Unfortunately, Truman's work has ended as her death was announced on the news Tuesday. Margaret Truman was a mainstay in mystery fiction with a mystery series in and about the Washington D.C. area. The daughter of President Harry Truman, Margaret Truman Daniels lived to be 83 years-old.
Walking back in the mystery section, I noticed 19 separate titles alone at our library. She had a great niche with writing about mysteries in Washington and her books--from what I noticed--enjoyed a good readership. Sometime, I'll have to try one too.
Here's part of the obituary from the The New York Times [the photo--taken before the mystery series began--comes from Yahoo!]: Mrs. Daniel’s foray into mysteries was an outgrowth of her years as a devotee of the genre. “I had been working on a nonfiction book — a history of White House children — but lost interest in it,” she said in an interview in the 1990s.

“Murder in the White House,” about a corrupt secretary of state found strangled in the family quarters of the executive mansion, was published by Arbor House in 1980. The novel climbed onto the best-seller lists, was sold to the movies, became a Book-of-the-Month Club alternate selection and was bought for $215,000 by Fawcett for paperback publication.
Other books in the series, issued at a rate of one a year, carry titles like “Murder on Capitol Hill,” “Murder in the Supreme Court,” “Murder at the Kennedy Center,” “Murder at the Smithsonian,” “Murder at the National Cathedral” and “Murder at the Watergate.”
No comments:
Post a Comment