Monday, March 29, 2021

Media Murder for Monday

It's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news:

THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES

Academy Award winner, Forest Whitaker, is set to co-star with Tom Hardy in the Netflix action film, Havoc, from Gareth Evans, the director of the critically acclaimed martial arts film, The Raid. Hardy stars in the project as a bruised detective who, after a drug deal gone wrong, must fight his way through a criminal underworld to rescue a politician’s estranged son. In doing so, he unravels a deep web of corruption and conspiracy that ensnares his entire city.

Chris Pratt will team up with brother-in-law, Patrick Schwarzenegger, on Amazon's The Terminal List. The series, which is currently shooting, is based on the Jack Carr novel that follows James Reece (Pratt) after his entire platoon of Navy SEALs is ambushed during a high-stakes covert mission. Reece returns home to his family with conflicting memories of the event and questions about his culpability. However, as new evidence comes to light, Reece discovers dark forces working against him, endangering not only his life but the lives of those he loves. Schwarzenegger will play Reece’s baby-faced youngest team member. 

Derek DelGaudio is set to join the ensemble cast of Steven Soderbergh’s next film, the New Line Max Original feature KIMI, with Zoë Kravitz on board to star. Although a recent Deadline report said that plot details are being kept under wraps, an earlier Variety article indicated the plot centers on an agoraphobic tech worker (Kravitz), who discovers recorded evidence of a violent crime during an ordinary data stream review and tries reporting it up the chain of command at her company. Met with resistance and bureaucracy, she realizes that in order to get involved, she will have to do the thing she fears the most — leave her apartment.

After landing rights to her directorial debut, Netflix is looking to get back into business with Halle Berry. The streamer has set her to star opposite Mark Wahlberg in the thriller, Our Man From Jersey. David Guggenheim penned the script, with Wahlberg and his partner Stephen Levinson producing. Plot details are being kept under wraps, but the film is described as a blue-collar James Bond. Insiders say the plan is to shoot the film early next year in London.

Katie Holmes, through her Noelle Productions banner, has optioned The Watergate Girl: My Fight For Truth and Justice Against A Criminal President, the best-selling autobiography by former Watergate prosecutor, Jill Wine-Banks. Holmes will also star in the project as Wine-Banks, then a 30-year-old (and known as Jill Wine Volner), the only woman on the team that prosecuted the highest-ranking White House officials. Called “the mini-skirted lawyer” by the press, she fought the casual sexism of the day to receive the respect accorded her male counterparts — and prevailed despite her house being burgled, her phones tapped, and her office trashed.

Kenneth Branagh’s mystery ensemble-cast movie, Death on the Nile has seen its premiere date pushed back again, this time to February 11, 2022. The 20th Century Studios production, which also stars Gal Gadot, Tom Bateman, and Annette Bening, has changed release dates several times due to the pandemic. However, Deadline reports that the new release date has nothing to do with co-star Armie Hammer, who has been besieged by an alleged sex scandal.

Meanwhile, those films that have been able to premiere in theatres with limited seating are doing surprising well. Among the recent successes are the Brad Furman-directed crime thriller, City of Lies, which evolves around the real-life death of hip hop icon Notorious B.I.G.; and the Cold War spy thriller, The Courier, starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Rachel Brosnaha.

TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES

CBS confirmed that Dick Wolf’s FBI franchise is growing and has given a series order to FBI: International, the third iteration of the successful FBI brand, for the 2021-22 broadcast season. The network also announced it is renewing the mothership series, FBI, for a fourth season and FBI: Most Wanted for a third season. FBI: International is scheduled to debut in a crossover episode of those other two shows next year.

The Act creator Michelle Dean is adapting Matthew McGough’s book, The Lazarus Files: A Cold Case Investigation, for a TV series. The book tells the story of one of the most infamous murder cases in LAPD history, which remained unsolved until DNA evidence implicated a shocking suspect – Stephanie Lazarus, a detective within the LAPD’s own ranks. McGough, an investigative journalist, met and interviewed Lazarus in 2008, when she was a well-respected detective in the LAPD’s Art Theft Detail. A year later, Lazarus was arrested for a cold case murder she had committed 23 years earlier. McGough researched not only the murder, but also the LAPD’s cover-up and its systemic failure to investigate one of it's own.

Netflix has taken international rights to Steven Moffat’s limited BBC series, Inside Man. Stanley Tucci has been set in the title role, joined by Doctor Who actor, David Tennant, and Dracula star, Dolly Wells. Rounding out the headline cast is Lydia West, who featured in the acclaimed Channel 4/HBO Max series, It’s A Sin. Steven Moffat (Sherlock, Doctor Who) is penning and directing the project, which is said to center around three characters, a prisoner on death row in America, an English Vicar, and a maths teacher trapped in a cellar, who all cross paths in the most unexpected way.

