Background
Viets, Elaine Frances was born on February 5, 1950 in St. Louis. Daughter of Henry Frederick and Elaine Frances Viets.
(The open road. The wind whipping in your face. For both...)
The open road. The wind whipping in your face. For both serious riders and the wanna-bes called RUBs--Rich Urban Bikers--riding a Harley is only part of the thrill. Putting on leather and acting out is the rest. Even Francesca Vierling, a St. Louis reporter who is a little too tall, smart, and sexy for her own good, is dressed to kill--for a biker's ball that will lead straight ahead to murder. The victim is a woman who lived well, married bad, and divorced hard. For Sydney Vander Venter, going from high-society wife to tough-talking biker chick was only a phase. One she didn't survive. Now Francesca must find out who ruined the annual Leather and Lace Ball by killing Sydney. But with her career crashing, her love life sputtering, and another murder waiting down the road, Francesca finds out firsthand how dangerous it can be when you're born to be wild--and dare to live that way too. . . . From the Paperback edition.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0440613485/?tag=2022091-20
(Did the doctor's callous bedside manner give a patient th...)
Did the doctor's callous bedside manner give a patient the urge to kill? It takes a truly sneaky person to keep a secret in a newsroom. St. Louis City Gazette columnist Francesca Vierling is just the woman to do it-especially to help hide her editor's bout with breast cancer. Now she's surreptitiously shuttling the editor to chemotherapy while finishing a column on gorgeous male stripper Leo D. Nardo. And it's all going without a hitch. . . . Until Leo disappears and somebody starts shooting the worst doctors in St. Louis. The first M.D. to go has a callous bedside manner that gives all his patients the urge to kill. The next victim is a master of misdiagnosis. As long as bad doctors are targets, the public isn't shedding a tear. But when Francesca herself is nearly gunned down, is it because she's hunting for Leo's hot body or a cold-blooded killer? Either way she has an adverse reaction to dying. The antidote? Discover the truth . . .
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0440236207/?tag=2022091-20
(Whacked with a lawn flamingo? A reporter wants to know--w...)
Whacked with a lawn flamingo? A reporter wants to know--who killed with kitsch... The rehabilitation of North Dakota Place is a feel-good story--the kind St. Louis City Gazette columnist Francesca Vierling likes to write. Grand houses restored to former glory. Pride in a neighborhood--and, like all good stories, this one has a hero, the woman who made it all happen, the city's guardian of good taste. Some call her a rehabbing saint, others a fanatic. The first death on North Dakota Place was certainly shocking but not entirely unwelcome--after all, the victim was a cranky old man who had been painting his house purple. The second death, of a drug dealer, brings tacit approval--and growing suspicion. But all bets are off when another victim is found, a socialite unceremoniously whacked with a pink lawn flamingo. Now the neighbors want Francesca to investigate. But her boyfriend wants her to commit to marriage, not crime. Soon the gutsy reporter is experiencing a deepening personal crisis--and something more heinous than vinyl siding: the dark secrets of heart, home, and blighted dreams.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0440224454/?tag=2022091-20
Viets, Elaine Frances was born on February 5, 1950 in St. Louis. Daughter of Henry Frederick and Elaine Frances Viets.
BJ, University Missouri, 1972.
Columnist St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 1979-1995, United Media, New York City, 1996-2000. Teacher writing seminars Broward Library., Florida Center for the Book, 1998-1999, St. Louis Public Library., 1999.
(Did the doctor's callous bedside manner give a patient th...)
(Whacked with a lawn flamingo? A reporter wants to know--w...)
(Book by Viets, Elaine)
(The open road. The wind whipping in your face. For both...)
Member Mystery Writers of America (board directors, secretary Florida chapter 1999-1900, president Florida chapter 2000, director-at-large 2002, Edgar committee best novel 1999, chair Edgar committee best first novel 2002), Sisters in Crime (board directors).
Married Don Crinklaw, August 6, 1971.