Best-selling author
Barbara Mertz died this past Thursday. She was 85.
If you don't know
her by that name, you likely know one of her pseudonyms. As Barbara
Michaels, she wrote 29 suspense novels. That alone would have marked
a successful career.
But she also wrote
another 35 novels, most with a much lighter tone, as Elizabeth
Peters. Those were her stories that I primarily read – and re-read.
First her freestanding novels, then her series featuring plucky
heroines Jacqueline Kirby, Vicki Bliss, and Amelia Peabody Emerson –
especially the Amelia stories.
Whether I was in
the mood to read them as straight, tongue-in-cheek, or over-the-top
farces, they never failed to entertain – and also inform me about
archaeology.
That's
where she began, earning her doctorate in Egyptology at age 23. And
that was the topic for Red Land, Black Land: Daily Life in
Ancient Egypt and Temples, Tombs, and Hieroglyphs: A Popular
History of Ancient Egypt, the
books she wrote under her own name.
By whatever name,
her books never failed to keep people turning pages.
A few years ago at
a writers conference, I encountered in the lobby a group of conferees
in their teens talking about the Peters book one was reading. Old
enough to be their father, I joined in the discussion about the
merits of each of her series.
My favorite? Night
Train to Memphis, a 1995 Vicki Bliss story, set in
contemporary Egypt and filled with adventure and overflowing with
humor, much of it involving a German professor's love for traditional
American country music.
Which of the many
titles by Barbara Mertz / Elizabeth Peters / Barbara Michaels have
you enjoyed most?
2 comments:
I have been a big Amelia Peabody Emerson fan since reading Crocodile on the Sandbank in the 80s. I've also read several Barbara Michaels novels.
Reading about the death of Barbara Mertz was like reading about the death of Amelia or her dear Emerson.
Read them all :-( In mourning...
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