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Janice MacDonald

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Janice Elva MacDonald (born 1959 in Banff, Alberta) is a Canadian writer of literary and mystery novels, textbooks, non-fiction, and stories for both adults and children. She is best known as the creator of a series of comic mystery novels featuring reluctant amateur sleuth Miranda "Randy" Craig, all of which are set in Edmonton, Alberta.[1] The latest of these, The Roar of the Crowd: A Randy Craig Mystery, was released on July 10, 2014, and its plot involves the Edmonton theatre scene, including the Freewill Shakespeare Festival and the Edmonton International Fringe Theatre Festival.[2][3] The Roar of the Crowd quickly became the #1 fiction book in Edmonton,[4] making it the third consecutive bestseller for the author, and it went on to be nominated for the David Award for Best Mystery Novel at the 2015 Deadly Ink Conference and featured as a recommended read in both the 2015 Edmonton Travel Guide and the 2015 Avenue Magazine Summer Reading Guide.[5][6][7] Condemned to Repeat: A Randy Craig Mystery, was published on June 15, 2013, and involves a series of deadly events connected to Alberta historic sites, including Rutherford House, Fort Edmonton Park, and the Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Village; it debuted in the top spot on the Edmonton Journal's bestseller list on June 21, 2013 and went on to be shortlisted for the Mary Scorer Award for Best Book by a Manitoba Publisher at the 2013 Manitoba Book Awards as well as the David Award for Best Mystery Novel at the 2014 Deadly Ink Conference.[8][9][10] Hang Down Your Head: A Randy Craig Mystery, was published in November 2011 and features "cameo" appearances by several real-life folk musicians, as well as a corpse discovered at the Edmonton Folk Music Festival.[11] The book was a hit in MacDonald's home city and spent more than six months on the Edmonton Journal's Top 10 list.[12][13] The book and its author were profiled on CBC Radio,[14] CityTV's Breakfast Television show,[15] in the Edmonton Journal,[16] and in the Edmonton Examiner.[17] A January 2012 cover story in Edmonton Woman Magazine[1] and a half-hour interview on the CKUA Radio Network's ArtBeat program,[18] looked more extensively at the entire mystery series.

Works

The Randy Craig Mysteries put a spin on the "ivory tower" academic mysteries by presenting a lead character who cannot seem to land a tenure-track position.[19] Instead, she changes jobs on the periphery of academe in each new adventure, managing to find trouble (and a body or two) wherever she goes.[14] The novels have been celebrated for their use of the city of Edmonton as a "star character."[20] MacDonald herself wrote her Master's thesis on detective fiction[14] and appeared as an on-air mystery expert for the Canadian television series "Booked".[21]

Ms. MacDonald's non-mystery works include award-winning non-fiction and children's titles.[22] The best-known of these is a well-received chapter book for young readers, The Ghouls' Night Out.[23][24][25] She is currently at work on a seventh Randy Craig Mystery, expected to be released in 2016, which takes Miranda to a reunion of her fellow graduate school students and resurrects a mystery involving a Canadian literary figure who has been long-believed dead.[3]

Personal life

Janice MacDonald was born in Canada's Banff National Park in 1959 but has spent most of her life in Edmonton, Alberta, where she lives and works with her husband and two grown daughters.[26] MacDonald is a former lecturer in English literature and Communications at both the University of Alberta and Grant MacEwan College, and she has taught courses on writing and detective fiction at national and international conferences; she is also a past-president of the Canadian Authors' Association, Alberta Branch and was for many year the regular crime fiction reviewer for the Edmonton Journal.[27] She is sometimes mistaken for another writer, Janice Macdonald (lower-case d), an American author of romance novels.[28]

Bibliography

Novels

  • The Roar of the Crowd: A Randy Craig Mystery (2014) Ravenstone Books/Turnstone Press
  • Condemned to Repeat: A Randy Craig Mystery (2013) Ravenstone Books/Turnstone Press
  • Hang Down Your Head: A Randy Craig Mystery (2011) Ravenstone Books/Turnstone Press
  • The Monitor: A Randy Craig Mystery (2003) Ravenstone Books/Turnstone Press
  • Sticks and Stones: A Randy Craig Mystery (2001) Ravenstone Books/Turnstone Press
  • The Next Margaret: A Randy Craig Mystery (1994) Mosaic Press

