You may have already heard my big news this week, which is that Spillane – King of Pulp Fiction (by James L. Traylor and me) has been nominated for an Edgar by the Mystery Writers of America.
I am of course thrilled, if for no other reason than it’s a further indication that Mickey is finally being taken more seriously and reassessed. When Jim Traylor and I had One Lonely Knight: Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer nominated for an Edgar in 1984, we were told confidentially by a member of the committee that we would have won but for one committee member refusing to even read a book about the dreaded Spillane.
I’ve been looking at various YouTube shows about the great Kiss Me Deadly (the film, and mostly raves) but those praising the film routinely condemn Mickey glibly, while expressing opinions about Spillane that indicate they have read little or nothing by him. Mickey was so controversial that you didn’t have to be familiar with his work to condemn him. And even the great Eddie Muller, introducing Kiss Me Deadly at a Noir City screening, characterized Mike Hammer largely in terms of anti-Commie lunacy. Of the first seminal six novels, only One Lonely Night is about “Commies” (and Joe McCarthy is essentially the bad guy) and only The Girl Hunters and arguably Survival…Zero! Of the later Hammers touches upon Russian bad guys. That’s three of thirteen novels. Of the thirteen posthumous Hammer novels I’ve completed, only Compound 90 deals with Communism and Russia. The most respected noir expert that Eddie is (rightfully) should recognize the very noir theme of a detective in love with a woman who turns out to be the murderer of the army buddy who gave an arm for him in combat. That’s I, the Jury, and not a Commie in sight. The Arkin brothers discuss Kiss Me Deadly and the more liberal of the two makes the comment that Mike Hammer seems to be a WW 2 veteran – you think?
This is my roundabout way of saying I have no expectation that Jim and I will win the Edgar for this book, which I am very proud to have co-written. The Spillane stigma is still there. And I’m up against books about James Ellroy (don’t get me started) and Poe himself. But Barb and I are probably going to the awards dinner. It’s a chance to be seen as somebody who is still in the game.
Anyway, here are all the nominees in the various categories.
Barb and I have a novella coming out from Neo-Text that can be pre-ordered at Amazon right now in e-book format. (There will be a print version, too, but it’s not listed yet.)
Here’s what our novella Cutout is about as described by the publisher:
Sierra Kane – who has bounced from one foster family to another – faces an uncertain future when she receives an unapplied-for scholarship to Barnard College specifically designed for orphans whose academic records are merely above average. A second unexpected boon comes her way when another recipient of that somewhat mysterious scholarship offers her a part-time courier job.
Soon Sierra is caught up in a whirl of espionage and murder, with a new boy friend who may or may not be part of a plot, a college mentor with a possible agenda of her own, and an FBI agent who rebuffs Sierra’s plea for help.
It’s a classic story of a small-town girl caught up in an overwhelming big-city world; but Sierra Kane is a young woman whose curiosity and determination will lead her to the truth…and into more than one deadly confrontation.
Married writing team Max Allan Collins
(Road to Perdition) and Barbara Collins (Bombshell) – whose Antiques mystery series is a long-running mystery fan favorite under the name Barbara Allan – have crafted a novella that is at once as timeless as a fairy tale and as modern as a headline.I am enormously pleased with the novella, although I really shouldn’t be taking top billing – the supposed value of my byline came into play and I was overridden. This book really is Barb’s baby. I did some plot consulting and did my usual punch-up draft, though her work needed little help.
For you e-book readers, here’s where you can pre-order it.
The enormously talented Heath Holland was kind enough to invite me on Cereal at Midnight for a freewheeling interview about my career. He has also pulled excerpts from our nearly two-hour talk that appear on YouTube separately.
We are discussing my making regular appearances on Cereal at Midnight (perhaps as often as monthly). Stay tuned.
Till then, here’s a link for that extensive interview.
At Lisa’s Book Critiques, Glen Davis was kind enough to list (and briefly discuss) Too Many Bullets as one of his favorite novels of 2023.
My new expanded version of Mike Hammer’s Mickey Spillane is available on several more streaming services, including Apple TV.
It’s on Roku, too, and Amazon Prime, Tubi and Vudu.
M.A.C.
Tags: Awards, Barbara Allan, Cutout, Interviews, Mickey Spillane, Mike Hammer, Mike Hammer's Mickey Spillane, Nate Heller, Spillane: King of Pulp Fiction, Too Many Bullets
Congratulations on the well deserved Edgar nomination for the Spillane biography. It is an excellent book that I know that I will be returning to over the coming years.
That was a great conversation with Heath Holland!
Congrats on the Edgar nomination! The Spillane biography is wonderful! I bought and read it the week it came out! And, I’ll definitely be buying a copy of CUTOUT for my daughter Sierra!
Congratulations on the Edgar nomination! I received the Blu-ray of Mike Hammer’s Mickey Spillane for my birthday this past weekend and I’m enjoying it very much.
Congratulations on the nomination. BTW You might like hearing this: At the library I work at, I got to mention Spillane: King of Pulp Fiction as a “Staff Pick Best of 2023” selection (#35) at https://greenwichlibrary.bibliocommons.com/list/share/242705567/2443056719?page=2 . Dig Two Graves (#17) is mentioned on page 1. Since the picks were posted online just before New Year’s, circulation on both books has risen!