Showing posts with label TOWER. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TOWER. Show all posts

Monday, August 2, 2010

TOWER nominated for a Crimespree Award!

Tower (by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman; paperback original; 978-1-935415-07-7; $15) has just been nominated for the 2010 Crimespree Award for Favorite Book of 2009!

Tower has also been nominated for the Anthony Award, Macavity Award, Spinetingler Award & the Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Award (Mystery).

Here are all of the nominations:

Favorite book of 2009
BURY ME DEEP, by Megan Abbott
TOWER, by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman
TRUST NO ONE, by Gregg Hurwitz
THE MYSTIC ARTS OF ERASING ALL SIGNS OF DEATH, by Charlie Huston
THE AMATEURS, Marcus Sakey

Favorite first Book 2009
THE SWEETNESS AT THE BOTTOM OF THE PIE, by Alan Bradley
RUNNING FROM THE DEVIL, by Jamie Freveletti
EVEN, by Andrew Grant
A BAD DAY FOR SORRY, by Sophie Littlefield
THE GHOSTS OF BELFAST, by Stuart Neville

Best in an on-going series for 2009
THE SILENT HOUR, by Michael Koryta
SHATTER, by Michael Robotham
SHANGHAI MOON, by SJ Rozan
WALKING DEAD, by Greg Rucka
TRUTH, by Peter Temple

The winners of each of these awards, along with the recipient of this year's Jack Reacher Award will be announced at Bouchercon in San Francisco.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Two Macavity Award nominations!

This feels like a dream... We've just learned that BFP has earned two Macavity Award nominations!

Tower (by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman) -- Best Mystery Novel!
Tower has also been nominated for the Anthony & Spinetingler Awards and the Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Award (Mystery).

"Last Fair Deal Gone Down" (by Ace Atkins, in Crossroad Blues) -- Best Short Story!
"Last Fair Deal..." has also been nominated for the Anthony & Edgar Awards.

The Macavity Awards are nominated and voted on by the members of Mystery Readers International. The winners will be announced at Bouchercon, the World Mystery Convention, in San Francisco this October. This award is named for the "mystery cat" of T. S. Eliot (Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats).

Other nominees include Megan Abbott, Louise Penny, Stuart Neville, S. J. Rozan, Deborah Crombie, and more. Go here for a complete list of nominees. Thank you so much, Mystery Readers International!!!

Friday, June 4, 2010

Busted Flush Press earns two Anthony nominations!

I (David) have long been a fan of the annual Bouchercon world mystery convention, held each year in a different host city (this year's takes place in San Francisco). My first was Seattle in 1994, followed by Toronto, Chicago, Madison, Indianapolis, etc. Bouchercon is a great place to meet your favorite authors & booksellers; sit in on some fascinating panels; buy lots of books; even explore a new city. But it's also where attendees can vote on the Anthony Awards.... which, as an attendee, is a pretty cool thing to be a part of.

So, of course, I'm extra excited to announce that two Busted Flush Press productions have earned Anthony nominations!

Tower (by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman) -- Best Paperback Original!
Tower has also been nominated for the Spinetingler Award & the Foreword Magazine Book of the Year Award (Mystery).

"Last Fair Deal Gone Down" (by Ace Atkins, in Crossroad Blues) -- Best Short Story!
"Last Fair Deal..." was also nominated for the Edgar Award.

Many many thanks to everyone who voted for the short list! Please check out the Bouchercon blog for a complete list of nominees.

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And here are the BFP authors with a few words...

Reed -- "It's always nice to be recognized by fans and peers. Some peer awards get more repect, but I would say you'd be hard-pressed to come up with a finer, more representative list than the nominations for the Anthony. It's great and humbling all at once."

Ken -- "Without David Thompson, Reed, Craig McDonald & Al Guthrie, there would be no nomination. I'm truly delighted to be nominated and to be a part of Busted Flush. Here's hoping we add the Anthony to Busted Flush's glowing rep." [Thanks, Ken!]

Ace -- "I had hoped to be included in a finer class of people than Ken & Reed. There are plenty of well-heeled, well-groomed professionals out there where I could be grouped. Instead I'm stuck with two scruffy degenerates."

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Congratulations to all of the other nominees! And if you're attending Bouchercon in San Francisco, I'll see you there. :-)

Monday, May 17, 2010

Anthony Award nominations, Daniel Woodrell's WINTER'S BONE

If you attended last year's Bouchercon in Indianapolis, or are already registered to attend this year's in San Francisco (Oct. 14-17), you can nominate the short list for the 2010 Anthony Awards! Categories include: Best Novel, Best First Novel, Best Paperback Original, Best Short Story, and Best Critical Nonfiction Work. Ballots are due by May 28th, just a week away! Download a ballot here.

And may we recommend two Busted Flush Press titles which are eligible for Anthonys: 2010 Spinetingler Award nominee Tower (by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman) for Best Paperback Original and 2010 Edgar Award nominee "Last Fair Deal Gone Down" (by Ace Atkins, in Crossroad Blues) for Best Short Story.

Thanks so much, and happy voting!

P.S. My own personal picks for the other two main fiction categories:
Best Novel -- Shatter (by Michael Robotham; Doubleday), though I also have a special fondness for No Such Creature (by Giles Blunt; Henry Holt).
Best First Novel
-- Mixed Blood (by Roger Smith; Henry Holt/Picador) just barely edges out The Ghosts of Belfast (by Stuart Neville; Soho), but it's mighty close.

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Back Bay Books has released the new movie tie-in cover of Busted Flush Press author Daniel Woodrell's 2006 novel Winter's Bone. Gorgeous, huh? This edition will be out soon.

And here's the estimated schedule of the film's theatrical release, which begins in L.A. & NYC June 11th. See if it's playing in your neck of the woods! Can't wait for it to hit Houston...

