Wednesday, 25 March 2015

TORQUIL MACLEOD - MEET ME IN MALMO (2010/2015)


Synopsis/blurb….

A British journalist is invited to Malmö to interview an old university friend who is now one of Sweden's leading film directors. When he discovers the directors glamorous film star wife dead in her apartment, the Skåne County Police are called in to solve the high-profile case. Among the investigating team is Inspector Anita Sundström, who soon finds the list of suspects growing. As Anita battles to discover the answers amid the antagonism of some of her colleagues, she even begins to think that the person she is becoming attracted to could be the murderer.

I've not read any Scandinavian set crime fiction for well over a year and this one was slightly unusual insofar as the author, Torquil MacLeod is an English-based Scotsman.

We start with a seemingly unconnected incident 25 years ago, where a young student falls to her death from Durham Cathedral. Present day, we pick up with a journalist, Ewan Strachan. Strachan’s in a dead-end job, but a chance opportunity to interview former university friend and now successful Swedish film director, Mick Roslyn sees him flying off to Malmo. On the morning of his appointment with Mick, Strachan discovers Roslyn’s film star wife, Malin Lovgren dead in their flat – murdered.

This now introduces us to the other main foil in our story – Swedish detective, Anita Sundstrom. Sundstrom we soon discover is attractive, capable and slightly disorganised in her personal life as well as single. She’s a slightly under-valued member of the investigative team. Her boss, Erik Moberg is a bit of a chauvinist, with a sometimes bull-dozing and blinkered approach to investigations……locate suspect, decide likelihood of guilt, assemble facts to support hypothesis and discount other avenues of enquiry. Sundstrom offers a more considered, balanced approach to the investigation.

Strachan, also a person of interest as he discovered the victim, manages to upgrade his journalistic gig with his newspaper to that of temporary crime reporter as the story breaks back in his home town and his editor keeps him in Malmo. Strachan’s fascination and attraction to Anita makes his prolonged assignment an attractive one.

The investigation brings added pressure, given the high profile identity of the victim. Inquiries indicate that Roslyn’s wife was subject to the unwelcome attentions of a stalker. Further digging in the direction of her husband, opens up other possibilities – a project Mick was working threatened to throw an unwelcome spotlight on the still unsolved murder of Swedish prime minister, Olof Palme back in the mid-80’s and the possible involvement of extreme’s elements within the police service. Additionally Mick had been playing away from home with his business partner’s girlfriend. Was Mick’s affair serious enough to drive him to murder and was he setting up his old friend, Strachan into the bargain. Did his partner suspect Roslyn’s dalliances and exact a twisted revenge?    

Plenty of possibilities for motive and murder. I must admit, I was undecided as to the perpetrator and MacLeod skilfully kept me guessing until the end and the reveal.

Great setting with an interesting mix of characters and a bit of police politics thrown in, with some bristly characters butting heads. Enough of Sundstrom’s personal life was offered to make her more than just a detective and someone this reader warmed to and liked. Our other main character, Strachan was interesting and sympathetic and the way they interacted with each other, especially as Ewan felt an attraction to Anita added another layer of intrigue to an extremely enjoyable mystery.

There’s more to come from Torquil MacLeod and his Swedish detective Sundstrom in the future with additional books appearing soon. I'm hoping to keep pace with this series going forward.   

4 from 5

Torquil MacLeod has his website here.

I was fortunate enough to receive a copy of this from the publishers – McNidder and Grace. Their website is here. Meet Me in Malmo was originally self-published in 2010. The new edition is released tomorrow. 

  

Tuesday, 24 March 2015

2 BY JON A. JACKSON

I’m unsure how I discovered Jon A. Jackson or his books, I think I maybe saw a comparison to Charles Willeford and then…..BOOM …….oh this guy has a ten book series set in and around Detroit, let’s buy most if not all of them and then kind of forget about them and never read them. (The sort of thing I used to do more frequently in the past.)

