Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sue Grafton wrote popular ‘alphabet’ mysteries

- Jocelyn McClurg and Bailey Loosemore

Best-selling mystery author Sue Grafton, whose alphabet mystery series consistent­ly topped USA TODAY’s Best-Selling Books list, has died. She was 77.

Grafton had been battling cancer and died around 11:30 p.m. Thursday in Santa Barbara, California, said her husband, Steve Humphrey.

Grafton’s series starred private investigat­or Kinsey Millhone and began with “A is for Alibi” in 1982.

The penultimat­e book in the series, “Y is for Yesterday,” was released in August and made its debut at No. 1 on USA TODAY’s list.

The novels in Grafton’s alphabet series were generally released two years apart, and Humphrey said his late wife had not started writing the last book, so the series will not make it to “Z is for Zero” (she had long planned that title).

“She was trying to come up with an idea, but she never got one she liked,” Humphrey said. “With chemo, she didn’t have much energy or interest in that anyway. There will just be a 25-letter alphabet, I’m sorry to say.”

The novels have been published in 28 countries and in 26 languages. In 2013, Grafton marked the series’ 30th anniversar­y with “Kinsey & Me,” a set of stories that revealed the investigat­or’s origins and gave insight into the author’s past.

Grafton, born in April 1940 in Louisville, Kentucky, graduated from the University of Louisville with a B.A. in English in 1961, according to a U of L profile of her. Over the years, she’s received more than 30 awards and honors.

“She was marvelous and fabulous and adored by everyone who knew her,” said Humphrey, her husband of more than 40 years. “She was very successful as a writer; very dedicated and very talented.”

Part of the fun of Grafton’s series were the clever titles and what word she would come up with to match each new letter. Titles included “H is for Homicide,” “M is for Malice” and “W is for Wasted.” For X, she went minimal, and the title was just “X.”

The novels were set in fictional Santa Teresa, Cal. In “Y is for Yesterday,” the year was 1989.

 ??  ?? Sue Grafton
Sue Grafton

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