Showing posts with label Big Four Contest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big Four Contest. Show all posts

Saturday, May 22, 2010

The Big Four Contest: Did You Win?

Today marks the fourth anniversary of The Rap Sheet’s official launching on May 22, 2006. But I’ll wait until tomorrow to recap the last year’s highlights, as I traditionally do on each such birthday. Instead, I want this day to be all about The Rap Sheet’s latest giveaway contest.

That competition, you will recall, launched on Monday and offered a total of eight terrific prizes: four free copies of the new Mike Hammer detective novel, The Big Bang, written by Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins, plus four free copies of the latest original Hammer radio novel on CD, “The Little Death.” Readers wishing to enter simply had to submit the names of their four favorite private eye novels of all time. (See how the fourth anniversary theme runs through this competition?) By midnight yesterday, we had received about 70 of those “Big Four” lists, sent from all over the world. We published them in four parts over the last few days (see here, here, here, and here).

After a random drawing of names, we can now announce the winners. The following lucky readers will receive one copy each of The Big Bang:

Ward Howarth of Richmond, Virginia
Harvey Dinerstein of Winthrop, Maine
Carol H. Novak of New Hyde Park, New York
Jeff Everden of Penticton, British Columbia, Canada

And these four have won one copy each of “The Little Death”:

David Phillips of Newtown Square, Pennsylvania
Guy Mills of San Jose, California
Patrick Foster of Halifax,
Nova Scotia, Canada
Ed Mattingly of Austin, Texas

Author Max Allan Collins has taken upon himself the task of mailing the winners their free books and CDs. All of those gifts should arrive at their destinations in short order.

I want to thank everybody again for participating in this special fourth anniversary challenge, and I hope you continue to enjoy The Rap Sheet.

The Big Four: Round Four

Today brings an end to The Rap Sheet’s latest giveaway contest, which put up for grabs four free copies of the new Mike Hammer detective novel, The Big Bang, written by Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins, as well as four free copies of the latest original Hammer radio novel on CD, “The Little Death.” The names of the eight contest winners will be announced later on this afternoon.

But before that announcement is made, let’s look over just one last intriguing batch of competition entries.

Murrie A. Zlotziver of Vicksburg, Pennsylvania:

The Moonstone, by Wilkie Collins
The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, by Agatha Christie
The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett

Calum Macleod of Inverness, Scotland, United Kingdom:

“Now while it’s bloody obvious any list of great private eye books should include Raymond Chandler (I’d opt for Farewell, My Lovely) and Dashiell Hammett (Red Harvest), with Ross Macdonald taking up the rear (The Far Side of the Dollar), let me offer an unashamedly Euro-centric alternative.”

The Killing Kind, by John Connolly
Dead Birds, by John Milne
The Guards, by Ken Bruen
Clean Break, by Val McDermid

Jeff Everden of Penticton, British Columbia, Canada:

Freak, by Michael Collins
The Twisted Thing, by Mickey Spillane
Playback, by Raymond Chandler
Red Harvest, by Dashiel Hammett

Scott Parker of Houston, Texas:

The Dawn Patrol, by Don Winslow
Darkness, Take My Hand, by Dennis Lehane
The Hound of the Baskervilles, by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Songs of Innocence, by Richard Aleas

Michael Shonk of Baton Rouge, Louisiana:

Sally’s in the Alley, by Norbert Davis
The Uncomfortable Dead, by Subcommandante Marcos and
Paco Ignacio Taibo II
The Dada Caper, by Ross H. Spencer
The Continental Op, by Dashiell Hammett (a collection of short stories)

Louis Burklow of Los Angeles, California:

True Detective, by Max Allan Collins (“Collins is the best at combining historical research with effective mysteries; I also love the cameos by real people, especially Dutch Reagan.”)
The Day the Music Died, by Ed Gorman (“He gets the feel of a small American town so right--reminds me of the town I grew up in near Nashville.”)
Berlin Noir, by Philip Kerr (“A detective in Nazi Germany--that was all I needed to know to want to read this one.”)
Holmes on the Range, by Steve Hockensmith (“I also love westerns, and the humor helps the story.”)

