Zackhelm, Victoria. Private Investigations: Mystery Writers on the Secrets, Riddles, and Wonders
in Their Lives. New York: Seal, 2020.
Mystery writers writing about their own personal mysteries, how meta can you get? Victoria Zackhelm set out to find out just that by recruiting twenty authors (some well-known, some not so well-known) to write about mysteries in their own lives, i.e. what intrigues, baffles, dismays, and intrigues them. Each author brings their own take on what makes a mystery, so be prepared to ricochet about this concept!
Sulari Gentill writes about her discovery of an unknown relative. Hallie Ephron dives into ghosts and mediums. Jeffrey Deaver brings the reader along on his quest to be a writer. For Cara Black, the mystery is Paris. Connie May Fowler riffs on motherhood. Martin Limon contemplates the U. S. Army and Korea. William Kent Krueger whispers about mothers and expectations. Asuma Zehanat Khan reminisces about origins. Kristen Lepionka is startled with a haunted apartment in Columbus (OH). Lynn Cahoon explores the mysteries of love and relationships. Rhys Bowen conflates World War II and her writings. Rachel Howzell Hall wanders through the surprises her body has for her. Steph Cha encounters stalkers! Jacqueline Winspear remembers war and her family. Tasha Alexander philosophizes on what attracts readers to mysteries. Carole Nelson Douglas winds cat smuggling and Nancy Drew into a career. Caroline Leavitt has the case of the missing voice. Charles Todd immerses himself in the milieu of the Great War. Robert Dugoni muses on how to reach the reader's heart. Anne Perry closes the book with why she wishes to be a writer.
So what does the reader get out of these varied essays? A small sense of what makes these particular writers put pen to paper and write!