Archive for April, 2012

By Hook or By Crook, Free E-Book

Wednesday, April 11th, 2012

I’m still in Japan through the rest of the week, but I saw this on Amazon, snatched it, and thought I should share.

By Hook or By Crook (Best Crime & Mystery Stories of the Year)

This (free, for now at least) collection includes 28 shorts including “The Big Switch,” a Mike Hammer story by Max Allan Collins and Mickey Spillane.

Chinatown Revisited

Tuesday, April 10th, 2012

At last a Blu-ray of CHINATOWN has been released, and it looks glorious. I haven’t listened to the commentary featuring writer Robert Towne and director (though not of this film) David Fincher. But the feature, on this upteenth visit by me, once again wove its spellbinding narrative.

As the author of the Nathan Heller novels, I was struck by how much I was influenced by the film, not in the obvious way of its being a period private eye film with a historical basis; but by two other, more subtle aspects of the film.

First, Jake Gittes is a rather typically cocky P.I. who is able to master his little corner of the universe. But when cast into the bigger world that is the corruption of the USA in general and L.A. in particular, he is out of his depth (“You may think you know what you’re dealing with…”/“Forget it, Jake – it’s Chinatown”). Heller was definitely influenced by the post-Watergate conspiracy approach of the film, and while Heller (like Gittes) always has small victories, he cannot triumph over the powers-that-be, whether government or mob. It’s significant in CHINATOWN that while Jake is pretty much in every frame of the film for its duration, he is finally, literally yanked out of the frame – and stripped of his ability to have an impact on the story – as its conclusion tragically unfolds.

Second, while Jack Gittes reflects Robert Towne’s respect for Raymond Chandler, Towne nonetheless set out specifically to make Gittes the opposite of Phillip Marlowe (this I confirmed in an interview online). Gittes takes divorce cases, he’ll sleep with clients, he’ll take a bribe, and…any of that sound familiar? I set out in TRUE DETECTIVE specifically to break every one of the rules Chandler set down in his “down these means streets” code. Towne, I have learned, essentially did the same thing.

Those of you who love CHINATOWN but who have dismissed its sequel, THE TWO JAKES (1990), should strongly consider watching the DVD of the latter after viewing the Blu-ray of the former. Whether you disliked THE TWO JAKES or avoided seeing it out of misguided respect to CHINATOWN, you need to give it a serious look. It works extremely well when your mind is fresh with the first Gittes film, as it’s a coda of sorts that is intertwined with CHINATOWN both on the plot and thematic level. On its own terms, it’s an intelligent private eye film, directed by Nicholson with restraint and sense of style and mood. As a ten years later continuation of CHINATOWN, the second film has resonance and substance.

Of course, THE TWO JAKES is not on the level of CHINATOWN. Nicholson studiously avoided any melodrama and even left some plot elements (including a killing and a great post-courtroom comeuppance for a Noah Cross-style villain) on the cutting room floor, after his initial cut was deemed too lengthy. Apparently Towne was unhappy with those cuts, but that doesn’t keep THE TWO JAKES from being a worthy, rewarding coda to the greatest private eye film of all time (yes, even better than KISS ME DEADLY).

For a film to be great, the gods must smile – everything must fall into place, all creative talents must be perfect for their roles (whether actor or otherwise) and at the top of their game. Luck and magic must happen. CHINATOWN originally had what is said to be a lousy score, and Jerry Goldsmith was brought in at the last minute to write (in a little over a week) what is now considered one of most memorable film scores of all time. THE TWO JAKES suffers from what is at best a serviceable score (by Van Dyke Parks), and at worst an intrusive one.

Nonetheless, it too deserves a Blu-ray. On my sound system, the unmemorable music swamps the dialogue; perhaps the Blu-ray format, with its excellent sound, would remedy that. But it took Paramount this long to release CHINATOWN, so….

And I suppose it’s too late to hope that Nicholson and Towne might get together one last time for GITTES VS. GITTES, the third film in the trilogy, derailed by the lack of commercial success for THE TWO JAKES (not intended as a coda, but a pastoral fugue of a second act). The trilogy was to be water (CHINATOWN), fire (THE TWO JAKES) and air (GITTES VS. GITTES). The third film would have been set in 1968 and deal with the end of no fault divorce, a reclusive Howard Hughes-type villain, and the LA freeway system. Call that one the greatest private eye film never made.

M.A.C.

Antiques Finish

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012

We finished and sent out ANTIQUES CHOP this week. The book was essentially complete by Tuesday afternoon, but we spent two more days reading and tweaking it. When you work on a book over time (Barb was on it a year, I was immersed in it for over a month), you get lots of little things wrong – everything from character description to plot points – and it’s necessary to make the end result not just satisfying, but consistent.

The final read-through is – except for plotting sessions – the only time Barb and I work on a book in the same room (my office). I read and mark up pages, and she enters them into the computer files, first checking to see if my changes/corrections/tweaks make sense to her. This tends to be a somewhat frantic but very much fun aspect of a book, particularly with the ANTIQUES series, because we wind up reading the funny stuff out-loud to each other, and laughing and laughing.

That’s because part of what we do in these books is try to top each other with funny stuff. It’s disturbing how easily it is for me to fall into the character of Brandy Borne’s eccentric diva mother, Vivian. Because the story involves two ax murders, the humor is at times darker than usual, which of course was fine by me.

Late this coming month (that would be April), ANTIQUES DISPOSAL will be out. I’ll share a few thoughts about that when the time comes.

In the meantime, I now face my usual post-project project: cleaning my office. At the beginning of a book, my work space is pristine; by book’s end, it’s a disaster site.

April will be spent on smaller projects – a Mike Hammer short story, a collaborative short story with Matt Clemens, another Fangoria Dreadtime Stories radio play, another DICK TRACY introduction. Also, finishing touches are being put on a new hardcover MIKE HAMMER comic strip collection for Hermes Press.

This is that “no rest for the wicked” you hear so much about.

M.A.C.

True Crime Kindle Sale (April)

Sunday, April 1st, 2012
True Crime

I’m still over in Japan, so this will be a quick announcement.

Through the end of April, the second Nathan Heller novel, True Crime, is on sale for $1.99 on the Kindle store.

The entire backlist of Nathan Heller books is available on the Kindle store, and many of them also steals for under five dollars each. (True Detective, for example, is only $3.60 and a terrific place to start.) Paperback, audio CD, and MP3 editions are also for sale. I’m in the middle of listening to the audiobook of True Crime, and I can highly recommend Dan John Miller’s version of Heller.

Also, please remember to leave a user review, especially if you like it!

Shareable link: http://http://amzn.to/HGisVd

Sayonara for now!