B.V. Lawson's Blog, page 222

June 25, 2013

You've Been Mugged

I'm a fan of whimsical things and especially book-related whimsy. If you've got a birthday coming up this summer (or know a book lover who does), here are a few literary mugs that might fill the . . . um, bill?



Reading-is-my-super-power-mugSummer + movies = blockbusters, especially those crammed with every super-whatever imaginable, but this mug lets everyone know the true source of power.



Shakespeare-Insult-Mug

Shakespeare wasn't all sonnets and soliloquies. He was also a fount of insults and epithets, and this mug celebrates the bawdy side of the bard.


 



Keep-Calm-Mug


 


All the negative news and stock market ups-and-downs got you rattled? No problem. This handy mug will have you relaxed faster than you can say "Om."


 



Talk_wordy_to_me_large_mugSpeaking of bawdy . . . (Yep, I like puns too.) Here's a mug that might get you an interesting date at your next Starbucks meetup.


 



Annoy-the-Writer-MugAnd just in case that date turns out to be a creep, switch to this mug.


 


 



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Published on June 25, 2013 07:16

June 24, 2013

Mystery Melange

Book-sculpture-by-anouk-kruithof-7
Book sculpture by Anouk Kruithof



Sad news from the writing world last week as we bade farewell to several luminaries, among them Scottish author Ian Banks, who wrote in a wide variety of genres including crime fiction; thriller author Vince Flynn (who penned the counterterrorism operative Mitch Rapp series); and Joan Parker,
the widow of author Robert B. Parker, who served as co-author of scripts with her husband and was involved with many philantropic
programs.

Congratulations to the nominees for the 2013 Shamus Award. The annual prize is handed out by the Private Eye Writers of America to the best books and stories in the private eye genre. Janet Rudolph has a listing of all the finalists over at her Mystery Fanfare blog.

The theme for this year's Bloody Scotland Short Story Competition is "Bad Luck and Trouble."
The contest is geared toward previously unpublished writers who have a
story in English of 3,000 words or under. But hurry—you only have until
midnight July 28 to enter. The winner will receive £1,000, a weekend
pass to Bloody Scotland 2013 and a bottle of whisky. Two runners up will
win a selection of tickets for events at the conference.

International Crime Month continues with author events at bookstores around the country including R.J. Julia in Connecticut; Politics & Prose in Washington, D.C.; Centuries and Sleuths in Forest Park, Illionois; and 57th Street Books and the American Library Association convention, both in Chicago.

The poem of the week at the 5-2, edited by Gerald So, is "Public Access" by Stephen D. Rogers. Noirboiled Notes also posted its Pulp Poem of the Week by Warren Moore from Broken Glass Waltzes.

John Kenyon, editor of Grift Magazine, said that the publication of the second issue "is imminent."  The issue includes an interview of Les Edgerton, another with Stuart Neville, and a look a the film noir woodcuts of Loren Kantor. There's also new short fiction from Erik Arneson, Jack Bates, Matthew Brozik, Lawrence Buentello, Holly Day, Salvatore Falco, Andy Henion, Davin Ireland, David Keaton, Jon McGoran, Chad Rohrbacher, Helen Maryles Shankman, and Martin Zeigler. While you're waiting, Grift #1 is still available for purchase.

Fans of Icelandic crime fiction should take note that Iceland will host its first crime fiction festival, Iceland Noir, at the Nordic Cultural Centre in Reykjavik on November 23-24. Special guest authors include Anne Cleeves, Yrsa Sigurdardóttir, John Curran and Quentin Bates. (Hat tip to Ayo Onatade at Shots Magazine.)

Speaking of Iceland, Reykjavik City Library announced Húsið (The House) by Stefán Máni is the winner of the 2013 Blóðdropinn — Blood Drop Award — for best crime novel of the year. The book will represent Iceland in the annual Glass Key Award competition for best crime novel written by a Nordic author. (Hat tip to Omnimystery News.)


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Published on June 24, 2013 08:43

June 23, 2013

Media Murder for Monday


OntheairMOVIES


Kon-Tiki star Tobias Santelmann is joining the all-star cast of the Brett Ratner-directed Hercules movie. The project is an update of the Greek mythological tale, ditching the supernatural and protraying Hercules (Dwayne Johnson) as a mortal who leads a team of mercenaries on a job where all is ominously not what it appears. Santelmann will play the main villain, Rhesus. The other cast members include Ian McShane, Joseph Fiennes, John Hurt and Rebecca Ferguson.

