Friday, May 16, 2008

The Book You Have to Read: “The January Corpse,” by Neil Albert

Perfect timing, Jeff.

Here I am up to my eyeballs in work on another Lawrence Block piece, a slew of reviews and sundry other overdue projects, when Rap Sheet head honcho J. Kingston Pierce sneaks up on me and bitch slaps me with a hell of a challenge.

Evidently it’s my turn to ante up for Patti “Don’t Call Me ‘Cake’” Abbott’s new tag-team Friday blog series, highlighting “books we love but might have forgotten over the years” and then challenging another writer to do the same.

What can I say? At least after chipping in, I get to inflict--I mean, spread the joy--to another writer ...

The irony, of course, is that I CAN’T forget the particular book I’ve chosen.

In the pantheon of unjustly forgotten private-eye writers, the late 1980s and early ’90s were responsible for a staggering number of candidates. The usual names bandied about are Stephen Greenleaf, Arthur Lyons, and Jonathan Valin, but you could toss in several other slightly more obscure but no less enjoyable authors, such as Gaylord Dold, Rob Kantner, and the late Ben Schutz.

All wrote tough, savvy, literate, and even poetic private eye tales, always solid and often memorable mysteries full of compassion and hard-boiled integrity, stuff that could cast an unflinching eye upon the mean streets of society one moment and break your (manly) heart the next.

Unfortunately, most of their books are long gone and long out of print, vanished somewhere into the black hole of publishing, victims of mainstream indifference and sales that were never quite enough, helped along perhaps partially by the then-popular female private eye boom (which itself would, predictably, grind to a staggering halt in a few years).

But none of the books by any of those writers, all these years down the road, remains as memorable to me as The January Corpse, by Neil Albert, the novel that introduced Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, private eye Dave Garrett.

That book came out in 1991 to, as far as I know, pretty solid reviews. The New York Times cited it as a “tantalizingly twisted first novel” and Publishers Weekly deemed it an “exceptional first mystery ... driven by a baffling plot [that] comes to a surprise ending that passes the Holmesian test: after the impossible is eliminated, that which remains, however improbable, is the truth.”

It was subsequently nominated for a Shamus Award for Best First P.I. Novel and even sold well enough to spawn a handful of sequels (The February Trouble, Burning March, Cruel April, etc.), each appearing approximately a year apart and each spouting a month of the year in its title. Unfortunately, for whatever reason, the series ended with Tangled June in 1997. Presumably, the author--an attorney himself--kept his day job.

Although, based on the promise shown in The January Corpse, at one time he coulda been the champion of the world. Because the audacity and the sheer effrontery of his corkscrew of an ending was a challenge to a genre that, even now, still has not responded.

Don’t get me wrong. The entire series--such as it was--is worth reading. It’s smart and literate and subtly-written, with an appealingly fresh voice and an engaging world-view. The novels will certainly appeal to fans of Ross Macdonald or Stephen Greenleaf, in particular. But that first book is really something special.

And, damn it, I can’t even discuss it’s ending without destroying much of the effectiveness of this book. Not that it’s so original and shocking a plot twist that it has never been used before--or won’t be spotted well in advance by some of the more jaded tabloid junkies out there; hell, I can think of a couple of mystery novels myself, one dating back to the ’30s, that have used it before. But that ending, and particularly its startling dénouement, still have the power to provoke and raise eyebrows after all these years.

Dave Garrett is a disbarred lawyer turned private eye, not exactly setting the world on fire. He drives a Honda Civic with more than a few years and miles on it, and he owns two guns, although he confesses he’s never really had to use either. His disbarment is, likewise, not the result of any sort of high drama but simply a rather sad set of circumstances and poor judgment--he got caught trying to take his wife’s final law exam (she suffered from anxiety attacks). So he lost his job ... and eventually his wife.

Despite all of this--or perhaps because of it--Dave’s become a man of principle, an obsessively honest, decent guy working as a detective, intent on doing the right thing. Oh, he’s still willing to bend a few small rules, if he has to. But he tries to keep his word, and he’s uncommonly loyal to his clients; and his small, one-man agency has thus earned a good reputation in Philadelphia law circles.

In The January Corpse, he’s hired to find a stiff.

That’s right--the dead man’s mother is convinced that her lawyer son, Daniel Wilson, is already dead. Long dead. Now she just wants proof of it, so she and her daughter, Lisa, can collect on Danny’s life insurance, and so they get on with their lives. But it’s Danny’s former employers, members of a prestigious law firm, who are the actual clients here, and their motives are a little less obvious. It turns out that Danny was something of a hotshot, a mover and a shaker, practicing mostly civil law but possessing more than his fair share of rather unsavory clients with rumored connections to organized crime. He disappeared seven years ago, leaving behind only his car, “found empty, shot full of holes, and full of blood.”

If Dave Garrett can provide presumption-of-death evidence in court and prove that Danny Wilson didn’t simply skip town with the $100,000 he allegedly had in his possession at the time of his disappearance, the family will be able to collect.

It seems like a slam dunk that the man’s deceased--there’s been no trace of him in all that time, no evidence that he’s still alive. But there’s more to this case than meets the eye. A well-known local detective agency has already refused to handle the same investigation, all that money is still missing, and Dave has begun to receive threats, warning him to stop poking around.

But Dave, possibly exhibiting more pie-eyed determination than common sense, is soon traipsing all over the Keystone State, from the “sad, worn-out country, full of dead hopes” coal fields to a white-knuckled car chase through Amish territory. Fortunately he’s got Lisa, Danny’s sister, along for much of the ride and she proves to be a surprisingly resourceful and pragmatic (but not always truthful) accomplice, a sharp counterpoint to the idealistic but at times hesitant young private eye. It’s the sort of pragmatism that leads to Lisa coolly shooting a gunman in the foot as a “warning.” An unexpected but entirely believable relationship between Lisa and Dave begins to develop, and it’s the sensitive and deftly handled details of this at-first-unlikely relationship which provide the emotional foundation of this novel.

