Thursday, November 29, 2018

MWA Withdraws Fairstein’s Award

Just two days after the Mystery Writers of America (MWA) announced that author Linda Fairstein would be one of its two Grand Master Award recipients for 2019 (along with Martin Cruz Smith), the organization has chosen to rescind its award to Fairstein.

This follows complaints, expressed online by Edgar Award-winning novelist Attica Locke and others, that Fairstein—who, prior to her literary career, headed up the sex-crimes unit of the Manhattan District Attorney’s office—had been instrumental in “the wrongful incarceration of the Central Park Five,” a group of teenage boys who were prosecuted in 1990 for allegedly attacking a woman jogger in New York City’s Central Park. The five boys were African American and Hispanic; the woman was white. Their convictions were vacated in 2002 after another man admitted to having committed the attack.

The MWA has issued the following statement:
On Tuesday, November 27, Mystery Writers of America announced the recipients of Grand Master, Raven & Ellery Queen Awards, special awards given out annually. Shortly afterwards, the MWA membership began to express concern over the inclusion of Linda Fairstein as a Grand Master, citing controversy in which she has been involved.

When the MWA Board made its selection, it was unaware of Ms. Fairstein’s role in the controversy.

After profound reflection, the Board has decided that MWA cannot move forward with an award that lacks the support of such a large percentage of our members. Therefore, the Board of Directors has decided to withdraw the Linda Fairstein Grand Master award. We realize that this action will be unsatisfactory to many. We apologize for any pain and disappointment this situation has caused.

MWA will be reevaluating and significantly revising its procedures for selecting honorary awards in the future. We hope our members will all work with us to move forward from this extremely troubling event and continue to build a strong and inclusive organization.
To read more about the Central Park Five case and this Grand Master controversy, refer to this story in today’s New York Times.

It’s Time to Step Up and Help Again

Damn! It seems that small American bookstores specializing in crime, mystery, and thriller fiction can never rest secure of their finances these days. In Reference to Murder’s B.V. Lawson brings the unwelcome news that “Once Upon a Crime, an independent mystery bookstore in Minneapolis for 31 years, has launched a GoFundMe page after suffering financial difficulties.”

Proprietors Dennis Abraham and Meg King-Abraham, who bought that shop in the spring of 2016 (and have since put their daughter, Devin, in charge of managing its impressive stock), report that decreases in sales have left them carrying somewhat more debt on the venture than they’d expected, “in addition to the original loan allowing us to purchase the store.” To pay off a portion of said debt, their new GoFundMe campaign is hoping to raise $50,000 necessary to keep the shop running. After three days, it has already brought in promises of (at last count) $16,238 of that total, contributed by 243 people.

I have a good friend who lives in Minneapolis, and I visit Once Upon a Crime on every occasion I roll into town. Last summer I finally discovered the store’s down-the-hall Annex, which is chock-a-block with first-edition hardcover works and vintage paperbacks. Several books from that trove came home with me, and I’ve since asked that more out-of-print books be sent my way. Once Upon a Crime is a splendid example of a friendly, knowledgeable business catering to the sometimes-eccentric demands of mystery-fiction readers. It would be a terrible shame to see it fail, while corporate booksellers survive.

If you can it in this hour of need, please do.

Nugent’s Double Helping of Accolades

Thanks to this short blog post by our old friend Declan Burke, we now know that author Liz Nugent has been honored with the 2018 Irish Independent Crime Fiction Book of the Year prize for her latest psychological thriller, Skin Deep (Penguin Ireland). That same work scored Nugent RTÉ Radio 1’s The Ryan Tubridy Show Listeners’ Choice Award. These wins were two of 16 announced on Tuesday night in association with this year’s An Post Irish Book Awards.

In 2014, Nugent won this same annual contest’s Crime Fiction Book of the Year commendation for her first novel, Unravelling Oliver.

Also vying in the 2018 Irish Crime Fiction Book of the Year category were A House of Ghosts, by W.C. Ryan (Zaffre); One Click, by Andrea Mara (Poolbeg Press); The Confession, by Jo Spain (Quercus); The Ruin, by Dervla McTiernan (Sphere); and Thirteen, by Steve Cavanagh (Orion). Click here for a full list of 2018 Irish Book Award winners.

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

PaperBack: “The Limping Goose”

Part of a series honoring the late author and blogger Bill Crider.



The Limping Goose, by Frank Gruber (Bantam, 1956; later republished as Murder One), is the penultimate entry in Gruber’s series starring con artist Johnny Fletcher and his strongman sidekick, Sam Cragg. Cover illustration by Barye Phillips.

Which Works Had “Lasting Impact”?

I fear this venture will ultimately overwhelm me, but at least for now I am endeavoring to keep track of all of the “best crime/mystery fiction of 2018” lists being published. Today, for instance, BOLO Books blogger Kristopher Zgorski posted his 10 top reads of the year rundown, including works by Ragnar Jónasson, Megan Abbott, and Laura Lippman. He also named his favorite debut novels, favorite anthology, and favorite book not yet available in the United States.

Dear John’s

Anyone who’s read Dashiell Hammett’s The Maltese Falcon (and who among us hasn’t?) knows about John’s Grill in downtown San Francisco. Located on the edge of the Tenderloin neighborhood, just north of Market Street and convenient to a BART Station and the Powell Street cable-car tracks, that wood-paneled and photograph-filled eatery was founded in 1908, just two years after the city’s ruinous earthquake and fire. According to its Web site, John’s Grill “was the first downtown restaurant to open after the quake.” Hammett used to eat there in the 1920s, when he was working for the Pinkerton National Detective Agency in the nearby John Flood Building, and he went on to immortalize the joint in his only Sam Spade novel.

