Jill Churchill

American novelist
Jill Churchill
BornJanice Young Brooks
(1943-01-11)January 11, 1943
DiedJuly 12, 2023(2023-07-12) (aged 80)
Kansas City, Missouri, U.S.
OccupationAuthor
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Kansas
University of Missouri–Kansas City
Notable awardsAgatha Award (1989)
Macavity Award (1990)

Jill Churchill (born Janice Young Brooks January 11, 1943 - July 12, 2023 in Kansas City, Missouri) was an American author, winner of the Agatha and Macavity Awards for her first Jane Jeffry novel and featured in Great Women Mystery Writers (2007).[1]

Biography

Churchill earned a degree in education from the University of Kansas in 1965 and then studied at the University of Missouri–Kansas City before teaching in elementary school for some years. Between 1978 and 1992, she was book reviewer for the Kansas City Star. Now divorced, she lived in Kansas.

Writer

She had published several historical novels under her real name before introducing a new series in 1989. This mystery series follows Jane Jeffry, a widow with three children living in suburban Chicago. With her neighbor and best friend Shelley Nowack, she gets caught up in murder cases. These often involve Mel Van Dyne, a police detective introduced in the first novel. The novel titles are puns on literary works and reflect Jeffry's cozy domestic life which she leads between crime-solving capers.[1]: 240 

In 1999, Churchill began a new mystery series set during the Great Depression, which features siblings Robert and Lily Brewster who live in New York. They've inherited a house from their great-uncle, which they run as a guest house to earn money.[1]

Published books

Non-fiction

  • Kings and Queens: The Plantagenets of England, as Janice Young Brooks (T. Nelson, 1975)– children's non-fiction, OCLC 1502441

Jane Jeffry series

  • Grime and Punishment (1989)
  • A Farewell to Yarns (1991)
  • A Quiche Before Dying (1993)
  • The Class Menagerie (1994)
  • A Knife to Remember (1994)
  • From Here to Paternity (1995)
  • Silence of the Hams (1996)
  • War and Peas (1996)
  • Fear of Frying (1997)
  • The Merchant of Menace (1998)
  • A Groom With a View (1999)
  • Mulch Ado About Nothing (2000)
  • The House of Seven Mabels (2002)
  • Bell, Book, and Scandal (2003)
  • A Midsummer Night's Scream (2004)
  • The Accidental Florist (2007)

Grace and Favor series

  • Anything Goes (1999)
  • In the Still of the Night (2000)
  • Someone to Watch Over Me (2001)
  • Love for Sale (2003)
  • It Had to Be You (2004)
  • Who's Sorry Now? (2005)
  • Smoke Gets in Your Eyes (2013)


Other fiction

As Janice Young Brooks

  • In Love's Own Time (1977)
  • Forbidden Fires (1977)
  • Seventrees (1981)
  • Still the Mighty Waters (1983)
  • Our Lives, Our Fortunes (1984)
  • Glory (1985)
  • The Circling Years (1986)
  • Season of Desire (1986)
  • Crown Sable (1986)
  • Cinnamon Wharf (1988)
  • Guests of the Emperor (1990)
  • The Herron Heritage (1992)

As Amanda Singer

  • Ozark Legacy (1975)

As Valerie Vayle

  • Lady of Fire (1980)
  • Seaflame (1980)
  • Oriana (1981)

References

  1. ^ a b c Elizabeth Blakesley Lindsay (2007). Great Women Mystery Writers. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 39–. ISBN 978-0-313-33428-3.

External links

  • Official website
  • Janice Young Brooks at Library of Congress, with 7 library catalog records (1975–1990)
  • Jill Churchill at Library of Congress, with 24 library catalog records (1988–2007)
Warning. Sources differ concerning which of the five other names is sometimes or consistently used for the publication of works written or co-written by Brooks.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Agatha Award winners
Best First Novel
  • Elizabeth George (1988)
  • Jill Churchill (1989)
  • Katherine Hall Page (1990)
  • Mary Willis Walker (1991)
  • Barbara Neely (1992)
  • Nevada Barr (1993)
  • Jeff Abbott (1994)
  • Jeanne M. Dams (1995)
  • Anne George (1996)
  • Sujata Massey (1997)
  • Robin Hathaway (1998)
  • Donna Andrews (1999)
  • Rosemary Stevens (2000)
  • Sarah Strohmeyer (2001)
  • Julia Spencer-Fleming (2002)
  • Jacqueline Winspear (2003)
  • Harley Jane Kozak (2004)
  • Laura Durham (2005)
  • Sandra Parshall (2006)
  • Hank Phillippi Ryan (2007)
  • G. M. Malliet (2008)
  • Alan Bradley (2009)
  • Avery Aames (2010)
  • Sara J. Henry (2011)
  • Susan M. Boyer (2012)
  • Leslie Budewitz (2013)
  • Terrie Farley Moran (2014)
  • Art Taylor (2015)
  • Cynthia Kuhn (2016)
  • Kellye Garrett (2017)
  • Dianne Freeman and Shari Randall (2018) (tie)
  • Tara Laskowski (2019)
  • Erica Neubauer (2020)
Best Contemporary NovelBest NovelBest Historical Novel
Best Non-Fiction
Best Short Story
Best Young Adult MysteryBest Children/
Young Adult Fiction
Malice Domestic Award
for Lifetime AchievementMalice Domestic
Poirot Award
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