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Showing posts with label Declan Burke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Declan Burke. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Ten Things That Happened While I Was In Bath

Bath in a bookshop in Bath
photo by Janet McKnight
Just back from a short and most pleasant visit to Bath. Still catching up but here's a few things that happened while I was gone:

I: Bloody Scotland launched its website, and very pretty it is too. There's also news of a short story competition that could see you published in a Blasted Heath ebook anthology.

II: Dead End Follies listed Ten Literary People On The Web That You Absolutely Need To Know and were kind enough to mention me. "I suspect Allan has eight pairs of arms, six brains and needs about twenty minutes of sleep a night for optimal functioning." I wish.

III: Anthony Neil Smith made his excellent Choke On Your Lies free for Kindle on Friday. It goes back to 'paid' on Monday so grab it while you can.

IV: Liberties Press has reduced the price of Declan Burke's Irish Book Awards-shortlisted Absolute Zero Cool to £1.95.

V: Speaking of Dec, here's a piece on ebook pricing he wrote for The Irish Times. And here's another interesting piece on ebook pricing from Digital Book World, specifically in relation to the impact of Amazon's KDP Select.

VI: Here's a chance to win Gerard Brennan's chapbook: Possession Obsession And A Diesel Compression Engine.

VII: NoirCon 2012 looms ever closer, with distinguished guest Lawrence Block and keynote speaker Robert Olen Butler (this I'd love to hear: Butler's book on writing fiction, From Where You Dream, is a mind-blower).

VIII: Benedicte Page gave Blasted Heath's February titles. Ray Banks's Wolf Tickets and Douglas Lindsay's The Unburied Dead a nice shout-out in her ebooks round-up in The Guardian.

IX: eBooknewser lists 10 Boards For Ebook Fans from new social networking site, Pinterest.

X: Some much-appreciated and very inspiring Amazon customer reviews have appeared for a few of my books. Two-Way Split is described as having "a gut-knotting finale that unfurls with the inevitability of all great tragedy and the best nasty sex ever" (thanks, Maya!); Savage Night is described as being "Shakespearean in scope and theme, unrelenting, tragic ... a powerful revenge tale, in which violence, fate, love, hate and even humor commingle like blood and wine, one barely distinguishable from the other" (thanks, Marilyn!); and finally "the writing quality is high, the stories are top notch, and this piece is worth your attention" (thanks, Pearce!) is a terrific response to Hilda's Big Day Out.

Saturday, 30 July 2011

Two-Way Split: One-Month Old (digitally speaking)

Two-Way Split by Allan Guthrie
99p/99c

Amazon UK, Amazon US.


Two-Way Split has received some very nice mentions since the Kindle release at the end of June. Thank you one and all! Here are a few first-month highlights.

Les Edgerton, at his writing blog, says: "this is a novel that is enormously entertaining. The words such as “riveting” and the phrases such as “couldn’t put it down,” or “this was a page-turner,” are overused in assessments like this—many times, undeservedly--but dang it, all of those and more apply to this novel. I couldn’t put it down; it was riveting; it was decidedly a page-turner… and I’ve become a huge, huge fan of Guthrie."

Luca Veste at Guilty Conscience says: "'Two-Way Split' was a complete surprise to me. I didn't know an awful lot about it when I started reading, but straight away I was pulled in. Guthrie has superb knack of setting the pace early, the story never drags. The way the story unravels, you're never sure of what will happen next, no words wasted or spent overly describing anything incidental, it is a fast paced, edge of your seat thriller."

There's also an interview with me at the Guilty Conscience blog.

AJ Hayes at Octogeek says: "In Two Way Split, Mr. Allan Guthrie with a maniacal laugh, knocks your derby clear off your head, sends it flying with the wind and announces that people, events and even life itself always come down to the jagged edge of a two way split. Buckle your chin strap and hang on, troops. You’re in for a RIDE!"

There's another interview with me at Anthony Neil Smith's Herman's Greasy Spoon.

And a Russian review from Ray Garraty at Endless Falls Up: "Two-way Split is Allan Guthrie's debut novel, and it's hard to believe. The book is so masterfully written, so there is lots of energy here, that it can be seen: the author is a great writer. Very, very good book."

Declan Burke at Crime Always Pays says: "Fans of classic crime writing will get a kick or five out of TWO-WAY SPLIT, and we’re talking classic: Allan Guthrie’s multi-character exploration of Edinburgh’s underbelly marries the spare, laconic prose of James M. Cain with the psychological grotesqueries of Jim Thompson at his most lurid … The result is a gut-knotting finale that unfurls with the inevitability of all great tragedy and the best nasty sex – it’ll leave you devastated, hollowed out, aching to cry and craving more."

Jay Stringer at Do Some Damage says: "If James M Cain wrote a heist story set in Scotland, the result would read a lot like Two Way Split. It's a book that sets the fuse on page one and then runs like hell, and you won't find a better debut crime novel."

There's yet another interview with me at Audacious Author.

