Thursday, April 12, 2012

Please Welcome Gray Basnight, Author of the Donna Prima Mystery Series

Omnimystery News: Guest Author Post

We are delighted to welcome crime novelist Gray Basnight as our guest blogger today.

Gray's first mystery in the "Donna Prima" series is The Cop with the Pink Pistol (Ransom Note Press, March 2012 Trade Paperback and eBook editions).

Today Gray tells us about his experience in getting his book published. And if he had to summarize it all in just a few words: "Every writer needs a good editor."

— ◊ —

We all learn and grow from our mistakes. So do writers. I made an error in judgment when creating the central character in my debut novel. Resolving it was an edifying experience on both the writing process and working with a professional editor.

When I decided to try to my hand at mystery fiction, I knew I had to absorb as much of the genre as I could. But rather than pursue the present, I rebelliously opted for the past. That's not what the "how to" books advise. And it's certainly not what agents suggest. But nonetheless, that's what I did. I had read all of Sherlock Holmes and James Bond as a teenager and thought there couldn't possibly be anything better in the genre. So I decided to revisit them for guidance.

Gray Basnight
Photo provided courtesy of
Gray Basnight

One of the great attractions of Conan Doyle's stories, I rediscovered, is the city of London. The infinite universe of that metropolis with its teeming cast of winners and losers was itself a central character working in tandem with Holmes and Watson. Realizing that, I knew my central character needed to be a product of my setting, which would be London's contemporary corollary—New York City. And being a New Yorker, I instantly understood several facts:

1. My New York City must be cast in all its skevoid glory as well as being the hip mother of all cities.
2. My detective must be a product of the city's historic diverse ethnicity.
3. My plot pacing must be steeped in the energy of the city—fast, to the point of being a multi-tasking layer of frenzy, all of it conveying a sense of urgency while seeming simultaneously odd.

It naturally followed that Detective Donna Prima would be a product of that setting. She would embody some essential aspect of the metropolis. Over a period of weeks, she evolved into Brooklyn native, Italian-American, Roman Catholic, NYPD Detective Maria-Donatella Prima who, in defiance of the rules, packs a pink pistol on her left ankle and has no use for Estée Lauder and even less use for Cole Haan pumps.

Additionally, I thought of her as a new kind of sleuth. She would be a blend of old and new worlds. In this case, old means both the old country, as in 19th Century Europe—and—Humphrey Bogartesque; new means both unique and modern, as in—"would you please take that Bluetooth out of your ear and put down your Blackberry while I'm questioning you about the dead body in the next room."

But core background and mannerisms aren't everything and I sensed that some vital dimension to her personality was missing. While contemplating that, I was walking my Cavalier King Charles Spaniel (named Taxi) around my Chelsea neighborhood, when several lurid visuals seemed to speak out to me with a thematic message. The male mannequins in a shop window were dressed in summer shorts designed to do for the wearer what the codpiece did for Henry VIII. There was an illuminated ad at the local subway entrance for something called Californication, another for something named Hung, and a third for the latest cinematic episode of Sex in the City. At the time, I was re-reading and still contemplating Goldfinger when it seemed the ghosts of Ian Fleming, Marshall McLuhan and Sigmund Freud were all sending signals.

Finally—duh—I got it.

The graven images of advertising were talking to me like a perfect muse descended via deus ex machina. It's not the economy; it's the sex—dummy! Sex sells. From the moment Madison Avenue first stood a runway model in front of the latest Ford, it's been nothing but ever more explicit and socially acceptable (sort of) sexual imagery ever since. I was struck by how obvious it was: I must endow my lady detective with James Bond's libido. I will make her the sexual aggressor. It will be brilliant. It will epitomize the latest chapter in women's assertiveness. It will be new and hip. The thirty-something crowd will get it. The twenty-something crowd will love it. And most importantly—it will sell better than Harry Potter.

Thus, Detective Donna Prima seduced my male protagonist in the first scene, indeed in the first 500 words.

That's when the difficulty began. Literary agents who handle the genre couldn't get past the opening scene, which puzzled me. Don't they understand that young adult readers will immediately grasp the point? After all, young women don't seem to judge anyone on a sexual basis these days, a trend that's picked up speed in recent years but has certainly steadily progressed since Hawthorne penned A Scarlet Letter. They'll appreciate her assertiveness, the stand-her-ground personality, and most importantly—her refusal to wait for men to make all the fun first moves.