ARIZONA
7/9 – Scottsdale – Camelview 5
7/23 – Tucson – The Loft

ARKANSAS
6/18 – Fayetteville – AMC Fiesta Square 16

CALIFORNIA
6/11 – Los Angeles – The Landmark
6/18 – Berkeley – California 3
6/18 – Irvine – University Town Center
6/18 – Pasadena – Playhouse 7
6/18 – Santa Monica – Monica 4-Plex
6/25 – La Jolla – La Jolla Village Cinemas
6/25 – San Diego – Hillcrest Cinemas

COLORADO
6/25 – Denver – Chez Artiste

CONNECTICUT
6/25 - Hartford - Cinema City 4
6/25 - New Haven - Criterion 7

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
6/18 – Washington – E Street Cinema

FLORIDA
7/9 – Tampa – Tampa Theatre

GEORGIA
7/9 – Atlanta – Midtown Art Cinemas 8

ILLINOIS
6/18 – Chicago – Century Centre Cinema

KANSAS
6/18 - Overland Park - Glenwood Arts

KENTUCKY
6/18 – Lexington – Kentucky Theatre
6/18 – Louisville – The Baxter

MARYLAND
6/25 – Baltimore – The Charles

MASSACHUSETTS
6/18 – Brookline – Coolidge Corner Theatre
6/18 – Cambridge – Kendall Square Cinema
6/25 - Amherst - Amherst Cinema Arts Center 3

MICHIGAN
6/25 – Bloomfield Hills – Maple Art Theatre
7/9 - Ann Arbor - Michigan Theater

MINNESOTA
6/25 – Edina – Edina 4

MISSOURI
6/18 – Frontenac – Plaza Frontenac Cinema
6/18 - Kansas City - Tivoli @ Manor Square
6/18 – Springfield – Campbell 16 Cine
6/25 - Branson - Branson Meadows Cinemas
6/25 – West Plains – Glass Sword Cinema

NEW JERSEY
6/18 - Montclair – Clairidge Cinemas 6

NEW YORK
6/11 – New York – Lincoln Plaza
6/11 – New York – Sunshine Cinema
6/18 - Brooklyn - BAM Rose Cinemas
7/23 – Rochester – Little Theatre
7/30 – Albany – Spectrum

NORTH CAROLINA
7/9 – Charlotte – Manor Theatre 2
7/9 – Raleigh – Colony Twin

OHIO
7/9 – Cincinnati – Esquire
7/16 - Cleveland - Cedar Lee
7/30 - Dayton - Neon Movies

OKLAHOMA
8/6 - Tulsa - Circle Theatre

OREGON
6/25 – Portland – Fox Tower

PENNSYLVANIA
6/18 – Philadelphia – Ritz 5

RHODE ISLAND
7/9 - Providence - Avon Cinema

TENNESSEE
7/9 – Knoxville – Downtown West Cinema 8
7/16 – Memphis – Ridgeway 4
7/16 – Nashville – Belcourt Theatre

TEXAS
6/25 – Austin – The Arbor
6/25 – Dallas – Magnolia Theatre
6/25 – Houston – River Oaks Theatre

UTAH
7/16 – Salt Lake City – Broadway Centre Cinemas

VIRGINIA
6/18 – Arlington – Shirlington 7

WASHINGTON
6/25 – Seattle – Uptown Cinemas 3
6/25 – Seattle – Guild 45th Theatre

And if you haven't seen it yet, view the movie trailer here.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

2010 Spinetingler Award nominations!

Busted Flush Press is nominated for Best Mystery/Crime Fiction Press, Publisher or Imprint. Tower (by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman) is nominated for Best Novel: Legend (by an author with 9+ novels published). And you can participate in the poll! Please go here to view the nominees & vote for your favorites! Congratulations to the other wonderful publishers also nominated: Bitter Lemon, New Pulp, Serpent's Tail, Soho, and Switchblade. We are honored to be in such great company.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

TOWER nominated for FOREWORD Book of the Year Award!

Tower (by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman; trade paperback original; $15) has been nominated for the Foreword Book of The Year Award in the Mystery category!

Foreword Reviews' Book of the Year Awards were established to bring increased attention to librarians and booksellers of the literary and graphic achievements of independent publishers and their authors. Foreword is the only review trade journal devoted exlusively to books from independent houses.

Winners will be announced at BookExpo in New York City in May.

Update (03/20/10): Speaking of Reed Farrel Coleman... Tyrus Books has just released the cover of the 6th Moe Prager novel, Innocent Monster, due out in October. Ain't it gorgeous?? Tyrus & Busted Flush Press will work together not only on the release of Innocent Monster, but the new reprints of Soul Patch (September) and Empty Ever After (October), with promotions, contests, giveaways, and more. Stay tuned to both of our blogs!

Thursday, March 11, 2010

The story behind THE EXTERMINATORS

By Bill Fitzhugh

The long and winding road to the publication of The Exterminators. And oh, what a long, strange trip it’s been…

David asked me for some blog content to commemorate our deal to publish the long awaited sequel to Pest Control. I decided to take a look back at the history of the little bug book that could…

It all started in May of 1991. A screenplay brainstorming session with a former writing partner led to the germ of the idea that would lead to a screenplay called Pest Control.

We finished a draft in September of 1991.

It was optioned for $4,000 November 1991, but the project went nowhere.

Worked on other screenplays for the next two years (including the script that would eventually become my third novel, Cross Dressing) before I decided to try writing Pest Control as a comic novel.

I began research in June 1993. I finished a draft in the fall of 1994. After rejections by 124 agents, I got a call from Jimmy Vines who loved it. However, all the major publishing houses passed on it. Jimmy told me not to worry, told me to start writing another book because he was going to sell Pest Control. So I started on The Organ Grinders.

In July 1995, Jimmy Vines gets the Pest manuscript to the New York offices of Spring Creek Productions. They loved it and send it to their L.A. offices on the lot at Warner Brothers.

On August 3, 1995, Spring Creek Productions bought the film rights to Pest Control for $500,000 against $1 million (i.e., half now, the other half if/when they make it).

October 1995, Japanese and UK publishers buy Pest Control.
November 1995, Avon Books buys North American rights.
February 1996, German publisher buys it.
March 1996, Italian publisher buys it.

May 1996, Pest Control is published in the UK. The Times of London calls it “one of the funniest, most off-beat thrillers to hit the bookstalls in years… Fitzhugh does for New York what Carl Hiaasen did for Miami.” And just like that, five years and 125 agents later, I’m an overnight success.

1997, Pest Control is published in the US, Germany, and Japan.

Italians decide to wait for the film. Bastards.

Many screenplay drafts are written and several directors are considered, but none Warner Brothers likes enough to make the movie.

Jimmy Vines begins urging me to write a sequel to Pest. I say I don’t have a good enough story for it. So I write The Organ Grinders, then Cross Dressing (which Universal Studios bought but still hasn’t made. The bastards.)

Jimmy Vines continues to urge me to write a sequel to Pest. I say I still don’t have a good enough story for it. So I write Fender Benders and Heart Seizure.

