Showing posts with label Jeffery Deaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeffery Deaver. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Bullet Points: Media Medley Edition

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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



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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Monday, January 17, 2011

Entitled Bond

While there’s been no word yet on a title choice for the next James Bond film, we do finally know the name of Jeffery Deaver’s “Project X,” his forthcoming James Bond novel for Simon & Schuster: Carte Blanche.

The Bond-oriented Web site MI6 reports that “Carte Blanche is due to be published by Hodder and Stoughton in the UK, a few days before [author Ian] Fleming’s birthday, on 26th May 2011. It has been commissioned by Ian Fleming Publications Ltd.” Because part of the action in Deaver’s novel will take place in the United Arab Emirates city of Dubai, the announcement of its title was made there earlier today.

* * *

And the good news just keeps on coming.

In its own piece about Carte Blanche, BBC News adds that Anthony Horowitz, creator and writer of the justly acclaimed World War II-era TV mystery series, Foyle’s War, “has been chosen by the Conan Doyle Estate to write a new full-length Sherlock Holmes novel. ... The title and content of the book, which will be published in September, have not been revealed.” The BBC says this is “the first time the estate has given its seal of approval for a new Holmes work.”

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

Digitizing 007

Amid all the talk about e-book publishing taking over from paper, and with some authors having turned evangelical on this topic, I was interested to see that Ian Fleming Publications has finally decided to publish the James Bond catalogue in electronic form, even bypassing the Penguin Group, the novels’ longtime English-language publisher.

As Britain’s Telegraph reports today:
The digital versions of the 007 books will be published by Ian Fleming Publications, which administers the rights to the Bond books. The 14 titles, including Dr. No, Moonraker, and Diamonds Are Forever, will launch on November 4, and will be made available via online e-booksellers such as Amazon.co.uk and Waterstone.com.

The deal has come about because Penguin did not own the digital rights to the Bond novels--a concept that was never considered when Ian Fleming was writing.

There are many authors still working that have not signed away the digital rights to their books, allowing them to cut out their traditional publisher if they chose to. Agents said they had grown increasingly irritated by the low royalty rates offered by publishers for digital rights.

Philip Jones, the deputy editor of
The Bookseller, the industry publication, said: “This has big implications for the established publishing houses, which are already under threat from Internet retailers, who are pricing very aggressively.

“They could be missing out on millions of pounds worth of revenue in the future because they never signed up the digital rights to their authors. There are also issues around new books, with publishers insistent that digital rights have to be included as part of any deal, otherwise they could end up paying for all the marketing, while the upstart owner of the digital rights reaps the benefits.”
Commanderbond.net has its own take on this subject here.

Meanwhile, Jeffery Deaver--who has been hired to produce the next James Bond novel--talks about that project with USA Today:
The family-owned Fleming business took notice when Deaver won the UK’s Crime Writers’ Association’s coveted Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award for Garden of Beasts (2004), a thriller about an American assassin sent to Berlin during the run-up to Hitler’s rise to power.

In his acceptance speech, Deaver talked about Fleming’s influence on his work.

Deaver’s initiation into the Bond family--more than 100 million 007 novels have sold worldwide--could significantly raise his profile.

Other novelists have written Bond novels since Fleming’s death in 1964--including Kingsley Amis, John Gardner and, most recently, Sebastian Faulks (his 2008 book,
Devil May Care, reached No. 38 on USA Today’s best-seller list)--but they all took place in the original era. Deaver is taking a new approach.

“There’s no more Cold War to fight,” says Deaver, so his new Bond, of the Fleming estate, will fight “post-9/11 evil.”

“I want to stay true to the original James Bond, who many people don’t know much about,” he says, referring to the secret agent Fleming portrayed in 14 novels, and not the movie Bond. “People know Daniel Craig, they know Pierce Brosnan, they know Roger Moore and Sean Connery, all of whom brought a great deal to the stories of 007. But the original Bond was a very dark, edgy character.”

Otto Penzler, proprietor of The Mysterious Bookshop in New York, says Deaver’s writing style can only enhance the Bond franchise.

“The main thing he can bring is a greater sense of suspense to the books,” Penzler says. “A lot of the books and movies are becoming basically chase plots, and Jeff really has the ability to create suspense better than almost any writer working today.”

Explaining why Deaver was tapped for the latest Bond adventure, Fleming’s niece Kate Grimond says: “He has a great understanding and appreciation of Fleming’s original creation. We feel sure that he will produce an exciting page-turning 21st-century Bond mission--and a Bond for the present day.”
I am delighted that it was Garden of Beasts, my favorite Deaver novel, that got the Bond folk interested in his continuing Fleming’s series.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

In Bond He Trusts

Well, this is a surprise. From The New York Times:
The next James Bond book will be written by Jeffery Deaver, the best-selling thriller writer, Simon & Schuster announced on Thursday. The novel, with the working title “Project X,” is expected to be set in the present day and take Bond to at least three “exotic locations around the globe.” It is scheduled for publication in May 2011. Mr. Deaver, the author of “The Bone Collector” and “Garden of Beasts,” said in a statement that he was thrilled to be asked by representatives of the Ian Fleming estate to write the book. “The novel will maintain the persona of James Bond as Fleming created him and the unique tone the author brought to his books, while incorporating my own literary trademarks: detailed research, fast pacing and surprise twists.” The book will be published by Hodder & Stoughton in Britain and Simon & Schuster in the United States.
(Hat tip to The HMSS Weblog.)