And then all hell breaks loose. Before the book is done, stereotypes are blown away and tropes flattened, crimes exposed and secrets unearthed. Flabbergasted readers knocked off-balance will find themselves re-evaluating what they’ve just read, and flipping back and forth through the pages, trying to figure out how the author accomplished all of that.

But he did it, alright, fairly and squarely; it was no fluke or happy accident. As evidenced by “A History of Private Eye Fiction,” a thoughtful and provocative short piece Albert once wrote for Mystery.net, the author clearly knew his stuff.

So anyone who enjoys the traditions--and even more so, the possibilities of the private eye genre--should track down a copy of The January Corpse post-haste. It’s too good a read to let slip by.

There’s a conversation still to be had about this book, one that’s been a very long time in coming. Alas, it won’t be had here. Even commenting on a plot “twist” is problematical--revealing its mere existence will get readers thinking out of the box. It’s best if you discover it on your own.

No, really. Read The January Corpse for what it is: a great little private eye novel. And then marvel at the author’s skill and pluck. Then just try to forget it.

I dare you.

And speaking of dares, I’m throwing one out to one of the genre’s more eminent men of letters: Dick Adler. Come on, Dick, pick up the stick for next week.

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Whoops, Missed It

This is working out to be a month of milestones. Almost two weeks ago, The Rap Sheet welcomed its 300,000th visitor. Next week, we’ll celebrate two years of blogging here about mystery and crime fiction. And it seems that yesterday, while my attention was directed elsewhere, The Rap Sheet chalked up its 2,000th post. Not bad for an experimental venture in Internet newsgathering and reviewing, eh?

Welcome to the Club

If you simply can’t get enough of Women’s Murder Club, the inane ABC-TV series starring Angie Harmon and based on a series of books by James Patterson, the evil Microsoft might just have the answer.

Microsoft and I-play yesterday released “Women’s Murder Club: Death in Scarlet,” which they’re touting as “the first interactive game based on a story and characters by best-selling author James Patterson.” (Of course it’s the first. Would there need to be more?) It will be available exclusively on MSN Games through Thursday, May 29. (Not being a gamer, I don’t get why that’s a good thing; but, hey: I don’t make this stuff up.)

While none of this sounds terribly fun to me, the Microsoft publicists obviously see things differently. You can tell how excited they are from all the en-dashes:
The game, which features the characters from the “WMC” books and an all-new, never-before-seen storyline, is a thrilling seek-and-find adventure designed by award-winning game designer Jane Jensen in collaboration with Patterson. Its storyline lets fans experience the suspense of James Patterson’s stories interactively for the first time as they solve a chilling series of murders in San Francisco.

“The opportunity for casual games built around intriguing stories and compelling characters is largely untapped, and who better to lead the way than America’s No. 1 storyteller, James Patterson?” said Kevin Unangst, senior global director of Games for Windows in the Entertainment and Devices Division at Microsoft. “We’re thrilled to partner with James Patterson and I-play to debut a game of this caliber on MSN Games.”
Dude, do you know how many books Patterson sells? Why wouldn’t you be thrilled? And the I-play people are no less so. Quoting from the same news release:
“MSN Games is a great place to debut a high-profile casual game with a powerful brand like James Patterson, based on the strength of their audience and the scope and reach of the MSN and Microsoft networks,” said Don Ryan, head of I-play. “We’re excited to work with them and are looking forward to an incredible debut for the first ‘Women’s Murder Club’ game.”
All of this probably won’t hurt Patterson’s popularity, either. However, it seems it will be too little, too late to help the show: earlier this week, ABC announced that Women’s Murder Club has been canceled.

Thursday, May 15, 2008

Smatterings: The Hell of a Week Edition

• If I were in the British capital right now, there’s no question that I’d be finding time to visit the Museum of London in Docklands, where curators have staged a delightfully creepy exhibition called “Jack the Ripper and the East End.” As the Associated Press’ Robert Barr notes, “We are still transfixed by London’s most notorious mass murderer. More than a century after his crimes shocked London, fascination with the Ripper grows, with new books, walking tours and the exhibit all bringing fresh attention to the unsolved crimes.” Being a veteran of these Ripper tours, I can certainly attest to the staying power of the Ripper legend and the hold it exerts over modern audiences. Click here to learn more about this London exhibit, which will run through November 2. And Elizabeth Foxwell points us as well to a BBC Radio 4 program about the historical display.

• Today marks the 60th birthday of New Jersey-born crime novelist Jeremiah Healy. He’s the “father” of both Boston private eye John Francis Cuddy and, under the pseudonym “Terry Devane,” of lawyer Mairead O’Clare novels. To learn more about Healy, click here.

• Beloved Canadian gumshoe Benny Cooperman, the creation of septuagenarian novelist Howard Engel, has been missing in action ever since 2005 and the publication of Memory Book, in which Cooperman came down with the same rare brain disorder as his creator. But now, according to The National Post, publisher “Penguin has re-launched the first 11 Cooperman books in paperback with a lively new design and a number emblazoned on the spine of each volume, so that obsessive Cooperman fans can shelve them in order of their creation ...” In addition, Penguin Canada has released a 12th Cooperman yarn, East of Suez. (Hat tip to Sarah Weinman.)

• Yikes! Is it really that time again? Carnival of the Criminal Minds time, that is. Author Sandra Ruttan (What Burns Within) serves as the mistress of this latest fortnightly extravaganza, picking up on a question that Bernd Kochanowski of Internationale Krimis asked when he hosted the Carnival earlier this month: “Which older post would you like to see in a blog museum?” Ruttan’s candidates run the broad spectrum from Mystery Bookspot’s genre primer and Eileen Cook’s gruesome premise for a novel, to Jeff Shelby’s “classic” blog post, “You, My Friend, Are a Huge Jackass.” (Damn! I was hoping to use that headline myself someday--it could have a great multiplicity of applications.) Great stuff, though I think could’ve gone my whole life without seeing those Victorian post-mortem photographs. Ruttan’s Carnival post can be found right here. British author-blogger Martin Edwards plays host next time.