Jimmy Vines continues to urge me to write a sequel to Pest. I say I don’t have a good enough story for it. So I write Radio Activity and Highway 61 Resurfaced.

February 2005. The late, great, George Taylor Morris reads Radio Activity. George is the program director for the Deep Tracks channel of XM Satellite Radio. We start talking. I have an idea for a radio show. He says send him a sample. So I do.

Early 2005, I finally figure out a story for the sequel to Pest Control and begin writing The Exterminators.

May 2005, “Fitzhugh’s All Hand Mixed Vinyl” debuts on XM Satellite Radio. Five years later, it's on the air five days a week on Sirius-XM.

June 2007, a German Radio Production company buys the rights to make Pest into a radio show.

June 2007, an attorney from New York sends me an email saying he represents a producer who wants to turn Pest Control into a musical. Seriously? Yes, seriously.

July 2007, Canum Entertainment buys the STAGE MUSICAL RIGHTS for Pest. Seriously.

August 2007, the German Radio version of Pest airs for the first time.

November 2007, a Romanian publisher buys the rights for Pest.

April 2008, Pest Control: The Musical hits the stage in Los Angeles to excellent reviews. (It goes on to win awards for Best Costume. Seriously, the best cockroach costumes you’ve ever seen.

June 2008, a Spanish publisher buys rights to Pest.

September 2009, Reed Farrel Coleman is in Los Angeles on tour for Tower. We go out to dinner after his signing at The Mystery Book Store. He says great things about his publisher, Busted Flush Press.

October 2009, I contact David Thompson, who 'craps his pants' [editor's note: Not really.] when asked if he's interested in reading The Exterminators.

February 2010, Busted Flush Press and Fitzhugh have agreed to publishing deal.

April 2011 (twenty years after the original idea for the original screenplay) the sequel to Pest Control is published.

There’s an old saying that “Good things come to those who wait.” It’s true. If you enjoyed Pest Control, you’ll love The Exterminators. But you’ll have to wait…

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Bill Fitzhugh is Toastmaster at this weekend's Left Coast Crime in Los Angeles (March 11-14). Visit him online at www.billfitzhugh.com.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Sorry, running behind...

My New Year's resolution was to stay more on top of things and NOT get behind any longer... Crap, less than a week in, and I've already blown it.

Very quickly, I need to thank Janet Rudolph (pictured at left) of Mystery Readers Journal for allowing Reed Farrel Coleman (Walking the Perfect Square) the opportunity to talk about what it was like to write Tower with Ken Bruen (London Boulevard)... "We never disagreed over who had final say. There were no pissing contests." Read more here.

Also, coming later this year... Busted Flush Press will reprint Reed's Shamus Award-winning 4th & 5th Moe Prager novels, with new forewords! Soul Patch (w/ a new foreword by Craig Johnson) is tentatively scheduled for May, and Empty Ever After (w/ a new foreword by S. J. Rozan) will be out in time for Bouchercon 2010 in San Francisco, and in time for Tyrus Books's publication of Moe Prager #6, Innocent Monster! Cover art coming soon.

I hope to get back on track with blogging later this week. As always, thanks so much for dropping by! And if you have any comments, suggestions, complaints (or, ahem, praise!), don't hesitate to drop me a line at bustedflushpress@yahoo.com. I'd love to hear from you.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Catch Reed Farrel Coleman on XM/Sirius!

Reed Farrel Coleman, the 2009 Shamus Award-winning author of Empty Ever After, will be interviewed on XM/Sirius Book Radio's "Cover to Cover Live!", tomorrow, Tuesday, December 22, 3-4 p.m. EST. He will be interviewed about Tower (co-written with Ken Bruen) and his Moe Prager novels. Catch it on XM 163 & Sirius 117.

Reed will also be featured on NPR's Fresh Air this week, as part of Maureen Corrigan's year-end round-up of favorite mysteries. We'd thought it was to be today, but it looks like it'll run later in the week. As soon as we know, it'll be posted here.

To coincide with Reed's NPR appearance, Busted Flush Press has some great news to announce about new acquisitions. Well...... we'll hold off until the NPR piece runs, but we can say it involves Daniel Woodrell (Winter's Bone) and Don Winslow (The Dawn Patrol)... please check back later in the week. (We're such teases!)

In other BFP news...

Donna Moore (Go to Helena Handbasket...) appears to be excited about her galleys of Old Dogs. But it looks as though she's attacking her parents with a copy! Chuffed, indeed. Visit her blog here... you could win an Old Dogs galley!

Thriller writer Zoë Sharp (Third Strike) is interviewed on MrEdit's blog. Her first introduction to crime fiction? Leslie Charteris's The Misfortune of Mr. Teal.

L.A.'s The Mystery Bookstore picks their favorite mysteries of 2009... and Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman's Tower makes Linda's & Pam's lists! Big thanks to Linda & Pam (& Bobby, too)!

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Kenneth Wishnia's students on TOWER!

by Kenneth (k.j.a.) Wishnia

My students hate cozies. Really. I’ll assign one every once in a while for balance and maybe three people out of a class of 35 will say they liked it. Everyone else will hate the freaking hell out of it. I teach a crime literature course every fall term at Suffolk Community College in Brentwood, one of the poorer areas of Long island, and I’ve observed that our students always respond more favorably to hardboiled and noir stories, in part because the sensibilities at the darker end of the genre more closely resemble their own life experiences. In fact, this year’s group became such experts in analyzing the genre they even started complaining that some of the stories in Megan Abbott’s anthology A Hell of a Woman weren’t noir enough for them.

I repeat: some of the stories in A Hell of a Woman weren’t noir enough for them...

So I promised them that the next assignment would supply the electric jolt of noir that they were craving: Tower, by Ken Bruen and Reed Farrel Coleman.

They loved it.

And they loved it even more when Reed Coleman dropped by to discuss the novel with us. (We’ve also brought Lee Child, S.J. Rozan, Jason Starr, Megan Abbott, Steve Hamilton and many other authors to our campus over the years.)

One student compared it to the collaboration between Jay-Z and Linkin Park on the album Collision Course, so naturally, we had to christen Reed with a new title: “The Jay-Z of Noir.” (Ken is stuck with being Linkin Park, I guess.)

Other sample comments:

“It was like a hybrid of a Guy Ritchie movie like Snatch and Martin Scorcese’s Goodfellas.”

