Friday, April 17, 2009

The Venetian Judgment

 

Venetian David Stone is the cover name for a man born into a military family with a history of combat service "going back to Waterloo." He's also a retired military officer himself who has worked with federal intelligence agencies and state-level law enforcement units in North America, Central America, and Southeast Asia. (His publisher, Penguin, has an interview with the author on their site, one of the few you'll find available).

Stone's first thriller, The Echelon Vendetta, introduced the character of Micah Dalton, a CIA "cleaner," the guy who erases a mess after something goes wrong in the field. In Venetian Judgment, Stone's and Dalton's third outing, the questionably sane Dalton (in the first book, he's visited by the ghost of a dead colleague with whom he holds long conversations), just about goes over the deep end when he starts assassinating members of the Serbian gang who shot his lover, in what is basically a suicide run.

But thanks to a mysterious jade box containing a stainless steel glasscutter which arrives at his villa, Dalton instead becomes involved in the search for a high-level traitor in the CIA thought to be responsible for the murder of elderly Mildred Durant, an adviser to an NSA decryption team known as the Glass Cutters. Dalton learns that not only did Durant work on the Venona Project which involved interception of Soviet cable traffic during the cold war, it appears Stalin had a source close to Roosevelt who was never exposed.

The hunt for answers leads Durant and his associate, a half-America, half-English aristocrat named Mandy Pownall, into airborne firefights above the Sea of Marmora, a sea chase up the Straits of the Bosphorus, and even to a violent confrontation in the mangrove swamps that line Florida’s Emerald Coast as they attempt to stop a group of spies before they paralyze America's most critical intelligence operations.

Stone's books are not for the squeamish, mixing in often explicit violence (not as much in Venetian Judgment as was the case with Echelon Vendetta), but the intricately-plotted spy thrillers with layers of insider details take readers on a Bondian thrill-ride around the world in a style some have compared to Robert Ludlum, with its similar themes of one crusading man up against a host of conspiracy theories.

Since Stone zealously maintains his cover, you'll never see him at booksignings or conferences. The best way to get a signed copy of his books is via VJ Books.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Mystery Melange for Middle o' the Week

 

Melange Mike Ripley of Shots Magazine reported recently award-winning author Kate Atkinson confirmed she's currently working on her fourth Jackson Brodie crime novel, the follow-up to When Will There Be Good News?, and that she is also planning a fifth crime novel, "an homage to Agatha Christie" with a cast of characters trapped in a country house hotel.

Judith Freeman of the LA Times wrote about a letter she received which led to a friendship with Dorothy Fisher, once Raymond Chandler's secretary, and one of the few people still alive who knew the author personally. She described Chandler as an exceptionally kind and thoughtful man, who, despite accounts of previous affairs with secretaries, treated her with respect, perhaps because she was only 17 when she began working for him.

Speaking of Chandler, the Baltimore Sun's Read Street blog summarized some of the offerings in the recent game "Write Like Raymond Chandler," with commenters providing even more.

Bookgasm and Harper Collins are featuring a contest for an Amazon Kindle 2 and a copy of Andrew Gross's new thriller Don't Look Twice, but hurry -- the deadline is May 1st.

In case you missed it, the Wall Street Journal carried an essay by Alexander McCall Smith on the intense personal relationships readers form with characters and how that can complicate the very real lives of authors.

Jill Paton Walsh’s third Lord Peter Wimsey novel, The Attenbury Emeralds is scheduled for publication in Fall 2010. The Dorothy Sayers Estate’s trustees asked Paton Walsh to complete an unfinished Sayers' story, Thrones, Dominations, which was published in 1998 and was successful enough to be followed by a second and now the third installment.

Elizabeth Foxwell reported on her blog the Bunburyist that 007 beat The Saint at auction:  the Leslie Charteris books featuring Simon Templar, aka The Saint, went unsold, whereas a few first-edition Ian Fleming titles fared better.

The Tony Hillerman novel contest announced rules for next year's competition, which is awarded to a first mystery novel set in the Southwest. Unfortunately, they are canceling the short story contest they've held for the past several years.

Books Expo America announced the assignments for author signings in both the booth and floor signing areas, with crime fiction notables including Brad Meltzer, JT Ellison, Rick Mofina, MJ Rose, Karin Slaughter, and Lee Child.

