Showing posts with label crime fiction. thrillers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime fiction. thrillers. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 May 2018

The Genesis of Kiss Me, Kill Me




I first discovered the work of James Carol last year with The Killing Game, as together with my fellow readers at the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger 2017 Judging committee, noted at the time -


“Cunningly structured Hollywood hostage drama that boldly explores the overlaps in fame and news-making between the spheres of media and terrorism. Carol’s world is peopled with troublingly realistic characters and disturbs in its portrayal of moral ambiguity. The cinematic pace never slows; totally absorbing.”

It became one of the six  thriller novels that found itself on the 2017 CWA Steel Dagger Shortlist.

So we were delighted when James Carol agreed to tell us a little about his follow-up, and how an idea can germinate within a writer.

“Where do you get your ideas” is a question writers get asked more than any other. The simple answer is that I don’t know where mine come from. Or rather, I don’t want to know. The fact that they appear at all is enough. I’m concerned that if I over-analyse things then the alchemy will stop happening. Ideas tend to pop into my head while I’m going about my day-to-day life. Some stray thought catches my imagination, collides with another thought, and before you know it I’ve got something that could maybe be a novel.
 
KISS ME KILL ME actually started life as a very different book. My agent was shopping around for a publisher for THE KILLING GAME, my first standalone, and needed an idea for a follow-up. I can’t remember what I was doing when the idea presented itself. Maybe I was in the bath; maybe I was out for a walk. The idea itself was an intriguing one: what if a woman woke up one day to discover her husband was a hitman, and that he was out to kill her. My agent needed a full outline to show to publishers. No problem, I said.
But it was a problem. A big one. Because that was how the story remained for years, just an outline. The way I write is to get an idea and run with it. What keeps me going through the long months of a first draft is that I’m curious to know how the story will finish. The problem here was that I knew how this one was going to end.





From time to time I’d revisit the outline, but I couldn’t bring myself to write the book because that spark wasn’t there. Then one day I was thinking about it and for some reason I started wondering if the wife might be pregnant. That was all it took to get me excited again. This one stray thought fired my imagination and took the story in a brand new direction. More importantly, though, I now had no idea where it was going to end. I couldn’t wait to get started.

Once the basic idea has been established the next stage is to choose a setting. Back in the nineties my parents lived in a small town just outside Portland, Oregon. The fact I’d been there was a bonus. I prefer to write about places I’ve visited since it enables you to get that extra layer of reality. Portland has a laidback arty feel that I thought would work really well. It’s also a very dynamic city and I wanted that energy in the book. Getting the right setting is crucial because it influences the whole vibe of the story.

While I’m working on the location I’m also thinking about the main characters. These tend to develop from the situation. With writing the trick is to create a reality that the reader can buy into. That’s the spell I’m trying to cast. With KISS ME KILL ME, you have a marriage that looks perfect on the outside but isn’t. Dan, the husband, is charming but ruthless, two attributes often associated with CEOs. That’s why he ended up running his own company. Zoe needed to be the opposite of that, so she is an aspiring writer, the artistic, creative Ying to his single-minded, driven Yang.

The story starts with Zoe at rock bottom and seeing no way out. When she discovers she’s pregnant she realises she has to do something because this isn’t just about her anymore. I love it when characters take on a life of their own and start doing unexpected things. Zoe in particular ended up being way more resourceful than I thought she would be. Put it this way, you’ll think you know where this story is going but chances are you’ll be wrong.

A lot of my research tends to be done on the fly and this is where the Internet is a godsend. With the first draft I just want to get the words down as quickly as possible; I don’t want the distraction of spending ages on research as this would disturb the flow of the story. The majority of my queries can be answered with a quick Google search, and then I can get back to the business of writing.

Inevitably though there will be something that needs to be researched in more depth. Amongst other things KISS ME KILL ME gave me an excuse to look more deeply into the Dark Web. This is basically an alternative version of the Internet that exists beneath the one that we all know and love. This is where you can go to buy the sort of things that you don’t find on Amazon. Drugs, weapons … a murder.

Every book is a learning experience and KISS ME KILL ME was no exception. It’s not just the characters who end up going into uncharted waters, I do too. Sometimes it feels like I’m just along for the ride, and I wouldn’t have it any other way because it’s usually one hell of a ride.