Millennium Films acquired the spec script Criminal by Douglas Cook and David Weisberg (the team behind The Rock). The story centers on a last-ditch effort to stop a diabolical plot, in which a dead CIA operative's memories, secrets and skills are implanted into an unpredictable and dangerous prison inmate in hopes he will complete the operative’s mission.

Director Paul Feig, whose female buddy-cop comedy The Heat (starring Sandra Bulloch and Jenny McCarthy) opens this week, is also writing, directing and producing a female spy film titled Susan Cooper. Described as a James Bond-inspired spy comedy inspired by Martin Campbell's Casino Royale, the project is being set up as a potential franchise.

TELEVISION

In a tribute to the inconic Tony Soprano mobster role protrayed by James Gandolfini, who died last week, Hollywood Reporter compiled a listing and some videos of "10 Definitive Tony Soprano Moments."

Amazon Studios ordered its first drama pilot, Bosch, based on Michael Connelly's Harry Bosch novels. The pilot was scripted by Connelly and Treme co-creator Eric Overmeyer, who are also serving as co-producers.

As Omnimystery News reports, Universal Studios has officially optioned the "Locke & Key" series of graphic novels by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez for film.

Reelz Channel announced that its police procedural series King will make its U.S. premiere Friday, July 5 at 10pm ET/ 7pm PT. The show centers on homicide detective Jessica King (played by Amy Price-Francis of The Cleaner), who is the lead investigator of Toronto's Major Crimes Task Force, the unit that handles the most volatile and challenging cases on the streets.

FOX International Channels recently announced a new entrant - FOX Crime, a channel entirely dedicated to crime and investigation. The lineup includes true-crime documentaries and crime dramas such as The Bridge, the Law & Order franchise, Criminal Minds, Blue Bloods and a "Classic Crime" block that launches with Magnum, CHIPS and Streets of San Francisco.

The BBC has signed Dr. Who star Jenna-Louise Coleman to play Lydia Wickham, the sister of Pride and Prejudice protagonist Elizabeth Bennet, in the network's adaptation of PD James' sequel novel, Death Comes to Pemberley.

Former Homeland actress Zuleikha Robinson is moving from one CIA drama to another as she joins the cast of the upcoming season of Covert Affairs.

The first two seasons of the CBS drama series Person Of Interest are finally available via digital download through all digital retailers, including iTunes and Amazon Instant Video.

CBS announced its fall 2013 schedule, which continues with its crime drama-heavy lineup pretty much every night of the week. Omnimystery News has a breakdown of the crime shows and their slots.

NBC also released a fall schedule calendar, including the including long-running drama Law & Order: SVU, Chicago Fire, Grimm and the new drama Blacklist, starring James Spader as an ex-government agent and criminal mastermind.

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO

Joining CBS This Morning last week as a guest was Janet Evanovich, co-author of The Heist (written with Lee Goldberg).


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Published on June 23, 2013 10:28

June 20, 2013

Friday's "Forgotten" Books - Shroud of Canvas

Lambot
Isobel Mary Lambot (1926-2001) was from a family of readers in
Birmingham, England, but she didn't turn to writing until 1960. She
served first in the Women's Royal Air Force then as a teacher before
marrying in 1959 a Belgian engineer whose work took him to Third World
countries. That was the launching point for Lambot's travels around the
world, experiences that would later turn up in her writing—including her
Russian-exile Commissaire Orloff who appeared in two novels and was
inspired from a period spent in France. In fact, Lambot's very first
crime novel was written in Jamaica, and although never published, it
connected her with her literary agent.

In all, she published some
20 crime novels, including police procedurals, political thrillers and
standalone detective stories based in such locations as Ceylon and the
Congo, translated into German, Italian, Portuguese and Swedish under the
Lambot name or the pseudonyms Daniel Ingham and Mary Turner. She also
had a nonfiction book, How to Write Crime Novels, published in 1992, taught creative writing, lectured to writers' groups and presented "Whodunit" evenings.

She
was definitely of her time and the social mores of the day, once
saying, "My aim is to entertain, not to preach, but certain moral values
underlie my work all the same. I prefer old-fashioned virtues, such as
Crime Does Not Pay, while obviously in real life it does! I don't like
the permissive society, and make sure my heroines get decently married
at the end. If any of my characters leap into bed with each other, it is
essential to the plot, and they usually regret it." But she also
understood the writing process well, adding that "People write because
they want to. It is an inner compulsion. Crime writers write to
entertain, to give a little relaxation in a world of stress. It is very
hard work." 

