Thursday, April 30, 2020

Caregiver Captures First-Novel Prize

Following closely on the heels of this morning’s news about the recipients of this year’s Edgar Awards comes the announcement that Phoenix, Arizona, nurse Rebecca Roque has won the 2020 St. Martin’s Minotaur/Mystery Writers of America First Crime Novel Competition. That prize includes a one-book, $10,000 publishing contract.

Roque’s victorious submission to this annual contest was an unpublished work tentatively titled Till Human Voices Wake Us. According to a news release, the book “opens when Alice, the best friend of 17-year-old Silencia ‘Cia’ Lucero, is found dead from a supposed suicide. But Cia knows three things must be true: Alice is dead, Alice could not have killed herself, and Alice, a budding journalist, must have found something. Cia is determined to solve the mystery Alice left behind, no matter who gets in her way. Silence might be her name, but it has never been her style.” Till Human Voices Wake Us is slated for release in 2021.

“We’re thrilled to have selected Rebecca Roque and her novel, Till Human Voices Wake Us, as this year’s competition winner,” says Minotaur associate publisher Kelley Ragland. “With a remarkable voice and a diverse cast, the book is an engaging mystery about the life of a town as well as the life of one teenage girl. And when we found out that Rebecca is also a nurse currently working on the frontlines of the COVID crisis, we were even more honored to be able to work with this amazing writer on her debut novel.”

Previous winners of this Best First Crime Novel Contest include Stefanie Pintoff (in 2008, for In the Shadow of Gotham), Eleanor Kuhns (in 2011, for A Simple Murder), John Keyse-Walker (in 2015, for The Drowned Land), and in 2019, Nev March, whose Murder in Old Bombay is due out from Minotaur this coming November.

Minotaur is now accepting submissions for its 2021 First Crime Novel Competition. Click here to find rules and deadlines.

An Electronic Dispensing of Edgars

Well, there is no glittering evening convocation of this genre’s stars at New York City’s Grand Hyatt Hotel in New York City, as has been the tradition in years past. And those folks won’t all sit down to a celebratory banquet before the announcements are made of which authors, books, TV shows, and other people associated with crime and mystery fiction have won the Mystery Writers of America’s 2020 Edgar Allan Poe Awards. Nonetheless, this morning brought those announcements—on schedule, but via Twitter.

Best Novel:
The Stranger Diaries, by Elly Griffiths (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Also nominated: Fake Like Me, by Barbara Bourland (Grand Central); The River, by Peter Heller (Knopf); Smoke and Ashes, by Abir Mukherjee (Pegasus); and Good Girl, Bad Girl, by Michael Robotham (Scribner)

Best First Novel by an American Author:
Miracle Creek, by Angie Kim (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)

Also nominated: My Lovely Wife, by Samantha Downing (Berkley); The Good Detective, by John McMahon (Putnam); The Secrets We Kept, by Lara Prescott (Knopf); Three-Fifths, by John Vercher (Agora); and American Spy, by Lauren Wilkinson (Random House)

Best Paperback Original:
The Hotel Neversink, by Adam O’Fallon Price (Tin House)

Also nominated: Dread of Winter, by Susan Alice Bickford (Kensington); Freedom Road, by William Lashner (Thomas & Mercer); Blood Relations, by Jonathan Moore (Mariner); February’s Son, by Alan Parks (World Noir); and The Bird Boys, by Lisa Sandlin (Cinco Puntos Press)

Best Fact Crime:
The Less People Know About Us: A Mystery of Betrayal, Family Secrets, and Stolen Identity, by Axton Betz-Hamilton (Grand Central)

Also nominated: The Ghosts of Eden Park: The Bootleg King, the Women Who Pursued Him, and the Murder that Shocked Jazz-Age America, by Karen Abbott (Crown); American Predator: The Hunt for the Most Meticulous Serial Killer of the 21st Century, by Maureen Callahan (Viking); Norco ’80: The True Story of the Most Spectacular Bank Robbery in American History, by Peter Houlahan (Counterpoint Press); and Indecent Advances: A Hidden History of True Crime and Prejudice Before Stonewall, by James Polchin (Counterpoint Press)

Best Critical/Biographical: Hitchcock and the Censors, by John Billheimer (University Press of Kentucky)

Also nominated: Beyond the Thirty-Nine Steps: A Life of John Buchan, by Ursula Buchan (Bloomsbury); The Hooded Gunman: An Illustrated History of Collins Crime Club, by John Curran (Collins Crime Club); Medieval Crime Fiction: A Critical Overview, by Anne McKendry (McFarland); and The Mutual Admiration Society: How Dorothy L. Sayers and Her Oxford Circle Remade the World for Women, by Mo Moulton (Basic)

Best Short Story: “One of These Nights,” by Livia Llewellyn (from Cutting Edge: New Stories of Mystery and Crime by Women Writers, edited by Joyce Carol Oates; Akashic)

Also nominated: “Turistas,” by Hector Acosta (from ¡Pa’Que Tu Lo Sepas!, edited by Angel Luis Colón; Down & Out); “The Passenger,” by Kirsten Tranter (from Sydney Noir, edited by John Dale; Akashic); “Home at Last,” by Sam Wiebe (from Die Behind the Wheel: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Music of Steely Dan, edited by Brian Thornton; Down & Out); and “Brother’s Keeper,” by Dave Zeltserman (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, May/June 2019)

Best Juvenile: Me and Sam-Sam Handle the Apocalypse,
by Susan Vaught (Paula Wiseman)

Also nominated: The Collected Works of Gretchen Oyster, by Cary Fagan (Tundra); Eventown, by Corey Ann Haydu (Katherine Tegen); The Whispers, by Greg Howard (Putnam Books for Young Readers); and All the Greys on Greene Street, by Laura Tucker (Viking Books for Young Readers)

Best Young Adult:
Catfishing on CatNet, by Naomi Kritzer (Tor Teen)

Also nominated: Killing November, by Adriana Mather (Knopf Books for Young Readers); Patron Saints of Nothing, by Randy Ribay (Kokila); The Deceivers, by Kristen Simmons (Tor Teen); and Wild and Crooked, by Leah Thomas (Bloomsbury)

Best Television Episode Teleplay: “Season 5, Episode 4” – Line of Duty, teleplay by Jed Mercurio (Acorn TV)

Also nominated: “Season 5, Episode 3” – Line of Duty, teleplay by Jed Mercurio (Acorn TV); “Episode 1” – Dublin Murders, teleplay by Sarah Phelps (STARZ); “Episode 1” – Manhunt, teleplay by Ed Whitmore (Acorn TV); “Episode 1” – The Wisting, teleplay by Katherine Valen Zeiner and Trygve Allister Diesen (Sundance Now)

Robert L. Fish Memorial Award:
“There’s a Riot Goin’ On,” by Derrick Harriell (from Milwaukee Noir, edited by Tim Hennessey; Akashic)

Ellery Queen Award: Kelley Ragland, associate publisher and
editorial director of Minotaur Books

Raven Award: Left Coast Crime

The Simon & Schuster Mary Higgins Clark Award: The Night Visitors, by Carol Goodman (Morrow)

Also nominated: One Night Gone, by Tara Laskowski (Graydon House); Strangers at the Gate, by Catriona McPherson (Minotaur); Where the Missing Go, by Emma Rowley (Kensington); and The Murder List, by Hank Phillippi Ryan (Forge)

The G.P. Putnam’s Sons Sue Grafton Memorial Award: Borrowed Time, by Tracy Clark (Kensington)

Also nominated: Shamed, by Linda Castillo (Minotaur); The Missing Ones, by Edwin Hill (Kensington); The Satapur Moonstone, by Sujata Massey (Soho Crime); The Alchemist’s Illusion, by Gigi Pandian (Midnight Ink); and Girl Gone Missing, by Marcie R. Rendon (Cincos Puntos Press)

If you have never been able to attend an Edgar Awards banquet, you’ve missed out on the recipients’ acceptance speeches. One good thing that can be said of this year’s online event is that those addresses are now available to all of us on YouTube.