In any case, Bay Area newspaper reporter Peter Hegarty—a Rap Sheet reader—just sent me the following news release about tomorrow’s 110th anniversary party for John’s Grill, suggesting that others might find it interesting, as well:
San Francisco — The 110th Birthday of Historic John’s Grill will be celebrated beginning at 12:00 noon, Thursday, November 29th, with Dashiell Hammett’s granddaughter Julie Rivett and over 200 friends and patrons of John’s Grill. Celebrity watchers will not be disappointed.

Historic John's Grill was one of the first restaurants to rebuild out of the rubble and ashes of San Francisco’s Great 1906 Earthquake & Fire and is the 27th “Literary Landmark” in the United States. Just off Union Square, John’s Grill was made famous internationally by Dashiell Hammett’s 1927 “Maltese Falcon” mystery novel (later a classic Humphrey Bogart movie): “Sam Spade went to John’s Grill, asked the waiter to hurry his order of chops, baked potato, sliced tomatoes and was smoking a cigarette with his coffee when …” was written by Hammett, who ate at John’s while working next door in the Flood Building as a Pinkerton agent. Detectives, politicians, reporters, and celebrities have been coming to John’s Grill for the past century. Their pictures adorn the walls above their tables and you never know whom you might see at John’s Grill. Be sure to visit the Grill’s Hammett museum located on the third floor and see the 150-pound lead-filled bronze statue of the famous Maltese Falcon.

WHO: Fifty-Piece Washington High School Marching Eagles, San Francisco Mayor London Breed Former San Francisco Mayors [Willie] Brown and [Frank] Jordan, Dashiell Hammett's granddaughter Julie Rivett, John’s Grill owner John Konstin and family; 200 well-known San Franciscans, Politicians, Politicos, Newsies, detectives and Maltese Falcon fans.

WHAT: The 110th Birthday of Historic John’s Grill

WHERE: John's Grill, 63 Ellis Street (between Stockton & Powell streets)

WHEN: 12 Noon — 2:00 PM, Thursday, November 29th
John’s Grill is one of my customary stops whenever I’m visiting San Francisco. Unfortunately, I won’t be there tomorrow to help celebrate its latest anniversary, but I shall be sure to tip a glass in honor of its continuing existence and the novel that made it famous.

READ MORE:John’s Grill Marks Its Centennial,” by John Coté
(San Francisco Chronicle).

Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Making Masters of Smith and Fairstein



Authors Martin Cruz Smith and Linda Fairstein (shown above) have been selected by the Mystery Writers of America as the winners of its 2019 Grand Master Awards. To quote from an MWA news release:
MWA’s Grand Master Award represents the pinnacle of achievement in mystery writing and was established to acknowledge important contributions to this genre, as well as for a body of work that is both significant and of consistent high quality. Ms. Fairstein and Mr. Smith will receive their awards at the 73rd Annual Edgar Awards Banquet, which will be held at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York City on April 25, 2019.”
Previous Grand Masters include William Link, Peter Lovesey, Jane Langton, Max Allan Collins, Ellen Hart, Walter Mosley, James Ellroy, Robert Crais, Carolyn Hart, Ken Follett, Margaret Maron, Martha Grimes, Bill Pronzini, Sara Paretsky, and James Lee Burke.

At the same time, the MWA has announced that veteran New York Times mystery-fiction columnist Marilyn Stasio will be the recipient of this next year’s Raven Award (honoring “outstanding achievement in the mystery field outside the realm of creative writing”). And Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine editor Linda Landrigan is to be given the 2019 Ellery Queen Award, which recognizes “outstanding writing teams and outstanding people in the mystery-publishing industry.”

Congratulations to all of these prize winners.

UPDATE: The MWA seems to have stirred up more than a bit of controversy with its decision to name prosecutor-turned-novelist Linda Fairstein as one of this year’s Grand Masters. Author Attica Locke (Bluebird, Bluebird) wrote this morning on Twitter:
As a member and 2018 Edgar winner, I am begging you to reconsider having Linda Fairstein serve as a Grand Master in next year’s awards ceremony. She is almost single-handedly responsible for the wrongful incarceration of the Central Park Five. … For which she has never apologized or recanted her insistence on their guilt for the most heinous of crimes, ‘guilt’ based solely on evidence procured through violence and ill treatment of children in lock up.”
Locke is referring here to a case brought by Fairstein, in her then-role as head of the sex crimes unit of the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, against five teenage boys—four African Americans and one Hispanic—who allegedly attacked a white female jogger in Central Park on the night of April 19, 1989. Charges were leveled against Fairstein that she and police detectives had intimidated the arrested teens into making false confessions. In 1990, all of the Central Park Five, as they became known, were convicted on charges of assault and sexual battery; but those convictions were vacated in 2002 after another man, “convicted serial rapist and murderer Matias Reyes,” confessed to having attacked the woman instead.

This afternoon, the MWA put out the following message: “We are taking seriously the issues raised by Attica Locke. Our Board is going to discuss these concerns as soon as possible and make a further statement soon.” Stay tuned for more on this matter.

READ MORE:Writer Linda Fairstein’s Past as a Prosecutor Overseeing the Central Park Five Case Causes Award Controversy,” by Steph Cha (Los Angeles Times).

Front of the Pack

It’s that time of year again, when book critics are pleased to highlight what they think were the best crime, mystery, and thriller novels published over the course of the last 12 months.

The latest two opinionated judges: Barry Forshaw, whose choices (including Manda Scott’s A Treachery of Spies and Abir Mukherjee’s Smoke and Ashes) appeared originally in the Financial Times; and Oline H. Cogdill, whose “Best Mystery Novels of 2018” feature can be found on the South Florida Sun-Sentinel’s Web site (and gives thumbs-up to Lou Berney’s November Road, Laura Lippman’s Sunburn, Megan Abbott’s Give Me Your Hand, and 13 other works).