KISS ME KILL ME by J.S Carol is published by Bonnier Zaffre on 31st May

For More Information: http://www.james-carol.com  

Wednesday, 16 September 2015

Where is Solomon Creed - Research!


Today on the blog author Simon Toyne talks about his new thrilling novel Solomon Creed and how he goes about doing research for a novel.

So far on the Solomon Creed Blog tour I’ve dealt with ideas and character, now I’m going to talk about how I go about researching a novel.

Research is fun - all writers love research - it’s the grist to the mill, the gathering of the string, the delving into interesting topics and places that takes place before you have to sit yourself down and start the process of turning all that yarn into - well …another yarn.

There’s an old axiom that says you should write what you know, but I think that’s incredibly misleading. In truth, all you really need to know in order to write a piece of fiction is human behaviour, and we’ve all been studying that from the moment we were born. Everything else you can research: guns, cars, locations, history, police procedure, language, local customs, everything - it’s all just an email, a phone call, a google search or a research trip away.

I try hard not to get too bogged down in preliminary research. It’s not an exam, remember, you’re allowed to look things up as you go along. In fact I often don’t really know exactly what I need to research until I start writing. I let the story tell me what I need to know, not the other way round. Having said that there are always some things I need to know about before starting writing, the foundation upon which the rest will be built. With Sanctus it was the inner workings of a medieval monastery, with The Key it was lost languages and how viruses spread, with The Tower it was space telescopes, and for Solomon Creed it was Mexican drug cartels and the history of copper mining in Arizona.  I start by Googling things, reading articles, Wikipedia entries, blogs about the subject and start collating a document with these useful links on it for future reference. This initial reading tends to throw up names of books and authors and I’ll make a note of these too and order titles that seem to deal with whatever I need to know.

One of the things I did for Solomon was go on a research trip to Arizona to try and find an
old mining town to set the story. I also wanted to feel what the desert was like in the height of summer, and smell the rain and listen to what it sounded like. This is the sort of stuff you can’t get from Google. I took lots of pictures too, some of which I’ve put up on my Pinterest board. I use these photographs for reference throughout the first draft, studying and re-studying them, pulling out different details to help pin my story to the page.

The great thing about fiction, of course, is that you are making it up, so it doesn’t have to be factually accurate. Obviously if you can get the details right then you should because that helps sell the lie at the heart of your story. Using the correct terminology when describing someone assembling a gun, for example, will help tell your story and stop people who know that stuff (and there are a LOT of them) from being jolted out of the narrative. Going into too much detail, however, will do the same and this often comes from doing too much research. I have a post-it fixed to the edge of my screen in my office with a Tom Stoppard quote on it that says ‘Just because it’s true, doesn’t make it interesting.’

Once you have enough to get started I’m a firm believer in the rule that you should get started and keep on going, even if you come to something that needs checking. I used to look things up as I went along but have now stopped doing this because research is too distracting. What I do now is when I hit a fact that needs checking is I make it up and write those bits in CAPITAL LETTERS so it’s easy to see what needs researching for the second draft. Often the thing I made up to suit the story is fairly close to the truth anyway. Sometimes the truth is wildly different and extremely boring so I stick with my made up version and brace myself for the inevitable emails.

So, once the initial research is done, the only thing between me and the first draft is the outline, and I’ll talk about that tomorrow on the next stop of the blog tour.

More information about Simon and his work can be found on his website.  You can also follow him on Twitter @simontoyne and find him on Facebook.

Solomon Creed by Simon Toyne is out now (Harper Collins, £14.99)

A plane crash in the Arizona desert.  An explosion that sets the world on fire.  A damning pact to hide an appalling secret.  And one man bound to expose the truth.  He is Solomon Creed. No one knows what he is capable of.  Not even him.  When Solomon Creed flees the burning wreckage of a plane in the Arizona desert, seconds before an explosion sets the world alight, he is acting on instinct alone. He has no memory of his past, and no idea what his future holds. Running towards a nearby town, one name fires in his mind – James Coronado. Somehow, Solomon knows he must save this man. But how do you save a man who is already dead?



Thursday, 19 January 2012

2012 MWA Edgar Nominations

The Staff at Shots Ezine would like to congratulate all the 2012 Edgar nominated authors and writers!

We present the press releases from the MWA -

Mystery Writers of America is proud to announce on the 203rd anniversary ofthe birth of Edgar Allan Poe, its Nominees for the 2012 Edgar Allan Poe Awards, honoring the best in mystery fiction, nonfiction and television published or produced in 2011.