Irish eyes are smiling right now, at least among fans of Irish crime fiction. Declan Burke has a note about readings in Belfast with Brian McGilloway and Declan Hughes tomorrow evening and with Gene Kerrigan and Colin Bateman in Dublin on the 24th. Burke also offers his thoughts on the new dedicated award to crime fiction as part of the Irish Book Awards.  And the Irish times liked the "dark entertaining" new thriller by Irish author Gene Kerrigan, Dark Times in the City.

Oregon's Friends of Mystery announced the Spotted Owl Award which is given each year to the best mystery books written by authors from Alaska, Washington, Oregon, Idaho or the Province of British Columbia. There were 11 finalists this year, due to a tie, with the nod doing to Executive Privilege by Phillip Margolin.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

A Book Tour With Heart

 

Languageofbees Laurie R. King is promoting the release of her latest novel The Language of Bees (from the series featuring Mary Russell, amateur sleuth and wife of Sherlock Holmes) in a very charitable way. As part of her Fifteen Weeks of Bees tour, she's set up events that help indie booksellers, libraries, and an organization working with poverty worldwide:

  • Readers who buy a copy of The Language of Bees from an independent bookseller and send along the receipt will be entered into a drawing for an original limited edition letterpress broadside (value $125) of her illustrated story "A Venomous Death." 
  • During National Library Week, library patrons can submit "love letters" about their local public libraries. The winning writer will receive a copy of the book and their library wins a complete set of hardback Russel/Holmes novels, beginning with The Beekeeper's Apprentice. There will be also be a drawing this week from a list of libraries on the author's web site.
  • The organization working with poverty worldwide is Heifer International, which sends beehives to poor communities worldwide. Those who donate two or more hives will get an exclusive Heifer booklet on beekeeping by Sherlock Holmes and be entered into a drawing to name a character in the next Russell/Holmes novel.

For more information on these events and the rest of her interesting and creative tour, check out her author site link.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

A Book Recap-ture

 

Festival-of-books-2009_lg In case you were monetarily-challenged like moi and unable to participate in the LA Times Festival of Books, here's a Recap of the Recaps, to keep you in the loop:

The Rap Sheet featured a three-part report on the "Fest of the West" starting with Part I from the pre-festival Mystery Bookstore party hosted by the Mystery Writers of America and followed by Part II looking at panels and signings on the first day and Part III's writeup of the Sunday festivities.

Jeri Westerson also had a two-part review from an author's perspective, located here and here.

Sarah Weinman was busy as a moderator but managed to pass along some thoughts.

GalleyCat had a backstage pass and reported on the book award winners, and Make Mine Mystery blog's Anne Carter participated in the successful Sisters in Crime booth.

Obsessions of a Pop Culture Nerd had a two-part recounting of the "Cops & Crooks in California" panel with Don Winslow, T. Jefferson Parker, Joseph Wambaugh, and Robert Crais as moderator, listed here and here.

If you're a Tweeple, you can check out Twitter's #latimesfob of on-site Tweets.

Not surprisingly, the LA Times was also there. The main page is here, but since it's almost book-length in its coverage, if you want to jump to the crime-fiction highlights, check out the following:

  • James Ellroy's weird, wild, and definitely not boring speech
  • Historical crime fiction authors Tom Epperson, Denise Hamilton and Nina Revoyr with Sarah Weinman moderating discussing "Cold Cases"
  • Don't want to leave some four-legged (and one two-legged) mystery fans.

Lords of Corruption

 

Lordsofcorruption I usually cringe when I hear "ripped from the headlines" applied to a book since it tends to have more of a cheesy marketing stamp than anything substantive. But Kyle Mills's latest standalone thriller Lords of Corruption could indeed have stepped right out of the newspapers, as the almost-daily turmoil we see in African countries like Somalia and Sudan can attest. The violent Africa of Mills's world view is a far different cry from the gentle Botswana of Alexander McCall Smith, rife as it is with tribal battles and government corruption.

Mills has put together a compelling story of a young down-on-his luck American named Josh Hagarty who is recruited by a charitable organization ostensibly to work on agricultural projects in the heart of Africa — only the projects are a front for something not at all charitable, his guide Gideon turns out to be a thug with ties to the genocidal dictator of the country, and Josh discovers too late his predecessor was found dismembered in the jungle.

There are a few cliches in the cast of characters, including a beautiful blond heroine who helps Josh in his fight to stay alive and a psychotic Eastern European, but both the interactions of the characters and the mixture of chaos and resigned acceptance among the locals are handled well, and, dare I say it:  it's a genuine page turner.

