1996 Quilt: Women Sleuths

Wisconsin Women Library Workers

photo of Women Sleuths quilt

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Designer and Assembler: Christie Brokish
Quilt Coordinators: Kathy Rohde and Mary Knapp
Winner: Barbara Vater

*"Lyme House Restaurant" by Sylvia Brown

Ellen Hart, Minneapolis author and former chef, created the characters Jane Lawless and her best friend Cordelia Thorn, flamboyant theatrical director. When mysterious things happen to their friends and acquaintances, Jane and Cordelia become sleuths and methodically or serendipitously discover the truth.

*"Gym" by Barbara Hanaway

One for the Money is Janet Evanovich's first mystery story about Stephanie Plum, a bounty hunter/detective. This square depicts a scene from the book. Evanovich has begun a mystery series librarians love. . .Two for the Dough is the second book and Three to Get Ready will soon be published. . .you never have to figure out which book comes next in the series!

*"S is for Sue Grafton" by Sue Searing

My square celebrates the popular mystery series that Sue Grafton launched in 1982 with "A" is for Alibi. Grafton's books feature a gutsy female private eye, Kinsey Millhone, and are set in the fictional California city of Santa Teresa. Along with a growing number of other contemporary women writers (my favorites include Sara Paretsky, Linda Barnes, and Marcia Muller), Grafton has reclaimed the hard-boiled detective genre for today's feminist reader. The cross-stitched alphabet motif, reminiscent of Colonial samplers, is inspired by Grafton's list of titles -- "M" is for Malice is her latest. The photo transfer in the square's center, reproduced from a computer generated image, adds a modern, hard edged touch.

*"Miss Scarlet in the Library with the Rope" by Nancy McClements

I first became interested in mysteries as a child by being my own sleuth in the board game "Clue." The (literally) colorful suspects, the beautifully depicted rooms, and the gruesome playing parts (guns and candlesticks) made me want to be a detective. Soon I was reading Nancy Drew and Agatha Christie. Now I play "Clue" with my nieces and nephews. I'm happy to see that in this age of computers, a simple board game with a good premise can still hold their interest. The bookshelves in this square use the strip quilting technique and embroidery. I added "realia" from the game for a macabre touch.

*"A is for Alibi" by Kate Odahowski

Another square honoring the popular alphabet mystery series balances the design in our "Women Sleuths" quilt.

*"Meg" by Marge Loch-Wouters

Intrepid detective Meg Mackintosh solves mysteries like no one else. The books on this sleuth are written by Lucinda Landon and are written for budding mystery buffs in grades one through three. I included a rebus in the quilt square design to underscore the "solve-it-yourself" element found in all of Meg's adventures. This square was pieced by Jean Sandvidge Wouters.

*"Kat" by Julie Chase

Kat Colorado is an intelligent, practical, private investigator who learned much of what she now practices back when she was a bartender. Her creator, Karen Kijewski, won the Best First Private Eye Novel of the Year Award for her first Kat Colorado novel, Katwalk. She is also the winner of the Shamus and Anthony awards. Kat Colorado is now featured in seven mystery novels and continues to develop a faithful readership. Now, if she'd only dump the dumb boyfriend! The practical side of Kat would appreciate why I chose to represent her on this quilt square. . .even I could attach a cat to something representing the state of Colorado!

*"Zora Neale Hurston" by Christine Jenkins

Detectives aren't the only ones who solve mysteries. Zora Neale Hurston was a scholar and writer whose books, including Dust Tracks in the Road and Their Eyes Were Watching God, were based on her research as an anthropologist and folklorist. For my square I chose Hurston and her definition of research to celebrate not only Hurston's work but all other women--past, present, and future--engaged in research. Working in archives, labs, libraries, and "rooms of their own," these sleuths solve large and small mysteries every day. For my square I used computer scanning to create a photo transfer, plus ribbon and rickrack.

*"Baker Street" by Jane B. Robbins

Laurie R. King, is an Edgar Award winner for A Grave Talent in which she features San Francisco police officer, Kate Martinelli; also in this series is To Play the Fool. The quilt square is inspired by King's The Beekeeper's Apprentice, in which Mary Russell, a late 19th century Oxford University student, becomes an apprentice to Sherlock Holmes; Russell quickly grows into a formidable sleuth in her own right. (A second book in the Russell series is A Monstrous Regiment of Women.) This square was designed, and in part completed, while in England where I stayed several days just blocks from Holmes' famous 221B Baker Street. Thanks go to my librarian daughter, Molly Robbins, who introduced me to Laurie R. King and whose love of bees sparked part of the concept for this quilt square's design.

*"Nancy Drew" by Kathy Rohde

I was alarmed recently to learn that the Nancy Drew mystery stories existed long before I knew them. The 1959 (the year of my birth) first edition of The Secret of the Old Clock I purchased at an antique store seemed like the first book ever written. I read all of Nancy's adventures and loved her no-nonsense approach to life. She was independent, had cool clothes and a convertible, too! When I think of childhood, I think of reading -- I spent hours and hours reading. When I think of reading, I think of Nancy Drew.

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Last update: November 10, 1999
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