Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Pierce’s Picks: “Lake Country”

A weekly alert for followers of crime, mystery, and thriller fiction.

Lake Country, by Sean Doolittle (Bantam):
It’s not always easy to “do the right thing,” as Iraq war vet Mike Barlowe learns when he tries to protect a former marine buddy, Darryl Potter, from the consequences of his latest screw-up. Potter, still emotionally troubled by his inability to save the life of another combat comrade, and pissed off at just about everything else--but especially at the fact that the American justice system favors the rich and powerful--has committed one of his stupidest acts yet: he’s kidnapped the 20-year-old daughter of Minneapolis architect Wade Benson. Five years ago, Benson dozed off behind the wheel of his car and crashed head-on into another vehicle, driven by college student Becky Morse. Becky died from her wounds; Benson’s “punishment” was probation, plus a couple of days a year in jail for the duration of that probation. As it happens, Potter was a friend of the Morses, and he’s decided to strike back on their behalf. However, snatching Juliet Benson and heading off with her into Minnesota’s northern Lake Country is hardly the best way to even the score. Barlowe knows that, which is why he’s determined to stop Potter before it’s too late. But his plans are seriously jeopardized by an attractive TV reporter who’s in pursuit of the story and a bounty hunter who’s in aggressive pursuit of Darryl Potter. Author Doolittle offers here an intricately woven and nicely paced tale that’s full with carefully drawn characters. Lake Country is already being talked about by some critics as a Best of 2012 contender.

* * *

There are two other novels due to reach bookstores this week that also deserve favorable mention.

Dare Me (Reagan Arthur) is New York writer Megan Abbott’s second dip (after last year’s The End of Everything) into the threatening depths of teenage girlhood. It finds the ordered world of a high-school cheerleading squad being seriously thrown off, first, by the arrival of a new coach and then by a suicide that draws police attention to that coach and her squad, and propels one of the young cheerleaders into a dismaying investigation of the tragedy.

Meanwhile, The Creeper (Pegasus), by Tania Carver--the joint pseudonym of British author Martyn Waites and his wife, Linda--has Suzanne Perry weathering a particularly horrific nightmare, in which a mysterious individual invades her bedroom, only to awaken the next morning and find a photograph of herself, sleeping, with the threatening words “I’m watching you” written on it. Detective Inspector Phil Brennan (introduced in 2009’s The Surrogate) investigates, only to land on the trail of a twisted killer who worms his way into the everyday lives of young women before doing away with them. This is definitely not a book to read before bedtime, at least not if you wish your own sleep to be restful.

READ MORE:Daughters of Daughters of Eve: An Interview with Megan Abbott,” by Laura Lippman (Mulholland Books).

Witness This!

Michael Connelly’s The Fifth Witness has won the 2012 Harper Lee Prize for Legal Fiction, according to an item in The Gumshoe Site. As I understand it, this commendation is sponsored by the University of Alabama School of Law and ABA Journal, and it has only had one previous winner--John Grisham’s The Confession in 2011.

Also nominated for this year’s Harper Lee Prize were Robert Dugoni’s Murder One and David Ellis’ Breach of Trust.

“007 Reporting for Duty”

In the event that you’ve not already heard, the official trailer for the next James Bond film, Skyfall, was released earlier today. It certainly does make this 22nd Bond flick look like a hell of a lot of fun, though as The HMSS Weblog notes, Skyfall has “borrowed from a literary device Ian Fleming used in his 1964 novel, You Only Live Twice. Those who’ve read the book will instantly recognize it.”

You can delight in the U.S. trailer here. The slightly different international trailer is here.

Skyfall is due for release in Britain on October 26, and in American theaters on November 9.

READ MORE:New James Bond Skyfall Trailer Makes Debut,” by Tim Lammers (Examiner.com).

Monday, July 30, 2012

The Story Behind the Story:
“Furt Bent from Aldaheit,” by Jack Eden

(Editor’s note: This 36th entry in our “Story Behind the Story” series comes from New Zealand resident Geoff Vause, who often writes novels under the pseudonym Jack Eden. After a long career producing and editing daily and community newspapers, Vause served as private secretary to Civil Defence Minister John Carter, and then as editor of the New Zealand Education Gazette and the New Zealand Education Review. He is currently a sub editor at Fairfax Media. Vause has penned eight novels so far, several of which have been published, including Trade Me [2006, trade paperback], which was optioned for a TV series and is to be followed by the scammer drama, Blackhat; and Jetsam’s Caress [2010], which was published as an e-book. His novel Furt Bent from Aldaheit, issued late last year [under his Jack Eden pseudonym] as both an e-book and a trade paperback by New Zealand-based Pear Jam Books, has been longlisted for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award. Below, Vause presents some of the background to that latest novel as well as his own story about getting into the business of crime-fiction writing.)

In 1971 I was a cadet journalist working on a community newspaper in West Auckland. I was paid $28.50 per week. It was a lot of fun. I lived at the beautiful, wild Karekare Beach.

I was fortunate to have Cedric Gray as my editor, an excellent journalist and boss who helped develop my writing and editing skills.

But I wanted my own newspaper. A printing firm south of Auckland was looking for someone to start a newspaper for them. It seemed a logical next step. So the County News was born, which later became the Franklin County News.

I had sucked a couple of editions out of my thumbs when former Tuakau mayor George McGuire and his raven-haired wife, Ella, came into the office. A few months before the County News appeared, local farmer Arthur Alan Thomas had been found guilty of murdering another farmer and his wife, Harvey and Jeanette Crewe.

George and Ella didn’t believe Thomas had done it. If he was the murderer, then his wife, Vivien, had to have been an accomplice or at least known about it and helped to cover it up. George and Ella wanted me to interview her.

Well, I did the interview and ran the story in the County News. It was the first article in New Zealand that talked about Thomas being innocent--which eventually proved to be the case (although he was given a Royal Pardon, rather than being found not guilty through appeal or retrial).

A few days after I ran that piece, two policemen involved in the investigation visited me. They made it clear they weren’t happy with my story. Well, stuff happened, as it does. Soon after, I left the township and my little newspaper, and headed north to other adventures.

The murders remain unsolved.

I had nothing more to do with the Thomas affair; however, meeting the McGuires, interviewing Vivien Thomas, and the subsequent events stayed with me, and Furt Bent from Aldaheit--inspired by those events--became the fourth of the eight novels I have written so far.

After I left the County News I spent a lot of time in New Zealand’s Hokianga and met a number of Vietnam War draft dodgers. Those encounters led to the novel Jetsam’s Caress, which is set in the Far North. I eventually returned to journalism, and through that work I encountered a number of colorful characters, particularly through court reporting and also by covering local government politics. Aspects of those characters make their way onto the pages of my novels.

When I am writing crime stories, I allow the characters to drive the tale through the settings and events. In short, the crime genre usually has the crime(s) central to the idea, and the characters react to the crime and take their shape largely in response to it. Solving the crime is almost irrelevant to me. In my fiction I am looking for solutions, resolution, perhaps redemption, in the character interaction.

This was one of the reasons the Crewe murders made such a compelling backdrop for Furt Bent from Aldaheit. The murders, as I said before, have not been solved, and the people involved are still searching for resolution, to some extent. They have also been subject to one-, two-, or three-dimensional development in various media and other publications dealing with those long-ago murders.

In my novel, “Furt Bent” is the delinquent alter-ego Osgood Sneddon assumes to deal with his extreme life. He’s an ordinary Kiwi teenager, thrust by events into an extreme underground crime world. It is this delinquent alter-ego that is the foil, the nemesis to my Detective Inspector Hubbard, a crooked cop who doesn’t let the truth get in the way of a result.

