Some of our loyal readers may recall that Barb and I did three e-book novellas over the past several years, all with a Christmas theme, none available as anything but e-books.
That will change soon. I am, this very week, working on the galley proofs of Antiques Ho-Ho-Homicide (by Barbara Allan, of course), collecting those three e-books into an actual book…a mass market paperback only (no hardcover).
We’re very pleased that this book is happening. The novella form works well for Brandy and Vivian Borne, and we like all three stories. If you’ve never read an Antiques novel, this one will make a good sampler – but it won’t be out till Christmas season, of course.
Batman: Elseworlds #3 includes Scar of the Bat, my Batman/Eliot Ness graphic novel, drawn by the great Eduardo Barreto. It comes out mid-June. Info here.
We had the fun of having Nathan, Abby and our grandson, Sam, for Mother’s Day, dining at the lavish new Merrill Hotel in Muscatine. Sam likes to visit because “Grandpa has the best cartoons,” a wise observation for a nearly three-year-old. His favorite is “A Froggy Evening,” reflecting the great taste that has been passed down through the miracle of DNA. He also laughs at his own jokes – gee, I don’t know where he gets that.
Nate finished his latest Japanese-to-English project – the book is excellent and is some of Nate’s best work. We’ll announce it when it reaches publication.
With no nepotism in the mix, Nate’s publisher for the book is Tor, current home of Nate Heller.
Barb and I went to Rampage, which is the very definition of a movie that we did not walk out of, though we strongly considered it. The Rock, I mean Dewayne Johnson, is very good at action tinged with humor. But the script is mostly an embarrassment – the bad guys build a homing device for the monsters they created…on top of their own building in downtown Chicago! – and some of the performances are downright painful.
Jeffrey Dean Morgan is given a star entrance – I guess he’s on Walking Dead, which I don’t watch – and he’s frankly terrible, making an awful character, well, awfuler. He plays a CIA type agent with corny cowboy dialogue and a pearl-handled .45 side-draw on his belt, which has a big cowboy buckle. One of the biggest disappointments of Rampage was that his character did not die (the possibility of seeing that was an inducement not to walk out).
One of the few reviews Killing Town has received is from Book Reporter, and it’s a nice one.
A brief but good Killing Town review can be seen here.
And another from the New York Review of Books.
M.A.C.
Tags: Antiques Ho-Ho-Homicide, Barbara Allan, Batman, Killing Town, Mickey Spillane, Mike Hammer, Movie Reviews, Scar of the Bat, Spillane, Trash 'n' Treasures
I wasn’t a big fan of Rampage myself. I played the video game when I was a kid, and the abandonment of the premise that the monsters were three different mad scientists who made different formulae to turn themselves into giant monsters bothered me probably a lot more than it should.
The rest of movie might as well have been on the SyFy channel. It just seemed lazy, all the way around, to me.
When I pressed for Kinokuniya to add you to the Edgar Awards display last year, I also made sure to highlight what I know of Nate’s translations to the staff as well. They were impressed on both counts. Although only MAC made the display.
Batman and Eliot Ness sounds interesting.