I spent 10 years as a marketing manager. I've found my experience in the financial world invaluable background for writing about white-collar crimes.
From Sara Paretsky
I love to sing. I'm a soprano.
I wish I could remember where I put things. I spend half my life looking for my keys. With the other half I look for my glasses.
White-collar crime gets more outrageous by the second in America.
People have less privacy and are crammed together in cities, but in the wide open spaces they secretly keep tabs on each other a lot more.
I'm a daydreamer.
Sometimes I think I'm a one-trick pony because I'm not very inventive about new ways of telling stories.
The possibility of bringing white-collar criminals to justice is ever receding over the horizon.
I grew up in conservative rural Kansas in the 1950s when it was expected that girls would not have a life outside the home, so educating them was a waste of time.
I had wanted to write Ghost Country for a long time, but it wouldn't work.
4 perspectives
2 perspectives
1 perspectives