A reader sent me this cover from a website he found--I didn't even know the publisher had finalised it. Yes, you may well ask as he did, where's the ship? Go ask St Martin's art department. They did at least ask me what sort of dog Nana is and made her a small multicoloured mongrel as I described. Black Ship will be out in September. The story is concerned with the effects of American Prohibition in England, when Daisy's next-door neighbours get…
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Added by Carola Dunn on April 13, 2008 at 10:18am —
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Latest news from the newsletter-
The latest installment in the monthly newsletter, SOUTHERN MYSTERIES WITH A SIDE OF GRIT, is now available! I appreciate all my new members who have signed up to receive this fun and informative e-news mail. If you haven't joined yet, you can do so by going to my website, mkimsmith.com and signing up.
This month is filled with articles on writing. You don't want to miss one issue! If you have any ideas, or want to submit content to Southern…
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Added by Kim Smith on April 13, 2008 at 8:17am —
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New Mystery Reader (http://www.newmysteryreader.com) has just posted an interview with Irish Crime Fiction writer Declan Hughes, who has written three books in his Ed Loy series. Yours truly does what he can with the questions; Mr. Hughes’s replies are insightful and entertaining. Well worth checking out.
Added by Dana King on April 12, 2008 at 2:30pm —
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I lived over three years in the Chicago area—Woodridge, actually—and have tried, with diminishing efficiency, to get back as often as possible. It’s been four years since my last trip, and the time has not been kind to my image of the city.
I write a lot of crime fiction set in Chicago, which is the perfect place for crime fiction. The problem is, once you do much research in Chicago’s criminal history, and its ostensibly straight history, one conclusion cannot be avoided: there’s no…
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Added by Dana King on April 12, 2008 at 2:28pm —
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I'm running a contest over at the Killer Hobbies blog about IFNWKS (Interesting Facts Not Worth Knowing), on Friday's post, "Sex and the Single Octopus." See post for details at:
http://killerhobbies.blogspot.com/2008/04/sex-and-single-octopus.html
Added by Kathryn Lilley on April 12, 2008 at 1:43pm —
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I'm an addict. I admit it. Before the entire world, I admit it. I mean, it's sort of ironic, you know? I managed to live for years without being struck by anything so incredibly and stubbornly incurable, but then I took a fall ... and when I did, I fell hard.
To what am I addicted? 3D graphics.
It started innocuously enough. I decided to do my own book cover. Now, this can be a dangerous decision, but I really wanted to do it. I can say I even felt compelled to do it. And…
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Added by Persia Walker on April 12, 2008 at 1:30pm —
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I wrote my first short story yesterday. It was an interesting exercise and I think it turned out quite well.
Constructive comments will be welcomed
I don't seem to be able do anything about the formatting below - if you want to see it properly fomatted please got to my website
http://www.iangosling.com/short_story_the_taxman.htm
THE TAXMAN
A short story by
IAN GOSLING
In his boots, the taxman towers a good…
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Added by Ian Gosling on April 12, 2008 at 11:30am —
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Just picked up the latest Mas Arai mystery published in Japanese from Kinokuniya Bookstore in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo. This is the cover for SNAKESKIN SHAMISEN, which won an Edgar in the category of best paperback original last year. Naysayers say awards don't mean much, but it was entirely because of the Edgar that I finally got deals in Japan and South Korea. So Mas thanks you, Mr.…
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Added by Naomi Hirahara on April 12, 2008 at 9:37am —
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Well, that’s enough of that. I’m officially done with traveling for the next few months. Time to pull up the drawbridge and chain myself to the desk. Jetsetting around like a rockstar is all well and good, but it’s meaningless if I don’t do the other, more important part of my job. I’m going to go write a book now.
Added by Christa Faust on April 12, 2008 at 4:21am —
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I just found out about a new review of
Glitter of Diamonds on The Suspense Zone. I love the last paragraph, because it sums up what my goal in writing the Manziuk and Ryan books is - to mimic, in a good way, and in today's world, the style of my favorite author, Georgette Heyer.
"
Glitter of Diamonds, second in the Manziuk and Ryan mystery series by award-winning Canadian journalist, author and speaker, N. J. Lindquist, continues with a finely drawn police procedural…
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Added by N. J. Lindquist on April 11, 2008 at 11:15pm —
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Tomorrow I have the rare privilege of addressing the Washington DC branch of the
National League of American Pen Women. The League members are women who have demonstrated creative talents in art, letters, and music composition. There are Pen Women branches throughout the U.S., in addition to state associations of affiliated branches in some places.
