Saturday, March 31, 2012
Letterman
The Chicken Hanger -- Ben Rehder
This book comes from a prestigious university press, but don't let that scare you. It's not one of those literary novels with no plot and characters who eat little sandwiches with no crusts on them. It's full of action and great characters, and there's even a good bit of humor. It's also a fairly even-handed look at the immigration problem. Rehder doesn't duck the facts, and he's careful to show both sides, though Ricky and his brother are certainly sympathetic characters as opposed to some of the others.
If you're looking for a well-written, provocative novel that's a little bit different, you can't go wrong. Highly recommended.
Want to Own a Little Bit of History?
Celebrity auctioneer Darren Julien says the sale includes rare guitars, effects pedals, mixing consoles and the grand piano from Paul’s home recording studio. Julien’s Auctions in Beverly Hills will host the sale over three days, including what would have been Paul’s 97th birthday: June 9.
An Interesting Blog
Friday, March 30, 2012
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention
Amazon.com: Roachkiller and Other Stories eBook: R. Narvaez: Kindle Store: A pregnant single mother who becomes a numbers runner in 1970s Brooklyn; an ex-con fighting against insurmountable odds not to kill again; a middle-aged tax lawyer who’s discovered the secret to happiness—at any cost: these are just a few of the hard-luck characters you’ll meet in Roachkiller and Other Stories, the debut collection of short stories from exciting noir writer R. Narvaez. Included are 10 hard-boiled tales, many with a dash of dark humor. Get-rich schemes gone violently awry. A slacker detective far out of his depth. A reformed criminal who can’t get past his killer instincts. The action moves from Brooklyn to Puerto Rico, from the ’70s to the near future, from deadly divorces to homicidal hipsters. Narvaez travels down the dimly lit side streets of noir you’ve never seen before.
And Keep Off Her Lawn!
Naples Daily News: A 71-year-old woman stood at her bedroom doorway pointing a .45 caliber handgun and warned the visitors in her home that she would shoot.
Patricia Mapes stood her ground. It didn’t matter that the visitors were Lee County deputies, according to arrest reports.
“I don’t care who you are. I’ll shoot you,” Mapes told deputies last Friday night (March 23) after they entered her home, called out for the woman and identified themselves.
Anybody Can Make a Mistake
First It Was the Thin Mints Melee . . .
Once Again, Texas Leads the Way
NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth: A 71-year-old Richland Hills grandmother was charged with a hate crime after she attacked a gay neighbor with her cane while yelling offensive slurs, police said.
Paris Hilton Update
But after the star - famous for being famous - was lambasted over the over reaction on this morning's Sunrise, it seems Hilton has extended an email olive branch and welcomed Bartholomew back onto the guest list.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Warren Stevens, R. I. P.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Harry Crews, R. I. P.
“He had been very ill,” she told The Associated Press on Thursday. “In a way it was kind of a blessing. He was in a lot of pain.” Thanks in part to motorcycle accidents and nerve damage in his feet, he had walked with a cane in recent years. But his career remained active. An excerpt from a forthcoming memoir had been published in the Georgia Review and there was talk of reissuing his books, many of them out of print, in digital editions.
He wasn’t widely known, but those who knew him— whether personally or through his books — became devoted. A wild man and truth teller in the tradition of Charles Bukowski and Hunter Thompson, he wrote bloodied stories drawn directly from his own experiences, including boxing and karate. Crews sported a tattoo with a line from an E.E. Cummings poem, “How do you like your blue-eyed boy Mister Death,” on his right bicep under the tattoo of a skull.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Illegitimacy in Literature
Forgotten Books: Who Done It? -- Alice Laurance & Isaac Asimov, Editors
The authors who contributed stories are John Ball, Robert Bloch, Dorothy Salisbury Davis, Rosemary Gatenby, Michael Gilbert, Elizabeth Gresham, Joe L. Hensley, Edward D. Hoch, R. A. Lafferty, John D. MacDonald, Florence Mayberry, Patricia Moyes, Rachael Cosgrove Payes, Bill Pronzini, Ruth Rendell, Lawrence Treat, and Janwillem van de Wetering. I have to admit that I wasn't familiar with some of the names, and I also have to admit that I was surprised to see R. A. Lafferty listed as a contributor. He doesn't turn up in many crime anthologies.
