Bruce DeSilva's Blog, page 13

October 22, 2016

Who’s Reading “The Dread Line” Now? Best-Selling Crime Novelist Harlan Coben!

coben-doneHarlan Coben is one of the best, and most popular, crime novelists working today, with his last ten books all debuting at #1 on the New York Times Best Seller list.  You can learn more about him and his work here.


The Dread Line is the fifth book in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva. In it, New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of the novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores


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Published on October 22, 2016 10:44

October 18, 2016

Who’s Reading “The Dread Line” Now? Comix Author And Crime Novelist Gary Phillips!

gary-phillips-done-editedGary Phillips is one of the most versatile noir writers around, penning gritty novels, hard-boiled short stories, and a series of wickedly dark comix. You can learn more about Gary and his work here.


The Dread Line is the fifth book in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva. In it, New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of the novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores


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Published on October 18, 2016 12:45

October 15, 2016

Casting “Dread Line,” The Movie

dread lineMarshal Zeringue of The Campaign for the American Reader asked me to write a guest blog explaining how I would cast a film version of The Dread Line , the fifth book in my Edgar Award-winning series of crime novels. Here’s what I sent him:


Since getting fired in spectacular fashion from his Rhode Island newspaper job last year (A Scourge of Vipers, 2015), Liam Mulligan is trying to piece together a new life—one that straddles both sides of the law. He’s getting some part-time work with his friend McCracken’s detective agency. He’s picking up beer money by freelancing for a local news website. And he’s looking after his semi-retired mobster-friend’s bookmaking business. But he’s still an anti-authoritarian with a strong but shifting sense of justice, he remains prone to ill-timed wisecracks, and of course, he still can’t seem to stay out of trouble.


In The Dread Line, he’s feuding with a feral cat that keeps leaving its kills on his porch. He’s obsessed with a baffling jewelry heist. And he’s enraged that someone in town is torturing animals. All of this keeps distracting him from a big case that needs his attention. The New England Patriots, still shaken by murder charges against their superstar tight end, have hired Mulligan and McCracken to investigate the background of a college athlete they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as they start asking questions, they get push-back. The player, it seems, has something to hide – and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


The new novel has a colorful and quirky cast of characters, some new and others who were introduced in the first four novels in the series. Movie thrillers tend to be full of gunfights, car chases and explosions, but there’s not much of that in my novels; so I think my books may be better suited to be turned into a character-driven television crime drama such as The Sopranos, Justified, or Ray Donovan.


LearyI’ve always thought that Boston-raised actor Denis Leary (Rescue Me) embodies the smart mouth and bad attitude toward authority that is Mulligan; but my character is a youthful 45, and Leary may be getting a bit old for the role.


 


 


liev-schreiberLately, I’ve been picturing Liev Schreiber as Mulligan. He’s got the bad attitude part down cold, and in Showtime’s Ray Donovan, one of the best shows on television, he’s adopted a convincing New England accent.

The rest of the cast:


kerryKerry Washington (Scandal) as attorney Yolanda Mosely-Jones, Mulligan’s love interest. She embodies Yolanda’s elegance and intelligence—and I think my hero deserves a woman like her.

 


 


chiklisMichael Chiklis (The Shield) as Bruce McCracken, Mulligan’s tough-as-nails boss at the detective agency.


 


 


thegronkRob Gronkowski (of the New England Patriots) as Conner Bowditch, the football prospect Mulligan investigates. Gronk may lack acting experience, but all he has to do is be himself.


 


6th Annual Food Bank For New York Steve Schirripa (The Sopranos) as Joseph DeLucca, Mulligan’s thuggish, smarter-than-he-looks friend, who is helping run the bookmaking business. Schirripa has both the right look and the perfect working-class manner of speaking.


 


 


laurieHugh Laurie (Veep) as Ellington Cargill, the arrogant billionaire whose jewelry is stolen in the heist Mulligan investigates—while not really caring if the creep ever gets it back.


 

BeghekyraJason Beghe (Chicago PD) and Kyra Sedgwick (The Closer) as the homicide twins, two Providence cops who have it in for Mulligan. They both know how to give somebody a hard time.


