Paula L. Woods Explained
Paula L. Woods (born 1953 in Los Angeles[1]) is an African-American crime novelist and literary critic. Her 1999 novel, Inner City Blues, won the Macavity Award for best first mystery,[2] and was followed by other novels featuring its heroine, L.A. policewoman Charlotte Justice. She has also edited an anthology of African-American crime literature and co-edited (with Felix H. Liddell) three anthologies of African American literature illustrated with African American fine art.
Crime fiction novels
- Inner City Blues (1999)
- Stormy Weather (2001)
- Dirty Laundry (2003)
- Strange Bedfellows (2006)
Editor
- Spooks, Spies and Private Eyes: Black Mystery, Crime and Suspense Fiction of the 20th Century (1995)
- With Felix H. Liddell:
- Merry Christmas, Baby: A Christmas and Kwanzaa Treasury (1996)
- I Hear a Symphony: African Americans Celebrate Love (1994)
- I, Too, Sing America: The African American Book of Days (1992)
References
- Web site: Meet Paula L. Woods . Gwendolyn E. . Osborne . 2000-01-15 . The Mystery Reader . 2010-12-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20101130202158/http://themysteryreader.com/paula.html . 2010-11-30 .
External links
Notes and References
- page 240, Great Women Mystery Writers, 2nd Ed. by Elizabeth Blakesley Lindsay, 2007, publ. Greenwood Press,
- Web site: Macavity Awards . Janet A. Rudolph . 2011 . Mystery Readers International Macavity Awards . Mystery Readers International . December 28, 2011.