“It was really disturbing that the only time Griffin ever showed emotion was in the presence of violence, or when someone was speaking about violence. He was a sick bastard.”

“Interestingly, it is finding love that impacts both men more than any of the criminal activity they are involved in... Nick’s experience with love eases his rage; Todd’s experience ignites his rage.”

One woman summed it up in six words: “Love, Hate, F#@^k... then you Die.”

I have my favorite moments as well, but I’ll just pick one, when Todd says the Irish are always pining for the old country, but not the Jews: “You don’t hear too many second generation Jews pining for Poland or Russia, Romania or Ukraine.” You got that right, boychik, and it was true for my family, too. With good reason.

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Kenneth (K.j.a.) Wishnia was born on a hot August night to a roving band of traveling academics. His first novel, 23 Shades of Black, was nominated for the Edgar and the Anthony Awards, and made Booklist’s Best First Mystery list. His other novels include Soft Money, which Library Journal listed as one of the Best Mysteries of the Year, and Red House, which was a Washington Post Book World “Rave” Book of the Year. His short stories have appeared in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, Murder in Vegas, Queens Noir, and elsewhere. Ken’s latest novel, The Fifth Servant, a Jewish-themed historical set in Prague in the late 16th century, is due out from William Morrow/HarperCollins in Feb. 2010. He teaches writing, literature and other deviant forms of thought at Suffolk Community College in Brentwood, Long Island.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Busted Flush hits the HUFFINGTON POST and DALLAS MORNING NEWS!

Best-selling thriller writer Jason Pinter interviewed six renowned crime-fiction reviewers on The Huffington Post, and BFP was mentioned a few times, especially in response to the question "Which small presses do you feel are doing the best job publishing crime novels?" Mystery Scene's Kate Stine said, "[O]ne of my favorites is... Busted Flush in Texas. Not only do they select high quality books, they do what so many small presses don't: lavish care on the covers and general marketing materials." Read the entire interview here. BFP praise aside, it's a wonderful, informative exploration of the state of the crime novel & where it's heading.

Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman's Tower was #1 on Dallas Morning News's Paperback Fiction best-seller list (running November 1st)! Special thanks to Legacy Books, one of Texas's largest indie booksellers, for this!

Monday, October 5, 2009

Reed hits the road... and other news!

Reed Farrel Coleman (Tower) and Jason Pinter (The Fury) launched their new books at NYC's Mysterious Bookshop last Wednesday. The place was packed and both books sold very well. Congrats, Reed & Jason, and big thanks to Mysterious Bookshop for putting on a great event!

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Reed Farrel Coleman hits the road this week to promote his newest release, Tower (written w/ Ken Bruen; 978-1-935415-07-7; paperback original; $15). He'll be heading to Minneapolis, Denver/Boulder, San Francisco/San Mateo, Los Angeles, Phoenix/Scottsdale, Indianapolis, Dallas, Austin, Houston, the Hamptons, Clinton (New Jersey), and more!

For a complete list of tour stops & dates, please go here.

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Tower is an IndieBound Indie Next Notable for October!
Many thanks to all of the independent bookstores who helped make that possible.

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Listen to Reed read an excerpt from Tower over at our good friends with Crimewav.com. Give yourself a little time to check out all of their other wonderful podcasts, including Megan Abbott, Michael Connelly, Anthony Neil Smith, and more!

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Tower will be reviewed by Betty Webb in the Holiday issue of Mystery Scene magazine (out in November). Here's a sneak peek at the review:

"My top recommendation is Ken Bruen and Reed Farrel Coleman’s Tower. I’m certain that at some point Ken Bruen has written bad prose, but I haven’t found it yet. Here the brilliant Irish noirist shares a byline with Coleman as they work in tandem, telling the story of two tough Brooklyn boys who eventually fall in with the mob. Bruen writes the voice of Nick in gorgeous, mean, Irish punk prose, while Coleman does a superb job with Todd, Nick’s less volatile Jewish friend. Set before the events of 9/11, Nick’s father is a bitter, shot-up cop working security at the World Trade Center. 'Rage kept him grounded,' Nick comments. A battered child, Nick grows up taking out his frustrations on other men’s chins, and eventually winds up working for Boyle, a Bible-spouting psychopath. But not all is grit and gloom. Nick’s interior monologues are quite amusing, especially when he says the exact opposite of what he thinks. Coleman’s Todd is deeply satisfying, too, but in a different way. While foregoing the music of Bruen’s prose, Coleman masterfully paints a picture of an essentially decent Todd whose petty-thief life forces him into a corner he’d rather not be in. 'I’ve always been a bit of a moth. Show me a flame and I’m there.' "

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Tower is an October "Top Shelf Pick" for Austin's BookPeople!

In his review, BookPeople's Scott Montgomery says, "Reed Farrel Coleman and Ken Bruen set the bar for other crime writers. They find the inherent literary qualities in the genre and bring them into bloom. Bruen takes Hammett’s tough, terse phrasing fusing it with attitude of punk rock for a driving, cynical force. Coleman taps into the prose poetry and jazz lyricism of noir fiction and the melancholy of the lone PI to deliver a hardboiled humanism. Together they give us Tower, the story of Nick and Todd, two friends and thieves told in Rashamon style that allows the distinct voice of each other to be uncompromised.... The parallel stories work beautifully. Bruen gives enough narrative space for Coleman to fill without repetition and allow the other expand their style.... Only these two authors could have pulled of this book with both the strong characterization and pace.... The book also finds a way to be a throwback to what a lot of crime fiction fans have mourned, the short (200 pages or less) novel. It has the echoes and experimentation of those paperbacks from the forties to the sixties written by the likes of David Goodis and Dan J. Marlowe. The short format allowed risks that many current over written novels can’t take. Tower reminds you of that tight storytelling that delivered on the edge storytelling with the pathos and punch that drew many of us to the genre in the first place."

Monday, September 7, 2009

TOWER excerpt


Tower, by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman (978-1-935415-07-7; trade paperback original; $15) On sale in 2 weeks!

PROLOGUE

“Always be near to them, but make sure they’re far away from you.”
—Jake Arnott, The Long Firm

GRIFFIN COUGHED BLOOD into my face when I made to slip the chains under his shoulders.

The chop on the water slapped the wrecked pilings with the backs of both hands and the thick layer of mist that hung over the West Side of Manhattan rendered the lights of Jersey a blur. They might well have been cleaning up the Hudson, but you couldn’t tell by the stink coming off the river. Or maybe that was just the stink of Griffin’s rotten soul.

