Ann Granger

Ann Granger
Granger in 2009
Born
Patricia Ann Granger

(1939-07-12)12 July 1939
Portsmouth, England
Died7 September 2025(2025-09-07) (aged 86)
Pen nameAnn Hulme
OccupationWriter
Alma materUniversity of London
Period1979–2024
GenreCrime fiction
Notable worksCold in the Earth
Spouse
John Hulme
(m. 1966; died 2014)
Children2

Patricia Ann Granger (12 July 1939 – 7 September 2025) was a British crime writer who wrote almost forty books in four different detective series, as well as a collection of short stories.

Early life and education

Granger was born in Portsmouth, England, on 12 July 1939, to Eugene Granger, a Royal Navy officer, and Norah née Davey.[1][2] She attended the Northern Grammar School for Girls, and had thoughts about becoming a veterinarian, but discovered women were not accepted into vet schools because they were not believed to be strong enough.[3] Instead she earned a Modern Languages degree at the University of London, where she first developed a desire to become a writer.[4]

Early career

Realizing that it would take some time to develop a steady income as a writer, Granger instead taught English for a year in France.[5] She then went to work in the visa sections of British consulates and embassies in France, Germany, Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia.[5] She married John Hulme in 1966,[2] a colleague in the foreign service and went with him to Zambia and Germany before returning to live in England with their two children.

Career as a writer

After returning to England, Granger turned her hand to writing and produced the historical romance A Poor Relation in 1979. Between 1982 and 1991, Granger produced several more historical romances.

Mitchell & Markby

In 1991, Granger made the decision to switch to crime novels, saying, "Basically, there is only one plot in love stories: You can describe it in different ways, but you always come back to the subject of man and woman. Crime fiction opens up a world of possibilities for the writer. It lets you tackle deep and difficult issues."[4] Her first crime novel, Say it with Poison, centred on the protagonists Meredith Mitchell, a consular clerk, and police officer Alan Markby. The book proved popular and Granger wrote 14 more Mitchell & Markby novels between 1991 and 2004.

During the series, Mitchell and Markby became romantically involved, but Granger resisted marrying them, believing that Meredith Mitchell could only work best as an independent woman.[4] She finally married them in the final novel of the series, That Way Murder Lies (2004). A young police officer, Jessica Campbell, made an appearance in this novel[4] — Granger would make her the protagonist of a new series four years later.

In 2022, Granger added one more Mitchell & Markby novel featuring the now-retired couple, Deadly Company.[6]

Fran Varady

In 1997, Granger began her second detective series with Asking for Trouble, featuring a very different protagonist, Fran Varady, an out-of-work and temporarily homeless actor. Granger explained, "I wanted to write about someone who is in a completely different situation than Meredith Mitchell: Meredith has a great job, a house, a car, a nice boyfriend, etc. – Fran has nothing. She is totally unattached."[4] Over the next ten years, Granger wrote seven Fran Varady novels.

Lizzie Martin & Ben Ross

In 2006, as Granger was winding down the Fran Varady series, she wrote A Rare Interest in Corpses, set in Victorian England in the 1860s and featuring Lizzie Martin, a companion to a wealthy widow, and Ben Ross, a police inspector. Although Granger had resisted marrying Mitchell and Markby in her first crime series, she had Martin and Ross marry very early in this series, reasoning that "Due to the restrictions on single women at the time, Lizzie wouldn't have had the freedom to be a detective in a whole series of books. Likewise, she and Ben shouldn't be allowed to spend much time together unsupervised."[4] From 2008 to 2023, Granger added eight more novels to the series.

Campbell & Carter

In 2009, Granger returned to the modern world with Mud, Muck and Dead Things, a novel set in the Cotswolds and featuring Detective Inspector Jessica Campbell and Superintendent Ian Carter. In the sixth installment, An Unfinished Murder, the retired couple Mitchell & Markby play a prominent role.[7] By 2025, Granger had written seven novels in the series.

