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Diane Mott Davidson

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Occupation
  
Novelist

Language
  
English

Name
  
Diane Davidson


Nationality
  
United States

Role
  
Author

Alma mater
  
Stanford University

Albums
  
Fatally Flaky

Diane Mott Davidson bookfansnetwpcontentuploadsimagesDianeMott

Born
  
March 22, 1949 (age 75) Charlottesville, Virginia (
1949-03-22
)

Education
  
Stanford University, Wellesley College

Awards
  
Anthony Award for Best Short Story

Books
  
Catering to nobody, The Whole Enchilada: A Novel o, Dying for Chocolate, The Cereal Murders, Crunch Time

Similar People
  
Radclyffe Hall, Alexander McCall Smith, Kathy Reichs, Duff Goldman

Notable works
  
Goldy Schulz series

Best selling author diane mott davidson interview


Diane Mott Davidson (born (1949-03-22)March 22, 1949) is an American author of mystery novels that use the theme of food, an idea she got from Robert B. Parker. Several recipes are included in each book, and each novel title is a play on a food or drink word.

Contents

Diane mott davidson part 1of6


Biography

Mott Davidson studied political science at Wellesley College and lived across the hall from Hillary Clinton. In a few of her novels (particularly, The Cereal Murders), she references a prestigious eastern women's college that her sleuth, Goldy Schulz, attended before transferring to University of Colorado in Boulder Colorado. In real life, Mott Davidson transferred from Wellesley and eventually graduated from Stanford University.

Career

The main character in Mott Davidson's novels is Goldy Schulz, a small town caterer who also solves murder mysteries in her spare time. At the start of the series, Goldy is a recently divorced mother with a young son trying to make a living as a caterer in the fictional town of Aspen Meadow, CO. As the series progresses, new characters are introduced that change Goldy's professional and personal life. It has been noted that Aspen Meadow, CO, closely resembles a real Colorado town, Evergreen. Evergreen is where Mott Davidson currently resides with her family.

The series has now reached 17 books. The first 12 books interwove recipes with the novel's text. When a dish is first described in the novel, the relevant recipe followed within the next few pages. Double Shot, the 12th novel, marked a change in the publishing of these recipes. In Double Shot, all recipes are compiled and printed at the end of the novel.

She was the guest of honor at the 2007 Great Manhattan Mystery Conclave in Manhattan, Kansas.

Awards

Mott Davidson was nominated for both the 1991 Anthony Award and the 1990 Agatha Award for Catering to Nobody in the "Best First Novel" category. Additionally, her story "Cold Turkey" won the 1993 Anthony Award for "Best Short-story".

References

Diane Mott Davidson Wikipedia