“I forgive ya, boyo,” he said through red, clenched teeth.

Stuck my fist against one of the two holes in his gut and pushed. Made his whole body twitch. Making Griffin twitch, now that was something to take pride in.

“Your forgiving me is pretty fucking funny. Like the devil threatening to send me to the principal’s office. Besides, it wasn’t me that killed you.”

“I know that, but yer forgiven just the same.”

“Sure he didn’t shoot you in the head? You’re talkin’ kinda crazy.”

“Do me a favor, Todd, don’t finish me before ya put me back in the river.”

“That’s the one favor I’m inclined to grant. Why?”

“Penance. I’ve a long list of debts.”

“You’re a sick fuck, Griffin, and nuts if you think a few seconds of terror—”

“It’s a start.”

“For a guy had nothing to say while he was alive, you’ve become a talkative cocksucker as a corpse.”

“Near corpse.”

“I stand corrected.”

“Look at me, boyo. Look close.”

“What am I supposed to see?”

“Yer own self.”

“All I see is a dead man.”

“Then yer blind. Are ya sure yer looking close?”

I began threading the chains through the centers of my old weights. Pulled the chains tight and his whole body shuddered. Didn’t like that, Griffin. Gave me the cold stare. The Griffin I knew.
“Fuck that, Griffin. I’m shitting my pants I’m so scared.”

“Ya should be. Ya’ll be here soon enough.”

“Never.”

“Look at me.”

“Not this shit again. I’m nothing like you.”

“The same.”

“Nah, Griffin, I’ve never killed for pleasure, never detonated a car bomb and blown up toddlers and old ladies. Boyle liked telling people about that, scared the hell out of ’em.”

“Yer missing the point.”

“And you’re pissing me off, Dead Man.” Brought together two end links, slipped an old lock through, and clicked it shut. “Remember Jacob Marley, Griffin? ‘These are the chains I forged in life . . .’ ”

“You’ll be wearing 'em someday. They’re God’s commandments, boyo, not his suggestions. If ya think ya’ll escape the chains, yer a fool. It’s a tower of cards ya’ve built for yerself. Recognize the joker in the deck?”

Yanked hard on the chains to make sure they were secure. Griffin’s body convulsed with such fury that he near rolled over. Few more episodes like that and he’d drop into the river without a push. The spasms calmed.

“Heard what you did to Rudi. Least I won’t end up in a pile of lion shite.”

“What, fish shit is more dignified?”

“S’pose we all turn up as worm shite one way or the other. Doesn’t matter if a bullet finds ya or if a plane falls on yer head, you’ll come out the ass end of something. That shield in yer pocket is no protection. Beneath the skin—” The convulsions began anew, struggle for breath. “Beneath the—”
Tapped my watch crystal. “Tick . . . Tick . . . Tick.”

Said something to me, but it was barely a whisper. The blood bubbled and foamed on his lips. I put my ear close to his lips. Felt his faint breath. Kept my ear there. Waited. His breath grew fainter still. Turned to face him, my nose near touching his. His eyes were glassy, fixed.

“Nothing to say? That’s the Griffin I knew in life.”

His head jerked up, lips pressing against mine. Flailed to push him away, but his head fell dead to the pier before my hands touched him. Mouth painted red in his blood, I rolled him into the river, this time for a longer stay.

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NICK

“HE BEATS ME.”

One line, one simple sentence and I’m off.

Well, almost.

I’m sitting at the counter, peeling the label off a longneck, and the rage is filling my mouth, the bitterness rising like the old bile and I bite down, take a deep breath and try to ease a notch.

The deep breath helps?

Like fuck.

Debbie is the woman who works the bar, not bad looking, a bit of mileage on the odometer but who’s counting? I can see the bruise under her left eye and it’s going to blacken more in a day. I know, I’ve had my share and given them too. But not to women, never hit a woman in my goddamned life. Hurt them?

Yeah.

But that’s a whole other trip and we’ll get to that, like later.

I miss New York, every freaking moment and never more so than now. If this were Brooklyn or even downtown Manhattan, I’d be going to my car, opening the trunk, getting the bat out, taking care of business.

I guess I could say to her

“Suck it up.”

It’s what I’ve been doing for the past ten months and I’m sick of it. This one-horse shithole, this constant rain and the people, as miserable a bunch as you’d ever come across. So, the rain doesn’t help their disposition, like I tell you now, that’s a crock. You put this bunch down in Florida, you know what? They’d be bitching, it’s what they do.

Whine City.

I say to Debbie

“Give me another brew?”

And she gives me the look.

Like, I’m not going to say anything about the shiner or what she just told me. Not today honey.
She sighs, plunks the bottle on the counter, and the way she does it, she’s mad as hell. Disappointed too.

Fuck her.

Disappointment, honey, I wrote the book.

Ask my old man.

I look out the window, the grime-stained panes and I can see the arc of the mill. It’s throwing a shadow, for all the world like the tower, the North Tower, where my old man worked.

That shadow has been with me all my life.

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Tower will be published in September 2009. Find copies at your favorite independent, chain, or online bookseller. See the list at the right for some of the indies that support & stock BFP titles. Go here for the list of cities where Reed Coleman will be touring for Tower.

Be sure to get your first printings of Tower while they last! How can you tell they're first printings? They'll have the red Tower cover... Later printings will all have a black cover.

Oh, and in additional Tower news: An 18-month film option of Tower has just sold to Brad Weston (Bad Santa), Gil Adler (Valkyrie) & Shane McCarthy!

Friday, September 4, 2009

More praise for TOWER!

Booklist: "It's a story as old as hard-boiled fiction, but Bruen, the prolific and gifted Irishman, and Coleman, his new partner in crime, have given it new life... Bruen's prose is some of the leanest, meanest writing crime fans will find, and Coleman's more discursive style amplifies and explicates the story, in the same way that John Coltrane's lyrical saxophone built on the clipped trumpet ideas of Miles Davis. The result is more than the sum of its parts, and it brings to mind Dennis Lehane's brilliant Mystic River. Readers who like their streets mean, and their criminals and cops meaner, will love Tower."

Library Journal: "Plot plays second fiddle to the specifics of sharply etched characters relayed in a prose style that frequently lands a punch to the gut. VERDICT: These two writers have amassed a mantle full of prizes and bevies of fans; much of the fun they must have had playing off each other comes across in this successful collaboration."

