Sunday, February 28, 2010

They Said WHAT?

Wow! Where did February go? I can't believe it's gone already. I sure wish the snow would have left with it. But, no such luck. We're still shoveling here in Northeast Ohio.

Very quickly, before I share my favorite lines with you for this month's reading, I want to remind you that today is the last day to put your nominations in for the "World's Favorite Detective" tournament. I will take the nominations up until 8:00 p.m. Eastern time today. Then I will begin tallying them all up. We already have in excess of 1300 nominations. At last count, there were over 200 different detectives and 90 of those detectives had 2 or more nominations. I hope to have the bracket all set up on Wednesday with the contest directions. So check back and enter the tournament.

And one more fun thing. If anyone ever needs a gift for me, I totally want one of these with an L.A. REQUIEM cover. Ha!

So, February's favorite lines are heavily Don Winslow. I have been listening to POWER OF THE DOG and I finished THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR. Winslow's wit is famous, so this is just a sampling because I could have copied most of the content of the books! So, I hope you enjoy these and they tempt you to read the books.

From THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR:

  • “He looks like he might actually cry, which would violate an important addendum to the rules of the Gentlemen’s Hour: There’s no crying, ever. These guys are old school – they think Oprah’s a mispronunciation of music they’d never listen to. It’s okay to have feelings – like if you’re looking at photos of your grandchildren – but you can never acknowledge them, and showing them is way over the line.”

  • “The small shop is a creepy little place in a strip mall in Mira Mesa, its customer base being a few actual PIs, a lot of wannabes, hard-core paranoids, and not a few of the grassy-knoll, wrap-your-head-in-tin-foil-the-government-is-attacking-you-with-gamma-rays set who won’t buy off the internet because the CIA, FBI, Homeland Security and Barbara Bush are all tracking their downloads. The store is usually filled with a lot of browsers who just like electronic gadgets and cool spy shit.”

  • “He already has the camera – it came with the basic Private Investigator Starter Kit along with the cynicism, a manual of one-liners, and a saxophone soundtrack.”

  • “Alan looks at Petra and Boone and says, ‘I’d better get with Mary Lou before Boone helps us anymore and puts Corey on the Grassy Knoll. You don’t have him on the Grassy Knoll, do you? Or anywhere in the vicinity of the Lindbergh baby? You got him nailing Christ up, too, Daniels?”

  • “Go to your thesaurus, look up every synonym for hatred, add them together, multiply them by ten, and you still don’t come up to the level of malice that these two guys hold for each other.”

  • “Motives are like colors – there are really very few basic ones, but they have a thousand subtle shades.

    Your primary motive colors are crazy, sex and money.

    Boone doesn’t linger on the first. Crazy is crazy, so there’s no line of logic you can pursue. It’s too random. Of course there are shades of crazy: You have your basic, organic, Chuck Manson or Mark Chapman crazy. There’s also ‘temporary insanity’ crazy, aka ‘rage’ – a tsunami of anger that washes away normal restraint or inhibition – a person ‘sees red’ and just goes off. A sub-category of rage is drug- or alcohol-induced rage – the booze, pills, meth, ice, steroids, whatever, make a person commit violence they otherwise would never do.”
The lines from POWER OF THE DOG include:

  • “ Scachi stares at him, then says, ‘Keller, you just earned first-ballot entry into the Asshole Hall of Fame.’”

  • “As O-Bop says, ‘if I’m going to hell it’s going to be on a crowded bus.’”
And finally, I'm going to wrap up with a few stunning lines from Pat Conroy's new novel SOUTH OF BROAD. Conroy stands with Burke as the two writers I believe to be the greatest living American writers today. Like Burke, Conroy creates a tone for his novels with his setting. His language is beautiful and his words brilliant. Here are a few examples. As I'm not yet finished with this novel, you can probably count on more to come in March:

  • "I consider it a privilege to be a native of one of the loveliest American cities, not a high-kicking, glossy, or lipsticked city, not a city with bells on its fingers or brightly painted toenails, but a ruffled, low-slung city, understated and tolerant of nothing mismade or ostentatious. Though Charleston feels a seersuckered, tuxedoed view of itself, it approves of restraint far more than vainglory."


  • "It would be many years before I learned that your fate could scuttle up behind you, touch you with its bloody claws, and when you turn to face the worst, you find it disguised in all innocence and camouflaged as a moving van, an orphanage, and a drug bust south of Broad."


  • "Of all the elements of my childhood that rang a false note, I was the only kid the American South whose mother had received a doctorate by writing a perfectly unreadable dissertation on the religious symbolism in James Joyce's equally unreadable ULYSSES, which I considered the worst book ever written by anyone. June 16 was the endless day when Leopold Bloom makes his nervous Nellie way, stopping at bars and consorting with whores and then returning home to horny wife, Molly, who has a final soliloquy that goes on for what seemed like six thousand pages when my mother force-fed me the book in tenth grade."
O.k., I admit. I put that last one in there because I, too, hate ULYSSES, so it struck a chord with me. I also want to point out that there is a magnificent paragraph at the conclusion of Alafair Burke's 212, but I decided not to include it in this post because I think it is too much of a spoiler for the novel. So, just take my word for it, it's wonderful and you need to read it to find out what it is. Once you've read it, feel free to email me and let me know what you think the part is.

Have a great week and happy reading!

Friday, February 26, 2010

Time is Running Out

Just a heads up that these are the final three days to get your nominations in for "World's Favorite Detective." If you haven't yet made your nominations or you forgot someone you wanted to nominate. Be sure to go here and get that nomination entered.

As I write this, there have been 327 nominations made. I'll begin to tally them all up to see who the top 64 nominees are and then construct the brackets, announce the contest, and we'll begin weekly voting on March 8th. It will be a vote-down, so that we end up with the top two the week of "Detectives Around the World." I hope you'll check in each week and vote for your favorites!

So, make sure you get your nominations in so that your detective is in the bracket. Make sure all your friends have gotten their nominations in, too! And let's get ready to rumble, ya'll!

Thursday, February 25, 2010

THE LONG FALL - Walter Mosely

First line: "'I'm sorry, Mr. um?..." the skinny receptionist said.

Leonid McGill is trying to go straight, or at least straighter than he's been most of his life. These days he's working as a P.I. His most recent case involves locating four men given only the street names they donned in their youth. After he's located all the men and they start turning up dead, LT, as his friends like to call him, receives a visit from a stranger trying to kill HIM. So, Leonid starts tracking backwards. The man who hired him was using a false name and when Leonid finds him, the man is dead. All his leads turn into dead ends, but if he doesn't find out what's going on, he may very well be the next dead end, himself.

THE LONG FALL is the first book in Walter Mosley's new Leonid McGill series, and he's off to a smashing start with this one. McGill is a former boxer who was also involved in a very shady occupation. However, he's decided to "go straight" as a P.I. McGill is also father to three children, of which only one is his biological child. And his marriage is essentially dead, but he remains in the union. The depth of McGill's character makes understanding him as much a part of the mystery as the crimes of the plot are.

The plot of THE LONG FALL weaves several storylines together, all directly connected to McGill. In addition to finding out who is killing the men he located, McGill is trying to prevent his son Twill from making a grave mistake that, while intended for the best of reasons, would forever alter Twill's life.

The language of Mosley's prose is the greatest of the strengths in this novel. The way that he blends the beauty of language with the rough, harshness of the characters, the crimes, the streets of New York, it mimics the dynamics of his protagonist. One of my favorite examples of this is early on in the novel when Leonid is talking about boxing:
" Throwing a punch is the yang of a boxer's life. The yin is being able to avoid getting hit."
Not only is that a wonderful metaphor, but it sets the tone for the whole novel: black and white, male and female, good and bad, rich and poor. Mosely is examining the intricacies of their relationships. Yes, they create a good deal of gray, but the gray comes from the blending of those extreme opposites.

THE LONG FALL is a perfect example of how a writer can continue to write, continue to grow, and continue to do all of it well. Walter Mosely has done just that, and I look forward to the next outing with Leonid McGill.

I listened to THE LONG FALL on audio, read by Mirron Willis. Willis did a fantastic job with this narration, bringing out the distinct characteristics of all the characters. His tone and pacing seemed to match the character and plot that Mosley has created. Penguin did a nice job of matching the reader with the book on this project.