 


robertRobert De Niro (what hasn’t he been in?) as slimy, smooth-talking sports agent Morris Dunst.


 


 


John-Francis-Daley-image-3John Francis Daley (Bones) as Mulligan’s young news biz pal, Edward Anthony Mason III, AKA Thanks-Dad. Like Thanks-Dad, he conveys a misleading naivety that makes him easy to underestimate.


 


 


joe_mantegna_2014Joe Mantegna (Criminal Minds) as Chief Ragsdale, the over-his-head small-town police chief on the island of Jamestown, where some of the action takes place.\


 


 


img_0642_edited-2And Bruce DeSilva as Carmine Grasso, Rhode Island’s biggest mobbed-up fence, because it’s a small part so I should be able to remember my lines.


 


 


The Dread Line is the fifth book in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva. In it, New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of the novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores


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Published on October 15, 2016 10:59

Who’s Reading “The Dread Line” Now? It’s Lee Child, The Creator of Jack Reacher!

lee-child-done


 


Lee Child is the author of the Jack Reacher novels, one of the best-selling crime fiction series of all time. I snapped this photo of him in New Orleans last month.


You can learn more about Lee and his books here.


The Dread Line is the fifth book in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva. In it, New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of the novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores


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Published on October 15, 2016 09:52

October 13, 2016

Who’s Reading “The Dread Line” Now? Mystery Writer Bill Crider!

bill-crider-doneBill Crider is the author of the the Dan Rhodes mysteries about a sheriff in a small Texas county; the Truman Smith series about a Galveston Island, TX, private eye; several stand-alone mysteries; and even some children’s books.


I snapped this photo of him last month. You can learn more about Bill and his fine work here.


The Dread Line is the fifth book in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva. In it, New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of the novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores


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Published on October 13, 2016 09:09

October 12, 2016

Koreatown Blues

kI always enjoy discovering a talented new crime novelist, so I was fortunate to receive a review copy of Koreatown Blues by long-time travel writer Mark Rogers.


The premise of the story:


Wes is a young man with ambition, but his ambition is small. He just wants to buy the car wash where he has been working as a laborer in the Koreatown section of Los Angeles. But when he finally manages to scrape a down payment together, the deal comes with strings attached: a young Korean wife, a centuries-old blood feud, and a target on his back.


Koreatown Blues is a cleverly-plotted hard-boiled novel with crisp, muscular prose, a feverish pace, a vividly-drawn urban setting, and characters so real that Rudy Giuliani would stop and frisk them.


The novel will be published by Brash Books next February, but it can be ordered in advance here.


 


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Published on October 12, 2016 12:32

Who’s Reading “The Dread Line” Now? It’s Mystery Writer Tim O’Mara!

tim-omara-doneTim O’Mara is at once a New York City public school teacher and the author of the fine Raymond Donne mysteries including his latest, Dead Red, and the soon to be released Nasty Cutter.


I snapped this photo of him last month at the Bouchercon World Mystery Convention. You can learn more about Tim and his work here.


The Dread Line is the fifth book in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva. In it, New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of the novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores


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Published on October 12, 2016 10:13

October 11, 2016

Bruce DeSilva’s Six Favorite Books About Sports

The following originally appeared on the Lit List blog maintained by the Campaign for the American Reader:
Bruce DeSilva is the Edgar Award-winning author of five Liam Mulligan crime novels including The Dread Line , in which the New England Patriots, still reeling over murder charges against one of their players, hire Mulligan to investigate the background of a college star they are considering drafting.

Here is a list of DeSilva’s six favorite books about sports:


Waiting for Teddy Williams by Howard Frank Mosher


Ethan Allen hails from mythical Kingdom Come, Vt., where the town common is a baseball diamond and those who don’t play show up to watch. Here, every boy dreams of growing up to play for the Boston Red Sox, but most end up working lathes at the Green Mountain Rebel baseball bat factory, where the scores from Boston are faithfully posted on a wall that resembles Fenway Park’s Green Monster.


Ethan, a lonely, fatherless child, has two dreams. One, of course, is to play for the Sox someday, and the other is to discover who his father is. He shares his dreams with a statue of his ancestor, Revolutionary War hero Ethan Allen, and does not find it remarkable that the statue talks back.


