Kennealy-Morrison was born in
Brooklyn, New York on March 4, 1946, and reared on Long Island in the hamlet of
North Babylon. She attended
St. Bonaventure University for two years, majoring in journalism. 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. 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. 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. 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. Kennealy-Morrison served as an advisor to
Oliver Stone for the 1991 film
The Doors, making a small cameo appearance as the High Priestess who marry the Jim and Patricia characters (
Val Kilmer and
Kathleen Quinlan). However, in subsequent interviews and writings, she has scathingly criticized Stone's portrayal of Morrison, herself, and others depicted for the fictionalized drama, saying the film bore little or no resemblance to the people she had known or the events they lived through; Stone conceded the Patricia character was a composite of several of Morrison's girlfriends and regretted not giving her a different identity. While the Patricia character in the film is a "
Wicca Priestess", Kennealy herself was instead a
Celtic Pagan. 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. 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.
Son of the Northern Star, a fictional account of the conflict between the Viking king Guthrum and Alfred the Great, was intended for publication by LQP but remained unfinished at the time of the author's death.
Ungrateful Dead: Murder at the Fillmore is the first in a series of murder mysteries set in the turbulent world of 1960s rock & roll.
Ungrateful Dead introduces the protagonist, Rennie Stride, rock reporter/detective, and her boyfriend (later husband) Turk Wayland, superstar English lead guitarist. Kennealy-Morrison has described the series as: Seamlessly blending the fictional with the real: the stars, the bands, the music, all the excitement of the most incredible decade of the last century ... Full of rockworld dish and attitude, created by someone who was not only there for it but made some of it happen herself, and who took just enough drugs to get into it and not so many that she can't remember it ...
Ungrateful Dead was published on November 1, 2007, to coincide with both the
Day of the Dead and
The Celtic New Year. Further novels in the Rennie Stride series are ''California Screamin': Murder at Monterey Pop
(May 2009), Love Him Madly: Murder at the Whisky
(March 2010), A Hard Slay's Night: Murder at the Royal Albert Hall
(January 2011), Go Ask Malice: Murder at Woodstock
(November 2012), and Scareway to Heaven: Murder at the Fillmore East
(December 2014). The most recent in the series is Daydream Bereaver: Murder on the Good Ship Rock&Roll'' (published March 2016). ==Name==