The crime(s), the setting, and the one- and two-dimensional characters help form a canvas on which the main characters can take on color and shape. At the time of writing, I am unconcerned with how the reader looks at the main character(s). I don’t care if the reader likes them or not. I want them to be effective. Furt Bent became more “likable” as a result of suggestions from my publisher, Jill Marshall, and I followed that advice during the final edits.

In Furt Bent from Aldaheit, I combine this approach to characterization with the present tense. In most of my novels I attempt to create strong imagery and relatively fast action. I try to screen a film in the reader’s mind and I find present tense allows me to do so. Oddly, I am not a big fan of other novels that use the present tense, yet it is the structure that arrives as soon as I embark upon writing a novel of my own.

I write quickly, and barely rewrite anything when the story is unfolding. I hardly read what I have written while the novel is underway. I start at the first chapter and finish at chapter wherever. I can feel the beginning, the middle, and the end unfolding. However, I do a lot of cuts at the direction of my publisher, whom I trust and respect. Most of my novels have had 40,000 to 60,000 words cut from them. When the need for cutting is pointed out to me, I agonize for a few days and then find it quite easy to do, largely because the rhythm to my writing settles each chapter into a similar length throughout the novel, and losing chapters--or moving them about--is relatively simple.

Chapters unfold for me rather like short stories, and the rhythm and chapter length varies from novel to novel. However, in each case I find the muse arrives at around 12,000 to 15,000 words. I push myself to get the characters into some sort of “match fit” state, like a coach, and once the muse arrives I find I become more of a referee, getting about the field of action, blowing the whistle and trying to get the players to follow the rules and stay onside.

They don’t. Once they are fleshed out, they become impertinent. They think they can interact with each other in ways that oblige the story in directions I had not envisaged. They get involved with each other. They develop unhealthy friendships. They generally misbehave like teenage scallywags, and I find it difficult keeping them on track. My main tools for doing this are the innate rhythm--the song--the novel has found, and the chapter length. The characters can mess about as they will, but they have to sing in tune, and stay within the field of play.

I have retained the Australasian setting in the sequel to Furt Bent (the working title of which is Body Copy). The opening pages reveal a woman’s body found in a rural church. That crime, and others in the novel, may or may not be “solved.” That’s largely up to the characters as they take shape on the pages. It is their individual development and interaction with each other that becomes the novel. It’s their story. Once they have shape and timbre, they show the story their way.

Your Words, Only Better

In case you haven’t noticed, there’s an advertisement about halfway down the right-hand column on this page. It’s promoting the copy-editing services of Charles Smyth, a longtime Seattle friend of mine and an expert wordsmith.

I encouraged Charlie to take out this ad, because I know that a considerable number of people who read The Rap Sheet on a regular basis are authors. And since publishing companies no longer offer the expert copy-editing services they once did, responsibility for ensuring the quality of one’s work has fallen increasingly on the authors themselves. (People who take the e-book route are even more dependent on freelance copy-editing assistance.) Finding superior copy editors--those with the skills you require and the snobbishness you could do without--can be difficult.

I’ve known Charlie for--wow!--more than 20 years now, and I have hired him as a copy editor for several magazines under my supervision. He’s not only meticulous about making sure that written work is edited on time and without errors, but he’s extremely conscientious about maintaining an author’s style and tone.

If happen to be in the market for professional copy-editing services, I can recommend Charles Smyth without hesitation. Contact him at wordsmyth44@qwestoffice.net.

Consider Us E-lated

It seems a bit late in arriving, but the Spring/Summer 2012 issue of Mysterical-E has finally been posted.

Included in its contents are original short stories by John M. Floyd, I. Van Laningham, and Mel Goldberg; Gerald So’s look at “the new crime TV shows of summer and fall 2012”; Jim Doherty’s rundown of his 10 favorite private-eye movies (among them Chinatown, Memento, and--surprise!--Gunn); and interviews with the likes of Elizabeth Zelvin and Melanie Atkins. Click here to read all that and more.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Gold Medals for Avarice and Action

Although U.S. coverage of this week’s opening of the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in England was badly muddled by Republican president-wannabe Mitt Romney’s embarrassing blunders and gaffes during a visit to London (one newspaper actually labeled him “Mitt the Twit”), things seem to have settled down a bit since. Which means that between now and the conclusion of these Games on August 12, you might find some time to sample a few Olympics-related crime novels.

Editor-blogger Janet Rudolph has posted a list of mystery novels with Olympics connections. Those books include everything from Manuel Vázquez Montalbán’s An Olympic Death and Off Side to Jeffery Deaver’s Garden of Beasts, Rebecca Cantrell’s A Game of Lies, and Philip Kerr’s March Violets (also worth mentioning is Kerr’s 2009 work, If the Dead Rise Not).

There are plenty of other reading options here.

READ MORE:Olympic Fiction, Fact, and Crime,” by Peter Rozovsky (Detectives Beyond Borders).

Friday, July 27, 2012

So Much for That

File the following item under “Didn’t We All See This Coming?”: AMC-TV has cancelled The Killing, its etiolated and often turgid version of the Danish series Forbrydelsen, which drew such enthusiastic reviews during its English-subtitled run in Britain.

So, what went wrong with the American edition? Well, most significantly, AMC tried to squeeze as much story as it could out of The Killing’s original (but not that original, after all) story line: the hunt for the killer of a young Seattle girl named Rosie Larsen. Viewers sat through 13 hour-long episodes in Season 1, only to be told that they wouldn’t learn who committed the murder unless they dialed in for 13 more eps in this year’s Season 2. Like so many people, I gave up the show at that point. I never watched a single episode of The Killing’s sophomore season, though I did--finally!--find out whodunit.

READ MORE:AMC Cancels The Killing …One Season Too Late,” by Jeremy Lynch (Crimespree Magazine).

Thursday, July 26, 2012

McCall to Arms

Oh no, say it isn’t so: Omnimystery News reports that Denzel Washington has been cast as covert agent-turned-urban vigilante Robert McCall in a big-screen adaptation of the 1985-1989 CBS-TV series The Equalizer. That role was originated by former Shakespearean actor Edward Woodward (who died in 2009). The blog adds that “Sony [Pictures] is moving forward with production, looking to start on-location filming in Boston next April.”

Now, I have nothing against Washington as a performer; I liked him a lot in Glory (1989), Philadelphia (1993), and Devil in a Blue Dress (1995), and I even remember him fondly from television’s St. Elsewhere (1982-1988). But he’s dead wrong to play Robert McCall. One of the most compelling things about Woodward’s portrayal of that sophisticated and quietly menacing New York justice-seeker was that he didn’t immediately come off as a tough guy. However, Washington has spent a good portion of his movie career playing tough guys, whether in Training Day or Man on Fire or American Gangster. It won’t be so easy for him to make theater audiences believe he doesn’t relish the opportunity to crack a few heads now and then.

More Sad Bookstore News

Word that the bookstore Mysteries to Die For in Thousand Oaks, California, was on the brink of closing leaked out in early July, when L.A. Observed put up this brief post. But now comes confirmation of this sorry news. The Ventura County Star reports that “after 19 years in business” the shop “will close its doors Saturday,” adding:
It doesn’t take a trench-coated sleuth to unravel Mysteries to Die For’s death. The culprit, brazen with a string of victims of all stripes, was the economy.

Dwindling sales, the cost of necessary improvements and fixes and other expenses took too much of a financial toll, prompting [owner Alan] Chisholm to take a step he had staved off as long as possible.

