Picks of the Week

  • Benjamin Black: The Lemur: A Novel

    Benjamin Black: The Lemur: A Novel
    Anyone who thinks John Banville lacks a sense of humor clearly did not read his serial for the New York Times magazine, available in novella-ish format in July. The story has all the basic crime ingredients - blackmail, adultery, murder, betrayal, that sort of thing - but it is so, so clear how much fun Banville had writing this pseudonymous exercise, loading up sentences filled with bizarre but well-placed metaphors and gently (or not so gently!) lampooning his characters as he moves them around his narrative chess board.

  • Cassandra Clare: City of Bones

    Cassandra Clare: City of Bones
    I read this on the flight home from the LA Times Festival of Books and it really is about the perfect airport read: fantastic storytelling, characters whose adventures and melodramas wrap you in their spells and really ass-kicking action scenes involving demons and all manner of underworld types. Sure, Clare clearly owes a huge debt to Buffy and Harry Potter, but dammit, I want to find out what will happen next to Clary, Jace, Simon & co. - and that's exactly the button that's supposed to be pushed.

  • Ibi Kaslik: ANGEL RIOTS

    Ibi Kaslik: ANGEL RIOTS
    Reading this novel was like being transported back to the mid-1990s Montreal I knew during my college years. But it also affords an inside look at the ups and downs, the politics and the dramas, the hookups and breakups endemic to a rising rock band. It's clear, whether told from the vantage point of the young violin prodigy with a boy's name or her bandmate looking to redefine himself outside the orbit of his best friend (and leader) that Kaslik knows this world cold, and we're privileged to share in this knowledge.

  • Irene Nemirovsky: David Golder, The Ball, Snow in Autumn, The Courilof Affair (Everyman's Library (Cloth))

    Irene Nemirovsky: David Golder, The Ball, Snow in Autumn, The Courilof Affair (Everyman's Library (Cloth))
    I'd recommend this simply based off of the utter gobsmacking brilliance that is LE BAL, one of the most crystalline and shocking novellas I've ever read, but the other three works simply confirm Nemirovsky's literary brilliance. THE COURILOF AFFAIR is a wonderful surprise for mystery readers because it's her version of a spy novel, tackling the moral quandaries of terrorism for a so-called greater good by personalizing the narrator's deeds and misdeeds. In other words, Nemirovsky's entire backlist can't be translated fast enough for me.

  • Sarah Hall: Daughters of the North

    Sarah Hall: Daughters of the North
    Goddamn, Hall can write, and her chosen dystopian subject matter gives her the chance not only to show off her sentence-by-sentence chops but to demonstrate how few steps removed our current culture is from the apocalyptic fervor of her world, where the reproductive rights of women are trampled on so definitively it takes an army of women to try, however futile the exercise might be, to take some independence back. I can't think of enough good things to say about this except that it should be read, now and years to come.

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February 28, 2008

Deals, Etc.

As there are quite a number on the crime fiction front. First, the next book from Blake Crouch:

Blake Crouch's ABANDON, set in a remote mining town high in the Rockies where two backcountry guides are leading a history professor, a journalist, a psychic, and a paranormal photographer deep into the Colorado wilderness to explore the fate of a group of people and an entire town that mysteriously vanished in 1893, to Michael Homler at St. Martin's, by Linda Allen of Linda Allen Literary Agency.

Then a debut thriller also has a northern echo:

Dennis Murphy's DARKNESS AT THE BREAK OF NOON, set in the frozen north where a sergeant of the Yellowknife RCMP must find out why the discovery of a journal from the ill-fated Franklin Expedition has proven fatal for at least two people, to Jennifer Lambert at Harper Canada, in a two-book deal, for publication in May 2009, by Helen Heller at Helen Heller Agency.

Finally, this book's title is straightforward but makes me want to read it straight away:

Dan Wells's I AM NOT A SERIAL KILLER, about a 15-year-old who works in his family's mortuary and has an unhealthy obsession with serial killers, and his struggle to control his dark side when a real monster comes to his small town, to Moshe Feder at Tor, in a three-book deal, by Sara Crowe at Harvey Klinger (NA).

February 27, 2008

More from the Scottish Invasion

As this is very good news indeed:

Russel McLean's THE GOOD SON, introducing a troubled Scots PI, who is dragged into a world of lies, violence, long-held secrets, and murky criminal double-crosses while investigating an apparent suicide, to Ross Bradshaw at Five Leaves, for publication in Winter 2008/2009, by Allan Guthrie at Jenny Brown Associates.

It goes without saying that I cannot wait to read this.

February 04, 2008

About Time Someone Wrote This

But then, I much preferred Rodgers with him than with Hammerstein:

Gary Marmorstein's LORENZ HART: AN AMERICAN LIFE, a biography of the tortured, brilliant lyricist (called "the Poet Laureate of America" by F. Scott Fitzgerald) who composed (with Richard Rodgers) such classics as "My Funny Valentine" and "Blue Moon", to Bob Bender at Simon & Schuster, in a good deal, in a pre-empt, by Dan Conaway at Writers House (NA).