THE LONG FALL is available from Riverhead Books in hardcover (ISBN: 978-1594488580) and from Penguin Audio in unabridged audio book (ISBN: 978-0143144205). A softcover format should be available next month.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

A Felonious February Weekend

As you all know, I traveled to Milwaukee again this past weekend to attend Felonious February at the Muskego Library. This is the same library where I attended the annual Murder & Mayhem in Muskego back in November. This time, however, I was scheduled to interview one of my favorite writers, Alafair Burke. I videotaped the interview, and I'll be sharing that with you a little later. But for today, I have a recap and some pictures to share. No matter how great my pictures could have come out, they wouldn't be able to capture how wonderful this weekend was. It was laid back and easy going. I loved it.

First up in the photo array is my buddy Logan. He graciously allowed us to visit his home:


I met up with Judy Bobalik in Indiana, and she and I drove up to Milwaukee to pick up Alafair at the airport. Then we made our way to Jon and Ruth Jordan's lair where we were joined by Tom Schreck who had come in from Albany. The six of us dined that evening at the Harley Davidson Museum Restaurant. It was a relaxing evening full of great company and conversation. Tom ordered a beer, and the waiter also brought him a sample of all the microbrews available.

He lined them up in a rainbow of darkest to lightest as he explained each one for Tom.


Our waiter was great fun and took all our silliness in stride, relishing it almost as much as we did.

When we returned to Castle Crimespree, Jon introduced Tom and I to Dr. Horrible. Jon, Ruth and Judy were all hands when it came to Dr. Horrible. All in all, a wonderful time with wonderful friends.

Saturday we didn't have to be to the library until 1, so the six of us met at the Iron Horse Hotel for lunch before heading over. It was more time to just share stories and enjoy each other's company. And you couldn't ask for better company than this.


Libby Hellman, Joe Konrath, Jamie Freveletti, and David Heinzmann drove in from Chicago. And Brian Azzarello also came in for the event.

Libby, Jamie and David started off the afternoon with a panel representing The Outfit Collective bloggers. They discussed their works and writing styles, among other topics before taking questions from the audience.


The Outfit panel was followed by a one-on-one discussion with Tom Schreck and Joe Konrath. These two kept the audience laughing as they discussed their short story they wrote together, Tom's similarities to his protagonist Duffy, and Joe's distinct differences from his character Jack Daniels.


They also hit on topics such as e-books and the benefits of sharing materials through e-book format, free .pdf documents, and other samplings that can attract new readers to their print books.


Tom and Joe were followed by an interview of Brian Azzarello who discussed different elements of the graphic novel. Brian is a veteran graphic novelist and spoke about the process involved in writing a graphic novel; the relationships between the writer, the artist, and the colorist; and, what I found most interesting, his experience working with an artist who didn't even live in the United States. Brian worked on 100 BULLETS for ten years with a artist from Argentina who he didn't meet for years after starting to work with him. They didn't speak the same language, they didn't live in the same country, but they made the relationship work flawlessly.

Then it was show time for Alafair and I. We wrapped up the afternoon of Felonious February, and I couldn't believe how quickly our 50 minutes went by. I won't share too much of the content with you since you'll get to see the video soon, but I can tell you I had far more questions than we had time for. The general response I heard afterward indicated that the questions we did cover left everyone knowing something about Alafair that they didn't know before. She made the whole process relaxing and fun. I am so honored to have been able to interview her live. Alafair is a fascinating, wonderful person.


Looking back over the photos, though, I made some crazy faces. I need to practice reading interview questions in front of a mirror, I think - holy cow! This picture is one that's semi-close to normal. ;)

After everyone finished signing books and collecting their belongings, we headed out to dinner. A nice way to wrap up the day with everyone. Here are a couple pictures from dinner at Slims. The first is Tom Schreck with Jaxson. Jaxson is Penny's grandson, and Penny is the Muskego librarian who coordinates Murder and Mayhem and this year also Felonious February. And then a picture of Alafair and I.



It was difficult saying good-bye. While I was happy to come home to my critters on Sunday, I was starting to miss everyone almost instantly. I look forward to the next opportunity to get together with my "family."

Friday, February 19, 2010

212 - Alafair Burke

First line: "Tanya Abbott noticed the quiver in her index finger as it pressed the three silver buttons in the rain - 9...1...1."

When a classmate directs Megan Gunther to a campus gossip website, she discovers that someone is leaving what she perceives to be threatening messages to her. The anonymous person has posted her schedule, right down to her exercise class. But the police tell Megan and her parents there isn't anything they can do. Empty threats are posted on websites like this one all the time. But these threats don't seem to be empty when Megan ends up dead and her roommate seriously injured.

Meanwhile, real estate agent/high-priced call girl Katie Battle is found tortured to death after leaving for a date/job with a seemingly harmless man. So, when Ellie Hatcher and partner, J.J. Rogan, find a connection between the two women, they start trying to put the pieces together. However, the pieces don't seem to fit right, and then a new piece is thrown into the puzzle when connections to a wealthy New York businessman and a high profile trial judge are unearthed and Megan's injured roommate disappears. Are these pieces all from the same puzzle? And if so, how do they go together? If not, where do they belong?

After a short hiatus, my favorite female crime fighter is back at work, protecting the streets of New York City in Alafair Burke's sixth novel, 212. The title of this book stems from the New York City area code as well as the name of the building where all the book's action originates.

Ellie Hatcher is back with a vengeance. A vengeance that lands her butt squarely in jail. Smart, independent Ellie Hatcher proves to the world everyday that she's far more than a pretty face. She can "bring home the bacon and fry it up in a pan." She juggles her job, her older brother Jess, Assistant District Attorney Max Donovan, even her mother back in Wichita. And while she may not be as hip as her brother would like, she still manages to do it all with panache.

Burke's work is the epitome of art imitating life. Her plot lines are "ripped from the headlines;" the characters and dialogue are infused with pop culture; and she brings to life the New York City she so loves. 212 has no shortage of Burke's signature wit, which often comes out in her crisp, commanding dialogue. Ellie's exchanges with both her brother Jess and her partner J.J. could walk off the pages they are so believable. Burke's strengths are numerous, but her dialogue is quite possibly my favorite. In this short excerpt between Ellie and J.J., the reader not only learns about each character, but also the easy relationship that exists between the two of them:

"'Well, being his pal didn't save me from a jail cell. Maybe next time you can be the one who does our time.'

'Nah,' he said, holding open the precinct door for her to exit. 'I'm way too pretty for central holding on some chippy contempt rap. Someone like me goes down, it's got to be major. I would need some serious federal corrections facility - golf course, croquet...'

'Rogan, you were raised in Brooklyn. Do you even know what croquet is?'

'I know it involves a round thing called a ball, which means it's yet another sport a brother could dominate if we only gave it a shot.'

'When you're done, you think you might get around to letting me in?' Ellie tugged on the Crown Vic's locked passenger handle to make her point."
In that exchange, Burke uses the word "said" once. And yet the identity of either speaker is never in question. Dialogue is clear, it's sharp, it's witty. When a reader believes the dialogue, he/she believes the characters delivering it. For my money, no one does this better than Alafair Burke.

The complexity of 212's plot is carefully balanced. Burke peals back layer after layer, creating numerous unexpected twists throughout the book. But the twists never go over the top, nor do they become too numerous for belief. Instead the keep the reader gripped to the pages. I tried to slowly savor this book, but the plot simply wouldn't let me.

In addition, the plot of 212, like each of Burke's previous novels, reflects current events. But more than that, it examines some hefty "why" questions that are floating around these current events as well. And whenever Burke addresses a "why" question in her writing, she illustrates that the answer to that question is never a basic one, like so many people want to make it out to be. Afterall, it's humanity she's addressing, and humanity is certainly never basic. In 212, Burke takes a 348 page back swing allowing her to masterfully stroke her theme straight down the fairway and sink a hole-in-one on the final page. It's a monumental ending, one that won't quickly leave your thoughts.

I waited over a year for Ellie Hatcher to return to action, and 212 was worth every minute of that wait.

212 will be available March 23, 2010 from Harper (ISBN: 978-0-06-156122-1). And Alafair will be out and about promoting it. You can check her schedule here to see if she will be near you. Or if you'd like to get a signed copy of 212, I'm sure most of the bookstores would be happy to accomodate a mail order for you.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Preparing for Muskego

A couple fun things for you as I'm preparing for Felonious February up at the Muskego Public Library this weekend. If you're in the area, you should come. It's going to be fun!