The Chelsea Detective will become the latest British crime series to be streamed by Acorn-TV.  Created and co-written by Peter Fincham, The Chelsea Detective stars Adrian Scarborough as Detective Inspector Max Arnold, who plies his trade in Chelsea to uncover the murky underbelly of a well-heeled borough of London.

This is an odd little project: CBS Studios and German producer Syrreal Entertainment are teaming to create a series for RTL streamer TV Now in which David Hasselhoff will star as himself in a fictional international conspiracy story. It follows the actor as he lands a lead role in a German stage show, which plunges him into the center of an international conspiracy of former cold war assassins, while around him the fabric of reality seems to break down. German actor Henry Hübchen also stars as a version of himself.

Evan Peters is set as the title character in Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, a Netflix limited series co-created by longtime collaborators Murphy and Ian Brennan. Monster chronicles the story of one of America’s most notorious serial killers (Peters), largely told from the point of view of Dahmer’s victims, and dives deeply into the police incompetence and apathy that allowed the Wisconsin native to go on a multiyear killing spree.

David Thewlis has been cast to star opposite Olivia Colman in the HBO and Sky crime drama, Landscapers. The four-part limited series, inspired by real events, tells the story of a seemingly ordinary couple who become the focus of an investigation when two dead bodies are discovered in the garden of a Nottingham house. Additional cast members include Kate O’Flynn, Dipo Ola, Samuel Anderson, Karl Johnson, Felicity Montagu, and Daniel Rigby.

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO

Small press and self-published authors were in the spotlight on the latest episode of Writer Types. Writers including Mick McCrary, Jonathan Brown, Delia C. Pitts, Murphy Morrison, and Greg Hickey all chatted with host, Eric Beetner. Plus Gabriel Valjean, Mark Atley, Eric Dezenhall and Sandra Wells also stopped by.

Read or Dead tackled mysteries and thrillers that transport you to a particular time and place.

Jacqueline Winspear was the featured guest on Speaking of Mysteries, discussing The Consequences of Fear, the 16th installment of Winspear’s addictive series featuring detective and frequent intelligence asset, Maisie Dobbs.

Suspense Radio and Meet the Thriller Author both chatted with master of suspense, Dean Koontz, about his latest book, The Other Emily, which takes readers on a twisting journey of lost love, impossible second chances, and terrifying promises.

Wrong Place, Write Crime welcomed Danny Gardne‪r‬ to chat about his newest novel, Ace Boon Coon, and the inspiration behind it.

Queer Writers of Crime spoke with William D. Prystauk about his series featuring a pansexual private investigator who solves crimes in New York City’s BDSM and LGBT communities.

On the Writer's Detective Bureau, host Adam Richardson answered questions about SWAT snipers on rooftops, how the FBI and SEC handle white-collar investigations, and when autopsies are and are not performed

Jackie Flaum joined It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club for a discussion about her first novel, Justice Tomorrow, featuring investigators Madeline Sterling and Socractes Gray, who head a team sent to a Georgia town in 1965 to look into the lynching of a local civil rights leader's son.

After a hiatus, the Alfred Hitchcock Magazine podcast series is back with a tale by Joseph S. Walker, nominated for an Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Short Story.

American spy author, Paul Vidich, spoke with Crime Time FM host, Paul Burke, about his fascination with the Cold War and his new Moscow-set thriller, The Mercenary, the fourth in the George Mueller series.

THEATRE

Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None is set to return to the stage in the UK, to be presented September 11-13 at Royal and Derngate in Northampton ahead of a UK tour. Director Lucy Bailey noted, "Set in 1939, this is Agatha Christie's most popular novel but also one of her darkest, reflecting the impending sense of doom of a world on the brink of war. Its depiction of a group of strangers stranded in a crisis of their own making feels very in tune with today's climate emergency."

Sunday, March 28, 2021

Hammett Honorees

In an email to members, the North American Branch of the International Association of Crime Writers announced the finalists for the 2020 Dashiell Hammett Prize for literary Excellence in Crime Writing. Since 1991, IACW/NA has presented the Hammett trophy to the book of the year that best represents the conception of literary excellence in crime writing. The 2020 reading committee, consisting of Christopher Chan, Marni Graff, Debbi Mack, and Chair J. Madison Davis, made a number of difficult choices, with the following books selected for the short list (the winner will be announced later this year):

  • When These Mountains Burn by David Joy
  • Three Hours in Paris by Cara Black
  • Murder in Old Bombay by Nev March
  • The Mountains Wild by Sarah Stewart Taylor
  • Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden

 

