Detroit native Karen Dionne is the internationally published author of Freezing Point, a science thriller nominated by RT Book Reviews as Best First Mystery of 2008. A second environmental thriller about an erupting volcano, a missing researcher, and a radical scheme to end global warming is forthcoming from Berkley in 2010. Karen is also co-founder of the online writers community Backspace, and organizes the Backspace Writers Conferences held in New York City every year. Karen is a member of Sisters In Crime, Mystery Writers of America, and the International Thriller Writers, where she serves as Website Chair and Managing Editor of The Big Thrill newsletter and Webzine.

Blog Entries by Karen Dionne

What's The Oldest Item In Your Refrigerator?

Posted December 23, 2009 | 03:27 PM (EST)


A three-year-old fruitcake? A bottle of sherry from 1996?

Whatever it is, I'm willing to bet my mother has you beat. My mom is famous for keeping multiple jars of opened salad dressings and dabs of dubious leftovers in her fridge. When raiding her refrigerator, family members know to...

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Chaitén Volcano - One Year Later

Posted May 5, 2009 | 04:51 PM (EST)


May 2, 2009 marked the one-year anniversary of the eruption of Chaitén Volcano in Northern Patagonia, Chile. Like many people around the world, I first became aware of the eruption via this dramatic photo:

Recently, I spent four days in Chaitén doing research for my next novel. I...

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On Buying Books

Posted February 4, 2009 | 12:27 PM (EST)


According to a survey commissioned last spring by Random House Inc., 28 percent of Americans purchase between 11 and 20 books every year. The figure is slightly higher for Canadians: roughly one-third (34%) report buying themselves at least one book per month. 36% of non-reading Canadians said they...

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Yet Another Blog Post About Michael Crichton

Posted November 6, 2008 | 11:49 AM (EST)


I didn't know Michael Crichton. There's nothing I can add to Charles McGrath's comments in The New York Times summing up Crichton's body of work, or to those from The Washington Post's Short Stack about why his readers loved him. I only knew Crichton by his stories.

...
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Can a Novel Change the World?

Posted October 31, 2008 | 11:29 AM (EST)


I don't mean DaVinci Code or Harry Potter change, though there's no denying those novels' influence. They've redefined the term "blockbuster," spawned countless knock-offs, created a new sub-genre, even added words to the popular lexicon.

I'm also not referring to Booker or Pulitzer Prize-winning fiction destined to be discussed and...

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Aqua Fina or Aqua Finite?

Posted October 24, 2008 | 02:36 PM (EST)


Recently, governors and legislatures in eight Great Lakes states and two Canadian provinces approved the Great Lakes Compact, a landmark agreement that bans the sale and diversion of water outside the region. The people living along the shores have reason to be concerned. For 15 years, I lived in St....

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