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Clea Simon

 
  • Date of Birth: July 27
  • Place of Birth:
  • Gender: Female
  • Nationality:
  • Official Website: http://www.cleasimon.com
  • Genres: mystery, cats, memoir, mental health

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Clea_Simon edited this page Thursday, September 10 2009. show Clea_Simon's changes | see page history

 I'm the author of three nonfiction books and two mystery series. The nonfiction books are Mad House: Growing Up in the Shadow of Mentally Ill Siblings (published as a Doubleday hardcover in 1997, released as a Penguin paperback in 1998), Fatherless Women: How We Change After We Lose Our Dads (Wiley, 2001) and The Feline Mystique: On the Mysterious Connection Between Women and Cats (St. Martin's Press, 2002). My Theda Krakow mystery series was launched in 2005 with Mew is for Murder and continues with Cattery Row and Cries and Whiskers, all now available in paperback. The fourth Theda book, Probable Claws, is due in April, 2009! My second series, featuring graduate student Dulcie Schwartz, launched this fall with "Shades of Grey," (Severn House). The second Dulcie book, "Grey Matters," will be published in March, 2010.

My essays are included in the following anthologies: Cat Women: Female Writers on Their Feline Friends (Seal Press) and For Keeps: Women Tell the Truth About Their Bodies, Growing Older, and Acceptance (Seal Press). My short mysteries will be included in Deadfall: Crime Stories by New England Authors (Level Best) and Cambridge Voices. I have also written new introductions for two Agatha Christie classics, The Mysterious Affair at Styles and The Secret Adversary, to be published by the Barnes and Noble Library of Essential Reading in March, 2009.

I also do a fair amount of journalism, including book reviews for the Boston Globe, San Francisco Chronicle, and the Boston Phoenix. My writing also pops up occasionally in the New York Times and the Boston Phoenix, and such magazines as American Prospect, Ms., and Salon.com. I used to do a fair amount of music criticism, but now primarily focus on relationships, feminism, and psychological issues.

I grew up in East Meadow, on suburban Long Island, N.Y., and came to Cambridge, Mass., to attend Harvard, from which I graduated in 1983. I've never left, and now happily cohabit with my husband, Jon S. Garelick, who is also a writer, and our cat Musetta.

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