We'll meet at 1 pm in the historic Pen Arts…
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Added by Austin S. Camacho on April 11, 2008 at 10:02pm —
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Believe it or not, there are two Peggy J. Herrings who are writers of romance. I knew this when I started looking for a publisher because the other woman's name showed up on Internet searches. (Actually there's a third Peggy Herring who's a college professor/science writer.) I chose to write under Peg Herring, having always been called Peg anyway, and figured that would differentiate us.
Wrong. My publisher got an email from the Library of Congress when they applied for an ISBN#,…
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Added by Peg Herring on April 11, 2008 at 9:46pm —
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I was delighted to find yet another fantastic review of A Study in Red on the Amazon UK site this morning. I'm just so pleased that everyone who's reading it seems to be enjoying my humble offering. Here's the new one.
Brian
www.freewebs.com/brianlp
Five Stars: A Thrilling Study in Red!!, 11 April 2008
By Mr. Michael Covell "Mike Covell" (Hull) - See all my reviews
I was lucky enough to win this excellent book, otherwise I would have bought it… Continue
Added by Brian L Porter on April 11, 2008 at 7:30pm —
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In my April 4th blog entitled War Crimes, I wrote about a recently declassified White House memo, which argued that the Geneva Accords didn’t apply to the President’s actions in wartime. The memo attempted to give the President and other senior White House officials cover for acts of torture they authorized in direct violation of international and constitutional laws.
Yesterday, ABC News reported that President Bush’s most senior advisers met in dozens of top-secret talks and…
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Added by Christopher Valen on April 11, 2008 at 1:17pm —
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This is the latest customer review of 'A Study in Red' posted on the Amazon.co.uk site. I'll forgive this reader spelling my name wrong at the end as his enjoyment of the book is self-evident in his words.
Regards
Brian
Five Stars: A BLOODY good read, 7 April 2008
By Michael C. Walker "Jfripper" (OZ) - See all my reviews
The book I should have, could have, would have, but did not, write.
But I did read it. And what a read!!
This is the…
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Added by Brian L Porter on April 11, 2008 at 8:28am —
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Another cool
frog story! You know I love my frogs and toads!
So, if this dude (Barbourula kalimantanensis) had a fight with the
giant toad (Beelzebufo), who would win? What if the fight was…
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Added by Clea Simon on April 11, 2008 at 2:58am —
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How do you write?
I don't outline, really, but I do have a synopsis (partly because my editor demands one) and I usually start a book with a broad overview of how the story will go in my head. Despite these, I usually just sort of write, letting my characters sort things out between themselves, the plot resolution just a goal on the horizon, all subject to change. I do all of this on the computer. I type faster than I write and I love the clarity of type. I can read what I've typed…
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Added by Clea Simon on April 11, 2008 at 2:57am —
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Recently on the Elmore Leonard discussion forum, someone posted this about the novel,
Pagan Babies:
"I was a bit uncomfortable at the use of a horrific, real-life tragedy within a crime novel."
Of course, almost every crime novel is inspired by some real-life tragedy. In this case it's the scale of the thing.
Pagan Babies opens five years after the Rwandan genocide with a description of forty-seven bodies, "... turned to leather and stains," in a…
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Added by John McFetridge on April 11, 2008 at 12:43am —
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Want to know what it’s really like to work the graveyard shift in a busy police department? Well, you can find out today because romance author/police dispatcher Tracy Seybold is telling all on The Graveyard Shift.
The Graveyard Shift, a guide to all things cops and robbers
- a blog for writers
http://www.leelofland.com/wordpress
Added by Lee Lofland on April 10, 2008 at 11:36pm —
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After having finished editing my porn book and writing another one (both, sadly (?), non-fiction), I've been reading Bill Granger's Schism from 1981. It's one of his Devereaux spy novels. I'm not big on spy novels, but I find myself liking this very much. It's about a Vatican spy that worked as a missionary in Vietnam and Laos in the fifties, disappeared and gets back around 1980. CIA, Vatican and other people are of course interested in him and Devereaux is hired to find out what the man…
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Added by Juri Nummelin on April 10, 2008 at 11:00pm —
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