Category Archives: announcement

Interview with Bill Crider

Crider photoYeah, I know, it’s been a while.  This summer has been busier than I thought it would be.  I’ll be back with a review of one of the Shamus Award nominees just as soon has I can get the ebook file off my dying hard drive.  Anyway, until then, I though I’d link to an interesting interview with Bill Crider conducted by Ben Boulden.  I’m a fan of Bill’s work, and you can expect me to review some of it here at some point.  There’s some great discussion about Bill’s early work as well as his latest release in the long running Sheriff Dan Rhodes series.

Here’s the interview.

2015 Shamus Award Finalists Announced

pwa_logo_2If you read my main blog, Adventures Fantastic, then you know that one of the awards I hold in high esteem is the Shamus Award, given by the Private Eye Writers of America.  In fact, the only award I hold in higher esteem is the David Gemmell Award.

One of the things I like best about the Shamus it that it’s one of the few awards that honors work published by independent authors.  Most of the major genre awards, such as the Hugo, the Nebula, and the World Fantasy (and, yes, the Gemmell) don’t recognize independent work, at least not as a matter of course.  So, kudos to the PWA for doing so.

Well, the other day the finalists for the Shamus were announced: Continue reading

Opening Salvo

Welcome to my new blog, Gumshoes, Gats, and Gams. In case you can’t figure out from the title, the focus on this one will be detective and crime fiction, with a heavy dose of noir. I toyed with several titles before selecting this one. Originally I was going to call it Booze, Bullets, and Broads. That title contains the three elements common in Raymond Chandler’s fiction. (I was exposed to Chandler in high school and never quite recovered.  Biologists call this imprinting.) However, given the recent brouhaha MiKe Resnick and Barry Malzberg set off when they referred to a female editor as a “lady”, that title might be deemed a little too sexist. I still like it and may use it for a series of future posts.

Likewise, Detectives, Danger, and Dames. Besides that one is too similar to the title of at least one anthology. The present title hearkens back to the classic detective stories from the 30s and 40s, which sets the tone I’m looking for. It tells you there will be a lone knight walking the mean streets, facing gunfire and a femme fatale or two.

I’ve always enjoyed a good noir or detective story, but they really were outside the focus of Adventures Fantastic, not that I didn’t include some from time to time. Here I can indulge that interest without alienating fantasy fans who aren’t looking for discussions and reviews of detective fiction. And maybe attract some followers who aren’t interested in fantasy or science fiction.

Welcome aboard. I’m glad you’re hear. We’re going to have fun.