Congratulations to all of the 2020 Edgar nominees and winners!

A sad concluding note: Barbara Neely, the author of four novel in the Blanche White series (Blanche on the Lam, etc.), had been named at the end of 2019 as this year’s recipient of the MWA Grand Master Award. But she passed away on March 2, 2020, at age 78, as a result of a heart ailment. She and others are remembered in today’s “In Memoriam” video segment.

READ MORE:Celebrating the 2020 Edgars from Afar,” by Oline H. Cogdill (Mystery Scene).

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Noting Those We’ve Lost

While our world suffers through the worsening novel coronavirus pandemic, and the United States alone accounts for almost 60,000 deaths thus far, other people are dying from causes unrelated to this viral scourge. That includes at least five people—see below—who had an influence on crime, mystery, and thriller fiction.

• Various sources report that Maj Sjöwall, the Swedish author who, with partner Per Wahlöö (1926-1975), composed 10 renowned novels starring Stockholm police detective Martin Beck, died earlier today at age 84. It’s said that her demise followed a prolonged illness. Of Sjöwall and Wahlöö, the periodical Barron’s notes:
The duo also penned the series decades before the likes of Henning Mankell and Stieg Larsson made the genre of “Nordic Noir” into a worldwide hit.

“They broke with the previous trends in crime fiction,” Henning Mankell wrote in an introduction to the 2006 English edition of
Roseanna. His own Inspector Kurt Wallander series would owe much to Beck three decades later.

Sjowall was “the giant on whose shoulders the titans of modern Scandi crime fiction stand,” Britain’s
Daily Telegraph wrote in 2015, in a story headlined “The couple who invented Nordic Noir.”

Both committed Marxists, they went beyond crime fiction, breaking new ground by carrying out a forensic examination of the failings of Swedish society. The modern themes they tackled included paedophilia, serial killers, the sex industry and suicide.

“Through the eyes of Martin Beck and his colleagues, they held a mirror up to Swedish society at a time when the ideals
of the welfare state were beginning to buckle under the realities of everyday life,” Scottish crime writer Val McDermid wrote in the introduction to the 2006 edition of
The Man Who Went Up In Smoke.
Rap Sheet correspondent Ali Karim points me toward video of an interview Lee Child conducted with Sjöwall at CrimeFest in 2015. And it’s worth revisiting a profile The Observer did of Sjöwall back in 2009, which recounted how she and Wahlöö came to write the Beck novels, beginning with 1965’s Roseanna. (Hat tip to Mystery Fanfare.)

• English actress Jill Gascoine perished today, too. As Deadline says, Gascoine “played the role of Detective Inspector Forbes for 56 episodes of The Gentle Touch in the early 1980s; it was the first Brit TV drama to center on a female police officer. She reprised the part for [the] spin-off series C.A.T.S. Eyes in 1985-87. Her TV work also saw roles in shows including Z-Cars, General Hospital, Home to Roost, and, after relocating to Los Angeles, the American series Northern Exposure and Touched By an Angel. On the movie side, she appeared in King of the Wind opposite Richard Harris and Glenda Jackson, and the comedy BASEketball.” Gascoine—who had suffered from Alzheimer’s for the last decade—was 83, and had been married to fellow British performer Alfred Molina since 1986. More on Gascoine’s passing is here.

• I am far from the first to mention the demise, on April 24, of Sheila Quigley, the author best known for having penned eight mystery novels set around a fictional estate in the northeast England town of Houghton-le-Spring (Run for Home, Killing Me Softly, etc.). She was 72 years old, explains ChronicleLive, a UK news site, which adds that Quigley was “taken to hospital with complications arising from a toe infection but her shocked family were told her condition had deteriorated rapidly. She was tested three times for COVID-19 but it was ruled out as the cause of her death.” Fellow fictionist Martin Edwards calls Quigley “such a vibrant personality that it is hard to believe she is no longer with us. Sheila’s life story was remarkable,” he explains in his blog. “A straight-talking former factory worker, she secured a £300K deal for her first two books when she was in her 50s, a brilliant achievement that understandably gained national attention.” ChronicleLive says Quigley was once “voted one of Britain’s most popular crime authors of all time,” and “her fictional lead detective, the no-nonsense DI Lorraine Hunt, was voted No.10 in [book retailer W.H. Smith’s] top fictional detectives poll.”

• Also taken recently was Karen Harper, the 75-year-old Ohio-born writer behind dozens of historical novels and mysteries, including nine whodunits set during the time of Elizabeth Tudor (both before and after she was Britain’s queen). In addition, Harper produced half a dozen yarns starring forensic psychologist Claire Markwood (Dark Storm, 2019) and various standalones, the most recent of which—The Queen’s Secret—was just released this month by Morrow. “Karen Harper,” observes Janet Rudolph of Mystery Fanfare, “won the Mary Higgins Clark Award [for her 2005 novel, Dark Angel]. According to author Connie Campbell Berry, Karen died recently of cancer.”

• Finally, we must acknowledge the passing of Ennis Willie, who, says Georgia’s Augusta Chronicle, “wrote 21 hardboiled crime novels between 1961 and 1965, [but] seemed to vanish after that, leading fans to speculate widely about who he really was.” According to the Facebook page Vintage Paperback & Book Covers, Ennis simply “burned out,” after the furious pace of his writing years, “started a printing business and dropped from sight. As he has said, ‘I wanted to be rich and famous, and then I got to be rich and famous … Then I decided I just wanted to be rich.” The Chronicle explains that Willie’s best-recalled protagonist was Sand, “an ex-gangster who always got the better of his adversaries, usually with a bullet.” Sand featured in such works as Sand’s War (1963), Warped Ambitions (1964), The Case of the Loaded Garter Holster (1964), and Code of Vengeance (1965), plus standalones on the order of Vice Town (1962). Willie was 80 years old at the time he breathed his last on April 22.

Bloody Bad News

From B.V. Lawson’s In Reference to Murder:
Another crime fiction conference has had to cancel due to the coronavirus pandemic. Bloody Scotland, which was scheduled for September 18-20, will not take place this year in order to maintain safety for staff and participants. A note on the event website added that “Though we will greatly miss celebrating the finest local and international crime writing at the festival, we hope to bring you a wee taste of that classic Bloody Scotland atmosphere in the form of online events which we are currently in the process of plotting.” More details about that will be announced on a later date.

Friday, April 24, 2020

Bullet Points: Staying Occupied Edition

• HBO-TV’s Perry Mason reboot, starring Matthew Rhys as a character closer to Chinatown’s Jake Gittes than to Raymond Burr’s resolute defense attorney, finally has a broadcast debut date—June 21—and a trailer, found here. Plot details about this mini-series are sparse, but it’s supposed to be a Mason origin story, set in 1932 Los Angeles and involving an Aimee Semple McPherson-like celebrity evangelist, that year’s Olympic Games and L.A.’s oil boom, and “a child kidnapping gone very, very wrong.” Filling out the cast will be John Lithgow, former Orphan Black star Tatiana Maslany, Chris Chalk as Paul Drake, and Juliet Rylance as Della Street. The International Movie Database (IMDb) suggests this drama will run to eight episodes.

• Piggy-backing upon that HBO show, The Mysterious Press is reissuing half a dozen of Erle Stanley Gardner’s original Mason novels in e-book format, all with rather handsome noirish covers. Among those re-releases are The Case of the Lonely Heiress (1948), The Case of the Green-Eyed Sister (1953), and The Case of the Terrified Typist (1956).