“I always said I’d do this as long as I don’t lose money,” he said. “I don’t know how to keep it going.”
You can read the Star’s full report here. It includes the contrastingly hopeful news that “Mysteries to Die For’s closure does not signal an epidemic, according to those in the book business. While niche sellers have more challenges, the number of independent bookstores has grown in recent years amid a tough retail market.”

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Pierce’s Picks: “Disappeared”

A weekly alert for followers of crime, mystery, and thriller fiction.

Disappeared, by Anthony Quinn (Mysterious Press/Open Road):
The past comes back to haunt--with particular urgency and drama--the present in Irish author-journalist Quinn’s first novel, for even though Northern Ireland no longer resonates with the echoes of bombs and gunfire, the much-promised peace has not yet been realized in some quarters. Inspector Celcius Daly is called to a rural home, from which David Hughes, an elderly gent afflicted with Alzheimer’s disease, has lately vanished. Hughes’ sister and caretaker fears he has wandered off and into trouble. But as the inspector investigates, he discovers that Hughes isn’t the quiet country putterer he seems. Instead, he’s part of a larger and much more complicated story connected to the long-ago slaying (by the Irish Republican Army) of an alleged political informer, Oliver Jordan, and the more recent torture murder of an ex-intelligence agent. The fact that said agent placed his own obituary in a local newspaper, prior to his death, makes this whole affair particularly bizarre. Daly--a detective still wrestling with a recent separation from his wife and more capable at his job than at handling his personal life--adds further to the stakes in this mystery by inviting Jordan’s answers-seeking son into the case. It soon becomes apparent that the missing Hughes harbors secrets in his deteriorating mind that others don’t wish to see released. Quinn enriches Disappeared with Irish history and he does an excellent job of ratcheting up the tension as this yarn progresses. I’m pleased to hear that he’s currently working on a sequel, Border Angels.

READ MORE:‘Ya Wanna Do It Here or Down ohe Station, Punk?’: Anthony Quinn,” by Declan Burke (Crime Always Pays).

Honestly, Abe!

In my Kirkus Reviews column this week, I present an argument for Stephen L. Carter’s new novel, The Impeachment of Abraham Lincoln (Knopf), being shelved in the crime-fiction section of your local bookstore. Of that book’s plot, I explain:
This story offers a classic “what-if” scenario. In its alternative construction of history, Abraham Lincoln, the 16th president of the United States, doesn’t die in April 1865 after being shot in the back of the head by renowned actor and Confederate sympathizer John Wilkes Booth. Instead, Lincoln survives, while on the same night Vice President Andrew Johnson (who in reality succeeded Honest Abe) is assassinated by a Booth co-conspirator, and another wounds Secretary of State William Seward so severely, the diplomat retreats from public view. (Actually, Seward recovered from his wounds and went on to engineer the U.S. purchase of Alaska from Russia.)

Two years after Booth’s assault, and following the death (by suicide?) of the president’s wife, Lincoln’s growing contingent of enemies--led by radicals within his own Republican Party, who believe the post-Civil War South deserves much harsher treatment than it has received--endeavor to oust him from the Executive Mansion. They charge Lincoln with, among other offenses, acting the role of “a petty tyrant” and trying to usurp congressional authority by establishing military rule in what was then known as Washington City, “with himself at the head.”
Plenty of novels over the years have followed similar “counterfactual” storytelling tracks; Douglas C. Jones’ 1976 work, The Court-Martial of George Armstrong Custer, comes to mind immediately, followed by Philip Roth’s The Plot Against America (2004), Michael Chabon’s The Yiddish Policemen’s Union (2007), and of course Stephen King’s recent 11/22/63. Like Chabon’s book, Carter’s new offering mixes alternative history with recognizable elements of detective and mystery fiction, but then he layers on top of all that a compelling legal drama. Even though Impeachment’s Lincoln isn’t nearly so vivid or engaging as Gore Vidal’s Honest Abe was in Lincoln (1984), Carter brings forth a political-strategizing side of the 16th president that’s defendable as historically accurate, and that we don’t often see.

As I write in the piece, The Impeachment of Abraham Lincoln is “one of the finest historical thrillers I’ve read so far this year.”

You’ll find my full Kirkus post here.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Bullet Points: Patches Pals Edition

• It looks as if we’ll be seeing more books from Canadian author J. Robert Janes, who I had the privilege of interviewing not long ago. On the heels of Mysterious Press releasing his 13th and latest Jean-Louis St-Cyr/Hermann Kohler historical puzzler, Bellringer, Janes tells me in an e-note that “Mysterious Press will publish Tapestry, the 14th St-Cyr and Kohler mystery in print and as an e-book. They will also be publishing my thrillers, starting with The Hunting Ground, in print and as an e-book, and The Alice Factor as an e-book.”

• Having not read much of Donald Hamilton’s work, I look forward to seeing Titan Books’ reissues of his Matt Helm series, beginning in February 2013. Explains The HMSS Weblog: “Hamilton wrote 27 published Helm novels, the last appearing in 1993. He also wrote a 28th, unpublished Helm story, The Dominators, around 2001 that isn’t part of the Titan Books deal. Hamilton died in 2006.”

• With the last of four new episodes of ITV’s Inspector Lewis set for broadcast next Sunday on PBS-TV’s Masterpiece Mystery! series, now might be the time to brush up on the plots of the preceding three Season 5 installments, courtesy of Criminal Intent’s Leslie Gilbert Elman. Here are the titles and links: “The Soul of Genius,” “Generation of Vipers,” and “Fearful Symmetry.” This coming weekend’s episode will be titled “The Indelible Stain.”

• Wow, that’s quite a project. Yvette Banek has put together a very interesting list of her favorite mystery and/or thriller films. There are some obvious choices here (The 39 Steps, In the Heat of the Night, Rear Window, etc.), plus a few that wouldn’t have come immediately to my mind, were I asked to compile such a rundown (such as Cottage to Let, Remo Williams: The Adventure Begins, 16 Blocks).

This is one of the more sexist old book covers I’ve seen. What was it about crime/mystery novels of the 1950s and ’60s and the tendency of their protagonists to threaten women with spankings?

• I was sorry to hear that Chris Wedes, who played Seattle’s favorite TV clown, J.P. Patches, for half a century, died on Sunday at age 84. As Rachelle Robins of Blatherwatch recalls:
The Emmy Award-winning J.P. Patches Show was one of the longest-running locally produced children’s television programs in the United States, appearing on Seattle TV station KIRO channel 7 from 1958 to 1981.

J.P. was the “Mayor of the City Dump,” where he lived in a shack and welcomed frequent guests: Seattle Boy Scout and Girl Scout troops, various local and national celebrities. Among his more well-known guests were Colonel Sanders, Jacques Cousteau, Slim Pickens and Tiny Tim.

He also had a beloved cast of supporting characters--Gertrude, Boris S. Wort, Grizwold, Esmerelda and Tikey Turkey.

Many children signed up to be “Patches Pals,” and J.P. announced some of their birthdays by “viewing” them on his “ICU2TV” set (a cardboard prop that created the appearance that J.P. was looking at you from inside your television).

J.P. Patches (the J.P. stood for Julius Pierpont) also made frequent fundraising appearances for local charities. He was a common sight at Children’s Hospital, visiting sick kids and promoting the work of the hospital.
There’s more on Wedes at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer Web site and in the ParentMap blog.