I will not belabor about the list of rejections, except to note the reaction of one female literary agent whose curt note adequately summarized many: "Sir, women don't think like this."

Ahem.

Well, that agent was not only not a New Yorker, she wasn't even on the West Coast. She was somewhere in between, so naturally—she—would never understand how clever and commercially strategic I was thinking. Unfortunately for her, she did not read much beyond the first few pages. Fortunately for me, the editors at Ransom Note Press read the entire manuscript. That resulted in a series of e-mail exchanges simultaneously expressing interest in the novel, but disabusing me of my self-anointed cleverness. The result was essentially what happened to Alex in A Clockwork Orange—I de-libidinized my central character. The difference is that it went much better (and easier) for me and Donna than it did for Alex.

In the end, I learned a few important lessons that the "how to" books repeat ad nauseum. But like so many other lessons in life worth learning—it's the actual experience that drives the meaning more effectively than mere cognitive knowledge of the rule.

Here's the take home for me:

1. Writers really do need good editors.
2. There really are boundaries in genre fiction.
3. Female protagonists in genre fiction really do want romance in one form or another on one level or another.

In the end, I got a terrific editor. And Donna Prima got romance.

Moreover, she may even have received something bigger than romance. I won't tip my hand on a sequel. But during Donna Prima's adventures, the "love" word was mentioned only in passing, and even then only in the title of a classic rock song (in this case by the Dave Clark Five). Yet that may possibly have been enough.

— ◊ —

Gray Basnight was born and raised in Richmond, Virginia where he spent his childhood and teen years on two much loved activities: reading and participating in theatre productions. After studying English and Theatre at a small college in North Carolina and George Washington University in Washington, D.C., Gray planned to become a theatre professor. Instead, he chose a life-enhancing pilgrimage to New York City to experience the actor’s struggle for a "couple of years." Thirty years later, many of them spent in traditional broadcasting, Gray decided to pursue a new career as a novelist.

To learn more about Gray and this thoughts about writing, visit his website at GrayBasnight.com.

— ◊ —

The Cop with the Pink Pistol by Gray Basnight

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition

Barnes&Noble Print Edition and/or Nook Book

Apple iTunes iBookstore

Indie Bound: Independent Bookstores

About The Cop with the Pink Pistol:

She doesn't do jiggle. She isn't into shoes or jewelry. She doesn't wear makeup (or, as she calls it, war paint). NYPD Homicide Detective Donna Prima's sole concession to modern womanhood is the pink .38 she wears strapped to her ankle. Not that she has much opportunity to use it, having been demoted to desk duty for a serious infraction of NYPD regulations.

On a routine burglary follow-up in Greenwich Village, Donna meets soap-opera actor Conner Anderson (Crawford on the top-rated Vampire Love Nest), who alerts her to some strange goings-on in a liquor store across the street. Sick of being chained to her desk, Donna decides to investigate. Meanwhile, the Feds need her help on a cold murder case as they investigate a theft from a nuclear power plant.

But would-be detective Conner Anderson wants to come along for the ride. And Donna, an Italian-American from Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, can't deny the mutual chemistry she feels with this Southern WASP from Tupelo, Mississippi. Will taking on Conner as a civilian partner be the start of something beautiful or the biggest mistake of Donna's life?

The Butterfly Forest by Tom Lowe is Today's Third Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Butterfly Forest by Tom Lowe as today's third free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

— ◊ —

The Butterfly Forest by Tom Lowe

The Butterfly Forest by Tom Lowe
Publisher: CreateSpace

About The Butterfly Forest (from the publisher): He hid the old pencil-drawn map for 40 years.

The guards never found it.

After 40 years in San Quentin, Luke Palmer leaves with a state-issued suit, $100 dollars to buy a bus ticket, and a map that will lead to a promise and into the heart of a dark forest.


College graduate student Molly Monroe is about to release rare butterflies not far from where the FBI used 4,000 bullets in a shootout to kill Ma Barker and one of her gangster sons in 1935. Molly snaps a picture that will frame something she never sees coming.

Sean O'Brien does see something -- a predator. Between the sea of cars in a Walmart parking lot. Walking quickly. Stalking two women.

As O’Brien tries to prevent the abduction, he opens the door to a new relationship. And he opens a dark door to a horror that is secluded within the forest. He follows veiled tracks that lead him farther into the woods where an evil from the past intersects with a frightening presence to from a volatile trap with only one way out.