First, my very good friend Michael from Lazy Thoughts from a Boomer is running a series on the Robert Crais audio books. Michael is an expert on audios and especially on Robert Crais' audios. He's running through the whole Elvis Cole/Joe Pike series and we're having some fun discussions about them. If you haven't checked this series out, I encourage you to do so, even if you think you aren't an audio fan, it's still a great look at how different interpretations can create different effects in reading. Fun stuff, and many kudos to Michael for the series. It's fantastic!

I'm grossly behind on my blog reading, and I need to get over and chat with Hank Phillippi Ryan who is guesting at 7 Criminal Minds this week. What a fun, talented woman. Stop over and say hi to her!

Don't forget to enter your nominations for the World's Favorite Detective tournament. The form for entries is here. Thanks to everyone who has been helping to spread the word. We aren't going to have any trouble filling the 64 slots. The question will simply be who fills those slots. And there's still time to sign up to participate in the "Detectives Around the World" theme week. Info on what to do for that is here. We've got over 20 participating blogs right now, and everyone is welcome. There will be lots of prizes and lots of fun. Hope you'll join in.

And finally, I want to share this trailer for Alafair Burke's 212 with you. For those that don't know, I will be interviewing Alafair at Felonious Friday this weekend. It's my first LIVE interview, so wish me luck. Alafair's an old pro...me, I'm the novice! But, while I'm traveling to Wisconsin tomorrow, I have my review of 212 set for you to check out. To prepare for that, check out this fun trailer:


Tuesday, February 16, 2010

THE GENTLEMAN'S HOUR - Don Winslow

First Line: "Kansas. 'See flatter than.'"

THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR is Don Winslow's follow-up to THE DAWN PATROL. Named for the block of surfing time in the day directly after "The Dawn Patrol," THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR finds Boone Daniels investigating the circumstances of the murder of his surfing hero, Kelly Kuhio. The only problem with this situation is the fact that Boone is investigating on behalf of the young man who has admitted to killing Kelly. The other members of The Dawn Patrol turn their backs on Boone when they learn what he is doing. The only exception is Sunny who is no longer in Southern California; she's on the professional surf tour.

The detective who normally prefers to be inactive whenever possible, Boone is also juggling a second case for one of his friends who normally surfs The Gentlemen's Hour, Dan Nichols. Nichols has hired Boone to follow his wife and find out if she is cheating on Nichols. Boone hates these kinds of cases, but accepts to help a friend. His choice may end up leading Boone straight to jail.

THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR is presently not available in the United States. From the information I've garnered, this book will not be available in the U.S. until summer of 2011. However, I was fortunate enough to have a friend, thank you le0pard13, who purchased a U.K. version of the novel, which is presently available. He shared his copy with me, and I was able to luxuriate in 328 pages of Winslow goodness.

Don Winslow is notorious for the sharp wit in his writing. He can be writing about the darkest, ugliest aspects of human nature and manage to pop something out that just makes you laugh, even though you're on the verge of heart-wrenching tears. And the reason you laugh is because the quip is so blatantly and starkly true. While THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR doesn't quite take you to the heart-wrenching tears - crying is not permitted in the gentlemen's hour, after all - it does explore, as THE DAWN PATROL did, the complexities and sensitivities of friendship and its bonds.

As in THE DAWN PATROL, the action of the plot is symbolized through the ocean:
"Never turn your back on a wave.

Never turn your back on the absence of a wave, either, because the second you do, a real thundercrusher will rise out of nowhere and smack you down. The ocean may look like one thing on the surface, but there's always something different happening underneath. That something could start a thousand miles away and then be headed toward you and you'll never know about it until it happens."
At the onset of THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR, the ocean is flat and still. No surfing takes place, just lolling and philosophizing. The ocean, like life, is all powerful. You can't control it even when it's still, but you can learn to understand it. Boone understands the ocean; it's the rest of life he still needs to be educated in. He's learning bit by bit and he's trying to do what he knows is right, regardless of how hard that may be. That struggle to do right is what makes Boone a character readers can relate to. His missteps and machismo are what make him a character readers find humor in. The whole package is what makes him the protagonist of a outstanding P.I. novel.

THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR cut a lot of the fat from THE DAWN PATROL for a tighter plot, but it maintains Winslow's depth and humor. The return of Petra and the loss of Sunny throws explosive dynamics into The Dawn Patrol's chemistry. And the added layer of The Gentleman's Hour builds dimension in the surfing community of Southern California. And of course, the Pacific once again takes on the dual role of character and setting.

While the ocean may not look like it's doing much in THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR, Winslow is making a huge splash with the return of "Boone freaking Daniels" and his surfing crew: "Dave the Love and War God, Johnny Absolutely Banzai, High Rolling Tide, and Hang Tough Twelve," not to mention "Loco Ono." If you enjoyed THE DAWN PATROL, you will love THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR. If you haven't read THE DAWN PATROL, now's the time. This is a series most effectively read in order. Pick up THE DAWN PATROL before THE GENTLEMEN'S HOUR'S release in 2011.

And if you can't wait until 2011, THE GENTLEMAN'S HOUR is available now in the U.K. through William Heinemann (ISBN: 978-0-4340-1925-0).

Monday, February 15, 2010

Let the Nominations Begin

As many of you know, in April, I will be hosting the "Detectives Around the World" theme week. One element of the theme week is going to be a tournament for the "World's Favorite Detective." This tournament will consist of weekly contests similar to the college basketball tournaments that will be going on. So, beginning this week and ending February 28th, you can nominate your favorite detectives.

There is no limit to the number of detectives you can nominate. There are 64 positions in the tournament, so if more than 64 detectives are nominated, the 64 with the highest number of nominations will be included. Enter your favorite detectives and their authors in the form below. Come back as often as you'd like to enter as many as you'd like.
What qualifies as a "detective" in this tournament you ask? A detective, for these purposes, is a character who is a police detective, a sheriff, an FBI agent or a licensed P.I. So, essentially, no spies or amateur sleuths for this tourney. The detectives can be male or female and reside anywhere in the world.

Once the 64 are nominated, a contest will be announced, much like the college basketball bracket contests you probably know about from office pools. So check back on March 1st for your chance to get in on the contest for some cool prizes!

If you have any questions, feel free to leave them in the comments or send me an email. Let the nominations begin!

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Congratulations and Heads Up

Congratulations go out to Kristie C from Warren, Michigan, who won the ARC copy of PRINT THE LEGEND. If you didn't win and are interested in purchasing a copy for yourself, here are a few independent mystery bookstores who would be more than happy to help you with your order. The recent weather has taken a toll on several of these fine stores:


Mystery Lovers Bookshop in Pennsylvania (free shipping on book orders over $10)

Aunt Agatha's in Michigan



Foul Play in Ohio


If you're interested in ordering from Murder by the Book or Foul Play, they will each be hosting Craig for part of his book tour. You could order a personalized copy from them. Also, these are my own personal endorsements; none of these bookstores compensates me in any way for mentions on the blog. I've had dealings with each of these stores personally and recommend them without any other influencing factors.


Also, I wanted to give you a early heads up that tomorrow I will be posting the form for you to nominate your favorite detective for the "World's Favorite Detective" tournament that will be part of the "Detectives Around the World" theme week. Make sure you check back and nominate your favorites. You can nominated however many detectives you'd like. Nominate early and often...and tell your friends!


And oh yeah, Happy Valentine's Day.




Friday, February 12, 2010

The Man Behind the Legend - Part II

Welcome back everyone. And welcome back to Craig, too. I am so excited to be back again with the remainder of my interview with PRINT THE LEGEND author Craig McDonald. I had such a great time with this interview and Craig was exceptionally tolerant of all my questions. But, I know you're more interested in getting back to what Craig had to say, as am I, so let's jump right back in.
Q. Ernest Hemingway’s death and the subsequent actions of his wife, friends, the scholars, this is the focus of book three, PRINT THE LEGEND. Can you talk a little about the conspiracies that we see in this novel (without giving too much away of course)? You bring out elements of the relationship of Hemingway to the FBI, and thus to Hector. And while all three books deal with conspiracies, PRINT THE LEGEND really gripped me. Made me want to run to Google about every six pages.

Craig: Thanks very much, Jen— I’m thrilled to hear that. The book that started much of the plot in PRINT rolling in my head was Herbert Mitgang’s DANGEROUS DOSSIERS that details J. Edgar Hoover’s surveillance of many writers and painters including such menacing figures as Carl Sandburg and Robert Frost. Part of the tragedy of Hem’s last days is that he was regarded as paranoid and delusional based on his claims the FBI was trailing him, but they in fact were: Agents followed him right into the Mayo Clinic. We have their reports to Hoover regarding the fact that electroshock therapy was being considered for Hemingway. Hoover was also quite upset that there was a period of time in which Hemingway had direct access to President Roosevelt via Hem’s third wife, Martha Gellhorn.