• A big-screen version of the 1980s Johnny Depp TV series 21 Jump Street? Oh, please tell me I’m only experiencing a nightmare here.

• It doesn’t necessarily have anything to do with crime fiction, but I find “Medieval noir” author Jeri Westerson’s list of the “Top Ten Myths About the Middle Ages” fascinating. Of special interest is her explanation regarding the use of chastity belts:
[T]he idea that a knight would encase his wife in a contraption to ensure fidelity as he went off to the Crusades might be a cultural curiosity, but it was never fact. What woman would put up with that? I mean, really. It is a Victorian myth to perpetuate the romantic (romantic?) notions of an age of Chivalry. Remember, this was the age of the pre-Raphaelites, whose depiction of noble, Dutch-boy coifed Crusaders would meet their lady loves in sunlit groves, a veritable Rivendell of velvet gowns and pointy sleeves. Those last vestiges of chicanery were removed from the British Museum, many of which have been on display since 1846--which was probably when they were made! A spokesman of the museum explained: “It is probable that the majority of existing examples were made in the 19th century as curiosities for the prurient or jokes for the tasteless.”
Also engaging is Westerson’s debunking of the provenance of that old saying, “It’s raining cats and dogs.” Go here to learn more.

The Gumshoe Site brings word that American novelist Oakley Hall has died at age 87. Although he may be known best for his broad fictionalization of Wyatt Earp’s Tombstone saga in Warlock (1958), the Gumshoe Site’s Jiro Kimura reminds us that Hall also wrote several mysteries, “such as Murder City (Farrar, 1949), So Many Doors (Random, 1959), A Game for Eagles (Morrow, 1970), and the Ambrose Bierce series (University of California Press).” In its too-abbreviated notice of Hall’s demise, the San Francisco Chronicle quotes one of its own reviewers as saying, “Oakley Hall gives a master class every time he practices his craft.”

• Glenn Harper laments the end of “Leonardo Padura’s tetralogy-plus-one of novels about Havana detective Mario Conde, the Count.” The last book in that series is Havana Gold. Read more about it here.

• After her recent fallow period, podcast interviewer Angie Johnson-Schmit is definitely back with a vengeance. She has two new exchanges for us to listen to, one with British author Steve Mosby (The 50-50 Killer, Cry for Help), the other with American thriller novelist and Rambo creator David Morrell. Those and all of her previous interviews can be found at In for Questioning.

• Speaking of interviews, Edgar Award-winning author and Rap Sheet contributor Megan Abbott (Queenpin) sits for two of them. The first is a now-complete two-parter to be found in Peter Rozovsky’s Detectives Beyond Borders blog (part I is here, while part II can be found here). Meanwhile, she’s grilled--and toasted--in Elaine Flinn’s Evil E blog (results here; scroll down about halfway on the page).

• The trailer for the film The X-Files: I Want to Believe (due to be released in July) can be found here.

• Off-topic, but altogether entertaining: In the realm of rants, some are merely pathetic, while others just make your mouth hang open in awed amazement.

• This is curious. From a list of the “Top 10 Ground-Breaking Mysteries,” the anonymous editor who writes the Mysterious Matters blog chooses only one written by a man: The Caveman’s Valentine, by George Dawes Green. You’ll find the full rundown--plus lists of the “Top 10 Reasons to Read a Mystery” and the “Top 10 Plot Devices That Make Me Want to Scream in Horror”--here.

• And Leonardo di Caprio as Ian Fleming in an upcoming film? Bish’s Beat is stirred by the story.

The Art of the Matter

Given my interest in book jacket design, you know I’m looking forward to seeing the forthcoming documentary about famed paperback illustrator Robert McGinnis. Director-producer Paul Jilbert has a nice backgrounder on the film at CinemaRetro, which includes a few fine examples of McGinnis’ art. The documentary, which I am led to believe isn’t coming out in theaters, but will be released in DVD format, is scheduled to reach stores in July. Click here to watch a trailer for Robert McGinnis: Painting the Last Rose of Summer.

Since McGinnis himself forced the shutdown earlier this year of Graeme Flanagan’s exceptional tribute site to his work, I for one have been feeling deprived of McGinnis’ imagery. Sign me up for a copy of this film.

(Hat tip to Ed Gorman.)

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Pay Attention, Big Boy!

It’s pleasant to think that book designers and cover artists are endlessly imaginative, that they can produce an ever-expanding array of new and novel covers, each demonstrating a radical departure from what has come before. But of course, that’s simply delusional. As we’ve discovered over time, designers of crime novels (and other books) not only borrow cover themes and image arrangements from each other, they too often duplicate stock art that’s been used prominently on other jackets. As is true of writers as well, designers try to do the best they can, and hope no one notices when they fall short of the heights of genius.

Besides, some ideas just keep on working. Again and again. And again. I was reminded of this recently, when I received in the mail an advance reading copy of The First Quarry, Max Allan Collins’ forthcoming (in October) prequel to his long-running series featuring a hired-killer known as Quarry. The jacket (at right), illustrated by Ken Laager, shows a man seated on a couch (presumably the aforementioned assassin), holding what looks to be a gun, while a curvaceous brunette stands in front of him, quietly but seductively removing her brassiere--though he seems too involved in whatever he’s thinking, to notice.

This sort of cover illustration--of a sexy female with her back turned to the book buyer, displaying her virtues to some man (or in one case below, a woman) who is either surprised or distracted by other matters--has become something of a standard. Looking around the Web, I found a number of other similar examples:






Understand, this post is not intended as a knock against illustrator Laager; I like his First Quarry artwork. Just consider it an observation confirming that old adage about how there are no new ideas in the world.