• Meanwhile, ITV’s new Van der Valk, a three-episode reboot of the same-named 1972-1992 British crime drama, is set to premiere in the UK this coming Sunday, April 26. The show features Marc Warren (Beecham House, Hustle, Mad Dogs) in his first lead role, as street-smart and unapologetic Amsterdam police detective Simon “Piet” Van der Valk, with Maimie McCoy (DCI Banks, A Confession, Endeavour) playing “Lucienne Hassell, Van der Valk’s highly competent partner who isn’t afraid to ruffle some feathers.” Radio Times says this “appears to be a newly created role replacing that of Inspecteur Johnny Kroon, the naïve assistant from the original series portrayed by Michael Latimer.” Both shows were inspired by Nicolas Freeling novels. Warren’s Van Der Valk will join PBS-TV’s Masterpiece Mystery! lineup sometime this summer, though a specific air date has not yet been announced.

• And The Columbophile ponders the possibility of rebooting Peter Falk’s famous TV detective drama, Columbo. Should a one-off motion picture be made, or might a new series be launched? If the latter, then should the stories be set in the 1970s, or should they be updated with forensics technology and cell phones? Finally, who should occupy the lead role—Mark Ruffalo, perhaps, or Russian Doll star Natasha Lyonne? (Falk once said that the only other actor he could see playing his bumbling L.A. police lieutenant was Art Carney.) “ … I’m not vehemently opposed to a Columbo reboot in a way I once was,” writes The Columbophile’s unidentified blogger, “but would only feel confident if it was set in the opulent L.A. of the ’70s, remained true to the original character’s sex, ethnicity, habits and personality, was a series not a one-off movie, and was suitably supported by a cavalcade of talent. In short, more of the same from when the show was at its peak.” Even I might be OK with it under those terms.

• NoirCon 2020 has been cancelled because of the novel coronavirus pandemic, says The Gumshoe Site. That gathering had previously been scheduled to take place in L.A. from September 10 to 13. “NoirCon is a biennial literary conference devoted to the dark subgenre of fiction and film called ‘noir,’” explains Gumshoe blogger Jiro Kiruma, who adds: “Actually the previous NoirCon, which was supposed to be held in Philadelphia in 2018, was cancelled too, partly due to the passing of its co-founder Deen Kogan in March 2018.” The official cancellation notice, from NoirCon organizer Lou Boxer, is here.

• CrimeReads’ Molly Odintz today surveys the field of crime and mystery novels “set against a backdrop of plague or [that] feature mysterious spreading illnesses. Some,” she explains, “are more relevant to our times than others—after all, COVID-19, unlike some of the illnesses in the following books, is not a psychological malady—but all should help us slowly begin to process the enormity of our current situation (and perhaps help us feel just a bit better about the odds, compared to those of the past).”

• English journalist-author Tony Parsons (#Taken) knows just the sort of story he would like to tell, if Ian Fleming Publications ever commissions him to pen a new James Bond continuation novel. As he writes in the UK edition of GQ magazine:
I have always planned to set my own James Bond book after the end of On Her Majesty’s Secret Service and before the start of You Only Live Twice. That means the lost days between the murder of Bond’s wife, Tracy, in the final chapter of On Her Majesty’s Secret Service but before the first chapter of You Only Live Twice, which finds our hero out east in a geisha house, given one last chance of redemption by M. That is surely fertile ground for any novelist—between the loss of the love of your life and your last chance to do something right. I even have a title—spoiler alert—Always Say Die. You can almost imagine Adele or Shirley Bassey singing it.
• While we’re on the subject of 007, The Spy Command points to new research by espionage-fictionist Jeremy Duns, which confirms that Catch-22 author Joseph Heller worked on a version of the script for Casino Royale, the 1967 movie based oh-so-loosely on Fleming’s 1953 Bond novel of the same name and starring David Niven.

• Like many of you, I suspect, I am currently watching my way through Season 6 of Bosch, the Amazon Prime TV series—based on Michael Connelly’s police procedurals—that dropped last week. (My opinion so far: This run of 10 episodes is far more interesting than Series 5.) Tied in with that premiere comes Michael Carlson’s new piece about “the way the show’s visuals work to set scenes, and also to set the tone of the whole series.” It appeared originally in Medium, but a version can also be found in Shots.

• Killer Covers concluded its month-long salute to artist Mitchell Hooks last weekend, after rolling out almost 100 paperback covers he created. If you missed out on some of that series, click here.

• Procrastinating from far more important responsibilities, Southern California author Lee Goldberg (Fake Truth) has lately put together humorous short tours of his home office, a couple of which supply answers to viewer questions about whale penises, his James Bond film posters, and more. You can watch them here, here, and here.

• During one of our trips to London, my wife and I made a special visit to Shakespeare’s Globe, a modern re-creation of William Shakespeare’s 17th-century playhouse on the south bank of the Thames. I’d purchased tickets months in advance for a presentation of Romeo and Juliet, and though I was suffering a terrible cold on the day of the show (I’m sure those sitting around us expected me to be hauled away to the nearest hospital at any moment), I insisted on remaining through the entire play. Now you can enjoy the Globe’s Romeo and Juliet for yourself, without running the risk of contracting the novel coronavirus during a plane flight. Literary Hub reports that the Globe “is making past performances of some of their productions available to stream for free through June. From now until May 3, you can watch the theater’s 2009 production of Romeo and Juliet. The rest of the roster includes The Two Noble Kinsman, The Winter’s Tale, The Merry Wives of Windsor, and A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”

• By the way, the Bard’s 456th birthday is coming up this weekend, on April 26—the perfect excuse for Literary Hub to arrange a discussion “between five scholars who have devoted their careers situating Shakespeare alongside issues of performance, education, identity, partisanship and more …” Assistant editor Aaron Robertson introduces it as “an essential guide to the possible futures of our collective engagement with theater.”

• Author and educator Art Taylor notes on Facebook that the new issue of Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine contains an announcement of which writers and short stories have won that publication’s 2019 Readers Awards. They are, in order of their placement, David Dean (for “The Duellist,” May/June 2019), Paul D. Marks (for “Fadeout on Bunker Hill,” March/April 2019), and—tying for third-place honors—Doug Allyn (for “The Dutchy,” November/December 2019) and G.M. Malliet (for “Whiteout,” January/February 2019). Below, I am embedding the scan of EQMM’s announcement that Taylor featured in Facebook. Click on the image to open a more readable enlargement.


• Before its recent re-release, by Poisoned Pen Press, I’m not sure I had ever heard of The Beetle, an 1897 supernatural horror novel from British writer Richard Marsh. Yet in its day, observes Olivia Rutigliano, it outsold Bram Stoker’s Dracula, published in the same year.

• From Mary Picken, at Live and Deadly:
As we wait to hear whether the Bloody Scotland Crime Writing Festival can go ahead (a decision is expected at the end of the month) there is good news around the annual prizes the Festival Awards for Scottish Crime Fiction in the past year.

Bloody Scotland is delighted to confirm that The McIlvanney Prize will be going ahead in 2020 with new sponsor, the Glencairn Glass, the World’s Favourite Whisky Glass and the Official Glass for Whisky. The Bloody Scotland Debut Crime Novel of the Year, which was launched last year and won by Claire Askew with All the Hidden Truths, will also go ahead, sponsored by the Glencairn Glass.

The award-winning, Scottish family business Glencairn Crystal, creators of the Glencairn Glass, has always produced the decanter for the winner of The McIlvanney Prize so it was a natural partnership for them to come on board as sponsors of the prizes in their entirety.
A longlist of McIlvanney Prize nominees is expected on June 23, with finalists to be announced on September 1. A final decision on this year’s winner is anticipated on September 18.

• Just a quick reminder: Submissions to this year’s Eleanor Taylor Bland Crime Fiction Writers of Color Award contest, sponsored by Sisters in Crime, “are free and open to any emerging writer through June 8, 2020,” says Oline H. Cogdill in the Mystery Scene blog. “The winner will be announced by July 15, 2020.”