The Edgar Awards will be presented to the winners at our 66th Gala Banquet, April 26, 2012 at the Grand Hyatt Hotel, New York City.


BEST NOVEL

The Ranger by Ace Atkins (Penguin Group USA - G.P. Putnam's Sons)

Gone by Mo Hayder (Grove/Atlantic - Atlantic Monthly Press)

The Devotion of Suspect X by Keigo Higashino (Minotaur Books)

1222 by Anne Holt (Simon & Schuster - Scribner)

Field Gray by Philip Kerr (Penguin Group USA - G.P. Putnam's Sons - Marion Wood Books)


BEST FIRST NOVEL BY AN AMERICAN AUTHOR

Red on Red by Edward Conlon (Random House Publishing Group - Spiegel & Grau)

Last to Fold by David Duffy (Thomas Dunne Books)

All Cry Chaos by Leonard Rosen (The Permanent Press)

Bent Road by Lori Roy (Penguin Group USA - Dutton)

Purgatory Chasm by Steve Ulfelder (Minotaur Books - Thomas Dunne Books)


BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL

The Company Man by Robert Jackson Bennett (Hachette Book Group - Orbit Books)

The Faces of Angels by Lucretia Grindle (Felony & Mayhem Press)

The Dog Sox by Russell Hill (Pleasure Boat Studio - Caravel Mystery Books)

Death of the Mantis by Michael Stanley (HarperCollins Publishers - HarperPaperbacks)

Vienna Twilight by Frank Tallis (Random House Trade Paperbacks)


BEST FACT CRIME

The Murder of the Century: The Gilded Age Crime That Scandalized a City and Sparked the Tabloid Wars by Paul Collins (Crown Publishing)

The Savage City: Race, Murder, and a Generation on the Edge by T.J. English( HarperCollins - William Morrow)

Destiny of the Republic: A Tale of Madness, Medicine and the Murder of a President by Candice Millard (Random House - Doubleday)

Girl, Wanted: The Chase for Sarah Pender by Steve Miller (Penguin Group USA- Berkley)

The Man in the Rockefeller Suit: The Astonishing Rise and Spectacular Fallo f a Serial Imposter by Mark Seal (Penguin Group USA - Viking)


BEST CRITICAL/BIOGRAPHICAL

The Tattooed Girl: The Enigma of Stieg Larsson and the Secrets Behind the Most Compelling Thrillers of our Time by Dan Burstein, Arne de Keijzer & John-Henri Holmberg (St. Martin's Griffin)

Agatha Christie: Murder in the Making by John Curran (HarperCollins)

On Conan Doyle: Or, the Whole Art of Storytelling by Michael Dirda (Princeton University Press)

Detecting Women: Gender and the Hollywood Detective Film by Philippa Gates (SUNY Press)Scripting Hitchcock: Psycho, The Birds and Marnie by Walter Raubicheck and Walter Srebnick (University of Illinois Press)


BEST SHORT STORY

"Marley's Revolution" - Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine by John C. Boland (Dell Magazines)

"Tomorrow's Dead" - Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by David Dean (Dell Magazines)

"The Adakian Eagle" - Down These Strange Streets by Bradley Denton (Penguin Group USA - Ace Books)

"Lord John and the Plague of Zombies" - Down These Strange Streets by Diana Gabaldon (Penguin Group USA - Ace Books)

"The Case of Death and Honey" - A Study in Sherlock by Neil Gaiman (Random House Publishing Group - Bantam Books)

"The Man Who Took His Hat Off to the Driver of the Train" - Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by Peter Turnbull (Dell Magazines)


BEST JUVENILE

Horton Halfpott by Tom Angleberger (Abrams - Amulet Books)

It Happened on a Train by Mac Barnett (Simon & Schuster Books for YoungReaders)

Vanished by Sheela Chari (Disney Book Group - Disney Hyperion)

Icefall by Matthew J. Kirby (Scholastic Press)

The Wizard of Dark Street by Shawn Thomas Odyssey (Egmont USA)


BEST YOUNG ADULT

Shelter by Harlan Coben (Penguin Young Readers Group - G.P. Putnam's Sons)

The Name of the Star by Maureen Johnson (Penguin Young Readers Group - G.P.Putnam's Sons)