Shelf Awareness: "Busted Flush Press has just released its first original novel... billed as a crime tale, and what a tale it is.... Tower is a brutal, and sometimes tender, noir novel that careens through Brooklyn, Manhattan, Boston and Philadelphia, leaving you breathless and stunned."

Publishers Weekly: "Brutally poetic... Bruen and Coleman shine... displaying all the literary chops that have made their novels such cult favorites among mystery fans."

Tower (by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman; 978-1-935415-07-7; trade paperback original; $15) comes out in 3 weeks! Reserve your copies from your favorite bookseller now! Bookstores & libraries can order Tower from Consortium, Ingram, and Baker & Taylor.

Friday, August 7, 2009

TOWER interview #3: Allan Guthrie

The Tower Interviews by Craig McDonald

In September 2009, Busted Flush Press will publish Tower (978-1-935415-07-7; trade paperback original; $15), a collaboration between award-wining crime novelists Ken Bruen (London Boulevard; Once Were Cops; The Guards) and Reed Farrel Coleman (Walking the Perfect Square; The James Deans; Soul Patch). Tower was edited by Edgar Award-nominated crime writer, editor and literary agent, Allan Guthrie (Kiss Her Goodbye; Two-Way Split; Slammer). In a series of interviews on the BFP blog, the trio discusses the process of writing and editing a novel that Publishers Weekly calls "brutally poetic." Edgar Award-nominated crime writer Craig McDonald (Head Games; Toros and Torsos) interviewed Bruen, Coleman, and Guthrie. Craig ("a genuine expert on the history of crime fiction" — Eddie Muller, San Francisco Chronicle) is an accomplished interviewer, and two collections of his interviews with major crime writers have been published: Art in the Blood (PointBlank Press) & Rogue Males (Bleak House Books). Here is the third interview, with crime writer/editor Allan Guthrie! [Interview #1, with Ken Bruen, can be found here, and interview #2, with Reed Farrel Coleman, is here.]

Craig McDonald: My understanding is [Busted Flush Press's] David Thompson sought you out for this editing post…
Allan Guthrie: That’s right. David’s known of my editing jones for some time—over the last few years he’s been a big supporter of PointBlank Press, where I picked up the habit editing writers like Dave Zeltserman, Duane Swierczynski, Ray Banks. And David’s known that it’s something I miss. As a literary agent, I edit manuscripts to various degrees for some of my clients, but the last book I worked on primarily as an editor was Ed Lynskey’s The Big Cheer, which was two, maybe even three years ago.

CM: What was your approach as editor in tackling this unique challenge of a two-person manuscript with contrapuntal narration?
AG: I approached it as I would any other manuscript. One author, two authors—doesn’t make any difference. Seriously, it’s not the number of authors involved, it’s what’s on the page that matters.

CM: Any special parameters or objectives you set in editing Tower?
AG: Other than trying not to make a fool of myself, no.

CM: Did you have to go back to one or either of the authors to adjust something that the other’s work mandated revising or tweaking?
AG: Reed was my first contact for all the edits, so they went through him and then came back with changes accepted or declined, bits added here and there, suggestions acted on or not and explanations as to why or why not. All very thorough and entirely peaceable.

CM: Were there times you were mediating between the two authors to make sure everything married up into a cohesive storyline?
AG: I came on board after the novel was written, so the storyline was already nice and solid. This sounds really boring but the truth is that this was a painless process, with no trace of ego. Nobody bit anybody’s ear off. Which I admit was a bit disappointing. I was hoping for a spot more carnage from those two.

CM: Did you have any role in the plotting—perhaps in terms of patching story problems or continuity issues?
AG: To a very limited extent. I suggested one or two things that the guys took on board, but my main contribution—I think—was just to help polish what was there. The book was already about 99% of the way done when I first read it and my suggestions were mainly along the lines of trying to make things a little clearer or more consistent. Most of the editing I did was in the details, although there were one or two places where I suggested something a little bigger—adding a scene here or there, something like that.

CM: This isn’t your first time editing Ken. Any special demands you find in handling Ken’s work?
AG: Special demands… well, Ken’s formatting is idiosyncratic, there’s no getting away from the fact. But I really like it. I’ve never seen his prose published the way he formats it, although I’d once planned to publish a story of Ken’s just the way it was written for an anthology I edited. Unfortunately the anthology got pulled at the last minute. Would have been interesting… and possibly a first.

CM: Ken’s manuscripts do have a very distinctive… look. The published version of Once Were Cops has a very striking single-sentence formatting that is much more in keeping with the more recent original manuscripts of Ken’s I’ve seen…
AG: Yes, even the very early manuscripts have that distinctive Bruen look. I’m glad to see the books being published more as Ken thinks they should look rather than as convention dictates. The way his writing appears on the page is clearly of huge importance to Ken.

CM: Ken credits you with making one or two “brilliant” tweaks to his portion of the narrative. Can you elaborate?
AG: Hell, no, I can’t think of anything remotely brilliant.

CM: Could you preview some of your own current/coming projects?
AG: I have a new book out in the U.K. called Slammer, a prison novel about a young prison officer who can’t cope with the stresses of the job. It’s out in the U.S. in November. And in a couple of months [out now!] I’ll have a novella out in the U.K. called Killing Mum, about a guy who arranges contract killings and one morning gets an anonymous request to have his mother whacked.

CM: Anything else you’d care to get out there?
AG: Just to say it was a real pleasure working on Tower and I hope lots of people read it.

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Craig McDonald is the author of Head Games and Toros & Torsos (both from Bleak House). The third novel in the Hector Lassiter Series, Print the Legend, is forthcoming from Minotaur Books in winter 2010. His current book is a collection of interviews, Rogue Males: Conversations & Confrontations about the Writing Life (Bleak House Books), featuring discussions with James Crumley, Daniel Woodrell, Pete Dexter, James Sallis, James Ellroy and Ken Bruen, among many others. Visit him online at http://www.craigmcdonaldbooks.com/.

Allan Guthrie is the Edgar Award-nominated author of Two-Way Split (PointBlank); Kiss Her Goodbye (Hard Case Crime); Hard Man, Savage Night, and Slammer (all from Harcourt). Visit him online at http://www.allanguthrie.co.uk/.

