Sunday, June 3, 2012

Catching Cold In The USA

The US cover without review quotes
Its been a while since I've had a crime novel published in America. Three years in fact. My last novel to come out Stateside was Fifty Grand which was brought out by Holt in 2009. This was not a pleasant experience. Two months before Fifty Grand was due to be released my editor left the company (editors dont just edit the book, they're the ones that get you reviews, PR and the oxygen of publicity) and three weeks before the pub date her replacement editor left. The book had no one looking after it and there was no book launch, no PR, no advertising and I had to beg Holt to send out review copies. (In the end I sent out review copies out of my own pocket.) The book died an ignominious death of neglect which was a shame because Fifty Grand went on to get good reviews and was shortlisted for the Theakston Best British Crime Novel Award. What was even more galling for me was the PR blitz Holt set in motion for John Banville, who had decided that he was going to write crime novels under the name Benjamin Black. Black's novels were everything I was opposed to in crime fiction: cliched, mannered, dull, cozy, old fashioned and pandering to an Americanised nostalgic vision of Ireland; but Holt pushed Banville out there like he was the second coming of Dashiell frickin Hammett. After that I decided I was never going to allow any of my books to be published by a major corporate US house again and I said as much in print. It was a bold statement but there weren't really any takers for my books in America so it was all a bit moot anyway. 
...
Early this year, however, I was approached by an editor called Dan Mayer who was starting a new imprint in the autumn of 2012 called Seventh Street Books. (Seventh Street, of course, is where Edgar Allan Poe lived). Dan said that he wanted to publish new, outsider voices who had something urgent to say and who rejected the moribund cliches of much contemporary crime fiction. He told me that he had read The Cold Cold Ground and wanted to publish me. I had heard this line from editors before: we want outsiders, we want new voices, we want original ideas and then you look at their list and its Marcia Clark from the OJ Simpson trial and a celebrity chef who has had an idea for a mystery novel. But Dan seemed different. For a start he got on my good side by praising the work of Declan Burke and then when he asked me questions about The Cold Cold Ground his observations were smart, knowledgeable and pertinent. Publishing is full of bullshit artists but Dan evidently wasn't one of those. (I was once in a meeting with an editor who told me that he had "been to Ireland twice to golf at St Andrews and Troon.") Dan appeared to be that rare bird who cared about the literary heritage of crime fiction and was in a position of power to create a list that embraced his vision. 
...
So anyway this is a long preamble to pretty exciting news for me. The Cold Cold Ground is being published in the US this November by a brand new imprint: Seventh Street Books. I've made one or two minor changes to the American version and the novel will come with a new cover as a paperback original at a very reasonable fifteen dollar price (10 bucks on Amazon). You can look at the Amazon listing here (and you can "like it" if you want too). I hope the book does well. The critics have been very very kind in the UK, Ireland and Australia so it might be pushing my luck to hope for a similar ride in the US but we shall see...

73 comments:

adrian mckinty said...

Oh and while we're on the topic, I should say that Falling Glass is finally going to be distributed in the US as well! It gets released this October on Serpents Tail's US label.

you can check out the Amazon listing for Falling Glass, here

speedskater42k said...

This is excellent news.

I "liked" the book on Amazon. I'm not sure what that does, other than provide Amazon yet another way to market to what it considers my preferences.

I see my review of the audio version of TCCG shows up on the paperback version.

I hope you'll do a USA book tour that will include the Tucson Festival of Books next spring!

adrian mckinty said...

Speedskater

I think "like" is something to do with Facebook which I am not on so I'm not that sure...

I hope I'll be doing some readings and events too but we'll see. I'm pretty good at readings and festivals (even if I say so myself) because I tell the truth.

speedskater42k said...

Adrian:

The Tucson Festival of Books is a huge event. It has tens of thousands attending and a long list of authors and events. It'll be March 9-10, 2013. http://tucsonfestivalofbooks.org/

I'm sure you'd be a big hit there, and you'd sell some books!

Matt said...

Nice, and I think that's a good time of year for the release. Past all the middle of the road crime fiction that people buy in the summertime at Wal-Mart.

adrian mckinty said...

Speedskater

I do like to sell me some books.

adrian mckinty said...

Matt

And I'll still be on a high from the Yankees surprising World Series victory over a rejuvenated Mets.

seana said...

Great news, or a couple of pieces of it, really. I do think that Olympic torch going past your mom's house may have been a good omen.

I still don't quite get what prohibited Serpent's Tail from distributing Falling Glass here earlier. They do have channels.

seana said...

Also, I don't think the liking thing on Amazon has anything to do with Facebook. So like a way, people.

Cary Watson said...

It's about bloody time. I was thinking the Toronto Public Library hadn't added any of your titles since Fifty Grand, but I just checked at work and it turns out we've recently acquired 6 copies of Falling Glass. We've had a budget cutback for acquisitions, but I imagine we'll be getting TCCG. I'll be sending FG out to my shut-in clients who take crime fiction. They've already had the Forsythe books.

Jason said...