Eric Beetner of Los Angeles, California:

Devil in a Blue Dress, by Walter Mosley
The Long Goodbye, by Raymond Chandler
The Deputy’s Widow, by J.B. Kohl
The Drowning Pool, by Ross Macdonald

Carol H. Novak of New Hyde Park, New York:

Some Buried Caesar, by Rex Stout
The Lonely Silver Rain, by John D. MacDonald
Appointment with Death, by Agatha Christie
Mystery Mile, by Margery Allingham

John Lushbough of Vermillion, South Dakota:

When the Sacred Ginmill Closes, by Lawrence Block
The Deep Blue Good-by, by John D. MacDonald
Valediction, by Robert B. Parker
Walking the Perfect Square, by Reed Farrel Coleman

Deanna Stillings of Carlisle, Massachusetts:

Above Suspicion, by Helen MacInnes
The Doorbell Rang, by Rex Stout
The Cannibal Who Overate, by Hugh Pentecost
Darker Than Amber, by John D. MacDonald

Andreas Decker of Wuppertal, Germany:

When the Sacred Ginmill Closes, by Lawrence Block
The Blue Hammer, by Ross Macdonald
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley
Second Chance, by Jonathan Valin

Walter Herbert of Upper Marlboro, Maryland:

The Galton Case, by Ross Macdonald (“I could have picked any of Macdonald’s books, but The Galton Case was the first I read and remains my favorite.”)
The Thin Man, by Dashiell Hammett (“OK, technically Nick Charles is retired, but he sure acts like a private eye, and Hammett’s spectacular dialogue surpasses his use of dialogue in The Maltese Falcon.”)
The Monkey’s Raincoat, by Robert Crais (“In The Monkey’s Raincoat Crais found just the right mix of irony, sarcasm, and action.”)
The Color of Blood, by Declan Hughes (“A wonderful story told in a unique setting; I didn’t realize that Dublin had mean streets, too, but I’ve seen The Quiet Man way too many times ...”)

Ed Mattingly of Austin, Texas:

Shame the Devil, by George Pelecanos
Ghost of a Flea, by James Sallis
The Killing of the Tinkers, by Ken Bruen
Heaven’s Prisoners, by James Lee Burke

Richard L. Pangburn of Bardstown, Kentucky:

The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett. (“The spare language, the noir attitude, the falcon as the ultimate empty McGuffin, the celebrated nuances that have led to other splendid literary works in imitation or in tribute, such as Paul Auster’s reworking of the Flitcraft episode, not to mention Joe Gores’ excellent prequel. The stuff our dreams are made of as well as the dream our stuff is made of.”)
Mike Dime, by Barry Fantoni. (“[A] terrific period piece that is also a marvelous tribute to the best of Raymond Chandler. Mike Dime drives around town trying to solve a murder on the eve of the 1948 election. Here’s a sample of the gorgeous prose: ‘She was in her late forties and her figure was spreading faster than spilled milk. A lot of her was almost into a peg-top velveteen skirt with slits that were too long and a frothy organdy blouse that needed buttoning. Her face was the color of uncooked bread, her lips were large and puffy and painted with less care than drunks count change.’”)
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley. (“Hard-boiled and delightful to read, his private eye is sent searching for a legendary drinker, Trahearne: ‘I found myself chasing ghosts across gray mountain passes, then down green valleys riddled with the snows of late spring. I took to sleeping in the same motel beds he had, trying to dream him up, took to getting drunk in the same bars, hoping for a whiskey vision. They came all right, those bleak motel dreams, those whiskey visions, but they were out of my own drifting past. As for Trahearne, I didn’t have a clue. Once I even humped the same sad young whore in a trailer-complex out in the Nevada desert. She was a frail, skinny little bit out of Cincinnati, and she had brought her gold-mine out west, thinking perhaps it might assay better, but her shaft had collapsed, her veins petered out, and the tracks on her skin looked like they had been dug with a rusty pick.’”)
The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler. (“A fine article ran in The Armchair Detective suggesting that Chandler got both his style and the idea of the title from ‘the big sleep episode’ in Robert Penn Warren’s ... All the King’s Men. Wherever he got it, it is fine noir and a wealth of critical literature has grown up around it, not to mention such fine tributes as Paul Tremblay’s The Little Sleep and Mark Coggins’ The Big Wake-Up.”)
Motherless Brooklyn, by Jonathan Lethem. (“The smartest and best impaired private eye novel ever, with an amazingly endearing protagonist and a wealth of great sub-themes, plus a realistic conclusion that grows ever more satisfying as the years go by. It is a private eye novel that is bigger than the sum of its parts, both a period piece and a genuine work of timeless art.”)

