Jack Tunney's Blog, page 29

January 6, 2014

AVAILABLE NOW ~ FIGHT CARD MMA: ROSIE THE RIPPER!


AVAILABLE NOW ~ FIGHT CARD MMA: ROSIE THE RIPP ER!


SAM HAWKEN WRITING AS JACK TUNNEY


Baltimore, 2014 … Rosie Bratton is a recovering alcoholic. Divorced, working a dead end job, and with a young daughter she only sees on alternate weekends, her life is going nowhere.  Her hopes hang on the

outcome of a custody battle to regain primary custody of her daughter, and the vague possibility things might get better together.


When circumstances turn bleak, Rosie nearly retreats into the bottle, but hers turned his talent toward teaching his skills to others. If Rosie becomes his student, he hopes she can learn how to be a stronger, focused, better person.


Some people are born to fight – in the cage and out – and Rosie is one of them. When she’s given the moniker Rosie the Ripper, she becomes something more than she was before – and it may be enough to give her a fighting chance …

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Published on January 06, 2014 07:32

January 5, 2014

FIGHT CARD PRESENTS: AN ANTHOLOGY FOR CHARITY!


FIGHT CARD PRESENTS: AN ANTHOLOGY FOR CHARITY!


COMING IN TWO WEEKS … TEN ROUNDS OF FIGHT FICTION FOR AN AUTHOR-IN-NEED …


FIGHT CARD PRESENTS: IRON HEAD AND OTHER STORIES …


THIS IS A CHARITY ANTHOLOGY … ALL PROCEEDS WILL GO DIRECT TO AN AUTHOR-IN-NEED …


TEN GREAT WRITERS:  JORY SHERMAN, MARK FINN, ED GREENWOOD, JAMES SCOTT BELL, BOWIE V. IBARRA, RYAN MCFADDEN, TROY D. SMITH, JACK BADELAIRE, JAMES HOPWOOD, MATHEW PIZZOLATO …


COVER BY CARL YONDER …


EDITED BY PAUL BISHOP AND JEREMY L.C. JONES


MORE DETAILS TO FOLLOW …

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Published on January 05, 2014 10:50

COMING THIS WEEK ~ FIGHT CARD MMA: ROSIE THE RIPPER

Chain Link Fence
COMING THIS WEEK!
FIGHT CARD MMA: ROSIE THE RIPPER 
SAM HAWKEN WRITING AS JACK TUNNEY

Baltimore, 2014 … Rosie Bratton is a recovering alcoholic. Divorced, working a dead end job, and with a young daughter she only sees on alternate weekends, her life is going nowhere.  Her hopes hang on the outcome of a custody battle to regain primary custody of her daughter, and the vague possibility things might get better together.


When circumstances turn bleak, Rosie nearly retreats into the bottle, but her sponsor has a solution. Felix was once a mixed martial arts contender. Now, he’s turned his talent toward teaching his skills to others. If Rosie becomes his student, he hopes she can learn how to be a stronger, focused, better person.


Some people are born to fight – in the cage and out – and Rosie is one of them. When she’s given the moniker Rosie the Ripper, she becomes something more than she was before – and it may be enough to give her a fighting chance …

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Published on January 05, 2014 10:33

December 20, 2013

December 16, 2013

SWAMP WALLOPER PAPERBACK NOW AVAILABLE

SWAMP PAPER
SWAMP WALLOPER PAPERBACK NOW AVAILABLE
Patrick ‘Felony’ Flynn is back! And this time he’s in way over his head …  New Orleans, 1956 … When the battered body of boxer Marcus de Trod turns up on the edge of the Bayou Sauvage outside New Orleans with the words ‘Get Felony Flynn LAPD’ tattooed in his armpits, Hat Squad detective, Patrick Felony Flynn, knows he is in for the fight of his life.  Far from the hardboiled streets of Los Angeles, Flynn and his partner, Tombstone Jones, are on a two-fisted rampage to find a killer. But hiding in the swamp, deep inside the walls of the Bayou Sauvage Federal Penitentiary, the killer patiently waits to crush his prey with razor sharp teeth and deadly jaws.  After taking down gangster Mickey Cohen’s championship prospect Solomon Kane in “Felony Fists,” Patrick Flynn triumphantly returns in “Swamp Walloper,” facing an even more dangerous foe – a killer fueled by voodoo and revenge …

 

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Published on December 16, 2013 12:12

FIGHT FILMS: GRUGE MATCH


FIGHT FILMS: GRUGE MATCH!


Grudge Match stars award-winning movie legends Sylvester Stallone and Robert De Niro as old boxing rivals who come out of retirement for one final match.