Jackson’s 10 book Detective Mulheisen series was published between 1977 and 2004. I expect I will snag the first when I log it and make a start soon after, as they have been gathering dust for a fair few years now.








Jon A. Jackson grew up in Northern Michigan and Detroit. He appears to be a bit of a jazz aficionado and co-hosts a show on Montana Public Radio, though I’m insure how up-to-date his website is. In his biography piece on his site, he kinds of marks episodes in his life by the vehicle he was driving at the time. Must be a Detroit thing!


His website is here.






The full list of Mulheisen books (courtesy of Fantastic Fiction) is as follows:

1. The Diehard (1977)
2. The Blind Pig (1979)
3. Grootka (1990)
4. Hit on the House (1993)
5. Deadman (1994)
6. Dead Folks (1996)
7. Man With an Axe (1998)
8. La Donna Detroit (2000)
9. Badger Games (2001)
10. No Man's Dog (2004)



Hit on the House

Whether working alone or with his sometime colleague Grootka, Mulheisen takes on the violent cases that lie in the darkest heart of urban Detroit. Mulheisen is investigating a string of mob slayings, when a former schoolmate comes back into the picture--along with her wretched, inexplicable little husband. And Mulheisen thinks they're somehow connected to the killings.
 










La Donna Detroit

Mob princess Helen Sedlacek was last seen heading west with millions in Mafia cash and the scalp of its godfather. Her successor wasted no time in hunting her down. Now he has welcomed her back into
the fold and offered her a reconciliation.

Monday, 23 March 2015

LOGGING THE LIBRARY - PART TWENTY-FOUR

Another tub another 50, no end in sight......

Pre-logging look

David Peace, Don Winslow, a couple from Sam Millar, Andrew Nugent

Larry Brown, Russel D. McLean, John Harvey, Val McDermid, Gerald Seymour,

Loved this guy, died too young!

Jasper Fforde, Nick Stone, Charles Bukowski, Marc Behm, Eugene Izzi

US author, mainly published in France where he lived as an ex-pat.

Cracker book, a couple of Pufferfish books from David Owen, William Faulkner, Leonard B. Scott

Literature from the 20's?

Stuart Pawson, Eugene Izzi, Paul Watkins, Robert Campbell, John Le Carre

Standalone from author of the Jimmy Flannery series

Larry Watson, Tony Hillerman, Jeffery Deaver, John Ridley

Not picked up one of these for a few years - overdue.

Michael Herr, Alexander Baron, William P. McGivern, Mark Baker, Richard Price,

The Big Heat - 50's I think.

Vietnam - non fiction

Forgotten English author - brought back into print now.

Shaky camera hand - Murdaland anthology, Niall Griffiths, Anthony Loyd, Charlie Higson, Sean Condon - travelogue

Anthony Loyd - war correspondent - Another Bloody Love Letter

Short-lived anthology of crime in print.

Russell James, Lauren Henderson, James Dickey, Willy Vlautin,

English noir!

Stella Duffy, Brian McGilloway

Olen Steinhauer, Mark SaFranko 

Great cover

Gary Phillips, Bill James, Emily Bronte

Who says I'm strictly low-brow?

Post logging view!
Highlights, lowlights.........looking forward to getting back to Eugene Izzi and Tony Hillerman. I'm also looking forward to cracking open Mark SaFranko's book, plus embarking on the Olen Steinhauer - Milo Weaver books.

