Posts Tagged ‘Bouchercon’

New Books and Bouchercon

Tuesday, September 17th, 2013
What Doesn't Kill Her
Lady, Go Die! Paperback

My Thomas & Mercer thriller, WHAT DOESN’T KILL HER, written with the assistance of longtime collaborator Matthew Clemens, goes on sale today. That means those of you who asked for review copies will now be available to post your reviews at Amazon.

The Top Suspense Group, of which I am a part, has an excellent WHAT DOESN’T KILL HER write-up courtesy of that excellent writer Libby Hellmann on the TSG blog today. Read it right here.

Barb and I are listening to Dan John Miller’s audio of WHAT DOESN’T KILL HER, and he really brings the book to life. Dan is heading into the studio to read ASK NOT this week – I am thrilled that the definitive audio voice of Nate Heller is back for this one.

Also available, for those you who have been waiting for a mass market paperback, is Titan’s new edition of LADY, GO DIE! This establishes a pattern for Titan reprints to come, utilizing images culled from old paperback covers (as opposed to the Hard Case approach of doing new retro covers). What do you think?

Speaking of Mike Hammer, here is a nifty review from Sons of Spade of COMPLEX 90.

Well, Barb and I did not win the Nero for ANTIQUES DISPOSAL, but we remain very pleased that we were noticed. That’s a very tough place to get nominated. Read about who won and who else was nominated at the Rap Sheet.

My thanks to readers who requested review copies of EARLY CRIMES. Some of those reviews are up at Amazon now.

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For those of you going to Bouchercon in Albany next weekend, here are the event times for Barb and me:

Friday, Sept. 20:

9:45 am signing – not sure where this will be held; probably the book room. It’s a Thomas & Mercer signing.

1:50-2:45 pm Barb/MAC panel, “I Don’t Want to Be Alone” RM 1

2:45-3:15 pm signing, “Barbara Allan” (Barb and MAX), book room

Saturday, Sept. 21:

10:20-11:15 am Barb panel, “Money or Love” RM 3

11:15-11:45 am signing, “Barbara Allan” (Barb and MAC), book room

12:30-1:25 pm MAC panel, “Famous Last Words” RM 6

1:25-1:45 pm signing, MAC, book room

PWA Hammer Award Video

Tuesday, November 20th, 2012

I am still recuperating from ASK NOT, and Barb and I are winding up a getaway weekend in St. Louis with Nate and Abby. (We saw CINEMATIC TITANIC live, riffing to DOLL SQUAD. TV’s Frank rules.) We also saw LINCOLN, which was excellent (no riffing).

So I’m just going to wish everybody a restful and fun Thanksgiving, and share this fun video of my acceptance speech (on that boat ride Shamus presentation at Bouchercon in Cleveland recently) of the “Hammer,” the award for an influential, long-running PI series (named for Mike Hammer).


Footage provided by Eugene George

M.A.C.

Reading Habits

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

This week is a “meme” (I’m still not sure I understand what the hell that is) that I’m did in advance of Bouchercon in Indianapolis.

Do you snack while you read? If so, favorite reading snack?

Never eat while I read. Always drink Coke – these days, Coke Zero (it’s a man’s drink – it’s in a black bottle or can!)

Do you tend to mark your books as you read, or does the idea of writing in books horrify you?

With research books, I sometimes uses marking pens on them, college-student style, but usually replace the book with another copy when I’m done. Books I’m using for research tend to get pretty battered.

How do you keep your place while reading a book? Bookmark? Dog-ears?

I never fold down the corners of pages (how could Rex Stout allow Nero Wolfe to do that?) though I will occasionally lay them face-down open, to mark a place. But not for an extended period of time, or in a spine-breaking way.

Fiction, non-fiction, or both?

Mostly non-fiction, about half and half research and pleasure. I get no joy from reading the competition, plus it’s a busman’s holiday, so with a very few exceptions (Ed McBain was one), I haven’t read mysteries (other than to do so for awards committees or market research) since the early ‘70s. Barb reads primarily theater and show business biographies. Nate is a science-fiction and fantasy guy, but not exclusively — he’ll read anything that snags his interest, mainstream, non-fiction, etc.