O’Mara, “Marlowe,” and “Mars”

This news puts an end to talk about U.S. network ABC-TV resurrecting fictional private eye Philip Marlowe in a new series. Irish actor Jason O’Meara, who had been slated to play Raymond Chandler’s gumshoe on the show, has instead won the lead role in an American adaptation of the popular British series Life on Mars. As Bish’s Beat reports:
Life on Mars centers on Sam Tyler, a present-day detective who, following a serious car accident, wakes up to find himself in the early 1970s. He’s not sure if he’s actually gone back in time, is in a coma or just crazy, but in working cases in the earlier time period he gets clues to his present-day state. The two seasons of the British series aired recently on BBC America. ABC’s pilot, written by [David E.] Kelley and directed by Thomas Schlamme (Studio 60, The West Wing) was originally considered for the fall. After having difficulty finding someone to play Tyler, however, the producers and ABC pushed the project to midseason. It’s now scheduled to go into production in August for possible midseason consideration. Rachelle Lefevre (What About Brian), who was initially cast as the only female detective in the 1970s department, remains attached to the show.
But here’s the excerpt that may disappoint Marlowe fans:
O’Mara became available for Life on Mars after ABC passed on Marlowe, a pilot updating Raymond Chandler’s iconic detective, this spring. He’s also had a recurring role on ABC’s Men in Trees and starred in the short-lived In Justice during the 2005-06 season. His credits also include The Agency and Band of Brothers.
This news was evidently reported earlier, but I missed it, and I suspect others did, too.

Admittedly, I didn’t have high hopes for ABC’s use of Philip Marlowe, especially since it was planning to “update” the character. But I’d still like to see the Marlowe pilot. Call me a masochist.

READ MORE:Old Is New Again,” by Lee Goldberg (A Writer’s Life).

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

The Girl, the Gold Ring, and Everything

It’s certainly one of the most highly praised novels of the year, with British author Val McDermid calling it “strange, complex, entertaining, and very haunting.” I’m talking, of course, about Swedish author Stieg Larsson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.

That hefty novel came out in the UK in January, but it isn’t due in U.S. bookstores till September. If you can’t stand the wait, it seems that Material Witness blogger Ben Hunt has one advance reader copy of Tattoo that he wants to give away to a lucky American recipient right now. All you have to do to win it is e-mail Hunt with the answer to a simple question. The deadline is this coming Friday, May 16.

Click here for full contest details.

A Bullet Dodged

My breath caught in my throat this afternoon when I read that James Garner, who only last month celebrated his 80th birthday, had suffered a stroke. But it was apparently a minor one, and the well-loved former star of The Rockford Files, Maverick, Nichols, and other memorable TV series “seems to be doing well,” according to TV Squad’s Bob Sassone. He’s expected to return home later this week.

Whew!

READ MORE:James Garner Hospitalized After a Stroke,” by John Rogers (The Huffington Post).

The Reel World

Former British Columbia college administrator and book reviewer M. Wayne Cunningham joins January Magazine’s stable of crime-fiction critics today with his assessment of Laura Lippman’s new, 10th Tess Monaghan novel, Another Thing to Fall.

The story finds private eye Monaghan more or less babysitting a headstrong young starlet named Selene Waites, who has a major role in Mann of Steel, “the pilot for a TV miniseries being shot in Baltimore.” As Cunningham explains:
Everybody wants this shoot to be squeaky-clean. But Selene is making that hard, with her after-hours antics at the local bars. Hence, the call to Tess for help.

Keeping Selene out of trouble is no easy task. Tess fails her first-night assignment, getting drugged and dumped by Selene and one of her boyfriends, “the actor of the moment.” But, as her previous outings have demonstrated, Tess isn’t easily outdone. She gets the upper hand when she hires her gal pal, Whitney Talbot, to help corral Selene and then keep the headstrong young actress under their collective thumbs. But while gumshoe Tess reins in Selene, she can’t exercise similar control over other events threatening the film’s production--a potential union shutdown, a suicide, a series of fires and smoke bombings, behind-the-scenes backstabbing and bad-mouthing, and a nasty feud between Selene and her co-star, a middle-aged actor who’s sliding down the ratings charts as quickly as she skyrockets up them. Adding to all these other troubles are an apparent stalker, bent on revenge, and a couple of killings that our heroine has to solve before she can dead-file the case and re-shelve the broken Emmy statuette that ultimately helps her find the murderer.
You can read all of the review here.

Monday, May 12, 2008

Knock, Knock, Knockin’ on Hell’s Door

I moderate a mystery reading group, the obviously titled Murder Ink, at the local Barn O’ Novels, here in sleepy, sunny Palmdale, California. It’s a fun group, a monthly break from the routine, although most months I’m the only guy in the group. And most of the ladies lean toward the lighter end of the spectrum (or at least profess to).

Still, stubborn cuss that I am, I keep trying on occasion to slip some harder, darker fare into the mix--a Raymond Chandler or Dashiell Hammett here; a Robert B. Parker or Walter Mosley there. And we try to mix things up a bit, ranging from new or newish writers to old classics (Arthur Conan Doyle, Dorothy L. Sayers, etc.), to off-the-beaten-track cross-over stuff (Elizabeth Lowell, Isaac Asimov).

So, when someone suggested we “do” a Ken Bruen novel (“that Irish guy you’re always talking about”), I jumped at the chance. Jack Taylor, the alcoholic ex-Guard turned Galway eye, the gumshoe with all the heart and hurt of a dozen dead poets, is the star of one of my favorite P.I. series--a literate, uncompromising stroll to the abyss and back that gets me every time. And so I oh-so-subtly led my group to one of the Taylor novels I hadn’t yet read, figuring it would be a good way for me to both catch up on the series (and revisit Galway, the “dirtiest city in Ireland”) and maybe ruffle a few smug suburbanite feathers.

Oops.

The Taylor stories have always been on the dark side, but Priest (2007), the fifth in that series, is something else again, a bruising, brutal blast of sustained white-hot rage and bottom-of-the-glass despair that’s as bleak and black as it gets. Taylor doesn’t so much go for a look at the abyss this time--he jumps in and does a few laps. This isn’t slipping into darkness; it’s a headlong dive.

