In Los Angeles

I hate to admit it, but I needed a wake up call. I got stuck in my latest crime/mystery novel and fell a bit into allowing the distraction of the world’s off-kilter, askew-ness, imbalance, WTF-ness, wake-up-and-smell-the-stinky-coffee-ness, kick-in-the-head-realization-that-the-mind-divide-of-my-fellow-human-beings-is-wide-ness to grab my attention. This has made my progress slower than normal. Distraction. I love the “work” of writing and being stuck (and distracted) is not fun and getting jolted out of it is great.
This trip to Los Angeles to see our kid has been a good and healthy thing. Let me tell you why:
My daughter, Lil, has a great sense of humor. Dry. Quick. Sometimes silly. Rarely cruel in her observations on life and people. She’s living in the town she was born in – Los Angeles and she has chosen a tough career – comedy. Not the stand-up kind (but I get the feeling she is moving into this (but I don’t pry – as my friend reminds me – the best after-eighteen parenting is benign neglect). In high school (in Los Angeles) she did theater (musicals, dramas, comedies) but she also started going to an IMPROV workshop and continued that in college in Boston.
She moved to Chicago and (in three years) worked her way up to the Main Stage of Second City – one of the premiere comedy sketch venues in USA.

Some of these faces above you’ll recognize as Second City former performers that eventually got national/international recognition.
Now, Lil’s back living in LA, she performed at UCB (Upright Citizens Brigade). UCB is ALL improv (not written sketches that you memorize and then might jump off from), so it’s about knowing the technique of how to get a beginning, middle and end and making a cohesive piece of comedy that will hold together just using your chops and thinking on your feet.
Now she is in the Sunday Company at the Groundlings – pretty much all sketches – it’s the other premiere sketch comedy venue in the USA. Some of the faces that have come out of the Groundlings that you might recognize:
I’ve met a lot of her ‘comedy’ friends and, off-stage, they are a very serious bunch. They work their asses off and commit to an insane writing schedule. They’re writing/observing/working on ideas all the time, ‘cause comedy and sketches can be ephemeral – if they are topical, they may only live in one performance, if they are more based on ebbs and flows and oddities of humankind, they can last longer and be tweaked and repeated. But you always want to give the audience “the new” –

Poster outside theater where our kid and her cohorts are performing now. Our kid is in the top right in all black.

Here’s her schedule at the Groundlings (there are 10 people in the comedy troupe, so each is going through/doing the same thing). You’ll see there is no time for distraction:
- MONDAY: Each comes up with 3-4 sketches (in the best possible world, sketches that have beginnings, middles and ends, last around 5 minutes and reflect on the vicissitudes and crazy, odd elements of life, ones that will make people laugh, think, hopefully see something in a new way, etc etc.). Each person writes their sketches, character bios, figure out who in the comedy team would be good in the sketch along with them, cast them, list what props/sets/costumes they will need.
- Do “day job” work too (comedy, at the level she’s at which is quite respected, doesn’t pay well)
- Specifically for my kid: Work on her “other” comedy show that she is contracted to produce/perform in twice a year at a cool theater near the LA River (this is a two-hour multi-cast “play” called THE BABY: RADIO MYSTERY HOUR.
This April trip was planned so we (hubby and I) could see the next installment of this play – it was wild fun with live “foley” (sound effects), a theatre of 200 which was sold-out (which is good because she wrote it with another person and they produced it too and thus get a cut of the house – a mini-mini-mini-ka-ching).
- TUESDAY: Polish the Groundlings work and write one more sketch in case the Monday ones don’t impress the director.
- Do “day job” work that pays most of the rent and prepare other performance/comedy stuff.
- WEDNESDAY: Pitch day. 3 pm to midnight. At the Groundlings theatre, pitch sketches to the director and pitch why they are “worthy”. Of course, the director (like our publishers/editors) has his/her own taste and the director now is in charge of making a choice that affects their lives and hard work. Cold-read sketches with the other actors/comedians and act in the other members of the company’s sketches.
- Day job
- Other comedy stuff/writing
- THURSDAY: Director (using his/her own taste) chooses the 10-12 sketches that “make the show”. He gives notes to the writers of those sketches. (So the possibility of having your sketch chosen is dear – about one in four?). The unchosen get put into the “maybe next show pile” and that can suck.
- Day job
- etc
- FRIDAY: Rewrite day according to director’s notes and get all the elements needed for the sketch nailed down, get the costumer/musical director (there is an in-house band), stage manager, lighting and sound people all set
- Day job
- etc
- SUNDAY: ALL DAY. 10 am to 7 pm rehearsal. Show starts at 7:30 pm and it’s always sold out (really nice theater on Melrose Ave in Hollywood seats about 150 people) and remind self that there’s no wiggle – you have to be on tippy toes of fast comebacks and fun comedy and fulfill the sketch while responding to the audience… (Basically don’t do something stupid like break up with your loved one that morning…)
- And then MONDAY is there again, and it starts all over.
So this trip to LA has been great for me. To see how hard these young comedians work, how many ideas they have to generate and commit to and write, to see them work together, and see them always pushing forward and supporting each other and then blowing off steam at local bars or gatherings.
Back to not letting the grass, fertilized by a world I worry about, grow under my feet.
Her writing life is really a lot like we go through. Not that week to week “end of a project” (we tend to take 6-12 months for a full project?) – but it’s the same sort of grind, excitement, generation of ideas and support –
Speaking of support – MAINE CRIME WAVE is May 30!!! Saturday!!!! Mechanics Hall in Portland Maine. 8:30 for coffee/gather and then 9 -4:30 or so. So many great panels and workshops and chance to talk to fellow authors! SIGN UP NOW! And consider starting the “gather days” on Friday night – May 29th – NOIR AT THE BAR at Bellflower Brewery (66 Cove Street in Portland)- Maine Writers reading from their work and prizes and a lot of fun. Info at the website below!
https://www.mainewriters.org/maine-crime-wave








