Goldsboro Books and
the Historical Writers' Association are pleased to announce that the shortlist
has been selected for the inaugural HWA/Goldsboro Prize for Debut Historical
fiction. Four books were selected from a
strong entry in our first year and the names of the authors and their titles
will be announced on 14th July at the Festival of Historical Literature which
is held at Kelmarsh as part of the Festival of History. The winner of the £2,000 prize will be
announced at History in the Court at Goldsboro Books in Cecil Court in London
on the 28th of September. More
information can be found here.
According to Book2Book after 100 years Bram Stoker’s
contract for Dracula is about to be made public. The
sprawling, archaic handwriting may be difficult to decipher, but a few of the
key words are clear: "The Un-Dead".
The document, seals the publishing pact that gave the world what
remains, more than 100 years later, its most celebrated horror novel: Bram
Stoker's Dracula. Publishers Constable
& Robinson are to publish the novel in its original form along with the
contract. There is a full article in the
Independent.
As
reported earlier by Shotsblog Paramount are suing the Puzo Estate over
the forthcoming prequel The Family
Corleone. Unsurprisingly, the Puzo
Estate are now counter-suing claiming that Paramount interfered with a
publishing contract and breached its 1969 copyright agreement with his father. The Businessweek.com article goes into a bit more detail.
The first poster
for one of the most anticipated films this summer the crime thriller Savages,
which is adapted from the novel by Don Winslow, has been released by the studio. Directed by Oliver Stone from a screenplay
co-written by Stone, Winslow, and Shane Salerno, the film features an all-star
ensemble cast of Taylor Kitsch, Blake Lively, Aaron Johnson, John Travolta, Uma
Thurman, Benicio Del Toro, Salma Hayek, Emile Hirsch and Demian Bichir.
Laguna Beach entrepreneurs Ben (Johnson), a peaceful and charitable Buddhist, and his closest friend Chon (Kitsch), a former Navy SEAL and ex-mercenary, run a lucrative, home-grown industry — raising some of the best marijuana ever developed. They also share a one-of-a-kind love with the extraordinary beauty Ophelia (Lively). Life is idyllic in their Southern California town … until the Mexican Baja Cartel decides to move in and demands that the trio partners with them.
When the merciless head of the cartel, Elena (Hayek), and her brutal enforcer, Lado (Del Toro), underestimate the unbreakable bond among these three friends, Ben and Chon — with the reluctant, slippery assistance of a dirty DEA agent played by Travolta — wage a seemingly unwinnable war against the cartel. And so begins a series of increasingly vicious ploys and manoeuvres in a high stakes, savage battle of wills. Savages opens in the US in July
Laguna Beach entrepreneurs Ben (Johnson), a peaceful and charitable Buddhist, and his closest friend Chon (Kitsch), a former Navy SEAL and ex-mercenary, run a lucrative, home-grown industry — raising some of the best marijuana ever developed. They also share a one-of-a-kind love with the extraordinary beauty Ophelia (Lively). Life is idyllic in their Southern California town … until the Mexican Baja Cartel decides to move in and demands that the trio partners with them.
When the merciless head of the cartel, Elena (Hayek), and her brutal enforcer, Lado (Del Toro), underestimate the unbreakable bond among these three friends, Ben and Chon — with the reluctant, slippery assistance of a dirty DEA agent played by Travolta — wage a seemingly unwinnable war against the cartel. And so begins a series of increasingly vicious ploys and manoeuvres in a high stakes, savage battle of wills. Savages opens in the US in July
According
to the BBC they are to adapt James Herbert's best-selling ghost story The Secret of Crickley Hall for BBC One
and it will star former Coronation Street star Suranne Jones who has been seen
lately in the police drama Five Days.
The BBC are also set to do
another four new feature length films of the Inspector George Gently
police procedurals. This time the year
is 1968 and the first Gently with Class sees a darker side of 1968 as the
social landscape of the Western World is being shaken to its core. In Paris, riots rage as the workers and
students take to the streets. In the
United States, thousands rally against the Vietnam War. And in England, antipathy for the upper
class’ outmoded social graces and their abuse of privilege is growing by the
day. The dramas are due to be shown later on this
year.