The other ongoing plot thread in PRINT relates to Hemingway’s posthumous papers/works. All of the books printed after Hemingway’s death were meddled with, some to great extent, by Hem’s fourth wife, Mary, and by subsequent editors. Mary also burned some materials in Cuba…allegedly letters and magazines, but who’s to say for certain?
Q. Hemingway was not as prominent in HEAD GAMES as he was in TOROS AND TORSOS and now in PRINT THE LEGEND. From several references in PRINT THE LEGEND, I’m assuming we’ll see more of Hector’s friendship with Papa in the future. Is that a safe assumption?
Craig: There will be a brief Hemingway cameo in number four, ROLL THE CREDITS…something that happens in occupied Paris. Apart from that, Hem has a major roll in the novel I wrote set in 1920s Paris. There he really is Hector’s sidekick through the duration of the novel. But that’s about it for Hemingway.
Q. I found myself looking up people and events from the Lassiter books to see how they blended into the history books. A prime example being Orson Welles’ flight from the U.S. in 1947. How have you gone about your research into these areas? Are these tidbits you’ve collected over the years or did you sit down with the express purpose of finding this information for a book concept? You’ve located a lot of “pockets” of time that aren’t necessarily recorded in detail in the history books and made use of them in your plots. And where do you draw your line at fact and fiction, or do you feel like it’s already drawn for you?
Craig: A lot of it is frankly serendipity and having a lint-trap mind for odd historical details picked up over years of reading. The bit about Orson fleeing the U.S. was stuff I picked up from reading far too many accounts of the Black Dahlia murder. Really, all that TOROS stuff was just weaving together things from different sources regarding the surrealists whom I’ve always regarded as a very twisted bunch.

In the grander sense, I hope the lines between fact and fiction don’t show much. I try to have the real people in the right places in time based on what we know of their movements. I try to have them talk “in character.” But I’ll trump history for story every time because it is, in the end, a novel.

I was a kid who read a lot of stuff about classic true crimes, read it far earlier than I should have, and yet you start to play games in your own head about how things marry up. My first full crime novel/manuscript, written in the late 1980s/very early 1990s, one I’d love to get out someday, is written around the Cleveland Torso murders. It was actually written before so many others took their own swings at those Cleveland crimes. That first novel kind of set the template and style for the eventual Lassiter novels, though it remains, for now, in a kind of limbo. And again, to illustrate my stubbornness, the character of the Irish cop, James Hanrahan in PRINT THE LEGEND, actually is one of the key characters from that first novel. Hanrahan, by the way, will be back in a much larger role in ROLL THE CREDITS.
Q. Do you hear many of those “detail” complaints about any of the books, especially seeing as you’re dealing with a lot more historical information? You know…those, “that gun doesn’t have [fill in the blank]” or “it wasn’t raining on that [enter date] in [enter location].”
Craig: To tell the truth, I purposely built a couple of anachronisms into HEAD GAMES to undermine the sense of accurate history — something to be paid off later in the series — but those “gaffes” went right by readers, nearly as I can tell. But yeah, I had a couple of small glitches in TOROS. One involved Styrofoam…the other a vehicle I had on the road a couple years too early. We fixed it for the French translation. You do your best to check these things. I’ve got some pretty bizarre emails between my agent and me regarding the availability of a certain kind of oysters in a certain place and time. As your agent is now really your front-line editor, mine is always looking for these problems, too.

Those confessions aside, my goal is to give a sense of shared memory of time and place rather than an accurate but embalmed time capsule sense of an era. I’ve read too many historical crime novels that read like a 1936 Sears & Roebuck catalogue: all these product and brand names…long descriptive passages about vintage kitchen utilities. In TOROS, I knowingly put that brick wall around Hemingway’s Key West house a year or two before it was really built just because I wanted that wall there in 1935. At that point, historically, Hem’s place was actually bound by a wire fence.
Q. The age-old debate comes through in Hector’s story through his friendship with Hemingway. Hector the “genre” writer and Hemingway the “literary” writer. And it is especially pronounced in PRINT THE LEGEND with all the scholars present. But there are also some interesting viewpoints on that debate in this book. For example, when Patricia introduces herself to Hector and says, “ ‘My pupil made a compelling case for you as one of the pioneers of postmodern fiction, despite your classification as a genre writer by most critics.’” This has always been an interesting distinction to me because as I look at history’s “literary” writers, if they were writing today, many would fall into genre categories. Shakespeare, Poe, Dickens, not to mention Arthurian literature would certainly be in the crime fiction realm. Are there crime fiction writers today that you think we’ll look back on and find that they’ve influenced writing as a whole? How do you feel about the legitimacy of the debate?
Craig: This past week, in fact, brought the usual dust up about that fissure on the web…a debate about putting a moratorium on the term “transcending the genre” and so forth. Having this year sampled something like 300 crime and mystery novels, speaking as a former genre critic, interviewer and current genre writer, I’d submit we desperately need to push boundaries and “transcend genre” more than most authors in genre currently seem impelled to do or many publishers are willing to buy. Many acquiring editors won’t buy things that fall between or meld genres. A lot of current crime and mystery fiction, for me, is frankly stultifying as written. There are astute people in publishing houses in New York who’ll say the same thing to you, quietly. Staying in the lines is choking genre fiction.

I’m trying to think of anyone writing today who I think might have that kind of reach or influence you’re pointing to…and I’m coming up dry. Cormac McCarthy runs as a literary writer, but he has stormed across a couple of genres with his two most recent novels, and he certainly wrote a western with BLOOD MERIDIAN. This past year, I’ve read a lot of novels using obvious Anton Chigurh knock-offs — these kinds of existentialist/metaphysical sociopaths. Coming at your question from the opposite direction in time, as you did with Poe and Dickens and so forth, I’d say Hemingway was a genre writer in TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT…certainly in “The Killers” and seven or eight other short stories. Same can be said of Faulkner. I’d say Flannery O’Connor was our first great female noir novelist and short story writer. For my money, THE GREAT GATSBY qualifies as crime fiction. Algren and Wallant wrote novels I think you could say are cusping crime fiction. I could go on in that sense… Maybe with hindsight we’ll see a few of today’s genre writers having wielded real influence, but I can’t point to them just yet.
Q. Kind of branching from that question, what do you think Hector Lassiter’s views on today’s crime fiction would be? Are there changes in the genre that would send him off the deep end? Are there new elements of the genre today that he’d be thrilled to see emerging?
Craig: In a short story that first introduced Hector called “The Last Interview,” I have Hector riffing on some contemporaries and some emerging trends that had him aghast (cat mysteries). Without getting too far into spoiler territory, in PRINT we begin to get hints that Hector actually kind of abandoned genre in favor of some other kind of writing as the middle 1960s encroached. That Paris novel I’ve alluded to a few times actually makes it clear that Hector was there in the City of Lights in the 1920s to establish himself as a literary writer — an ambition he never quite shook.

As to how Hector would regard crime fiction today, he’d probably share a lot of my own tastes in contemporary fiction, focusing most heavily on James Sallis and Daniel Woodrell. He’d probably have higher regard for more writers working in genre now than in his own time. Hector always chafes when someone calls him a mystery writer because of what the term “mystery novel” embodied in his day—plot-driven puzzles low on polished prose and stingy on character development. I think, on balance, more of today’s writers are swinging for the far fences than maybe did in the previous generations of crime genre writers.
Q. You mentioned that you’ve read quite a bit of crime fiction this year, and you’ve also mentioned that you make an effort to grab the newest Megan Abbott, the newest Michael Koryta. Who else is on the list for you? With all the reading this year, any new names that you feel will make an impression on the genre?
Craig: I’ll read anything new by Sallis, Woodrell… Ellroy when he writes them — it was a long time between novels this ’round. I try to stay current with Mosley and Pelecanos. I read both of the new Connelly’s and THE SCARECROW certainly resonated for me on countless levels as a journalist. Other novels that have caught my eye this year include one by an Ohio author writing as “Kenneth Abel” called DOWN IN THE FLOOD. I was impressed by Jedediah Berry’s debut, THE MANUAL OF DETECTION. Tom Piccirilli’s SHADOW SEASON was excellent and did some very interesting things related to its narrator’s blindness. I actually read Ellroy’s BLOOD’S A ROVER twice…once to read it and once to prep to interview him. It is, in most ways, monumental, I think.

