Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

With ‘Y is for Yesterday,’ Grafton prepares for end of long Kinsey series

- MOIRA MACDONALD

“She is my alter ego,” says Sue Grafton of her fictional heroine, private detective Kinsey Millhone. “I’m an introvert, so doing half of what Kinsey does is beyond my poor capabiliti­es. But it’s fun to get to live her life without penalty!”

Grafton, on the phone from her home in Montecito, Calif., is the bestsellin­g author of what’s known to countless mystery fans as “the alphabet series.” The project has become Grafton’s life’s work, beginning with “A Is for Alibi” in 1982 and continuing through the recent publicatio­n of “Y Is for Yesterday” (Putnam, $29). The final book in the 26-volume series, “Z Is for Zero,” will be out in 2019.

And while the rest of us have aged several decades, Kinsey’s gotten only a few years older. Early on, Grafton said, she realized that even if she wrote a book a year, “after 26 years (Kinsey’s) going to be way too old to be running around hitting bad guys with her pocketbook. I thought I’d better keep her credibly young, so she ages one year for every 21⁄2 books.” Kinsey, therefore, is still in the 1980s, researchin­g and solving crimes with shoe leather and index cards.

“When I started, she was 32 and I was 42,” said Grafton. “And now she’s 39 and I’m 77, which I just do not think is fair.”

I’ve long considered Kinsey — a tough, funny loner with an efficiency apartment, a gentlemanl­y landlord, an allpurpose dress and a mind like a precisely ticking watch — to be a friend, and wait eagerly for each new alphabet installmen­t. So it was a kick to chat with her creator, whose Kentucky roots are evident in her lilting voice, and whose conversati­on has the wry irreverenc­e that makes Kinsey irresistib­le. Grafton’s similariti­es to Kinsey don’t extend to her personal life: The author has a husband, children and grandchild­ren (including a granddaugh­ter named Kinsey), and divides her time between homes in California and Kentucky.

Inspired by Dad

Like so many authors, hers is no overnight success story: After graduating from the University of Louisville, she headed to Los Angeles and spent 15 years working as a writer in film and television. “I was miserable,” she said. “I am not a collaborat­ive writer.”

But she’d long thought of writing detective fiction like her father, who’d had to give it up when “he couldn’t make a dime at it.” He’d had the idea, like some other mystery writers, of coming up with a theme to link his titles; in his case, a nursery rhyme.

Grafton, after writing seven non-mystery novels that went nowhere, decided to try her hand at a detective. Around that time, she happened to pick up a copy of Edward Gorey’s Gothic children’s book “The Gashlycrum­b Tinies” (“A is for Amy who fell down the stairs / B is for Basil assaulted by bears … “) — and just like that, the alphabet series was born.

“I sat down and wrote out as many crime-related words I could think of, and I began ‘A is for Alibi,’ ” Grafton said. “I didn’t have a contract, I’d never written a mystery in my life. The fun of it! I had nothing at stake, so I just flat out did what I felt like.”

“A Is for Alibi,” dedicated to Grafton’s father Chip “who set me on this path,” introduced us to Kinsey and to the fictional city of Santa Teresa, Calif., where most of the books are set. (It’s basically Santa Barbara, Grafton said, “but I change all the street names if it suits.”) Of that book, the tale of a murdered divorce lawyer whose young widow — after serving time for the murder — hires Kinsey to find out what happened, Grafton said, “I still think that’s one of the sassiest ones.”

Those years in film and television weren’t wasted: “Hollywood taught me how to write dialogue. I learned how to get into a scene and out of it, I learned to do action sequences, and I learned how to structure a story, and those things have served me so well.”

Still, don’t hold your breath for a Kinsey Millhone movie: Grafton has long rejected the idea. “Why would I trash my life’s work?” she said. “You’d be so mad at me — you’d be looking at some actress and thinking, that is so not Kinsey Millhone.”

In “Y Is for Yesterday,” in which Kinsey gets pulled into a decade-old case involving a sexual assault at an elite private school, you get a sense of a soon-coming final farewell, like the cast of a musical assembling on stage for one last number. But Grafton says she’s resisting bringing back too many old characters — “Most of them have agreed to be in a book on long sufferance; they never said they were going to be in more than one!” — and that she doesn’t yet know exactly how “Z Is for Zero” will end.

“I don’t plan these books in advance; I don’t outline,” she said. “My job is to stay out of (Kinsey’s) way and let her do exactly what she feels like doing, within reason.” For “Z,” which she’s “just getting a sense of” now, she’s not planning a grand finale. “I don’t want fireworks, I don’t want to go out in a blaze of glory. I think it should be a book like the others — a good solid story and good detective work.”

 ?? STEVEN HUMPHREY ?? Sue Grafton started her alphabetic­al series in 1982, carefully aging her hero Kinsey Millhone at a pace that keeps her able to fight the bad guys.
STEVEN HUMPHREY Sue Grafton started her alphabetic­al series in 1982, carefully aging her hero Kinsey Millhone at a pace that keeps her able to fight the bad guys.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Y Is for Yesterday. By Sue Grafton. Marian Wood Books/Putnam. 496 pages. $29.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Y Is for Yesterday. By Sue Grafton. Marian Wood Books/Putnam. 496 pages. $29.

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