mr_social_sharing_toolkit domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /data02/c8515919/public_html/us/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6131The private eye story, once the preserve of pulp magazines, were for the new breed of women writers such as Grafton, a vehicle for bringing together a good mystery with a female investigator that could empathise with the clients. Kinsey was both a crime solver and a fully developed character; based at a fictionalised Californian resort town she would uncover the lives of a vivid variety of characters. Her own helpers included a Mohawk hair-cut youth and a much older woman. She charted a new path for the crime novel that others, particularly women writers such as best sellers Louise Penny and Ann Cleeves <\/a>would follow.<\/p>\n When she attended the 1990 crime convention in London, the Bouchercon, Grafton was up to \u201cG\u201d is for Gumshoe . <\/i>She was already in the space of eight years a favourite with many mystery fans winning the best novel (the Anthony Award) on several occasions. One of the less well-known reasons for her success was her talent for screenwriting for television, particularly working on plots that pulled the audience in. She worked on Agatha Christie adaptations, soaps such as Rhoda, and many of these were with her husband Steven Humphrey,<\/p>\n
<\/a>One of the great mystery writers of recent times, Sue Grafton has passed away aged 77. Grafton came to prominence in the 80s when she began her alphabetical series of Kinsey Millone private eye novels.<\/p>\n