But in all of the year’s reading, what I found, most frustratingly, were a lot of novels that went along great for two-thirds’ length or more, then just made a tonal shift in the final turn that was almost whip-lash inducing. I’m not sure why so many books seemed to do that, but it was a definite running motif in my year’s reading, and I was reading all over the place, so it wasn’t just a matter of my own tastes producing this result.
Q. In PRINT THE LEGEND we find out that Hector is writing a book that may be bordering on the autobiographical. He’s created a working title…TOROS AND TORSOS. And he says about this work in progress, “I have my own long game to think about. Maybe I’ll let that sucker sit for awhile. Arrange to have it published thirty or forty years down the road, and maybe under some other byline…Maybe something Celtic sounding.” Well, hmmm. This leads me to the question – how much of you is in Hector?
Craig: Some of that is postmodern gamesmanship…having some meta fun. Another part of it is I’m increasingly underscoring the fact that these novels, whether written in first- or third-person, are really Hector’s own books…works he’s put forth for highly idiosyncratic agendas or personal reasons. He is the man “who writes what he lives and lives what he writes.”

To the other half of your question, in HEAD GAMES, Hector was frankly more of a character for me. I was thinking of James Crumley a lot while writing that book. By the time I was halfway through writing number two, TOROS, the distances between Hector and me had closed pretty alarmingly, as I began to see in retrospect. Fact is, I think Hector kind of hijacked my head in some ways and he’s yet to give it completely back. Between the eight novels, I’ve written well over half-a-million words about the guy, and having done that over a period of just a few months, something had to give and I guess it was maybe my own persona to some mild extent.
Q. O.k., I’ll quickly apologize for so many questions because I’m not done yet! I’ve directed most of my questions to you about the series as a whole, so is there anything you’d like to add specifically about PRINT THE LEGEND before I wrap this up with my last question?
Craig: Honestly, I think you’ve covered it all and thank you so much for this — it’s been a really rewarding exchange and you are one very close reader.

What would I add? Just that I’ve tried to make each novel very different from the one before because I rue series where the books become indistinguishable from one another. In the case of PRINT THE LEGEND, I see it as very much a shared book…as much belonging to the character of Hannah Paulson, the young, pregnant and aspiring fiction writer whom Hector comes to mentor to some extent, as the novel belongs to Hector himself.

And touching again on the unusual use of time in these novels, the good news is you can actually jump on board with any book in the series, really…there isn’t a pressing need to read them in publication sequence.
Q. Last question (as Craig wonders why in the world he agreed to this interview) – One True Sentence: “Hector Lassiter…”
Craig: No wondering on my part: thank you, Jen — this was, sincerely, a blast.

Okay, One True Sentence. Hector Lassiter would have relished the chance to contribute a six-word memoir: “Life is what happens between novels.”
Yep, you all know I have my goofy grin right now. Don't ya just love it? I love it! No money changed hands for that answer either! Thanks so much to Craig for all his time and wonderful responses. It's been a sheer joy learning more about him, the Hector Lassister series, and specifically PRINT THE LEGEND. And of course PRINT THE LEGEND comes out this Tuesday from St. Martin's Minotaur. Craig's had numerous posts at his blog regarding some of the conspiracies, characters, interviews, etc. that play parts in PRINT THE LEGEND. So you can mosey around over there and find out some additional fascinating facts.

Today is the last day you can enter to win my ARC copy of the book. So if you haven't done that already, jump on over and get your entry in. I will announce the winner tomorrow.

And of course, if you have some additional questions - if any of these questions sparked something for you, please feel free to leave them in the comments.

Thanks to everyone for stopping by. I strongly urge you to put this series on your must read list. It really is one I highly recommend. For those who have the chance to get out to see Craig when he's on his book tour for PRINT THE LEGEND, there is a limited edition short story, "Colt," you will be able to buy from some of the independent book stores he's visiting. You'll want to get your paws on one of those. Here's Craig's tour schedule for that. And now I'll be waiting patiently for the arrival of ROLL THE CREDITS.

Thanks everyone! Happy reading!

Thursday, February 11, 2010

The Man Behind the "Legend" - Part I

As I mentioned earlier this week, I am humbled to have had the opportunity to chat with Craig McDonald and learn a bit more about him and his writing. Hopefully by now you are aware that he is the author of two Hector Lassiter novels, HEAD GAMES and TOROS & TORSOS, with a third, PRINT THE LEGEND, to be released on Tuesday. He also authored two collections of interviews, ART IN THE BLOOD and ROGUE MALES. He is an award-winning journalist, a husband and father, and simply an all-around great guy.

Of course in my blog interviews I have the benefit of being the one who comes up with the questions, so I get to ask about what interests me, but I hope you also find this interview as utterly fascinating as I did. As is often the case, I started asking and just kept going. So, I'm going to divide the interview into two days.

So without a bunch of extra chatter from me, here is day one of my conversation with Craig McDonald:

Q. I’d like to start out with a question about Craig. You’ve published two books of interviews, and PRINT THE LEGEND makes your third crime fiction novel. And prior to that, you were a journalist. What transpired in the life of Craig McDonald to bring you to this point in your career? Why writing? Why crime fiction?

Craig: My goal, very early, was to make a living as a writer. Journalism was partly a first-step toward realizing that aim and a way of gaining discipline, potential source material and developing a voice. I actually tried to write a mystery novel at about the age of eight or nine. The character who centered that early work of fiction I name-dropped into PRINT THE LEGEND (very near the end). I don’t let go of things easily in that way.

As to why crime fiction — it’s what I was raised on. My granddad had a basement full of crime novels he accumulated from this place called Murph’s Bar on the main drag of my hometown. It ran a kind of lending/trading library of pulp-lit stuff, lots of Gold Medal paperback originals and the like. I pretty much skipped the Hardy Boys and went straight to Lester Dent/Kenneth Robeson…on into Ian Fleming and Richard S. Prather.
Q. Aha! A man with a life-long calling. So, you've prepared to get to this level in the game. Nowadays, how do you prefer to write? Do you have a certain time of day that you like to write? Do you set word goals for yourself? Is it mandatory that you write at least something every day? Do you outline? I have to tell you that I love this question as clichĂ© as it is. I have yet to hear an author on either side of the fence not say, “I don’t know how they do it” when they reference writers who write opposite of what they do.
Craig: Preferably early morning, back in the day. Now, it’s just whenever I can fit it in. I don’t have any real routines, and write on the computer, or longhand on a legal pad…more of the latter, lately. I revise as I key it in. I definitely don’t outline, and, yeah, I don’t understand how those who do outline ever write the book. To me, outlined books usually read as outlined books.

I usually start a novel with a beginning and an end in mind. I have a first and last sentence; it’s improvisation in between. James Sallis describes his own process as being a little like throwing yourself off a cliff knowing you can grab enough bracken and limbs on the way down to break your fall. As writing metaphors go, that works well for me. As to daily output, I shoot for 2-3K words, though I’ve done as many as 10-15,000 in a day.
Q. Switching gears here from the written word to the spoken, I was very intrigued to read your interview with Tom Stechschulte and the corresponding blog post. You said that it’s through his voice that you experience your books as the audience, instead of as the creator. This is so different from what I hear most of the time from authors. I typically hear, “I can’t listen to the audio book because it’s so different from what I hear in my head when I write.” What do you think is the reason you’re able to listen and experience as a member of the audience?