In a Q&A with BookReporter, Mills comments on the fact he gained first-hand experience from the winters he spends in Cape Town, South Africa, and adds:

"I originally went there for research and became convinced that Africa was the ideal environment for crime. In much of the continent, there’s no one watching the store at all. And some of the governments are so corrupt, they would be happy to cooperate as long as they got a cut. It’s a far cry from the U.S. or Europe where organized criminals are always having to look over their shoulders."

Lest you think the book and/or plot are racist, that's not the case at all. Mills brings in elements of how the "white" world has interfered in African affairs to an extent that has caused more problems than it has solved (if indeed any have been solved).

Monday, April 6, 2009

Media Murder

 

Moviereel MOVIES

The Coen Brothers' adaption of The Yiddish Policemen's Union, based on the Michael Chabon novel, will be postponed so they can concentrate first on their remake of the western True Grit.

Matthew McConaughey will play criminal defense attorney Mickey Haller in the film adaptation of Michael Connelly's bestselling novel, The Lincoln Lawyer.  Lakeshore Entertainment "snapped up bigscreen rights to the tome six months before Lincoln Lawyer hit shelves in what was dubbed a seven-figure deal."

Barry Sonnenfeld will direct The Spellman Files, the Paramount Pictures adaptation of Lisa Lutz's novel.

The British Film Institute is marking the centenary of the birth of Albert "Cubby" Broccoli with a season of his pre-James Bond films and a series of Bond-related masterclasses.

Ericson Core (Invincible) has been signed to direct the crime thriller Murder, Inc, written by Brian Kistle. The story centers on two estranged brothers whose parents were brutally murdered when they were young. One becomes an FBI agent who decides to get his long-lost brother out of jail to take out the man who killed their parents.

TV

A CBS Paramount crew caused a little bit of excitement in D.C. filming the pilot for Washington Field, which follows the FBI's Washington field office and a team of special agents who work on critical cases. Some officials were concerned special effects involving a small "explosion" might spook the locals.

The Montreal Gazette took a look at pilot shows currently in production for U.S. networks (many of which film in Canada). They include

  • The spinoff from NCIS (itself a spinoff from JAG)
  • Another show about military investigations from the same producers of The Unit, this one an ensemble drama focusing on a team of federal prosecutors in the U.S. Justice Dept
  • Brothers & Detectives from Daniel Cerone, the head writer and co-producer of Dexter, about a failed detective who discovers his 11-year-old brother is not only a whiz at solving puzzles - he can solve crimes, too
  • Lost & Found, from Law & Order-creator Dick Wolf, starring Katee Sackhoff (Battlestar Galactica) as a police detective who runs afoul of her superiors and is banished to the basement as punishment, where she uncovers evidence of criminal wrongdoing.


The New York Times reported that many in the TV industry are beginning to regret putting shows on the Web for free. One sign of retrenchment by the broadcasters -- CBS no longer streams its hit show The Mentalist.

ET Online has a sneak peek of the upcoming Harpers Island, which has a large cast, seeing as how has each week during the 13-week run of the show at least one person gets murdered.

ITV has commissioned a sequel to Lynda La Plante’s Above Suspicion, which will once again star Kelly Reilly and Ciaran Hinds.  Above Suspicion: The Red Dahlia will be a three-part drama based on La Plante’s novel of the same name, which focuses on detective Anna Travis.

Burn Notice, the top-rated original series on basic cable in the first quarter, led USA Network to top the basic cable ratings overall.

THEATER

Playhouse in the Park's 50th anniversary season will include best-selling novelist Walter Mosley's first play, Smell of the Kill.

Crime fiction was part of a double bill of new opera which premiered recently by Music Theatre Wales in Cardiff. The work is the creation of composer Huw Watkins and librettist David Harsen (who writes crime novels under a pseudonym). "People like crime novels and crime on the television so I don’t see why it shouldn’t work," said Watkins. "With opera you get extreme emotions. And if you’re not used to opera this is a good way to get started as the piece is just 30 minutes long."

WEB/RADIO

The most recent Crimwav Podcast was with Allan Guthrie, a Scottish writer of crime fiction, shortlisted for the CWA Debut Dagger and winner of the 2007 Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Novel Of The Year.

The BBC Woman's Hour Drama has been featuring a dramatization of Daunt and Dervish, an adventure for Guy Meredith's female private eyes, set in 1956.

Elizabeth Foxwell's Bunburyist blog pointed out several recent interviews on CBC Radio, including Cuban expatriate Jose Latour talking about his thriller Crime of Fashion, Gail Bowen discussing her new novel The Brutal Heart, and a Peter Robinson Q&A.