Sadly, late in life as a widow she had rapid onset
of Alzheimer's disease and after being moved to a nursing home, left one
day and was last seen walking into the countryside. As a family member
noted, the author's final mystery was like her novels, as a massive
search operation was set up with police and volunteers until her body
was found against a tree in Yeld Wood. But she probably would have
appreciated the funeral—as the hearse drove from the Church in Kington
to the Crematorium in Hereford, a lone buzzard flew over the coffin and
screeched.


Shroud-of-Canvas Her novels, such as the 1967 Shroud of Canvas,
use a plain straighforward style to good effect, weaving character
sketches and interpersonal relationships to help build suspense. The
main POV protagonist in "Canvas"  is Rosalind, a young widow with a
daughter, who had cut all ties with her family during her first
disastrous marriage and has recently married a man she's only known for
six months, Geoffrey Lennard, founder of a plastics company.

When
Rosalind receives a telephone call from Geoffrey's former fiancée whom
Rosalind knew nothing about, it sets in motion a series of mysteries and
deaths beginning with the murder of the ex-fiancée in the Lennard
garden. As evidence and suspicion begins to mount against Geoffrey,
Rosalind's newfound happiness is in jeopardy even as she unwaveringly
believes in the innocence of her husband. With the help of a surprising
ally, Detective Sergeant Barry Thornley, and his boss, Superintendent
Longton, Rosaline pursues the truth, dodging the whispers and doubts
from the local community admidst a backdrop of industrial espionage and
power struggles.

And yet...Rosalind does wonder, as this excerpt
indicates, although it also shows Lambot's effective sparse style and
how she creates conflict:


There was a nightmare
sense of repetition. Was she doomed to sit at the breakfast table each
morning waiting for an explanation that never came?...She had wandered
round the silent house all evening, waiting for the sound of Geoffrey's
car, wishing one moment that Sally was not away for the night, glad at
another that she was not there to witness her mother's anxiety.

One
in desperation, she had phoned the office but there was no reply. Not
that it meant anything. Geoffrey could have told the switchboard not to
leave him connected with an outside line, so that he could get on with
his work in peace...

But the previous evening he had gone to meet Anne...



Shroud of Canvas may
date from the late 60s, but it follows true British Golden Age
tradition, filled with skillfully placed clues and red herrings alike
and ending with a closed circle of suspects gathered together to hear
the revelation of the murderer's identity.


In light of Lambot's tragic battle with Alzheimers, I think it's appropriate to remind folks that author Tess Gerritsen's fundraiser to Alzheimer's research is just shy of $6,000 in reaching its goal. For every $5 you donate to her GoFundMe campaign,
you'll be entered into a drawing to have a chance to name a character
in the next Rizzoli & Isles book or other prizes.



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Published on June 20, 2013 17:06

June 18, 2013

Mystery Melange

Book-Sculptures-by-Jodi-Harvey-Brown-6
Book sculpture by Jodi Harvey-Brown


The Nero Wolfe Society announced the nominees for the 2013 Nero Award that recognizes excellence in the mystery genre. They include Antiques Disposal by Barbara Allan; Burning Midnight by Loren D. Estleman; Dead Anyway by Chris Knopf; and The Truth of All Things by Kieran Shields. The winner will be announced at the annual Black Orchid Banquet in December. (Hat tip to Mystery Fanfare.)

Authors often pitch in to help raise money for charitable causes, the latest being the Authors Love Teachers OK Tornado Relief Auction. A group of authors and the Bookgasm site are banding together to help students and teachers at the Plaza Towers Elementary School and Briarwood Elementary School affected by the recent EF5 tornado in Oklahoma. You can bid on items through June 30th including autographed books by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, Max Allan Collins, Ed Gorman, Lou Berney and William Bernhardt, among many others.

Author Tess Gerritsen has also launched a separate charitable appeal, this one for Alzheimer's research, a disease that claimed the life of her father. For every $5 you donate to her GoFundMe campaign, you’ll be entered into a drawing to have a chance to name a character in the next Rizzoli & Isles book. Three runners up will receive a Rizzoli & Isles prize pack that includes a signed copy of Gerritsen's latest book, Last to Die, plus a pair of handcuff earrings and a Rizzoli & Isles baseball cap.