• A Shroud of Thoughts blogger Terence Towles Canote has posted a broad recap of the acting credits chalked up by Brian Dennehy during his 43-year career; Dennehy, of course, died last week at age 81. One of my favorite Dennehy appearances was his turn as a comfortably corrupt sheriff in the 1985 western film Silverado, but he’d previously guest starred on such TV series as Serpico, Lou Grant, Cagney & Lacey, and Hunter, and led the cast of Big Shamus, Little Shamus, an extremely short-lived 1979 detective drama (see its opening title sequence here). He would go on to star in the 1994 medical series Birdland and the 2001 sitcom The Fighting Fitzgeralds, as well as in teleflicks such as Perfect Witness (1989), To Catch a Killer (1992), and Deadly Matrimony (1992), the first of six movies in which he played a homicide investigator named Jack Reed. In addition to the aforementioned Silverado, Dennehy featured in big-screeners such as First Blood (1982), Cocoon (1985), Legal Eagles (1986), and Tommy Boy (1995). He won a Golden Globe Award for his role as Willy Loman in the 2000 television film Death of a Salesman, plus two Tony Awards for his stage performances. Canote calls Dennehy “truly a modern-day character actor. Throughout his career he portrayed a wide variety of characters including heroes, villains, and everything in between.”

• Gone now, too, is Andrew J. Fenady, the Ohio-born actor, screenwriter, producer, and author, who may be best remembered by Rap Sheet readers for his two lighthearted detective novels, The Man With Bogart’s Face (1977) and The Secret of Sam Marlow (1980), both starring L.A. cop-turned-private investigator Sam Marlow. Fenady passed away on April 16. He was 91 years old. Long before he created his fictional retro gumshoe, Fenady produced a trio of still-well-remembered TV westerns: The Rebel (1959–1961), Chuck Connors’ Branded (1965–1966), and finally, Hondo (1967), about which Fenady talks in a couple of video clips found here. He continued working on films over the next quarter century, his credits including a 1980 adaptation of The Man with Bogart’s Face and the 1989 TV film Jake Spanner, Private Eye (aka Hoodwinked), starring Robert Mitchum as an aged, cranky sleuth created by L.A. Morse. (See a trailer here.)

• Mystery Fanfare conveys the sad news that Sheila Connolly has died. Blogger Janet Rudolph explains that Connolly, born in 1950, “was the author of numerous novels and short stories: The County Cork Mysteries (8 novels and a novella), The Orchard Mysteries (12 novels), The Victorian Village Mysteries (1), The Relatively Dead Series (6), The Museum Mysteries (7) and two standalones: Reunion with Death and Once She Knew. Her latest book, Fatal Roots, was published by Crooked Lane Books in January.” Connolly has at least one more new novel yet to hit bookstores: her third Victorian Village mystery, The Secret Staircase, due out in May 2021 from Minotaur. FOLLOW-UP: Blogger Lesa Holstine offers her own farewell to Connolly, reposting a piece the author wrote in 2014 “about her love of Ireland.”

• Finally, we bid adieu to Rubem Fonseca, “one of Brazil’s leading literary figures whose flinty, obscenity-laden crime stories were seen as dark metaphors for the rot in Brazilian society,” according to The New York Times. Jose Ignacio recalls in A Crime Is Afoot that Fonseca, a onetime police commissioner in Rio de Janeiro, “started his career by writing short stories, considered by some critics as his strongest literary creations. His first popular novel was [1983’s] A Grande Arte (High Art), but Agosto [1990] is usually considered his best work. In 2003, he won the Camões Prize, considered to be the most important award in the Portuguese language. In 2012 he became the first recipient of Chile’s Manuel Rojas Ibero-American Narrative Award.” Fonseca was less than a month away from his 95th birthday when he died on April 15. (Hat tip to Mystery Fanfare.)

• In Reference to Murder says that the Mystery Writers of America “will be announcing the 74th annual Edgar Allan Poe Award winners via the Twitter handle @EdgarAwards next Thursday, April 30th, beginning at 11 a.m. That’s the same date the winners would have been announced at the honors banquet that was canceled due to the coronavirus.”  Here are all of the contenders.

• Shotsmag’s Ayo Onatade chatted recently with former New Zealand lawyer Craig Sisterson, the author of Southern Cross Crime, a guide to the world of Australian and New Zealand crime writing. (An audiobook version of that work will soon be available in both Britain and the States, but the UK print version—originally scheduled for April, has been postponed until September, due to the COVID-19 crisis.) During their exchange, Onatade asked what “fun fact” Sisterson had come across while researching his book. He responded:
Hmm … before writing the book I was already aware that the history of antipodean crime writing dated back to the earliest days of the detective fiction genre (in terms of novels and short stories). The bestselling detective novel of the 19th century wasn’t written by Wilkie Collins or Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, as many might think, but by a New Zealand lawyer who’d moved to Melbourne to further his dreams of becoming a playwright (Fergus Hume, The Mystery of the Hansom Cab). One of the earliest writers of police tales was Mary Fortune, who wrote dozens from the Australian goldfields in the 1860s. Thanks to the research of the likes of Lucy Sussex, I was already aware of these historic figures.

But what I didn’t know was that the very first Edgar Award given out by the Mystery Writers of America back in 1954, actually went to an Australian. Charlotte Jay (pen name of Adelaide writer Geraldine Halls) won for
Beat Not the Bones, a psychological thriller about an Australian woman who travels to New Guinea to uncover the truth behind her husband’s death. Talking to award-winning crime writer Alan Carter recently about that book (he’d come across it during his Ph.D. studies), he described it as “fantastic, radical and well ahead of its time … A vivid, often hallucinatory, gut-punching beautifully written book.”

So, while we’re experiencing an antipodean crime wave in recent years, the currents certainly run long and deep back through the decades and centuries.
Click here to enjoy this full interview.

I mentioned in a previous post that Thomas McNulty has launched a YouTube channel on which he talks about vintage books. His latest offering—found here—reintroduces us to MacKinlay Kantor (1904-1977), once “one of America’s best-known and best-selling authors,” but now pretty much forgotten. McNulty’s narrative makes me want to keep my eyes out in the future for used copies of Kantor’s works, and to find a copy of his still-in-print 1955 Civil War novel, Andersonville.

• More than a decade ago, The Rap Sheet posted video of Mark Coggins interviewing fellow crime novelist Joe Gores, the author of 32 Cadillacs, Interface, and the Maltese Falcon prequel Spade & Archer. But just last week, I received an e-note from Coggins, saying that “with so much time on my hands” during the pandemic shutdown, he’d “tackled a project that had been on the docket for years: transcribing my interview with Joe Gores.” You’ll find the welcome results here.

• Otto Penzler has now cracked the top 20 among his choices of “the greatest crime films of all time.” Number 20 was The Conversation (1974), with North by Northwest (1959) capturing the 19th spot. Catch up with all of Penzler’s selections here.

• The Moderate Voice has some rather nice things to say about Margaret Rutherford: Dreadnought with Good Manners, Andy Merriman’s 2009 biography of the English actress who portrayed Agatha Christie’s Miss Jane Marple in a succession of 1960s films. Reviewer Doug Gibson’s choicest tidbit, though, is this one: “During her life Rutherford feared that a family history of unstable behavior would cause her to lose her sanity. Her father murdered her grandpa. As a toddler her mother killed herself. She was raised by her aunt.” Apparently, Rutherford suffered from serious depression.