• Also to be missed is Alexander Cockburn, the Irish-American political journalist who died of cancer on Saturday at age 71. I had a single opportunity to meet and talk with Cockburn, when he visited Seattle back in the late 1980s, and I remember that it amounted to my sitting still as he regaled me with anecdotes and facts and opinions, based somewhat on whatever question I had asked, and moving on from there to anything else he really wanted to talk about at the time. Not that what he offered me wasn’t fascinating; it most certainly was, I just didn’t have a hope in hell of writing it all down! Others have done a far superior job to what I might accomplish in eulogizing Cockburn. Look here, here, here, and here.

• Cemetery Dance Publications has announced that it will release “special trade hardcover editions of two ‘Nameless Detective’ novellas by Bill Pronzini” in December of this year, both with “stunning covers by acclaimed artist Glen Orbik.” The books are to be titled Kinsmen and Femme. (Hey, is it just my imagination, or could Orbik’s woman on the cover of Femme be the long-lost sister of the lithe lovely he painted for Christa Faust’s Money Shot?).

• This week’s new story in Beat to a Pulp comes from Derringer Award winner Patti Abbott. It’s called “How to Stay Ahead.”

• That’s clever: Nine Books NOT to Read at the Beach.”

• Mystery*File’s Michael Shonk follows up his recent assessment of the first 13 episodes of ABC-TV’s Harry O (1974-1976) with this excellent look back at the latter part of Season 1. Still to come, Shonk promises, is his report on Season 2.

• Here’s the sort of reader comment you want to see first thing in the morning, as you’re trying to separate your eyelids and inject some caffeine into your system. It comes from someone named Sheri (a most kind and discerning person, if I may say so) in response to my interview last year with James Garner, which was posted in the wake of the actor publishing his memoir, The Garner Files:
Mr. Pierce--outstanding interview! It was very informative and you asked some really great questions that gave us yet another glimpse of Mr. Garner. I’ve read the book (twice now) and never want it to end each time. There was another Garner 3-hour interview, done a long time ago, posted on YouTube. It started out with a female interviewer for the first part, then a male for the consecutive parts. It was OK (a lot of questions asked, but not good ones like yours!) It would have been so much more interesting if YOU would have been the interviewer. I really like your style. Thanks for such a GREAT read!
Five pretty good writing tips from Tana French.

This ad brings back good memories.

• Speaking of TV advertisements and related promos, The Booksteve Channel’s Steve Thompson has begun posting assorted images from 16 years worth of TV Guides that he recently acquired. His selections commence here and here.

• Theatergoers are still lining up to see Savages, the film adaptation of Don Winslow’s 2010 novel of that same name. But already, Omnimystery News is reporting that Winslow’s 1999 book, California Fire and Life, will be given its own new life on the silver screen.

• R.I.P., Sally Ride, “the first American woman to fly in space,” who died today at her home in San Diego. She was just 61 years old.

• And Ivan G. Shreve Jr. says to be on the lookout for a new, 12-disc set containing all 114 episodes of Peter Gunn (1958-61). He notes that the street date will be October 23, and the price for Peter Gunn: The Complete Series will be $99.98 “(it will also contain a bonus CD of music from the show, composed by none other than Henry Mancini).”

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Mina’s Major Coup

Scottish crime writer Denise Mina’s 2010 novel, The End of the Wasp Season (Orion), has won this year’s Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award, according to the Euro Crime blog. That commendation was presented this evening during the opening ceremony at England’s Harrogate Crime Writing Festival (July 19-22).

The other five finalists for that same prize were Now You See Me, by S.J. Bolton (Transworld); Where the Bodies Are Buried, by Chris Brookmyre (Little, Brown); The Burning Soul, by John Connolly (Hodder & Stoughton); Black Flowers, by Steve Mosby (Orion); and Before I Go to Sleep, by S.J. Watson (Transworld).

Eighteen books were on the longlist of contenders for the 2012 Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award, but that list was shortened to half a dozen in early July. An online public balloting process was then launched to help determine the winner.

In addition to Mina’s win, Colin Dexter, author of the Inspector Morse series, was presented with the third Theakstons Old Peculier Outstanding Contribution to Crime Fiction Award.

READ MORE:Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, Day One,” “Day Two,” and “Day Three,” by Ayo Onatade (Shotsmag Confidential); “Harrogate,” by Martin Edwards (‘Do You Write Under Your Own Name?’); “The Harrogate Festival,” by Craig Sisterson (Crime Watch); Euro Crime’s Karen Meek offers several posts from Harrogate; “Final Days of Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, and Reflections,” by Ayo Onatade (Shotsmag Confidential).

Tube Toppers

Omnimystery News has kindly segregated out the TV crime series from amongst the lengthy full list of nominees for this year’s Primetime Emmy Awards. The contenders were announced earlier today.

Breaking Bad has the most nominations,” the blog reports, “followed not far behind by Game of Thrones, Homeland and Sherlock.” (Hmm. Does the medieval fantasy series Game of Thrones really qualify as crime fiction?) It adds that there are “no nominations for The Killing in any category. Future showrunners take note: Do not mislead and disappoint your fans! It will come back to haunt you in myriad ways.”

Look for the winners to be announced during a special televised ceremony on September 23.

Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Look, Sharp!

Michigan lawyer-turned-author Ronald Farrington Sharp (aka R.F. Sharp) has won Poisoned Pen Press’ inaugural Discover Mystery Award with his original manuscript, Human Pest Control. According to a press release, Sharp will receive $1,000, and Poisoned Pen will publish his novel--retitled No Regrets, No Remorse--in November.

The four other finalists vying for this commendation were Bill Butler (Slone’s Last Dance), Dawn Marie Fichera (In the Market for Murder), Susan Lumenello (Who Killed Julian Emery?), and Bruce Rolfe (Mortgaged to Death).

As Janet Rudolph explained in Mystery Fanfare earlier this year, the Discover Mystery contest is the first “specifically for unpublished writers trying to break into the mystery genre ...”

Bogus Bookshelf Bounty

In March of this year, I alerted readers to a new feature on the art, culture, and photography site Zoom Street. Editor Derek Pell said he’d created a pictorial series of 100 “missing mysteries”--“rare books you never knew existed.” These were in fact crime and mystery novel jackets of Pell’s pure and clever imagining, each of which was accompanied by a spurious story description.

After only a few installments, though, the series seemed to run out of gas. “I’d stopped posting them, as the response was rather underwhelming,” Pell told me in a recent e-note.

But fortunately, the Missing Mysteries are missing no more. Pell posted a number of new covers just yesterday, all of which can be seen here. They include everything from Murder Is a Four-Letter Word, by Dashiell Hammett, and The 40 Steps, by John Buchan (“the notorious sequel to The 39 Steps), to Eric Ambler’s Bankster and Brett Halliday’s No Restroom in the Boneyard, Baby. These are all kinds of fun, well worth checking out when you have a free moment.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

The Story Behind the Story:
“A City of Broken Glass,” by Rebecca Cantrell

(Editor’s note: This 35th entry in our “Story Behind the Story” series was submitted by Rebecca Cantrell. She’s the author of the Hannah Vogel mysteries set in 1930s Berlin, Germany, the newest of those being A City of Broken Glass [Forge], which is due for official release in the States today. Cantrell’s books have won the Bruce Alexander and Macavity awards, and been nominated for the Barry and RT Reviewer’s Choice awards, among others. In addition to the Vogel books, she is now working with best-selling thriller author James Rollins on a new “Blood Gospel” series. In the essay below, Cantrell recalls how her work on three previous historical novels led her to compose A City of Broken Glass.)