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Free Kindle Book Amazon Free Kindle Edition Download Link.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Taken by Debra Lee is Today's Second Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Taken by Debra Lee as today's second free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

— ◊ —

Taken by Debra Lee

Taken by Debra Lee
Publisher: CreateSpace

About Taken (from the publisher): Welcome to the fictitious little town of Watery, Pennsylvania where the district attorney's personal secretary Mary Murray never planned to become a single mom or a suspect in her infant's disappearance. But she plans to find Jena before she suffers the same fate Mary's younger brother had when he was taken twelve years earlier.

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Free Kindle Book Amazon Free Kindle Edition Download Link.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Show Time by Phil Harvey is Today's Featured Free MystereBook

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Show Time by Phil Harvey as today's free mystery ebook.

This title was listed as free as of the date and time of this post. Prices are subject to change without notice. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your transaction.

— ◊ —

Show Time by Phil Harvey

Show Time by Phil Harvey
Publisher: Lost Coast Press

About Show Time (from the publisher): Future viewing audiences have become totally desensitized to violence and entirely dependent on sensation to escape their boring workaday lives—an addiction nurtured by the media with graphic portrayals of war and crime and with so-called reality programming. Now, TV execs in pursuit of the only things they care about—higher ratings and bigger paychecks—have created the ultimate reality show: Seven people, each bearing the scars of his or her past, are deposited on an island in the middle of Lake Superior. Given some bare necessities and the promise of $400,000 each if they can endure, the three women and four men risk death by starvation or freezing as the Great Lakes winter approaches. The island is wired for sound, and flying drones provide the video feed, so everything the contestants do and say is broadcast worldwide. Their seven-month ordeal is entirely unscripted, they can't ask for help or they forfeit the prize, and as far as the network is concerned—the fewer survivors the better.

Important Note: This book was listed for free on the date and time of this post. Prices can and do change without prior notice. Please confirm the price of the book before completing your purchase.

Download Link(s):

Amazon Free Kindle Book Amazon Free Kindle Edition Download Link.

For more free mystery ebooks, visit our Free MystereBooks page.

Casting News for Television Adaptation of Ian Rankin's Doors Open

Doors Open by Ian Rankin

ITV has announced that Stephen Fry and Dougie Henshall have joined the cast of Doors Open, a two-hour made-for-television adaptation of the 2008 stand-alone heist novel by Ian Rankin.

"Doors Open is full of excitement with many twists and turns and it is as much of a love story as an art heist," said Laura Mackie, Director of Drama at ITV. "We have an A list cast lined up to bring Ian Rankin's great characters to life."

The storyline follows three friends, who descend upon an art auction in search of some excitement. Mike Mackenzie (Dougie Henshall) — retired software mogul, bachelor and fine art enthusiast — wants something that money can't buy. Fellow art-lover Allan Cruickshank is bored with his banking career and burdened by a painful divorce. And Robert Gissing (Stephen Fry), an art professor, is frustrated that so many paintings stay hidden in corporate boardrooms, safes and private apartments. After the auction — and a chance encounter with crime boss Chib Calloway — Robert and Allan suggest the "liberation" of several paintings from the National Gallery, hoping Mike will dissuade them. Instead, he hopes they are serious.

Filming begins later this month on location in Edinburgh.

(Source: Press release.)

Mister Monday by Garth Nix is Today's Barnes&Noble Nook Daily Find for Families

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature Mister Monday by Garth Nix as today's Barnes&Noble Nook Daily Find for Families. The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, April 12, 2012.

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Mister Monday by Garth Nix

Mister Monday by Garth Nix
The Keys to the Kingdom
Publisher: Scholastic

This is the first book (of seven) in this series of young adult fantasy novels.

About Mister Monday (from the publisher): Meet Arthur, an ordinary boy with a few problems on his hands. And his week has only just begun …

Arthur Penhaligon is not supposed to be a hero. He is, in fact, supposed to die an early death. But his life is saved by a key shaped like the minute hand of a clock.

Arthur is safe — but his world is not. Along with the key comes a plague brought by bizarre creatures from another realm. A stranger named Mister Monday, his avenging messengers with blood stained wings, and an army of dog-faced Fetchers will stop at nothing to get the Key back — even if it means destroying Arthur and everything around him.