The Silence of Murder by Dandi Daley Mackall (Random House Children's Books- Knopf BFYR)The Girl is Murder by Kathryn Miller Haines (Macmillan Children's Publishing Group - Roaring Creek Press)

Kill You Last by Todd Strasser (Egmont USA)


BEST PLAY

Sherlock Holmes and the Adventure of the Suicide Club by Jeffrey Hatcher (Arizona Theatre Company, Phoenix, AZ)

The Game's Afoot by Ken Ludwig (Cleveland Playhouse, Cleveland, OH)


BEST TELEVISION EPISODE TELEPLAY

"Innocence" - Blue Bloods, Teleplay by Siobhan Byrne O'Connor (CBS Productions)

"The Life Inside" - Justified, Teleplay by Benjamin Cavell (FX Productions and Sony Pictures Television)

"Part 1" - Whitechapel, Teleplay by Ben Court & Caroline Ip (BBC America)

"Pilot" - Homeland, Teleplay by Alex Gansa, Howard Gordon & Gideon Raff (Showtime)

"Mask" - Law & Order: SVU, Teleplay by Speed Weed (Wolf Films/Universal Media Studios)


ROBERT L. FISH MEMORIAL AWARD

"A Good Man of Business" - Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by David Ingram (Dell Magazines)


MWA GRAND MASTER

Martha Grimes


RAVEN AWARDS

M is for Mystery Bookstore, San Mateo, CA / Molly Weston, Meritorious Mysteries


ELLERY QUEEN AWARD

Joe Meyers of the Connecticut Post/Hearst Media News Group


THE SIMON & SCHUSTER - MARY HIGGINS CLARK AWARD

To be presented at MWA's Agents & Editors Party on Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Now You See Me by S.J. Bolton (Minotaur Books)

Come and Find Me by Hallie Ephron (HarperCollins Publishers - WilliamMorrow)

Death on Tour by Janice Hamrick (Minotaur Books)

Learning to Swim by Sara J. Henry (Crown Publishing Group)

Murder Most Persuasive by Tracy Kiely (Minotaur Books - Thomas Dunne Books)


The full list of nominations / MWA Press Release can be downloaded as a .pdf file here


Photo top (c) 2008 Ali Karim

"R J Ellory standing in the shadow of the last resting place of Edgar Allan Poe taken at Westminster Hall Baltimore at Bouchercon 2008"

Monday, 16 January 2012

The Face through the Key Hole

Following Stephen King’s remarkable 11 / 22 / 63 the great folks at Hodder and Stoughton have organized a rather surreal competition to celebrate the upcoming Dark Tower novel -

To celebrate the publication of The Wind through the Keyhole, the hotly anticipated new episode in Stephen King’s fantasy series The Dark Tower, we’re inviting you to help make literary history; lucky entrants will have their faces featured on the back of the jacket artwork.

Using mosaic design technologies, thousands of readers’ images will be incorporated in the illustration on the back cover of The Wind through the Keyhole.

One winner will also be selected at random to receive the entire STEPHEN KING backlist published by Hodder in the UK.

For your chance to be a part of this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, all you have to do is upload your photo via this facebook app

Or click > https://www.facebook.com/stephenkingbooks.

We can’t guarantee that everyone’s photo will make it on – but we’ll contact you when the jacket is ready so you can see if your face is featured, and if you’ve been lucky, you can share your pixels of fame with friends and family!

The closing date for entries is 23rd January 2012. Terms and conditions apply, click here for more details.

The Wind through the Keyhole is published in April 2012

Thursday, 12 January 2012

Win a chance to become a Mulholland Driver

Do you love suspense fiction? Crime novels, thrillers, police procedurals and supernatural suspense? If you love these books then Mulholland Books is the imprint for you, bringing exciting American thriller writers to the UK alongside British crime authors who deliver what thrill-hungry fans demand. If you are interested then hop on over to the Mulholland website where you can find all the information about how to join the team.