The March 28 edition of NPR's Weekend Edition featured an interview with thriller author Jeffrey Archer (Paths of Glory).

Two bestselling authors with extensive media experience have joined forces to launch From Cover to Cover, a literary talk show on Houston Radio Station, KPFT 90.1 FM, on April 22, 2009 from noon to 1 p.m.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Going for a Long Fall

 

Longfall Walter Mosley has had a "storied" career--his more than 20 books have been translated into 21 languages, his first published book, Devil in a Blue Dress, was made into a 1995 movie starring Denzel Washington, and he's received numerous awards, including a Grammy for liner notes for a Richard Pryor recording.

His three popular mid-to-late-20th century protagonists, hard-boiled black private detective Easy Rawlins, army veteran Fearless Jones, and ex-con/street philosopher Socrates Fortlow, have won him legions of fans and critical acclaim. But Mosley, not one to rest on his laurels, has added a third protagonist to the mix, contemporary New York P.I. Leonid McGill, in the just-released novel The Long Fall.

As Mosley says in this podcast:

"I created this new character because I'm talking about a completely different world. The world of Easy Rawlins and Fearless Jones is a world of monolithic racism where it is exactly the same everywhere, where American saw itself as one nation and one negative nation, a white nation and a non-white nation. And Leonid McGill lives in a world where that's no longer true, where all kinds of people blend together, respond to each other, for various reasons, very different reasons, and it's not as easy to tell who's your friend and who isn't, and it's not as easy to tell what people are thinking about."


In McGill, Mosley has created another complex character, a man trapped in a loveless marriage,  whose father was an idealistic communist and his grandfather a slave master from Scotland, who also practices Buddhist meditation and tries to keep his son, Twill (who isn't even his biologically) out of trouble, all the while trying to reform himself into an ex-smoker and more of a by-the-book investigator, "from crooked to only slightly bent":

"But those days were pretty much over for me. I hadn't given up being a private detective, that was all I knew. I still took incriminating photographs and located people who didn't necessarily want to be found. I exposed frauds and cheats without much guilt.

In other words, I still plied my trade but now I worried about things.

In the years  before, I had no problem bringing people down, even framing them with false evidence if that's what the client paid for. I didn't mind sending innocent men, or women, to prison because I didn't believe in innocence--and virtue didn't pay the bills. That was before my past caught up with me and died, spitting blood and curses on the rug."


And so it is that when a private detective from Albany offers him way too much money to help locate four young men, he's hesitant, but since there's nothing obviously illegal about the PI's offer and McGill's rent is over due, he takes the job. It doesn't take long before he realizes he's made a serious error in judgment when the men he locates, as well as the PI who hired him in the first place, start turning up dead.

Mosley has said he intends to write up to ten more books in this series, and it will be interesting to see where he takes his not-quite-noir, morally relativistic creation in the future.

You can catch some video interviews online with Mosley about The Long Fall from Penguin and from the Barnes and Noble's Tagged series.

If you happen to be in Atlanta this Saturday, Mosley will be giving a reading from the book at the Jimmy Carter Library at 2pm, which is appropriate since it was a comment from former President Bill Clinton about how Mosley was one of his favorite writers which gave the author's career a boost.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Keep Watching the Skies

 

Astronomy Today through April 5th, it's “100 Hours of Astronomy,” a cornerstone project of the International Year of Astronomy 2009. Best of all, during the final 24 hours a global star party will sweep around the world, with local gatherings beginning as darkness descends. The official web site has a world map of free events you can peruse for the location nearest you.

That got me to thinking about ties between crime fiction and astronomy, and after a search, I've come to the conclusion those ties aren't very strong, for the most part. Fortunately, Conan Doyle led the way early on. In an article by Bradley E. Schaefer, Schaefer points out that Dr. Watson often points out some fact, such as the phase of the moon or the time of sunrise, which would allow the range of possible dates to be narrowed down (as in the Adventure of the Engineer's Thumb), although Watson's writings often contain apparently astronomical contradictions.

As for Doyle's famous sleuth, Dr. Watson feels that Holmes is seemingly ignorant of the field of astronomy and in A Study in Scarlet, remarks that Holmes was ignorant of the Copernican Theory and the composition of the solar system. Of course, the opposite is true stories like The Musgrave Ritual had Holmes taking calculations of the sun's position so he can locate buried treasure, adding "It was unnecessary to make any allowance for personal equation, as the astronomers have dubbed it."