According
to The Hollywood Reporter,
Copper the BBC America is due to
premier on 19th August
2012. Copper is described as a
gripping crime series set in 1860s New York City, and centres on Kevin Corcoran
(Tom Weston-Jones), an intense, rugged Irish-immigrant cop working the city’s
notorious Five Points neighbourhood and grappling to maintain his moral compass
in a tumultuous world. He returns from
the Civil War to discover his daughter is dead and his wife has disappeared, a
storyline that will be explored during the series. His friendship with two war compatriots — the
wayward son of a wealthy industrialist and a physician who secretly assists
Corcoran with his work — takes him to the opposing worlds of elegant Fifth
Avenue and rural Harlem. All three men
share a secret from their experience on the battlefield that inextricably links
their lives forever.
The 24th Annual Lambada Literary Awards
have been announced and the full list and press notice can be found here. The nominees in the Lesbian Mystery Category
are as follows –
Dying to Live,
by Kim Baldwin & Xenia Alexiou, Bold Strokes Books
Hostage Moon,
by AJ Quinn, Bold Strokes Books
Rainey Nights: A Rainey Bell
Thriller, by R.E. Bradshaw, R.E. Bradshaw Books
Retirement Plan, by
Martha Miller, Bold Strokes Books
Trick of the Dark,
by Val McDermid, Bywater Books
Congratulations to all the nominees. Winners will be announced at a Monday evening,
June 4th ceremony in New York at the CUNY Graduate Center (365 Fifth Avenue)
with an after-party at Slate (54 West 21st Street).
The Left Coast Crime Convention is an annual
event sponsored by fans of mystery literature for fans of mystery literature,
including both readers and authors and has recently taken place. The following awards were given out:-
The Lefty for best humorous mystery novel: The
Real Macaw by Donna Andrews (Minotaur)
The Bruce Alexander Memorial Historical Mystery
Award: Mercury's Rise by Ann Parker (Poisoned Pen Press)
The Golden Nugget is a special award given to the best mystery set in California, in recognition of the location of this year's convention: City of Secrets by Kelli Stanley (Minotaur)
Eureka! is a special award this year for the best first mystery novel. Nazareth Child by Darrell James, (Midnight Ink)
The Dilys Award given by the Independent Mystery Booksellers was also announced. The winner was Ghost Hero by S.J. Rozan (Minotaur)
The Golden Nugget is a special award given to the best mystery set in California, in recognition of the location of this year's convention: City of Secrets by Kelli Stanley (Minotaur)
Eureka! is a special award this year for the best first mystery novel. Nazareth Child by Darrell James, (Midnight Ink)
The Dilys Award given by the Independent Mystery Booksellers was also announced. The winner was Ghost Hero by S.J. Rozan (Minotaur)
The nominees for
the 2012 Thriller Awards have been
announced by the International
Thriller Writers
organization, recognizing the best in crime thriller fiction. The winners will be announced during ThrillerFest VII
in New York City this July, 2012.
The nominees are:
Best Hardcover Novel -
Buried
Secrets by Joseph Finder
(St. Martin’s Press)
A Hard Death by Jonathan Hayes (Harper)
A Hard Death by Jonathan Hayes (Harper)
11/22/63 by Stephen King (Scribner)
The Ridge by Michael Koryta (Little, Brown)
The Two Deaths Of Daniel Hayes by Marcus Sakey (Dutton)
Best Paperback Original -
The Last Minute by Jeff Abbott (Sphere)
Threat Warning by John Gilstrap (Pinnacle)
The Glass Demon by Helen Grant (Delacorte Press)
The Queen by Steven James (Revell)
The Two Deaths Of Daniel Hayes by Marcus Sakey (Dutton)
Best Paperback Original -
The Last Minute by Jeff Abbott (Sphere)
Threat Warning by John Gilstrap (Pinnacle)
The Glass Demon by Helen Grant (Delacorte Press)
The Queen by Steven James (Revell)
Already Gone by John Rector (Thomas & Mercer)
Best First Novel -
The Genesis Key by James Barney (Harper)
She Can Run by Melinda Leigh (Montlake Romance)
Best First Novel -
The Genesis Key by James Barney (Harper)
She Can Run by Melinda Leigh (Montlake Romance)
Spiral by Paul McEuen (The Dial Press)
The Fund by H. T. Narea (Forge Books)
The Fund by H. T. Narea (Forge Books)
Midnight
Caller by Leslie Tentler
(Mira)
Best Short Story -
"One More Lie" by James Scott Bell (Compendium Press)
"Anything to Win" by Michael Lewin (Strand Magazine)
"Happine$$" by Twist Phelan (Mystery Writers of America Presents The Rich and the Dead, Grand Central Publishing)
Best Short Story -
"One More Lie" by James Scott Bell (Compendium Press)
"Anything to Win" by Michael Lewin (Strand Magazine)
"Happine$$" by Twist Phelan (Mystery Writers of America Presents The Rich and the Dead, Grand Central Publishing)
"Half-Lives" by Tim L. Williams
(Dell Magazine)
"A Hostage Situation" by Dave Zeltserman (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine)
"A Hostage Situation" by Dave Zeltserman (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine)
According to Variety
Inferno Entertainment has optioned Harlan Coben’s 2008 novel Hold Tight. Hold
Tight is the story of a concerned father who must shield his family from
criminals and fight for their survival after his son accidentally exposes them
via the internet.