In Grudge Match, De Niro and Stallone play Billy The Kid McDonnen and Henry Razor Sharp, two local Pittsburgh fighters whose fierce rivalry put them in the national spotlight. Each had scored a victory against the other during their heyday, but in 1983, on the eve of their decisive third match, Razor suddenly announced his retirement, refusing to explain why but effectively delivering a knock-out punch to both their careers. Thirty years later, boxing promoter Dante Slate Jr., seeing big dollar signs, makes them an offer they can’t refuse: to re-enter the ring and settle the score once and for all.



But they may not have to wait that long: on their first encounter in decades, their long-festering feud erupts into an unintentionally hilarious melee that instantly goes viral. The sudden social media frenzy transforms their local grudge match into a must-see HBO event. Now, if they can just survive the training, they may actually live to fight again.



The film also stars Kevin Hart as Dante Slate Jr.; Alan Arkin as Razor’s former trainer, Louis Lightning Conlon, who gets to put Razor through his paces again; and Kim Basinger as Sally Rose, who was once the love of Razor’s life. Rounding out the cast are Jon Bernthal as BJ, who becomes The Kid’s instinctive but untested trainer; and young film newcomer Camden Gray.



Peter Segal directs from a screenplay by Tim Kelleher and Rodney Rothman, story by Tim Kelleher.







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Published on December 16, 2013 12:05

December 5, 2013

R.I.P. NELSON MANDELA

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R.I.P NELSON MANDELA 1918 – 2013
A GREAT MAN WHO LOVED BOXING …
Mandela on boxing …
Boxing is egalitarian. In the ring, rank, age, color, and wealth are irrelevant. When you are circling around your opponent, testing his strengths and weaknesses, you do not think about his skin color or social status.
I never did any real fighting after I entered politics. My main interest was in training; I found the rigorous exercise to be an excellent outlet for tension and stress. After a strenuous workout, I felt both mentally and physically lighter. It was a way of losing myself in something that was not the struggle. After an evening’s workout I would wake up the next morning feeling strong and refreshed, ready to take up the fight again.
From Mandela’s autobiography, A Long Walk To Freedom …

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Published on December 05, 2013 22:10

December 3, 2013

FIGHT CARD MMA: FISTS OF AFRICA ~ NIGERIAN WRESTLERS

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FIGHT CARD MMA: FISTS OF AFRICA ~ NIGERIAN WRESTLERS
Just finished editing an amazing Fight Card MMA book for 2014 from Balogun Ojetade (Fight Card MMA: Fists Of Africa), which features a Nigerian wrestler as the main character.  Balogun just sent me some reference photos to use for working on the cover, and now I’m even more stoked …

AF 6 AF 7 AF 5 AF 4 AF 3 AF 1

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Published on December 03, 2013 09:25

November 29, 2013

THE TWO-FISTED HOLMESIAN TRADITION CONTINUES



 



 



 



 



 



 



 



 



 


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Published on November 29, 2013 16:22

RENOVATING SHERLOCK HOLMES FOR FIGHT CARD


RENOVATING SHERLOCK HOLMES FOR FIGHT CARD


AUTHOR ANDREW SALMON TAKES US INSIDE THE WRITING OF FIGHT CARD SHERLOCK HOLMES…


GETTING AN ICON INTO THE RING


I’ve been a Fight Card fan since Day One. Having read and reviewed many of the titles, it didn’t take me long to get a sense of the quality of the books and soon a longing to be a part of the fun kicked in.


I was on the outside looking in, dreaming of one day being able to contribute to this fine series when I received an email out of the blue from Paul Bishop. Would I be interested in contributing to Fight Card? Uh, yeah! Would I be interested in writing Fight Card: Sherlock Holmes? Hell, YEAH! And that was all it took. Suddenly I’d been invited in out of the cold where it was warm and jumping! And, a chance to write Holmes in a new way? This was an opportunity too good to pass up!


Discussing the project with Paul, we hit on the framework of a traditional Sherlock Holmes tale except with bare knuckle boxing in it. Sacrilege you say? Not traditional you cry? Shades ofabominable. 


Well, Doyle himself created Holmes as an accomplished boxer, as well as an accomplished … just about everything else! So what was the problem? As I had written Holmes and Watson five times before getting the nod from Paul, I felt I had a good handle on the characters and could shoulder the workload though no one other than Doyle can ever truly master this dynamic duo.


As the plot began to take loose shape, I soon found myself faced with the biggest challenges and crucial questions: How does one describe a Victorian boxing match? What was the language of the ring in the 1880s? What boxing techniques existed at the time? And what were the rules? All of these would have to be answered before Holmes could throw a punch. Historical accuracy is something I strive for every time I sit down to bang out an historical action tale. With bare knuckle boxing alive and well all over the world, there is a quiet legion of fans who have taken the time to stitch together the history of the sport for posterity and regularly visit thedead champions of old to pay their respects. 


