Joan Hess | |
Birth Date: | 6 January 1949 |
Death Place: | Austin, Texas, U.S. |
Pseudonym: | Joan Hadley |
Occupation: | Writer |
Genre: | Mystery fiction |
Awards: |
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Joan Hess (January 6, 1949 – November 23, 2017) was an American mystery writer, a member of Sisters in Crime, and a former president of the American Crime Writers League. She wrote two popular mystery series: The Claire Malloy Mysteries and The Maggody Mysteries (also called The Arly Hanks Mysteries), and contributed to multiple anthologies and book series, including: Crosswinds, Deadly Allies, Malice Domestic, Sisters in Crime, and The Year's 25 Finest Crime and Mystery Stories. She also wrote the Theo Bloomer mystery series, under the pseudonym Joan Hadley.[1] [2]
The Claire Malloy series is set in Farberville, Arkansas, and centers around Claire Malloy, who owns a small bookstore across from the campus of Farberville College. It has been suggested that Farberville is a stand-in for Fayetteville, Arkansas, with many landmarks, including the University of Arkansas-Fayetteville, Dickson Street, and even well-known local citizens, thinly veiled in the prose.
The Arly Hanks series is set in Maggody, Arkansas, population 755. The main character is Arly Hanks, Maggody's irreverent young female police chief. The first book of the Arly Hanks series, Malice in Maggody, was the basis for the 1993 CBS television pilot Arly Hanks.[3]
In the Theo Bloomer series the eponymous protagonist, "a dignified offshoot of old Connecticut money and prestige", is a retired bachelor-botanist who formerly worked as a florist. In each book, family obligations take him to an exotic vacation destination, where he becomes embroiled in a mystery: in the first book, he travels to Israel to retrieve his niece, who is staying at a kibbutz hotel,[4] and in the next he accompanies her party to a "luxurious villa" in Montego Bay, Jamaica, as a chaperone.[5]
1987 | Strangled Prose | Anthony Award for Best First Novel | Finalist | [6] |
1988 | Mischief in Maggody | Agatha Award for Best Novel | Finalist | [7] |
1990 | "Too Much to Bare" in Sisters in Crime 2 | Agatha Award for Best Short Story | Winner | |
1991 | Macavity Award for Best Mystery Short Story | Winner | [8] [9] [10] | |
1992 | "The Last To Know" in Malice Domestic 1 | Agatha Award for Best Short Story | Finalist | |
1993 | O Little Town of Maggody | Agatha Award for Best Novel | Finalist | |
1994 | Anthony Award for Best Novel | Finalist | ||
1995 | Miracles in Maggody | Agatha Award for Best Novel | Finalist | |
Lefty Award for Best Humorous Mystery Novel Award | Finalist |
A longtime resident of Fayetteville, Arkansas, Hess lived in Austin, Texas, where she died at her home November 23, 2017.[11] [12]
Standalone Teenage Romance
Maggody Files: Hillbilly CatGreat Cat Mysteries: An Anthology of Feline Capers (audio edition by Phoenix Books, 1996).She also has two books of solely her own short stories.
She co-authored Elizabeth Peters' last book, The Painted Queen. After Elizabeth Peters died, Joan Hess completed this last novel in the popular Amelia Peabody series.