Craig: I think film adaptation I’d have a tough time settling into. There’s a story about some author, I forget which one, but I know he wrote a Western. He said he fell out of the film in the first shot because the hero rode in on his horse from the wrong side of the screen. I think because I selected Tom as my audio book narrator, and because he was close to the voice I heard in my head, I can just go with it. Really, by the time a novel is in finished form, I may have read it in total at least 50 times; in parts, maybe a hundred times. I’m always rereading as I key in, so every work is always being revised, all along the way. When I settle in with Tom’s narration, I really forget where it’s all going and just take it in like an old-time radio play. And now, when I edit Hector, his voice sounds just like Tom’s in my head.
Q. You also mentioned that you learn things about your style, about your dialogue that you notice through Tom’s audio book performances. Many authors will tell me that they read out loud to themselves as they write. What different kinds of things are you picking up from the audio books that you wouldn’t pick up from your own readings to yourself as you write?
Craig: I’m actually one of those authors who revises aloud. I know Walter Mosley does that. Ken Bruen, too. In the early days, I’d even read into a tape recorder and listen in the car as I drove to-and-from work: it is a great way to check dialogue for “sound.” Listening to Tom read my stuff, I think I key in on how characters’ are distinguished through my dialogue — helped no end by Tom’s acting, of course — and I learn to further sharpen characters’ voices in that way.
Q. Tom does an exemplary job with the Lassiter books. I’ve listened to his readings of both HEAD GAMES and TOROS AND TORSOS. Then I listened to James Lee Burke’s RAIN GODS, which Tom also read. I spent the first two chapters trying to re-orient myself so that I wasn’t thinking Hector Lassiter was talking. Do you hear your own voice or do you hear Tom’s voice when you write?
Craig: That’s strange: Tonight I’m about a third into reading RAIN GODS. Now that you mention it, I never hear my own voice when I write, though I didn’t consciously realize that until you made me think about it. I really write the movie I’m watching in my head. I hear distinct voices for all the characters. Before Tom was narrating the novels, Hector actually sounded like singer/songwriter Tom Russell’s speaking voice in my head. Now it’s all Tom Stechschulte. Bud Fiske, Hector’s sometimes sidekick, also sounds like Tom’s Bud, now.
Q. We have discussed before that I was a big fan of Mark Hammer’s before he passed away, and I am also a huge fan of George Guidall. How about you? Other audio book readers you’ve really been affected by?

Craig: I like Guidall quite a bit. Richard Poe is great. I enjoyed the late-Frank Muller’s readings very much. David Rintoul did my favorite narrations of the James Bond books. What I tend to notice even more are badly cast voices. There were some unabridged recordings of Hemingway’s novels that were cast so badly it smacked of sabotage. For my money, the best readings of Hemingway’s works are those by Alexander Scourby and Stacy Keach.
Q. O.k., let's get back on track here. Please pardon my drift there. Your “series” with Hector Lassiter doesn’t follow a traditional chronological order. Instead the events from each novel intertwine with each other. It’s kind of like taking the concept of the epic novel and blending it with the serial novel. What made you decide to use this approach? What are the greatest benefits and what are the greatest drawbacks or challenges?
Craig: For better or worse, events in our own lives are never discrete from one another: it’s all like a kind of oil spill. I wanted to capture some of that in a series format which is something I don’t think has ever been done before. For me, it’s all one big book. This way of using time also allows me to recontextualize things and kind of never shut off Hector’s evolution as a character. In the fourth novel, ROLL THE CREDITS, we’re going to see a twenty-something Hector in flashback. I have an entire novel written, set in one week in Paris, in which Hector is 24. If we get that far into the series, the later books will tend to give you a younger Hector than the first four did.

I think the only way to pull this concept off is to do the crazy (or audacious) thing I did: Draft all eight novels, then revise them tightly as a block. Then cross your fingers and hope nothing falls apart in the process of preparing/polishing the books with an editor.
Q. You have completed the Hector Lassiter series, correct? And PRINT THE LEGEND was, in your plan, to be the penultimate book. Your publisher, however, wanted to move the book to the third publication. Did you have to make any changes for this? Or how has it (if at all) changed your concept for the entire Hector Lassiter arc?
Craig: All the books are written. And, yes, my editor at Minotaur, John Schoenfelder (since moved on to Little, Brown), read them all and picked what I regarded as the last two books to relaunch the series at Minotaur. The strange thing was, the opening pages of PRINT THE LEGEND come right off the end of TOROS & TORSOS. So, in terms of the master plan, nothing was disrupted. It even looks planned. We’ve since made a change in publication schedules, and what I regarded as the last novel, set in the late 1950s in Nashville and building to a revelation at the end regarding the whole series, is now off the table in that sense — to my relief. Number four will instead focus on events tied to World War II and the German expressionist film movement’s influence of film noir. Hector will narrate book four, as he did in HEAD GAMES. Number four is fully edited and in cue, and that will be ROLL THE CREDITS, winter of 2011.
Q. When you started HEAD GAMES, was a seven-book series always your ultimate goal for Hector Lassiter? Did you plan out the entire series at that time or did that evolve after writing HEAD GAMES?
Craig: HEAD GAMES was a probable standalone with some secret wiggle room built into the end if I decided to do more with Hector. As I was writing the second novel, TOROS & TORSOS, I came up with the idea for the 1924, Paris book that I originally envisioned as number three. From there the others quickly unfolded. I saw it as a contained series with a definite end. I ended up going to eight because in a first phone conversation with John Schoenfelder, he expressed keen interest in a kind of WWII epic tied to film noir. My eldest daughter, who was also going through an obsessive period over that war and Anne Frank, kept urging me to do something with WWII. Maybe when she’s a teenager she’ll be allowed to read the result.
Q. So, with Hector simply waiting for the publishing green light at this point, what’s in store for Craig McDonald?
Craig: I wish I could tell you with certainty. There are several things out there now and it could go several different ways. I have a trilogy that’s running to the outer edges of genre that’s under consideration…a couple of standalones lurking. And another whole series I wrote before Hector I’d like to get out someday. It’s always an infernal waiting game. Some of this is all just waiting on the genre wheel to turn. My sense of the market right now is that the drive is for the big story…the high-concept novel. I’m thinking series are going to be a harder and harder sale outside the cozy market. The age of the small case is over. I think hard noir and pastiche noir have run their course, too, in some sense.
Q. In addition to being a crime fiction series, the Hector Lassiter series is also very much historical fiction using not only events in history but also very prominent figures from history: Pancho Villa, Ernest Hemingway, Orson Welles, members of the Surrealist Movement, J. Edgar Hoover. What were the driving factors that made you decide to plop Hector’s life into this time frame and have him associate with these figures?
Craig: I was into the notion of writing a secret history of the 20th Century, so Hector was born on January 1, 1900. His actual checkout date is one of the things the series will perhaps address in time. Living up to its title, the events in HEAD GAMES, particularly in the last third, are not necessarily to be trusted.

But there came a point after I wrote the third novel, which is kind of A MOVEABLE FEAST as crime novel, that I decided to actually run from history in that sense of layering in lots of real people. I wrote a Hector set in 1925 Key West that contains no historical figures. It does use a couple of historical crimes, one lifted from Toledo, Ohio, and dropped into the Keys. My greatest fear with this series is to have it turn into something that starts to feel like Forrest Gump or Young Indiana Jones where Hector can’t swing a dead cat without smacking up against a notable personality. So I’ve tried to keep the cast of historical characters to a minimum in terms of numbers. Historical figures will recur, more often than not. Hoover was there lurking in HEAD GAMES and TOROS and others to come. Hemingway is an ongoing Hector friend, ditto Orson, though I’m pretty much done with Welles at this point. Oddly enough, Gertrude Stein crops up in quite a number of the novels.
Fun stuff. Are you enjoying getting to know the man behind the "Legend"? O.k., everyone groan because this is where I say "to be continued" tomorrow! We'll hear more about Craig, his books, and crime fiction. If you have any questions for Craig, leave them in the comments. I'm confident he'll stop by and chat with you if you have some nagging questions, too. In the meantime you can check out his website. You can also check out where he's going to be live, promoting the release of PRINT THE LEGEND.

And, if you haven't already registered to win my ARC copy of PRINT THE LEGEND, time is running out. Make sure you register here to get your name in the drawing. I will see you back here tomorrow for the conclusion to my conversation with Craig McDonald.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

PRINT THE LEGEND - Craig McDonald

First Line: "He rose with the sun as he had every morning since childhood."

PRINT THE LEGEND is the third novel in Craig McDonald's Hector Lassiter series. This collection of adventures for the pulp fiction writer begins after Ernest Hemingway's death. Hector has returned to Idaho to speak at a convention of Hemingway scholars. Mary Hemingway is soliciting Hector's help in publishing some of Hem's work that didn't see print before his suicide. Mary has also agreed to let Richard Paulson, one of the Hemingway scholars, assist in writing her biography. What Mary doesn't know is that Richard suspects Mary of murdering Papa, and he's there to coax an admission of guilt from her.

Meanwhile, the FBI that hounded Hemingway in life, is still hovering around everything associated with him: his widow, his home, even his friends - including Lassiter.