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

Dennis Lehane Imprint at William Morrow

Not satisfied with his film adaptations of Shutter Island, Gone Baby Gone and Mystic River, nor his own ground-breaking fiction such as The Given Day, Dennis Lehane is launching his own imprint as reported today in Publishers Lunch -

Dennis Lehane Books will "help identify and acquire literary fiction with a dark urban edge." The announcement did not specify a launch title or a release date beyond saying Lehane would oversee publication of a "select number" of fiction titles annually and that he would work with his longtime editor Claire Wachtel. (Lehane's agent Ann Rittenberg negotiated the deal with Morrow.)
Lehane in a statement, "My goal is to call attention to worthy writers, who for some unknown reason aren’t as popular as they deserve to be. That's a reason to get out of bed every morning." William Morrow publisher Liate Stehlik added: "In a world where computer algorithms and screen placement often replace in-store recommendations, having a line of books with a talented and highly regarded writer like Dennis is a great way to help readers discover what to read next. The list will be made up of the kind of high-quality writing that Dennis most admires and that readers would associate with his name."

Photo © 2011 Ali Karim “Mark Billingham Talks to Dennis Lehane at Theakston’s Crime Writing Festival Harrogate”

Wednesday, 28 September 2011

Larry Block’s retirement has been somewhat exaggerated

Last time I saw Larry Block was when we all gave him a standing ovation at Bouchercon 2008 in Baltimore, where he was presented with a lifetime achievement award for his contribution to the crime / mystery genre. To list all his accolades would fill this page ten-fold, for Lawrence Block has had all the awards that litter the genre, including recognition from the industry associations such as PWA [Private Eye Writers of America], MWA [Mystery Writers of America] and the [Crime Writers Association] CWA.

So with his ‘A Drop Of The Hard Stuff’ unleashed this month in the UK from Orion Publishing and Hardcase Crime / Titan Books “Getting Off” in February 2012, and now we have a long awaited collection of Matt Scudder stories ‘The Night and the Music’ – so Larry Block’s retirement has been somewhat exaggerated.

I received this note from Larry Block which I’d like to share -

I've been writing novels about Matt Scudder since the early 1970s, and he's turned up in novelettes and short stories for almost as long. THE NIGHT AND THE MUSIC contains the nine stories I've published over the years, along with two new ones; "Mick Ballou Looks at the Blank Screen" appeared only as the text of a 100-copy limited broadside, while the elegiac "One Last Night at Grogan's" was written this summer, specifically for inclusion in this volume, and has been published nowhere else.



When I told my friend Brian Koppelman about the book, he immediately volunteered to write an introduction. Brian's a screenwriter and director ("Rounders," "Knockaround Guys," "Solitary Man," Ocean's Thirteen"), and I think you'll be touched by his account of discovering Scudder at age 15. I know I was. And the book closes with (what else?) an author's afterword, detailing some of the circumstances of the writing and publication of each story. I'm genuinely excited about this book, not least of all because I'm publishing it myself.


The good people at Telemachus Press have done the heavy lifting, making sure it's perfectly formatted and professionally put together, but it's my baby. It's available as an eBook, for sale on all major platforms: Kindle, Nook, Apple, and all those served by Smashwords. The eBook price is $2.99. It's also offered as a Print-on-Demand paperback @ $14.95. A handful of select mystery booksellers will be able to furnish signed copies, and I'll also offer signed copies at my website bookstore.


Otto Penzler loved the book, and he'll be doing it proud, with one of his deluxe leather-bound hardcover first editions, limited to100 signed and numbered copies, for sale (while they last) @ $150. When I read THE NIGHT AND THE MUSIC all the way through, it struck me that it's very much of a piece with the seventeen novels, so that it could fairly be considered the eighteenth book in the series—one I began writing in the mid-1970s and just completed this summer. Because "One Last Night at Grogan's" brings Scudder's story up to date, one might see it as a coda to the series. Will there be more stories? More novels? I really don't know. It's never been given to me to know what I'm going to write next, and the several times I thought I was done telling Matt's story I turned out to be (like Bogart in Casablanca) misinformed. So we'll have to let time tell.



If you are new to Lawrence Block, you have a lot of catching up to do, but you have some wonderful novels and stories to look forward to all from a legend in the crime / mystery genre.

More Information from -http://www.lawrenceblock.com/

Incidentally Brian Koppelman writes with fellow screenwriter and PWA Shamus Nominated author David Levien [‘City of the Sun’ and ‘Where the Dead Lay’]has his third Frank Behr Investigation on the bookshelves now entitled “The 13 Million Dollar Pop



Photo © 2008 Ali Karim “Lawrence Block and Justin Scott at the PWA Shamus Awards held at Westminster Hall Baltimore"