![]() |
VOOZH | about |
π Gone Fishin'
By Kellye Garrett
November 26, 2018
www.lareviewofbooks.org
THIS PAST SUMMER, Walter Mosley, Agatha Awardβwinning writer Gigi Pandian, and I started a group for crime writers of color. Within two months, the group went from the three of us to having over 80 writers β all in various stages of our careers. We cheer the ups, commiserate with the downs, and brainstorm ways to ensure the appallingly low number of mysteries published by writers of color continues to grow.
It was during one of those brainstorming discussions that the idea for this roundtable took shape. The group was discussing how best to diversify conference panels. I mentioned how Iβd love to see a panel featuring black mystery writers who first published in different decades to see what had gotten easier, what had gotten harder, and what had stayed the same.
Steph Cha messaged me suggesting that it might work as a roundtable discussion. I knew exactly who I wanted to invite β and was thrilled when they all immediately said yes. The resulting conversation is enlightening and a great inside look at what itβs like to be a black mystery writer.
π Photos by Bob Martin for The New York Times
As Seen by The New York Times
November 10, 2018
In California, there were deserts and mountains, vast farmlands and a thousand miles of publicly owned beach. There were people from everywhere and opportunity that only a country like America could offer the working man or woman, and their children, too. From San Francisco to San Diego, from Hollywood to the world, California offered succor, health and, oddly, anonymity. If you didnβt like the view, you moved. If the boss gave you grief, you dropped him.
The sun shone mercilessly, but no one asked for mercy.
Everybody was rich because anything was possible.
Walter Mosley does NOT have an X account. Anyone claiming to be him is a fake.