Not too sure if or when I will read Emily Bronte, or indeed Jasper Fforde,

50 more next week.....hopefully

Full 50 are........
AUTHOR TITLE YEAR SERIES FICTION/NON GENDER
BAKER MARK NAM 1981 N M
BARON ALEXANDER KING DIDO 1969 LF3 F M
BEHM MARK THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER 1980 F M
BRONTE EMILY WUTHERING HEIGHTS 1847 F F
BROWN LARRY DIRTY WORK 1983 F M
BUKOWSKI CHARLES THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN TOWN 1983 F M
CAMPBELL ROBERT W. CIRCUS COURONNE 1977 F M
CONDON SEAN SEAN AND DAVE'S LONG DRIVE 1996 N M
DEAVER JEFFERY MANHATTAN IS MY BEAT 1989 R1 F M
DICKEY JAMES TO THE WHITE SEA 1993 F M
DUFFY STELLA FRESH FLESH 2000 SM4 F F
FAULKNER WILLIAM SANCTUARY 1931 SAS3 F M
FFORDE JASPER THE WELL OF LOST PLOTS 2002 TN3 F M
GRIFFITHS NIALL RUNT 2007 F M
HARVEY JOHN NICK'S BLUES 2008 F M
HENDERSON LAUREN PRETTY BOY 2001 SJ7 F F
HERR MICHAEL  DISPATCHES 1977 N M
HIGSON CHARLIE KING OF THE ANTS 1992 F M
HILLERMAN TONY LISTENING WOMAN 1978 JL3 F M
IZZI EUGENE INVASIONS 1990 F M
IZZI EUGENE PLAYERS 1996 F M
JAMES RUSSELL SLAUGHTER MUSIC 1994 F M
JAMES BILL THE LOLITA MAN 1986 H+I2 F M
LANGNAS MICHAEL ed. MURDALAND 2007 F M/F
LE CARRE JOHN SINGLE & SINGLE 1999 F M
LOYD ANTHONY ANOTHER BLOODY LOVE LETTER 2007 N M
McDERMID VAL FEVER OF THE BONE 2009 TH/CJ6 F F
McGILLOWAY BRIAN GALLOWS LANE 2008 IBD2 F M
McGIVERN WILLIAM P. THE BIG HEAT 1953 F M
McLEAN RUSSEL THE LOST SISTER 2009 JMCN2 F M
MILLAR SAM BLOODSTORM 2008 F M
MILLAR SAM DARK SOULS 2003 F M
MORTIMORE JIM CRACKER: MEN SHOULD WEEP 1995 C6 F M
NUGENT ANDREW SECOND BURIAL 2006 F M
OWEN DAVID THE DEVIL TAKER 1997 F M
OWEN DAVID X AND Y 1994 F M
PAWSON STUART LAST REMINDER 1997 DICP4 F M
PEACE DAVID TOKYO YEAR ZERO 2007 TT1 F M
PHILLIPS GARY HIGH HAND 2000 MC2 F M
PRICE RICHARD LADIES' MAN 1978 F M
RIDLEY JOHN LOVE IS A RACKET 1998 F M
SAFRANKO MARK HATING OLIVIA 2004 MZ1 F M
SCOTT LEONARD B. THE LAST RUN 1987 F M
SEYMOUR GERALD THE COLLABORATOR 2009 F M
STEINHAUER OLEN THE NEAREST EXIT 2010 MW2 F M
STONE NICK MR CLARINET 2006 MM1 F M
VLAUTIN WILLY NORTHLINE 2008 F M
WATKINS  PAUL ARCHANGEL 1995 F M
WATSON LARRY WHITE CROSSES 1997 F M
WINSLOW DON THE DAWN PATROL 2008 F M

Saturday, 21 March 2015

STARK HOLBORN - NUNSLINGER 1 (2013)


Synopsis/blurb……

The year is 1864. Sister Thomas Josephine is on her way from St Louis, Missouri, to Sacramento, California. During the course of her journey, however, she'll find that her faith requires her to take off her wimple and pick up a gun. Innocent Visitandine nun Sister Thomas Josephine wants nothing more than an adventure-free journey out west. But adventure is what she'll get - and heaps of it - when she's taken hostage by a desperate outlaw on the Laramie Plains of Wyoming. Before long she'll find herself torn between two men, the handsome Union Army Lieutentant Thomas F. Carthy and the mysterious drifter Abraham C. Muir. And soon, one of these men will be staring down the barrel of her gun. In this exclusive, free, all-new ebook, (no longer free) you'll meet Sister Thomas Josephine, the innocent Visitandine nun, and travel along the overland trail with her as she meets varmints and scallywaygs galore. Nunslinger book 1 is the first in an extraordinary new series that will publish serially throughout 2014.

