R.G. Belsky's Blog, page 14

August 10, 2014

August 3, 2014

More Deadly Ink

Story about me at the Deadly Ink conference over the weekend. I caused a bit of controversy talking about The Kennedy Connection at the historical novel panel. Not everyone agreed with me that fiction doesn't have to be totally true to history. Interesting discussion. http://vweisfeld.com/?p=2325
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Published on August 03, 2014 15:30

At Deadly Ink

I met Donald Bain and his wife Renee Paley-Bain at the Deadly Ink Mystery Conference this weekend. Even signed a copy of The Kennedy Connection for them! They've written 45 Murder She Wrote mysteries so far, along with a lot of other great stuff too. Pretty damn impressive, huh? The couple were the guests of honor at Deadly Ink 2014.
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Published on August 03, 2014 15:22

August 1, 2014

The Midnight Hour 

Just got the copy edited manuscript back from Atria for The Midnight Hour - my second Gil Malloy book. It will be published as an ebook in Feburary. Another Gil Malloy book in paperback will follow later in 2015.


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Published on August 01, 2014 09:30

July 31, 2014

Deadly Ink 

Getting ready for Deadly Ink Mystery Conference this weekend at the Hyatt Regency in New Brunswick, N.J. Friday nite, Saturday and Sunday. I'll be appearing on two panels - Putting History into Mystery and Rollercoaster Rides: What Makes a Thriller Compelling."  Donald Bain and his wife, Renee Paley-Bain are the guests of honor. Advance copies of The Kennedy Connection will be ready for signing so should be a good kickoff as I get ready for official pub date of August 12.
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Published on July 31, 2014 06:26

July 29, 2014

Visit to Houston 

Book signing at Murder by the Book in Houston, Texas....August 23 at 4:30 p.m.
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Published on July 29, 2014 16:34

July 16, 2014

Why Did Tippit Stop Oswald?

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Even if one accepts the official story that it was Lee Harvey Oswald who shot Dallas police officer J.D. Tippit after the JFK killing, there is still one baffling question that remains unanswered: Why did Tippit stop Oswald on the street in the first place?
The Warren Commission concluded it was because Oswald fit the description of the suspected Kennedy assassin that had gone out over the police radio.
Okay, that sort of makes sense when you first hear it. Except – upon examination of the facts – it makes no sense at all.
The police description broadcast that day was for an: “Unknown white male, approximately 30, 165 pounds, slender build…no further information or description at this time.” That general description clearly matched much of the male population of Dallas. (and didn’t exactly match Oswald). So why did Tippit – seeing a man simply walking down a street in the middle of the day miles from the assassination site – decide to stop him as a possible suspect?
There are also many questions about where the police description – vague as it was – ever came from. Many believe it was based on a witness, Howard Brennan, who claimed to have seen a man in the sixth floor window at the time of the assassination. But other accounts say the description came from an unidentified source who said he saw an unidentified man running from the Book Depository after the shots were fired. No official basis for the police broadcast of that early description was ever confirmed.
What does all of this mean? I have no idea. Oswald and Tippit were the only people who really knew the circumstances that brought them together on that fateful afternoon.  All the rest is just speculation. Maybe Oswald did something, said something to make Tippit suspicious - or maybe it wasn't even Oswald at all that shot him.
But I do know that the official version of the Oswald/Tippit encounter just doesn’t add up to me.
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Published on July 16, 2014 15:12

July 13, 2014

Booklist Review: Intriguing Alternative Interpretation of the Kennedy Assassination

Aug. 2014. 352p. Atria, paperback, $16 (9781476762326).
REVIEW. First published July 7, 2014 (Booklist Online).

A disgraced reporter tries to turn his career around with a story that could solve the 50-year-old assassination of JFK. A literary agent tells reporter Gil Malloy about a man who claims to be the illegitimate son of Lee Harvey Oswald. The man believes he has a solid alibi for his father on November 22, 1963. While Malloy tries to prove the man’s claims, a murderer is running amok in Manhattan, leaving his victims with Kennedy half-dollars by their bodies. Are the killings related to the events of the past? Belsky’s tale adds another intriguing alternative interpretation of the Kennedy assassination and will appeal to those who just can’t leave the grassy knoll alone. — Jeff Ayers
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Published on July 13, 2014 07:22

July 7, 2014

Library Journal likes The Kennedy Connection

Library Journal07/01/2014
New York reporter Gil Malloy has been publicly disgraced by the taint of a fabricated source (think Jayson Blair), but he still holds a position at the paper. Unexpectedly, his former literary agent pitches him a wild story; she knows a man who claims to be Lee Harvey Oswald's son and has proof that his father didn't assassinate President John F. Kennedy. Malloy shrugs this off, instead opting to help Roberto Santiago, an old police detective friend who is convinced that a long-ago shooting case was a police cover-up. Santiago dies shortly after in a hit-and-run accident, and Malloy gets distracted by a more glamorous case. A photographer named Shawn Kennedy has been murdered, with a Kennedy half-dollar left next to her body. A second killing occurs, and another Kennedy half-dollar is left on the scene. Suddenly, knowing more about Oswald Jr. becomes imperative. Muscling his way into the spotlight, Malloy fails to see key clues connecting his two stories. Meanwhile, the body count increases. VERDICT Belsky's (Playing Dead) quick read has unexpectedly clever twists, perfect for the conspiracy-oriented reader. The first-person narrative keeps the tone personal.
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Published on July 07, 2014 05:05

July 4, 2014

Great Review from Kirkus!

"Engrossing...fast-moving and well plots yarn with twists the reader probably won't see coming...a terrific story. " Read the entire Kirkus review of The Kennedy Connection.....
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Published on July 04, 2014 19:21