Todd Mason of Radnor, Pennsylvania:

Trophies and Dead Things, by Marcia Muller
The Big Fix, by Roger Simon
The Enquiries of Doctor Esterhazy, by Avram Davidson
(“almost a novel”)
The Final Solution, by Michael Chabon

Alan Griffiths of London, England, United Kingdom:

The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
Alive & Kicking, by John Milne
A Good Year for the Roses, by Mark Timlin
The Guards, by Ken Bruen

Friday, May 21, 2010

The Big Four: Round Three

If you haven’t yet entered The Rap Sheet’s “Big Four” contest, please keep in mind that time is running out. Damn fast! The prizes being given away are four free copies of the new Mike Hammer detective novel, The Big Bang, written by Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins, plus four free copies of the latest original Hammer radio novel on CD, “The Little Death.” The deadline for entering is midnight tonight, Friday, May 21.

To be in the running for these prizes, you need to do only two things: (1) Make a list of your four favorite private eye novels and (2) send that list, along with your mailing address, to jpwrites@wordcuts.org. Please write “Mike Hammer Contest” in the subject line. The names of eight contest participants will be drawn at random, and those winners’ names announced tomorrow. Each winner will receive either a copy of The Big Bang (signed by co-author Collins) or a copy of “The Little Death.”

So, if you haven’t already entered this contest, do it now!

Over the last couple of days (see here and here), we’ve been posting many of the submissions to this contest. Below, we offer a third batch of those lists.

Guy Mills of San Jose, California:

When the Sacred Ginmill Closes, by Lawrence Block
Fire Lake, by Jonathan Valin
Toll Call, by Stephen Greenleaf
The Gentlemen’s Hour, by Don Winslow

Naomi Johnson of Columbus, Ohio:

The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
The Dramatist, by Ken Bruen
The Forgotten Man, by Robert Crais
Yellow Dog Party, by Earl Emerson

Bill Slankard of Arlington Heights, Illinois:

The Galton Case, by Ross MacDonald
Shackles, by Bill Pronzini
Some Buried Caesar, by Rex Stout
True Detective, by Max Allan Collins

Paul McMurray of Milton, Wisconsin:

The Lonely Silver Rain, by John D. MacDonald
Too Many Cooks, by Rex Stout
A Catskill Eagle, by Robert B. Parker
Looking for Rachel Wallace, by Robert B. Parker

Bill Crider of Alvin, Texas:

The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
The Chill, by Ross Macdonald
One Lonely Night, by Mickey Spillane

Steve Parvin of Yucaipa, California:

I Was Dora Suarez, by Derek Raymond
The Neon Rain, by James Lee Burke
An Easy Thing, by Paco Ignacio Taibo II
Red Harvest, by Dashiell Hammett

David Blount of Jackson, Mississippi:

