. And he was with her when she died.
Family
and friends feared for his life, so deep was his sorrow.
And he feared for his life too, knowing it was indeed
possible to die from a broken heart.
But
instead of dying, this remarkable man's heart mended
and dared to love again, so that 14 years later we were
standing in the loveliest room at Hovey, surrounded
by roses.
He's
now 74, and I'm 50. Holding a card saying the roses
are from Ralph. Michael grabbed it out of my hands and
examined it, then started to laugh. He laughed until
he wept, and finally, after I handed him a Kleenex,
he said only one thing: "Ralph is me. I told them
to say, Love Michael, but they must have misunderstood
and written, Happy, Happy Birthday, Ralph Michael."
I
leaned in and kissed him and whispered, "I Ralph
you too."
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