Children's Book

  • The Ghouls' Night Out (1998) Ronsdale Press

Non-fiction

  • True North: Canadian Essays for Composition (1999) Addison-Wesley
  • Canoeing Alberta (1985) Lone Pine Publishing
  • The Northwest Fort (1983) Lone Pine Publishing

Featured work in anthologies

  • "Getting Away with Murder" in Forms of Writing (2009), eds. Stewart, Allen, Galliah, Pearson-Prentice Hall
  • "Call Him Ishmael" in When Boomers Go Bad: The Ladies Killing Circle (2005), Ottawa
  • "Edmonton" in Formac Guide Alberta and the Rockies, Lorimar, Toronto, four editions: 2001, 2006, 2008, 2010
  • "When? Why? What? Where? Answers to Questions Inevitably Asked" in The Spirit of Writing: Classic and Contemporary Essays Celebrating the Writing Life (2001), ed. Waldman, Tarcher/Putnam
  • "Starting Over" in Wrestling with the Angel (2000), eds. Edwards and Stewart, Red Deer Press
  • "Parody and Detective Fiction" in Theory and Practice of Classic Detective Fiction (1997), eds. Jerome H. Delamater & Ruth Prigozy, Greenwood Publishing

References

  1. ^ a b Chua, "Killer FICTIONista", "Edmonton Woman Magazine"
  2. ^ Edmonton Journal, "Literary Events", "Calendar"
  3. ^ a b CBC Radio Edmonton Sound Files, "Nola Keeler interviews Janice MacDonald", "Daybreak Alberta"
  4. ^ Edmonton Journal, "Bestsellers", "Bestsellers July 25, 2014"
  5. ^ Mystery Fanfare, "Deadly Ink David Award Nominees", "2015 David Award Nominees"
  6. ^ InfoEdmonton, "4 Great Books from Edmonton Authors", "2015 Edmonton Travel Guide"
  7. ^ Avenue Magazine, "Avenue's Summer Reading Guide", "2015 Summer Reading Guide"
  8. ^ Edmonton Journal, "Bestsellers", "Top 10 List"
  9. ^ Manitoba Writers' Guild, "2013 Manitoba Book Awards Shortlist Announced", "News Release"
  10. ^ Mystery Fanfare, "Deadlly Ink David Award Nominations", "2014 David Award Nominees"
  11. ^ Graves, "Folk music, junior hockey … mysteries don’t get more Canadian than this", "Hamilton Spectator",
  12. ^ Edmonton Journal, "Bestsellers", "Top 10 List"
  13. ^ MacLachlan, "Booksellers optimistic heading in to holidays", "Quill and Quire"
  14. ^ a b c CBC Radio Edmonton Audio Files, "Christmas Book Show 2011", "Daybreak Alberta"
  15. ^ CityTV Video Files, "Janice MacDonald Interview", "Breakfast Television Edmonton",
  16. ^ Withey, "Murder at the Folk Fest? Only in fiction", "Edmonton Journal",
  17. ^ Robb, "Mystery, she wrote: Local author unveils her latest in a series of murder-mysteries set here in Edmonton", "Edmonton Examiner",
  18. ^ CKUA Radio Network Audio File, "February 19: ArtBeat Interviews Author Janice MacDonald"
  19. ^ Journal of the Canadian Society for Traditional Music, "Book Review: Hang Down Your Head"
  20. ^ Hingston, " Those juicy flashes of home", "Edmonton Journal feature story"
  21. ^ Booked TV, "Booked Experts", "Janice MacDonald"
  22. ^ Writer's Guild of Alberta, "Bibliography", "MacDonald, Janice"
  23. ^ McNaughton, "Review: The Ghouls' Night Out", "Quill and Quire"
  24. ^ Hodgson, "Recent Canadian Children's Books: The Sublime and the Ridiculous", "Canadian Literature: A Quarterly of Criticism and Review"
  25. ^ Ito, "Books at Bedtime: The Ghouls' Night Out", "Paper Tigers"
  26. ^ Inigo-Jones, The Canadian Rockies, Formac Press, Halifax (2010), p. 6
  27. ^ Skene-Melvin, Investigating Women: Female Detectives by Canadian Writers, Simon and Pierre, Toronto (1995), p. 35
  28. ^ Macdonald, "The Traveling Romance Writer", "janicemacdonald.com"

External links

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