Only March and I’ve already got an eye on my year-end reading figure. Nunslinger is a book comprised of 12 episodes, so instead of a BOGOF offer I actually get a dozen ticks in the box, and as I’m probably going to split my reading time between this and other stuff, rather than feel overwhelmed by 600-plus pages, it’s only reasonable – especially as you can buy each part on its own.

So initially sucked in by the vivid cover and having a liking for the old West, guns and nuns (my favourite aunt is a nun!), what could be better than a gun-toting nun, in the West a hundred and fifty years ago?

50-odd pages……..we start with a wagon ambush and the cavalry coming to the rescue in the form of Lieutenant Carthy. In the aftermath, our Sister Josephine is kidnapped by a drifter, Abraham Muir. Initially Muir is abhorrent to Josephine, but gradually a bond of sorts develops between then. First impressions give way to a more considered response.

Josephine is warned by Muir that the handsome Union Lieutenant Carthy is not a man to be trusted and if there is anyone with a blackness in his soul, he’s your man. Muir and our nun, get attacked at a trading post, and fleeing with a bullet in his shoulder, into the inhospitable wild lands Muir is destined for a painful death before Josephine using her earlier training as a nun, saves his life, by removing the bullet. A consequence of her actions sees them landing back in the hands of our Union soldiers.

With Muir imprisoned and facing execution, our syphilitic-ridden Carthy decides to give Sister Josephine a piece of something no bride of Christ can countenance. Our nun shoots her assailant and toting a pair of Muir’s guns busts him and an Indian prisoner out of his cell and flees.

Episode two awaits and promises more frolics and adventures……….our nun’s on the run!

Great setting, great characters, interesting and unusual set-up. I’m going to have a lot of fun reading these I think.

4 from 5

Originally acquired on Net Galley, I let my access expire, fortunately my library had a copy available at another branch that I could borrow.


Stark Holborn is a mystery as an author. I believe he or she is using a non-de-plume and I can find no hints or clues as to the author’s real identity……I’d love to know who it is though.

Friday, 20 March 2015

JIM THOMPSON - IRONSIDE (1967)

Synopsis/blurb…..

World-renowned criminologist

Special consultant to the San Francisco Police Department

Confined to a wheelchair, paralyzed by a would-be-assassin’s bullet

IRONSIDE:

The brilliant detective with a genius for flushing out evil faces his greatest challenge: a faceless murderer stalking San Francisco – a different kind of killer who slays not out of revenge or greed but out of love – a fanatic with a sacred mission to kill.

A SENSATIONAL NOVEL

A HIT NBC-TV SERIES

STARRING RAYMOND BURR AS IRONSIDE

Well a 1967 book and a bit of a nostalgia trip for me. My dad, long since departed bless him, wasn’t a massive fan of US television, television full-stop really, but one exception to the rule would have been Ironside. In 1967 I would have been 4 years-old and can dimly recall us watching this as a family. False memory? Perhaps, but one I’m happily clinging on to. In truth the series ran well into the early-70s so I might well have been 8 or 9 when we watched in black and white!

Anyway – fond memories of my dad refreshed, a Jim Thompson book to boot and after a couple of ropey months being underwhelmed by Sax Rohmer and Chester Himes an enjoyable contribution to Rich Westwood’s Past Offences monthly meme. This month being 1967.

Onto the book then…..much better than the last Thompson book I read The Rip-Off, back in October,2013.

We have a murderer roaming San Francisco, prowling the bars, but disguising his methods and soon after we have Mark Sanger, Ironside’s black assistant in jail, held on a potential murder charge after an altercation with a man who was racially abusing him. Ironside’s focus is on finding out who killed Sanger’s attacker, after Sanger himself had been knocked unconscious.

