Patricia Kennealy-Morrison

Writer

Birthday March 4, 1946

Birth Sign Pisces

Birthplace New York City, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2021-7-21, New York City, U.S. (75 years old)

Nationality United States

#45582 Most Popular

1946

Patricia Kennealy-Morrison (born Patricia Kennely; March 4, 1946 – July 21, 2021) was an American author and journalist.

Her published works include rock criticism, a memoir, and two series of science fiction/fantasy and murder mystery novels.

Her books are evenly divided between the series The Keltiad and The Rock&Roll Murders: The Rennie Stride Mysteries.

Kennealy-Morrison was born in Brooklyn, New York on March 4, 1946, the daughter of Genevieve Mary (McDonald) and Joseph Gerard Kennely, and reared on Long Island in the hamlet of North Babylon.

Her family was strict Irish Catholic.

She attended St. Bonaventure University for two years, majoring in journalism.

1960

As first a writer and then the editor-in-chief of Jazz & Pop magazine in the late 1960s, she was one of the first women rock critics.

Kennealy-Morrison worked as an advertising copywriter, receiving two Clio nominations.

She was a Dame of the Ordo Supremus Militaris Templi Hierosolymitani, a High Priestess in a Celtic Pagan tradition and a member of Mensa.

1967

She later transferred to Harpur College (now Binghamton University), where she graduated with a B.A. in English Literature in 1967.

She also studied at NYU, Parsons School of Design, and Christ Church, University of Oxford.

1968

After her college graduation at age 21, she moved to New York City, where she worked first as a lexicographer for Macmillan Publishing, then as an editorial assistant, and, from 1968 to 1971, editor-in-chief of Jazz & Pop magazine.

She was one of the first female rock critics.

1969

As editor-in-chief of Jazz & Pop she first interviewed Jim Morrison of the rock band the Doors in January 1969.

After the interview, they began a correspondence, became friends and later lovers.

1970

She and Morrison exchanged vows in a Celtic handfasting ceremony in June 1970.

Before witnesses, the couple signed a document declaring themselves wed.

The relationship continued to be long-distance, which she said suited them both just fine.

As temperamental artists with their own careers, living together for more than short periods of time may have been too much for either to handle.

She preferred a non-traditional arrangement to "domesticity" and had no desire to "wash [Jim's] socks".

Morrison could be very difficult, at times loving and gentle, then suddenly brutal, or cold and distant.

By the time Morrison was on trial in Miami, potentially facing a long sentence of hard labor, his at times erratic and even cruel behaviour led her to speculate that maybe he hadn't taken the wedding as seriously as he'd led her to believe.

But then Morrison would change his tune yet again and profess his love and desire for domesticity, claiming he was planning on returning to her, and to the Doors, in the fall.

Kennealy-Morrison was skeptical by this point, as he was known to vacillate like this in his other relationships, as well.

Jim Morrison's sudden death at 27 would mean a lack of closure not only for her, but for the many people in his life.

1991

Kennealy-Morrison served as an advisor on Oliver Stone's 1991 movie The Doors, and played a small role in the film as the High Priestess who marries the Jim and Patricia characters (portrayed by Val Kilmer and Kathleen Quinlan).

However, in subsequent interviews and writings, she was scathingly critical of Stone's portrayal of Morrison, herself, and other people who were the basis for the film's fictional characters, saying Stone's fiction bore little to no resemblance to the people she had known or the events they lived through; Stone admitted that the character named after her was a composite of several of Morrison's girlfriends and regretted not giving her a fictional name.

In the film her character is referred to as a "Wicca Priestess", but Kennealy-Morrison identified as a Celtic Pagan, not a Wiccan.

Kennealy-Morrison has gone on record that she published her memoir Strange Days: My Life With and Without Jim Morrison as a reaction and rejoinder to Stone's movie, among other reasons.

1994

From 1994 to 2007 her books were published as "Patricia Kennealy-Morrison", with the hyphen.

Ungrateful Dead and the subsequent Rennie Stride novels were her first books to be published as simply "Patricia Morrison".

The author had said that she wished to make a distinction between her Celtic fantasy novels and the murder mysteries, so decided to use different versions of her name rather than an invented pen name.

2000

In 2000, Robin Ventura, third baseman for the pennant-winning New York Mets, took the phrase "Mojo Risin" from the Doors' "L.A. Woman" and made it the rallying cry for the team that year.

Ventura and the Mets invited Kennealy-Morrison to a game just before the playoffs, where she met with them and became a Mets fan.

The author's legal name was "Patricia Kennealy Morrison".

As a rock critic and editor, she initially published under her birth name, "Patricia Kennely", and later "Patricia Kennealy" (both are pronounced the same; she changed the spelling to be closer to the pronunciation).

2007

Following a 1999 split with her publisher HarperCollins, on May 19, 2007, Kennealy-Morrison announced via her blog that she planned to start her own publishing house, Lizard Queen Press, and to self-publish novels and non-fiction.

The next Keltiad novel was to be The Beltane Queen, but she turned to mystery writing instead.

The first book to carry the Lizard Queen Press imprint is Ungrateful Dead: Murder at the Fillmore, published in 2007, first in the Rennie Stride series, which to date consists of six published books, all released on Lizard Queen Press.

2013

Additionally on LQP are Rock Chick: A Girl and Her Music (2013), a collection of PKM's writings originally published in Jazz & Pop magazine, Tales of Spiral Castle: Stories of the Keltiad (August 2014), a short-story collection set in her Keltiad world, and the forthcoming Son of the Northern Star, a fictional account of the great conflict between the Viking king Guthrum and Alfred the Great.