Daz's Short Book Reviews says: "[Guthrie] masterfully blends all these ingredients together with fast paced and gritty descriptive writing. He simmers several plot lines until boiling and mixes them all together to create a fantastically enjoyable novel. Another great creation from one of Scotland’s finest crime writers."

And finally, entirely unrelated to Two-Way Split, here's a piece I wrote as part of Dead End Follies excellent Ten Rules To Write Noir series.

Tomorrow, a post about sales.


Two-Way Split by Allan Guthrie
99p/99c

Amazon UK, Amazon US

Friday, 1 July 2011

JT Lindroos: Covers To Celebrate

JT Lindroos
JT Lindroos launched my writing career. As the driving force behind PointBlank Press, he took on an unpublished nobody from Scotland who'd amassed literally hundreds of rejection slips, and risked his editorial ass on Two-Way Split. It was the second book published by PointBlank, JT's imprint at Wildside Press. He's known, quite rightly, as an excellent cover designer. But he's also one of the best editors I've worked with. I learned more in that first edit from him than I'd learned in the previous half-a-dozen years. We went our separate ways after PointBlank, but always kept in touch, and when I started publishing ebooks, there was only one person I wanted to have as my cover designer. JT, poor guy, has done about 20 covers for Two-Way Split alone now! 

Today's his 40th birthday, so I thought it would be a great opportunity to see some of the other covers he's done. There's quite a variety, as you'll see below. Also one or two exclusives. SLAMMER and GUN (now there's a cover that pops) have never been seen before, and BARNEY THOMSON (another beauty) is pretty new as well. So here's to remarkably talented JT Lindroos. Have a good one, Juha!

 
"You only need to look at the PointBlank covers to know that JT Lindroos has an explosive talent for design. For me, Alan Slater will always be that man with the savage side parting, and JT will always be a go-to guy for eye-popping covers. I don't know anyone quicker, better or more open to ideas than him. And the thing of it is, I don't need to. Happy birthday, JT." Ray

"Thanks JT for bringing a great new dimension to my old book. Looking forward to working together on many more. Happy 40!" Douglas

"Happy Birthday, J.T., and thanks for the fantastic covers!" James


"Forty happy returns, JT. If my books were as good as your cover designs, we'd both be millionaires. Much obliged." Declan

"JT Lindroos is a top bloke and absolutely brilliant to work with. He was so enthusiastic about ...Go To Helena Handbasket and had so many great ideas. He came up with a cover design for the book and, after discussion, he then sent me another one...which made me cry. It was absolutely perfect. And that's the same with all the covers that he does - they really fit the books. He understands the books, he cares about them, and he sees things in a unique way. Happy birthday JT, and thanks for everything." Donna
"Happy 40th JT! Always a pleasure – and an honour – to work with you. Many thanks for the stunning covers." Russel
"Best Birthday Wishes to a Great Guy with a True Noir Vision. Have a few vodkas on me today, JT!" Dave

"Great cover for PSYCHOSOMATIC. Have a good 40th, man." Neil
"Happy birthday, JT. Have a fab day and thanks for the great cover design." Ed
"Happy Birthday JT! Thanks for all the great covers you've done so far and all the great ones to come! Hope you have a great day!" Lee

"Here's hoping you have a great day, JT, and thanks for all the superb work you've done. Happy Birthday, sir." Al
"JT - have a great 40th! And thanks for helping me start my writing career with such a fabulous cover." Debbie


Friday, 1 April 2011

Declan Burke interview: Eightball Boogie

Eightball Boogie by Declan Burke
86p/99c

Declan Burke is an author and arts journalist. He has published three novels to date: ‘The Big O’, ‘Crime Always Pays’ and ‘Eightball Boogie’. He is the editor of ‘Down These Green Streets: Irish Crime Writing in the 21st Century’ (Liberties Press), and hosts a website dedicated to Irish crime fiction called Crime Always Pays.

What's the book about, and what was your motivation for writing it?

Eightball Boogie started out as a fun exercise in writing a chapter about the classic private eye moment - when our intrepid hero first meets the desperate client. I liked the private eye, Harry Rigby, so much that I just kept on writing, and the story kept coming. As I got into it, the motivation became a fluid thing, and changed quite a lot. At first, I simply liked the idea of having a classic private eye (Rigby is heavily influenced by Marlowe, Spade and Archer) operating in the northwest of Ireland; later, as the story came to incorporate corrupt politicians and ex-paramilitaries diversifying away from politically-inspired crime to more prosaic forms of criminality, I thought the book had something relevant to say about its time and place. Ireland has changed pretty dramatically in the last decade or so, and I wanted to try to reflect some of those changes.

Who designed your cover and how much difference does a good one make?