As our mystery unfolds, we are introduced to a variety of characters and some tangentially related incidents, which whilst appearing to be separate strands in the book, by the conclusion are all woven together.

Ironside gets to showcase his incorruptibility and resistance to outside pressures, as well as, in Sanger’s absence struggling to assert some level of independence and mobility in the face of his physical infirmity. Bravery or stupidity? Certainly stubbornness.



I really enjoyed this one, particularly when Thompson plants you inside Ironside’s head. Is he a decent man, for not acting on his implied feelings towards his attractive assistant, Eve or is he an old lech for having those feelings in the first place? Was it commonplace in a 60’s work environment for an authority figure to want to admonish a female by the application of a smack on the backside, or is there a darker side to our main character’s psyche? I get the feeling Thompson had a bit of fun pushing the boundaries as far as he could with this.

I’m not usually a massive fan of novelisations of films or TV shows, but this I really liked.   

4 from 5

Click the year to see what other folks have been enjoying for Rich’s 1967 meme.

Moira at Clothes in Books blog – enjoyed this one a few months ago. Her thoughts are here.

I bought a secondhand copy of this a few years ago, from I can’t remember where.

As a final thought – did people have better eye-sight in the 60’s?


With 42 lines of text to a page, I was restricted to reading this during daylight hours at the weekends!  



Wednesday, 18 March 2015

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS WITH THATCHER ROBINSON


Latest author in the Q+A hot-seat is Thatcher Robinson. Robinson is the author of two mysteries set in San Francisco's Chinatown.


White Ginger

Fierce loyalties, staunch compassion, and a weakness for strays lead Bai Jiang--San Francisco's best known "souxun," or people finder--into violent conflicts that test her pacifist beliefs in the brutal world she lives in. Armed with Buddhist philosophy and wicked knife skills, Bai Jiang works at being a better person by following her conscience, while struggling with what she likes to think of as "aggressive assertiveness."

When a girl goes missing in San Francisco's Chinatown, Bai is called upon as a souxun, a people finder, to track down the lost girl. The trail leads to wannabe gangsters, flesh peddlers, and eventually to those who have marked Bai for death.

Enlisting the aid of her closest friend and partner, Lee--a sophisticated gay man who protects her, mostly from herself--and Jason--a triad assassin and the father of her daughter--they follow the girl across the Bay and across the country. Bai confronts paid assassins and triad hatchet men, only to find that being true to her beliefs as a Buddhist and staying alive are often at odds. At the same time, fighting a faceless enemy who seems committed to having her killed fills her with anger and fear that sometimes turns into a burning rage with deadly consequences.

Flavored with dark humor, White Ginger serves the perfect cocktail of wit, charm, sex, and violence.
-----------------------------------------
Black Karma

Bai Jiang - San Francisco's best-known souxun ("people finder") - is hired to track down the mysterious Daniel Chen. Police inspector Kelly suspects Chen of being involved in a botched drug heist that resulted in the death of an officer. Bai has her own suspicions.  She thinks the police just want to see Chen dead.

Her investigation leads Bai into deadly intrigue as she finds herself caught between international intelligence agencies and merchants of war, who deal in death, drugs, and high-jacked information.

To make matters worse, she's thirty-something and dating again. It's not easy juggling a suitor with family connections, a brazen young man who finds her irresistible, and her ex--the father of her child.


World conflict and family strife explode as adversaries face off in San Francisco's Chinatown, a world away from the one we know.




Q. Is the writing a full-time occupation? What is or was the day job?

I now write full time. Before taking up writing, I managed projects developing top-secret cyber warfare tools for the military and government agencies. Prior to that, I was a software specialist for the IBM research labs.

Q. Did you suffer many rejections on the way to becoming published?

Writers are often anxious to validate their efforts.  It’s almost impossible to resist the urge to submit a fresh manuscript and receive the accolades one might expect. I’d caution fledgling writers not to rely on friends and family for critical feedback. Find a writing group or an instructor willing to give an honest appraisal of your work before sending the manuscript off to an agent or publisher.