READ MORE:Bond, James Bond, Comes Back for More in New Novel,” by Jennifer Quinn (Associated Press).

Saturday, August 16, 2008

The Stars Come Out at Harrogate, Part IV

(Editor’s note: This is the latest installment of British correspondent Ali Karim’s report from the recent Harrogate Crime Writing Festival. Previous parts can be read here.)

After a fitful night’s sleep, plagued by dreams about conspiracy theories, Alexander and I roused ourselves in the morning, breakfasted like kings, and then headed back to the Crown Hotel to see American novelist Jeffery Deaver speak. It turned out to be one of the highlights of this year’s Harrogate festival.

Even at 9 a.m., the room in which Deaver (left) spoke offered standing room only. He began with a hilarious “diary of my life as a writer” monologue. Apart from being a sharp thriller novelist, Deaver can be very droll, with a dry and ironic sense of humor. I recall Left Coast Crime in Bristol, during which Deaver read out a long poem he’d composed, titled “The Death of Reading,” about the naysayers in publishing who always think that the sky is falling in. And then at last summer’s ThrillerFest, he sang a song while accompanying himself on a guitar. Deaver is a showman, and a very talented performer--not the sort of person you’d expect to find taking on a role in one of his tense thrillers. He was no less engaging at Harrogate.

At the end of his presentation, I managed to ask him a question about the opening chapter of his dazzling 2004 historical thriller, Garden of Beasts, which is sort of my in-joke with Deaver. “And what made me think I’d be asked about that novel?” he responded, laughing as he recognized my voice, even though I was seated back in the shadows. Then he went on to talk at some length to the audience in general about why he’d loved writing Garden of Beasts and why, despite critical acclaim and a Dagger Award win, it didn’t sell all that well in the United States. As is our tradition, Alex and I left the room shortly before Deaver had finished speaking, so we could be at the front of the queue waiting for him to sign our books. By the time he arrived in the signing room, the queue stretched out like a twisting motorway, and even Deaver appeared shocked by its length. He thanked me for my tireless promotion of Garden of Beasts and signed a copy of the book for my son. Interestingly, I noticed later that all the copies of Garden of Beasts had sold out of the festival’s book room, so maybe it’s worth mentioning that work at events such as this one. I envy people, like Alex, who have the chance to read it for the first time.

After the Deaver session, we stopped for a quick coffee and were amused to see authors Mark Billingham and Peter Guttridge obsessing over their iPhones in the bar. It appears that both of them have fallen in love with those gleaming gadgets. I managed to pull Billingham away from his mini-screen long enough to chat about his latest work and first standalone book, In the Dark, which I am looking forward to reading. (For a taste of what it offers, here’s the opening chapter.) Billingham, incidentally, is going to serve as toastmaster at Bouchercon in Baltimore this fall. Being a stand-up comic in addition to an excellent novelist, his presence alone ought to be worth the price of admission. As I was talking with Billingham, Alex rooted about in my bag for a signable proof copy of In the Dark. Watching, the author smiled and said to me, “Poor old Alex, you’ve just brought him as your donkey-boy to help cart your books around.” Alex laughed, but he knew that there was a grain of truth in Billingham’s jibe. Mind you, Alex was well paid for his efforts, and he was spending the money wisely on books. “Like father like son,” Billingham remarked, as he saw the size of Alex’s to-be-signed stack.

From there, it was panel time again. We went to watch Caroline Carver (aka C.J. Carver) moderate a discussion about location use in fiction writing, her fellow panelists being Jeff Abbott, Frank Schätzing, Tom Rob Smith, and Meg Gardiner. This turned out to be an engaging presentation, as location so often plays a crucial role in thriller fiction. Carver, being a globetrotter and setting her novels (including Gone Without Trace) in exotic spots, was the perfect choice as moderator. German novelist Schätzing (who I first met at London’s Goethe Institute in 2004, when he launched his popular eco-thriller, The Swarm) related the story of one of his readers who, during a tsunami in Southeast Asia, had warned beach bathers to flee a second, larger, and more destructive wave--a phenomenon he’d only just heard about in The Swarm. And when it came his turn to speak, Smith emphasized the importance of writers actually visiting the places in which they intend to set their fiction. It seems he had traveled to Russia well before starting work on his Ian Fleming Dagger-awarded novel, Child 44.

After this session, I managed to nab a choice few minutes with the Simon & Schuster team of Joe Pickering and Kate Lyall-Grant, together with their now Man Booker Prize-nominated author, Tom Rob Smith. They were all delighted that I loved Child 44 so much, but Smith was also still amused by one question I’d asked him when I interviewed him for The Rap Sheet some months ago:
Ali Karim: Sometimes the most despicable traits of villains are not always the most visceral. I found the scene in which Vasili and his men ransack Leo Demidov’s apartment, while Leo watches Vasili rummage through Raisa’s underwear, sniffing the contents, probably the most disturbing and repellent part of the novel. Do you agree?

