« September 2007 | Main | November 2007 »

October 27, 2007

Join the Club!

This is L.J. Sellers inviting you to become a fan of The Sex Club and a fan of Seattle Mystery Bookshop. This is a great place to buy books and a great place to sign books. Wonderful staff! Check out my novel too.  Everyone who reads The Sex Club says they can't put it down.  And if they do put it down, someone else picks it up and starts reading.  And they have to fight to get the book back.  It's also interesting to see that the issues in the book -- teenage sex and access to birth control -- are becoming big news in Maine right now.  This is a hot issue. Be a part of the discussion. And read a great book at the same time.

L.J. Sellers

Support your local bookstore!

Vicki Delany here.  I'm having a great day at the Seattle Mystery Bookshop.  I'm here to sign my newest book, the first in a new series, a traditional village police procedural featuring Constable Molly Smith and Seargant John Winters of the Trafalgar City Police.  Trafalgar is a small fictional town in the B.C. interior.  Trouble ensues when the town plans to erect a monument to Vietnam-era draft dogers who came to Trafalgar from the U.S.,  and protesters from all sides are soon streaming into town.  I'm also proud to be signing paperback versions of my two earlier books, Burden of Memory, and Scare the Light Away, both standalone psychological suspense.

This is a super store.  I'm always amazed at the variety of books at independent mystery stores such as this one.  It's places like Seattle Mystery Bookshop that, in my opinion, are keeping the mystery genre alive.  Sure you can find the latest Ian Rankin, Patricia Cornwell or Anne Perry at any branch of any of the chains.  But only at the small independents can you find the next-big-thing, or the as-good-as-the-biggest-but-never-got-the-big-break.  And only your local store knows your taste, and will be sure that you're notified of anything that comes in that you'll be sure to love.  And sometimes they'll know you so well that they'll tell you to stretch a bit, try something new.

So please support your local bookstore.  And the authors who visit them.

Best,

Vicki

October 26, 2007

Clueless in Seattle

Last time I was here it was on Microsoft's dime (back in the 90s).  Today it's on my publisher's.  So I made my way here to the Mystery Bookshop to sign their stock of my title.  (Obligatory plug: the new Repairman Jack harcover BLOODLINE and paperback HARBINGERS.)  The good news is they have lots.

I'm kind of disappointed in the weather.  Where's the Seattle gloom and rain?  There's a flawless sky up there.  And coming from the airport I had this panoramic view if Mt. Ranier that I swear was CGI.

And what's with you people and coffee?  I remember when Starbuck was getting started and thinking, That'll never fly.  (Now you know why I have to keep writing - with that sort of investment savvy, I lose money left and right.)

Okay, that's it.  I'm hungry.  Must.  Find.  Food.

Over and out,

F. Paul Wilson - www.repairmanjack.com.   

October 24, 2007

Robert Greer

Dr. Bozo Greer here signing books at the Seattle Mystery Bookshop and trying to find the blog that called me a Bozo because of writing a book about the JFK  Killing, The Mongoose Deception. WE, meaning the bookshop staff and I, tried to find the "Bozo" reference, but could not. WE desperately need the site in order to prove that that I am truely a Bozo and to get the publicity train rolling. Any help would be appreciated. Love this Seattle coffee. Off for now, The King of Bozos.

Robert

October 22, 2007

Gone Baby Gone

Yesterday, Gretchen and I went to see Gone Baby Gone. I am always hesitant to see movie adaptations of books that I've really liked. Some times they get it right and sometimes they don't. LA Confidential was terrific while Black Dahlia was terrible.

I'm a huge fan of Dennis Lehane's Patrick Kenzie and Angie Genarro books. They're some of the finest private eye fiction ever written and I'd be willing to say finest fiction ever written. I maintain that the second book in the series, Darkness, Take My Hand was the best mystery of the 1990s and while Mystic River was a great book by any standards, it is Lehane's third best, after Darkness and Gone. But the reviews have been so lavish that I needed to see it.

In many ways, it is a very honest and true adaptation. It has all of the major plot points of the book, and nearly all of the major characters. The acting is superb Casey Affleck and Michelle Monaghan are very good as Patrick and Angie and the always stellar Ed Harris, John Ashton and Morgan Freeman are stellar as the cops in the case. None of the acting is half-way. The film is both beautiful and heartbreaking in it's images and the city, a major character, compliments the story and the acting.