As with both Hector Lassiter books before this, PRINT THE LEGEND is brimming with conspiracies, adventures, and crime. McDonald has taken the historic figures and events, weaving them brilliantly into Hector Lassiter's fictional world. The blending of fact and fiction is seamless, so much so the reader will find him/herself drawn to the history books (or Google, as it may be), driven to know more.

PRINT THE LEGEND focuses mainly on Hemingway and the legacy left after his suicide. While many people doubted Hem's claims of harassment from the FBI while he was alive, records have since come to light verifying many of those claims, as well as the harassment of others in the art world. McDonald brings the conspiracy to life as Hector gears up to battle it:

"Hector saw shadows everywhere he looked. Now it was about more than his own legacy; about more even than preserving Hem's long game.

Now it was a war to save his craft; a war against an enemy Hector couldn't yet figure out how to point a gun at."
As he did in TOROS & TORSOS, McDonald makes use of the third person limited point of view. He alternates the limited point of view between the major roles in the novel, which works to heighten the effect of the conspiracy theories. And again, we see the distinctive time line of McDonald's series. The time line stretches over several decades and intertwines, occurring concurrently, with events that occurred in both previous novels, as opposed to each novel occurring consecutively. We even see a glimpse of Bud Fiske and learn a little tidbit tied into HEAD GAMES. Likewise, TOROS & TORSOS takes on a new dynamic with information garnered in PRINT THE LEGEND. The books are like interlocking pieces. They are all interdependent on one another, but the order you obtain the data in is irrelevant, rather it is only essential that you have all the pieces.

Another element that rears its head in PRINT THE LEGEND is the conflict between "literary" writers and "genre" writers. This is a constant point of contention between Hemingway and Lassiter, but an especially insightful section has Hemingway sharing a different view than the one he expresses publicly:

"Hector was writing for the crime pulp magazines back home, and making good money. Everyone called him a crime writer but he was really a writer who wrote stories with crime and the est of his stories might have fit well in a collection of stories such as 'The Killers,' if I had yet written that story. Or with many of Faulkner's short stories with criminal or rather crime elements."
The twist to this section comes, however, in the question of authorship. It appears that Hemingway has written it, but Lassiter takes the entire chapter, from which this excerpt is taken, as a forgery. But repeatedly throughout the novel the idea is reinforced. Lassiter is a crime writer and therefore, lower on the food chain. Yet people read what he writers; they like what he writes; they find meaning in what he writes:

"'You might be surprised.' She sipped her extra-tall drink and said, 'A couple of years ago, a precocious and percipient student of mine wrote a paper: 'Hector Lassiter and the Agony of the Postmodern Detective.' My pupil made a compelling case for you as one of the pioneers of postmodern fiction, despite your classification as a genre writer by most critics.'"
And so the controversy goes.

Like Hemingway and Lassiter, this series is unlike any other in the annuls of American writing. At its core it is a crime novel. And from there it pushes and pulls and challenges the idea that a crime novel has to fit in a nice little compartment, limit its language, minimize its character development. PRINT THE LEGEND explodes out in every direction, leaving the reader breathless and stunned.

Lassiter says, in reference to Hemingway, "when the legend becomes fact, print the legend." But more accurately it's McDonald who exquisitely "prints the legend" of the man who "lives what he writes and writes what he lives." Regardless of whether you've read any of McDonald's work before this, make sure you add PRINT THE LEGEND to your must-read list immediately.

PRINT THE LEGEND will be available February 16, 2010, in hardcover from St. Martin's Minotaur (ISBN: 978-0-312-55437-8).

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

TOROS & TORSOS - Craig McDonald

First line: "'Can I sit with you for a time, sir?'"

TOROS & TORSOS is the second book in the Hector Lassiter series. This novel finds Hector living in the Florida Keys in 1935 when a hurricane is preparing to strike. Hector picks up Rachel in a bar with the help of a few friends and a rather shady plan. His plan is more along the lines of a one-night stand, but his plan goes a bit awry. As Hector begins to care more about Rachel than a one-night stand, strange murders begin to occur around the Keys, murders that resemble, even mimic Surrealist art. But these murders don't stop for Hector in the Keys, they follow him into Spain and later Hollywood. Is this a case of life imitating art or art imitating life?

Craig McDonald once again makes use of his unique epic-style time line in the plot of TOROS & TORSOS. What makes this series all the more unique however, is that the novels interweave on that timeline with one another. They aren't simply chronological. The style allows readers to pick up anywhere in the series without missing details that may show up in later books. It also allows the readers to see how the books fit together on Hector's timeline, regardless of what order they are read.

Also in the style of HEAD GAMES, McDonald peppers the plot with historical figures: Ernest Hemingway and Orson Welles play prominent figures in this novel. Rita Hayworth makes an appearance. They, and their own histories, blend seamlessly into the life of Hector Lassiter. I found myself needing to Google quite often as I read, driven to find more out about a time period, a person or an event. And every time I did, the facts were straight and the events of the novel were absolutely plausible.

McDonald changes from HEAD GAMES in point of view, however. TOROS & TORSOS takes on the third person limited point of view, whereas HEAD GAMES is told from Hector Lassiter's first person voice. McDonald's versatility makes both approaches effective and memorable.

McDonald has created a rich, robust character in Lassiter, the man who "writes what he lives and lives what he writes." Anyone who reads this series knows that Lassiter is much more than that, too. He can be a womanizer, but he can also be attuned to women, often more so than the other men around Lassiter. He can be ready for a rumble, but knows when a rumble is counter-productive. He doesn't wear his heart on his sleeve, but he can be deeply affected by events, by people, by fate. Hector Lassiter is not a character who can be easily compartmentalized because he reflects humanity by acting out of character or exhibiting hypocrisy. In reality, that's what most people do. Lassiter is worthy of the epic hero role.

A small element I enjoyed in both novels, but especially in TOROS & TORSOS was McDonald's use of quotes at the beginning of each chapter. Having listened to T&T on audio book, these quotes are more pronounced; I can't glance over them as I might be tempted to while reading. And hearing them emphasised their perfect placement and enhancement to the text. The quote opening Chapter 27 not only enhanced the text, but McDonald's whole approach to this series:

"There is no logic...The acts of life have no beginning and no end. Everything happens in a completely idiotic way."
Many writers will TALK about "pushing boundaries" or "transcending genre." McDonald DOES those things with flair and panache. This is a novel that will haunt your thoughts and dreams long after you've finished. Its plot and characters will haunt you; its language will haunt you; its beauty will haunt you. And if you finish this novel and it doesn't race to the forefront of your mind every time you hear "Ernest Hemingway," "Surrealism," "Orson Welles," etc., you are a far stronger person than I. Or maybe stronger person isn't the right comparison.
TOROS & TORSOS isn't traditional; it isn't conventional. It's thought-provoking; it's brilliant; and it's a must-read.

I listened to TOROS & TORSOS on audio from Recorded Book, narrated by Tom Stechschulte. Stechschulte also narrated HEAD GAMES. He does an outstanding job with pitch, tone, and pace for the hardened pulp fiction writer. I didn't have any trouble latching on to his sound as the sound of Hector Lassiter. As a matter of fact, I listened to another audio book not long after TOROS & TORSOS that was also read by Stechshulte and it took me about three chapters to adjust to the fact that it wasn't a Hector Lassiter novel I was listening to. This is a great combination of reader and character.

TOROS & TORSOS is published by Bleak House Books in hardcover (ISBN: 978-1-60648-000-7) or trade paper (ISBN: 978-1-60648-001-4), and the audio book version is available from Recorded Books (ISBN: 978-1-4407-1657-7).

Monday, February 8, 2010

Kickoff to my Craig McDonald Week

Wow do I have a week in store for you! It is going to be filled with everything Craig McDonald. And if you aren't familiar with Craig or his work, you will be by the end of this week. Craig's third novel, PRINT THE LEGEND, will be released next week. He's also the author of two books of incredible interviews, so to say I was intimidated when I interviewed Craig would be a gross underestimation. But Craig is wonderful and his interview is wonderful; I can't wait to share it with you later this week.

To kick off the festivities, though, I'm going to hold a giveaway for my ARC copy of PRINT THE LEGEND. Since I'm getting a finished copy of this novel, I'll pass my ARC on to another interested reader. I don't usually say this in regards to a series, but this is a series that can be read in any order. You'll see what I mean as I talk about the books throughout the week. So, you don't need to worry if you haven't read HEAD GAMES or TOROS & TORSOS. You'll want to read those too, I assure you, but you can read PRINT THE LEGEND first. On Wednesday you'll be able to read my review of PRINT THE LEGEND, but right now you can see a review from Corey at The Drowning Machine or a rave from Naomi at Wot larks, Pip!