Monday, November 26, 2018

Prize Positions

Three weeks ago, we received the shortlist of nominees for the premiere Staunch Book Prize, designed to honor the best thriller novel “in which no woman is beaten, stalked, sexually exploited, raped, or murdered.” And finally, today brought an announcement that Australian author Jock Serong has captured that prize with his third novel, On the Java Ridge. Text Publishing, that Australian house that handles Serong’s books, offers the following plot synopsis:
On the Java Ridge, skipper Isi Natoli and a group of Australian surf tourists are anchored off the Indonesian island of Dana. In the Canberra office of Cassius Calvert, Minister for Border Integrity, a federal election looms and a hardline new policy on asylum-seekers is being rolled out.

Not far from Dana, the
Takalar is having engine trouble. Among the passengers on board fleeing from persecution are Roya and her mother, and Roya’s unborn sister.

The storm now closing in on the
Takalar and the Java Ridge will mean catastrophe for them all.
“This is exactly the quality of thriller that Staunch set out to find, and we’re proud to name it as our winner,” The Guardian quotes Staunch prize founder Bridget Lawless as saying. “It’s a good thriller, with all of the usual jeopardy and ups and downs. There is very strong writing, it’s very brutal, and there is violence, but there is nothing gratuitous. And one of the adversaries is nature, which we don’t see enough of.”

On the Java Ridge faced off against five other contenders in this competition to capture the first Staunch Prize: The Appraisal, by Anna Porter (ECW Press); East of Hounslow, by Khurrum Rahman (HQ); If I Die Tonight, by A.L. Gaylin (PRH); The Kennedy Moment, by Peter Adamson (Myriad Editions); and Cops and Queens, by Joyce Thompson (seeking a publisher). In addition to earning bragging rights, Serong’s Staunch Prize win brings him £2,000 in award money.

Text Publishing notes that Serong has some solid history of scoring literary commendations. His novel Quota evidently picked up the 2015 Ned Kelly Award for Best First Fiction; and The Rules of Backyard Cricket was not only shortlisted for the 2017 Victorian Premier’s Award for Fiction, but was a finalist of the 2017 Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award for Best Paperback Original.

* * *

Meanwhile, the shortlist of nominees for the 2018 Costa Book Awards has been announced, and among the quartet of contenders in the First Novel category is a mystery yarn titled The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, by Stuart Turton (Sourcebooks Landmark). The Costa Book Awards are handed out annually in five categories to works by UK- and Ireland-based authors. Winners in each category are scheduled to be declared in January of next year.

Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Revue of Reviewers, 11-21-18

Critiquing some of the most interesting recent crime, mystery, and thriller releases. Click on the individual covers to read more.









A Stunt for the Ages

“This Day in TV History,” a regular feature of David Bianculli’s fine TV Worth Watching blog, notes that it was on this date, November 21, back in 1980 that boob-tube addicts finally learned “the resolution of one of television’s most unforgettable cliffhangers”: who shot J.R. Ewing, the patriarch on CBS-TV’s enduring series, Dallas.

“The previous season of the soapy primetime drama … ended with an unseen gunman shooting Larry Hagman’s J.R. Ewing—twice,” recalls TVWW. “Viewers were left wondering which of Ewing’s many adversaries had pulled the trigger (not to mention whether J.R. had survived the assault). Over the summer, ‘Who Shot J.R.?’ became part of the pop-culture lexicon, with references popping up in other television shows and even the 1980 presidential campaign.”

The Rap Sheet got in on the act, too—though not until 2013. That’s when I dug from my numerous file boxes a copy of the September 1980 edition of Panorama, a short-lived monthly magazine that promised to address “quality television” and was produced by TV Guide’s parent company, Triangle Publications. As I explained back then,
What interested me most about that edition of Panorama was a piece, tucked into the middle of its 112 pages, in which several prominent crime-fictionists of the time speculated on who had shot J.R. Ewing, Hagman’s manipulative oil baron character on the popular CBS-TV nighttime soaper, Dallas. That shooting took place at the conclusion of the March 21, 1980, season finale episode of the series, and a resolution to the crime would not be delivered until the November 21, 1980, episode. In the meantime, Panorama editors enlisted an all-star panel of “experts” to figure out whodunit: P.D. James, Nan and Ivan Lyons (Someone Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe), John D. MacDonald, Emma Lathen, and Collin Wilcox. ...

I can tell you right now that none of the authors who contributed their speculations to
Panorama got the answer right. Yet there’s fun to be had in seeing what reasons they came up with for getting the murderer’s identity wrong.
Of course, I scanned all of the relevant Panorama pages and posted them here for posterity. By the way, if you don’t know or don’t recall who drew that gun on the despicable J.R., click here to find out.

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Bullet Points: Media Medley Edition

• Argentina-born pianist and composer Lalo Schifrin, who has scored such films as Cool Hand Luke, Bullitt, and Dirty Harry, and created the theme music for TV productions including Mission: Impossible, Petrocelli, and Mannix, was honored this last weekend with a Governors Award from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. In addition to the 86-year-old Schifrin, two other recognizable Hollywood figures received Governors Awards: 93-year-old actress Cicely Tyson and Marvin Levy, a longtime public relations exec who was once a member of the AMPAS board of governors. You can watch Schifrin accept his award on YouTube.

• The Classic Film and TV Café calls producer-writer Stirling Silliphant “the poet laureate of 1960s television” in this tribute looking back at his scripts for the 1960-1964 CBS series Route 66. “Silliphant, who co-created the series with producer Herbert B. Leonard, wrote an incredible 73 of the 116 episodes over the show’s four-year run,” observes the blogger known as Rick29. “In terms of entertainment value, the plots were consistently above-average, but it’s Silliphant's dialogue that gave Route 66 its unique voice. As David Mamet would do later, Silliphant embellished his characters with dialogue that would never pass for natural—but which conveyed a singular poetry all its own.” In addition to Route 66, Silliphant (shown on the left) is remembered for his work on the TV programs Naked City and Longstreet, and his screenplays for such pictures as In the Heat of the Night (1967) and Marlowe (1969), which starred James Garner as Raymond Chandler’s justly famous Los Angeles private eye, Philip Marlowe.

