L. R. Wright


Laurali Rose "Bunny" Wright was a Canadian writer of mainstream fiction and mystery novels. Many of her stories are set on the coast of British Columbia.

Early life and education

Wright was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. She was educated at Carleton University, the University of Calgary, University of British Columbia, and later at Simon Fraser University.

Career

In 1959, Wright worked as a journalist at the Fraser Valley Record; she wrote for the Saskatoon Star Phoenix, but her first article was for The Globe and Mail about being a teenager in Germany. She later moved to Calgary, where she was mentored by W. O. Mitchell. She worked in California for an advertising agency.
While in Vancouver, she met John Wright. The two were married, and she spent time as an actor with her husband, including a stint doing summer stock in Dawson City. She worked for several years as a journalist at the Calgary Herald, eventually becoming assistant city editor, before turning to full-time fiction writing in 1977.
Wright published her first novel, Neighbours, in 1979. Her earliest novels were literary fiction; after the publication of The Suspect, her first mystery novel and winner of the 1986 Edgar Award for Best Novel, she concentrated almost exclusively on the genre. One further work of literary fiction, Love in the Temperate Zone, appeared in 1988.
In addition to the Edgar Award, Wright received the Arthur Ellis Award and wrote several adaptations of her novels for CBC Radio. Her novels have been published and distributed throughout the world in several languages. The Suspect has been adapted for the stage and, at various times, the Alberg and Cassandra series has been optioned for film and television. It is the basis for the television series Murder in a Small Town, which premiered in 2024.

Personal

Wright rarely used her given names for any purpose. She published all her novels as L. R. Wright, and was known as Bunny in her personal life. She and her husband, John Wright, had two daughters.
Wright died of breast cancer in Vancouver, British Columbia, on February 25, 2001.