In fact, the book kicks off with Taylor just finishing up a little dip, and he’s dripping wet. He’s fresh out of the looney bin, his mind short-circuited by prolonged abuse and raging guilt over the death of a child, with few prospects and fewer friends, facing a hollow and hopefully (but probably not) alcohol-free future. Meanwhile, a nun has just discovered the severed head of a priest in the confessional--a priest recently accused of child molestation.

And then things really get dark. Before the book is finally nailed shut, there will be murder done and a grisly sort of reckless, wild justice meted out, hearts and lives shattered, drinks drunk (or not drunk) and blood spilled, and poetry and music (Springsteen, Cash, Zevon) evoked. And souls forever fucked.

Taylor’s (and Ireland’s) complicated relationship with the Catholic Church, the lies and wreckage left behind by Ireland’s economic success, and the detective’s own thundering despair--they’re all here, all ratcheted up to ear-bloodying volume. I thought The Magdalen Martyrs, a previous book in this series, in which Taylor took on the Church’s systemic abuse of unwed mothers and his own tormented relationship with his mother, was fierce, but this entry screams like the mother of all banshees.

What was I thinking?

And Taylor’s a far cry from an affable character. In the hands of a weaker writer than Bruen, he’d probably be detestable and utterly unreadable. But Bruen does it with seeming ease. His is one of the freshest, most distinct voices in crime fiction today. He doesn’t so much have style as an M.O.: the plots in the Jack Taylor series seem almost assembled, not written, each a swirling jangle of stream-of-consciousness rants, random encounters, chance meetings, out-of-nowhere lists, fever dreams, newspaper clippings and poetry snippets, and even, sometimes, a little detective work. Holding it all together is Bruen’s skill and fierce vision, and of course Taylor, a black hole of a hero if there ever was one.

So, yes, Taylor can be obnoxious and a bully, stupid and mean-spirited and nasty to those who would try to love him, a mostly charm-free, self-pitying grade-A fuck-up whose tragedy is that he knows he’s a fuck-up, but can’t seem to keep the decks from tilting. Nonetheless, there’s something about him worth appreciating. And there’s always a tiny, tiny sliver of hope, of redemption, a compassion in each book that keeps me reading.

Of course, that tiny splinter invariably and inevitably becomes infected and has to be lanced. But hey, this ain’t no Lifetime movie.

Long before George W. Bush and Dick Cheney made torture fashionable, Taylor was doing it to himself.

He’s a one-man weapon of self-destruction; a guy whose adult life has been one long Sunday morning coming down, punctuated by lost weekends and bad choices. Because his real battle, of course, is not with the Church or the powers that be, with corrupt cops or Celtic Tiger criminals in their shirts and their ties, but with himself. Taylor’s alcoholism, his obsessions with past crimes, real and imagined, his burning guilt as he slowly circles the last exit to Hell--rarely has someone conjured up such a vivid and poetic sense of noir and somehow managed to transform it into an ongoing series. And it ain’t that pretty at all.

But therein, maybe, lies its beauty.

I can hardly wait to see what the ladies’ reactions will be. May God have mercy ...

Noises Off

I hadn’t really expected anything to come of my complaint, made in yesterday’s post about Mike Ripley’s new “Getting Away with Murder” column, that Shots was assaulting its visitors’ ears with its auto-loading audio advertisement for Jason Pinter’s The Mark. Yes, it was obnoxious. But what to do about it wasn’t my call.

So I was surprised to receive in my e-mailbox this morning the following note from Shots editor Mike Stotter:
Everything is now resolved on the homepage. It’s the viewer’s choice to click on the video to make it play. No sound bleeds through to any of the links.
If you really want the blaring promo for The Mark, click here. Otherwise, rest assured that you can visit Shots without having to turn your speaker volume down, or off.

A grateful readership thanks you, Mike.

Smatterings: The Halos and Huzzahs Edition

• It was 101 years ago today that half-Chinese, half-English author Leslie Charteris, who’d go on to create the character of Simon Templar--aka “The Saint”--was born in Singapore. He died almost 86 years later, after helping to make Roger Moore a Hollywood star.

• Recently applauded Edgar Award winner and Rap Sheet contributor Megan Abbott talks with Peter Rozovsky of Detectives Without Borders about noir, fictional gangsters, and her latest novel, Queenpin. The first part of their interview can be found here, with a second part still to come.

• A couple of weeks ago, TV historian Ed Robertson & Co. at “global radio” station KSAV put together a show celebrating the work of the late British actor Barry Morse (The Fugitive), who died in early February of this year. That show is now available through the KSAV archives. Go here to listen.

• In celebration of the 25th anniversary of Cambridge, Massachusetts’ Raven Award-winning store, Kate’s Mystery Books, a Web site called Wicked Local Cambridge hosts a short but worthy profile of that establishment.

Barbara Fister submits her new novel, In the Wind, to Marshal Zeringue’s Page 69 Test. The results are here.

• Euro Crime’s Karen Meek reports that the “complete set” of the 1989-1990 British TV series Campion--which starred Peter Davidson as author Margery Allingham’s aristocratic detective, Albert Campion--is now available in DVD format.

• Speaking of Euro Crime, I wasn’t aware until today that the site is actively trying to “review all ten of the Martin Beck books” by Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö. The Laughing Policeman (1968) is the latest of those excellent novels to be reassessed, on this occasion by AustCrimeFiction’s Karen Chisholm. Previous reviews took on The Abominable Man (1971) and The Man on the Balcony (1967).

• More critical reassessment comes from Adrian McKinty (The Bloomsday Dead), who writes in Crime Always Pays about the Harlem of author Chester Himes.

The New York Times asks, how do Gotham detectives really dress?

• Can it be mere coincidence that both Pop Sensation’s “Rex Parker” and Mystery*File’s Steve Lewis both write this week about the long-forgotten Evan Pinkerton novels by David Frome (né Leslie Ford)? Maybe it’s something in the air. In any case, you’ll find Parker examining the cover of The Man from Scotland Yard (1942) here, while Lewis remarks on Homicide House (1950) and the broader Pinkerton series here.