When the Sacred Ginmill Closes, by Lawrence Block
Bleeders, by Bill Pronzini
Miami Blues, by Charles Willeford
Book Case, by Stephen Greenleaf
Retribution, by Stuart M. Kaminsky
A Smile on the Face of the Tiger, by Loren D. Estleman

David W. Madara of Mays Landing, New Jersey:

Red Harvest, by Dashiell Hammett
The Hound of the Baskervilles, by Arthur Conan Doyle
The Million-Dollar Wound, by Max Allan Collins
Stolen Away, by Max Allan Collins

Ward Howarth of Richmond, Virginia:

The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
The Dawn Patrol, by Don Winslow
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley
Red Harvest, by Dashiell Hammett

Brian O’Malley of Chicago, Illinois:

I, the Jury, by Mickey Spillane
Kiss Me, Deadly, by Mickey Spillane
Carnal Hours, by Max Allan Collins
Flying Blind, by Max Allan Collins

Karl-Erik Lindkvist of Västerås, Sweden:

The Goodbye Look, by Ross Macdonald
“F” is for Fugitive, by Sue Grafton
120, rue de la Gare, by Jacques Tardi and Léo Malet (“The best graphic novel interpretation of a hard-boiled detective novel ever! Keep your fingers crossed that Fantagraphics will publish a translated edition.”)
The Murderer Is a Fox, by Ellery Queen (“In Wrightsville, away from his home turf and the NYPD, Mr. Queen has to act as a real private eye to get to the bottom of a 12-year-old murder. Impossible to put down!”)

Gerald So of Old Westbury, New York:

The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
Blunt Darts, by Jeremiah Healy
Promised Land, by Robert B. Parker
No Colder Place, by S.J. Rozan

Randy Johnson of Eden, North Carolina:

Texas Wind, by James Reasoner (“My favorite of his.”)
Devil in a Blue Dress, by Walter Mosley (“My first Mosley.”)
I, the Jury, by Mickey Spillane (“My first private eye novel.”)
The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler (“My first Chandler.”)

Rafaela Castro of El Cerrito, California:

Albuquerque, by Rudolfo Anaya
Devil in a Blue Dress, by Walter Mosley
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
The Long Goodbye, by Raymond Chandler

Iasa Duffy of Hurst, Texas:

The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
Silentium! by Wolf Haas
Fer-de-Lance, by Rex Stout

Andrew Eichner of Chicago, Illinois:

Redbird, by Jo Nesbø
The Eighth Circle, by Stanley Ellin
A Long Walk Up the Water Slide, by Don Winslow
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley

John F. Frost of Brooklyn, New York:

The Goodbye Look, by Ross Macdonald
The Lime Pit, by Jonathan Valin
Beyond Blame, by Stephan Greenleaf
Prayers for Rain, by Dennis Lehane

“If I had to name a fifth, it would be the first mystery I ever read, which got me hooked: Puzzle for Fools, by Patrick Quentin.”

John Lau of Playa del Rey, California:

The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
The Long Goodbye, by Raymond Chandler
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley
Lost Light, by Michael Connelly

Dwight Brown of Austin, Texas:

The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
Pale Gray for Guilt, by ohn D. MacDonald
When the Sacred Ginmill Closes, by Lawrence Block
California Fire and Life, by Don Winslow

Keith Hart of Citrus Heights, California:

The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
The Thin Man, by Dashiell Hammett
Shackles, by Bill Pronzini
The Doorbell Rang, by Rex Stout

Paul Tenpenny of Milwaukee, Wisconsin:

Don’t Catch Me, by Richard Powell
Kiss Me, Deadly, by Mickey Spillane
Flying Blind, by Max Allan Collins
The Case of the Black-Eyed Blonde, by Erle Stanley Gardner

Michael Alatorre of Los Angeles, California:

L.A. Requiem, by Robert Crais
The Long Goodbye, by Raymond Chandler
Trigger City, by Sean Chercover
Devil in a Blue Dress, by Walter Mosley