Desperate, Arthur ventures into a mysterious house — a house only he can see. It is in this house that Arthur must unravel the secrets of the Key — and discover his true fate …

When the Great Architect of All disappeared ten thousand years ago, she left a Will to be executed by her seven Trustees. But Mister Monday and his fellow traitors from the house broke the Will into seven fragments, scattered them across space and time, and seized the seven Keys to the Kingdom for themselves. Now a fragment of the Will has escaped and seeks its Rightful Heir. Arthur, a reluctant hero, is the one who must solve the great mystery — day by day, key by key, realm by realm — and restore order to a universe in chaos.

Important Note: Barnes&Noble updates its Nook Daily Find every day at approximately midnight PT. The title referenced above is available at a discounted price for Thursday, April 12, 2012 only.

Download Link(s):

Barnes&Noble Nook Daily Find B&N Nook Daily Find for Families.

The Titanic Tragedy by William Seil is Today's Barnes&Noble Nook Daily Find

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature The Titanic Tragedy by William Seil as today's Barnes&Noble Nook Daily Find. The deal price of $1.99 is valid only for today, Thursday, April 12, 2012.

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The Titanic Tragedy by William Seil

The Titanic Tragedy by William Seil
The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Publisher: Titan Books

About The Titanic Tragedy (from the publisher): Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson board the Titanic in 1912, where Holmes is to carry out a secret government mission. Soon after departure, highly important submarine plans for the US navy are stolen. Holmes and Watson work through a list of suspects which includes Colonel James Moriarty, brother to the late Professor Moriarty. Will they find the culprit before tragedy strikes?

Important Note: Barnes&Noble updates its Nook Daily Find every day at approximately midnight PT. The title referenced above is available at a discounted price for Thursday, April 12, 2012 only.

Download Link(s):

Barnes&Noble Nook Daily Find B&N Nook Daily Find.

Amazon Kindle Price Match Amazon Kindle Price Match (today only).

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Two More Teaser Videos for the Looper Trailer

Looper (2012)

Two days ago we posted a trailer for the trailer for Looper, not realizing at the time that this was going to be a daily event. Since then, two more trailers for the trailer have been released; we've embedded them below. Both feature Joseph Gordon-Levitt and the film's screenwriter/director Rian Johnson discussing various elements of the film.

Gordon-Levitt plays a hired gun named Joe, who finds himself the target of his future self (played by Bruce Willis), who travels back from the future to kill him.

Looper opens in theaters September 28th, 2012.

Teaser Poster for The Host, adapted from the novel by Stephenie Meyer

The Host (2013)

The first teaser trailer for the adaptation of Stephenie Meyer's The Host was released a few weeks ago and now a new teaser poster — which is remarkably similar to the book's cover — has been uploaded to the film's Facebook page (right; click for a slightly larger version). The poster's tagline: "You will be one of us."

Directed by Andrew Niccol from his own adapted screenplay, the film stars Saoirse Ronan as Melanie Stryder, whose body has been invaded by Wanderer (played by Diane Kruger). This alien species takes over the minds of its human hosts, leaving the body intact, but Melanie is refusing to relinquish possession of hers.

As Melanie fills Wanderer's thoughts with visions of Jared, a human who still lives in hiding, Wanderer begins to yearn for a man she's never met. Reluctant allies, Wanderer and Melanie set off to search for the man they both love.

Ths Host is currently scheduled to open in theaters March 29th, 2013.

BBC America to Co-Produce Mini-Series Adaptation of The Spies of Warsaw by Alan Furst

The Spies of Warsaw by Alan Furst

Earlier this month we reported on some of the deals coming out of MIPTV, the annual international marketplace for television.

One of these deals was an adaptation of Alan Furst's historical thriller The Spies of Warsaw. Today, BBC America announced that it was joining in on the production, with the mini-series — four 45-minute episodes — to premiere on the US cable network.

The storyline is set in the years leading up to World War II and will follow French and German intelligence operatives, who are locked in a life-and-death struggle in the espionage arena. At the French embassy, the new military attaché, Colonel Jean-Francois Mercier (played by David Tennant), a decorated war hero of the 1914 war, is drawn into a world of abduction, betrayal and intrigue in the diplomatic salons and back alleys of Warsaw. At the same time, the handsome aristocrat finds himself in a passionate love affair with Anna (Janet Montgomery), a Parisian lawyer for the League of Nations. Their complicated love affair intensifies as German tanks drive through the Black Forest.

On-location production is expected to begin next month in Poland.

(Source: Press release.)

