Thursday, October 2, 2008

Author, Author

 

As part of a Bouchercon and Baltimore Book Festival preview of sorts, The Baltimore Sun profiled Walter Mosely, who ended the exploits of Los Angeles-based PI Easy Rawlins in the novel Blond Faith last year. "I think I've done enough," he said. "My writing career is not about Easy Rawlins. It's about Walter Mosley." Although he's not abandoning crime fiction, he's branching out a bit more, including one project involving a series of five science-fiction novellas.

Otto Penzler profiled Stuart Kaminsky, back with his 15h Inspector Porfiry Petrovich Rostnikov novel, People Who Walk in Darkness. Penzler writes that Kaminsky has maintained a consistently high level of professional crime fiction throughout a career that has spanned more than three decades, but feels there is little introspection or internal conflict on the part of Mr. Kaminsky's characters, a key element (in Penzler's opinion) that prevents them from being in the first rank of literary creations. Apparently, this is just fine with the author; Kaminsky made it clear in an autobiographical essay once that his goal is to be "a storyteller who transports his reader into the tale." He added, "if there is Meaning in my tales ... then let it be absorbed rather than academized."

An LA Times article on British mystery writer Michael Dibdin (who unfortunately died last year, a few days after his 60th birthday) points out that, although Dibdin's novels featuring Italian police detective Aurelio Zen have been dismissed by detractors as "tourist noir," Zen experiences Italy in almost the opposite way that Anglo vacationers encounter bella Italia. Dibdin had numerous fans, including writers Ruth Rendell and Ian Rankin, and also reviewer Tom Nolan who said "He tried to make every book different...There's one modeled on a Mozart opera. That's the kind of thing really inventive people do when they write a series. His books were in no way ordinary."

Elmore Leonard is the subject of a Times Online profile who called him no less than the "Dickens of Detroit" and America's greatest living crime novelist. In an interview that also included son Peter (with his own recently-published crime fiction novel Quiver), Leonard Sr. says "If you've got characters that you like, and you can make them talk, then it's in their hands. They'll say something that surprises you."

According to an article by Entertainment Weekly, Dennis Lehane is done with mysteries, or at least whodunits. "I'd say it's highly unlikely that I'll ever write another one," He said, even though he's the author of five Patrick Kenzie detective mysteries (including Gone Baby Gone, made into a movie by Ben Affleck). "I was never comfortable with them anyway. I'd be writing these friggin' whodunits and I could care less. I wanna tell everybody on page 2, he killed so-and-so, he done it! If you look at my books in that regard -- and I'll be 100 percent honest about my flaws -- you can see how I was whipping out the kitchen sink just to obscure s---, like the identity of the serial killer or whatever, and that's why the books got so labyrinthian in the last 100 pages."

Mystery Melange Lite

 

Melange October is Mystery Month in Rancho Cucamonga. Not only is the community participating in the Big Read program, having selected The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett, but they have other events scheduled to celebrate. Anne Perry is featured this Friday, October 3 in a kickoff event, and one week later on Friday, October 10 there will be a special author panel moderated by Denise Hamilton, author of the Eve Diamond crime novels.

Mark Tavani, a Senior Editor with Ballantine Books, was interviewed on Crime Fiction Dossier recently. He wasn't terribly encouraging, noting the difficulties of midlist author to survive and the Hollywood-style mentality in the publishing industry, but there are gems of wisdom, too. He says, "I guess the most important thing an author can do is, in the beginning of the process, to have a few very frank conversations with your agent and your editor. From those conversations, amass all of the realistic information you can, read between the lines, develop accurate expectations, ask for what you think you can get, let the rest go, and move forward full speed ahead."

Author Clyde Ford is embracing technology is a new fashion to promote his latest murder mystery set in the San Juan Islands and Inside Passage. The former IBM systems engineer built a Web-based application centered on the programs OnScene, Microsoft Virtual Earth and Google Earth, allowing readers to virtually visit the places in the story. Readers "virtually" fly to locations such as Lummi Island near Bellingham, and Eagle Harbor, and can explore further with background on local history and geography, live webcam views and readings by the author and other people.

In a move that could one day affect e-book publishing, record labels, music publishers, songwriters and online music services reached an agreement on how to compensate music creators for online distribution of their content. The agreement is designed to settle how the industry calculates royalty rates for limited downloads and music that is streamed online, including when it is provided by subscription and advertising-supported services. Fans using on-demand music streaming can select the songs they want to hear but do not keep a permanent copy, and providers of such services will pay a royalty of 10.5 percent of revenue after other royalties are calculated.

There are scads of murder-mystery dinner parties, theaters and fundraisers all around the globe each year, but here's a "novel" take: members of the Members of Johnstown, Pennsylvania, Harley Owners Group are holding their second annual Ride-to-Read Murder Mystery Ride to benefit the One Book, One Community reading program. The exact route is kept a mystery and riders receive clues to help them guess the identity of the make-believe murderer at the first stop and continuing at designated stops thereafter.

Nintendo just released a new interactive game that falls on the heels of other popular crime-oriented game titles. In "Unsolved Crimes," set in a stylized 1970s New York, the user plays the role of a young rookie detective in the Homicide division who, along with a partner, must solve the mysterious kidnapping of aspiring model Betsy Blake.