Friday, March 26, 2021

Agatha Accolades

The Malice Domestic Conference today announced the finalists for the annual Agatha Awards. This year, the winners will be presented at the virtual More Than Malice online convention to be held from July 14-17. Congratulations to all the nominees:

Best Contemporary Novel

Gift of the Magpie by Donna Andrews (Minotaur)
Murder in the Bayou Boneyard by Ellen Byron (Crooked Lane Books)
From Beer to Eternity by Sherry Harris (Kensington)
All the Devils are Here by Louise Penny (Minotaur)
The Lucky One by Lori Rader-Day (William Morris)
 

Best Historical Novel

The Last Mrs. Summers by Rhys Bowen (Berkeley)
Fate of a Flapper by Susanna Calkins (Griffin)
A Lady's Guide to Mischief and Murder by Dianne Freeman (Kensington)
Taken Too Soon by Edith Maxwell (Beyond the Page Publishing)
The Turning Tide by Catriona McPherson (Quercus)
 

Best First Novel

A Spell for Trouble by Esme Addison (Crooked Lane Books)
Winter Witness by Tina deBelgarde (Level Best Books)
Derailed by Mary Keliikoa (Epicenter Press, Inc.)
Murder at the Mena House by Erica Ruth Neubauer (Kensington)
Murder Most Sweet by Laura Jensen Walker (Kensington)
 

Best Short Story

"Dear Emily Etiquette" by Barb Goffman (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine Sep/Oct)
"The Red Herrings at Killington Inn" by Shawn Reilly Simmons Masthead: Best New England Crime Stories (Level Best Books)
"The Boy Detective & The Summer of '74" by Art Taylor (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine Jan/Feb)
"Elysian Fields" by Gabriel Valjan California Schemin': The 2020 Bouchercon Anthology (Wildside Press)
"The 25 Year Engagement" by James Ziskin In League with Sherlock Holmes: Stories Inspired by the Sherlock Holmes Canon (Pegasus Crime)
 

Best Non-Fiction

Sometimes You Have to Lie: The Life and Times of Louise Fitzhugh, Renegade Author of Harriet the Spy by Leslie Brody (Seal Press)
American Sherlock: Murder, Forensics, and the Birth of American CSI by Kate Winkler Dawson (G. P. Putnam)
Howdunit: A Masterclass in Crime Writing by Members of the Detection Club by Martin Edwards (Collins Crime Club)
Phantom Lady: Hollywood Producer Joan Harrison, the Forgotten Woman Behind Hitchcock by Christina Lane (Chicago Review Press)
H. R. F. Keating: A Life of Crime by Sheila Mitchell (Level Best Books)
 

Best Children's/YA Mystery

Midnight at the Barclay Hotel by Fleur Bradley (Viking Books for Young Readers)
Premeditated Myrtle by Elizabeth C. Bunce (Algonquin Young Readers)
Saltwater Secrets by Cindy Callaghan (Aladdin)
From the Desk of Zoe Washington by Janae Marks (Katherine Teagen Books)
Holly Hernandez and the Death of Disco by Richard Narvaez (Piñata Books)

 

Thursday, March 25, 2021

Mystery Melange

 

The British Book Awards shortlists have been announced, including the honorees in the Crime & Thriller category: Troubled Blood by Robert Galbraith; The Sentinel by Lee Child and Andrew Child; The Patient Man by Joy Ellis; The Guest List by Lucy Foley; The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman; and A Song for The Dark Times by Ian Rankin.

Deadly Pleasures Magazine announced the 2021 Barry Award nominations, with winners to be announced at the New Orleans Bouchercon opening ceremonies August 26. The Best Novel finalists include The Boy From The Woods by Harlan Coben; The Law of Innocence by Michael Connelly; Blacktop Wasteland by S. A. Cosby; And Now She's Gone by Rachel Howzell Hall; Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz, and All The Devils Are Here by Louise Penny. For the lists in all the other categories, check out this list from Shots Magazine.

The Audio Publishers Association announced the winners of this year's Audie Awards for excellence in audiobooks. The winner in the Mystery Category was Michael Connelly's Fair Warning, read by Peter Giles and Zach Villa (see the other finalists here); while the winner in the Thriller Category was When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole, read by Susan Dalian, and Jay Aaseng (click here for the other finalists).

Multiple award-winning crime fiction author, Elizabeth George is publishing Mastering the Process: From Idea to Novel, which goes on sale next month on April 6. The book is described as "A master class on fiction writing" in which George takes the reader through her entire process of researching, outlining, and writing book such as her Inspector Lynley novel, Careless in Red. George will be doing a handful of virtual workshops to support the paperback publication: April 7 at Barr Memorial Library in Fort Knox, KY; April 10 at Book Passage in Corte Madera, CA; and April 14 at Books & Books in Miami, FL.

