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"When I wrote a different kind, the publisher said I'd need another pseudonym," she says. "There's always the notion people are going to use the nasty word prolific about you." Under the Peters name -- a combination of her children's first names
-- she produced several mystery series, including 19 books about Peabody. When the series began, with "Crocodile on the Sandbank" in 1975, Amelia pursued her adventures while pregnant. The series continued until her son, Ramses,
was grown "Between Amelia Peabody and Indiana Jones, it's Amelia
-- in wit and daring -- by a landslide," Paul Theroux wrote in a New York Times appreciation. Mertz described the character to the AP as a sentimental woman who solved mysteries by guessing but nonetheless thought of herself as logical: "I want to kick her sometimes." As she wrote about her forceful heroine, Peters said she became more like her. Once, she said, "I was mealy mouthed, timid, never spoke up, let people push me around." She divorced in the 1970s, but continued her fiction writing despite financial concerns.
In 1998, Mertz received the grandmaster lifetime achievement award from the Mystery Writers of America, the top award from the mystery writers group. "It has taken me over a quarter of a century to realize that I love to write, and that this is what I should have focused on from the beginning," she wrote on her website. Mertz is survived by her children, Elizabeth and Peter, and six grandchildren.
[Associated
Press;
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