Fishing captain and author Linda Greenlaw is on a 45-city book tour to promote her first mystery, "Slipknot" (Hyperion) , in which Jane Bunker , a marine insurance investigator , finds a body washed ashore in Maine. Writing fiction, says Greenlaw, is much harder than fishing, but she's not letting go of either. While she's on the road, her father is taking care of her lobster traps back in Maine.
Greenlaw came to fame after her respected career as a swordboat captain was highlighted in "The Perfect Storm," by Sebastian Junger, and the book's film adaptation. Fans want to know about her mother, with whom she wrote a cookbook (she's doing well), and if Greenlaw has a boyfriend (she does). "I hate to call him my boyfriend, though. We're both so old," says Greenlaw, 46. "I call him my guyfriend."
The Hatfield resident's newest offering is "How Do Dinosaurs Go to School?" (Scholastic), illustrated by Mark Teague. With sales of 3 million copies, the dinosaur series is Yolen's most popular. One grateful mother wrote Yolen that reading "How Do Dinosaurs Say Goodnight?" helped her autistic son sleep through the night without her or her husband at his side.
Yolen, 68, sold her first children's book at age 22. In addition to writing for children and young adults, she has written science fiction and fantasy for adults. Recently, she finished her first graphic novel, "Foiled," about a high school girl whose passion is fencing. The girl loses her fencing foil on her first date -- as Yolen once did -- and then the magic begins.
"Interventions," by Noam Chomsky (City Lights)
"Someone to Love," by Jude Deveraux (Atria)
Jan Gardner can be reached at JanLGardner@yahoo.com. ![]()