• We’re always told in crime fiction not to trust coincidences. Yet they suddenly seem bountiful. Just last Friday, I wrote about William L. DeAndrea’s The Lunatic Fringe (1980), mentioning in the course of my post that the late author was married to another wordsmith, Jane Haddam. Now, I discover that Haddam will be guest-blogging all this week at St. Martin’s Press’ Moments in Crime series. Her posts should be found here.

This is just frickin hilarious.

• While James Bond receives the royal treatment this month, his would-be amour, Miss Jane Moneypenny finally reaches the United States with her own story. Bookgasm has the story.

• And somehow, somewhere, I want to find enough extra time to enjoy this new book.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

The Female Instinct

My father was a big fan of the James Bond movies, so I was introduced to Ian Fleming’s Agent 007 early. Probably too early for it to have had a favorable affect on my psyche. I was a bit young to have sat through the first-run theater openings of any of Sean Connery’s Bond escapades. However, I remember watching Dr. No (1962) on my family’s tiny black-and-white TV set, probably with my mother rolling her eyes in the other room. (She never did appreciate Fleming’s male sex and espionage fantasies.) I believe the first franchise installment I went to a movie house to see was Live and Let Die (1973), starring the suave Roger Moore and the then-seductive Jane Seymour. Since that time, however, I’ve watched all of the 007 flicks as they have been released, and gone back to view those I missed on the initial showings.

My association with Fleming’s original novels has been less thorough. In fact, it was only a few years ago, during a travel-writing assignment to Barbados, when I ran short of reading material, that I finally picked up my first Bond book: Diamonds Are Forever. I found a paperback copy of that 1956 thriller in the library of the hotel where I was staying, along with several less interesting (at least to me) volumes by Colleen McCullough, Tom Clancy, and Jackie Collins. During my free time between dinners out and sitting beside the pool, surreptitiously glancing at bikini’d women through my extra-dark sunglasses, I devoured Diamonds, which finds 007 trying to infiltrate a gem-smuggling ring that’s bringing African riches into the United States. It was terrific escapist fare, I thought, though rather less propulsive in its storytelling than the films.

Even now, I haven’t read all of the Bond novels, just three or four. But my interest in tackling the remainder is definitely whetted by Penguin UK’s decision to re-release them all in stylish new hardcover editions on May 29. As Penguin senior copywriter Colin Brush explains in the publisher’s blog, artist Michael Gillette--Welsh born, but now living in San Francisco--“was commissioned to paint fourteen iconic covers. The books were numbered on their spines so it’s not hard to read them in order (if you’re traditionally minded). The blurbs, adapted from earlier Penguin editions, were themed around the new unified concept. Fourteen book biographies, one for each back flap, replaced the usual author biography (which is found on page one). A short extract from each book graces the back cover. They were made into demi-format hardbacks to be not so much collectible as bloody irresistible. Having worked on the Bond novels on and off for eight years--and these are the fourth set Penguin have done in that time--I can attest to their enduring appeal. And you won’t find a safari suit in sight.”

Instead, Gillette uses curvaceous women--always a standard element of the Bond yarns--as his connective design element on these new jackets. That’s not exactly an original decision; artist Robert McGinnis exploited the female form to its fullest in his promotional poster for the 1967 David Niven film version of Casino Royale, and Richie Fahey and Roseanne Serra used women in revealing situations on the covers of Penguin’s most recent paperback Bond series. But that doesn’t mean its not a good decision--it certainly is that. The resulting new hardcover series, distributed just in time for this month’s centenary of Ian Fleming’s birth, is, from what I’ve seen of its so far, remarkably handsome. Just the sort of thing any Bond lover needs for his or her bookshelves. You can see the full set here.

Oh, and if anyone’s wondering what to get me for a present, well ...

READ MORE:Another Look at Fleming’s Centenary Editions” (K1Bond007); “Charlie Higson’s Top 10 Bond Villains” (The Guardian); “For Your Eyes Only,” by Ali Karim (The Rap Sheet).

(Hat tip to The Book Design Review.)

Némirovsky’s Spy Novel

Irène Némirovsky was born in Kiev in 1903 into a wealthy banking family and emigrated to France during the Russian Revolution. After attending the Sorbonne in Paris, she began to write and swiftly achieved success with David Golder (1929), which was followed by more than a dozen other books. Throughout her lifetime she published widely in French newspapers and literary journals. She died in Auschwitz in 1942. More than 60 years later, Suite Française was published posthumously.

Now, the stalwart Everyman’s Library has published four of her shorter novels in one handsome volume, a gorgeous hardcover that comes complete with a gold cord bookmark. And the especially good news for lovers of crime fiction is that one of those tales, The Courilof Affair, is a classic Conradian (or Dostoyevskian) spy novel. It’s the story of a Russian revolutionary, Leon M.--living out his last days in Nice, France--first meeting in the 1930s a man who jogs his memory and then writing in longhand about his relationship with Valerian Courilof, the minister of education in Imperial Russia. Léon grew to like the decrepit, politically ruined Courilof, even as he was ordered to kill him.

Mom, Apple Pie, and Mayhem

Sadly, my own wonderful mother passed away almost 20 years ago, a too-young victim of Lou Gehrig’s Disease. But I returned home not long ago from a late breakfast with my in-laws, so am well aware that today is Mother’s Day in the United States. Which got me to thinking: Are there any Mother’s Day-related mysteries available? As it turns out, there are--everything from Jane Haddam’s Murder Superior (1993) and Lee Harris’ The Mother’s Day Murder (2000) to Mignon F. Ballard’s Angel at Troublesome Creek and Dorothy Cannell’s ominously titled How to Murder Your Mother-in-Law (1994).

More suggestions can be found here and here.

READ MORE:A Little Murder for Mom,” by B.V. Lawson (In Reference to Murder).

Ripley Sounds Off

If you can make it past the Web site’s obnoxious and repeating audio advertisement for Jason Pinter’s new novel, The Mark (who in the hell thought that was a good idea?), you’ll discover that the May edition of Mike Ripley’s “Getting Away with Murder” column has been posted in Shots. Finally.