• Finally, a few more author interviews of note: Nancie Clare speaks with Marcia Clark (Final Judgment) for her Speaking of Mysteries podcast; during an exchange on another podcast, Seize the Way, Harlan Coben (The Boy from the Woods) covers subjects ranging from his writing insecurities to his life as a New Jersey father; Criminal Element’s Steve Erickson fires a few questions at Max Allan Collins about the latter’s latest Mickey Spillane collaboration novel, Masquerade for Murder; and for the Los Angeles Review of Books, Steve Weddle chats with William Boyle about the importance of place setting in Boyle’s books (including his newest, City of Margins).

PaperBack: “Walk with Evil”

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



Walk with Evil, by Robert Wilder (Crest, 1957).
Cover illustration by Charles Binger.


READ MORE:Friday Finds: Flaming Road,” by J. Kingston Pierce
(Killer Covers).

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Gunn Reloaded

David Bianculli’s TV Worth Watching notes it was on this day, back in 1989, that ABC-TV “presented the two-hour movie, Peter Gunn, revisiting the 1958-1961 private-eye series that starred Craig Stevens in the title role. ABC’s remake featured Rich Man, Poor Man and The Jericho Mile star Peter Strauss, and was written and directed by the show’s original creator, Blake Edwards, with the hope of launching a Perry Mason-style series of telefilms. Co-stars included Jennifer Edwards, Barbara Williams and Peter Jurasik.” To watch the trailer for this picture, clickety-clack here.

Houston, We Have Lots of Problems

To help keep us all entertained during these troubled times, Texas author Scott D. Parker has debuted a YouTube reading of Wading Into War, his first Benjamin Wade private eye novel, set in 1940 Houston. Parker was kind enough to hand me a copy of that slender 2015 paperback when we met at Bouchercon in New Orleans four years ago. I read it then, but it’s still fun to listen now to his narration of the tale. He’s posted videos of his reading the first 10 chapters, with the remainder to appear tomorrow. Click here to find them all.

Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Canada Applauds Its Stars

The Crime Writers of Canada last night announced its shortlists of nominees for the 2020 Arthur Ellis Awards. Because of the present COVID-19 pandemic, that news was spread online, rather than through the traditional method: a series of events held across Canada.

Best Crime Novel:
Greenwood, by Michael Christie (McClelland & Stewart)
Fate, by Ian Hamilton (House of Anansi Press)
Hideaway, by Nicole Lundrigan (Penguin Random House Canada)
The Last Resort, by Marissa Stapley (Simon & Schuster Canada)
In the Dark, by Loreth Anne White (Montlake Romance)

The Angela Harrison Memorial Award for Best Crime First Novel:
Nobody Move, by Philip Elliott (Into the Void Press)
Blindshot, by Denis Coupal (Linda Leith)
Past Presence, by Nicole Bross (Literary Wanderlust)

Best Crime Novella:
The Red Chesterfield, by Wayne Arthurson
(University of Calgary Press)
Blood Ties, by Barbara Fradkin (Orca)
Too Close to Home, by Brenda Chapman (Grass Roots Press)
The Goddaughter Does Vegas, by Melodie Campbell (Orca)
The Woman in Apartment 615, by Devon Shepherd (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, January/February 2019)

Best Crime Short Story:
“In Plain Sight,” by Y.S. Lee (from Life is Short and Then You Die, edited by Kelley Armstrong; Macmillan)
“Closing Doors,” by Peter Sellers (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, March/April 2019)
“The Dead Man's Dog,” by Zandra Renwick (Alfred Hitchcock
Mystery Magazine
, January/February 2019)

Best French Crime Book:
Les offrandes, by Louis Carmain (VLB Éditeur)
Tempêtes, by Andrée Michaud (Éditions Québec Amériques)
Ghetto X, by Martin Michaud (Libre Expression)
Le tribunal de la rue Quirion, by Guillaume Morrissette
(Guy Saint-Jean Éditeur)
Le cercle de cendres, by Félix Ravenelle-Arcouette (Héliotrope)

Best Juvenile or YA Crime Book:
Tank & Fizz: The Case of the Tentacle Terror, by Liam O’Donnell
and Mike Dean, Orca)
The Grey Sisters, by Jo Treggiari (Penguin Teen)
Keep This to Yourself, by Tom Ryan (Albert Whitman)
Ghosts, by David A. Robertson (HighWater Press)

Best Non-fiction Crime Book:
The Missing Millionaire: The True Story of Ambrose Small and the City Obsessed with Finding Him, by Katie Daubs
(MacClelland & Stewart)
The Billionaire Murders, by Kevin Donovan (Penguin Random House)
The Court of Better Fiction, by Debra Komar (Dundurn Press)
The Forest City Killer: A Serial Murderer, a Cold-Case Sleuth, and a Search for Justice, by Vanessa Brown (ECW Press)
Murdered Midas: A Millionaire, His Gold Mine, and a Strange Death on an Island Paradise, by Charlotte Gray (HarperCollins)

The Unhanged Arthur Award for Best Unpublished
Crime Manuscript:

Bert Mintenko and the Serious Business, by B.L. Smith
Henry’s Bomb, by K.P. Bartlett
One Bad Day After Another, by Max Folsom
The Dieppe Letters, by Liz Rachel Walker
The River Cage, by Pam Barnsley

In addition, Peter Robinson, Toronto-based author of the Alan Banks mystery series, has been chosen to receive the 2020 Grand Master Award, an honor presented biennially “to recognize a Canadian crime writer with a substantial body of work who has garnered national and international recognition.”

Winners of the other prizes are to be named in late May.

“Video Is Unavailable”

If you haven’t yet noticed, seemingly all of the video clips I’ve uploaded to The Rap Sheet over the last decade and a half have suddenly disappeared (though those cross-posted from YouTube are still operating). I have not the slightest idea what’s gone amiss, but am hoping this is merely a technical issue with the Blogger software, and that it will be repaired soon. I’ve put in a request for help, and will update you as I hear more.

Friday, April 17, 2020

Cha and Mosley Give Their Thanks

The Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, which was to have been held from April 18 to 19 at the University of Southern California campus in L.A., has been postponed until the weekend of October 3-4. In the meantime, though, the winners of its 2020 Book Prizes—in 12 categories—were announced this morning on Twitter.

This year’s winner in the Mystery/Thriller category is Your House Will Pay, by Steph Cha (Ecco). Also nominated were The Night Fire, by Michael Connelly (Little, Brown); The Lost Man, by Jane Harper (Flatiron); Lady in the Lake, by Laura Lippman (Morrow); and Heaven, My Home, by Attica Locke (Mulholland).

Additionally, Walter Mosley, best known for writing the popular Easy Rawlins historical crime series, is being given the Robert Kirsch Award for lifetime achievement. That commendation “recognizes a writer whose work focuses on the American West.”

Because Book Prize recipients cannot gather together at this time, they have all delivered their acceptance speeches on YouTube. Cha’s can be found here; Mosley’s (including a tribute to his father) is here.

Congratulations to all of this year’s contenders!

Edgars Go Electronic

As reported previously on this page, 2020’s Edgar Awards Mystery Week, which had been scheduled to take place later this month in New York City, was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemoc. But The Gumshoe Site brings word this morning that the Mystery Writers of America will announce the winners of its latest Edgar Allan Poe Awards on Thursday, April 30, via Twitter. Expect that announcement at 11 a.m. Eastern Standard Time.

All of the nominees are listed here.

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Bouchercon Bites the Dust, Too

Given all of the uncertainly surrounding the world’s novel coronavirus pandemic, and how long our current social-distancing practices might have to last, it comes as no surprise to hear that this year’s Bouchercon—which had been scheduled to take place in Sacramento, California, from October 15-18—has been cancelled. The news came in a note posted on the convention’s Web site by co-chairs Rae James and Michele Drier. It reads, in part:
We’re terribly sad to tell you this, but out of an abundance of caution and concern for the health and safety of our community, we are canceling Bouchercon 2020.

We have no way of knowing what the balance of this year holds for groups of people gathering, nor can we tell what the state of travel will be.