Having said that, I've been told my experience in getting published is a rarity. I don’t have a background in writing, so I decided to take a writing class from a local professional. She looked at my work and told me to find an agent. I sent queries, along with the first three chapters of White Ginger, to eighty agents via email. Within days, I received three positive replies offering representation. I chose my current agent, who consequently sold the book in a relatively short time­less than two months.

Q. Any un-published gems in the bottom of your desk drawer? 

No gems, but I do have a couple un-published turds in the bottom of my desk drawer. If I become really successful, my publisher will undoubtedly print my literary turds after I die. If you happen to read my obituary…I’d caution you against buying any new books with my name splashed across the cover.

Q. What's been the highlight of your writing career so far? 

The highlight of my writing career to date is the starred review I received from Library Journal for Black Karma. All of the other publications gave favorable reviews, but the Library Journal featured Black Karma along with the pick-of-the-month. Validation is like opium to a writer. I was high for about a week on that review.

Q. What's a typical writing day consist of? 

My typical writing day is atypical. I don’t write every day. I don’t have a set time. When I write, I drink lots of coffee, tea and diet colas to keep me motivated. When I've ingested enough caffeine, I get giddy and start to vibrate, bouncing up and down as I pound on my keyboard. I don’t recommend this method for everyone, but it works for me.

Q. Do you have a target word count for each day or do you write for a set number of hours, or do you have a specific point in the story you want to get to? 

I used to attempt to write 2000 words a day. Then I realized I was filling page after page with useless crap. I now spend a lot more time thinking about what I’m going to write, and even more time determining what I’m going to edit out. I refer to this process as ‘skinning the pig’.

Q. Are you a plotter? Do you have a beginning, middle and end all mapped out before you start, or does the story unfold of its own accord as you write it?

I’d like to take credit for masterful plotting and planning, but very little of what I do is on a conscious level. I never know where the book is going until the words fly across the page. Sometimes, after several hours of writing, I’ll go back and read my manuscript only to find I don’t even recognize much of what was written. I suspect my cat of adding dialog when I’m not looking. Cats are crafty and have a strange sense of humor.

Q. Bai Jiang and her extended family have appeared in your two published novels, White Ginger and Black Karma so far. Will we be hearing more about your Chinese American souxun (people finder) in the future?

I've just posted the third installment in the White Ginger series to my agent. If she likes it then there’s a good chance you’ll be reading more about Bai Jiang and her friends in the near future.

Q. How familiar is San Francisco's Chinatown to you? It's somewhere I have only ever visited in reading and through film.

I've lived and worked in San Francisco on-and-off over the last 40 years. Chinatown is a place I naturally gravitate to. I love the bakeries, the noodle shops and the dim sum restaurants. The energy in Chinatown has a raw feel to it. The people are industrious, driven, and, by western standards, perhaps a bit abrupt. But the cultural differences are what make Chinatown interesting.

Q. Awkward question, and apologies if I have phrased it insensitively, you don't appear to have an Oriental ethnicity or name. How can you write so knowledgeably about San Francisco's Chinese community?

Since childhood, I've been referred to by my Asian friends as an inside-out banana­white on the outside and yellow on the inside. As a child and then as a young man, my best friends were Chinese and Japanese. My first job was working in a Chinese market. I make a habit of marrying Asian women.

But leaving aside my attraction to all things Asian, I’d like to emphasize that my works are purely fiction. The picture of the Chinese community I paint is not real. Sun Yee On doesn't have a strong presence in San Francisco’s modern-day society and Bai Jiang is a figment of my skewed and somewhat lascivious imagination. My books are meant solely to entertain.

Q. Do you have to do much research for your books?

I did quite a bit research for the first book, White Ginger. I studied the history of triads and researched gang-slang to make the dialog more authentic. (The Hong Kong task force on organized crime has a wealth of information.) I still spend time researching language, modes of ethnic dress, and trivia that pertains to the Chinese culture to stay marginally accurate for the sake of my readers.