This year's virtual Malice Domestic convention, More Than Malice, has announced additional authors who will be part of the lineup, including Donna Andrews, Ann Cleeves, Martin Edwards, Rachel Howzell Hall, Charlaine Harris, Sheila Mitchell, and Katherine Hall Page. Malice took an enormous financial hit due to the ongoing pandemic and the cancellation of two in-person conventions and says they "truly appreciate the generous support of so many from the Malice Community and Family and look forward to bringing you a spectacular event featuring old friends and new ones." You can click here to register at the early-bird price for the festival, which takes place July 14th-17th.

Libraries, booksellers, publishers, and festivals are being invited to take part in the UK's National Crime Reading Month this June. The annual festival is held throughout the UK, and is hosted by the Crime Writers’ Association (CWA). Secretary of the CWA, Dea Parkin, added: “This summer, nobody knows if they will be able to escape abroad on holiday. One thing that is guaranteed is the option to escape through a good book. We hope National Crime Reading Month this June will lead the great escape we all desperately need after such a difficult year.”

Volume 39, no. 1 of Clues: A Journal of Detection is out, guest edited by Eva Burke and Clare Clarke. The theme for the issue is domestic noir, with essays on such topics as "At Home in Irish Crime Fiction"; "I Am Not the Girl I Used to Be": Remembering the Femme Fatale in The Girl on the Train; "Killing Bluebeard: Claiming Subversive Femininity in Agatha Christie’s "Philomel Cottage" and The Stranger, and much more, including interviews and reviews.

Crime and comic writer, Alex Segura, has teamed with fellow mystery novelist Elizabeth Little, artist David Hahn, colorist Ellie Wright, letterer Taylor Esposito and veteran editor Joseph Illidge to create a new type of superhero comic.

If you're a fan of spy fiction, Alma Katsu, author and retired intelligence professional, took a look at the "Best Spy Novels Written by Spies, According to a Spy."

This story is a lot of fun ... Sherlock Holmes and the Loch Ness Monster?

The latest crime poem at the 5-2 Weekly is "Justice for Jessica."

In the Q&A roundup, crime author Gerard Brennan spoke with The Irish News about the of writing his strong female-led new novel, Shot; Elly Griffiths chatted with Writer's Digest about what it was like to write her latest crime novel, The Postscript Murders, using multiple points of view; and Write 2 Be Me magazine welcomed former police detective turned author, Caroline Mitchell, shortlisted for the International Thriller Awards and Killer Nashville Silver Falchion Awards.

Monday, March 22, 2021

Media Murder for Monday

It's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news:

THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES

David Strathairn will join Daisy Edgar-Jones, Taylor John Smith, and Harris Dickinson in the film adaptation of Where The Crawdads Sing, based on Delia Owens’s best-selling novel. Directed by Olivia Newman, the project takes place in the mid-20th century South and centers on Kya, a young woman who is abandoned by her family and has to raise herself all alone in the marshes outside of her small town. However, when her former boyfriend is found dead, Kya is thrust into the spotlight, instantly branded by the local townspeople and law enforcement as the prime suspect for his murder.

Jamie Foxx, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, January Jones, Maika Monroe, and Andrew Dice Clay are set to star in the action-thriller, God Is A Bullet. Written and directed by Nick Cassavetes and based on the novel of the same name by Boston Teran, the film centers on vice detective, Bob Hightower (Coster-Waldau), who finds his ex-wife murdered and daughter kidnapped by a satanic cult. Frustrated by the botched official investigations, he quits the force, gets tattoos, and infiltrates the cult to hunt down the cult leader with the help of the cult’s only female victim escapee, Case Hardin (Monroe). Foxx will play the pivotal supporting role of "The Ferryman."

Max Beesley has joined the cast of Guy Ritchie’s untitled latest action thriller, formerly known as Five Eyes, opposite Jason Statham, Aubrey Plaza, Josh Hartnett, and Cary Elwes. The feature follows an MI6 agent (Statham) who is recruited by a global intelligence agency to track down and stop the sale of a deadly new weapons technology that threatens to disrupt the world order. Beesley plays a respectable lawyer and consigliere to a billionaire arms broker (Hartnett), who can "also handle himself in a fight."

Signature Entertainment has acquired the mob crime-drama, The Birthday Cake, for UK-Ireland and Australia-New Zealand. The film follows Giovanni (Shiloh Fernandez) who, on the 10th anniversary of his father’s death, reluctantly accepts the task of bringing a cake to the home of his uncle, a mob boss, for a celebration. Just two hours into the night, Gio’s life is forever changed after witnessing a murder and learning the truth about what happened to his late father. The film also stars Ewan McGregor, Val Kilmer, Lorraine Bracco, and William Fichtner.

TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES

Spectrum Originals has given a 10-episode order to Joe Pickett, a drama series based on C.J. Box’s bestselling novels. Michael Dorman (Patriot, For All Mankind) has been tapped for the title role. Joe Pickett follows a game warden and his family as they navigate the changing political and socio-economic climate in a small rural town in Wyoming. Surrounded by rich history and vast wildlife, the township hides decades of schemes and secrets that are yet to be uncovered. The series will air for a nine-month exclusive run on Spectrum.

Clive Owen is set to star in Monsieur Spade, a one-hour drama series from Scott Frank (The Queen's Gambit) and Tom Fontana (City on a Hill). The predominantly French language series centers around writer Dashiell Hammett’s great detective, Sam Spade (Owen) who has been quietly living out his golden years in the small town of Bozuls in the South of France. It’s 1963, the Algerian War has just ended, and in a very short time, so, too, will Spade’s tranquility.

Matthew McConaughey is attached to star in a series adaptation of the John Grisham novel, A Time for Mercy, which is currently in development at HBO. The book, published in 2020, is a follow-up to Grisham’s books, A Time to Kill and Sycamore Row, which center on the character of attorney Jake Brigance. In A Time for Mercy, Brigance must defend a young man who killed his mother’s boyfriend, a deputy sheriff, with the boy claiming the man was abusive towards his mother, himself, and his little sister.

FX is in early development on a drama based on Elmore Leonard's novel, City Primeval: High Noon in Detroit. The story centers on Raymond Cruz, a Detroit homicide detective, and his quest to bring a killer nicknamed the "Oklahoma Wildman" to justice after the latter kills a judge. Leonard's novella, Fire in the Hole, served as source material for the popular TV series, Justified, and there is some talk of bringing the show's star, Timothy Olyphant, back to play U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens in the new project.

Wiip, the independent studio created by former ABC chief, Paul Lee, is developing Young Agatha, a TV series exploring the teenage years of Agatha Christie, the iconic British crime writer behind genre-defining characters including Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple. The project will tell the story of how a precocious teenager mourning her father’s death became one of the most prolific and beloved mystery novelists of all time. Set in the early 1900s in Devon, England, the series is being described as "an action-packed drama," and a “dynamic and supercharged coming-of-age story."

In a competitive situation, Peacock has landed Poker Face, a mystery drama from Knives Out director, Rian Johnson, set to star Natasha Lyonne. Plot details about the series are being kept under wraps, but Johnson said, "I’m very excited to dig into the type of fun, character driven, case-of-the-week mystery goodness I grew up watching."

BritBox, the BBC and ITV’s joint-venture streamer, has acquired ITV’s John Simm drama, Grace, for the U.S. and Canada, set to premiere on April 27. Told as two feature-length episodes, Grace is from Endeavour creator, Russell Lewis, and is an adaptation of the first two of Peter James’s Roy Grace crime novels, Dead Simple and Looking Good Dead. The novels introduce Brighton-based Detective Superintendent Roy Grace, a hard-working police officer who has given his life to the job.

EastEnders actress, Jessica Plummer, has joined Gugu Mbatha-Raw and David Oyelowo in The Girl Before, the limited series for HBO Max and BBC One. Based on JP Delaney’s bestselling psychological thriller, the story follows Jane (Mbatha-Raw), a traumatized woman who falls in love with an extraordinary minimalist house, which remains under the spell of the architect (Oyelowo) who originally designed it. But when she discovers that another damaged woman died in the same property three years earlier, she starts to wonder if her own story is just a rerun of the girl before.

Writer/producer David Eick (Battlestar Galactica) is developing a remake of 1973 feature film, Walking Tall, which is being set up as a two-hour TV movie at the Peacock streaming service with hope of future installments or an ongoing series. The original was based on the life of Sheriff Buford Pusser and starred Joe Don Baker as the professional wrestler turned lawman. The reboot will star WWE's Charlotte Flair playing a Tucson cop who finds herself caught in a web of fraud, exploitation, and murder and is forced to go full vigilante to protect her home town.

Killing Eve is coming to an end with its delayed fourth season (set to premiere in 2022), but BBC America is developing a number of potential spinoffs. The cat-and-mouse thriller stars Jodie Comer as assassin, Villannelle, and Sandra Oh, as British intelligence agent, Eve Polastri. The network and production company didn’t disclose specific spinoff ideas, but some have suggested potential targets might be The Twelve, the shadowy organization that is associated with Villanelle, or The Bitter Pill, a group of investigative journalists that help Polastri investigate.