Ethan looks forward to every spring, when a drifter with the legendary name Teddy Williams mysteriously appears out of the mist to teach him the finer points of the baseball.


In the boy’s 17th year, the creep who owns the Boston Red Sox sells off all the team’s stars and plans to move the franchise to Hollywood after the end of a dreadful season. But the team’s manager, The Legendary Spence, somehow has his collection of journeymen on the brink of winning the pennant.


All he needs to pull off a miracle is one more pitcher, for which the creep has approved the ridiculously small salary of $30,000. Enter Ethan, an unknown teenager with a fair fastball and a knee-buckling change-up.


The result is a funny, wise, lyrical novel about baseball, coming of age and dreaming out loud.


Mosher has often been compared to Mark Twain, but his humor is gentler, his vision of America sweeter. Waiting for Teddy Williams is a modern classic that should be read and reread for generations.


Levels of the Game by John McPhee


In 1968, the year that Robert Kennedy and Martin Luther King were assassinated, college students raged against the war in Vietnam, and race riots set American cities ablaze, two great young tennis players, one black and one white, faced each other across the net at Forest Hills, NY.


Arthur Ashe and Clark Graebner were friends—or at least friendly—but they had little in common, either as athletes or as men.


Ashe was lithe, his game based on speed and deception. Graebner was built like a wrestler, his game based on power. Ashe was black, a Virginia native descended from a slave who arrived on our shores in chains in 1735. Graebner was of German descent, a son of white privilege from Ohio. Ashe was liberal, Graebner conservative.


This little book, the yellowed Bantam paperback edition I bought in 1969 just 119 pages long, opens with Ash tossing a tennis ball into the air and smashing his serve over the net. The description of the tense match between he and Graebner is rendered in vivid detail—some of the finest sports writing you will find anywhere.


But as the match progresses, McPhee intersperses the action with insightful portraits of these two very different Americans engaged in a civilized form of combat in a culturally, politically, and racially divided America.


The book is a stunning achievement by one of the most accomplished non-fiction writers of the 20th century. McPhee’s meticulous reporting and brilliant prose could draw a reader into any subject. He proved it by writing an amazing book about—get this—oranges, and by making this baseball and football fanatic love a story about tennis.


A Fan’s Notes by Frederick Exley


This book, characterized by its publisher as “a fictional memoir,” is a disturbing read for a rabid sports fan like me—a dark warning about the dead end of hero worship in a culture that values hyper-masculinity.


Exley describes growing up in Watertown, NY, the son of a sports-crazy father. Later, he enrolls at the University of Southern California, and it is there that he encounters Frank Gifford, the handsome, personable big man on campus who later becomes a star halfback for the New York Giants.


After college, as Exley sinks into swamp of unfulfilling jobs, a failed marriage, alcoholism, depression, and psychiatric treatment, he obsessively measures his failings against Gifford’s seeming perfection as an athlete, a husband, and a beloved national celebrity.


Astute reviewers have called Exley’s achievement as towering as F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. This is a sorrowful, deeply troubling book written in a brilliant idiosyncratic style. It should not be read without the solace of a bottle of whiskey close at hand.


The Boys of Summer by Roger Kahn


“At a point in life when one is through with boyhood, but has not yet discovered how to be a man, it was my fortune to travel with the most marvelously appealing of teams. During the early 1950s, the Jackie Robinson Brooklyn Dodgers were outspoken, opinionated, bigoted, tolerant, black, white, open, passionate: in short, a fascinating mix of vigorous men. They were not, however, the most successful team in baseball.”


So begins what just may be the finest non-fiction book written about baseball, but it is much more than that. It is about boyhood dreams realized, about race in America, and about what life is like for great athletes as they age.


Kahn tells the story of the Dodgers’ struggles on and off the field, culminating in their unlikely 1955 World Series win over the powerful New York Yankees. And then he tracks the post-game lives of a dozen players – stars like Robinson and Duke Snider but also bit players like Andy Pafko and George Shuba, as they adjust, most of them successfully, to life after the cheering stops.


For those who love the summer game, it’s a must read.