Brenda Buchanan sets her novels and short stories in Maine. Her three-book Joe Gale series features a contemporary newspaper reporter with old-school style who covers the courts and crime beat at the fictional Portland Daily Chronicle. Brenda’s short story, “Means, Motive, and Opportunity,” was included in the anthology Bloodroot: Best New England Crime Stories 2021 and received an honorable mention in Best American Mystery and Suspense 2022. A short story called “Cape Jewell,” was published in Snakeberry: Best New England Crime Stories 2025, and another short story “Crime of Devotion” will be published next month in Murder Most Senior, an anthology presented by Jacqueline Winspear in association with the Malice Domestic conference.
I am not exaggerating when I say this has been the coldest, windiest winter I can remember. That’s saying a lot, given that in the 2007-2008 snow season, over 200” of white stuff fell in my backyard. Don’t believe me? Even the squirrels prayed for a respite. We didn’t have much snow this year, enough to keep the snow-dependent industries happy, but the wind! Oh, my. Twice I chased my wheeled garbage bin down Route 11 when the wind whipped it from my hand. Another time, the wind took my shovel and sent it flying like a kite into the woods when I was on the upswing. Note to self -next life, have kids. Let them handle these tasks. I’m not complaining, though. It’s the price we pay for the clear blue skies that complement our snowy landscape. That’s winter.
March in Maine is the cruelest month. Doesn’t matter if it comes in like a lion or a lamb, it’s going to hurt you. Big time. The entire month is a plot hatched by Mother Nature to make us earn the soft breezes of spring. Temperatures range from 50 above to 10 below zero, often in one day. Morning snow turns to rain in the afternoon and ice overnight. We live on a hill. I’ve worn the back out of more than one pair of jeans by losing my footing with the first step into the dooryard and scooting halfway down the driveway and finding a landing site. Getting back up the hill is even more amusing. It’s the time of year when I long for any colors other than white and gray.
The previous owners planted bougainvillea around the pool fence. The colors are magnificent, but the plants have long, sharp thorns, and no one ever included our house on the annual senior graduation pool walk bacchanal.
The previous owners also planted the oleander. Gotta wonder what they were thinking. The entire plant, from roots to leaves to flowers, is toxic. In the 1950s, Florida planted them on highway medians. Pretty, but deadly.
We think the birds planted the honeysuckle in the live oak. It blooms in January. This one was right outside our bedroom, and the scent was amazing. I’m deathly allergic to bees, and bees flock to honeysuckle, but honeybees don’t sting so we got along quite well.
Next week at Maine Crime Writers there will be posts by Kait Carson (Monday), Brenda Buchanan (Tuesday), Jule Selbo (Thursday), and Joe Souza (Friday), with a writing tip from Allison Keeton on Wednesday.


When I look back through an old file, I wonder if those writers are still reading my books. Do they look for a new Thea? If they liked Thea, did they also try the Burgess books, and was the change pleasing or did they want me to stick to the characters they liked?
I’ve often joked that when someone called up and says, “I hate you,” I’m pleased. It means they’ve been up all night reading one of my books. So when a reader named Ethel whose reread Chosen for Death and just finished Steal Away, says, I mostly like to read to take myself away from “whatever”, not to be touched or involved. Steal Away did not allow me to do that. You are an excellent writer . . . thanks for the experience.










The last person hanged in Maine, a British immigrant named Daniel Wilkinson, was dispatched in Thomaston in November 1885, only a few months after Capone and Santore.