When I do read mystery/crime fiction, it tends to be classic material. Some years ago I decided to read all the Perry Mason novels. I have re-read Hammett, Chandler, Cain, and Spillane countless times. Similarly the novels The Bad Seed by William March and Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye by Horace McCoy.

Hard copy or audiobooks?

Barb and I travel quite a bit — car trips to Des Moines (for many years I was on the board of the Iowa Motion Picture Association, and there was a monthly meeting) and Chicago (for pleasure and research). And we have done many midwestern book tours, travelling by car. Lately we’ve visited Nate in St. Louis. There are three to six hour trips, one-way.

So audio books are important to us. We have listened to pretty much all of Agatha Christie that way (great writer) and are on our second and sometimes third pass on Rex Stout’s Nero Wolfe novels and novellas. Stout has been a fairly recent enthusiasm for me, and I now rank him with Hammett, Chandler and Spillane. For sheer enjoyment, spending time with Archie and Wolfe is tough to beat. See my novels A Killing in Comics and Strip for Murder to see just how much I like Stout.

Are you a person who tends to read to the end of chapters, or are you able to put a book down at any point?

End of chapters or until I get too sleepy to comprehend what I’m reading.

If you come across an unfamiliar word, do you stop to look it up right away?

Usually I figure out the meaning from context and try to remember to check on it later.

Are you the type of person who only reads one book at a time, or can you read more than one at a time?

One book at a time.

This is partly why I don’t read crime and mystery fiction much (other than not wanting to encourage the competition): I am almost always writing a novel, and that is the novel I’m “reading.”

Reading non-fiction while I’m writing a novel is not a distraction, though.

What are you currently reading?

We are about to listen to The Mother Hunt by Rex Stout on the upcoming Indianapolis trip, as well as my audio novel (an advance copy) of The New Adventures of Mike Hammer: The Little Death with Stacy Keach.

I am reading Geniuses of the American Theater: The Composers and Lyricists by Herbert Keyser. Tells about what dark lives most of the great songwriters had while they were inventing American-style romantic love.

What is the last book you bought?

That new book on the Universal movie monsters.

Do you have a favorite time of day and/or place to read?

Late at night, and in the bathtub. Not necessarily mutually exclusive categories. (The shower works less well.)

Do you prefer series books or standalone books?

Hard to say. I have been attracted to series, both as a reader and a writer, but many of my favorite novels are standalone. A basic tenet of storytelling — broken routinely by series novels — is that the main character or characters should grow or change (or fail to), in other words take some kind of journey. Few series characters do that (though Nathan Heller and Mike Hammer have). Certainly Archie and Nero Wolfe never learn a damn thing. Or Perry Mason. Marlowe may learn something in The Long Goodbye.

Is there a specific book you find yourself recommending over and over?

The Maltese Falcon above all others. Of Mickey’s books, I often point to One Lonely Night. Chandler, Farewell, My Lovely. The Postman Always Rings Twice. Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye. The Bad Seed. Mark Harris’ baseball novels.

How do you organize your books?

By author. My office has the favorite stuff (Hammett, Spillane, Stout, Chandler, Jim Thompson, Horace McCoy, W.R. Burnett, William March, Erle Stanley Gardner, Mark Harris, Calder Willingham, Ian Fleming, Chester Himes, James M. Cain, a few others). My basement library needs work, but one area has Westlake, Christie, McBain, Block, Gorman, Randisi, Lutz, and other favorites.)

We’ve had another great review for QUARRY IN THE MIDDLE (which comes out this week).

At Bouchercon, I ran into Sharon Clute, who provided me a link to a “Behind the Black Mask” podcast I did a while back.

Also, I want to add to my Bouchercon memory book by mentioning my friend Robert Goldsborough, who wrote seven Nero Wolfe novels to continue the series (how I wish he were still doing it!) and is currently doing a first-rate historical mystery series about about Chicago PI Snap Malek. Other friends we ran into include writer/cop Jim Dougherty and writer Gary Bush, who has just published his Once Upon a Crime collection for Nordin Press (in honor of the great bookstore in Minneapolis); Barb and I have a story in it (“Flyover Country”).

Jim Winter with January Magazine‘s The Rap Sheet Blog posted two video interviews from Bouchercon — one with Barb about the Trash ‘n’ Treasures series and another with myself about the new Heller, Bye Bye, Baby.

M.A.C.