The spark for my first novel, A Trace of Smoke (2009), ignited in my imagination almost 30 years ago. I was living in a city crammed with ghosts and stories--Berlin. As an exchange student, I attended a German high school, learned German, and gained 10 pounds (from very, very good chocolate).

For spring break I took a trip to Munich. Unlike my more well-adjusted peers, I skipped out on the drinking and went to the concentration camp at Dachau. I suspect that this tells you everything you need to know about me and the books right there, but I know I’m supposed to write more than two paragraphs.

So, I went to Dachau. Because the happy students were swilling beer and gulping pretzels, I was basically alone. Wind moaned through open wooden barracks. My feet ached because my black leather ankle boots were more fashionable than warm. It gets dark early in Germany in the spring, especially on an overcast day, and I wished for a flashlight to drive away the shadows and ghosts.

But I didn’t have one, so I headed inside the camp and stopped in front of a plain wall. It held a row of colored triangles that had been worn by actual prisoners: yellow, red, green, blue, purple, pink, brown, and black scraps of fabric. Above each now faded triangle, thick Gothic letters spelled out categories: Jewish, political prisoner, habitual criminal, emigrant, Jehovah’s Witness, homosexual, gypsy, and asocial (a catch-all term used for murderers, thieves, and those who violated the laws prohibiting Aryans from having intercourse with Jews).

Even though I was just a teenager, I’d read enough to know what the Nazis did to the Jews, the Communists, the gypsies, and those who disagreed with their ideology. But I’d had no idea they’d imprisoned people for being gay.

I stuffed my hands deep into the pockets of my too-light coat (with rolled up sleeves and the collar turned up in the back, because it was 1985) and thought about my German host brother. We were the same age and often went clubbing in Berlin until the wee small hours of the morning. The subways stopped running around midnight, and if we missed that last one, we were out until 5 a.m., unless we caught a night bus. Then we were on the night bus for hours as it wended its way through every tiny street imaginable before reaching Mummelmannsweg, where we lived. Without much adult supervision, my host brother and I spent what, in retrospect, were probably too many nights leaned up against each other like puppies sleeping on the top front seat of the night bus or on the benches at the subway station waiting for the first train.

He had perfectly styled 1980s bottle-blonde hair, an extravagant fashion sense, and he was gay into the marrow of his bones. We would snag a table at a gay/straight club called the Metropol, where we would both drink a Berliner white beer (his with a red shot of syrup, mine with a green) and then dance with an endless array of GIs. At the end of the evening, we’d hook back up and start our long journey home, talking about guys. Forty years earlier, those innocent evenings would have been enough to send my host brother to a sure death in the camps.

As I took the train from Munich back to Berlin, I couldn’t stop thinking about how such a thing could have happened. Thirty years later, I’m still thinking about that pink triangle. How did German history reach that point in time where they hung such triangles? I’ve grappled with the question in non-fiction. I wrote my senior history thesis about it, explaining that even as American soldiers freed the camp prisoners, they sent the people with pink triangles straight to prison. Because being homosexual was still against the law. And I’ve investigated the matter in fiction. My first stab at it was a short story called “On the Train,” set aboard a train traveling between Dachau and Auschwitz (anthologized in First Thrills: High-Octane Stories from the Hottest Thriller Authors, edited by Lee Child).

When I sat down to write a novel a few years ago, Hannah Vogel appeared. She’s a sarcastic and tough crime reporter in the 1930s. Hannah doesn’t shirk, and she reports back the stories she finds. In the first story, A Trace of Smoke, she’s searching for the murderer of her brother, a gay cabaret singer.

I’ve now spent several years researching the grimmest period in German history, following Hannah from book to book, hoping to find a little light in all that darkness. The second novel, A Night of Long Knives (2010), was set during a purge where a thousand people were murdered over the course of a few days. When I started researching it, I discovered a wealth of material about the major military and political victims, but nothing about the vast majority of men killed simply because they were in the wrong place at the wrong time, went to the wrong parties, allied themselves with the wrong other men. Just as Hannah struggled to bring their stories out, so did I. Most of the victims were young, barely out of their teens, when they were lined up against a stone wall and shot. The Nazis forbade newspapers from printing their obituaries, and stopped the police from investigating all deaths that happened over those few days--suspicious or not--so that by the time of the Nuremberg Trials no one even knew how many people had died. But Hannah risked it all to find out and let the world know. She’s determined that way.

The third book, last year’s A Game of Lies, deals with the Berlin Olympics of 1936, which was like a mini-vacation as far as research was concerned. Nobody died, and there is a wealth of material out there documenting every minute of the games. Hannah and I tried to dig below the surface, to show the things that didn’t make it into the documentaries that talk about Jesse Owens’ medals (OK, he’s in the book too) or the carefully staged tableaux filmed by Leni Riefenstahl.

My new book, A City of Broken Glass, was the most intense for me to write. I knew that I wanted to show things we hadn’t seen before, starting with the small Polish town to which Herschel Grynszpan’s family was deported with thousands of other Jews of Polish descent living in Germany. The conditions in those hastily erected camps would enrage him so greatly that he shot a German diplomat in Paris and touched off the events of Kristalnacht in November 1938.

The more I researched this story, the more I realized how intensely personal those events were. It wasn’t just storm troopers breaking shop windows and burning down synagogues. It was about neighbors who had joined the Nazi Party going into their Jewish neighbors’ houses to humiliate them and destroy their possessions. It was about children watching their toys being smashed, knives slashing through sofa upholstery, every piece of glass in a house broken--from the windows to the dishes to jars of jam. It was about half of all Jewish men in Germany and parts of Austria being rounded up and sent off to concentration camps. It was about the end of lives, of an era in history, of trust, of safety and the beginning of the Holocaust.

The only people left alive today are those who were children back then, and I listened to their heartbreaking accounts on the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Web site and on YouTube. Like Hannah, I had nightmares as I walked with her through those streets, letting her see what happened and bringing back the stories.

Because she’s a writer, too, and that’s all she could do.

All Hat, Mo’ Tattle

With only three more episodes left, as I understand it, before the new A&E-TV series Longmire hangs up its Stetson for the season, I’ve been enjoying Tara Gelsomino’s installment-by-installment recaps in Criminal Intent. If you aren’t already watching this well-composed cowboy-sleuth show, here’s your chance to catch up on the story so far.

Nothing But the Best

From the author of the new novel, The Kings of Cool, comes something else pretty cool. For Publishers Weekly, Don Winslow has named his five favorite crime novels as follows:

The Friends of Eddie Coyle, by George Higgins
The Long Goodbye, by Raymond Chandler
The Guards, by Ken Bruen
L.A. Confidential, by James Ellroy
Laguna Heat, by T. Jefferson Parker

You’ll find Winslow’s enthusiastic remarks about each book here.

(Hat tip to Campaign for the American Reader.)

Monday, July 16, 2012

Skating Around the Web

R.I.P., Donald J. Sobol, author of the Leroy “Encyclopedia” Brown series of children’s mysteries. Sobol was 87 years old. In an Associated Press obituary, Sobol’s son “said his father’s story was one of perseverance. His first Encyclopedia Brown book was turned down two-dozen times before it was finally published.”

• I also bid a sad adieu to Academy Award-winning actress Celeste Holm, who died yesterday at her apartment in Manhattan. She was 95. Holm hit it big with her roles in Gentleman’s Agreement (1947), Come to the Stable (1949), and All About Eve (1950). But she also guest-starred on a number of TV crime dramas, including Columbo, Magnum, P.I., The Fugitive, The Name of the Game, Matt Houston, and Spenser: For Hire, as well as in the 1972 pilot for The Delphi Bureau and the 1974 teleflick The Underground Man, which was a pilot for a Lew Archer series starring Peter Graves. Ivan G. Shreve Jr. has a great deal to say about Holm’s radio career here. (UPDATE: Terence Towles Canote offers up his own two cents about Holm here.)

