“Mystery
writing involves solving a puzzle, but 'high suspense' writing is a situation
whereby the writer thrusts the hero/heroine into high drama.”
– Iris Johansen
Born in St. Louis on this date in
1938, Johansen started her career in the airline industry but when she found
herself bored with the romance novels she liked to read, she decided in her
early 40s to try writing some herself.
Good move on her part.
After early successes in the Romance
genre, she changed direction slightly and began writing Historical Romance
suspense novels in 1991 with the publication of The Wind Dancer, then
settled into suspense writing with her bestselling crime fiction thriller Ugly
Duckling in 1996. A self-described
“voracious” writer, she has written well over 100 books and
counting. Her 110th, Hindsight, came out in January, and the
111th, Chaos, is due out in September.
Writing is a family affair for
Johansen. Her son Roy is an Edgar
Award-winning screenwriter and novelist and has co-written with his mom, and her daughter Tamara serves as her
research assistant. Her myriad fans say
they hope she goes on indefinitely, often using the word “spellbound” to
describe how she leaves them feeling.
“The greatest compliment a writer
can be given is that a story and character hold a reader spellbound,” she
said. “I'm caught up in the story
writing and I miss a good deal of sleep thinking about it and working out the
plot points.”
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