Showing posts with label Jason Pinter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jason Pinter. Show all posts

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Tour's End

One week ago today I was on my way home from the Love Is Murder Conference up in Wheeling, Illinois. I took the train home out of Chicago's Union Station--the ride was pleasant, but boarding was a surreal experience. What is it about train boarding announcements that cause people to immediately become angry and aggressive? One would have thought we were queuing up for the last loaf of bread in Stalingrad, 1942!

The Wheeling Westin is one of those prairie hotels--not much nearby to walk to. The bellman said I could get a cab for the 10 minute ride to the local Panera if I didn't want to have breakfast at the hotel. And from my hotel window I watched a herd of deer wander into an apartment complex! Wait--there was this place that was certainly worth the breezy stroll across the parking lot. (I bought something there, but, hey, I'm not telling!)

There were stranger sites, though. The hotel was also hosting a reenactor convention. Apologies for the terrible pictures...At one point on Saturday night I was caught in the middle of twenty women in hoop skirts who were so determined to get past me and into the ballroom, that I was afraid I'd be swept away!







Congrats to my friend--and recent Handbasket guest--CJ Lyons, who won a Love Is Murder LOVEY Award. Her 2008 book Lifelines won the Readers' Choice award for Best First Novel! Pictured with her is fellow Ballantine author and one of my favorite dinner companions, Steve Berry. Steve won a LOVEY for Best Thriller--The Charlemagne Pursuit. (He always looks so serious in photographs, but he was definitely smiling when he accepted it!) Also below is a pic of me with Steve and his darling wife Liz, the terrifyingly efficient Executive Director of Thrillerfest.





Other Highlights:

Seeing that the book room sold out of all but one copy of Calling Mr. Lonely Hearts. Being on the Editor and Reviewer panel with Jon Jordan of Crimespree. Finally meeting the ever-charming Rosemary Harris (she'll be on the Handbasket as soon as I can send her interview questions), and seeing Julie Kramer, whose STALKING SUSAN was just nominated for the MWA Edgar's Mary Higgins Clark Award. (Both pictured below) Having some good chat time with Shane Gericke, seeing Jason Pinter, and meeting James Strauss who writes for an uber-popular television show and is launching his new book series with Five Star this spring. Meeting the prolific and charming Erica Spindler, and, oh, and I can't forget J.T. Ellison, of course. It was truly the last sigh of the Blonde and Blonder tour!



Julie Kramer, Rosemary Harris


Me, James Strauss

Seems that the Love Is Murder board has decided not to hold a conference next year. It's a shame. The relatively small size of the conference means that there's lots of good writer/reader contact and a manageable number of panels. I'll be interested to see if they decide to grow or keep the intimate nature of the thing. Still--Chicago in February?!

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Octoberguest! Jason Pinter

Bestselling writer Jason Pinter is darned prolific. Since his Barry Award-nominated novel The Mark was released in early 2007, he's published two more novels in his Henry Parker series: The Guilty and The Stolen. The Fury will be released this coming March. And given that, not so long ago, Pinter left his glamorous job as an editor at a NY publishing house to write full time, there are sure to be more thrillers about the idealistic young reporter to follow.


This past summer, Jason was brave enough to appear on the Thrillerfest panel that I moderated (my first!). Everyone on the panel had published their first novel in 2007, so we had lots of sage (ha!) advice to offer. There's a dvd of our memorable appearance somewhere on this website if you want to hear what Jason had to say. But you'll find out much more about him at his personal website. Snag a copy of The Stolen, here. (Really, though, you should start at the beginning!)

Jason lives in New York and will be appearing at the Barnes & Noble on East 86th St on October 30th. (More events listed on his site.)


Welcome, Jason!

So I'm sitting in a hotel room in Baltimore for Bouchercon 2008 as I type this, growing hungrier by the minute because being Jewish I'm observing Yom Kippur. Also known as the Day of Atonement, Yom Kippur is a 24 hour period--from sunset today until sunset tomorrow--whereby we fast to atone and repent for our sins.
Now, aside from my usual sins (sloth, gluttony, never returning phone calls, not responding to emails in a timely manner, hoping to see Karl Rove get swept up by a windstorm and sail into a stucco building), I have writerly sins as well. Some of these sins are private, and have to do with my work schedule. I never write as much as I want to, I never read as much as I intend to, and spend way too much money on books I don't have time to read. Nevertheless, I do have public writer sins. Most of them, unsurprisingly, have to do with my simple lack of a public life. I'm a relatively shy guy. I outgrew the bar and club scene a long time ago, at least as far as it pertained to spending $13 on a Jack and Coke in a dimly lit hallway where you're being shoved back and forth by sweaty dudes in plaid shirts and trying not to bump into the girl somehow carrying six martini glasses.
My public life tends to consist of book signings when a new book comes out, going to local events when an author friend is in town, and wandering the aisles of my local bookseller day after day to the point where one of the clerks remarks that I changed outfits (because it was my second time in the store that day). I have some fans, but I still don't really believe them when they write to tell me they enjoy my books. I assume they're being put on by my wife or my mother in an attempt to make me happy. Granted I can't yet explain how my mother might have been able to fake over a hundred different email addresses or change her handwriting, but the first thing I told myself when I decided to try to write a novel was to never think you're any good. The moment you start to buy into any hype, you'll lose your motivation. This might count for two sins: modesty and pride (the eighth and ninth dwarfs, in case you're counting).
Yet all these sins are forgiven at conferences. I come early, stay late, and tend to enjoy every minute of it. Not because I sell lots of books (if I sell enough to pay for a Happy Meal on the drive back I'll be happy), but because there are few places I'd rather be than hanging out with other people who love books enough to the point where they'll spend hundreds of dollars to hang out with other book lunatics, sit in panels hour after hour to hear about plot, pacing, work schedules, and innumerable inside jokes about things like Barry Eisler's hair and the size of Dave White's...feet. (just kidding)
As a writer who doesn't get out much, I'll make an exception at conferences. I'll stay at the bar until my eyes get weary, I'll drink with people I've never met before, and I might even gather up the courage to introduce myself to someone whose work overjoys me to the point where I give up rational thought that they're a human being and convince myself that they're an alien life form that will spontaneously either burst into flames or laughter when I attempt an introduction.
But you know what? Most of them are cool about it. Cause even the veteran writers, the ones who've been to five or ten or twenty conferences were at one point in my shoes. And there are probably a slew of aspiring writers at this conference who, next year, might be as well. And ten years from now, they'll be the ones downing their fifth pint of beer as a newbie gathers up the liquid courage to speak to them.
So Bouchercon is another way to atone for my sins, public and private. Though events like these make atoning in public a whole lot more fun.
Jason Pinter

Thanks, Jason!

[Remember--Everyone who comments is entered to win $100 Godiva Chocolatier and Harry & David giftbaskets, plus books from several Octoberguest! authors! Drawing held November 2nd.]

Tomorrow's Octoberguest!: Sharon Linnea