• While we’re on the subject of bygone boob-tube shows, check out Michael Shonk’s new Mystery*File post about Gavilan, a 1982-1983 NBC series that featured Robert Urich (later of Spenser: For Hire fame) as a former intelligence operative who has gone to work for an oceanographic research organization called the Dewitt Institute, but keeps trying to help people—especially attractive young females—in trouble. Shonk opines:
The series had its good moments, but it also had many of the flaws of 1980s television. The plots were better than average but had to really stretch to connect to the Institute. In “By the Sword” the brilliant beautiful woman was a scientist working on a project to study the krill as a food source, but the plot was about an ancient samurai sword she stole from the Yakuza to regain her family honor.

The stories were entertaining but mindless, predictable and too willing to sacrifice story and character for a joke or twist. In “By the Sword,” the female scientist is trained in the martial arts and had done something her entire family had not done in over a hundred years, got her family’s ancient honored Japanese sword back from the Yakuza. So in the final confrontation for the sword it is Gavilan—as she watched—who sword fights to the death for the sword and her family honor. Of course, Gavilan out duels the unbeatable Master Samurai.
Shonk’s piece includes two episodes of Gavilan found on YouTube. A few of my own thoughts on this show can be found here.

• NBC-TV has reportedly made a script commitment for The Bone Collector, a series based both on Jeffery Deaver’s 1997 psychological thriller of the same name and on the 1990 Denzel Washington movie already adapted from that novel. According to Deadline Hollywood, NBC’s project “hails from writers V.J. Boyd and Mark Bianculli (S.W.A.T.), Universal Television and Sony Pictures Television … Written by Boyd and Bianculli, The Bone Collector follows Lincoln Rhyme, a retired genius forensic criminologist left paralyzed after an accident on the job. When a harrowing case brings him back to the force, Rhyme partners up with an ambitious young detective, Amelia Sachs, to take down some of the most dangerous criminals in the U.S.” There’s no information yet on who might star in this series, but plenty of speculation on what it could draw from Deaver’s 14 existing Rhyme novels, the latest of which is 2017’s The Cutting Edge.

The Killing Times says that America’s Audience Network has renewed the Stephen King-inspired, David E. Kelley-developed crime drama, Mr. Mercedes, for a third season.

• I’m not surprised by news that Netflix’s Tony Danza/Josh Groban “dramedy,” The Good Cop, hasn’t been picked up for a second season. While I really wanted to like the series—in part because its creator-showrunner was Monk mastermind Andy Breckman—it came off as way too cute too much of the time, with an excess of thin plots and ridiculous turns. I did, however, like Danza’s portrayal of a disgraced ex-New York City policeman as part con man, part reluctant troubleshooter; and dancer-actress Monica Barbaro consistently brightened up the screen playing Grogan’s ballsier partner, Cora Vasquez. I’ve only seen half of the 10 episodes of The Good Cop, but their performances will keep me watching through to the end.

• I’d heard about this before, and was convinced that I’d mentioned it here, but evidently I was wrong. Anyway, Mystery Tribune notes that Christopher Huang’s debut novel, A Gentleman’s Murder—which featured in my recent CrimeReads piece about nine post-World War I mysteries—has been optioned for TV adaptation.

• Deadline Hollywood brings word that Tom Shepherd, who scripted Robert Downey Jr.’s forthcoming The Voyage of Doctor Dolittle, has been signed to pen Matt Helm, based on Donald Hamilton’s long-running series of spy thrillers. Bradley Cooper will star in this Paramount project, with George Clooney, Grant Heslov, Alex Kurtzman, and Roberto Orci all serving as executive producers.



• Continuing The Rap Sheet’s series on “copycat covers,” book fronts that employ artwork previously displayed on other titles, we offer—above—the façades of Blow Out the Candles and Say Goodbye (Lamplighter Suspense), Linda S. Glaz’s 2017 novel, and 2016’s Stealing People (Europa Editions), the third entry in Robert Wilson’s series starring kidnap consultant Charlie Boxer.

• A new book suggests that Arthur Conan Doyle based the character of Professor James Moriarty, sleuth Sherlock Holmes’ principal nemesis, on a brilliant 19th-century professor of mathematics named George Boole. “A thorough comparison between Conan Doyle’s fictional Moriarty and the real Boole,” writes The Irish Times, “reveals numerous persuasive similarities. Both characters held chairs at small provincial universities; both won appointments on the basis of outstanding early work; both had interests in astronomy; the two were of similar appearance—an illustration of Moriarty in Conan Doyle’s work bears a striking resemblance to a photograph of Boole and may well have been based on it. The major discrepancy between Boole and Moriarty is that Boole was a man of high morals and excellent character, a social reformer, religious thinker and family man.” While Moriarty … well, as Conan Doyle put it in The Valley of Fear, he was “the greatest schemer of all time, the organizer of every devilry …”

• Murder & Mayhem picks11 must-read mysteries set in Los Angeles,” and I’m relieved to discover that I’ve read all but one: Dorothy B. Hughes’ The Expendable Man (1963).

• To his excellent John D. MacDonald blog, The Trap of Solid Gold, Steve Scott has recently added two worth-reading vintage profiles of Travis McGee’s creator—one from Florida’s Tampa Bay Times, dated April 26, 1981; and the other from a 1978 edition of the Canadian news magazine Maclean’s (you’ll find that second piece here).

