I dissed dude's new book here, but he's still one of my all-time favorites. Skip to the 33 minute mark, then enjoy.
Your second (maybe third?) choice for book news, reviews, praise & slander.
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Friday, May 29, 2009
Book News, In Brief
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Comic Book News, In Brief
(accompanied by an awkward bit of autobiographical over-sharing)


I first heard of Real Deal via the Beastie Boys' magazine, Grand Royal. After ordering a few issues and falling head-over-heels in love with its bizarre blend of blaxploitation and Gary Panter-esque art, I sent a ten question interview to the creators (artist Lawrence Hubbard and writer HP McElwee), hoping to run something about them in my fledgling fanzine. Not only did they respond tout de suite, they answered all of my questions in the angry, over-the-top voices of their crooked pimp characters. I was in heaven! This being the early-90's, though, I was apparently the only one enjoying such blatant badass-ery. The interview was met with a small handful of angry, feminist hate mail (ironically: mostly from men), immediately ranking it as the most popular thing I'd ever done!
Ah, but how time changes everything. It's now fifteen years later, and indie/arty comics publisher PictureBox is preparing to re-acquaint the world with Real Deal's hysterical brand of blaxploitation at this summer's MoCCA. They've even got an interview with Hubbard on their ComicsComics blog. (Sadly, McElwee died of a stroke and heart attack at age 43.)
I'm telling you, if you enjoy those old, 70's Pam Grier/Jim Brown/Fred Williamson flicks, or the Wayans brothers' spoof, I'm Gonna Git You Sucka!, or the crime fiction of Chester Himes, or even the surreal comic stylings of Archbishop Don Magic Juan, you'll want to check out Real Deal.
Bonus! Comic Book News for those uptight, upright citizens uninterested in graphic storytelling in the urban milieu:
30 Second Book Review
Road Dogs
by Elmore Leonard
Elmore Leonard is back, and he's brought three of his most popular characters with him. Out of Sight's super-cool criminal, Jack Foley, LaBrava's not-so-cool criminal, Cundo Rey, and Riding The Rap's wishy-washy psychic, Dawn Navarro, all return in this, the second most blatant Hollywood cash-in in Leonard's otherwise outstanding career. While not as lifeless as 1998's Get Shorty sequel, Be Cool, Road Dogs is nowhere near the effortless masterpiece that the aforementioned Out of Sight, LaBrava and Riding the Rap were. Why? Well, to me, Leonard's best moments are often those where nothing happens plot-wise and the characters are allowed to just riff endlessly. Unfortunately, this is the first of his books where it actually feels like nothing's happening and that the characters are riffing endlessly. Oh well, it's not like this is going to be Leonard's last book. The man has over 40 novels to his name. And it's not like this is a sign that his talent has left him, either. Leonard's last book, 2007's Up In Honey's Room, was one of his best yet.
One line pull-quote: Curious fans of the Jack Foley character might want to wait for the inevitable movie version.
Related: Today Is Elmore Leonard Day (I Hope You Remembered To Wear Your Gun)
by Elmore Leonard
One line pull-quote: Curious fans of the Jack Foley character might want to wait for the inevitable movie version.
Related: Today Is Elmore Leonard Day (I Hope You Remembered To Wear Your Gun)
Book News, In Brief
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Cool Covers from Recent Releases:
Sometimes Simple Says It All
Valkyrie by Von Boeselager, Fehrenbach and Fehrenbach.
B Is for Beer by Tom Robbins.
In Yer Face by Ismael Alvarez.
We Are Doomed: Reclaiming Conservative Pessimism by J. Derbyshire.
Spent: Sex, Evolution, and Consumer Behavior by Geoffrey Miller.
High: Confessions of an International Drug Smuggler by Brian O'Dea.
Book News, In Brief is Back!
(ain't nothing changed but my limp)
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Author Event
Saturday, May 30, 4:00 PM
Cynthia Riggs
Death and Honesty
Author talk, Q&A, book signing, and complimentary refreshments.
In Death and Honesty, Victoria Trumbull, the ninety-two-year-old poet/sleuth, discovers a neighbor’s body in the home of one of the three town assessors. The assessors have been skimming off tax money from wealthy landowners and stashing it in their own special retirement funds. Then the private pilot of the not-so-holy clergyman husband of one of these landowners is found dead, floating in his employer’s pond, his face gnawed by snapping turtles. Finally, searching for old documents in the attic of Town Hall, Victoria discovers a third body, that of the long-missing assessors clerk. In order to tie all the threads together and solve the murders, Cynthia again teams up with her old friend and rival, Emery Meyer, now working as the landowner’s chauffeur.
It’s another entertaining mystery, as only Riggs can spin it, infused with the flora and fauna of Martha’s Vineyard.
Cynthia Riggs, a thirteenth-generation Islander, lives on Martha’s Vineyard in her family homestead, which she runs as a bed-and-breakfast catering to poets and writers. She has a degree in geology from Antioch College and an MFA in creative writing from Vermont College, and she holds a U.S. Coast Guard Masters License (100-ton). Click here to visit Cynthia's website.
Posted by Inkwell Michelle
Cynthia Riggs
Death and Honesty
In Death and Honesty, Victoria Trumbull, the ninety-two-year-old poet/sleuth, discovers a neighbor’s body in the home of one of the three town assessors. The assessors have been skimming off tax money from wealthy landowners and stashing it in their own special retirement funds. Then the private pilot of the not-so-holy clergyman husband of one of these landowners is found dead, floating in his employer’s pond, his face gnawed by snapping turtles. Finally, searching for old documents in the attic of Town Hall, Victoria discovers a third body, that of the long-missing assessors clerk. In order to tie all the threads together and solve the murders, Cynthia again teams up with her old friend and rival, Emery Meyer, now working as the landowner’s chauffeur.
It’s another entertaining mystery, as only Riggs can spin it, infused with the flora and fauna of Martha’s Vineyard.
Cynthia Riggs, a thirteenth-generation Islander, lives on Martha’s Vineyard in her family homestead, which she runs as a bed-and-breakfast catering to poets and writers. She has a degree in geology from Antioch College and an MFA in creative writing from Vermont College, and she holds a U.S. Coast Guard Masters License (100-ton). Click here to visit Cynthia's website.
Posted by Inkwell Michelle
Vacationing Blogger Presents:
Recycled Posts #5-14
To quote my-damned-self,
"When The Economy Needs Stimulating, Your Hard Earned Dollars Are The French Tickler!"
Gift Tips for the Bookish: the complete collection...thus far.
Live blogging returns tomorrow!
"When The Economy Needs Stimulating, Your Hard Earned Dollars Are The French Tickler!"
Gift Tips for the Bookish: the complete collection...thus far.
Live blogging returns tomorrow!