Barbara D'Amato
Barbara D'Amato | |
---|---|
Born | Grand Rapids, Michigan, U.S. | April 10, 1938
Alma mater | Cornell University Northwestern University |
Genre | Mystery fiction |
Notable awards | Anthony Award (1993) Agatha Award (1998) |
Spouse |
Anthony D'Amato (m. 1958) |
Children | 2 |
Website | |
barbaradamato |
Barbara D'Amato (born April 10, 1938, in Grand Rapids, Michigan) is an American mystery author and winner of the Agatha and Anthony Award. She also features in Great Women Mystery Writers (2007).[1]
Biography
She was born Barbara Steketee, the daughter of the owner of the department store Steketee's. She studied at Cornell University but left to marry Anthony D'Amato in 1958. Anthony became a law school professor and Barbara later completed her bachelor's degree from Northwestern University in 1971, followed by a master's. They have two sons Brian (an author and sculptor) and Paul, and live in Chicago.[1]
She began writing full-time in 1973, first co-writing plays with her husband. After trying different genres her first published novel in 1980 was a mystery. She won the Agatha and Anthony Award for a non-fiction work, The Doctor, the Murder, the Mystery: The True Story of the Dr. John Branion Murder Case based on a case her husband worked on in 1984. The book led to the reopening of the case and eventual pardon and release of Branion.[1] In 1999, she served as President of the Mystery Writers of America.
Bibliography
Gerritt De Graaf series
- The Hands of Healing Murder (1980)
- The Eyes on Utopia Murders (1981)
Cat Marsala series
- Hardball (1989)
- Hard Tack (1991)
- Hard Luck (1992)
- Hard Women (1993)
- Hard Case (1994)
- Hard Christmas (1995)
- Hard Bargain (1997)
- Hard Evidence (1999)
- Hard Road (2001)
Figueroa and Bennis series
- Killer.app (1996)
- Good Cop, Bad Cop (1998)
- Help Me Please (1999)
- Authorized Personnel Only (2000)
- Death of a Thousand Cuts (2004)
Other novels
- On My Honor (1989) (writing as Malacai Black)
- White Male Infant (2002)
- Foolproof (2009) (with Jeanne M Dams and Mark Richard Zubro)
- Other Eyes (2011)
Anthologies and collections
Title | Contents | Publication Date | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|
Of Course You Know That Chocolate
Is a Vegetable: And Other Stories |
See No Evil
Freedom of the Press |
May 2000 | Five Star First Edition Mystery
Speaking Volumes |
Crimes By Moonlight | The Conqueror Worm | Jan 2010 | Berkley |
Non-fiction
References
- ^ a b c page 62-64, Great Women Mystery Writers, 2nd Ed. by Elizabeth Blakesley Lindsay, 2007, publ. Greenwood Press, ISBN 0-313-33428-5
External links
- Articles with short description
- Short description matches Wikidata
- 1938 births
- Living people
- 20th-century American novelists
- 21st-century American novelists
- Agatha Award winners
- American mystery writers
- American women novelists
- Anthony Award winners
- Cornell University alumni
- Northwestern University alumni
- Writers from Grand Rapids, Michigan
- Writers from Chicago
- American women mystery writers
- 20th-century American women writers
- 21st-century American women writers
- Novelists from Illinois
- Novelists from Michigan