Lynne Murray

Lynne Murray

About

Lynne Murray knew she wanted to write a novel featuring a fat heroine with a take-no-prisoners attitude when the book hit the wall. She threw the novel she was reading when she reached a page where the book's heroine sneers at a fat character. It was one fat joke too many. She had to do something.

She wasn't sure how to create a fat fictional character who refused to be ignored or disrespected. It turned out that what she had to do was become a self-accepting woman of size in the process of writing about one.

Larger Than Death
, the first book in the mystery series featuring Josephine Fuller, a sleuth of size who doesn't apologize, won the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance (NAAFA) Distinguished Achievement Award.

In Bride of the Living Dead, she set out to write a romantic comedy about love and marriage. She conjured up a rebellious, plus-sized heroine whose idea of dressing up is wearing a monster movie T-shirt and jeans to go to the movies. Yet Bride of the Living Dead finds heroine Daria MacClellan trapped into a formal wedding with her anorexic, perfectionist older sister planning the whole thing.

Murray's humorous short pieces have appeared in magazines and newspapers. Many of these articles, including an interview with Darlene Cates, star of What's Eating Gilbert Grape, are available on her website at www.lmurray.com. She is also a regular contributor to the Body Impolitic blog.

Murray went to San Francisco to go to college and ended up staying. She received a B.A. in psychology from San Francisco State University. The city is the setting for Bride of the Living Dead and has been the setting for most her her fiction since her first book, Termination Interview, was published in 1988.

Murray shares an apartment with a small group of extremely mellow cats, who are all either rescued or formerly feral.

Size Zero (Visage Book 1)

Size Zero (Visage Book 1)

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Description

<p style="margin:0px 0px 14px;padding:0px;font-family:Arial, sans-serif;font-size:14px;"><strong>&quot;A somber, disturbing mystery fused with a scathing look at the fashion industry. </strong><strong>Mangin writes in a confident, razor-edged style.&quot;</strong><strong> - Kirkus Reviews</strong></p><p style="margin:-4px 0px 14px;padding:0px;font-family:Arial, sans-serif;font-size:14px;"><strong>Condom dresses and space helmets have debuted on fashion runways.</strong></p><p style="margin:-4px 0px 14px;padding:0px;font-family:Arial, sans-serif;font-size:14px;">A dead body becomes the trend when a coat made of human skin saunters down fashion's biggest stage. The body is identified as Annabelle Leigh, the teenager who famously disappeared over a decade ago from her boyfriend's New York City mansion.</p><p style="margin:-4px 0px 14px;padding:0px;font-family:Arial, sans-serif;font-size:14px;">This new evidence casts suspicion back on the former boyfriend, Cecil LeClaire. Now a monk, he is forced to return to his dark and absurd childhood home to clear his name. He teams up with Ava Germaine, a renegade ex-model. And together, they investigate the depraved and lawless modeling industry behind Cecil's family fortune.</p><p style="margin:-4px 0px 14px;padding:0px;font-family:Arial, sans-serif;font-size:14px;">They find erotic canes, pet rats living in crystal castles, and dresses made of crushed butterfly wings. But Cecil finds more truth in the luxury goods than in the people themselves. Everyone he meets seems to be wearing a person-suit. Terrified of showing their true selves, the glitterati put on flamboyant public personas to make money and friends. Can Cecil find truth in a world built on lies?</p><p style="margin:-4px 0px 0px;padding:0px;font-family:Arial, sans-serif;font-size:14px;"><strong>In high fashion modeling, selling bodies is organized crime.</strong></p>

Story Behind The Book

Lynne knew she wanted to write a novel featuring a fat heroine with a take-no-prisoners attitude when the book she was reading hit the wall. She threw the novel when she reached a page where the book's heroine sneers at a fat character. It was one fat joke too many. She had to do something. Larger Than Death, the first book in Murray's mystery series featuring Josephine Fuller, a sleuth of size who doesn't apologize, won the National Association to Advance Fat Acceptance (NAAFA) Distinguished Achievement Award. Three other Josephine Fuller novels followed before the publisher (St. Martin's Minotaur) decide not to continue the series. Murray wonders if her books who sell better if they had a lower fat content. But she can't write books in which all the characters are thin. She doesn't live in a world like that, and the idea of such a narrow range of humanity saddens her. It doesn't exist in any reality outside of television, movies, and possibly concentration camps. &quot;My friends and neighbors and the people I love and hate come in all sizes,&quot; Murray says. &quot;In my fictional world, at least some of the fat characters have to stand up and face the issues that real fat people deal with every day of our lives.&quot; And that's what the heroine of her new romantic comedy novel, Bride of the Living Dead, does. When Murray set out to write a romantic comedy about love and marriage, she conjured up a rebellious, plus-sized heroine whose idea of dressing up is wearing a monster movie T-shirt and jeans to go to the movies. Yet when indie film critic Daria MacClellan meets her match, her wedding is hijacked by family drama and she finds herself heading for a formal wedding planned by Sky, her perfectionist, anorexic older sister. Dara adores her fiance and loves horror films, but her wedding seems to be spiraling out of control. Will the spectre of a picture-perfect pink -- or periwinkle -- wedding turn her into the Bride of the Living Dead? Murray is thrilled to be working with Pearlsong Press, a niche publisher featuring body positive fiction and nonfiction with a particular emphasis on Health At Every Size. Bride of the Living Dead is being published in original trade paperback and ebook format in June 2010.

Reviews

&quot;Jane Austen meets the Marx Brothers. Lynne Murray has written a delightful comedy of manners with impeccable politics.&quot;<br /><br /><strong>Laurie Toby Edison</strong><br />Photographer, <em>Women En Large: Images of Fat Nudes<br /><br /></em>&quot;Anyone needing a laugh-out-loud romance full of lovable and real people need look no further.&quot;<br /><br /><strong>Margaret Vickers<br /></strong>BookWomanUnbound.blogspot.com<br /><br />&quot;From the start you will find yourself cheering for Daria as she overcomes hurdles such as a control-freak sister, his and her stalkers, and her own nagging self doubt, to marry her beloved Oscar. <em>Bride of the Living Dead</em> is a fun read about love, friendship, and being true to yourself.&quot;<br /><br /><strong>Sue Ann Jaffarian</strong><br />Author of the Odelia Grey mysteries &amp; The Ghost of Granny Apples mystery series<br /><br />&quot;<em>Bride of the Living Dead</em> is an irresistible comedy that's got it all: a big, beautiful, witty heroine, true love, scary stalkers, reluctant in-laws and monster movie magic. Buy it, read it, laugh out loud and enjoy the heartfelt love story.&quot;<br /><br /><strong>Jaqueline Girdner<br /></strong>author of the Kate Jasper &amp; Cally Lazar mystery series<br /><br />&quot;In Lynne Murray's fabulous version of romance, lovers find true pleasure in all body sizes and shapers, wedding dresses are altered to fit the happy bride's body (not bride made to fit brocade) and readers feast on smart detail and smarter dialogue.&quot;<br /><br /><strong>Marilyn Wann</strong><br />Author of <em>FAT!SO? Because You Don't Have to Apologize for Your Size</em>