While we are canceling the actual Bouchercon convention, we are working to develop a different format for some of the Bouchercon events and activities such as the Anthony Awards, the short story anthology and the General Membership meeting. Nominations will continue to be open until June 5 for the Anthony Awards.

For those of you who had registered or provided sponsorships, we will be issuing full refunds. …

Although the members of the Local Organizing Committee who have worked on this for the last five years are saddened, we know this is the right step to take to keep all safe. And we know that there will be future Bouchercons where we can gather again to celebrate the world of mystery.
Bouchercon 2021 will be held in New Orleans, Louisiana, in August of next year. (Really, August? Bring your lightest attire, ’cause the weather will likely be scorching.)

POSTSCRIPT: For the record, the planned lineup of special guests for Bouchercon 2020 can be found here.

Revue of Reviewers, 4-15-20

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



















Van Shaw Pitches In

As we all settle into this new norm of little exposure to the world beyond our own homes, it’s cheering to see authors bringing to the Web fresh stories that we can appreciate during our suddenly abundant free time. Irish writer John Connolly is now several chapters into posting a “Web-exclusive Charlie Parker novella,” “The Sisters Strange.” U.S. screenwriter/comic-book writer Damon Lindelof has begun composing an “exclusive, serialized” mystery story for venture capitalist Dave Pell’s blog, Next Draft, titled “Something, Something, Something Murder.” And now Seattle-born novelist Glen Erik Hamilton (Mercy River) is dipping his toe into the same waters.

He wrote yesterday on his Facebook page:
Hello, Northwesterners …

I miss Seattle, especially now. I wanted to do something about that, and I’d been pondering what another hometown guy might be up to these days, so I wrote this: The very first Van Shaw short story, ‘Essential Business.’

The story is free on my website, but if circumstances allow please consider donating a small amount to one of the many fine COVID-19 crisis support organizations linked to the [
Seattle] Times article in the story's afterword. Thank you, and stay safe up there.
Click here to read “Essential Business.”

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

In Quest of Thrillers

This year’s ThrillerFest, previously scheduled for early July, has been cancelled as a result of the novel coronavirus pandemic. However, the race for the 2020 Thriller Awards is still on! Today brings an announcement of the nominees in six categories.

Best Hardcover Novel:
One Good Deed, by David Baldacci (Grand Central)
Rag and Bone, by Joe Clifford (Oceanview)
Recursion, by Blake Crouch (Crown)
They All Fall Down, by Rachel Howzell Hall (Forge)
The Chain, by Adrian McKinty (Mulholland)
Conviction, by Denise Mina (Mulholland)

Best First Novel:
My Lovely Wife, by Samantha Downing (Berkley)
Miracle Creek, by Angie Kim (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
The Good Detective, by John McMahon (Putnam)
The Silent Patient, by Alex Michaelides (Celadon)
American Spy, by Lauren Wilkinson (Random House)

Best Paperback Original Novel:
Girl Most Likely, by Max Allan Collins (Thomas & Mercer)
Never Look Back, by Alison Gaylin (Morrow)
Jihadi Bride, by Alistair Luft (Black Rose Writing)
The Scholar, by Dervla McTiernan (Penguin)
The Bird Boys, by Lisa Sandlin (Cinco Puntos Press)
Such a Perfect Wife, by Kate White (Harper)

Best E-Book Original Novel:
Night Man, by Brett Battles (Brett Battles)
The Deep Abiding, by Sean Black (Sean Black)
Murder Board, by Brian Shea (Severn River)
Leave No Stone, by LynDee Walker (Severn River)
Close to You, by Kerry Wilkinson (Bookouture)

Best Short Story:
“Turistas,” by Hector Acosta (from ¡Pa’Que Tu Lo Sepas!,
edited by Angel Luis Colón; Down & Out)
“Call Me Chuckles,” by Michael Cowgill (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine [EQMM], March/April 2019)
“The Long-Term Tenant,” by Tara Laskowski (EQMM,
July/August 2019)
“Snow Job,” by Lia Matera (EQMM, January/February 2019)
“Fathers-in-Law,” by Twist Phelan (EQMM, November/
December 2019)

Best Young Adult Novel:
Seven Ways to Get Rid of Harry, by Jen Conley (Down & Out)
Catfishing on Catnet, by Naomi Kritzer (Tor Teen)
We Speak in Storms, by Natalie Lund (Philomel)
Patron Saints of Nothing, by Randy Ribay (Kokila)
Keep This to Yourself, by Tom Ryan (Albert Whitman)

2020 ThrillerMaster Lifetime Achievement Award recipient:
Diana Gabaldon

2020 Silver Bullet Award recipient:
Michael Connelly

2020 Thriller Legend Award recipient:
Writers House (a literary agency)

The winners of the contested commendations were to have been declared on July 11, during a Thriller Awards Banquet. Now it’s not absolutely clear when the announcement will be made. ThrillerFest organizers are supposed to hold a “virtual conference” in July, including the prize presentations, but details of that event—and how to register for it—have yet to be released.

UPDATE: The Gumshoe Site says, “Thriller Award winners will be announced in a special presentation on July 11 during ‘Virtual’ ThrillerFest, hosted by the International Thriller Writers Facebook page.” So stay tuned.

An “Absorbing” Look at Historical Chaos

The German-made historical crime series Babylon Berlin—the third season of which reached Netflix in the States last month—is winning a lot of favorable press lately. Sarah Hughes remarks in The Guardian that writer-director “Tom Tykwer’s ambitious adaptation of Volker Kutscher’s police procedurals … [offers] the chance to lose yourself in a fully realised and beautifully recreated world, populated by people you will come to genuinely care about, driven by tight plots and a wider story of how the after-effects of the First World War would send shockwaves through the German nation, eventually leading to the collapse of an all-too-brief progressive government and the subsequent rise to power of Adolf Hitler’s Nazi party.”

Meanwhile, Vulture’s Kathryn VanArendonk calls Babylon Berlin “an amazing show for right now: politically resonant but historically removed, stylistic and melodramatic, endearing, bracing, and completely absorbing. It’s about the sense that the whole world is teetering on the edge of collapse, so it’s not hard to reach for parallels to the current moment; the final shot of the new third season is one of the most accurate images I’ve seen of what it feels like to be alive in the world in 2020. But that final shot is also perfect, escapist Babylon Berlin: anxiety shaped into Surrealism, a nightmare turned fantasy.”

Hmm. This series didn’t grab me in the same way it has obviously gripped others; I stopped tuning Babylon Berlin in partway through its first season. Maybe I should give it a second chance.

Bowen’s Last Trip Down the Trail

Peter Bowen, the Montana author behind both the Gabriel Du Pré mysteries and the Yellowstone Kelly historical novels, died from “heart failure after a fall” on Wednesday, April 8. He was 74 years old.

“Bowen was a writer’s writer, respected for his wordsmithing—and his irreverence and sardonic humor …,” says an obituary in the Great Falls Tribune. Born in Athens, Georgia, on May 22, 1945, Bowen attended the University of Michigan, and there “discovered the folk-music world at a coffee house on campus, which he ended up managing for a time, bringing in acts like Tom Rush, Doc Watson and a young Joni Mitchell. He also fell in love with south-side Chicago blues.

“Like his character Yellowstone Kelly, Bowen himself was good at more than one thing. He learned the construction trade to put food in his mouth, and those skills would later serve him well as he fell in love with woodworking. He also would work as a cowboy, a folksinger and a fishing guide while he practiced the craft of writing.

“A big, gruff, shaggy man,” according to the Tribune, “he loved many dogs and a very few people. For years he lived by this river or that in Montana, writing and fishing and enjoying his solitude.”