Interested in
seeing what the new Superman logo
will look like? Then look no further. Superman:
Man of Steel was due to originally be out in cinemas December 2012. However the release date has been changed to
June 2013. I certainly hope that it will
be worth the wait.
Not sure how I
missed this originally, but there is an excellent blog post over at CriminalElement.Com where thriller writers Charles Cumming and Olen Steinhauer discuss espionage and especially John Le CarrĂ©’s seminal novel Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy which has recently be remade into a
film with Gary Oldman in the lead role of Smiley played originally by Alec
Guinness.
Brilliant
interview with Lee Child in the International Thriller Writers monthly webzine The Big Thrill where he talks about The
Long Game: Lessons on Success. A really good insight into what it takes to
be a successful writer.
According to the
Guardian there is to be a sequel to the
successful film Woman in Black. The sequel is to be called The Woman in Black: Angels of Death. Furthermore, according to the Hollywood
Reporter it will be
the same team behind The Woman in Black
that will be reuniting for the sequel.
The sequel is due to pick up the story 40 years later. Author Susan Hill will be involved as well.
The
Independent’s Invisible
Ink No.117 has
an excellent article by Christopher Fowler on Sexton Blake and Bulldog
Drummond.
Want to know
what distracts Donna Leon from writing, what she is currently reading and who
her favourite author is? If you do then
read the Independent’s One minute with Donna Leon for the low down.
Elizabeth Haynes
second novel Revenge of the Tide was
published recently and she talks to Danuta Kean about swapping criminology for pole
dancing in her latest thriller.
Interested
in knowing how and why James Patterson’s books sell so well despite the fact
that most of them are done with collaborators? The Wall Street Journal’s online Arts and
entertainment magazine Speakeasy talks to James Patterson, who explains
how his collaborations work and why he has to have a colour coded calendar to
keep track of the number of books that are being published each year.
Ahead of the
London Book Fair editor Katherine Armstrong at Faber & Faber have acquired
a major new crime thriller Playing Dead
by American journalist Julia
Heaberlin. Faber will publish the book
in two months’ time. Faber will publish
first as an e-book in June, before releasing the mass-market paperback in July
2012.
According to the Bookseller UK-based Reelart Media has bought film rights to Wilbur
Smith's Those in Peril (Pan
Macmillan), with plans for a release in 2014. A sequel Vicious
Circle is due to be published in 2013 and will once again feature Hector
Cross first introduced to readers in Those
in Peril. Next year will mark Wilbur
Smith’s 50th anniversary as a novelist.
According to the BBC, former Dr
Who star David Tennant is set to play a French spy in the BBC adaptation of
Alan Furst’s best-selling novel The Spies
of Warsaw. The Spies of Warsaw is set in Berlin, Paris, London and Poland in
the years leading up to the war.
In more comic news the sequel to Captain America, Captain America 2 is due to be released in 2014. As opposed to Captain America, which took place in the 1940s, Captain America 2 will carry out in present day, taking place after the events of the upcoming The Avengers and continuing Steve Rogers difficult integration into modern society. The Avengers movie opens in the US in May.
No comments:
Post a Comment