Tom Rob Smith: Yes, that is horrible! You’re right, though: paradoxically, depictions of violence can often become less disturbing the more graphic it becomes.
Jokingly, Smith asked if I had a fetish about “underwear,” which incited laughs all around. But he agreed that the act of sniffing undergarments was rather disturbing, as it depicted the “badness” in his villain so effectively.

From there, Alex and I attended a cocktail party (again in the Thackery Suite) hosted by UK television channel ITV3. Seems it’s launching yet another award for crime and thriller fiction. Emma Tennant, controller of ITV3, took up the microphone and informed her audience that presentation of these Crime Thriller Awards will be preceded by a jam-packed ITV3 broadcast schedule--six weeks of the greatest TV crime dramas, with specially commissioned documentaries profiling the six finest British crime writers working today: Colin Dexter, Ian Rankin, P.D. James, Lynda La Plante, Val McDermid, and Ruth Rendell. Viewers of ITV3 will then be invited to vote for the author who’s work they think is the best. (Note that the work of all six has been adapted for television.) Each of those documentaries will look back at how their subjects created their fictional detectives, and see how their success is reflected in their present lifestyles. Other crime fictionists, including Mark Billingham, Peter James, Peter Robinson, Martina Cole, Jeffery Archer and Giles Brandreth, will also be featured, as will real-life detectives, pathologists, and criminals. The preliminaries over, we were treated to a 10-minute collection of video highlights from the documentaries to come. Unfortunately, the volume was turned up to maximum. We were lucky to survive with our eardrums intact.

We didn’t really have too much time to stay around and mingle with the TV folk, before we darted off to panel discussion called “A Dirty Job But Someone’s Got to Do It.” Moderated with erudition by our dining companion of the evening before, Quintin Jardine, the session was an opportunity to learn more about a rather eclectic and international bunch of writers: Jo Nesbø from Norway, Thomas H. Cook from the States, Barbara Nadel from the UK (though she sets a great deal of her work in Turkey), and my friend Roger Jon Ellory (who, though he’s British, sets his work in America).

The discussion was all over the map. Cook, a tremendous writer of mystery novels, explained how he got into print by sheer luck, as one of his early manuscripts was picked up by a friend ... who showed it to a publisher buddy ... who got him on the first rung of the ladder. He said, dryly, that he’s remained there ever since. To me, Cook’s work (especially Red Leaves) is outstanding; I can never understand why Cook (shown at right with Simon Kernick) is not a mega-seller. Meanwhile, Ellory explained that he wrote 20-odd novels before his first was accepted for publication--Candlemoth, which was a January Magazine favorite in 2003. Ellory laughed when he recalled how naïve he was before being signed by Jon Wood of Orion Publishing--a story he detailed to me several years ago. And listening to Jo Nesbø was a particular treat, as I have followed the work of this musician-journalist turned full-time writer ever since it was first translated into English. (His latest is the fourth in the Harry Hole series, Nemesis.)

Afterward, Alex and I sped to the signing room with a huge hold-all of books. I was especially pleased to have Thomas H. Cook signing my collection of his work. As he did so, I chatted on about how I’d first discovered Red Leaves (through Larry Gandle of Deadly Pleasures magazine), how my enthusiasm for that novel had brought my reviewing work to the attention of publishing house Quercus (and led Quercus to send me an early copy of Stieg Larsson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo), and how disappointed I was that Red Leaves had not won the Crime Writers’ Association’s Duncan Lawrie Dagger Award in 2006. It was just then that I realized British author Ann Cleeves was sitting within easy earshot. “Bollucks,” I whispered to Cook, because it was Cleeves’ novel Raven Black that had defeated Red Leaves for the Dagger that year.

It’s lucky that I know Ann Cleeves well. She just smiled graciously and didn’t make a big deal of my faux pas. I proceeded to backtrack a little, saying that the Duncan Lawrie Dagger shortlist in 2006 had been a particularly strong one, and Cook concurred. I should note here that I’ve enjoyed Cleeves’ work greatly over the years, and thought she did an excellent interview with Karin Fossum at CrimeFest a couple of months ago. But I find Cook’s work very special. His writing is poetic, chilling, and alters my way of thinking. To me, Thomas H. Cook is something of a god amongst authors, and Red Leaves was, without question, my favorite novel of 2006.

Quickly gathering up my books and rejoining Alex, I realized that it was time for me to meet with Robert Crais. Orion Publishing’s wonderful Angela McMahon had kindly arranged that get-together for me, and I didn’t want to be late, as upsetting the creator of Joe Pike would not be a healthy thing to do.

(Part V can be found here.)

READ MORE:
Is Jo Nesbø Europe’s Top Crime Writer?” by Uriah Robinson (Crime Scraps).