I had recently re-read the book because of the hoo-hah about the movie, so I was ready for it - and maybe that makes me unobjective.

But this was a movie that cried out to be a 13 part 'series' on cable. There is no way anyone could have done justice to the story in two or even three hours. I hope the DVD has scenes that were cut, scenes that will smooth it out and keep the story in the movie from being abrupt. It tended to jump a bit, making leaps from one scene to another. I understood what was going on but I'm not sure the average viewer will.

I understand that there must be changes to the story to make it fit the screen, but there were a few changes that made no sense to me. In an interview, Ben Affleck said he had to alter Patrick's age from around 40 to around 30 to make his brother fit the role better. OK, not a huge deal. But at the start of the movie, Patrick and Angie come off as beginners, with their licenses in their living room. No office in the belfry. Patrick seems hesitant and a bit shy. By the end of the movie, he's figuring out things that no one else can. Why make it seem as if they're novice private eyes? No reason for it.

Michelle Monaghan's Angie is reduced to be little more than a girlfriend, instead of a partner and just as canny a PI as Patrick. Why? No reason other than to give more weight to Casey Affleck's screen time, I suppose. In the book, it is Angie who can't let go of the case; in the movie, it is hard to tell, but she is far less a co-actor in the plot than she is in the book. And Angie is a GREAT character! She's in people's faces as much as Patrick. Both of them are confident, professional PIs and neither is the shrinking violets portrayed in the movie. When either of them do take a stand in the film, it feels out of place, something forced onto the characters instead of their actual characteristics. Maybe in the director's cut...

Another small detail is Bubba and the child molesters. In the book, Bubba takes Patrick on a delivery run to sell some guns. In the movie, it's drugs. The only reason that it matters is that when Patrick and Poole and Broussard return to look for the missing little boy, you know that they're well armed in the book. You know it is going to end badly and the dramatic tension is stronger. In the movie, you know that they're armed, but not with the firepower the book gives them. And, Bubba isn't really explained - who he is and how edgy he is. He seems far less dangerous in the movie than in the books and, I think, part of that is making him a drug dealer instead of an arms dealer.

My biggest criticism is how the plot is compacted towards the end. While the book's story does move along quickly once the pieces begin to fall into place, in the movie they feel slammed into place artificially. Here, I think, it comes down to this inane belief in our culture that long is bad. I'm so tired of hearing critics harp about how long the movie was, how it needed to be cut back to two hours or less. I grew up when movies were often long enough to require intermissions. The Godfather, in the theatre, had an intermission! [And with movie prices being as outrageous as they are (we went to a matinee and paid $6.50 a ticket - full price would have been $9.25! Insane!), we better have a long movie to make the outlay worth the price.  But that is an entirely different screed... ] There is nothing wrong with long and, in the case of Gone Baby Gone, the movie is too short for it's story.

Which leads me to my biggest point: the British will take a great mystery and do justice with it by making it into a mini-series. What a book like Gone Baby Gone needed was that sort of treatment - 8 weeks on PBS, 13 weeks on HBO, a treatment that could stretch out and really use the subtleties of Lehane's novel. For instance, in the book, there is a major and pivotal scene at a water-filled quarry at night. It is supposed to be an exchange of money for the missing little girl. In the book, it involves multiple police agencies and it is approached as a minor military affair in an attempt to catch the kidnappers. It is very atmospheric and convoluted with the outcome uncertain and confusing, as is the case itself. In the movie, it is dealt with in a few minutes and then they're off to other scenes. In the book, part of the story is a possible power play by one of the criminal's underlings. He's in prison and these guys on the outside may have gotten involved in the kidnapping as part of a play to take over his empire. In the book, the criminal is not in prison and the power-play angle is dropped. One of the dynamic aspects of the book is that the plot is confusing as is real life. It is all explained and resolved as well as real life is, but the movie felt simplified to me. That wouldn't have to be in a stretched out version.

Last week, at home we watched the first season of Dexter on DVD. We don't have that particular cable channel and, anyway, we're fans of renting a season and watching two or three episodes a night instead of one a week. What could have been done with Gone Baby Gone in 12 'hour' episodes instead of 2 hours makes my mouth water. So, I have to say that the movie Gone Baby Gone was good, but it could have been so much more. It was a good adaptation of the book, but it was little more than a Cliff Notes version of the book.