The paper explains that a 16th and final Du Pre novel is awaiting publication, “pending finishing touches from [his wife, Christine] Whiteside, who also served as Bowen’s editor in recent years. At least three other Montana historical novels await discovery by publishers, including Water Rose, a love story and thriller set in the Prohibition era. Bowen was working on a memoir at the time of his death.”

READ MORE:In Memory of Mystery Author Peter Bowen, 1945-2020,” by MacKenzie Stuart (Murder & Mayhem).

Friday, April 10, 2020

Bullet Points: Making the Best of It Edition

• London’s Goldsboro Books has announced its longlist of a dozen contenders for the 2020 Glass Bell Award, a prize meant to celebrate “the best storytelling across contemporary fiction.” About half of the books—identified below with asterisks—are obviously or at least arguably drawn from the crime/mystery side.

Imaginary Friend, by Stephen Chbosky (Orion)
Darkdawn, by Jay Kristoff (HarperVoyager)
The Starless Sea, by Erin Morgenstern (Harvill Secker)
The Lost Ones, by Anita Frank (HQ)
My Sister, the Serial Killer, by Oyinkan Braithwaite (Atlantic)*
The Farm, by Joanne Ramos (Bloomsbury)
Girl, Woman, Other, by Bernardine Evaristo (Hamish Hamilton)
The Second Sleep, by Robert Harris (Cornerstone)*
Blood & Sugar, by Laura Shepherd-Robinson (Mantle)*
Daisy Jones and the Six, by Taylor Jenkins Reid (Cornerstone)
Nothing Important Happened Today, by Will Carver (Orenda)*
The Silent Patient, by Alex Michaelides (Orion Books)*

A shortlist of six Glass Bell finalists is expected to be released on May 11, with the winner to be named on July 2.

• In advance of Bosch’s return to Amazon Prime next Friday, April 17, Crime Fiction Lover briefly recaps the last five seasons of that Michael Connelly-supervised police-procedural series.



• This apparently coincidental cover similarity (see above) is sure to create confusion when it comes to ordering books. In the Dark, by Loreth Anne White, was released last December by Montlake Romance. Somewhere in the Dark, by R.J. Jacobs, is set to debut in August, from Crooked Lane. (Hat tip to Linda L. Richards.)

• It had to happen: ThrillerFest XV, which had been arranged for July 7-11 in New York City, has been cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. An e-mail notice from executive director Kimberley Howe says, “We will be providing full refunds to everyone, and you will receive those funds in approximately two weeks, as soon as Cvent (our registration provider) can process our request.” But all is not lost. “To help you avoid ThrillerFest withdrawal,” says Howe, “we will be offering, in July, a virtual conference that you can enjoy from the safety of your own home. This event will include PitchFest, ConsultFest, Master Class, the Debut Author Breakfast, the Thriller Awards Presentation, and other special ThrillerFest presentations. Current registrants will have first dibs to register for these events before others are welcomed to join in the fun (if there’s still space). Details and your chance to sign up will follow soon.”

• As he explains it, about three weeks ago Scottish novelist Peter May (The Blackhouse, A Silent Death) was asked by someone on Twitter whether he had any interest in composing a story set against today’s novel coronavirus scare. At which point May realized, “I had already done just that.” It seems that about a decade and a half ago, at a time when he despaired of his career future, May penned Lockdown, a thriller that imagined a global pandemic of bird flu. Unfortunately, the book was rejected by publishers as “unrealistic” and “unimaginable in present-day London.” May’s outlook on publishing was soon after buoyed by the release (originally in France) of The Blackhouse, and he shelved Lockdown, not expecting it ever to reach readers. Until now. With the novel coronavirus making grim news worldwide, British publisher Quercus is rushing Lockdown into print. It will go on sale in the UK on April 30; its U.S. premiere will be August 18.

• A different book with the same title is coming from publisher Polis in mid-June. Edited by Nick Kolakowski and Steve Weddle, Lockdown: Stories of Terror, Crime, and Hope During a Pandemic is an anthology of short stories that LitReactor says take place “against the background of a nationalized lockdown in response to a (fictional) virus, which mutates rapidly as it jumps from person to person. Cities are under martial law. The skies are clear as all planes are grounded. Some people panic, while some go to heroic lengths to save those they love—and others use the chaos as an opportunity to engage in purest evil. From New York City to the Mexican border, from the Deep South to the misty shores of Seattle, their characters are fighting for survival against incredible odds.” Proceeds from the sale of this collection are supposed to go to BINC, the Book Industry Charitable Foundation, a non-profit enterprise “that assists booksellers in need.”

• Which brings us to this good news: The U.S. branch of Sisters in Crime has accelerated its support program for bookstores. The organization usually awards $500 every month to a deserving shop “to use for promotion, marketing, or hosting book-signing events.” But, it has announced, “in response to the current pandemic, we will be drawing the winners for the rest of 2020—nine winners—on April 16, 2020. We want to get these prizes out while the need is great. The deadline for entry is April 15. All other entry criteria remain the same.” Entry details are available here.

• Meanwhile, author Laurie R. King is holding an unusual auction. The person who contributes the most money will win the opportunity to name a character in King’s 2021 novel (to be set in Transylvania in 1925). Proceeds from this auction go to the Second Harvest Food Bank of Santa Cruz County, California, which King says “is stepping up [during the current pandemic] with drive-by food giveaways serving hundreds of families at a time—families whose breadwinners pick our fruit, clean our rooms, pack our home deliveries, care for our sick.” You have until Wednesday, April 15, to make an auction bid and become eligible for these naming rights. If you simply want to donate to the food bank, you can do so at that same link.

• In case you’re feeling too happy of late, Zach Vasquez suggests you read “The 12 Darkest Endings in the History of Noir Fiction.”

Easter mysteries to relish over the coming holiday.

• Need some film fun this weekend? Empire of Deception author Dean Jobb picks “10 of the Greatest Con Artist Movies of All Time.”

• Actor James Drury, who died this last Monday at age 85, may be best-remembered for starring in the 1962-1971 NBC-TV western series The Virginian. (Not bad for somebody who was actually born in New York City—nowhere in spitting distance of America’s frontier reaches.) However, he also played Captain Spike Ryerson in the short-lived 1974 ABC drama Firehouse, featured in three episodes of Walker, Texas Ranger, and guest-starred on everything from Bourbon Street Beat, Michael Shayne, and Perry Mason to It Takes a Thief, Ironside, and The Fall Guy. Drury’s lengthy catalogue of credits is here.

• This item comes from In Reference to Murder:
A beloved TV character is coming back: NBC gave a 13-episode series order to a new crime drama series starring Christopher Meloni, reprising his Law & Order: SVU role as Elliot Stabler. The SVU spinoff drama will revolve around the NYPD organized crime unit led by Stabler. Like Law & Order: SVU, headlined by Mariska Hargitay as Olivia Benson, the new drama is set in New York, allowing for potential seamless crossovers with SVU and for Benson-Stabler reunions.
• I’m very sorry to hear that Mort Drucker, the Brooklyn-born cartoonist and caricaturist whose work became so familiar over his five decades of contributing to Mad magazine, died on Wednesday at 91 years of age. Drucker, who “specialized in parodies of movies and television shows” (including The Man from U.N.C.L.E., Perry Mason, Magnum, P.I., and the James Bond flicks), was one of my father’s favorite artists, along with Jack Davis and politics lampooner Pat Oliphant, so there were always a lot of Mads around my boyhood home. “Mr. Drucker’s facility was best expressed in multi-caricature crowd scenes,” opines J. Hoberman in The New York Times. “His parody of the 1986 Woody Allen film, Hannah and Her Sisters, opened with a panel depicting a Thanksgiving dinner that, in addition to most of the movie’s ensemble cast, included caricatures of Mr. Allen’s first wife, Louise Lasser; the film critics Roger Ebert and Gene Siskel; Mayor Ed Koch of New York; and Mad’s mascot, Alfred E. Neuman. His drawing for a 1970 Time magazine cover, ‘Battle for the Senate,’ now in the National Portrait Gallery, featured a pileup of 15 individually characterized political figures, including President Richard M. Nixon and Vice President Spiro T. Agnew. Mad’s takeoff on the MGM retrospective feature That’s Entertainment, published in 1975, required Mr. Drucker to caricature more than two dozen stars.” (Drucker applied the same aesthetic to his poster art for the 1971 Mafia comedy film, The Gang That Couldn’t Shoot Straight.) Let’s give the final word here to Saturday Evening Post art critic David Apatoff, who recalls in his blog: “Drucker was such a humble, gentle soul, I could never quite figure out where he found the drive and ambition to create his hundreds of beautiful stories, decade after decade. The opposite of competitive, he was as generous and open-minded an artist as I’ve ever known. Yet he maintained the excruciatingly high standards to stay up late night after night crafting marvelous drawings, working out likenesses for his caricatures and populating his pictures with details and humor that reflected his abundance of spirit.”