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Look for a Tower excerpt soon, and even a contest to win your very own Tower galley! Tower will be published in September 2009. Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman will both appear at Bouchercon in Indianapolis! Reed will hit the road to sign Tower, with stops including New York, Minneapolis, Denver/Boulder, Phoenix/Scottsdale, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Dallas, Austin, and Houston (complete tour schedule to be posted soon).

Booksellers / librarians: Order Tower through
Consortium Book Sales & Distribution, Ingram, and Baker & Taylor!

Monday, July 27, 2009

TOWER interview #2: Reed Farrel Coleman

The Tower Interviews by Craig McDonald

In September 2009, Busted Flush Press will publish Tower (978-1-935415-07-7; trade paperback original; $15), a collaboration between award-wining crime novelists Ken Bruen (London Boulevard; Once Were Cops; The Guards) and Reed Farrel Coleman (Walking the Perfect Square; The James Deans; Soul Patch). Tower was edited by Edgar Award-nominated crime writer, editor and literary agent, Allan Guthrie (Kiss Her Goodbye; Two-Way Split; Slammer). In the following interview, the trio discusses the process of writing and editing a novel that Publishers Weekly calls "brutally poetic."

Edgar Award-nominated crime writer Craig McDonald (Head Games; Toros and Torsos) interviewed Bruen, Coleman, and Guthrie. Craig ("a genuine expert on the history of crime fiction" — Eddie Muller, San Francisco Chronicle) is an accomplished interviewer, and two collections of his interviews with major crime writers have been published: Art in the Blood (PointBlank Press) & Rogue Males (Bleak House Books; May 2009). Here is the second interview, with two-time Edgar Award nominee Reed Farrel Coleman! [Interview #1, with Ken Bruen, can be found here.]

REED FARREL COLEMAN

Craig McDonald: The way it was explained to me, you were presented with Ken’s fragment, and essentially had to drive it home. What was your strategy for advancing the narrative and making it whole?
Reed Farrel Coleman: It was the hardest and, in many ways, the most rewarding work I’ve ever done. I had to develop the strategy as I went. Ken takes no credit for this, but the fact is that he left room to breathe in his half of the narrative. This allowed me the space to develop the storyline and to bring both lead characters to life. It also let me bring the book to a crescendo. If he had written his narrative more densely, it would have left me nowhere to go. As written, Tower builds (sorry about the bad pun) to, what I think, is a powerful and emotionally satisfying ending.

CM: One of the appeals of fiction writing is that autonomy and freedom to build worlds, set atmosphere, plot and to define character. Was collaboration at all confining for you in any of those areas?
RFC: It’s difficult to separate this answer from the first answer, but I’ll try. I tell my students that to be a writer you need to develop an incredibly strong and healthy ego. Not a big ego, a strong one. When you really think about it, the notion that someone is going to shell out fifteen or twenty-five bucks to buy a bunch of words that you strung together is pretty ballsy. In order to be a good collaborator, one needs an especially strong ego because you have to both subvert it and rely more heavily on it. To work with Ken I was willing and able to do that.

Wordsworth wrote a sonnet that I often refer to entitled “Nuns Fret Not.” The sonnet is a very strictly defined form and the life of a nun has many strictures. Wordsworth’s point is that even with severe constraints a person can achieve much satisfaction. So it was with Tower. That I had to write characters that weren’t my own invention within a structure that was not my own and according to a timeline that had already been laid out for me was nearly impossible. However, it drove me to do things and reach for strengths I never knew I possessed both as a writer and a person. I am a far better writer for having even tried it.

CM: What particular challenges did you face in writing this book, as opposed to one of your own novels?
RFC: Well, the obvious ones. The characters weren’t my own invention nor was the plot, but that’s not all bad. As a non-outliner, plot develops for me organically. With Tower I was relieved of that gnawing tension that I suffer through with my own novels. The plot was laid out for me. The tough part was making Todd, the character I was responsible for, a reflection of me as an author. This was the brilliance of what Ken did. He gave me an empty vessel into which to pour my vision of Todd. I look at it this way; Ken gave him a name and I gave him a life.

CM: Ken says the “Rashomon” approach of presenting certain events from varying perspectives evolved as you began to expand the work. Was this something you consciously pursued in the early phases?
RFC: I think we need to back up some and get something straight. Doing stuff with Ken isn’t like doing stuff with anyone else. I mean that as an extreme compliment. Ken and I discussed the book in passing, but just like an idea. You know: “Reed, I’ve got this idea for a book. Maybe we could do it together. Here’s what I’m thinking…” Then we didn’t talk about it again for months. One day I get an email and attached is Ken’s half of the book and a prototype book cover he had done with out names on it. The email said something like, “Have at it, buddy!” I mean, that is so Ken. We didn’t really discuss it or plan it. That’s the thing you gotta love about Ken. He can do things like this. He understands challenges and challenging his friends. I took the challenge of Tower as the greatest compliment Ken could give me. He trusted me enough not to screw it up and rise to it. So I guess that’s a roundabout way of saying there wasn’t a lot of preplanning and conceiving here on my end.

CM: What was the most satisfying aspect of this project?
RFC: There are many, but I think the most satisfying will be when I stand up with Ken at the launch party and we read from the book.

CM: Is there anything in the experience you found frustrating?
RFC: In the beginning of the process, there were a million. I’d never taken on anything like this. I really struggled with self-doubt and finding my way ahead. I was frustrated because I couldn’t rely on the old tricks I use with my own stuff. It was like learning a new language all on my own.

CM: How was the editing process in terms of having another writer involved?
RFC: Here’s where Ken really understood the process of collaboration. He had his say, but for the most part trusted me to do the early editing. Then I ran the changes by him and there was very little disagreement if any. We did need an objective eye for the final edits and to make sure we didn’t miss anything because we were so close to the project. This is where Al Guthrie, a splendid writer in his own right, with a sharp editorial eye who knew our work, did a splendid job.

CM: How would you measure the character of Todd against your other series characters?
RFC: I wouldn’t, but for argument’s sake I’ll have a go at it. I went more deeply into Todd’s psyche than I’ve ventured with Dylan Klein or Joe Serpe—the character I write under "Tony Spinosa"—or even Moe Prager. Todd is more violent than any of those characters and has much less impulse control. In fact, loss of control and trying to regain it is the central drive in Todd’s life. That’s the note I hit on because it was a reflection of the task set before me by Ken. How could I regain a sense of control in a book that wasn’t mine to begin with. I realized it only in retrospect.