If you're a fan of the books, you'll like it. If you see the movie before reading the book, the book will explain so much more about what went on. If you've not read the books, read them. Start with his first novel, the first of the Patrick and Angie books, A Drink Before the War, and you'll be hooked.

Promise.

- JB

October 20, 2007

It's raining, it's pouring, and I'm signing books in Seattle

So, here I am in Washington at the Seattle Mystery Bookshop. And guess what? It's raining! Yup, stereotypes live. But I'm thrilled to be here: the staff is awesome, the store full of ambiance and I have already found myself thinking "When can I come back?"

I've also found a stack of books to buy, thanks to Fran and Janine. I'm going to try out Carol O'Connell's CRIME SCHOOL, due to a recommendation from Janine, and DARKLY DREAMING DEXTER by Jeff Lindsay, which I have wanted to read for a while. Both Fran and Janine recommended this book.

I am currently working on a dark suspense for St. Martin's, tentatively titled THE TIES THAT BIND, so these "dark" books will fit right in with my current mindset. I've already turned in the third Jenny T. Partridge Dance Mystery, POINTE AND SHOOT, so my light and cozy mode is on hiatus.

So, a few things about Seattle. It is beautiful here, especially in the fall. Green, and lush, with splashes of red and yellow and orange. I visited Pike Place Market (hope I got that right), checked out Puget Sound, had some fresh seafood, and then had a dessert of a baked Washington apple. Wonderful, and practically guilt-free. I got to check out the fish throwing at the market (I still don't know why they are throwing fish, but I'm sure someone will tell me). I also wished I lived close so I could take home a gorgeous bouquet of flowers. I did get my girls some Seattle hoodies, so they will accept me back into the fold when I return tomorrow. You know how kids are. Do NOT return home unless you are bearing gifts.

Oh, and of course I've had some great coffee.

So thanks, Seattle Mystery Bookshop, for hosting my signing. It's been a great time, and like I said, I can't wait to come back!

Natalie, author of Wives and Sisters, Behind Closed Doors, Tutu Deadly and Tapped Out - so far!

www.nataliercollins.com

www.jennytpartridge.com

www.nataliemroberts.com

Ayna Meppelink

This is my very first book signing, and I'm loving it at the Seattle Mystery Bookshop, promoting I See a Red Door, a paranormal mystery. This is one of the neatest bookstores I've visited: blood on the floor but cozy at the same time. I could live here! Fran told me I could even bring my dogs. "All five of them?" I asked. Affirmative! They've never met Luci the Labrador. She'd deconstruct the whole store. Oh, my book! Yes, the story is based on real events, real experiences. I do see where the bodies of murder victims are hidden.

Ayna

October 17, 2007

Neophyte Musings

My first book signing ever, and I'm lucky enough to do it at the Seattle Mystery Bookshop. I've shopped here for years -- love the selection, the staff, the atmosphere and the location. Pretty much everything, and now add to that the fact that they are selling my new Home Crafting Mystery, Lye in Wait, out this month from Midnight Ink.

It may be my first signing, but I certainly hope it won't be my last here. Looking forward to coming back, guys! Thanks!

Cricket McRae

October 16, 2007

Traveling with dogs

Here I am, in Seattle, where it is raining. Actually, after the long drive through Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, it feels good. The dogs and I are making a mad dash around the United States, promoting my book, And Murder For Dessert, and sipping a little wine along the way. Me, not the dogs. They are having a great time, and the people at the Seattlle Mystery Bookshop have welcomed them with dog treats and lots of pats. We are on our way again, a few books richer. Next stop, Chicago.

Kathleen Delaney - also Laney and Shea.

October 13, 2007

Tim Maleeny

Back at this incredible bookstore, trying desperately to refrain from maxing out my credit cards from buying half their stock. Here signing my latest, a novel with the unlikely title BEATING THE BABUSHKA, a story about the Russian mob's involvement in the movie business. It's the follow-up to Stealing The Dragon, which came out in March. Promoting two books in one year has been exhausting but so much fun --- thanks to everyone who turned out. (Also here today is Achy Obejas, awesome editor of Havana Noir. Read it!) The staff is unnervingly nice --- Tammy is plying us with chocolate, Fran is making us sign until our hands cramp, and Janine is keeping us both sane. Can't wait to come back.

Tim