• Scott D. Parker’s obituary of Drucker, in Diversions of the Groovy Kind, features the cartoonist’s parody of the 1972 disaster pic The Poseidon Adventure, retitled “The Poopsidedown Adventure.”

• For its part, Spy Write recalls Drucker’s satirical twist on the 1966 picture The Spy Who Came in from the Cold.

• There’s a new crime-fiction podcast worth sampling: Tartan Noir. As the program’s Web site explains, this hour-long offering will spotlight Scottish crime-fiction writing, and will be hosted “by author and broadcaster Theresa Talbot, who’s joined each week by a special guest (fellow authors, journalists or celebrity fans).” Val McDermid lent her voice and knowledge to the first episode, while on the second, Talbot spoke with Liam McIlvanney.

• Here’s one other podcast recommendation, courtesy of Dave Knadler. In his blog, Dave’s Fiction Warehouse, he extols the “lovely, measured tones” of Phoebe Judge’s voice as she reads classic mysteries. Judge has hosted the podcast Criminal for several years; but since the onset of today’s pandemic, she’s also been reading—chapter by chapter—such famous works as The Mysterious Affair at Styles, by Agatha Christie, and The Hound of the Baskervilles, by Arthur Conan Doyle. You can listen in at Phoebe Reads a Mystery. Let’s hope Judge continues these readings past the time when all of us can resume something approaching our normal lives.

• Way back in 2008, author Mark Coggins contributed a multi-part series to The Rap Sheet about The New Black Mask magazine, a short-lived 1980s revival of the publication that had helped launch the careers of so many well-known crime-fictionists. In Coggins’ assessment of the final, 1987 edition of NBM, he talked about John D. MacDonald, who was that issue’s feature focus and who was interviewed briefly in its pages. What wasn’t included with his article, however, was the full text of Macdonald’s “brusque” exchange with co-editor Richard Layman. But now, Tennessee banker-turned-writer Steve Scott has posted that interview in his MacDonald-oriented blog, The Trap of Solid Gold, for all of us to appreciate.

• Ace Atkins’ next (ninth) novel starring one-named Boston P.I. Spenser will be Robert B. Parker’s Someone to Watch Over Me, scheduled for release (from Putnam) in November.

• Illinois writer Thomas McNulty is behind the book-review blog Dispatches from the Last Outlaw, but it turns out he also has a YouTube channel, McNulty’s Book Corral, on which he talks about reading matters. Some of the episodes have focused on westerns and science fiction, but here he enthuses over Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer novels (and Max Allan Collins’ continuation of that series). And here he focuses on “man-bait paperbacks,” soap-operaish works with romantic themes and “saucy” covers, marketed toward male readers. McNulty must have an outstanding collection of vintage softcovers.

Elmore Leonard seems to be a popular subject this week, as Craig Pittman celebrates that author’s strong Florida connections in CrimeReads, and Don Winslow writes in Deadline about how he “almost made a movie with Elmore Leonard.”

• Winslow also talks with Thomas Pluck, for Criminal Element, about his fresh-off-the-vine short-story collection, Broken.

• Two more worthy exchanges: Nancie Clare’s chat with Cara Black (Three Hours in Paris) for her podcast, Speaking of Mysteries; and the delightful Hilary Davidson’s conversation with Frank Zafiro about her sixth novel, Don’t Look Down, for Wrong Place, Write Crime.

• If you haven’t been reading the Māwake Crime Review, a Crimespree Magazine feature that regularly showcases “great crime writers and crime novels from beyond the borders of North America and Europe,” you should start. In the latest installment, New Zealand critic-blogger Craig Sisterson turns his gaze upon Japanese contributions to this genre. Part of the column is devoted to an interview with Soji Shimada, author of The Tokyo Zodiac Murders and Murder in the Crooked House.

• I have heard several times over the years that film, TV, and stage performer Tony Franciosa—who starred in The Name of the Game, Search, and Matt Helm—was not popular among some of the people with whom he worked. Author and screenwriter Lee Goldberg recently shared this anecdote on Facebook, confirming such talk:
Tony Franciosa was reportedly a very difficult actor to work with. During the production of Matt Helm, he punched a director. Things got so bad, that Franciosa was written out of the 13th and final episode of the show. The producers must have loathed him because, in that final episode, they covered Franciosa’s face in the main titles with credits! Below are the credits as they appear in the first 12 episodes … and how they appeared in the final one. I’m amazed they got away with it!


• By the way, Goldberg has good news concerning a complete, five-disc French DVD set of Matt Helm episodes. In a March 20 “Bullet Points” post, he cautioned that the discs (with their English soundtrack, but French subtitles) “are unplayable on U.S. DVD players … unless you have a multi-standard DVD player (which I do) or software that allows you to watch it on your computer’s DVD drive.” However, he wrote me earlier this week to say that, in fact, those Matt Helm discs (which he must have ordered for himself) “will play on any DVD player … The picture and sound are great.”

• Columbus, Ohio, isn’t often thought of as a hotbed of fiction, when it’s even thought of at all. However, in his introduction to the new anthology Columbus Noir (Akashic), Andrew Welsh-Huggins—an editor and reporter for the Associated Press, and an occasional contributor to The Rap Sheet—points out why the 14th largest city in the United States offers all of the ingredients necessary to make it “ripe for the attention of crime fiction writers.” Read it all here.

• Terry Zobek takes a deep dive into all the corners of Lawrence Block’s writing career in his new release, A Trawl Among the Shelves: Lawrence Block Bibliography, 1958-2020.

• Spanish blogger José Ignacio Escribano continues to post intriguing mini-biographies of mystery writers in A Crime Is Afoot. Recent subjects include the well-remembered Leo Bruce, Julian Symons, and Anthony Boucher as well as less tip-of-the-tongue talents such as Anthony Wynne, A.E.W. Mason, and Ronald A. Knox.

• With April being National Poetry Month, Gerald So has organized a 30-day celebration of crime-related verse in The Five-Two.

• And a couple of weeks back, CrimeReads posted a critic’s list of 14 “long-ass books”—all crime, mystery, and thriller novels, of course—that might help us while away these mass-isolation times. Now Literary Hub’s Emily Temple takes that same idea and expands upon it, delivering an inventory of what she says are “The 50 Best Contemporary Novels Over 500 Pages.” I’m pleased to see that her choices include Anthony Doerr’s All the Light We Cannot See, Denis Johnson’s Tree of Smoke, Don DeLillo’s Underworld, and Larry McMurtry’s Lonesome Dove (a novel I chose as one of the 20th century’s best works). Several of her picks overlap those in CrimeReads (among them Donna Tartt’s The Secret History, Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose, and Eleanor Catton’s The Luminaries), but she also promotes two other crime-oriented tales: Ian Pears’ An Instance of the Fingerpost and Vikram Chandra’s Sacred Games.