Three astronomers (real and fictional) wind up being named in the various Holmes stories, Copernicus, Mr. Frankland in the Hound of the Baskervillesan amateur astronomer who used his telescope to spot Holmes's hideout in the moor, and the infamous Professor Moriarty, celebrated author of The Dynamics of an Asteroid. Schaefer goes on to discuss the topic of astronomy and the Holmes canon in great detail, so if you're an astronomy or Holmes fan, definitely check it out.

As far as other crime fiction works involving astronomy, this is where you readers may have to help, since I only found a few books with astronomy links:

  • In Alex Brett's Cold Dark Matter, Morgan O'Brien is a research fraud investigator who delves into the murder of a young astronomer at the FrancoCanadian Telescope in Hawaii.
  • Martin Long wrote the three-book Gaslight Mystery series featuring Wellington Cotter, a retired detective and amateur astronomer.
  • Jim Nisbet wrote Dark Companion, which features Banerjhee Rolf, an Indian-American scientist and amateur astronomer, whose relationship with his seedy, drug-dealing neighbor and stoner girlfriend takes a bizarre turn and shatters Rolf's placid world until he becomes a fugitive from justice.
  • There are other books with passing references to astronomy, of course, one of the more notable and recent being Stieg Larsson's The Girl Who Played with Fire and its mention of Lisbeth Salander’s fascination with the obscure topic of spherical astronomy.

Still, it's a fairly small list, and I know there are probably others out there. Can you think of any?

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Mystery Melange (and That's No Joke)

 

Melange Here are some of the latest tidbits in the world of crime fiction...

MAGAZINES

Good news, bad news for online short fiction:  The spring issue of Mysterical-E is now available online, with their usual fun lineup of stories, columns, and interviews.  Unfortunately, Lunch Hour Stories is closing up shop. For the past four years, it's offered a subscription print publication to help writers, especially new and emerging writers, showcase their stories, but it's become yet another victim of the economy.

AWARDS

'Tis the season for awards, and here are some of the latest nominations:

  • 2009 British Book Industry Awards announced the titles in several categories, including Crime Thriller of the Year, with nods to Martina Cole, Tom Rob Smith, Stieg Larsson, Linwood Barclay, C.J. Sansom, and Kate Atkinson. Shots Magazine has a contest to win tickets to the red carpet gala.
  • Spinetingler Magazine posted its nominations for New Voice, Rising Star, Legend, Graphic Novel, Editor, Reviewer, Publisher, Special Services, Book Cover, and Best Short Story on the Web (with links to the stories).
  • Thriller Writers International has nominees for Best Thriller, Best First Novel, and Best Short Story, and has will also his year be giving the Thrillermaster Award to David Morrell, honoring his influential body of work, and the Silver Bullet Award to Brad Meltzer for his outstanding charitable contributions.
  • The Irish Book Awards for the first time is awarding the AIM Crime Fiction Award. Nominees this year include  Brian McGilloway, Tana French, Arlene Hunt, and Alex Barclay.
  • The Short Mystery Fiction Society's Derringer Award finalists were announced yesterday.

CONFERENCES

  • Conferences are also back in full swing. A couple to add to the listing include UK's Lincoln Book Festival, May 13-17, where Michael Connelly will be a featured guest.
  • Another is the Give Me a Clue Conference on April 25th, sponsored by the Central Jersey chapter of Sisters in Crime. Author/Agents participants include Shobhan Bantwal, Jeff Cohen, Peggy Ehrhart, Jack Getze, Chris Grabenstein, Shirley Hailstock, Carlotta Holton, Martha Jewett, Evan Marshall, Lily Tang, Ann Waldron, and Eileen Watkins

BOOKSTORES

  • Things are finally looking up for the Chapters Literary Store in D.C., which may have found a new location to help keep it in business. One of the popular features at the old location before they had to vacate was the Mystery Monday Lunchtime Series. Fans of the shop can send along contributions to the address listed on the site link.
  • More intriguing bookstore news:  Encinitas Book Tales (California) is launching "The Literary Walking Companions," a daily book club for walkers. Owner Patti McFarland said  "I'm 65. I need to walk. . . . It's about trying to be a little more healthy. Everybody is outside doing things because the weather is good. Why not start something like this?"

BLOG FUN

  • Dave Rosenthal, Sunday editor of  the Baltimore Sun, posted a quiz on the paper's blog asking readers "to imagine Raymond Chandler writing today by completing descriptions like these: 1. as ____ as a Dick Cheney sneer. 2. as ____  as an A.I.G. exec asking for a bonus."