CM: Have you read the Bruen/Starr collaborations? If so, was there anything you consciously did to avoid comparison with those books?
RFC: I’ve read them, yes, though I’m partial to Bust, which was, in part, dedicated to me—Thank you, boys. And being privy to Jason and Ken’s process for their books helped a lot with Tower. All collaborations are different and neither Ken nor I was interested in trying to repeat what he and Jason had accomplished. From the start, the tone was diametrically opposed to the satirical, winking pose Jason and Ken take for their books. Tower is many things, but funny isn’t one of them.

CM: Tower bears the Bruen convention of heading chapters with quotes from other works. Did you choose your own quotes, or was that style point something overlaid by Ken?
RFC: I enjoy the thing Ken does with the quotes because I learn from them and they, like a prologue for an entire book, help set the tone of the chapter. I used my own quotes and hope they are more in line with the character of Todd as the quotes Ken used are more in line with Nicky. It was great to break out of my own stylistic constraints and try on some different clothing. I’ve always been good at imitating voices and this was a way to do it in writing.

CM: My understanding is that the prologue and epilogue are yours. What inspired this framing decision?
RFC: Pragmatism, plain and simple. When both of our narratives were done, the book still wasn’t of a piece. It wasn’t complete. We both saw that and some of our early readers agreed. So I tried several different prologues—to go back to the question about frustrations, this was the biggest one I had—and, after what felt like a million tries, I hit upon the solution. Ran it by Ken and he loved it. Still, we needed something contextual to round it out. The prologue had created a different kind of imbalance. Prologues and epilogues are more my style than Ken’s, but he let me try an epilogue. I don’t know where I pulled that one out of, but the introduction of a third narrative voice just seemed right. Part of being an artist is knowing when you’re not done and when you’re done. When we took a look at the book with both prologue and epilogue included, we knew it was done.

CM: Was there any disappointment arising from the fact the novel kept you in your NYC setting? Did you wish you’d had another shot at writing Ireland, à la Dublin Noir?
RFC: To tell you the truth, I couldn’t have taken any more challenges with this book. If I had to imagine our characters in another setting, I would have gone completely out my mind. Maybe somewhere down the road, Ken and I can do something set in a different place.

CM: Have Ken and you discussed how you might divide eventual awards/Edgar® statuettes?
RFC: I think we’ll worry about that if and when we get there. Ken and I are both two-time Edgar losers and I don’t think tempting the gods is going to help any.

CM: What are your thoughts on the state of the genre presently?
RFC: I think the genre is indestructible: good times or bad. I believe that. As to the state of the industry… I think they have to look back at what befell the music industry and make some hard decisions. The music industry, as those of us older than forty understood it, no longer exists. It’s a shell of what it was and I would hate for that to happen to publishing. But I would hope that publishers would include the suppliers of their product—writers and agents—in their considerations of how to move ahead. The Kindle is a good idea, but it’s way too expensive to have a huge impact. If the price comes down or if it’s simply given away with the reader guaranteeing to purchase X amount of books, it could be huge. What do I know, I’m just an author?

CM: What’s next for you?
RFC: I’m working on a new book with a new protagonist, but I don’t want to give too much away. I’ve also been working on a very complex novel for many years. It has so many moving parts that I need to step away from it for long periods of time in order to refine it. But I never know exactly what’s next.

CM: Anything you’d like to add?
RFC: I’d like to thank David Thompson for believing in us and for being a publisher on the rise. With the industry in the state it’s in, Busted Flush Press is well-positioned to give a home to great authors and to keep careers alive and flourishing.

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Look for the 3rd interview (with editor/crime writer Allan Guthrie) to run soon, along with an excerpt and more! Tower will be published in September 2009. Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman will both appear at Bouchercon in Indianapolis! Booksellers / librarians: Order Tower through Consortium Book Sales & Distribution, Ingram, and Baker & Taylor!

Friday, July 10, 2009

A quick post... BFP news...

I'm sorry to dash off this post so quickly, but much has been going on, and I promise to write in more detail next week...

Finally, A. E. Maxwell's second Fiddler & Fiora thriller -- The Frog and the Scorpion (978-1-935715-00-8; paperback; $14) -- should arrive in stores in about 2 weeks. A Jewish Iranian friend of Fiddler’s is being blackmailed by terrorists and needs Fiddler’s help. "One of the most interesting and engaging private eyes since Robert Parker’s Spenser."—Advertising Age

We're working on the tour schedule for Tower (by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman; 978-1-935415-07-7; September; paperback original; $15). Due to scheduling conflicts, Ken Bruen may not be able to take part in events outside of NYC and Bouchercon (two of his books are currently filming, with the likes of Colin Farrell & Jason Statham... and Ken's even supposed to have lines in Blitz!), but we'll keep you posted. In the meantime, Reed will be in New York, Minneapolis, Denver/Boulder, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Phoenix/Scottsdale, Austin, Houston... and of course, Bouchercon in Indianapolis! More to come...

Busted Flush just signed up Scottish crime writer Donna Moore (Go to Helena Handbasket) for the American publication of her second novel, Old Dogs. This is an incredibly funny caper thriller... reads like a Guy Ritchie adaptation of The Thomas Crown Affair. I'll post more on this soon, including, at some point, interviews with Donna & her agent, fellow crime writer Allan Guthrie. Old Dogs will be published in summer 2010.

Have a great weekend!

Monday, July 6, 2009

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY review of TOWER!

Publishers Weekly (07/06/09)

Tower (by Ken Bruen and Reed Farrel Coleman; Busted Flush; $15; paperback original; 978-1-935415-07-7) "Divided into two halves, this short, brutally poetic tour of the underside of Brooklyn, Boston and Philadelphia marks the first collaboration between noir masters Bruen (The Guards) and Coleman (The James Deans). Drawing on the classic theme of childhood friends pulled toward different sides of the law, the coauthors tell the story of Nick and Todd in quick concise scenes, sketching backstories and love lives, flipping time and incidents like Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction. Running errands under the cold eyes of an enforcer, Griffin, for the Bible-quoting gangster Boyle, the heroes learn fast enough that 'you live in the rain forest, you get wet.'... Bruen and Coleman shine, dropping in-jokes, experimenting and displaying all the literary chops that have made their novels such cult favorites among mystery fans."

Tower will be published by Busted Flush Press in September. Please contact your favorite independent, chain, or online bookseller -- or library! -- to reserve your copies now.