Canadian series, Burden of Truth, has been canceled and will wrap up with its Season 4 finale. Debuting on CBC in July of 2018, and airing in the U.S. on The CW, the legal drama centered on Joanna Hanley (Kristin Kreuk), a big city lawyer who returned to her hometown to take the case of a number of girls grappling with a perplexing illness. Created by Brad Simpson, the series also starred Peter Mooney, Star Slade, Meegwun Fairbrother, Anwen O’Driscoll, and Nicola Correia-Damude.

AMC Networks streamer, Acorn TV, has renewed its darkly comic British crime series, Queens Of Mystery, for a second season, with production already underway in southeast England. The show follows a perennially single female detective and her three well-known crime writing aunts, who help her solve whodunit-style murders as well as set her up on blind dates. Olivia Vinall played detective Matilda Stone in the first season, but will be replaced by Florence Hall in the second due to a scheduling conflict. Julie Graham, Sarah Woodward, and Siobhan Redmond return as Stone’s aunts.

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO

A new Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast is up featuring the first two chapters of Out of Time by Cathi Stoler, as read by actor Ian Jones.

Writer Types host, Eric Beetner, was joined by Greg Levin (author of The Exit Man and Sick To Death) as co-host in the latest episode. They chatted with debut medical thriller author, Tammy Euliano (Fatal Intent), thriller writer, Rio Youers (Lola On Fire), and true crime author, Harold Schechter (Maniac).

Suspense Radio welcomed debut author, Susan Ouellette, to talk about her book, The Wayward Spy, and how her background in the CIA made her the perfect fit to become a writer of spy thrillers.

David Heska Wanbli Weide‪n, a citizen of the Sicangu Lakota nation, stopped by Wrong Place, Write Crime to discuss his Edgar-nominated novel, Winter Counts, as well as exploring the setting for the book, a Native American reservation.

My Favorite Detective Stories spoke with Daniel J. Waters, an open-heart surgeon who's authored several medical books as well as a thriller series featuring Surf City Police Chief, Mickey Cleary.

It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club discussed books by Irish mystery authors Carlene O'Connor, Olivia Kiernan, and Graham Norton

Queer Writers of Crime spoke with JB Sanders, author of a satirical "Hardy Boys" style mystery series, about the fine balance between suspense and humor.

Rachel Howzell-Hall was interviewed by Robert Justice for Crime Writers of Color. Hall writes the acclaimed Lou Norton series, has been nominated for the Anthony, Lefty, and Thriller Awards, and co-wrote The Good Sister with James Patterson.

Listening to the Dead was joined by pathologist Dr. Brett Lockyer, part of the experienced team at Forensic Access, to reveal how to tell the difference between strangulation and hanging during a post mortem, and where best to look for evidence that a suicide is not what it seems.

On Crime Time FM, Peter May talked about his new Enzo MacLeod thriller, The Night Gate; writing the "new normal" into fiction; why he’s enjoying some well earned down time; and why he's not looking forward to a coming French adaptation of one of his Chinese set novels relocated to Korea.

Thursday, March 18, 2021

Mystery Melange

 

The finalists for the 33rd Annual Lambda Literary Awards were announced this week, selected by a panel of over 60 literary professionals from more than 1,000 book submissions (and over 300 publishers). The titles in the LGBTQ Mystery category include Death Before Dessert by A.E. Radley; Find Me When I’m Lost by Cheryl A. Head; Fortune Favors the Dead by Stephen Spotswood; I Hope You’re Listening by Tom Ryan; and Vera Kelly Is Not a Mystery by Rosalie Knecht. This is the first year for the combined LGBTQ category of five nominees; in previous years, there were five finalists each for Best Lesbian and Best Gay mystery.

The finalists for the Foreword Reviews Book Awards were announced, including those in the Mystery and Thriller & Suspense Categories. More than 2,000 entries spread across 55 genres were submitted for consideration, with the finalists determined by Foreword’s editorial staff. Winners are now being decided by teams of librarians, and winners in each genre—along with Editor’s Choice Prize winners and Foreword’s Independent Publisher of the Year—and will be announced June 17, 2021.

The NAACP Image Awards that were just announced include a category for Outstanding Literary Works. Among that list are the crime fiction/author titles, Lakewood by Megan Giddings (HarperCollins Publishers) and The Awkward Black Man by Walter Mosley (Grove Atlantic). For all nominees, follow this link. (HT to Mystery Fanfare)

I'm a day late for pointing out Mystery Fanfare's list of St. Patrick's Day crime fiction, but we'll just consider it St. Patrick's week and call it square.

Steve Powell of the Venetian Vase blog continues his series on the influences of music in James Ellroy's crime novels.