Over at Killer Covers, I look at the mounting controversy surrounding a new book cover that so obviously owes its inspiration to Raymond Hawkey’s famous black-and-white design for the 1962 edition of The IPCRESS File, by Len Deighton.

• Michael Shonk has posted, in Mystery*File, a terrific review of the 1971 TV pilot, Banyon, which starred Robert Forster as a Depression-era gumshoe in Los Angeles, and also featured Darren McGavin and José Ferrer. That better-than-average (in my opinion, anyway) pilot begat a short-lived NBC series, produced by Quinn Martin, who managed to turn what could have been an interesting show into one filled with too many hard-boiled clichés.

• A show less worth remembering: Mrs. Columbo.

• Today is your opportunity to help out Steven Kerry Brown, a former special agent with the FBI and the author of The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Private Investigating, who needs some help in paying his bone marrow transplant bills. Fortunately, assistance can be rendered in the form of buying books.

• Lesa Holstine has posted a brief wrap-up of last week’s Poisoned Pen conference, held at the Arizona Biltmore Hotel in Phoenix.

Washington Post columnist Ezra Klein calls this anti-Mitt Romney spot “one of the most devastating attack ads I’ve ever seen.”

• And a shortlist of 11 nominees has been announced for the 2012 Rusty Hevelin Service Award (aka The Munsey). A winner will be named during this year’s PulpFest in Columbus, Ohio (August 9-12).

Pierce’s Picks: “The Fear Artist”

A weekly alert for followers of crime, mystery, and thriller fiction.

The Fear Artist, by Timothy Hallinan (Soho Crime):
Poke Rafferty just can’t stay out trouble. And that’s a good thing, for the series in which this Bangkok-based travel writer stars requires constant nourishment with bizarre homicides and assorted other curious crimes. The Fear Artist is the fifth Rafferty book, following 2010’s outstanding installment, The Queen of Patpong. This new story finds Rafferty out buying paint for the apartment he shares with his wife, Rose, and their adopted daughter, Miaow. But that domestic task is interrupted by anti-government demonstrators, who rush by Rafferty as they’re dispersed by police. One of those runners crashes into our hero--only to die in Rafferty’s arms, the victim of several bullet wounds. Before he breathes his last, however, the man utters three words: Helen Eckersley, Cheyenne. Rafferty is subsequently questioned by Thai secrets agents, and when he returns to his apartment, he discovers the place ransacked. Rafferty sends a warning to Rose, telling her to stay out of the city until further notice, and then becomes a fugitive, dodging authorities bent on linking him to the dead man and turning for help to people he can trust--and even others he cannot. Winning his life and peace back will depend on Rafferty figuring out what part the dead man played in a drama that involves Muslim insurgents, the so-called war on terror, and an ugly episode from the Vietnam War. The Fear Artist boasts political complications and knotty character relationships, plus an adversary of menacing proportions.

Family Murders, Family Pains

Jim Napier’s review of Broken Harbor (Viking), Tana French’s “compelling tale about the horrific multiple-murder of a family in rural Ireland,” was posted this morning in January Magazine. He offers this synopsis of the main crime at hand:
In a coastal housing estate of half-vacant, jerry-built homes an hour’s drive north from Dublin, a grisly crime has been unearthed: Patrick Spain and his two young children have been brutally stabbed to death. Spain’s wife, the sole surviving member of their immediate family, has been left in critical condition, stabbed multiple times and now barely clinging to life. The bodies of the children show no signs of a struggle; they seem to have been murdered in their beds while they slept.

Pat Spain had been unemployed for months, a victim of the recession that has swept across Ireland. Although he was forced to give up his family’s expensive car, he somehow found the money to stage an elaborate birthday party for his daughter. Everything in this murder investigation points to a family member being responsible, and since he was on the verge of poverty and trying desperately to maintain an image of middle-class respectability, the father is the odds-on favorite for the crimes.
You’ll find the complete critique here.

Saturday, July 14, 2012

A View to a Thrill

During a ceremony at this weekend’s ThrillerFest VII in New York City, winners of the 2012 Thriller Awards were announced as follows:

Best Hardcover Novel: 11/22/63, by Stephen King (Scribner)

Also nominated: Buried Secrets, by Joseph Finder (St. Martin’s Press); A Hard Death, by Jonathan Hayes (Harper); The Ridge, by Michael Koryta (Little, Brown); and The Two Deaths of Daniel Hayes, by Marcus Sakey (Dutton)

Best First Novel: Spiral, by Paul McEuen (The Dial Press)

Also nominated: The Genesis Key, by James Barney (Harper); She Can Run, by Melinda Leigh (Montlake Romance); The Fund, by H.T. Narea (Forge); and Midnight Caller, by Leslie Tentler (Mira)

Best Paperback Original: The Last Minute, by Jeff Abbott (Sphere/Little, Brown UK)

Also nominated: Threat Warning, by John Gilstrap (Pinnacle); The Glass Demon, by Helen Grant (Delacorte Press); The Queen, by Steven James (Revell); and Already Gone, by John Rector (Thomas & Mercer)

Best Short Story: “Half-Lives,” by Tim L. Williams (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine [EQMM], March-April 2011)

Also nominated: “One More Lie,” by James Scott Bell (Compendium Press); “Anything to Win,” by Michael Z. Lewin (The Strand Magazine, June-September 2011); “Happine$$,” by Twist Phelan (from Mystery Writers of America Presents The Rich and the Dead, edited by Nelson DeMille; Grand Central); and “A Hostage Situation,” by Dave Zeltserman (EQMM, September-October 2011)

On top of all that excitement, true-crime writer Ann Rule was presented with the True Thriller Award. Novelist Jack Higgins (né Harry Patterson) acted as the convention’s ThrillerMaster.

As usual, congratulations to all of the winners and nominees!

READ MORE:Great People, Awful Pictures from ThrillerFest!” (Criminal Element).

The Scribe Has Spoken

In addition to bringing out comic-book geeks and curious media, this year’s Comic-Con in San Diego, California, made news with Friday night’s announcement of the 2012 Scribe Award winners. Those commendations are given out by the International Association of Media Tin-in Writers. This was the sixth annual presentation.

Among the Scribe recipients were Joan D. Vinge, whose novelization of the film Cowboys & Aliens picked up the prize for Best Adaptation; Erin M. Evans, whose book Dungeons & Dragons--Forgotten Realms: Brimstone Angels captured the award for Best Speculative Original Novel; and Max Allan Collins, whose 2011 audio drama, Mike Hammer: Encore for Murder--based on “the plot for an unwritten novel found in the files of the late Mickey Spillane”--won the Best Audio award. Collins also walked away with Best Original Novel honors for Kiss Her Goodbye, his third Mike Hammer novel, which also built on material left behind by Spillane.

Friday, July 13, 2012

The Book You Have to Read:
“Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game”

(Editor’s note: This is the 119th installment of our ongoing Friday blog series highlighting great but forgotten books. Today’s pick comes from Steven Nester, the host of Poets of the Tabloid Murder, a weekly Internet radio show heard on the Public Radio Exchange [PRX]. Texas resident Nester, who has been interviewing mystery-fiction authors since 1998, also wrote recently on this page about another “forgotten book,” Nick Tosches’ Cut Numbers.)

Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game (1978) is the second book in William Kennedy’s renowned cycle of novels set in Albany, New York, during the Great Depression; and in terms of action, it’s quite probably the best entry in that entire series. The bones of this book are those of a crime novel, describing the events surrounding an underworld kidnapping. But for readers who like to don their thinking caps, Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game is also a dialectic on fathers and sons, a love song to an Albany long gone, and a discourse on the perennial hard-boiled theme of how a man must maintain and live by his personal code no matter what peril it presents.

Billy Phelan is a young hustler and gambler who makes his living on the “easy action, gravy vested sporting mob” of Albany’s pool halls, card rooms, and gambling dens. Anyone who wants a piece of this action must first be OK’ed by the McCall family, the political and criminal power in town. In a world where Darwin and gangsters meet and run amok, players who don’t look out for themselves quickly become somebody else’s sucker--the lifeblood of professionals like Billy who make their living among the demimonde. It’s made clear that suckers don’t fare well in the Albany of 1938. As one character, a bloated, drunken sage of the pool room states, “a sucker don’t get even until he gets to Heaven.”

Everybody knows the rules the McCalls have set down, and anyone brazen or stupid enough to run afoul of them is banned from the city’s bars and clubs and revoked of their privilege to make book. The stories of those who dared to ignore the McCalls are known to all; they hang in the beer- and cigarette-soured air like bodies hanging at a crossroads.

Billy, though, is a well-liked and hard-working hustler. He always pays his debts, never cheats, and votes the party line. But his personal ethics are tested when Charlie McCall, his boyhood friend and the heir apparent to the McCall political machine and graft empire, is kidnapped and held for ransom.

Billy is drawn into the drama when the McCalls discover that a pimp and gambler named Morrie Berman might be involved. It just so happened that Berman backed Billy in a bowling match the night Charlie was grabbed. Billy’s opponent was supported by Charlie McCall. At the request of the McCalls, Billy stays close to Berman in order to inform them of his actions. He does so reluctantly, and not for long. Billy sees himself as a fink, and this grates on his personal code of honor.

Although he does give information that eventually aids the McCalls in rescuing Charlie, Billy tells the family that he refuses to spy on Berman any longer, and is consequently cast out from the bars and clubs where he makes his living. Throughout all of this, Billy is watched and guided by newspaper columnist Martin Daugherty. Redemption eventually comes through the intervention of a Daugherty newspaper column whose sole audience is the McCalls, and Billy is back in the action.

Damon Runyon might have been the ideal storyteller for this type of fiction. Kennedy, on the other hand, nurtures no fedora fetish, nor does he attempt to re-create Runyon’s overwrought prose style, which would only sound as dated and lumbering as the original does today. (Kennedy does, though, channel the bard of Prohibition Broadway just briefly in Billy Phelan). There’s really no need for literary replication, because Kennedy is too good a writer.

Billy Phelan has few noirish tendencies; the prose is more poetical than economically driven tough-guy shorthand and the players have none of the world-weary nihilism expected in noir. The Albany these characters live in is bound by family and tradition and Catholicism (there hasn’t been this much Catholicism in a crime novel since John Gregory Dunne’s True Confessions), and the book exhibits none of the rootlessness associated with noir novels written in and of this time period. There is nothing hopeless or bleak here, except the fate of those who refuse to play by the rules of the McCall family.

(Left) Author William Kennedy

The ruminations of fathers and sons appear heavily in Billy Phelan, and the biblical story of Abraham and Isaac is invoked several times. The sins of the fathers play out in the lives of the sons as well: the criminality of the McCalls visits Charlie as a victim; newspaperman Daugherty has an affair with his enfeebled literati father’s ex-lover, and his teenage son, Peter, leaves home to join the seminary; the criminal Morrie Berman is at odds with his labor lawyer and activist father. And then there’s Billy Phelan. His willful disobedience of the McCalls and the resulting banishment from his sustenance is emphasized by the reappearance of his vagabond father, who deserted the family decades before, after causing the accidental death of Billy’s younger brother. Of the complicated relationship between fathers and sons, Kennedy says, “There’s no Santa Claus and there’s no devil. Your father’s both.”

Kennedy does present reveries to the wonders of nighttime Albany in its heyday, though not enough to provoke dizziness in his readers. While the sense of place is well drawn and populated, the city of Albany--like Chandler’s Los Angeles or Hammett’s San Francisco--is a character, with a role that’s secondary but still salient.

But fear not: Billy Phelan isn’t all literature class. Kennedy knows enough to crack wise and pepper his prose with smart-aleck observations and felicities. Of the office flirt, for instance, he declares: “Coquettes of the world disband; you’ve nothing to gain but saliva.” And of his chunky wife, he observes that “screwing your wife was like striking out the pitcher.”

Of the many historical crime novels available today, Billy Phalen’s Greatest Game is perhaps one of the best. Kennedy’s other seven books in the Albany Cycle are well worth the reading, as well, especially the first, Legs (1975), about the rise and fall and murder in Albany during the time of the notorious gangster, Jack “Legs” Diamond.

New Life in Older Books

A wee bit later this morning, The Rap Sheet will post its newest entry in the Web’s weekly “forgotten books” tribute series--a fond look at Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game, by William Kennedy.

In the meantime, though, today has already brought out a wealth of other write-ups about crime and thriller works, some classic and some ... well, not so. Among the volumes under consideration are: He Who Hesitates, by Ed McBain; Rendezvous in Black, by Cornell Woolrich; Dolls Are Murder, edited by Harold Q. Masur; The Winds of Change, by Martha Grimes; The Wrong Case, by James Crumley; Where There’s a Will, by Rex Stout; The Body on Mount Royal, by David Montrose; Murder Comes First, by Richard and Frances Lockridge; The Golden Hooligan, by Thomas B. Dewey; Dragonfire, by Bill Pronzini; Painted Ladies, by Robert B. Parker; A Crime Remembered, by Jeffrey Ashford; Carteret’s Cure, by Richard Keverne; Put Out That Star, by Harry Carmichael; and The Boys from Brazil, by Ira Levin.

A complete listing of this week’s “forgotten books” posts can be found in series organizer Patti Abbott’s blog, Pattinase.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Small-screen Crime Wave

On at least one occasion in the past, The Rap Sheet has employed, as artwork, the cover from the November 26, 1973, edition of Time magazine. You know, the one with the headline “TV’s Year of the Cop.” But only recently did I realize I still own a copy of that issue of Time, with its longish profile of Columbo’s Peter Falk.

The magazine offers an interesting trip down memory lane. Inside are stories about President Richard M. Nixon’s counterattacks on the press for its reporting on the Watergate scandal, the “simply splendid” wedding of Britain’s Princess Anne, and America’s energy economy, plus a review of Arthur M. Schlesinger’s then just-released book, The Imperial Presidency (a bargain in hardcover at only $10!).

But from this blog’s vantage point, the most valuable article was Time’s six-page look at the growing crop of TV crime dramas.

Columbo was then prospering in its third year as part of The NBC Mystery Movie, joined on the airwaves by Hec Ramsey, Banacek, The Snoop Sisters, Kojak, Hawkins, Griff, Police Story, Shaft, The New Perry Mason, and myriad other such series. Time name-checked all of those, and many more, though it concentrated on Columbo. In a sidebar, the magazine asked genuine lawmen for their opinions on how on-screen crime solving compared with reality, and it concluded its coverage with Falk’s prediction for the future of sleuth shows. “I don’t think the trend’s going to last very long,” Falk remarked. Sadly, he was right. That latest heyday of TV cop and detective shows petered out during the 1980s. Today’s crime dramas aren’t so novel or numerous as what viewers were offered 30 and 40 years ago.