Review: Murder at the Lanterne Rouge by Cara Black

Murder at the Lanterne Rouge by Cara Black

We've just published our Review of Murder at the Lanterne Rouge by Cara Black. An Aimée Leduc Investigation. Soho Crime Hardcover, March 2012.

Available to purchase from …

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle Edition

Lockout Opens in Theaters Friday, April 13th

Lockout (2012)

The space prison-based action-thriller Lockout opens in theaters this Friday, April 13th, 2012.

Set in the near future, the storyline follows a falsely convicted ex-government agent (Guy Pearce), whose one chance at obtaining freedom lies in the dangerous mission of rescuing the President's daughter (Maggie Grace) from rioting convicts at a maximum-security prison orbiting 50 miles above the earth.

Directed by James Mather from an original screenplay by Stephen St. Leger, Lockout is rated PG-13 for intense sequences of violence and action, and language including some sexual references.

Watch a trailer for the film below.

The Mystery Bookshelf: Stolen Lives by Jassy Mackenzie, a Jade de Jong Mystery

The Mystery Bookshelf: New Mystery,  Suspense and Thriller Books

The Mystery Bookshelf, where you can discover a world of mystery and suspense, is pleased to feature a new crime novel we recently received from the publisher.

— ◊ —

Stolen Lives by Jassy Mackenzie
A Jade de Jong Mystery (2nd in series)
Soho Crime (Trade Paperback)
Publication Date: April 2012
ISBN-13: 978-1-61695-067-5

Stolen Lives by Jassy Mackenzie

About Stolen Lives (from the publisher): When wealthy Pamela Jordaan hires PI Jade de Jong as a bodyguard after her husband Terrance disappears, Jade thinks keeping an eye on this anxious wife will be an easy way to earn some cash. But when a determined shooter nearly kills them both and Jade finds Terrance horrifically tortured and barely alive, she realizes that she has been drawn into a wicked game.

At the same time, her relationship with police superintendent David Patel is on the rocks, and things only get more complicated when his son is kidnapped and his wife is blackmailed. It soon becomes clear that the kidnapping and the attempted killings of Pamela and her husband are tied to a human trafficking ring that stretches from Johannesburg to London.

— ◊ —

About the author: Born in Rhodesia (as, she notes, all ex-Zimbabweans still prefer to call it), Jassy MacKenzie moved to South Africa when she was eight years old. She loves the energy, danger and excitement of Johannesburg, and believes there is no better place for a thriller writer. Jassy lives in Kyalami with her partner Dion, two horses and two cats. Visit her website at JassyMackensie.com.

Mysterious Reviews: Mysteries Reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books Crime novels by Jassy Mackenzie reviewed by Mysterious Reviews: Random Violence (2010) and Stolen Lives (2011).

Purchase Options for Stolen Lives:

Amazon.com Print and/or Kindle EditionBarnes&Noble Print and/or Nook Book editioniBookstore (iTunes)

Mark Walhberg Interested in Playing The Partner in Film Adaptation of John Grisham's Novel

The Partner by John Grisham

Earlier this year we reported that John Grisham's eighth legal thriller The Partner was being adapted for film. (All seven of the author's books that preceded this one have also been adapted.)

Now we're learning that Mark Wahlberg is interested in the role of Patrick Lanigan, a partner in a Biloxi law firm who is presumed dead after a car accident, but who is really living in Brazil under an assumed name. The question his former partners are asking: What happened to a fortune that suddenly disappeared from the firm's offshore account after Lanigan "died"?

Though the actor is reportedly in "early talks" with the producers, we can totally see Wahlberg in this role.

(Related article: Variety.)

AMC to Develop Television Adaptation of Crime Comic Thief of Thieves

Thief of Thieves (AMC)

AMC is developing a television adaptation of the new crime comic series Thief of Thieves. (The first issue came out just this past February; the third issue publishes today.)

Written by Robert Kirkman and Nick Spencer with art by Shawn Martinbrough, the comic is centered around Conrad Paulson, who lives a secret double life as master thief Redmond. There is nothing he can't steal, nothing he can't have … except for the life he left behind. Now, with a grown son he hardly knows, and an ex-wife he never stopped loving, Conrad must try to piece together what's left of his life, before the FBI finally catch up to him … but it appears they are the least of his worries.

"Much like The Walking Dead brought horror to television in a unique and groundbreaking way, I feel Thief of Thieves can do the same thing for heist stories, showing the humanity of all the characters, including the criminals," Kirkman says.

(Related article: The Hollywood Reporter.)

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