Another new charitable project is the anthology Grand Central Noir for the Amazon Kindle. The anthology was compiled and edited by Terrence McCauley, with stories from I.A. Watson, Charles Salzburg and Jessica Hall, S.A. Soloman, Matt Hilton, Jen Conley, Amy Maurs, R.J. Westerhoff, J. Walt Layne, Kathleen A. Ryan, Silas Donohue, Marcelle Thiebaux, Ron Fortier, Richie Narvaez and Seamus Scanlon. All proceeds go directly to God's Love We Deliver, a non-profit that delivers meals to those in need.

Madison, Wisconins's new Mystery to Me bookstore (which took over from Booked for Murder) held its grand opening last Saturday. As the newspaper Isthmus noted, Mystery to Me plans on adding Skype sessions with authors, using a large flat-screen TV in the store; is partnering with the nearby public library branch to potentially hold events; and will order any book, mystery or not, with each purchase coming with a free "mystery book" wrapped in white paper (for a limited time).

On Wednesday, September 18, Sisters in Crime is sponsoring their annual SinC Into Great Writing workshop in association with Bouchercon. The one-day workshop features Cathy Pickens leading a session on the creative process, including developing, learning to tap into creativity more deeply, and producing creative work more readily; and Bob Dugoni will lead a session on selling your novel.

Seventeen novels by Stuart Palmer are now available as ebooks by MysteriousPress and Open Road Media. Palmer (1901-1968) is best known for his whodunits starring the humorous spinster sleuth/school teacher, Hildegarde Withers, a schoolmarm who solves mysteries, beginning with The Penguin Pool Mysteries in 1931 and continuing for 13 more novels.


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Published on June 18, 2013 11:08

June 17, 2013

Media Murder for Monday


OntheairMOVIES


Fox 2000 has hired Michael Sucsy to direct the adaptation of Megan Abbott's novel Dare Me. Described as "Heathers meets Fight Club, with teenage cheerleaders," the studio hopes to sign Natalie Portman to star in the film, which Abbott is scripting.

Actor Ray Winstone (of The Departed and Beowulf) has joined fellow stars Sean Penn, Javier Bardem and Idris Elba in Pierre Morel's film, The Gunman. Winstone will take on the role of mentor to a hitman (played by Penn), who is betrayed and then hunted by the organization he worked for.

After the successful Kickstarter project to bring Veronica Mars back from TV cancellation purgatory with a film adaptation, the show creator Rob Thomas announced that many original cast members will be returning, including Jason Dohring, Percy Daggs III, Tina Majorino, Amanda Noret, Sam Huntington and Daran Norris. The series focused on a young woman (Kristen Bell) who moonlighted as a private investigator under the direction of her detective father. The new film is set 10 years after the original timeline.

Vampire Diaries star Joseph Morgan has joined Walton Goggins, Ron Perlman and Nicole Badaan in the film adaptation of Craig Clevenger's cult novel, Dermaphoria. Described as "Memento meets Breaking Bad," the story follows a brilliant chemist (Morgan) who wakes up with amnesia in jail after a drug-lab explosion and has to piece together his memories to find his missing girlfriend, while dodging the cops and bad guys who want the formula buried in his head.

Open Road Films has acquired U.S. rights to the big-screen adaptation of the 2005 thriller Homefront by Chuck Logan. The project is being directed by Gary Fleder from a screenplay by Sylvester Stallone and will star Jason Statham, James Franco, and Winona Ryder. (Hat tip to Omnimystery News.)

TELEVISION

Burn Notice star Jeffrey Donovan will direct the 100th episode, in which Michael (played by Donovan) returns to Miami to protect his cover, but things don't go as planned after Fiona (Gabrielle Anwar) is kidnapped and Michael is forced to reveal his presence to his old crew. Several of the Burn Notice cast spoke about the road to the 100th episode in an interview with the Hollywood Reporter.

The Hallmark Channel announced that its new primetime series based on Debbie Macomber's Cedar Cove novels will debut Saturday, July 20 at 8 PM. Andie MacDowell stars as Judge Olivia Lockhart, whose Cedar Cove Municipal Court "is where the town's surprises and hidden secrets are unveiled."