There was no way I was going to have Holmes step into the ring without having done my homework. Lots and lots and LOTS of research followed as I stuffed my brain with bare knuckle boxing history via the library and the internet to get a sense of where bare knuckle boxing was at in the 1880s. Michael Blackett, the guy at the helm of the History of Bareknuckle Boxing facebook page, sent me links to his website with articles among which were a few on how boxers toughened their hands back in the day. Holmes follows a version of the tried and true methods. 


The most important question of all, however, was how would Dr. Watson describe a Victorian fight? Remember thenot only a man of hisand it was vitally important to hit on the right tone, get into Watson’s head as he watched his friend toe the scratch line and start swinging. I had to have a handle on it before putting words at the end of Watson’s pen.


The result of all this was the chance to step into a fascinating lost world. Bare knuckle boxing was illegal by the times Holmes and Watson first hopped into a hansom. It still thrived, but underground on a much smaller scale. The heady days of champions, big purses and massive crowds were long over by the 1880s.


And the tale had to take place in the 1880s. Boxing is a young man’s sport and as we know Holmes was born in 1854, he would have been 26 in 1880. Sherlock Holmes chronologies abound as over the decades Holmesians have tried to create a timeline for the original adventures and those that have followed. There’s no definitive chronology, so I had to pick one that seemed best suited to my tale. 


Proceeding from the first meeting between Holmes and Watson in 1881, the year 1884 was easy to settle on. Of course, the biggest reason for setting my tale in 1884 was the canonical reference to Holmes having been in the ring during a benefit for a retiring boxer named McMurdo in A Sign of the Four


Said benefit, according to Holmes when he meets the retired fighter in 1888 in chapter four of A Sign of the Four, having occurred four years previously – thus 1884, when Holmes would have been 30 years old. My tale opens with this exhibition bout, which is only alluded to in the Doyle novel.


With the history established, it was time to put Watson ringside for the fights. To the challenges above was instantly added the task of making the fight interesting and dramatic. Fight Card books use the first-person perspective so the reader can feel every blow and punch away with the protagonist against his or her opponent. 


Watson, for all intents and purposes, was standing on the sidelines watching the fight happen to someone else. The Holmes tales are usually told with some measure of detachment – after all with Watson writing the tale years later, we know nothing fatal is going to happen, so I knew missing out on feeling every punch would be overcome by the subject matter. 


Also, it’s up to the writer to squeeze as much drama as possible while playing into the conceit the reader knows in the back of their mind that the heroes will win the day. I called on my time in Watson’s shoes over the last few years to play the fights out and it’s up to readers to tell me if I succeeded.


The last piece of the puzzle was the fighting style Holmes would use. Holmes is described as being a tall man, which would give him the benefit of reach over most opponents. Also his calculating brain coupled with his amateur status would, I reasoned, make him somewhat cautious as he tested his opponent’s abilities and style while determining the best approach to counter them.


Thus I made him an accomplished counter-puncher who, after some sparring, could guess what his opponent would do before he did it and prepare the appropriate response. I did borrow from gloved boxing by giving Holmes Ali’s uncanny ability to stand toe to toe with his opponent, gloves lowered, and twitch his head this way and that dodging blows. I could see Holmes doing this, using his height, and wanting to get as close to his opponent for the purpose of study.


As any Holmesian knows, Sherlock Holmes was the first fictional mixed martial artist, practiced in the many

disciplines of Bartitsu or Baritsu as Doyle calls it in The Adventure of the Empty House when he is describing how Holmes got the better of Professor Moriarty. But this was a boxing tale so I kept these abilities in check for the most part.


The mystery elements of the plot came about through an organic process. To be honest, I did not know how the first murder took place or the identity of the murderer. I decided, instead, to come at the case as Holmes would: finding a body, examining the scene and putting the pieces together. 


This method made for some nervous moments as I moved Holmes and Watson through the story ever closer to the end when Holmes was to begin revealing all while I had no idea how it all tied together. My salvation came in the form of that weird scenario only writers know … Holmes, himself, explained the case to me one night as I pushed my pen across the paper. I just wrote down what he told me as fast as I could then got

on with the tale.


This is not unusual. As Holmes and Watson are the characters I’ve written the most in my career to date, they often have conversations in my head on a variety of subjects, and I’ve found I’ve come to know them quite well. Which is why I’ll be writing them again soon. I’ve got an inkling for a second Holmes boxing tale and a full-fledged idea for a third fight adventure. If readers like this first one, I’ll gladly get to work on more. It’s up to you, fight fans. If you want more two-fisted action from Holmes then sound the bell and we’ll toe the line for another round or two.


Until then I want to thank Paul Bishop and the Fight Card crew for giving me a shot at the title and doing the heavy lifting in getting this book ready to be unleashed on an unsuspecting world. Writing it was a blast and I hope I’ll get a chance to do it again. Keep punching, folks!

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Published on November 29, 2013 14:35