About the Louise Gaylord
Louise Gaylord (right), author of Anacacho, an Allie
Armington mystery novel.
LOUISE GAYLORD is a natural storyteller, whose life, like her
mystery stories, has been full of surprises. She discovered her
love of storytelling during her days at Saint Mary's Hall, an
Episcopal girls' boarding school in San Antonio, Texas. Classmates
gathered round as she read her stories and ended up in tears
by, "...and they lived happily (or not so happily) ever
after." But it was painting, not writing, that her teachers
encouraged, so her writing was put on hold.
Louise studied art history and sociology at Rollins College
in Winter Park, Florida, and later at The University of Houston
where she met and married Ted Gaylord, a promising entrepreneur
from Upstate New York.
Though her grandfather was one of the founding members of the
Houston Symphony, opera was Louise's real passion. After designing
several covers for Opera Cues, the Houston Grand Opera Guild's
magazine, she took over the editorship, eventually becoming President
of the Guild and later President of Opera Guilds International.
Louise was invited to join the Writers Consortium founded by
Guida Jackson and Ida Luttrell. The group includes other published
authors: Jackie Pelham, Patsy Ward Burk, Julia Gomez-Rivas, and
Karen Stuyck, and has helped shape the writing career of Vanessa
Leggett and other new talents.
With the nurturing guidance of the group,
Louise's short story repertoire rapidly grew: "It was
like a door opened and, once I walked through, it was a new
world."
Louise has penned over 30 short stories, some
of which have appeared in the Suddenly series. She has written
several one
act plays and one full-length play, "The Season," which
was produced by the Backdoor Theatre in Wichita Falls and later
performed in Houston. Anacacho, Louise’s first Allie Armington
Mystery, won the 2003 National Benjamin Franklin Award for Best
Mystery/Suspense sponsored by Publisher’s Marketing Association
in Los Angeles
Louise's three months of service on a Harris County, Texas,
grand jury panel sparked the idea for the Allie Armington mystery
series and, as they say, the rest is history.
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