David Cranmer's Blog, page 6
November 17, 2017
My Two-Cents is Invaluable, Right?

Stealing Ghosts by Lance Charnes, Trading Down by Stephen Norman, and Blood Run by Jamie Freveletti. My opening thoughts on Blood:
If Jamie Freveletti had arrived on the literary scene ahead of Raymond Chandler, the famous quote instead may have read, “When in doubt, come through the door with a grenade launcher.” In her latest novel, Blood Run, her biochemist protagonist, Emma Caldridge, is three hundred miles east of Dakar, Senegal, when the armored vehicle she and three others are riding in is ambushed.
In the days ahead I will be reviewing The Best American Mystery Stories 2017 edited by John Sandford.
The heavy car shuddered when a second grenade exploded near the roof, and another rain of bullets hit the driver's side window. It failed in a shower of tiny glass slivers and shrapnel. Emma watched in horror as a splash of red washed over the clear divider between the driver and the passenger area.
“The driver's been hit,” Emma said to the two others.
She pressed the button to lower the glass divider, like those found in limousines, to access the front seat. She was glad that it still moved. That meant that the car hadn't yet lost power. She knew that a car taking fire, even an armored car, had seconds to escape the first hit. A vehicle that didn't move while under attack would eventually be breached, no matter how extensive the armoring.
Published on November 17, 2017 13:35
November 14, 2017
Telemachus

That may all seem quaint, as this plebeian describes it, but there's a lot more happening beginning with the robust language. After Haines assumes Stephen is an atheist: "You behold in me, Stephen said with grim displeasure, a horrible example of free thought" or his verbal jiu-jitsu with Mulligan: "Parried again. He fears the lancet of my art as I fear that of his. The cold steel pen." And on and on the beauty of these passages build like nothing else in literature. No hyperbole. Martin Amis calls Joyce a "genius ... he makes Beckett look pedestrian, Lawrence look laconic, Nabokov look guileless." Zadie Smith says, "For me, Joyce is the ultimate realist because he is trying to convey how experience really feels. And he found it to be so idiosyncratic he needed to invent a new language for it." And none other than T.S. Eliot: "I hold [Ulysses] to be the most important expression which the present age has found; it is a book to which we are all indebted, and from which none of us can escape." More well known authors make the Joyce case here.

Published on November 14, 2017 16:54
A Savage Conversation

Over the years, I’ve stayed in contact with Frank—email here, direct message there—but this interview caught me up to date, finding the Indiana writer on the cusp of new ventures as his debut novel Donnybrook is being made into a movie, currently in production by director Tim Sutton. The starry light of Hollywood’s call hasn’t changed him a bit. This back and forth Q&A took a few weeks while working around the intersection of Frank’s competing schedules: a blue-collar job where he slogs the night shift, training for the run of his life, and his writing pursuits. He remains as candid and humble as ever.
Here's my conversation with Frank at LitReactor.
Published on November 14, 2017 15:59
November 13, 2017
Loving The Savage

Into this nightmare, The Savage doesn’t have the luxury of a slow start with the Picasso poetic likes of “It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.” Yeah, goodbye to all that. Frank Bill delves right into it, storming the ravaged, scorched fields with these opening lines...
Please click over to Macmillan's Criminal Element blog for my full review.
Published on November 13, 2017 10:03
November 10, 2017
Ulysses Adventure Begins
My #FridayReads (as the universal party hash tags it on Twitter and Facebook) is going to be the same for the next year. Choosing to study James Joyce's ULYSSES. 2.5 pages (total of 783) a day. Have annotated version backup and a graphic novel for assistance.

Published on November 10, 2017 17:33
October 26, 2017
Nemeth on Writers
David Nemeth makes his debut at Do Some Damage with his first weekly post entitled "Do Writers Even Read Anymore?" I took a gander and left a comment because I've enjoyed David's tweets and am looking forward to his future contributions at DSD.
Published on October 26, 2017 13:08
Chess, Comics, Crosswords, Books, Music, Cinema: Boot Hill: An Anthology of the West by Robert J. R...
Chess, Comics, Crosswords, Books, Music, Cinema: Boot Hill: An Anthology of the West by Robert J. R...: "They died with their boots on." © Forge Books Boot Hill: An Anthology of the West (2002), edited by American author and a...
Published on October 26, 2017 04:35
October 25, 2017
Thinking Halloween? Think Transgemination!

Published on October 25, 2017 17:42
Life There Is Sheer Hell
Have you read Roger Ebert's Life Itself: A Memoir (2011)? Such an enjoyable, insightful read and pretty much what you would expect from the late film critic and Pulitzer Prize winner. (There is also an accompanying film you shouldn't miss.) Chapter 38 is devoted to his friendship with filmmaker Werner Herzog. A quote by Herzog from 1999 stood out to me:
"Life in the oceans must be sheer hell. A vast, merciless hell of permanent and immediate danger. So much of a hell that during evolution some species—including man—crawled, fled onto some small continents of solid land, where the Lessons of Darkness continue."Straightforward, nothing new, but it gave me pause... thought I'd pass it on.
Published on October 25, 2017 08:24