There's a form below for you to complete with contact information. Please don't worry. I never use the information for anything other than sending a winner his/her prize. All information is destroyed once the contest ends. This one will be open to participants in the U.S., Canada, or Mexico. Plus, if you subscribe to this blog (you can find the subscription option at the bottom of the blog), you will receive two additional entries in the drawing. Be sure you verify your subscription via the email you receive. If you've already subscribed, you automatically receive two additional entries once you complete the form below. I will take entries until midnight Eastern time on Friday and I will pick the winner Saturday morning. If you have any questions, drop me an email. Good luck to everyone.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

A Few Weekend Odds and Ends

I spent the better part of this morning shoveling my driveway after our snowfall this weekend. After two hours I almost had the driveway finished, only about a foot left - that end is always the worst because the city plows the snow from the street into the end of everyone's drives. So not only is it higher, but it's heavier because of all the gunk in the street. But anyway, I was about a foot short of finishing when my heaven-sent parents pulled up with the snow blower! My dad took care of the sidewalks, so Mr. Mailman (I have a male mail carrier) you can thank my dad for a clear walk. I never would have been able to do it myself! I'm already starting to feel the aftermath, I'm kinda scared what tomorrow morning may bring.

O.k., so that's my moaning and complaining for this weekend. I do have a few tidbits of news to share with you, although I'm embarrassingly behind on my blog reading, so I don't have lots of that to share. What I do have to share is Felonious February. It is going to take place on February 20th at the Muskego Public Library in Wisconsin. The special guest authors are Alafair Burke and Joseph Finder. I will be making my live interview debut here when I interview my hero, Alafair! If you can be in the area, I encourage you to contact Penny and register. The event is actually an all-day affair with many authors and lots of fun. There isn't an online presence for the event, but you can email Penny Halle (pennyphalle[at]gmail[dot]com) or you can call the library to register 262.971.2101.

Another item I'd like you to be aware of is Andrew Gross's Facebook promotion that he's holding in the month of February. For every fan he has on his fan page at the end of February, he's donating $1 to the Clinton/Bush Haiti Relief Fund. So, let's really put a hurt on Andy's wallet and make that donation a hefty one, alright? In exchange you get the lowdown on his upcoming release, which sounds like it's going to be pretty exciting. I'm looking forward to it. Join Andy's page, make a difference and stay in the know.

And last but not least, I wanted to remind you that you have until tomorrow at noon (Eastern) to enter to win an ARC of Alex Berenson's new spy thriller THE MIDNIGHT HOUSE. Get your entry in!

I hope your weekend has been a bit warmer than mine. I'm off now to console myself with a great book. Have a wonderful week and happy reading!

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Win It Before You Can Buy It!

I have a couple fun things to share with you. The first one I can now officially announce because Chris has sent out some advance copies of his new book, ROLLLING THUNDER. It is the next book you have to place on your "must buy" list. ROLLING THUNDER is book number six in the John Ceepak series, and Officer Jen Forbus has joined the ranks of the Sea Haven Police Department! AND, you'll love this part, her speciality is...witness interviews! My partner in law enforcement is Nikki Bonanni, for those of you who know Nikki. I was fortunate enough to read ROLLING THUNDER in its pre-editing stages and can tell you that had I been left on the cutting room floor again, this still would have been a wonderful book in the tradition of the Ceepak series. I'm so excited for May when it's released and you'll all have a chance to check it out - and it's available already to preorder. So, put it on your radars, and I'll be reviewing it a tad closer to release date - but, I'm in it, what else could you possibly need to know? ;-)

The other fun item I have to share with you is a new contest! The wonderfully generous folks at Putnam contacted me with a giveaway offer. Here's a chance for you to win the new Alex Berenson spy thriller, THE MIDNIGHT HOUSE. This book releases this Tuesday and I will run the contest until noon Eastern on Monday. Then I'll turn the winner's contact information over to the kind folks at Putnam, and they'll send the winner his/her book.

If you aren't familiar with Alex Berenson, he's worked as a journalist for both the Denver Post and the New York Times. His first novel, THE FAITHFUL SPY, earned him an Edgar Award and his subsequent books have landed him on the New York Times Bestseller list. THE MIDNIGHT HOUSE is the fourth book in his John Wells series. You can read more about the entire series here.

O.k., so here's the skinny on the contest. It is open to all U.S. and Canadian residents. You must complete the entire form below before noon on Monday, February 8th to be eligible for the drawing. That's all there is to it. Good luck!


Two By Bruen

I recently finished CALIBRE and THE DRAMATIST on audio, both by Ken Bruen and both read by Michael Deehy, so I'm going to review them together in this post.


CALIBRE first line: "Shit from shinola. You have to hand it to the god-damned Yanks, they have great verbals, man."

CALIBRE is Bruen's sixth Inspector Brant novel. Brant is a member of the Southeast London Police Squad, and in this installment of the series, he's after a killer who is taking cues from Jim Thompson's THE KILLER INSIDE ME. The murderer targets people with poor manners and kills them in such a way that it's impossible to declare them murders because the actual cause of death is always questionable. While he's trying to track down this killer, Brant is also trying to become England's Joseph Wambaugh by writing his own crime fiction novel. However, he can't write. Point of view effectively alternates between the murderer's first person monologues and third person limited.

THE DRAMATIST first line: Lemsip and Greek yoghurt. That was my daily fare, the Lemsip for a flu I thought I had.

THE DRAMATIST is Bruen's fourth Jack Taylor novel. Taylor is a sometimes P.I./former Guard in Galway, Ireland. Bruen's alcoholic Taylor is living a clean and sober life in THE DRAMATIST when his former drug dealer summons him to the prison where he's incarcerated. The drug dealer's sister died apparently by accident, but the drug dealer doesn't believe it to be an accident; he wants Taylor to investigate and find the person responsible. When Taylor begins investigating he finds a scary similarity to another "apparent accident," the presence of a book by John Millington Synge.

I opted to review these together because, despite their unique characters, plots and settings, they share a recipe for excellence. Bruen, in both novels, takes the reader through an experience riddled with crime, darkness, and wretchedness. Yet in both novels he elicited genuine laughter from me. His dark humor is as striking as his heart-wrenching despair.

Bruen is a minimalist. Every word, every sentence counts; he sculpts elaborate, detailed universes with the most basic of tools and is unmatched in his craft. He also has a very distinct style and sound. There is a short, sharp sound to Bruen's writing and that works to reinforce the tone of the novels.

Brant is an unlikeable protagonist, but smart as a whip. And while you wait patiently for someone to pull one over on Brant, you still grin when he cleverly outwits those around him. Taylor, in THE DRAMATIST, has a tendency to evoke pity from the reader. He's created the life he now lives, but you find yourself rooting for him to succeed in his efforts to turn his life around, yet at every turn he's met with overwhelming obstacles. For a character-lover such as myself, Brant and Taylor are dreams come true. They're complex characters that can't be forced into stereotypes or traditional protagonist roles so you're challenged as a reader to develop a new kind of relationship with these characters. The challenge doesn't come with identifying flaws in these characters, but rather in looking past the flaws to discover why they are so magnetic.

Ken Bruen crafts works of art and binds them between two covers. In my case, Michael Deehy interpreted the works of art vocally in the form of the audiobook. It actually took me awhile to discern that it was in fact the same person reading both books. That is how deep-rooted he was in each of the characters. I felt he did an outstanding job with both narrations. The only thing I had to watch for was my love of Irish brogue. It had a tendency to lull me because I find it almost transfixing. I highly recommend both book as well as both audiobook versions.

CALIBRE was published in the U.S. by St. Martin's Minotaur in 2006 (ISBN: 978-0-3123-4144-2) and on unabridged audio by BBC Audiobooks America (ISBN: 978-0-7927-4073-5), also in 2006.

THE DRAMATIST was published in the U.S. by St. Martin's Minotaur in 2006 (ISBN: 978-0-3123-1647-1) and on unabridged audio by BBC Audiobooks America in 2006 (ISBN: 978-0-7927-3911-1).

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If you have any questions concerning disclosure of review copies obtained for this blog, you can read the disclosure notice posted here. No other compensation is accepted beyond review copies of books, and they have been tagged (beginning Oct. 10, 2009) in their labels with "review book." If you have questions, please feel free to contact me.

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