Among the Ripster’s targets this month: Stephen Jones’ biography of Basil Cooper, prolific author of the Mike Faraday detective series; C.S. Forester’s early “crime novels of psychological suspense”; “chick-lit vampire fiction,” about which he laments, “What I find slightly unhealthy is the way publishers are falling over themselves to gorge on this particular flavour-of-the month (and surely a minority taste)”; and the forthcoming, but posthumously published novel, Vita Nuova, by Magdalen Nabb.

The full column can be found here. To save your eardrums, though, turn off your computer’s speakers before clicking on that link.

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Simms City

Like his fictional protagonist, Detective Inspector Jon Spicer (introduced in Killing the Beasts, 2005), author Chris Simms lives just outside the northern English city of Manchester. Their mutual involvement with that mammoth metropolis lends Simms’ novels an air of authenticity that is a welcome balance against their sometimes gritty, more visceral elements. (One of his early standalone novels, 2004’s Pecking Order, featured a character having sex with a chicken, which put me off Kentucky Fried Chicken for life.) It doesn’t hurt his career, either, that he’s represented by über-agent Jane Gregory and published in the UK by Orion.

With the imminent release in Britain of Simms’ seventh novel, Hell’s Fire, I encouraged him to tell Rap Sheet readers a little about this work’s plot and inspiration. His response:
In Hell’s Fire, DI Jon Spicer is on a particularly easy trail to follow; the criminal he’s chasing leaves churches burning in his wake. But with the fourth attack, a badly burned corpse is found in the smoking ruins.

The novel looks at the decline of Christianity in this country, a phenomenon reflected in falling congregations and the boarding-up of many churches. Also of concern is what’s replacing the traditional Sunday service as people seek spiritual fulfillment of one sort or another. In recent years, New Age beliefs have become incredibly popular. Spiritual colleges are popping up all over the country--and Internet--where pupils can, for a fee, learn about such things as crystal-healing, tarot, or palmistry. Some even conduct séances where you can contact dead relatives through the (college-supplied) spirit medium.

Pagan religion is also enjoying a renaissance. Witchcraft--or Wicca as it’s now known--pre-dates Christianity and was ruthlessly stamped out as the church established itself in Britain.

Many in the Christian faith are still alarmed over the influence of anything magical. Vicars frequently speak out against the perniciousness of things such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer or even that sinister fellow, Harry Potter.

Of course, what they really fear is people exposing themselves to the forces of Satan. Many would agree their fears are well-founded--after all, there is no doubt [that] interest in the satanic is as strong now as it ever was. All you need do is listen to death metal music. Unfamiliar with this particularly morbid strain of metal? The band names give a good indication of what it’s all about: Abomination, Angelcorpse, Blasphemy, Fallen Christ, Infernum, Necromass, Rigor Mortis, Sodom, Ungod. Pretty music, it isn’t.

DI Spicer’s investigation into whom the dead person in the fourth church was draws him into a horrifying underworld--one where worship involves committing unspeakable acts. As [mathematician and religious philosopher] Blaise Pascal noted back in the 17th century, “Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from a religious conviction.”
Meanwhile, I see that Simms and his books are featured prominently at the Web site Manchester Confidential. According to site contributor Philip Hamer:
Chris spends three months researching his novels, and the entire gestation period takes a year--he writes them in long hand. “It’s vital to get the forensics right and the expert Ian Pepper is a fantastic source. There’s a lot of intriguing stuff about arson and its detection in my new book. You’ve got to be wary of the amazing advances in DNA because a crime can be solved so quickly these days that a crime writer wouldn’t be able to fill a page with his tale, let alone an entire novel.” As for authentic dialogue, Chris says that travelling on public transport and listening in to conversations is important to him.

His love for a girl from Marple, in Cheshire, brought Chris to the outskirts of Manchester. The Sussex-born Sociology graduate is proud that themes, rather than characters, dominate his work and says that Spicer is emphatically not a Mancunian Rebus, the Edinburgh detective created by Ian Rankin. “There is little cynicism in Spicer, and he is younger, and he has none of the world weariness or complicated love life of Rebus,” he says. “My Spicer novels have permitted me to explore so many topics that interest me: consumer and car culture, the way we treat animals, plastic surgery and terrorism have all been the topics that have galvanised my work.”
If all that doesn’t persuade you to pick up a copy of Hell’s Fire (which is due out in American bookstores come July), then perhaps it’s worth noting as well that the British book chain Waterstones last year selected Simms as one of Britain’s 25 young authors to watch--an honor he shared with Nick Stone (King of Swords), Louise Welsh (The Bullet Trick), and Richard Morgan (Black Man/Thirteen).

And Don’t Miss ...

• David Lewis’ interview with Allan Guthrie at Pulp Pusher, in which they talk about Guthrie’s new novel, Savage Night. Read it all here.

• An interview with Libby Fischer Hellman (Easy Innocence) in New Mystery Reader Magazine.

Plots with Guns editor Anthony Neil Smith submits his latest novel, Yellow Medicine, to Marshal Zeringue’s notorious Page 69 Test. The results are here.

• And because every author must now publicize his or her work with a video teaser, Tony Black now has one on YouTube promoting his forthcoming Scottish underworld novel, Paying for It. You can watch it here. It’s guaranteed that the Edinburgh tourist department isn’t going to be hiring Black to promote their town.