During the pandemic, the Ohio Shakespeare Festival has been performing original radio plays for at-home listening, including some based on mystery-related works. The offerings include "The False Burton Combs" based on the story by Carroll John Daly; "Lady Molly of Scotland Yard" based on the stories by Baroness Orczy; and "The Monkey's Paw" based on the short story by W. W. Jacobs. (HT to The Bunburyist)

Just another reminder to support your local bookstores before they're gone forever.

What happens in your brain when you "lose yourself" in fiction? Scientists now have a better idea.

The latest flash fiction piece up at Shotgun Honey is "Lemmings" by Jay Butkowski

The latest crime poem at the 5-2 Weekly is "Murder They Say" by Sharon Lask Munson.

In the Q&A roundup, E. B. Davis interviewed Amy Pershing about A Side of Murder, the first book in Amy Pershing’s Cape Code Foodie Mystery series, for the Writers Who Kill blog; and J.A. Jance chatted with Deborah Kalb about Missing and Endangered, the latest in her Joanna Brady suspense series.

Monday, March 15, 2021

Mystery Melange

It's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news:

THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES

The Academy Award nominations were announced this morning and include a few crime dramas. Among the Best Movie nods are Judas and the Black Messiah, Promising Young Woman, and The Trial of the Chicago 7. In the Best Actress category, Andra Day was nominated for The United States vs. Billie Holiday, and Carey Mulligan for Promising Young Woman. In the Best Supporting Actor category, Daniel Kaluuya and Lakeith Stanfield were nominated for Judas and the Black Messiah and Sacha Baron Cohen for The Trial of the Chicago 7. For all the nominees in the various categories, follow this link.

Likewise, the British Academy of Film and Television Arts announced the nominees for the annual BAFTA awards, which also include nods for several crime dramas. The Best Film category includes The Mauritanian, Promising Young Woman, and The Trial of the Chicago 7. The Best British Film category includes the Irish crime drama, Calm With Horses as well as The Mauritanian and Promising Young Woman. For all the nominees, follow this link.

New Line has picked up the action-thriller, Classified, with Chad Stahelski (John Wick) attached to direct, and Andrew Deutschman and Jason Pagan set to pen the screenplay. The log line for Classified describes the project as a "high octane, cat-and-mouse thriller, in the vein of Die Hard meets Indiana Jones, set inside a top secret government bunker that contains relics covertly recovered during World War II — that turn out to be more powerful and dangerous than ever imagined."

Elizabeth Banks, who most recently directed the latest Charlie’s Angels installment, has signed on to direct Cocaine Bear for Universal Pictures. Written by Jimmy Warden, the film is a thriller inspired by true events that took place in Kentucky in 1985 when a bear's death from ingesting cocaine led to a corrupt narcotics officer and drug smuggling ring.

Rob Delaney, Charles Parnell, Indira Varma, Mark Gatiss, Cary Elwes, and Greg Tarzan Davis have rounded out the cast of Mission: Impossible 7 starring Tom Cruise. They join previously announced new cast members Hayley Atwell, Pom Klementieff and Esai Morales, as well as returning actors, Rebecca Ferguson, Simon Pegg, Ving Rhames and Vanessa Kirby. The most recent installment ramped up production late last year after its filming was put on pause due to the Covid-19 pandemic. The plan was to shoot installments seven and eight back-to-back, but Deadline recently reported production on the eighth film will occur in 2022 in order to give cast and crew a break.

TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES

Apple TV+ has given a straight-to-series order for a new limited series from director Alma Har’el (Honey Boy) starring Natalie Portman and Lupita Nyong’o. The project, titled Lady in the Lake, is an adaptation of the 2019 novel of the same name by Laura Lippman. Set in 1960s Baltimore, the series centers on Maddie Schwartz (Portman), a housewife and mother who is pushed by an unsolved murder to reinvent her life as an investigative journalist. The case sets her on a collision course with Cleo Sherwood (Nyong’o), a hard-working woman juggling motherhood, many jobs, and a passionate commitment to advancing Baltimore’s Black progressive agenda.

Peacock has given a series order for Dan Brown’s Langdon (f/k/a Langdon), based on Brown’s best-selling thriller novel, The Lost Symbol. The series was originally developed by NBC and ordered to pilot by the network last year. Written by Dan Dworkin and Jay Beattie, Dan Brown’s Langdon follows the early adventures of famed Harvard symbologist Robert Langdon (Ashley Zukerman), who must solve a series of deadly puzzles to save his kidnapped mentor and thwart a chilling global conspiracy.

Patrick Harbinson (Homeland) is adapting author Kate London’s novel, Post Mortem, into a three-part ITV series. The drama will be titled The Tower, in a nod to the novel’s thrilling opening sequence in which a veteran beat cop and teenage girl fall to their deaths from a tower block in south-east London, leaving a five-year-old boy and rookie police officer Lizzie Griffiths on the roof — only for them to go missing. Detective Sergeant Sarah Collins works to solve the disappearances and uncover the truth behind the grisly tower block deaths. Collins and Griffiths later become the central characters in three books written by Kate London, a former Met officer.