PBS's Masterpiece Mystery! released a teaser trailer for its Summer 2013 season, which will include three new episodes of Inspector Lewis; Endeavour's first season of four episodes; the return of Foyle's War; and The Lady Vanishes, a new version of the classic Hitchcock film. (Hat tip to Omnimystery News.)

DirecTV announced the renewal of its original crime drama series Rogue for a second season. The story follows Grace Travis (played by Thandie Newton), an undercover detective who doubles as an agent for a powerful crime boss Jimmy Laszlo (Marton Csokas) who she believes will lead her to her son's killer.

ITV has also ordered a third season of the DCI Banks series, starring Stephen Tompkinson as the character created by crime novelist Peter Robinson.

PODCASTS/RADIO/VIDEO

Walter Mosley was a guest on the PBS Newshour show talking about revising his iconic Ezekiel "Easy" Rawlins character.

Carl Hiaasen joined the Today Show and NPR's Fresh Air to talk about his latest novel, Bad Monkey.

Paul. D. Brazill, Frank Duffy, K. A. Laity, Laurence Oneal and Richard Sharp talked about books, films, politics, video ganes and more on the inaugural ORF weekly podcast.

Adam Gopnik of the New Yorker and Oline Cogdill, mystery fiction reviewer and Mystery Scene blogger, joined the radio show On Point with host Tom Ashbrook to discuss Florida crime fiction.


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Published on June 17, 2013 06:55

June 13, 2013

Friday's "Forgotten" Books - Dr. Nikola Returns

Dr-Nikola Guy Newell Boothby (1867-1905) was born in South Australia, the son of a politician and the grandson of a judge. He started out his career as a clerk but soon turned his hand to writing plays and musical comedies and eventually made his way to England by way of Singapore, Borneo and Java. He used his travel-related experiences in his writing, turning to Rudyard Kipling-influenced works and exotic settings, churning out 6,000 words every day.

That prolific word count led to fifty novels in the 14 years between 1894 and 1908, with some of the most popular featuring Dr. Nikola. Nikola is an occultist anti-hero in search of immortality and world domination, who uses hypnotic powers and studies witchcraft and the occult. The Nikola series was launched in 1895 as the serial "A Bid for Fortune" in The Windsor Magazine, a rival to The Strand. The series only amounted to five works in all, but Dr. Nikola became almost as popular as Sir Athur Conan Doyle's Professor Moriarty in 1890s Britain.

Nikola is described as dressing in "faultless evening dress, slender, having dark peculiar eyes and dark hair, and white toad-coloured skin." He lives in a bungalow on the Rue de Lafayette in Shanghai (leading some to say the character of Sax Rohmer's Fu Manchu was based on him). John Norris, the host of the Pretty Sinister Books blog, wrote about Stanley L. Woods, who often illustrated the Nikola stories, portraying him in white cravat and fur coat, with his frequent companion, the baleful-eyed black cat Apollyon, perched on Nikola's shoulder.

Dr. Nikola (also known as Dr. Nikola Returns) was a sequel to A Bid for Fortune. In the first book, Nikola tried to obtain a Chinese carved stick said to have almost limitless occult powers. In Dr. Nikola Returns, the doctor continues his pursuit of the powers associated with the Chinese talisman, but enlists the assistance of the penniless but adventurous Wilfred Bruce, who speaks fluent Chinese and also serves as narrator of the tale. Dr. Nikola and Bruce scheme to penetrate the most powerful secret society in China to gain access to a remote Tibetan monastery. 

Although Boothby's output was cut short due to his untimely death from influenza at the age of 37, Dr. Nikola lived on in numerous theatrical productions, beginning with Dr. Nikola on the London stage in 1902. In 1909, a three-roll film based on Dr. Nikola was produced by the Danish director Viggo Larsen and was the first novel-based film in Europe long enough to be able to tell the entire story of a novel. A 1935 project that would have starred Boris Karloff as Dr. Nikola never made it to the screen, but Dr. Nikola made a guest-starring appearance in Kim Newman's Anno Dracula graphic novel series from 1992.

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Published on June 13, 2013 15:32

June 12, 2013

Mystery Melange

Book-Sculpture-Johwey
Book sculpture by Johwey Redington


The Crime Writers of Canada handed out their annual Arthur Ellis Awards for the best in Canadian crime fiction. The award for Best Novel went to Giles Blunt for Until the Night, while the Best Debut Novel was handed out to Simone St. James for The Haunting of Maddy Clare. For the full list of winners, check out the CWC website.