Though I am curious to see if Marmorstein's take will supercede that of Frederick Nolan's from a decade or so ago.

January 31, 2008

Nisbet to be rediscovered

Overlook's done a pretty good job at getting formerly neglected espionage novelists Robert Littell and Charles McCarry back on the radar. Now it looks like that ethos will apply once more:

Jim Nisbet's untitled noir crime thriller, plus nine novels from the author's backlist, including LETHAL INJECTION and Hammett Prize finalist DARK COMPANION, to Aaron Schlechter at Overlook, by Matt Bialer at Sanford J. Greenburger Associates (World English).

Suffice to say that will be a good way to catch up.

January 10, 2008

Run Your Way to a Book Deal

For that seems to work for Jamie Freveletti, whom I think I met briefly at ThrillerFest and is a member of the Chicago Contingent:

Jamie Freveletti's RUNNING FROM THE DEVIL, introducing an ultra marathon runner who uses her experience as a bio-chemist to survive in the jungle after a hijacking gone wrong, to Carolyn Marino at Harper, in a six-figure deal, in a pre-empt, in a two-book deal, by Barbara Poellee at the Irene Goodman Agency (world).

December 12, 2007

Siler Tries Nonfiction

One of my favorite crime writers, Jenny Siler, is going in a different direction for her newest project:

Myles J. Connor, Jr., and novelist Jenny Siler's HONOR AMONG THIEVES, pitched as a Catch Me If You Can-style memoir by the Boston criminal mastermind long assumed to be responsible for the biggest art theft in American history, the 1990 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum heist, to Bruce Nichols at Collins, in a good deal, for publication in 2009, by Dan Conaway at Writers House (NA).

Just how involved Connor may have been in that heist is in dispute - especially as he was in prison at the time it took place - but this promises to be a fascinating book no matter how much (or little) it reveals.

November 26, 2007

When So Little Says So Much

It's just a one-line deal memo and yet it has the weight of a million paragraphs:

"Film director David Cronenberg's first novel, to Nicole Winstanley at Penguin Canada, in a pre-empt, by Andrew Wylie of The Wylie Agency."

Oh please live up to the promise. Please please please.

UPDATE: The Orlando Sentinel movie blog has a few more details, namely that the book won't be published until 2010 and that it is partially set in Toronto. Said Nicole Winstanley, Executive Editor at Penguin Group Canada: "I wrote David Cronenberg several months ago to inquire about whether or not he’d consider writing a novel. His films demonstrate a deep understanding of the human condition that could translate into fiction brilliantly so I’m delighted that he has decided to take this challenge on and I’m really looking forward to working with him."

UPDATE TWO: The Globe & Mail reports that the deal is "believed to be between low and mid-six figures" and that Winstanley bought Canadian rights "on the basis of a few pages."

November 19, 2007

But It Left Out the Most Important Point

The deal writeup for a big trilogy sale is plenty interesting:

Stieg Larsson's THE MILLENNIUM TRILOGY, with THE GIRL IN THE DRAGON TATTOO to be the first published from the trilogy, to Sonny Mehta at Vintage and Nicole Winstanley at Penguin Canada, in a significant deal, for publication in Fall 2008, by Emma Ward at Quercus, on behalf of the MacLehose Press (NA).

But some rather important details are left out, namely that Larsson died of a massive heart attack at age 50 in 2004, just nine months before the first book (whose original title was MEN WHO HATE WOMEN) was released in his native Sweden. The second book, THE GIRL WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE, won the 2006 Glass Key Award. And the entire trilogy sold to the movies, where it's now in pre-production.

Of course, being dead doesn't mean the author should be paid attention, and I sure hope the books end up being good. 

November 07, 2007

Echoing the Congrats

As this is quite good news indeed:

A N Smith's YELLOW MEDICINE, in which a corrupt sheriff's deputy confronts Malaysian terrorists in rural Minnesota, and HOGDOGGIN', to Benjamin Leroy at Bleak House, in a nice deal, by Allan Guthrie at Jenny Brown Associates (NA).

I can't imagine a better fit of author and publishing house, in fact.

November 06, 2007

I Don't Care If It's Probably Contrived

I still have to read this:

Amy Belasen and Jacob Osborn's JENNY GREEN'S KILLER JUNIOR YEAR, a satire in which a 16-year-old daddy's girl from Long Island becomes an unlikely serial killer after losing her virginity at boarding school, pitched as a teenage DEXTER, to Michael Del Rosario at Simon Pulse, by Alex Glass at Trident Media Group (World).

That said, it makes me want to reread Jen Sacks' ahead-of-her-time (and Edgar nominated!) satire NICE again....