Because--unlike me--most Rap Sheet readers probably don’t have this classic issue of Time lying about in their basement, I’m going to embed the cover (illustrated by Norma Wasserman) and cover story below. You can open each page in a new window for easy viewing.





The Critics Speak

The Strand Magazine has announced the winners of its 2011 Strand Magazine Critics Awards. They are:

Best Novel: Tie — The Cut, by George Pelecanos (Reagan Arthur Books), and Buried Secrets, by Joseph Finder (St. Martin’s Press)

Also nominated: The Affair, by Lee Child (Delacorte Press); The Drop, by Michael Connelly (Little, Brown and Company); and Death Comes to Pemberley, by P.D. James (Knopf)

Best First Novel: Sister, by Rosamund Lupton (Crown)

Also nominated: The Hypnotist, by Lars Kepler (Farrar, Straus and Giroux); Before I Go to Sleep, by S.J. Watson (Harper); The Boy in the Suitcase, by Lene Kaaberbøl and Agnete Friis (Soho); and The Poison Tree, by Erin Kelly (Pamela Dorman Books)

Receiving commendations of a different sort are Joseph Wambaugh and John Sandford, who were both gifted with The Strand’s Lifetime Achievement awards for excellence in crime and thriller writing.

Congratulations to the winners as well as the other nominees.

(Hat tip to Omnimystery News.)

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Bullet Points: Mainstream Mid-week Edition

• Here’s exciting news for fans of the 1974-1976 David Janssen private-eye series, Harry O. Warner Bros. Studios is releasing the first season of that show on DVD. It’s a six-disc, 22-episode set that goes for $49.95--a rather steep price, but perhaps no deterrent for the many people who’ve been waiting for this crime drama to finally go on sale. ... By the way, Mystery*File’s Michael Shonk recently posted a fine remembrance of the first 13 episodes of Harry O, all of which were set in San Diego, California.

• I’ve never heard this before: Back in the 1920s, Sinclair Lewis--best known as the author of Main Street, Babbitt, and Elmer Gantry--“shocked his publisher, Harcourt, by announcing that he wanted to write ‘a series of short stories with a central character, a “public health detective” who would solve medical mysteries.’ This announcement from Lewis did not find favor with Harcourt, to say the least!” You’ll find more information about Lewis’ abortive attempt to become a crime novelist here.

• The fifth and final season of Glenn Close’s Damages kicks off this evening on DirecTV. “The season is subtitled ‘Patty vs. Ellen,’” reports Omnimystery News. “The founder of a controversial website devoted to government and corporate transparency gets sued after his most recent information leak does not go as planned. It’s the perfect stage for the ultimate showdown between the mentor (Glenn Close) and her former protégée (Rose Byrne).”

• Publisher Perfect Crime is re-releasing Robert J. Randisi’s six Miles Jacoby private eye novels in trade paperback size, with new cover designs by Christopher Mills.

• I had the chance to interview prolific UK author Peter Lovesey many years ago, back when a TV series based on his Sergeant Cribb mysteries was being broadcast in the States. But J. Sydney Jones had the opportunity to speak with him more recently, and has posted the results of their conversation here.

• Who remembers the Edgar Wallace Mysteries series?

• British author Stephen Booth offers a very nice encomium to Reginald Hill here. It’s part of the month-long rolling blog tribute to the late creator of detectives Andy Dalziel and Peter Pascoe. The full run of these posts can be enjoyed here. They will continue through this coming Sunday, July 15.

• Happy belated birthday to “Carolyn Keene,” the name used by “28 different women and men” who wrote the Nancy Drew mysteries over 73 years. “The first, most enduring Carolyn Keene was Mildred Augustine Wirt Benson,” explains the Los Angeles Times, “who wrote 23 of the first 30 Nancy Drew books. Benson was a stunningly prolific writer, publishing more than 130 books, mostly for children and young adults, frequently under pen names. She was born Mildred Augustine in Ladora, Iowa,” on July 19, 1905.

A “lost interview” with Dashiell Hammett?

• Lawrence Block explains the history of his “John Warren Wells” pseudonym, under which he once published sex-oriented non-fiction.

• While spending some leisure time on Hawaii’s Waikiki Beach, blogger Les Blatt has begun writing about “one of Honolulu’s finest fictional detectives,” Charlie Chan. You’ll find his critique of The Chinese Parrot here. And his thoughts on The House Without a Key--the first Chan novel, from 1925--are here.

Here’s a book for my Christmas wish list.

• I was out of town when the announcement came last weekend that actor Ernest Borgnine had died at age 95. Like many people reading this blog, I remember him best as Lieutenant Commander Quinton McHale on McHale’s Navy, but people forget that he also won an Oscar for his lead role in the 1955 film Marty. If you haven’t already burned out on Borgnine tributes, click here, here, and here.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Of Drugs, Dads, and Devotion

My Kirkus Reviews column this week is devoted to a review of Die a Stranger, the rewarding ninth installment in Steve Hamilton’s series featuring reluctant sleuth Alex McKnight. The piece begins:
If Steve Hamilton has ever written a boring book chapter, he must have consigned it to the yawning recesses of a desk drawer someplace—back there with furry old Tootsie Rolls and mangled Post-Its—because I’ve certainly never read it.

More often, I’m impressed by the high-pitched tension, multilayered plots and character enrichment that he brings to his tales about former Detroit cop Alex McKnight. I’ve even come to enjoy McKnight’s persistent bitching about the cold weather. He does, after all, live in Michigan’s remote Upper Peninsula.

In a town called Paradise, of all things.
You’ll find the remainder of my Stranger critique here.

Monday, July 09, 2012

Pierce’s Picks: “Harry Lipkin, Private Eye”

A weekly alert for followers of crime, mystery, and thriller fiction.

Harry Lipkin, Private Eye, by Barry Fantoni (Doubleday):
Elderly sleuths--professional and not--aren’t unusual in crime and mystery fiction. Agatha Christie’s Miss Jane Marple was no spring chicken. Neither was the late Dorothy Gilman’s Emily Pollifax. And we mustn’t forget about Colin Cotterill’s Dr. Siri Paiboun, or L.A. Morse’s Jake Spanner, or Stuart Palmer’s Hildegarde Withers. Harry Lipkin, though, is said to be “the world’s oldest private eye ...a tough-talking, soft-chewing, rough-around-the-edges, slow-around-the-corners private investigator who carries a .38 and a spare set of dentures.” An 87-year-old resident of Miami, Florida, Lipkin specializes in cases that might have embarrassed Philip Marlowe or Mike Hammer. He’s currently employed, for instance, by Norma Weinberger, the wealthy widow of a hatmaker, who’s sure that there’s a thief in her midst, somebody--probably somebody she trusts, a member of her household staff--who is robbing her of trinkets, both expensive and sentimental. It’s up to the creaky Lipkin to catch the crook(s). Trouble is, most of the eccentric characters in Mrs. Weinberger’s orbit have motives. You can tell this is likely to result in a fairly comedic tale, even before you learn that author Fantoni used to be a writer for Britain’s satirical Private Eye magazine and a cartoonist for the London Times. Harry Lipkin, Private Eye isn’t at all an important novel, but it would be a welcome diversion on one of those days more filled with sunshine than responsibilities.

READ MORE: “Barry Fantoni: ‘Harry Knows What I Know,’” by Paul Blezard (The Independent).