JT Lindroos designed the cover, and did a very fine job indeed, in my humble opinion. It took a couple of tries to get it right, mainly because JT is the creative guy and I kept sticking my oar in, but I did want to get it as right as possible, because a good cover is pretty important, I think. It’s particularly important when it’s the cover of an ebook, because the covers of ebooks are generally only viewed in postage stamp-sized images, so the cover needs to be stark, dramatic, eye-catching. With so many other books clamouring for the reader’s attention, your cover needs to stand out. In essence, the cover is the first impression a reader will get of your book, and we all know how important first impressions are. If the cover doesn’t look smart, if it isn’t produced to a professional standard, the reader - and rightly so, in my opinion - is going to presume that the writing inside is similarly lacking.

What's your favourite part of the writing process?

I’m one of those naive writers who just loves everything about the writing process. Drill down to the very fundamentals of what I try to do, and it’s all about getting the right words in the right order on a sentence-by-sentence basis. And I love tinkering with words, that’s why I first wanted to become a writer. It’s a simple but simultaneously complex joy. I think it was Joseph Conrad who said (I’m paraphrasing) that every word of every line of every sentence of every paragraph of every page should lead inexorably to the final line. In a sense, that’s what I’m after. I think if you pay attention to every single word, then you’ve a pretty good chance of writing a good book. Then, once the first draft is finished, I love redrafting, because that’s where the tinkering really starts to happen. I really don’t mind how many drafts it takes to get it right-right-right, because to me it’s all fun. It can be tough getting the time to do it, because I have a full-time day job, but for that hour or two every day when I get to tinker with the words, it’s pure joy.

As a reader, how would you describe your taste in crime fiction?

I suppose I’d err on the side of realism; I do like my novels to be rooted in an authentic reality, even if I’m reading some kind of crime / sci-fi hybrid. I’m too old these days, I think, to buy into the super-human James Bond-style hero who saves the world with one leap over a high building; I’m much more interested in heroes (or anti-heroes) who are ostensibly ordinary men and women, but who find themselves tested in extremis by extraordinary situations. I think that that is partly because, for me, the crime novel is (or should be) something of a document of its time and place, and that it is far more important a genre than it’s generally given credit for by the literary, mainstream reviewers and critics.

As a writer, how would you describe your ideal reader's taste in crime fiction?

That’s tough question for me - I don’t have an ideal reader. I think the idea of an ‘ideal reader’ is misplaced, the idea that if only a writer could get his book to a reader, or group of readers, who appreciate a number of issues, then that reader or readers will fully ‘get’ the story. It’s not the job of a reader to be an ‘ideal reader’, it’s the job of the writer to be fully convincing in terms of his or her characters, plot, setting, etc., so that any potential reader will be fully convinced of the story which unfolds. It’s not that simple, of course; any given reader might not be well disposed to, say, a graphic representation of violence, or hurt visited on a dog or a cat, and if your story contains those elements, then you’ll lose that reader no matter how convincing your story is. Maybe my concept of an ‘ideal reader’ is a reader who comes to a book, any book, with an open mind, ready and willing to be persuaded by the story. That’s certainly how I open every book. After that, as I say, the ball is very much back in the writer’s court.
 
If you had to re-read a crime novel right now, what would you choose?

That’s another tough question, although for all the right reasons - there are so many crime novels I’d love to have the time to re-read. I do try to read at least one Raymond Chandler novel every year, and if I had to pick one it would be The Long Goodbye. But I’d also like to be able to re-read Alistair MacLean’s When Eight Bells Toll every now and again; there’s at least a handful of Elmore Leonard’s novels that are worth re-reading; James Ellroy’s novels, and particularly those of the ‘Dudley Smith quartet’; the early George Pelecanos novels; Barry Gifford’s crime stories; Adrian McKinty’s Dead I Well May Be; Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye by Horace McCoy; three or four of Jim Thompson’s better novels, and particularly The Killer Inside Me … It’s a very, very long list.

What crime book are you most looking forward to reading?

There’s a few on my radar, a couple of which are already on my TBR list, that I’m almost salivating at the prospect of reading. John Hart’s latest, Iron House, arrived last week; Gene Kerrigan’s The Rage is due in a month or so; I have a soft spot for Carl Hiassen’s comedy capers, and I’m due to read Star Island in the next couple of weeks. Another couple of very fine Irish writers, Brian McGilloway and Conor Fitzgerald, release Little Girl Lost and The Fatal Touch, respectively, in the next couple of months, and Adrian McKinty’s Falling Glass is begging to be picked up. I also like the look of Domingo Villar’s Death on a Galician Shore, which I’ll be getting to shortly.

From an artistic rather than financial perspective, what book do you wish you had written?

That would very probably be The Magus by John Fowles. Not strictly a crime novel, although it has a Nazi war crime at its heart, but it’s one of my favourite novels, not least for its setting on a remote Greek island. Fowles is a beautiful stylist, and his prose fairly sings, but he’s very strong on pace, atmosphere and character too. In my humble opinion, The Magus is longer than it needs to be; roughly the last quarter of the novel needs a comprehensive editing. So maybe I’d like to have written it just as it is for the first three-quarters of the story, and then get busy tinkering and fiddling with the last bit …

Eightball Boogie by Declan Burke
86p/99c