• Authors are generally quite reticent to reveal which books they prefer among those they have written, so it’s interesting to see Max Allan Collins identify his two favorite entries in his rapidly expanding series about the hit man known as Quarry.

• Which reminds me, I wasn’t aware before reading this piece in The Guardian, that Agatha Christie’s 1967 novel, Endless Night, was her favorite. Sam Jordison says more about that standalone here.

• A weekend spent organizing my late in-laws' long-forgotten boxes of books turned up some surprising and welcome literary gems.

• I am, of course, an enthusiastic follower of the Web site Pulp Covers, with its ever-growing abundance of classic book and magazine fronts. And one of the reasons for my interest is that the site’s unidentified editor frequently posts links to full issues of periodicals such as Dime Mystery Magazine, Detective Book Magazine, Manhunt, and New Detective. Those issues are easily downloaded and can be wonderfully entertaining.

• So much has already been said about the demise, late last week, of 87-year-old novelist and screenwriter William Goldman, that I fear I have nothing to add. Obituaries in The New York Times and in the British Guardian covered the highlights of his career: his scripting of movies such as Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, All the President’s Men, Maverick, and Paul Newman’s Harper; his penning of novels that included Marathon Man, The Princess Bride, and Magic; and his late-life success with a memoir titled Adventures in the Screen Trade. CrimeReads adds to those encomia a collection of notable Goldman quotes. My own first experience with Goldman was way back in high school, when I was introduced to Magic … which put me off of ventriloquist’s dummies for the remainder of my mortal life. I’ve often watched Goldman’s motion pictures, with Harper—based on Ross Macdonald’s 1949 private-eye novel, The Moving Target—and Butch Cassidy being my favorites. I never met the man, but the power and precision of his prose, and the pleasure I’ve derived from listening to his dialogue and reading his stories made me care about him nonetheless. Really, a storyteller could hope for nothing better than that.

The Gumshoe Site reminds us that William Goldman’s first mystery novel was No Way to Treat a Lady. In another blog, Tipping My Fedora, Sergio Angelini recalls that that book was “originally published in 1964 under the pseudonym ‘Harry Longbaugh,’ the real name of the outlaw ‘The Sundance Kid.’ Written in just 10 days, this brief novel is 160 pages long and broken down into 53 chapters and is an exciting, blackly comic work reminiscent of the best of the Ed McBain thrillers of the time.” Adam Groves of The Bedlam Files adds that No Way to Treat a Lady “lacks the slickness and polish of [Goldman’s] later novels, with much slapdash prose and an uncertain grasp of tone (it’s difficult to discern if all the comedic elements were meant to be funny). Yet the wit, verve and imagination that characterize Goldman’s best work are very much evident in this suspenseful and macabre novel that predates everything from Dexter to Natural Born Killers in its furiously inventive account of the fortunes of a mass murderer.” Concludes Groves: “I say it’s one of William Goldman’s finest books.”

• By the way, No Way to Treat a Lady was made into a 1968 film starring Rod Steiger, Lee Remick, and George Segal. As I’ve never read Goldman’s original book, or seen the movie, I guess I have some serious catching up to do.

• Want to learn more about classic New Zealand mystery writer Ngaio Marsh? CrimeReads’ Neil Nyren provides a bit of background as well as recommendations of four works from her oeuvre.

• Here’s something I didn’t know before: Wisconsin-born, Japanese-American crime novelist Milton K Ozaki (1913-1989)—who often wrote under the moniker Robert O Saber—was not only “a newspaperman, an artist, and the operator of a beauty parlor” (per Bill Crider), but also something of a con man, according to Paperback Warrior.

• In The Spy Command, Bill Koenig traces the complicated roots of the 1964-1968 NBC-TV spy series The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and its connections to James Bond creator Ian Fleming. This is a continuing series, but you can find Part I here, with Part II here.

The New York Times’ Alexandra Alter recently caught up with Megan Abbott, whose commitments both as an author and as the executive producer of a TV pilot film based on her 2012 novel, Dare Me, must leave her little time for relaxation.

• Leo W. Banks has claimed another prize for his 2017 debut novel, Double Wide. His publisher’s Web site says Banks “just received the 2018 Best Mystery Novel award from the New Mexico Book Co-op, announced at a gala awards banquet in Albuquerque on November 16th. Along with this latest honor, Double Wide also has received two Western Writers of America 2018 Spur Awards and [the] Best Crime Novel of the Year Award by True West magazine.”

• Finally, I’ve spent several years now trying to procure copies of the four episodes made of Faraday and Company, a 1973-1974 detective series that starred Dan Dailey and James Naughton, and was part of the NBC Wednesday Mystery Movie line-up. Then, just today, I happened across a Web site called DVD Planet Store, which offers the full run of Faraday for $16. The trouble is, after reading negative online reviews of this Pakistan-based enterprise, I fear I might never receive the DVDs I sought to purchase. Has anybody else tried to buy from DVD Planet Store? What were your experiences with it?

Monday, November 19, 2018

PaperBack: “Waterfront Cop”

Part of a series honoring the late author and blogger Bill Crider.



Waterfront Cop, by William P. McGivern (Pocket, 1956; originally published by Dodd, Mead in 1955 as The Darkest Hour).
Cover illustration by Clark Hulings.

Le Carré Returns to Television

The BBC One mini-series adaptation of John le Carré’s 1983 spy novel, The Little Drummer Girl, begins broadcasting tonight in the States on AMC-TV. The blog Criminal Intent offers a short preview of what viewers can expect from the show.

A trailer for this mini-series can be enjoyed here.

READ MORE:Which Thriller Series Should You Binge-watch Over the Holiday Weekend?” (CrimeReads).