Q. Any plans in the future for some non-Bai books? Not that I've tired of reading about her - far from it.

I recently self-published a fantasy novella called Meld on Amazon. I wanted to see what was available in the way of marketing tools and how difficult it would be to find a market. With over six million books on Amazon, the task has proved to be daunting. I’m still learning and experimenting to find methods of effectively reaching interested readers.

Q. Who are you reading and enjoying?

I just finished Walter Mosley’s Fearless Jones, a novel featuring his protagonist by the same name. It was a good read. Walter Mosley’s sense of mid-twentieth-century Los Angeles is engrossing and his characters are colorful.

Q. What's the current project in progress? How's it going?

I’m currently working on an off-beat Western. The genre is a change of pace for me. I’m employing a male protagonist with a first-person perspective in this book. The plot revolves around a historical wagon train massacre that took place in Utah in the 1840’s. A group of settlers traveling west were murdered by Mormons, who then tried to blame the atrocity on Indians. The humor, as you might guess, will be quite dark.

Q. What's the best thing about being published?

The best thing about being published is that I can now claim to be employed. Before being published, my wife kept asking me when I was going back to work. I can now proudly thrust out my chest and smugly claim the title of author. Of course, she still asks me when I’m going back to work.

Q. What's the worst?

Bad reviews are the worst part of being published. With rare exception, my reviews have been favorable, but even the rare exception can sting. No one likes to be told their children are ugly.

Q. If I pop back in a couple of year's time – where do you hope to be with the writing career?

I’d like to be writing from a white-sand beach in Hawaii. If enough books sell, you’ll find me there with a cold beer in one hand and a notepad in the other. I've been practicing my one-handed beer drinking and feel like I’m finally up for the challenge.


Many thanks to Thatcher for his time. You can find out a bit more about him and his books at his website over here.

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

2 BY JOE R. LANSDALE

Joe R. Lansdale is an author from Texas and has a fair few slots on the shelves. He pretty much writes the lot… novels and short stories and everything in-between, in Fantasy, crime, horror, graphic, Westerns and probably science-fiction genre as well.

Fair to say that not everything he has written grabs me but enough of it does to have his books on my shelves numbering over a dozen.










Most of them are in the 9 or 10 book series with his two protagonists – Hap Collins and Leonard Pine. Hap and Leonard, one black – one white, one gay – one straight even have their own Wikipedia page!


One of these years I’ll sit down and read my way through the series. I don’t think it will be this year though.



Lansdale has his website here.

His full Hap and Leonard series is as follows: 
1. Savage Season (1990)
2. Mucho Mojo (1994)
3. The Two-Bear Mambo (1995)
4. Bad Chili (1997)
5. Rumble Tumble (1998)
6. Captains Outrageous (2001)
7. Vanilla Ride (2009)
8. Devil Red (2011)
9. Hyenas (2011)
Veil's Visit: A Taste of Hap and Leonard (1999) (with Andrew Vachss)
Dead Aim (2013)


Captain Outrageous

Hap Collins and Leonard Pine, the heroes of Mucho Mojo, head back to Mexico is seek revenge for the murder of a beautiful young lady, currently involved with a Mexican mobster and a practicing nudist, who, along with her elderly father, had rescued them both from armed attackers.






Cold in July

To kill a man, even in self-defence, is no easy thing for a man with a conscience. He has to answer to himself, put the episode behind him, get on with his life. This is very difficult when the dead man's father, a murderous ex-con, is determined to avenge the shooting, no matter what the rights and wrongs. Richard Dane is a small businessman, a family man with a son of his own. Ben Russell, the ex-con, has a very simple proposition: an eye for an eye, a son for a son. But the truth is anything but simple, and before long Dane and Russell, misled and manipulated, are awkward allies in a living nightmare of paranoia and psychopathic sex, violence and corruption.