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L.R. Wright

L.R. (Laurali Rose) Wright was a Canadian writer of mainstream fiction and mystery novels. Many of her stories are set on the coast of British Columbia. She grew up in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan and in Abbotsford, British Columbia.

She attended the UBC Summer School of Theatre, and was hired to perform with Holiday Theatre, Canada’s first touring theatre company for young audiences.  There, in fall of 1961, she met fellow actor and director John Wright, whom she married on January 6, 1962.  Their two children are actor-singer Katey Wright and actor-director Johnna Wright.  Over the next years, the Wright family lived in California, Vancouver, Saskatoon, West Vancouver, and Calgary, where she worked as a reporter for the Calgary Albertan and the Calgary Herald, and later as Assistant City Editor at the Herald.

But what L.R. really wanted to do was write fiction.  With the support of the Calgary Herald she was accepted into a creative writing course at the Banff School, where her mentor was acclaimed novelist W.O. Mitchell. Her first novel, Neighbours, won the Search-for-a-New-Alberta-Novelist competition and was published in 1979. Wright’s next two novels, The Favourite and Among Friends, were published in 1982 and 1984.

With her fourth novel, Wright found herself writing about an elderly man who unexpectedly became a killer.  It became clear that the police would be involved, so Karl Alberg, the central character of what was to be a critically and popularly acclaimed series of mystery novels, was born.  The Suspect, published in 1985, won the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Novel of the year. 

Wright followed up with another Alberg mystery, Sleep While I Sing (1986), and the mainstream Love in the Temperate Zone (1988).  She then returned to Alberg and the town of Sechelt with seven more “Alberg Mysteries.” When Alberg retired in 1997, his position at the RCMP detachment was taken up by Sgt. Edwina Henderson, who featured in Kidnap (2000) and Menace (2001).  Wright’s novels have been published in Canada, the USA, Great Britain, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Norway, Spain and Sweden. Her last novel, The Disappearance of Mabel Watson, currently remains unpublished.

L.R. Wright was proud and honoured to receive a number of awards. In addition to being the first Canadian writer to win the Edgar Allan Poe award (The Suspect, 1985), she twice won the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Novel (A Chill Rain in January, 1990; Mother Love, 1995), and was the first “genre” writer to receive the Canadian Authors’ Association Literary Prize for Fiction (Mother Love, 1995). In 2001 the Derrick Murdoch Award for Lifetime Achievement, presented at the annual Arthur Ellis Awards banquet, was accepted on Wright’s behalf by her daughter Katey.

After publishing The Suspect, L.R. Wright completed an MA degree in Liberal Studies at Simon Fraser University, receiving the Outstanding Alumni Award for Arts and Culture in 1996. She taught writing extensively, in workshops and through the University of BC Continuing Education department. She travelled across Canada and the US promoting her books and attending conferences, served as Chair of the Crime Writers of Canada, and was a member of the Writers’ Union of Canada, International P.E.N., International Association of Crime Writers, and Mystery Writers of America. She was a juror for numerous literary awards and granting bodies. She wrote adaptations of several of her books for CBC Radio drama and for film and television, often in collaboration with John Wright.

L.R. (Bunny) Wright remains sorely missed by her loving family, friends, colleagues, and her many fans. Her books continue to be widely read in over a dozen countries, and several are currently in development for film and television.

 

Works by L.R. Wright

Murder in a Small Town

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Published Works

The Alberg and Cassandra Mysteries

The Edwina Henderson Mysteries

  • Kidnap (2000)
  • Menace (2001)

Other novels

  • Neighbours (1979)
  • The Favorite (1982)
  • Among Friends (1984)
  • Love in the Temperate Zone (1988)

Wright is a master of the psychological thriller.

Booklist

L.R. Wright understands people and is extraordinarily adept at transporting her insights onto the printed page. Adding riches to riches, she writes with style and grace and is masterful at creating a terrific sense of dread… [that] stayed with me long after I turned the last page.

Jonathan Kellerman

(Praise for Acts of Murder:)

… beautifully written and carefully crafted… a dense, ambiguous novel with a lot more going on than a simple surface plot.
Globe and Mail