Winifred Waite of Washington, England, United Kingdom:

The Remorseful Day, by Colin Dexter
A Sudden, Fearful Death, by Anne Perry
The Virgin in the Ice, by Ellis Peters
The Information Officer, by Mark Mills

Jon Butters of Chapel Hill, North Carolina:

The Dawn Patrol, by Don Winslow
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley
Booked to Die, by John Dunning
This Wicked World, by Richard Lange

Thursday, May 20, 2010

The Big Four: Round Two

You still have a day and half to enter The Rap Sheet’s latest and biggest-yet giveaway contest. The prizes up for grabs are four free copies of the new Mike Hammer detective novel, The Big Bang, written by Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins, plus four free copies of the latest original Hammer radio novel on CD, “The Little Death.”

To participate in this competition, all you need do is submit a list of your four favorite private-eye novels. The deadline for entering is midnight tomorrow, Friday, May 21. Complete contest details can be found here.

We already posted the first sampling of entries to this challenge. Today, we bring you another 17 lists of what this blog’s readers believe are the best P.I. novels ever written. There are occasional efforts in these “Big Four” rundowns to stretch (or even subvert) the definition of a private-eye story, but we are not going to be too strict about that. We’re just curious to know what books everybody has been enjoying. And perhaps these lists will inspire some people who’ve read less widely, to take chances on authors or works they have eschewed in the past.

Gary Thaden of Minneapolis, Minnesota:

The Hound of the Baskervilles, by Arthur Conan Doyle
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
Devil in a Blue Dress, by Walter Mosley
Fer-de-Lance, by Rex Stout

Ed Henley of Baltimore, Maryland:

The Chill, by Ross Macdonald
Red Harvest, by Dashiell Hammett
Little Scarlet, by Walter Mosley
Chasing Darkness, by Robert Crais

Barry Pateman of Albany, California:

The Ivory Grin, by Ross Macdonald
Hollywood and Levine, by Andrew Bergman
October Heat, by Gordon DeMarco
Devil in a Blue Dress, by Walter Mosley

Thomas Coady of Brooklyn, New York:

Eight Million Ways to Die, by Lawrence Block
The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
Sunset Express, by Robert Crais
The Lonely Silver Rain, by John D. MacDonald

David Gauthreaux of Westwego, Louisiana:

A Coffin for Dimitrios, by Eric Ambler
The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
A Corpse in the Koryo, by James Church
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, by Stieg Larsson

Pat Lee of Tustin, California:

The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
I, the Jury, by Mickey Spillane
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
Looking for Rachel Wallace, by Robert B. Parker

Graham Powell of Fort Worth, Texas:

The Long Goodbye, by Raymond Chandler
The Wrong Case, by James Crumley
Down by the River Where the Dead Men Go, by George Pelecanos
Gone, Baby, Gone, by Dennis Lehane

“Not a whole lot of happy endings there,” adds Powell. “Wonder what
that says about me?”

Gary Dobbs, Porth, South Wales, United Kingdom:

The Godwulf Manuscript, by Robert B. Parker
The Guards, by Ken Bruen
Farewell, My Lovely, by Raymond Chandler
Gone Fishing, by Walter Mosley

Terrill Lankford of Woodland Hills, California:

The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
The Long Goodbye, by Raymond Chandler
The Last Good Kiss, by James Crumley
Blackheart Highway, by Richard Barre

Rick Helms of Weddington, North Carolina:

The Long Goodbye, by Raymond Chandler
Early Autumn, by Robert B. Parker
Empty Ever After, by Reed Farrell Coleman
Winter and Night, by S.J. Rozan

Keith Raffel of Palo Alto, California:

The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
The Drowning Pool, by Ross Macdonald
Devil in a Blue Dress, by Walter Mosley
Red Cat, by Peter Spiegelman

Peter Guzzo of Powell, Ohio:

Free Fall, by Robert Crais
Big City, Bad Blood, by Sean Chercover
The Sins of the Father, by Lawrence Block
Promised Land, by Robert B. Parker

Harvey Dinerstein of Winthrop, Maine:

Scattershot, by Bill Pronzini (“actually any early ’80s Nameless books, but I picked this from 1982”)
Sugartown, by Loren D. Estleman
When the Sacred Ginmill Closes, by Lawrence Block
Hell to Pay, by George Pelecanos

William H. Hamilton of Honolulu, Hawaii:

The Godwulf Manuscript, by Robert B. Parker (“his first and
most memorable”)
Stalking the Angel, by Robert Crais
Contract Null and Void, by Joe Gores
Strawberry Sunday, by Stephen Greenleaf
The Mexican Tree Duck, by James Crumley

Paul Bishop of Camarillo, California:

Early Autumn, by Robert B. Parker
Whip Hand, by Dick Francis
Embrace the Wolf, by Benjamin M. Schutz
Just Another Day in Paradise, by A.E. Maxwell

John Stickney of Fairview Park, Ohio:

The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
Farewell, My Lovely, by Raymond Chandler
Come Die with Me, by William Campbell Gault
The Goodbye Look, by Ross Macdonald

David Komaniecki of Chicago, Illinois:

The Dark Fantastic, by Stanley Ellin
Angels Flight, by Michael Connolly
City of Bones, by Michael Connolly
Road to Perdition, by Max Allan Collins

So, do you think you’re up to the challenge of submitting your own “Big Four” list of favorite private-eye novels? Then enter The Rap Sheet’s new competition now--before it’s too late. What can you lose? And we’ve already told you what you could win!

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

The Big Four: Round One

As regular readers undoubtedly know, The Rap Sheet is in the midst of a weeklong book and CD giveaway competition, tied to the blog’s fourth anniversary celebration this coming Saturday. Being offered are four free copies of the new Mike Hammer detective novel, The Big Bang, written by Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins, plus four free copies of the latest original Hammer radio novel on CD, “The Little Death.”

Entry to this competition is earned by submitting a list of your four favorite private-eye novels. Full details can be found here. The deadline for entering is midnight on this coming Friday, May 21.

Want a sampling of the books already suggested? Below you will find 12 lists, submitted by Rap Sheet readers from all across North America and as far away as Australia. Some of their fiction choices are familiar; others are somewhat more obscure.

Joseph McCusker of Williamsville, New York:

The Lady in the Lake, by Raymond Chandler
The Eighth Circle, by Stanley Ellin
Interface, by Joe Gores
When the Sacred Ginmill Closes, by Lawrence Block

Shannon Chenoweth of Kissimmee, Florida:

The Big Sleep, by Raymond Chandler
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
I, the Jury, by Mickey Spillane
Cop Hater, by Ed McBain

Grant McKenzie of Gibsons, British Columbia, Canada:

Fletch, by Gregory Mcdonald
One Lonely Night, by Mickey Spillane
L.A. Requiem, by Robert Crais
The Magdalen Martyrs, by Ken Bruen

David Phillips of Newtown Square, Pennsylvania:

“A” Is for Alibi, by Sue Grafton (“maybe the most consistent
P.I. writer out there)
Dark Dream, by Robert Martin (“aside from Thomas Dewey’s P.I., [Martin’s Jim Bennett was] the most realistic P.I. in the’50s and greatly underappreciated”)
The Dead Are Discreet, by Arthur Lyons (“first P.I. book I read,
lead me to collect all those [P.I. Jacob Asch] titles”)
Falling Angel, by William Hjortsberg (“best surprise in a P.I. novel”)

Robert J. Randisi of Clarksville, Missouri:

The Doomsters, by Ross Macdonald
Act of Fear, by Michael Collins
Murder on the Wild Side, by Jeff Jacks
The Sins of the Father, by Lawrence Block