The Mystery Writers of America is sponsoring an upcoming MWA University in Seattle on Saturday, August 11. The one-day workshop features a day of classes taught by experts who discuss their strategies for all facets of writing and publishing, including: "After the Idea" led by Jess Lourey; "Dramatic Structure & Plot,"  led by Kat Richardson; "Setting & Description," with Reed Farrel Coleman; "Character," with Brian Thornton: "Writing as Re-Writing," taught by Daniel J. Hale; and "The Writing Life," with Hank Phillippi Ryan.

There's a new crime fiction festival coming to Adelaide, Australia, called The Body in the Garden, to be held October 25 to 27. The event will feature a line-up of 22+ writers from Australia and overseas, including Swedish crime writer Hakan Nesser, UK author Anne Cleeves, and Australians Gabrielle Lord, Paul Bangay, Fabian Capomollo and Mat Pember. This is unusual in that it's a free festival and will be held (as the name suggests) at the Adelaide Botanic Garden.

This week's story at Beat to a Pulp is "The Cinderella Myth" from Sandra Seamans, who also operates the very useful and informative My Little Corner blog, with resources and information about markets for short crime fiction.

This month's issue of Suspense magazine includes interviews with Chevy Stevens, Jeffrey Archer, Alafair Burke, Hank Steinberg, Dean James and debut author John Mulhall. Plus, Anthony J. Franze continues his Rules of Fiction with bestselling author Michael Connelly and Lisa Gardner continues her series from the writers toolbox, helping all writers master their craft.

This week's Q&A roundup includes former news cameraman Jon Steele, whose noir fantasy Angelus trilogy tells the story of a high-end call girl and a British tough guy who find themselves in a war between angels and demons; Andy Rivers is the lastest "Short Sharp Interivew" with Paul D. Brazill; and Joanna Campbell Slan joined Omnimystery News to talk about her mystery series featuring literary character Jane Eyre.


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Published on June 12, 2013 08:50

June 8, 2013

Media Murder for Monday


OntheairMOVIES


Before I move on to this week's "Media Murder" news, I have a correction to make from last week. Although the Internet (Deadline, CinemaBlend, DigitalSpy, Hollywood Reporter, et al.) was abuzz with the report about a movie titled Depravity that was based on a Dennis Lehane script was in production, this is apparently news to Dennis Lehane. In 2010, he noted in an interview that he had no idea about the project, and yet his name is still attached to it in 2013. After checking with a Lehane representative, I can verify that the author has never written such a script, and his name being associated with the project is completely untrue.

Fox Searchlight Pictures has acquired the North American rights to the dark comedy crime caper Dom Hemingway, starring Jude Law as a safecracker known for his profane and dangerous ways.

Paramount Pictures acquired film rights to The Testing, a YA novel by Joelle Charbonneau about a group of the best and brightest high school graduates in a post-apocalyptic U.S., who are put through a series of tests to determine whether they have what it takes to become the leaders of future generations.

Sony Pictures and producer Neil Moritz optioned remake rights to A Prophet, the French film about a young man’s rise to the top of a crime syndicate. The original film earned a Best Foreign Language Film Oscar nominee in 2010 and won Grand Prize at Cannes and nine César Awards in France.

Javier Bardem is taking another villainous role, starring opposite Sean Penn in the international assassin thriller The Gunman, from Taken director Piere Morel.

Christoph Waltz has signed to star in True Crimes, a project based on a feature by David Grann in The New Yorker about the case of Krystian Bala, a Polish writer who was convicted of murder in 2007.

Kirsten Vangsness and Joe Mantegna of Criminal Minds are the latest Hollywood celebrities to take to Kickstarter to try to fund pet projects. The CM duo hope to turn the 2009 stage production of the comedy noir Kill Me, Deadly! into a feature film.

In an article roundup of casting additions, Deadline reported that Ken Howard and David Krumholtz have joined Robert Downey Jr. and Robert Duvall in The Judge, a film about the murder trial of Judge Joseph Palmer (Duvall) who is defended by his estranged attorney son (Downey); and Max Ryan has landed a role oin Tokarev with Nicolas Cage and Danny Glover, playing a woman who aids a reformed crook in finding the Russian mobsters who kidnapped his daughter.