While the good Dr. Asimov doesn't have a story in the book, h e does contribute an eight-page introduction on the topic of writing style that's worth your time. Cheap copies of the book abound on the Internet.
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Our Constitutional Rights Continue to Erode
'Flying Pancake' Aircraft Comes To Dallas Museum
Video of the prototype and the test flight of the actual plan can be found here.
Jerry Boogie McCain, R. I. P.
McCain had a long music career that spanned the decades from 1953, when he made his first recordings, to his death. His best-known songs include “Ain't No Use for Drug Abuse” and “Burn the Crackhouse Down,” which he wrote about goings-on in his neighborhood.
Archaeology Update
But now, researchers have turned to satellite imagery to uncover a vast network of over 14,000 long-overlooked Mesopotamian settlements, spanning 8,000 years of ancient civilization. Their findings represent a monumental step forward for the fields of archeology and anthropology, and suggest that an aerial perspective may hold the key to unlocking the mysteries of humanity's first major settlements.
Forgotten Music -- Patti Page
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Earl Scruggs, R. I. P.
But Scruggs' legacy is in no way limited to or defined by bluegrass, a genre that he and partner Lester Flatt dominated as Flatt and Scruggs in the 1950s and '60s: His adaptability and open-minded approach to musicality and to collaboration made him a bridge between genres and generations.
Hat tip to Seepy Benton.
Adrienne Rich, R. I. P.
Short story competition
Along with the chance to win a unique killer first prize from Glengoyne Whisky (worth £ 3,000) and a residential writing course with Arvon, you could be included in an anthology of the best entries published right here by the Heath.
We’ll be publishing Worth The Wait in September to coincide with the festival.
Available Now!
Amazon.com: Carnival of Death (Dead Man #9) eBook: Bill Crider, Lee Goldberg, William Rabkin: Kindle Store
The Grace of a Shadowy Street
Once Again, Texas Leads the Way
Excellent mugshot at the link.
Hilton Kramer, R. I. P.
Hat tip to Jeff Meyerson.
Tuesday, March 27, 2012
The Devil's Bones -- Larry Sweazy
Available Now!
Amazon.com: Carnival of Death (Dead Man #9) eBook: Bill Crider, Lee Goldberg, William Rabkin: Kindle Store
Bert Sugar, R. I. P.
JFK Leads the Way
Overlooked Movies -- It Came From Outer Space
The auditorium featured a ceiling "sky" of floating clouds and mechanically controlled twinkling stars. Seating was provided on the main floor and in two balconies in woven cane seats. The stage was flanked by massive Corinthian columns, with an orchestra pit in front. Backstage consisted of twelve dressing rooms, a loft to accommodate scenery and a set of wooden lighting controls. A Kilgen theater organ opus 3054 size 2/8 was also installed.[4]
I was, to say the least, impressed. Could the movie live up to the building? Well, it could for me. The stars are Richard Carlson and Barbara Rush. Carlson plays an amateur astronomer who sees a meteor crash in the desert, except it's not a meteor. It's an alien spaceship, as he discovers when he goes to investigate. Nobody believes him, naturally. That's the way it always is in these things. And since the ship is covered by a landslide almost as soon as Carlson finds it, nobody can see it. Nobody else has seen the alien that Carlson sees, either.
You can see where all this is going. It's yet another paranoid thriller from the '50s, and pretty soon weird things begin to happen. People who go out to the desert act strangely. Some of them disappear. Some people even begin to believe Carlson.
I don't want to give too much away, but the movie doesn't work out like you might expect. The aliens are scary, but they aren't what they seem. The movie is one of the better ones of the '50s, though not really in the top rank. I'd love to see it again in 3-D in the Majestic.
Monday, March 26, 2012
Here's the Plot for Your Next Blonde Thriller
Interview with the Author
The 9th book in the DEAD MAN saga, Bill Crider's CARNIVAL OF DEATH, is out this week. We asked Bill a few questions about his career and his new book.
And Keep Off Her Lawn!
Sunday, March 25, 2012
PimPage: An Occasional Feature in Which I Call Interesting Books to Your Attention
His life having crumbled, Blake Gladstone returns to his hometown of Santa Fe, and tries to settle back into the unsatisfying life he’d had before he left for Florida.
When he meets Denise, a pretty young blonde with a bag full of tricks, his sad routine breaks, and the more they get to know each other, the more Blake can’t figure out if he’s on a road to salvation, or a road back to hell.