Saturday, September 10, 2011
Cliff Robertson, R. I. P.
Robertson, who also played a real-life role as the whistle-blower in the check-forging scandal of then-Columbia Pictures President David Begelman that rocked Hollywood in the late 1970s, died at Stony Brook University Medical Center on Long Island, according to Evelyn Christel, his longtime personal secretary. His family said he died of natural causes.
David Bell Has a Big-Time Contest Going On
We are just four weeks from the release of Cemetery Girl on October 4th, and to thank you for your continued support of my work, I [David Bell] am announcing a drawing sponsored by this website.
Every week for the four weeks leading up to the book’s release, I will be giving away a Nook or a Kindle to one lucky reader who pre-orders Cemetery Girl. That’s right, all you have to do is pre-order Cemetery Girl from any bookstore (in person or online)*, send me an email at david@davidbellnovels.com letting me know you’ve done it, and you will be entered in the weekly drawing for the Nook or Kindle. If you’ve already pre-ordered the book, just let me know, and you will be entered as well.
On September 13th, 20th, 27th and October 4th, I will announce the weekly winner here on my website as well as on Facebookand Twitter. If you don't win during one week, fear not. I will roll those entries over to the next week. I will also be giving away a runner-up prize every week—a signed copy of Cemetery Girl.
But wait, there’s more.
On October 4th at 11:00 p.m., the day of the book’s release, I will announce the grand prize winner of all four weeks of entries. One lucky entrant will—wait for it!—win an iPad. Yes, I am giving away an iPad. But all you have to do to be entered is pre-order the book, send me an email letting me know you pre-ordered, and you will be entered in the drawing. The deadline to enter is 11:00 p.m. on October 4th, 2011.
The Collectible, Nonsensical Dr. Seuss
Buy My Book!
Hermie, Al, and Carl from Bill Crider's first young adult novel A VAMPIRE NAMED FRED, are back in action for another adventure in A WEREWOLF NAMED WAYNE - published for the first time ever.
Friday, September 09, 2011
Hitchin' a Ride
Elvis Impersonator Update
But incredibly this carving of Elvis Presley was created around 1800 years before the King of Rock and Roll first warbled his first note.
Once Again, Texas Leads the Way
Corey Webb, 17, relieving himself shortly after the jury had left the courtroom in Tyler, Texas, reports The Sun.
Local TV footage shows him smirking as he unbuckles his belt before walking over to the bin.
Once Again, Texas Leads the Way
Forgotten Books: Tuesday the Rabbi Saw Red -- Harry Kemelman
Thursday, September 08, 2011
Eve Brent, R. I. P.
Happy Birthday, Sid Caesar!
Get a Rope!
Write Your Own Caption
Milton Ellis, 69, said that he had fallen asleep in his electric wheelchair on the porch of a vacant Hooters in St. Petersburg. He awoke to find Josephine Smith on top of him.
Help an Old Guy Out -- Buy this Book
"I always thought that vampires had to have names like Dracula or Vlad or Lestat, but that was before Fred moved into the house next door. In fact, I had a lot of wrong ideas about vampires, but Fred set me straight about most of them."
In a funny, lively story the boys set out to help Fred lead a "normal" life.
Books & Beer: Talking Literature With The Inklings
The Inklings included two of the 20th century’s most popular writers of fiction – J.R.R. Tolkien of Lord of the Rings fame and C.S. Lewis, who wrote the Chronicles of Narnia. The group is also famous for sometimes meeting in a pub called The Eagle and Child and mixing high-end literary discussion with pints of beer.
The pub, located in the central St Giles area of Oxford and known as the Bird and Baby to the locals, is still around today and anyone (aged 18 and over) can follow in Lewis and Tolkien’s footsteps by buying a bitter (I recommend the Wadworth 6X) and sitting down to talk about literature.
Monica Lewinsky Update
First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . . .
Michael S. Hart, R. I. P
Project Gutenberg provides free e-books of thousands of works that are in the public domain. Hart first got the idea of sharing significant documents electronically early, in 1971.
Wednesday, September 07, 2011
First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention
Once Again, Texas Leads the Way
Wardell Quezergue, R. I. P.
Quezerque’s imprint on local music scene looms large, arranging “Chapel of Love” by the Dixie Cups, “Mona Lisa” by Aaron Neville, Professor Longhair’s “Iko Iko” and “Big Chief” and Earl King’s “Trick Bag.”
In 1992, he produced Dr. John’s Grammy award-winning “Goin' Back to New Orleans.”
Don't Try This at Home
Here's the Plot for Your Next Suitcase Thriller
AbeBooks' Top 10 Most Expensive Sales in August 2011
Tuesday, September 06, 2011
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention
More than 500 notes on England's personalities, aristocracy, politics, religion, history, society, and literature.
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention
Once Again, Texas Leads the Way
Best Taste: Buffalo chicken flapjacks
Most Creative: Fried bubblegum
Highly Recommended by Judy (as are the other books in this series)
Lady Georgie is honored to be trusted by the Queen—and even more honored when she meets Coco Chanel and is asked to model her latest clothing line. But when a necklace belonging to the Queen is stolen on the catwalk, Georgie not only has to find two priceless items—she also has an unsolved murder on her hands and has to keep an eye on her love interest, Darcy O’Mara, who has been acting awfully suspicious throughout Georgie’s ordeal.
Texas Wildfires Update
Speaking Tuesday at a news conference near one of the fire-ravaged areas, Texas Gov. Rick Perry said more than 100,000 acres have burned in rain-starved Texas.
A Blog You'll Want to Follow
New Discussion at Top Suspense Group
Forgotten Films: Mister Buddwing
Monday, September 05, 2011
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention
Five years ago John Coburn watched as his father was gunned down by a masked man. Tortured by the fact that the killer was never caught, Coburn fights the feelings of failure that haunt his every waking moment.
Now, history has repeated itself. When his best friend Felix is murdered after agreeing to protect a witness, John Coburn dives in to catch the killer before the police and FBI. Battling official law enforcement and his own demons, Coburn turns over every lead, rattles every cage, and stretches his own moral code to the breaking point. As he digs deeper into a mystery that involves team of thieves, corrupt businessmen, and a mafia kingpin with a price on his head, Coburn realizes that revenge has a cost he cannot calculate.
If he fails, can he live with another ghost?
If he succeeds, can he live with the consequences?
Rocket in My Pocket -- Max Décharné
First the Gators Were Everywhere; Now . . .
That's small compared with Texas, where biologists estimate the feral hog population at around 2 million, but Batcheller said any number is bad because they're certain to multiply. Damage becomes more noticeable when the population reaches the thousands and the hogs stake out home territories rather than wandering widely.
Labor Day
Sunday, September 04, 2011
Apocalypse Now
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention
Slammer eBook: Allan Guthrie: Amazon.co.uk: Kindle Store: A dark, psychological thriller set in a Scottish prison.
Young prison officer, Nicholas Glass, is finding the stresses of his new job increasingly hard to handle. Bullied and abused by inmates and colleagues alike, each day is getting longer than the one before. When a group of cons uses outside help to threaten his wife and daughter, he agrees to do them a "favour". But as their threats escalate, and one favour leads to another, he grows ever closer to breaking point.
‘Ed Gein, The Musical
Paul Lindsay,: R.I.P.
A Killer's Essence -- Dave Zeltserman
And Keep Off His Lawn!
Suiting up for Faulkner University in Montgomery, Alabama, Moore - who's 61 - is the oldest player in college football history.