Turkey, Trimmings, and Trouble

With just three days to go before Thanksgiving Day here in the States, Janet Rudolph has posted an updated list of Thanksgiving-related crime fiction in her blog Mystery Fanfare. Among her selections: Deb Baker’s Murder Talks Turkey, Sammi Carter’s Goody Goody Gunshots, Harry Kemelman’s That Day the Rabbi Left Town, Jane Haddam’s Feast of Murder, Ralph McInerny’s Celt and Pepper, and Rex Stout’s Too Many Cooks. One other book that belongs on this list is Craig Rice’s The Thursday Turkey Murders (1942), the second of her Bingo and Handsome novels. Read more about that work here.

Friday, November 16, 2018

Quick Hits Parade

• Three months after Burt Reynolds’ death, at age 82, Visual Entertainment Inc. will release a complete DVD set of episodes from his 1970-1971 ABC-TV series, Dan August, the Quinn Martin production in which he portrayed a police lieutenant investigating homicides in the fictional Southern California town of Santa Luisa. That hour-long drama also starred Norman Fell, Ned Romero, Richard Anderson, and Ena Hartman. The Spy Command says VEI’s release of Dan August, on December 7, will include not only the 26 weekly episodes, but also the pilot film, House on Greenapple Road, which starred Christopher George as August. (George later bowed out of the Dan August series in order to star in another short-lived show, The Immortal.) The familiar theme music from Dan August was composed by Dave Grussin.

• This isn’t too surprising, but is welcome news: Bosch, the Amazon Prime TV series based on Michael Connelly’s long-running series of Harry Bosch police procedurals, and starring Titus Welliver, has already been renewed for a sixth season, even though Season 5 has not yet debuted—and likely won’t before the spring of 2019.

• Art Taylor has fine new review of Leslie S. Klinger’s annotated Classic American Crime Fiction of the 1920s in Washington Independent Review of Books. He calls that 1,152-page collection of five novels—all of them (by Dashiell Hammett, Ellery Queen, and others) quite pivotal in the development of early 20th-century mystery and detective fiction—“a treasure of information and a joy to study or simply read. By gathering these texts together and diving into them with insight and research, ... Klinger brings them to today’s readers in an accessible, enlightening, and entertaining way.”

• In business news … from In Reference to Murder:
Prometheus Books, which is nearing its 50th anniversary, has decided to refocus on nonfiction titles and sold its two genre imprints to Start Publishing. One of those, the crime fiction imprint Seventh Street Books, currently has a backlist of about ninety titles including award-winning books by Allen Eskens, Adrian McKinty, Lori Rader-Day, and Terry Shames. Start Publishing began has an exclusively digital publisher but has expanded to include print editions as well. Start will publish both print and digital editions of the newly acquired Seventh Street titles.
• Quercus Books imprint MacLehose Press has revealed the unarguably eye-catching cover of David Lagercrantz’s The Girl Who Lived Twice, his third and latest entry in the Millennium/Lisbeth Salander series created by Stieg Larsson. The Amazon UK site mentions that The Girl Who Lived Twice (which follows Lagercrantz’s The Girl in the Spider’s Web and The Girl Who Takes and Eye for and Eye) won’t be available to British readers until August 2019. There’s still no word on when the novel will reach Salander’s U.S. fans.

Strand Magazine editor Andrew F. Gulli presents a list of what he thinks are the “top 20 novels of 2018” here. His choices are mostly, but not all, crime novels. And mostly, but not all, contemporary stories. How many of them wind up vying for The Strand’s 2018 Critics Awards is something we’ll have to wait until next spring to find out.

• And if you don’t know this already:Douglas Rain, voice of the computer HAL 9000 in the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey, died on [November 11]. He was 90 years old,” reports the blog Paleofuture. “Born in Canada, Rain started on the stage and was known in both the Canadian and British theater communities for his roles in William Shakespeare’s classics like Othello and Twelfth Night. But Rain is best known in the sci-fi community as the voice of HAL—a cold, monotone voice that immediately evokes fear in anyone who hears it.”

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Inkslingers Turned Investigators



This CrimeReads piece has sure been a long time in coming. Way back in April, I dropped the following note onto my Facebook page:
I’m trying to develop a list of mystery/crime/thriller novels that feature journalists and reporters (especially newspaper reporters) as the protagonists/crime solvers. Any suggestions would be much appreciated.
That request elicited dozens of responses. So many, in fact, that I resolved to confine myself to writing only about books offering newspaper reporter protagonists. I also had a variety of other assignments standing in the way of my compiling novels along this theme, including last week’s dive into post-World War I mysteries. And in the meantime, other CrimeReads contributors brought forth related stories, including J.G. Heatherton’s selection of novels featuring investigative reporters, and Steven Cooper’s essay about “why investigative reporters become mystery writers.” All of this accounts for the rather lengthy lag time between the birth of my “brilliant” idea and my actually composing the piece I had in mind.

Only this morning has my work, “A Brief History of Reporters in Crime Fiction,” finally been posted in CrimeReads. It features 10 crime and mystery novels starring print journalists, together with one that imagines a newspaper photographer in the sleuthing role. My picks were published as far back as 1939 and as recently as September. Among the authors represented are Martin Edwards, William P. McGivern, Julia Dahl, Les Whitten, and Pete Hamill. Although I settled on reading and then writing about 11 books, and mentioning 19 others at the end of the piece, I culled those from a much longer list of options available. In addition to the suggestions received on Facebook, two online sources helped me get a handle on the scope of the field: The Thrilling Detective Web Site and Stop, You’re Killing Me! With all of this assistance, I tallied up books I hoped to write about, but later had to cut my choices way back in order to finish my research before the year 2030. So many books had to go unexamined—for now, at least:

David Mamet’s Chicago (2018)
Liam McIlvanney’s Where the Dead Men
Go
(2013)
Val McDermid’s Report for Murder (1987)
Marc Olden’s Kill the Reporter (1978)
Lawrence Meyer’s False Front (1979)
Simon Wood’s Paying the Piper (2007)
Jim Kelly’s The Water Clock (2003)
Steven Brewer’s End Run (2000)
Allen Eskens’ The Shadows We Hide (2018)
James Howard’s Die on Easy Street (1957)
Sarah Ruttan’s Suspicious Circumstances (2007)
Rick Mofina’s If Angels Fall (2000)
Mary Daheim’s The Alpine Advocate (1992)
Vince Kohler’s Rainy North Woods (1990)
Jason Pinter’s Stolen (2008)
Mark Arsenault’s Spiked (2003)
Warren Adler’s The Henderson Equation (1976)
Robert Olen Butler’s Paris in the Dark (2018)
Martyn Waites’ Mary’s Prayer (1997)
Mark Sanderson’s Snow Hill (2010)
Thomas Enger’s Cursed (2017)

A full study of this subject would probably be book-length. But I am pleased with what I was able to accomplish in a much shorter space, for CrimeReads. Click here to read the full article.

READ MORE:The Disappearing Newsroom,” by Wallace Stroby (CrimeReads).

Posting Predilections

With bookseller Amazon having already weighed in with what its editors believe have been the best crime novels published during 2018, it’s now The Washington Post’s turn. Three Post reviewers have revealed their 10 favorite mysteries and thrillers:

Dark Sacred Night, by Michael Connelly (Little, Brown)
The Death of Mrs. Westaway, by Ruth Ware (Gallery/Scout Press)
The Flight Attendant, by Chris Bohjalian (Doubleday)
The Fox, by Frederick Forsyth (Putnam)
Give Me Your Hand, by Megan Abbott (Little, Brown)
The Infinite Blacktop, by Sara Gran (Atria)
Our House, by Louise Candlish (Berkley)
The Reckoning, by John Grisham (Doubleday)
Sunburn, by Laura Lippman (Morrow)
The Woman in the Window, by A.J. Finn (Morrow)

Read the short write-ups about each of these novels here.

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Revue of Reviewers, 11-14-18

Critiquing some of the most interesting recent crime, mystery, and thriller releases. Click on the individual covers to read more.











Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Reading Suggestions, Anyone?

As you might expect, I receive hundreds of online messages each day. They’re everything from complimentary missives about The Rap Sheet and publisher offers of forthcoming books, to questionable dating invitations sent by Russian or Asian women and ridiculous blackmail memos (one recent example threatened to tell my friends I was visiting porn sites, unless I forked over $500—I didn’t pay).

But last week, I opened this pleasantly challenging e-mail note from a Rap Sheet reader identifying himself as Ross Wallace:
As a longtime reader of your blog—albeit one whose actual exposure to private-eye fiction is mostly limited to the works of the great James Sallis—I recently stumbled upon a mystery I felt I couldn’t solve alone. Which is where (I hope) you come in.

I realize it might pain you to read this—not to mention puzzle you, given that I’ve outed myself as a fan of The Rap Sheet—but I’m not much into detective fiction, police procedurals, cozy mysteries, legal thrillers, whodunits, or just about any other crime-fiction subgenre you can think of.

What I am a fan of is pulpy, hard-boiled, non-detective-centric fiction. You know, the kind of stuff the Hard Case Crime imprint was created to highlight.

Now, to get to the “mystery” (at long last): Having plowed through just about every non-P.I.-focused crime book I could lay my hands on from Hard Case and by the likes of Jim Thompson, Richard Stark, George V. Higgins, Elmore Leonard, Edward Bunker, Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Dave Zeltserman, Wallace Stroby, Charlie Stella, Scott Phillips, Garry Disher, and Jason Starr, along with selected works by, to name a few, Duane Swierczynski, Allan Guthrie, and Ray Banks … I suddenly find myself (after a period of many years—I don’t read THAT fast) in the awkward position of not knowing which way to turn next to satisfy my regularly recurring jones for “bad-guy crime novels,” as I call them.

As noted above, The Rap Sheet has long been a valuable resource, but as I’m sure you’d acknowledge (proudly), your blog casts a pretty wide net. This can make it a bit tough for someone like me, with a comparatively narrow focus, to sort through all the … bad metaphor alert! … many thousands of bottles in the supermarket spice aisle in order to find exactly the seasoning I want.

Yes, I’ve tried turning to the General Crime Fiction section and the Author Web Sites/Blogs link on The Rap Sheet homepage but, frankly, my eyes glaze over at the mere thought of sifting through all those sites (as worthy as they might be).

Any chance you could help me, well, cut to the chase (god knows, given the unwieldiness of this e-mail, I could use all the help I could get on that front) and recommend a site that specializes in exactly the type of crime fiction I’m describing?

Or maybe you’d consider inaugurating a series on your own site—in a similar vein to PaperBack—dedicated to spotlighting books with criminal anti-hero protagonists?

I’m pretty sure I can’t be the only one of your blog’s readers who takes much greater (perverse?) pleasure in strolling around in the gum-soled shoes of hit men, heisters, safecrackers, second-story men, getaway drivers, and gangsters than in those of oh-so-upright beat cops, crusading journos, and private eyes. Err … can I?

You’re a patient and tolerant man if you’ve actually read all the way to here in this painfully long-winded e-mail.

Thanks ahead of time for any help you can offer. And, again, the blog is a winner. Keep on doing what you do.
Hmm. Our friend Wallace already lists most of the “bad-guy crime novels” I might have recommended, though he doesn’t mention Loren D. Estleman’s Peter Macklin series or Steve Hamilton’s Nick Mason novels. He might also enjoy Erle Stanley Gardner’s tales of Ed Jenkins, “The Phantom Crook,” who, to quote from The Thrilling Detective Web Site, works “both sides of the law, pitting cops against crooks, and all in the name of his personal gain.” There have been at least three collections of Gardner’s Jenkins yarns, including The Blonde in Lower Six, published by Carroll & Graf in 1990.