Dakota Fanning is joining Ripley, starring opposite Andrew Scott. She'll play Marge Sherwood, an American living in Italy who suspects darker motives underlie the affability of Tom Ripley (Scott). Based on Patricia Highsmith’s books, the series follows Tom Ripley, a grifter scraping by in early 1960s New York, who is hired by a wealthy man to try to convince his vagabond son, Dickie Greenleaf (Johnny Flynn), who is living a comfortable, trust-funded ex-pat life in Italy, to return home. Tom’s acceptance of the job is the first step into a complex life of deceit, fraud, and murder.

Claire Foy and Paul Bettany are set as the stars of Amazon and BBC One’s A Very British Scandal, a follow-up to the Hugh Grant-led, A Very English Scandal. The three-part series focuses on the divorce of the Duke (Bettany) and Duchess of Argyll (Foy), one of the most notorious, extraordinary, and brutal legal cases of the 20th Century that included accusations of forgery, theft, violence, drug-taking, secret recording, bribery, and an explicit Polaroid picture.

Queen Latifah is going to hunt more bad guys following the news that CBS has renewed The Equalizer for a second season after only four episodes. The Equalizer stars Latifah as Robyn McCall, an enigmatic woman with a mysterious background who uses her extensive skills as a former CIA operative to help those with nowhere else to turn.

More good nenewal news, this time for the British crime drama series, Bloodlands, which stars James Nesbitt and comes from Bodyguard creator Jed Mercurio. The BBC announced it was renewing that series for a second season. The noir-ish drama follows DCI Tom Brannick (Nesbitt), a veteran detective who delves into his own dark past to try and solve an infamous cold case with enormous personal significance: a series of mysterious disappearances linked to a turbulent period in Northern Ireland history over 20 years ago.

Queen of the South fans aren't as lucky, since USA announced the show will end with its upcoming fifth season. The Alice Braga-led crime drama (an adaptation of the best-selling novel La Reina Del Sur by Arturo Pérez-Reverte) tells the story of Teresa Mendoza, a woman who is forced to run from the Mexican cartel and seek refuge in America. Eventually, she rises to power over her own drug trafficking empire.

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO

A new Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast episode is up, a special bonus episode that features an excerpt from the audio book of Death in Rancho Las Amigas by Gay Toltl Kinman, as read by actor and mystery author, Harley Jane Kozak.

Debbi Mack interviewed crime writer, Laurie Buchanan, on the Crime Cafe podcast. Buchanan's debut novel, Indelible, introduces Sean McPherson, an ex-cop turned handyman at a writer's retreat where the story takes place.

Read or Dead hosts, Katie and Nusrah, chatted about mystery/thrillers that feature revenge and serial killers, and how these narratives uncover stories that often go unheard.

Speaking of Mysteries welcomed Jess Montgomery, whose protagonist, Sheriff Lily Ross, returns in The Stills, the third installment of Montgomery’s series that takes place in 1920s Prohibition-era southeastern Ohio.

Wendy Heard was the latest guest on the Queer Writers of Crime podcast. Heard is the author of two adult thrillers, The Kill Club and Hunting Annabelle, which Kirkus Reviews praised as "a diabolically plotted creep show."

Suspense Radio bought back bestselling author, Joel Rosenberg, to talk about his latest book in the Marcus Ryker series, The Beirut Protocol.

Wrong Place, Write Crime spoke with Ryan Sayles about his latest police procedural, It's Ugly Because It's Personal.

The internationally bestselling Anne Perry stopped by It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club. Perry is the author of two long-running series, one with Victorian policeman Thomas Pitt and his well-born wife Charlotte and another featuring private detective William Monk and volatile nurse Hester Latterly. The New York Times selected Perry as one of the "100 Masters of Crime."

The latest In GAD We Trust episode examined the Dr. Thorndyke Stories of R. Austin Freeman.

Listening to the Dead host, Lynda Plante, tackled the topic, "Cause of Death – Gunshot Wound" in the latest episode. She was joined by former Senior Forensic Scientist, David Pryor, an internationally-renowned expert in the field of firearms and wound ballistics.

On the new podcast, Crime Time FM, Tony Parsons interviewed Paul Burke about his new novel, Your Neighbour's Wife. Parsons also discussed his love of the iconic thriller/chiller, Rebecca; tackled topics as diverse as the death of print journalism, David Bowie on drugs, and gambling the pension on becoming a crime writer; and took a look at "why Lee Child bosses it."