Sue GraftonJoin now to read essay Sue GraftonOn April 24, 1940, Sue Grafton was born to Cornelius Warren, an attorney and novelist, and Vivian Boisseau (Harnsberger) Grafton, a high school chemistry teacher, in Louisville, Kentucky. (“Sue Grafton” I 1) Her father, also called Chip, wrote and published three psychological mysteries and a novel as C.W. Grafton. (“Sue Grafton” I 1) With her parents being a lawyer, writer, and teacher, there were various books around the house that her mother labeled: dirty, dull, or good. (“Sue Grafton” I 1) At an early age, Sue Grafton was already pursuing her love for literature given that her parents allowed her older sister, Ann, and her to read any book of their choice. (“Sue Grafton” I 1) As Sue was indulged in adult crime novels, her friends were only reading Nancy Drew mysteries. (“Sue Grafton” I 1) Even with both her parents being alcoholics, she credits them, her father more so than her mother, for her initial love and inspiration in detective fiction and reading in general. (“Sue Grafton” I 1)
Sue Grafton first got married when she was only eighteen years old, and began college at the University of Louisville. (“Sue Grafton” II 1) Although Grafton maintained above-average grades, she was not at all devoted to her schoolwork, but “driven by her fright of poor performance.” (“Sue Grafton” I 1) During her junior year, Grafton gave birth to her first child. (“Sue Grafton” I 2) She and her husband named their daughter Leslie Flood. (“Sue Grafton” II 3) Grafton graduated and received a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Louisville in 1961 with a major in English Literature and minors in Humanities and Fine Arts. (Grafton 1) In the fall of 1961 at the University of Cincinnati, she initiated her graduate studies in English. (“Sue Grafton” III 2) Though, she dropped out before the end of her first year, viewing the curriculum as “stifling and overly political.” (“Sue Grafton” III 2) Grafton and her husband divorced in late 1961, only for her to quickly remarry the following year. (“Sue Grafton” II 1)
Soon after their marriage, the two moved out to the west coast into California. (“Sue Grafton” I 2) Here, Grafton enrolled in a creative writing course at the University of California at Los Angeles. (“Sue Grafton” I 2) Robert Kirsh, who at the time was the book editor of the Los Angeles Times, taught the class, and encouraged Grafton to write novels. (“Sue Grafton” I 2) While in California, she and her second husband had a daughter, Jamie Schmidt, and a son, Jay Schmidt. (“Sue Grafton” II 3)
Before settling down as one of America’s best-selling authors, Grafton held a variety of jobs including hospital admissions clerk, cashier, and clerical/ medical secretary. (“Sue Grafton” IV, 1) She took her experiences and knowledge gained from working in hospitals, and used it as material in some of her later books. (“Sue Grafton” III, 3) Along side the hospital work, she traveled to several colleges and a number of writers’ conferences to give lectures. (“Sue Grafton” IV 1) Since she still had a passion for literature, Grafton stuck with her ambitions to be a writer, and wrote on her own time. (“Sue Grafton” I, 2) After four book-length manuscripts, she came out with her first novel, Keziah Dane, in 1967. (“Sue Grafton” I 2) Two years later in 1969, Grafton pushed her second novel out, The Lolly-Madonna War, which only caught the eye of film studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. (“Sue Grafton” I 2) Grafton, in company with Rodney Carr-Smith, agreed to write the script of the screenplay which would come out in 1973. (“Sue Grafton” I 2) A year before the movie hit Hollywood, Grafton divorced her second husband, and ran off to Los Angeles with their two children. (Waxman 5) For the next couple of years, she played around with screenplays, mostly television scripts that she had modified from novels written by other authors. (“Sue Grafton” I 2)
On October 1, 1978, Grafton remarried for the third time to Stephen F. Humphrey, a professor of philosophy. (Chapman 198) With custody battles occurring between her and her second husband, Grafton developed the basis of her outline for her first novel of the alphabetical mystery series, “A” Is for Alibi, published in 1982. (“Sue Grafton” I 2) Having much hatred toward her ex-husband built-up inside, she came up with a poisonous murder plot that served as a “catharsis” for her feelings toward her second husband. (“Sue Grafton” I 2). Towards the beginning of the series, Grafton and her husband published Kinsey and Me in 1992, which was a collection of stories about Grafton’s main character throughout the series, Kinsey Millhone. (“Sue Grafton” IV 2) Grafton focused all of her attention toward the alphabet series, working to come out with a book a year. (“Sue Grafton” II 2) At this pace,
Grafton developed a strong literary connection with her third husband, his two children, and a strong interest in books. (“Susan Grafton” III 1):
“He was not a prolific writer, but he was so prolific that he did not keep a list of his books. He wanted his work—not books—to be in the best position to be published so that readers could understand why he writes now, in his own ways. I want to tell the story of Grafton.” (1) For many years after the novel, Grafton became obsessed with her work, especially Kinsey, and even a strong link to her work to one of the books in Dictionaries, The Lost Heart, could be seen in “The Lost Heart: George Grafton and His Life” by Michael A. MacMillan (1992) . He began using books and Kinsey, and soon after working on Kinsey’s book, the two also became close. (1) Although she would never have published a series of Dictionaries, her work at Kinsey Mill was, at the same time, very accessible to readers with a high quality of interest and a deep sense of the human condition. Grafton, who was then 26½, was a graduate student who graduated with a bachelor’s degree in philosophy at the University of Maryland. According to the Library of Congress, she “had made significant progress in various branches of research during her undergraduate career in philosophy at the College of William & Mary in Maryland. She spent twelve years at the School of Political Science at Baltimore University studying political science and sociology. Her work in philosophy was also devoted to American political culture. She was the co-author of a number of articles for several prominent newspapers. Her work had a considerable impact on the political issues debated in her country. She held posts in two of the major news organizations—National Review, the New York Observer, The New York Times, and the Washington Post. She joined the faculty of the University of Maryland at College Park in 1994 after her undergraduate teaching at the University of Kentucky. She followed this up with a master’s degree in philosophy at the University of Maryland at Marist College in 1995, and a Ph.D.* in political science from the University of Michigan in 1995. She went on to lead the political science institute at the University of Michigan in 1998. During her time with the University of Maryland at Marist she served as a senior advisor to the State Department’s Research Associate. She retired from the Department in April 1998.” (2) While Grafton was employed as a political editor at the University of Maryland at Marist, it was with the University of Kentucky that she was assigned a post at the Washington Post, a job that paid her two salaries a week – a full-time job and a part-time and seasonal gig. (2) As a junior, Grafton started receiving several calls from reporters and editors at the Post, and her writing on her mother’s blog had become a staple at The Washington Post. (2) During the course of her tenure at the Post, Grafton appeared as an associate to D. Michael Moore, George W. Bush’s senior