Short stories

In 2021, in recognition of thirty years of crime novels, Granger released a collection of eighteen short stories, Mystery in the Making.[6]

Death

Granger died on 7 September 2025, at the age of 86.[6][8] Her publisher Headline announced her death on 24 September.[9][10]

Awards and recognition

In 1999, Granger was inducted into the prestigious Detection Club.[11] She was also a member of the Crime Writers' Association in the UK and Sisters in Crime in the US.[4]

Granger's books sold more than one million copies and were translated into ten languages.[9] The German versions of her novels made Germany's Top Five Bestseller list more than thirty times; and sold millions of copies.[5]

Bibliography

Historical romances (selection)

  • A Poor Relation (1979)
  • Summer Heiress (1982)
  • The Garden of the Azure Dragon (1986)
  • The Unexpected American (1989)
  • A Scandalous Bargain (1990)
  • False Fortune (1991)

Mitchell & Markby mysteries

  • Say It With Poison  (1991)[12]
  • A Season for Murder  (1991)
  • Cold in the Earth (1992)
  • Murder Among Us (1992)
  • Where Old Bones Lie (1993)[13]
  • Flowers for His Funeral (1994)
  • A Fine Place for Death (1994)
  • Candle for a Corpse (1995)
  • A Word After Dying (1996)
  • A Touch of Mortality (1996)
  • Call the Dead Again (1998)
  • Beneath These Stones (1999)
  • Shades of Murder (2000)
  • A Restless Evil (2002)
  • That Way Murder Lies (2004)
  • Deadly Company (2022)

Fran Varady mysteries

  • Asking for Trouble (1997)
  • Keeping Bad Company (1997)
  • Running Scared (1998)
  • Risking It All (2001)
  • Watching Out (2003)
  • Mixing With Murder (2005)
  • Rattling the Bones (2007)

Ben Ross & Lizzie Martin mysteries

  • A Rare Interest in Corpses (2006)
  • A Mortal Curiosity (2008)
  • A Better Quality of Murder (2010)
  • A Particular Eye for Villainy (2012)
  • The Testimony of the Hanged Man (2014)
  • The Dead Woman of Deptford (2016)
  • The Murderer's Apprentice (2019)
  • The Truth-Seeker's Wife (2021)
  • The Old Rogue of Limehouse (2023)

Campbell & Carter mysteries

  • Mud, Muck and Dead things (2009)[1]
  • Rack, Ruin and Murder (2011)
  • Bricks and Mortality (2013)
  • Dead in the Water (2015)
  • Rooted in Evil (2017)
  • An Unfinished Murder (2018) (featuring Mitchell & Markby)
  • A Matter of Murder (2020)
  • Death on the Prowl (Audio book released December 2024 in UK)

Short story collections

  • Mystery in the Making (2021)

References

  1. ^ a b "Ann Granger".
  2. ^ a b "Granger, Ann 1939-". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 24 September 2025.
  3. ^ Manski, Natascha. "Five questions for… Ann Granger" (in German). Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Reineke, Bianca (2011). "Land und Stadt und Mord". Kalibre .38: Krimis im Internet (in German). Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  5. ^ a b c "Ann Granger". Blake Friedmann Literary Agency. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  6. ^ a b c "Ann Granger, crime novelist who delighted readers with her fresh take on the classic village mystery". The Telegraph. 30 September 2025. Retrieved 30 September 2025.
  7. ^ "CAMPBELL AND CARTER UNITE WITH MITCHELL AND MARKBY IN AN UNFINISHED MURDER BY ANN GRANGER". Blake Friedmann. 12 July 2018. Retrieved 24 September 2025.
  8. ^ "In Memory of Ann Granger, 12 July 1939 – 7 September 2025". Blake Friedmann. 1 October 2025. Retrieved 2 October 2025.
  9. ^ a b Snow, Maia (24 September 2025). "Crime writer Ann Granger dies aged 86". The Bookseller. Retrieved 24 September 2025.
  10. ^ "Tributes paid to Ann Granger". BookBrunch. 25 September 2025. Retrieved 25 September 2025.
  11. ^ "The Detection Club". Golden Age of Detection. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  12. ^ "Ann Granger – Author Information, Books, and News". Archived from the original on 3 September 2012. Retrieved 17 September 2012.
  13. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 August 2012. Retrieved 17 September 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)