TV

MRC and Leonardo DiCaprio's Appian Way production company are adapting the historical fiction/gritty crime/sci-fi novel The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes. The story follows a serial killer who uses a house in Depression-era Chicago to time travel, but has to kill "shining girls," or those with talent and potential, in order to keep traveling.

ITV has ordered a second season of Endeavour, the prequel series to the long-running Inspector Morse based on crime novels by Colin Dexter, with Shaun Evans playing the Inspector as a younger man. (Hat tip to Omnimystery News.)

Bridget Regan will appear in a 10-episode arc on USA's White Collar, playing a beautiful rare book scholar who becomes entangled with Neal's (Matt Bomer) latest con and Neal himself.

Christina Ricci has signed on to play Lizzie Borden,
the woman who was accused of killing her stepmother and father with a
hatchet in 1892. The untitled made-for-TV will appear on Lifetime,
although the broadcast date hasn't been set.

BBC America released a "launch trailer" for the upcoming third season of Luther, starring Idris Elba stars as DCI John Luther. (Hat tip to Omnimystery News.)

PODCASTS/VIDEO
 
Jason Matthews, a 33-year veteran of the C.I.A and author of the debut spy thriller Red Sparrow, was a guest on CBS This Morning.

Suspense radio featured James Tabor, David Morrell and Hank Steinberg on June 1st and also a one on one with John Lansing as part of the new Partners in Crime author tour radio series.

Lee Goldberg is the first guest on "Pulp Friction with Paul Levine, " chatting out his new book The Heist, co-written with Janet Evanovich.


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Published on June 08, 2013 11:32

June 7, 2013

Friday's "Forgotten" Books - The Port of London Murders

Since I'm on the road this week, I'm reposting this "classic" FFB, The Port of London Murders, in honor of Crimefest held in the UK this past weekend.


Port-of-london-murdersJosephine
Bell, the pen name of Doris Collier Ball, was born in Manchester in
1897, educated at Cambridge, and became a University College Hospital of
London physician. She married a fellow physician who died at a young
age in 1936, which is when Bell turned her hand to writing, even as she
maintained her medical practice.

She was a co-founder of the
Crime Writers' Association, serving as its chair in 1959, and also
became a member of the Detection Club. She eventually closed her medical
practice at age 57 but continued to write full time until she was 85,
creating numerous sleuths in her more than 40 crime novels (at the rate
of two a year), such as AmyTupper, Dr. David Wintingham, Dr. Henry
Frost, and Scotland Yard Inspector Steven Mitchell.

Not
surprisingly, her novels often feature a strong medical component, not
the least of which were two of her doctor-protagonists. She also
featured poison and other unusual methods of murder prominently in her
plots. Bell and her family were experienced sailors, and the author drew
upon this knowledge, too, using many vivid passages in her books that
relate to the water and to various nautical details.

Water is certainly at the heart of the setting in Bell's novel The Port of London Murders
from 1938, specifically as the title suggests, the port area of
London's River Thames. It's a tough neighborhood, but the death of one
Mary Holland is still a bit of a shock, even though it appears at first
to be a suicide by Lysol poisoning. Tell-tale needle marks on the
victim's arm lead Detective Sergeant Chandler to suspect murder tied
into a drug ring—which
seems even more chillingly apparent when Chandler disappears shortly
after he starts to investigate, right before he's due to testify at the
inquest. It's up to Inspector Mitchell of Scotland Yard to unravel the
layers of deception and addiction that are exploiting rich and poor
alike in a way that hasn't changed much in the seventy years since the
book was written.

Bell is particularly good with settings, even
the squalid ones that pop up in the novel, no doubt witnessed first-hand
in her role as a physician who saw people from every walk of life. Her
take on the state of medicine in her day was often somewhat bleak, as in
this passage from the book—again, as true today as it was in 1938:


For
the great majority of these cases, too poor to have a doctor of their
own, there was little he could do...Dr. Freeman could encourage them
with a bottle of medicine and help them with a pint of milk a day, but
it was not in his power nor that of anyone else to effect a lasting cure
of their complaints. There were others, too, not old, but equally
hopeless, who attended the dispensary as regular visitors; those struck
down in youth or middle age by tuberculosis, rheumatism, heart trouble,
and a number of more rare diseases. They had come to the end of their
resources, their insurances, and their capacity for earning. The
hospitals could do nothing more for them, but they still lived, in the
worse possible surroundings, and the Public Assistance saw to it that
they did not die too soon.


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Published on June 07, 2013 04:42