The Natural, a novel by Bernard Malamud


Everyone has seen the movie starring Robert Redford. Few have read the book.


This is the story of Roy Hobbs, a 19-year-old pitching phenom whose dreams are shattered when a woman he falls in love with shoots him as he is on the way to join the Chicago Cubs.


Years later, he resurfaces as an aging rookie slugger with the cellar-dwelling New York Knights. But Hobbs’ prowess at the plate leads them to the World Series.


Everyone remembers how the movie ends: Hobbs stands at the plate with two outs in the ninth inning and one last chance to win the game. His childhood sweetheart and the child he never knew he had watch from the stands. Hobbs swings. The ball sails over the fence and crashes into the lights. Broken glass rains on the field, the music almost operatic, as the hero strides around the bases.


But guess what. In the novel, Hobbs strikes out.


This beautifully-written novel is an astute examination of the mind of an athlete, the place of baseball in our national consciousness, and a much sadder and darker tale than the movie would lead you to believe.


The Fight by Norman Mailer


This is the story of “The Rumble in the Jungle,” the titanic struggle between an aging Muhammad Ali and the seemingly indestructible champion of the world, George Foreman.



Mailer takes us to Ali’s training camp in rural Pennsylvania, introduces us to his hangers-on, transports us to the exotic African site of the bout, shows Foreman wowing sportswriters as he pounds the heavy bag, describes Don King and the financial side of the event, touches on the politics of Zaire President Mobuto’s dictatorship, and lingers on the hero worship of an oppressed people who see Ali as a savior.


But the finest part of the book is the description of the fight itself as Foreman’s ferocity and power gradually succumb to Ali’s view of boxing as not just a physical contest but a chess match. Mailer brings both his powers as a writer and his personal experience in the ring to his vivid, meticulous, round-by-round portrait.


When Ali knocked out an exhausted Foreman in the 8th round, a few disbelieving sports writers howled that the fix was in.


A few years before Mailer’s death, I sat with him over drinks at a Boston writers’ conference.


“Do you remember what you wrote about the claim that the fight was fixed?” I asked.


“No,” he said. “Do you?’


“I do,” I said. “You wrote, ‘Sure, and so was Night Watch and The Portrait the Artist As A Young Man.’”


The Dread Line is the fifth book in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva. In it, New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of the novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores  here. 


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Published on October 11, 2016 07:52

October 10, 2016

Who’s Reading “The Dread Line” Now? Best-Selling Mystery Writer Lisa Unger!

lisa-unger-doneLisa Unger is the New York Times best-selling author of 14 mystery novels including her latest, Ink and Bone. I snapped this photo of her last month at the Bouchercon Worldwide Mystery Convention in New Orleans.


You can learn more about Lisa and her work here.


The Dread Line is the fifth book in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva. In it, New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of the novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores  here. 


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Published on October 10, 2016 10:12

October 4, 2016

Who’s Reading “The Dread Line” Now? It’s Best-Selling Mystery Writer Reed Farrel Coleman

Reed Farrel Coleman

Reed Farrel Coleman


With is fine stand-alone novels such as Gun Church and his remarkable Moe Prager private eye series, Reed Farrel Coleman has long been one of the best mystery writers in the business. But since he was selected to continue the late Robert B. Parker’s best-selling Jesse Stone series, Reed is being discovered by thousands of new readers.


His latest Jesse Stone novel is titled Debt To Pay, and with the recently published Where It Hurts, he’s launched a remarkable new series featuring former Long Island police officer Gus Murphy.


I snapped the photo of him reading my new crime novel when we appeared together in Arizona last month. You can learn more about Reed and his work here.


In The Dread Line, the New England Patriots, still shaken by a series of murder charges against one of their star players (true story) have hired Liam Mulligan, the hero of my novels, to investigate the background of a college star they are thinking of drafting. At first, the job seems routine, but as soon as he starts asking questions, he gets push-back. The player has something to hide, and someone is willing to kill to make sure it remains secret.


dread lineTo order The Dread Line, the fifth in the Edgar Award-winning series of hardboiled crime novels by Bruce DeSilva, you can choose from a list of independent or chain online bookstores  here. 


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Published on October 04, 2016 11:09