As to the matter of blogs or Web sites with a particular bent toward this breed of crime fiction, I would suggest that Wallace check on Paperback Warrior and the ingloriously named Glorious Trash. Neither is exactly what Wallace has in mind, but both should offer him some new options for his reading pile.

Can anybody else propose other books or online resources?

A Matter of Choice

Today kicks off the third and final round of voting to select the winners of Goodreads’ 2018 Choice Awards. There are 20 groupings of contenders. Just 10 novels remain in the Mystery & Thriller category:

The Wife Between Us, by Greer Hendricks and Sarah Pekkanen
(St. Martin’s Press)
The Death of Mrs. Westaway, by Ruth Ware (Gallery/Scout Press)
Sometimes I Lie, by Alice Feeney (Flatiron)
The President Is Missing, by Bill Clinton and James Patterson
(Little, Brown)
The Witch Elm, by Tana French (Viking)
The Outsider, by Stephen King (Scribner)
Lethal White, by “Robert Galbraith,” aka J.K. Rowling (Mulholland)
Then She Was Gone, by Lisa Jewell (Atria)
Force of Nature, by Jane Harper (Flatiron)
The Woman in the Window, by A.J. Finn (Morrow)

Click here to let your preference be known. You have until Monday, November 26, to vote. Winners in all of the categories will be announced on Wednesday, December 5.

Sunday, November 11, 2018

PaperBack: “Die on Easy Street”

Part of a series honoring the late author and blogger Bill Crider.



Die on Easy Street, by James Howard (Popular Library/Eagle, 1957). Cover illustration by Raymond Johnson.

When I last wrote about author Howard, in relation to his 1955 novel, Murder Takes a Wife, I noted that I’d had scant success finding background information on the author (who also published as  “James A. Howard” and under the pseudonym Laine Fisher). Today, though, while searching the Internet, I came across a news service clipping that appeared in the February 26, 1956, edition of a Lima, Ohio, newspaper called The Lima News. It reads as follows:
James Howard, a University of California at Los Angeles graduate student, has a “novel” way of working his way through college. He writes them—novels, that is.

Howard, while working toward a Ph.D. in psychology, has found time to write four mystery novels, of which the first two have sold more than 625,000 copies. The third is in press, and he recently completed the fourth which he hopes will sell equally as well.

Howard sold his first story to [a] pulp magazine named “Black Mask” when he was in high school. He later became a reporter on the Peoria, Illinois, “Star.”

Howard, who has been a magnetic crane operator, a college professor, taxi driver, professional baseball player, night club entertainer, radio advertising salesman and a pilot during World War II, says that there is some connection between his study of psychology and his renewed success as a writer.

The young graduate declared:

“I took up writing again as a sort of self-administrated psychotherapy. At the time I was serving a psychological internship at the West Los Angeles Veterans Administration Hospital. After listening to other people’s troubles all day, I would come home at night all tensed up. I began writing to work off the steam.”

In general, Howard’s work follows the cult of violence established by Mickey Spillane. Howard’s novels center around a character named Steve Ashe, an itinerant newspaper man. However, he points out that his Ashe has never been as brutal as Spillane’s Mike Hammer.

Howard holds a membership card in the Mystery Writers of America Assn. He was tapped for this honor after publication of his first book.

Howard says that he is like Steve Ashe. “I’m inclined to be a bit itinerant myself.”
According to Pulp International, Howard’s first Steve Ashe novel was I Like It Tough (1955). However, that may be wrong, for as the same blog mentions in a later post, Howard had produced a previous entry in the series, 1954’s I’ll Get You Yet. The third Ashe book appears to be Blow Out My Torch (1956), with Die on Easy Street as the fourth.

It’s frustrating that I cannot find a list anywhere—not in my many crime-fiction reference books or online—of Howard’s novels in the order of their publication. But I did come across an interesting item in the 1956-1957 Register of University of California students, mentioning that a psychology student named James Arch Howard, from Fostoria, Ohio, was writing his doctoral thesis on “Violence in mystery fiction as an outlet for the aggressive tendencies of the authors.” Could this have been the same guy? My investigation continues …

FOLLOW-UP: After I posted this piece, Randal S. Brandt, a librarian at the University of California, Berkeley’s Bancroft Library, kindly e-mailed me a list of James Howard’s mysteries, taken from Allen Hubin’s Crime Fiction IV: A Comprehensive Bibliography, 1749-2000 (2005 edition) on CD-ROM. Hubin’s entry reads:
HOWARD, JAMES A(rch) (1922-2000); see pseudonym
Laine Fisher (books)

• I’ll Get You Yet (n.) Popular Library 1954 [Steve Ashe]
I Like It Tough (n.) Popular Library 1955 [Steve Ashe; Colorado]
• Blow Out My Torch (n.) Popular Library 1956 [Steve Ashe]
• Die on Easy Street (n.) Popular Library 1957 [Steve Ashe; Los Angeles, CA]
• Murder Takes a Wife (n.) Dutton 1958 [Texas]
• Murder in Mind (n.) Dutton 1960 [California]
• The Bullet-Proof Martyr (n.) Dutton 1961 [Illinois]
• Death Audit (n.) Raven 1981 [California]
• Friday Is a Killing Day (n.) Raven 1981

FISHER, LAINE; pseudonym of James A. Howard
(1922-2000) (books)

• Fare Prey (n.) Ace 1959 [Los Angeles, CA; Train]
Brandt adds, “I think it is safe to say that the James Arch Howard you found in the UC Register is your guy.” Hurrah!