by
Scott D. Parker
(NOTE: Yesterday, instead of the usual Friday's Forgotten Books, the crime and mystery community celebrated Texas author Bill Crider. Patti Abbott collected many of the rememberances, and you can read them all here. This is mine. I encourage y'all to comment here with your thoughts or at Patti's site.)
By the time I stuck my toe into the ocean that is blogging, Bill Crider was a veteran sea captain.
Scott D. Parker
(NOTE: Yesterday, instead of the usual Friday's Forgotten Books, the crime and mystery community celebrated Texas author Bill Crider. Patti Abbott collected many of the rememberances, and you can read them all here. This is mine. I encourage y'all to comment here with your thoughts or at Patti's site.)
By the time I stuck my toe into the ocean that is blogging, Bill Crider was a veteran sea captain.
His was one of the first names I kept seeing pop up over and over again in comments. Slowly but surely, in reading his comments on other blogs and especially on his own blog, I got a sense of who Bill is and the kinds of stories he enjoys. I can tell you that the day he wrote his first comment on one of my own blogs was a great day. When he namedropped my blog on his “Blog Bytes” column in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, I knew I had stepped onto the stage. For so many of us writers who “came of age” in the first decade and a half of the 21st Century, I honestly think it’s a rite of passage for Bill to have read your blog and commented on it.
He has a kind, jovial face that radiates warmth and charm and a personal demeanor to match. Nevertheless, the first time in which I saw him in person, at Houston’s Murder by the Book, I grew nervous. I’m a fanboy in that I love seeing writers in person but, back then, reserved enough not to want to bother them. It was Bill’s easy-going personality that immediately put all those fears to rest. He greeted me like an old friend, smiled, and asked me about my writing. I found it odd that an accomplished writer would care about a newbie, but that’s Bill’s way. He cares about the genre, the writing, and the people behind the writing. At one meeting, right after hello, his first comment was to congratulate me on a new story. He was nice enough to respond to emails when I would send a few cover concepts to him, encouraging me all the way. He made me feel welcome, and I pass it on all the time to every writer I meet.
1 comment:
Putting that together yesterday almost wrecked me, reading all the wonderful tributes.
Today I go to a funeral of a friend. A sudden death instead of a long one. Both are horrible.
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