Peace Be With You

A writer whose work I’ve enjoyed over the years for its sheer poetry is Yorkshire man David Peace (Tokyo Year Zero), who now spends most of his time in Japan. The Guardian today looks closely into Peace’s work and his writing life. Its piece begins:
One of the most heartening features of the recently announced, Richard and Judy endorsed, Galaxy British Book Awards was the presence of David Peace on the shortlist for author of the year. Peace was named in Granta’s 2003 list of the best young British writers and has gone on to build a reputation as an original new voice, but it was still a surprise to see him up against such writers as Ian McEwan (who won the prize), Doris Lessing, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and Khaled Hosseini. First, Peace is usually--if potentially misleadingly--described as a crime writer. More interestingly, his work, with its ultra-terse dialogue, disturbing interior monologues and dark subject matter, would by most measures be regarded more as avant garde than daytime TV fare.
Although Peace’s most recent books stand a bit outside the crime genre, he is probably still best known for his Red Riding Quartet of novels (beginning with Nineteen Seventy Four), which were published from 2000 to 2003. Those stories covered the years 1974 to 1983, and charted the traumatic impact the “Yorkshire Ripper,” aka Peter Sutcliffe, had on the inhabitants of northern England. As The Guardian remarks:
Taking the story of the Yorkshire Ripper as subject matter for his Red Riding quartet was the next step. “Millions of people were directly affected by the Ripper manhunt. It seems that nearly everyone in the north has a story about that time: their fathers being pulled over by the police, walking past murder sites on the way to school.” While he says he wasn’t baying, he was part of the mob outside Dewsbury Magistrates Court when Peter Sutcliffe appeared there after his arrest in 1981. He was also a witness to the miners’ strike a few years later, “but when I came to write GB84, I realised just how much lip service I had paid to it all. I knew that people were losing their houses and so on, but I didn’t really know what that meant. I met people whose lives had been ruined, and I do wonder whether it would happen now. Would people in productive pits, with good money and prospects, go on strike and lose their houses and savings for people they didn’t know in unproductive pits? I doubt it, but you can’t help but admire those who did.”
One of my early assignments for Crimespree Magazine was to interview author Peace, in tandem with Martyn Waites (White Riot). The results of that exchange appeared in Crimespree Issue No. 2. In case you missed reading it, I’m happy to offer an excerpt here in which I talk with Peace about crime fiction, his fondness for comic books, and his student days at Manchester Polytechnic.

Ali Karim: Considering the intensity of your Red Riding Quartet, did you have a fractured childhood or upbringing?

David Peace: Only really the fact that I was born and brought up when and where I was, which was during a very strange time in Yorkshire.

AK: I understand that your parents were teachers, so were you brought up in a bookish home?

DP: Yes, my dad was a very big fan of writers such as Alan Silltoe, John Braine, David Storey--all the angry Northern writers, and these were the writers that I read early on. But actually, in truth, it was Marvel Comics that I read first, before the Northern guys. It is quite interesting as a friend of mine went to a James Ellroy reading in New York, and Ellroy actually talked about his love of Braine, Sillitoe, and Northern writers. Another aspect of those writers is the use of regional voice and that much of that work I mention can be viewed as the precursor to the regional crime novel of today. I wonder if writers such as Sillitoe, or John Braine, had not been published, whether we would have such interest in regional crime/mystery novels?

AK: I can see the influence of those writers from the 1950s, 1960s in your work, and also where some of the anger and desperation originates.

DP: Yes, in Nineteen Seventy Four, [the character of] Eddie is very similar to the character in [Braine’s 1957 novel] Room at the Top, and so the influence of those writers is definitely in my work.

AK: You mentioned Nineteen Seventy Four. But the follow-up, Nineteen Seventy Seven [2001], was probably the most difficult book for me to read--perhaps your darkest, your most disturbing.

DP: A lot of people say that, but it is my favorite book. It is the book I’m most proud of. It was actually written when my father-in-law was dying of cancer, and I did write it in hospital wards, and I don’t know if it was that, that contributed to its final flavor.

AK: How difficult is it mixing fact with fiction? Do you encounter any particular legal issues?

DP: I think GB84 [2004] was slightly more problematic. I clearly indicate that all my work is fiction, based on facts.

AK: I read that you studied at Manchester University and--

DP: Manchester Poly.

AK: [Laughing] I was at Liverpool Poly. Anyway, what did you study and what was the time like?

DP: I studied English Studies. It was one of those typical polytechnic courses where you spent most of your time on topics relating to war and culture and not much English; in fact, not much use in getting a real job. [Laughing]

AK: So how did you get Nineteen Seventy Four published, as I understand you had a series of rejected books in your third drawer?

DP: Lots, in fact. ... In fact, one of the reasons why I went to teach abroad was that I couldn’t get my books published. I wrote Nineteen Seventy Four purely for myself, to amuse myself in Tokyo. My dad came out and he read it, and told me that I should give it another go and submit it. He also brought some books by some new British crime writers and told me that he thought that Nineteen Seventy Four was better than those he had just read. I read them too and felt the same. I went to Serpent’s Tail first, as I admired what they were publishing--Walter Mosley and George Pelecanos; in fact, they had just published the early Nick Stefanos novels at the time.

AK: I am a big fan of George Pelecanos, and he also writes with one eye on the social and political environment he sees around him. In fact, he was one of the reasons why I picked up your work, because he recommended your book Nineteen Seventy Four.

DP: Actually, George Pelecanos was very kind to read it and give me a quote.

AK: Going back to my previous point: One thing you do share with the works of Pelecanos is your awareness of the political and social fabric in crime, and the interrelationships between these themes. Why is this backdrop important to you?

DP: Well, I didn’t purposely put it in, it just happens, I guess, and is a part of the way I was brought up. I can’t divorce those themes from my work. I really don’t think you can separate crime from society. If you do, you just exploit crime as a plot vehicle; and not referencing why it occurs is wrong, in my opinion.

AK: GB84, you’ve said, is first and foremost a crime novel. So could you tell us a little about it? And the title is somewhat Orwellian. ...

DP: GB84 I like to describe as a cult history of the [1984-1985 British] miners’ strike, the hidden secrets told from the various viewpoints of that strike--the top, the bottom, the left, and the right of that period. There is within the book, a traditional crime narrative, but there is also the fact that you can never say that the miners’ strike was not a criminal period in our history. OK, it may not appeal to, say, Colin Dexter fans if they view crime novels as puzzles. But may well appeal to others.

AK: In a similar way, is politics not integral to crime fiction?

DP: Yes, I would agree. Politics is everywhere, including in the crime novel. ... In the words of Stokely Carmichael, “everything is political.”

Spaceships Aren’t Illiterate

Being a longtime fan of “