Murder and Matrimony Laura Weatherly '93
Perfect moments are created one detail
at a time," according to Laura Weatherly's wedding-planning
website. Perfect murders are, too--including bumping off the
mother of the bride (MOB, in wedding-planner speak.)
Don't worry. Weatherly, who attended Duke on a writing scholarship,
majored in English, and won the John Hope Franklin Award for
documentary writing, is not up on a murder rap. The wildly
successful D.C. wedding planner, whom Washingtonian magazine
has repeatedly named to its annual "Best Of" list,
writes mystery stories using the pen name Laura Durham. In
Better Off Wed, published in 2005, her protagonist, Annabelle
Archer, a wedding planner/sleuth, solves the murder-by-poison
of an MOB.
Weatherly's first job after Duke was with Algonquin Books of
Chapel Hill, where she was a manuscript reader, then a publicity
assistant, and finally an editor. "I clawed my way to
the middle of a very small publishing company," she says,
with a laugh. Having gone as far as she imagined was possible
at Algonquin, says Weatherly, "I moved to Washington,
where I thought there would be more opportunity."
But literary publishing jobs turned out to be elusive there,
so she took a job editing government documents. To escape the
grind, she and a friend decided to launch a company. "We
asked ourselves, 'How hard can wedding planning be?' We were
twenty-four-year-olds with more guts than brains."
The gamble paid off, even though Weatherly says she's "not
a very wedding-y person. I didn't have my Barbies get married
all the time. But I am organized and imaginative. My timelines
became my hallmark."
The locations of the 300-plus Washington weddings Weatherly
has overseen include the Great Choir of the National Cathedral
and the Great Hall of the National Museum of Women in the Arts.
Her company, Engaging Affairs Inc., is established enough to
allow her the time to write and raise her daughter, Emma, born
last year. Weatherly keeps one foot in the bridal business,
doing about five weddings a year--"only the spectacular
ones."
Those real-life experiences of getting a bride down the aisle
in one piece continue to inspire her books. "As soon as
someone becomes a bride, she goes a little bit crazy. A normal
woman becomes deranged. There was the bride who asked us to
glue rose petals to the grass. Another had a stretch limo just
for her dress."
It was a client who got her started on murder.
"She was the mother-of-the-bride from hell," Weatherly
says. "For months afterward, I would think about things
I should have said to her. I realized that I had to let it
go, so I wrote one scene where she dies. It was so therapeutic!
I thought, I could write a whole book of this." She did.
In the process, the demonic--and dead--MOB morphed into a composite
of several meddling mothers.
Weatherly's pen name is more than a tribute to her college
years; it's practical. "The W's are at the bottom of a
bookstore shelf," she points out. She picked a name that
put her in the D's, within reach of browsers.
Her second Annabelle Archer title, For Better or Hearse, was
published March 1. A third, in which a wedding planner meets
her end, is in the works. The series will continue, she says. "There
are so many people to kill."
In the meantime, as Laura Weatherly, she is the author of STOP!
Don't Plan a Wedding Without This Book, released by Penguin
USA in January. When it came to her own wedding, Weatherly
avoided the madness. She and fiancÈ Juan Carlos, a wedding
photographer, chose a different route.
"The thought of having a big wedding was horrible, so
we eloped and got married in a park. It was a Justice of the
Peace, her golden retriever, and us. And it was wonderful."
--Catherine
O'Neill Grace
Freelance writer Grace was married in Washington, without incident. |