Frank Loose of Lawrenceville, Georgia:

The Zebra-Striped Hearse, by Ross Macdonald (“really, this is representing the entire [Lew Archer] series”)
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
Skakedown, by Roney Scott
Solomon’s Vineyard, by Jonathan Latimer

Scott Ford of Houston, Texas:

Darkness, Take My Hand, by Dennis LeHane
L.A. Requiem, by Robert Crais
A Tax in Blood, by Benjamin M. Schutz
No Good from a Corpse, by Leigh Brackett

David Foster of Cheltenham, Victoria, Australia:

The Other Side of Sorrow, by Peter Corris (“although I find it hard to pick just one Cliff Hardy title”)
Winter Kill, by Jon Cleary (“similarly, I find it hard to pick just one Scobie Malone title”)
The Kinky Friedman Crime Club, by Kinky Friedman (“I know this is a cheat; an omnibus. Stories include: ‘A Case of Lone Star,’ ‘Greenwich Killing Time,’ and ‘When the Cat’s Away’”)
The Girl Hunters, by Mickey Spillane (“and I thought it appropriate to include at least one Hammer tale”)

Jerry House of Lusby, Maryland:

The Killing Floor, by Arthur Lyons
Shackled, by Bill Pronzini
Ride the Lightning, by John Lutz
The Staked Goat, by Jeremiah Healy

David Stengele of Allentown, Pennsylvania:

Lay Her Among the Lilies, by James Hadley Chase
Sleeping Beauty, by Ross Macdonald
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
The Girl in the Plain Brown Wrapper, by John D. MacDonald

Patrick Foster of Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada:

Early Autumn, by Robert B. Parker
Stolen Away, by Max Allan Collins
The Lonely Silver Rain, by John D. MacDonald
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett

Sean O’Kane of Jersey City, New Jersey:

The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
The Green Ripper, by John D. MacDonald
A Quiet Flame, by Philip Kerr
A Fine and Private Place, by Ellery Queen

Do you think you can put together a better list? Then enter our competition yourself. We’re always interested in more reading suggestions. And we love to give away free stuff!

Monday, May 17, 2010

“Big” and “Little” Prizes -- Enter Now!

Astounding as it seems, this coming Saturday, May 22, will mark the official fourth anniversary of The Rap Sheet’s introduction to the blogosphere. As part of the celebration, we’re going to give away four free copies of the new Mike Hammer novel, The Big Bang, written by
Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins, plus four free copies of the latest original Hammer radio novel on CD, “The Little Death.” That means eight lucky winners in all.

Oh, and did we happen to mention that these prizes will be free?

To enter the competition, you need to do only two things: (1) Make a list of your four favorite private eye novels--hard-boiled or not--and (2) send that list, along with your mailing address, to jpwrites@wordcuts.org. Please write “Mike Hammer Contest” in the subject line. Entries will be accepted between now and midnight on this coming Friday, May 21. The names of eight contest participants will then be drawn at random, and those winners’ names announced on Saturday. Each winner will receive either a copy of The Big Bang (signed by co-author Collins) or a copy of “The Little Death.”

Over the next few days, we’ll post in The Rap Sheet a selection of the lists of favorite private eye novels being submitted by readers.

As a way to kick things off, we asked Max Allan Collins to offer his own “Big Four” rundown of preferred P.I. fiction. His response:
The Maltese Falcon, by Dashiell Hammett
Farewell, My Lovely, by Raymond Chandler
One Lonely Night, by Mickey Spillane
The Golden Spiders, by Rex Stout

This list represents my four favorite private eye authors. If this list were six books long, I would add representative titles by my next two favorites--Erle Stanley Gardner (The Case of the Fiery Fingers) and Agatha Christie (The Hollow).
Can you do better than Collins? Put on your thinking cap, review your bookshelves, and then send in your contest entries. Remember, you have to e-mail your list by this coming Friday.