I was at the No Alibis event where you told a funny story about sharing a platform with John Banville AKA Benjamin Black. Care to repeat it here?

Peter Rozovsky said...

The subeditor in me must inform you that it's Marcia Clark, but this is a fine post. You're right about Black, though, and may I suggest that you and the good folks award book prizes to contestants who come up with the best use of "cold" to describe the novel? I will begin by calling this book a far from common cold.
==========================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana


And I saw my mum, my two sisters and a niece on the feed from the BBC.

adrian mckinty said...

Cary

Toronto public library, eh? Position of power there. You could influence the reading habits of thousands...

adrian mckinty said...

Jason

No, lets not get into that again. Dec Burke has told me on several occasions that Banville is a good guy. Dave Torrans said the same thing that night. Ok he was a spoiled little shit to me but thats water under the bridge.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Oh really? Ok I'll fix. I've been trying not to think about that incompetent fool for the last 15 years so no wonder I cant spell her name.

Cold is a very rich word in terms of titles. Love in a cold climate is probably my fav.

Peter Rozovsky said...

"Baby, It's Cold Outside" may be the cold title most frequently alluded to. And Barry Forshaw's recent book about Scandinavian crime fiction cribs Jessica Mitford's title. It's called "Death in a Cold Climate."

Before you sneer, be aware that the book discusses an anti-Stieg Larsson reaction in Nordic crime writing.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Oops, wrong Mitford. It was not the muck raker, the facist, or the mental case, it was Nancy.

Peter Rozovsky said...

And now I learn that the title is a quotation from Orwell.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Two of them loved Hitler. Diana and Unity. Unity was the one who loved him so much she shot herself. Diana was the one married to Oswald Mosley.

Jessica was the communist muck raking journalist. Nancy was the novelist. Pamela was the one who tormented the poet laureate. Deb was the one who was good friends with Patrick Leigh Fermor and is still alive.

Peter Rozovsky said...

But Unity was also the nut, so I rank that as her defining attribute.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

This is a great interview with Debbo at the Frick Collection from last year:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=25IO32AxGq4

Quite the bunch of eccentrics those Mitford girls.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Ah, yes. You posted that once before, maybe when Fermor died.

seana said...

Cold Comfort Farm is a great title, even though I'm not sure what game we're playing.

That's cool you saw your family. The torch came through Santa Cruz on its way to China. It was early in the morning, and I don't think I saw it, but maybe I did. I was on the path at any rate--the town was pretty busy with police activity in preparation that day. Later in San Francisco there was some sort of protest because there had been trouble in Tibet.

My sister asked me tonight if I had seen the queen's flotilla.

I always miss everything.

Peter Rozovsky said...

I interviewed a pair of amusing and amused volunteers along the torch's patch in Massachusetts in 1984. I also happened to be Avignon in 1992 when the torch was on its wasy to Albertville for the Winter Games. The locals put on a big, booming son-et-lumiere show.

I alkso just missed the torch's payh through Bristol by a day or two this year.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter, Seana

And of course talk of the olympic torch ties nicely into Hitler and Diana and Unity Mitford too.

Peter Rozovsky said...

I didn't see the torch in 1976, possibly since I was away at summer camp, and also I lived in the destination city. But I did see the gold- and bronze-medal games in team handball. I don't remember who played whom, but my memory does tell me that three of the four teams were Poland, the Netherlands, and the U.S.S.R.

Peter Rozovsky said...

And my memory wsa wrong, the records say: Soviet Union over Romania for the gold, Poland over West Germany for the bronze. So the less oppressive the regime, the worse its men's handball team.

Paul D Brazill said...

Good stuff. I do like that cover.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

I have a vague memory of the 1500 metres at the Montreal olympics. John Walker winning.

adrian mckinty said...

Paul

Yeah thats an AP shot from the riots in Belfast last summer apparently.

David Corbett said...

Brilliant news, Adrian, on all fronts -- that your book will land in the US and that there might be a crime publisher out there who isn't scared shitless by good writing -- or good writers. Now, if you could only finagle a trip here, so I can return the favor of that lunch we shared in Denver oh so many years ago.

David Corbett said...

P.S. It was during that lunch, as I recall, we discussed our shared experiences with the aforementioned Mr. Banville. We both had shared a venue with him, the insufferable little snob.

Dana King said...

This is great news. I picked up a copy of FALLING GLASS on the Internet, and had reconciled myself to doing the same for COLD COLD GROUND. Now I can buy a copy here, in the hope good sales numbers will persuade Seventh Street (or whoever) to keep your books in print on this side of the sheugh.

Congratulations, Adrian.

John McFetridge said...

This is great news. Launching in November, if only there was a large gathering of crime fiction writers and fans somewhere around that time, maybe just before to set it up.....

By the way, the Toronto Public Library is one of the biggest libraries in the world - and if it wasn't for a few readings there and them buying my books I don't think I'd make any money from writing.

Nice jab about the Marcia Clark publisher...

David Richy said...

This is very interesting books about the Seventh Street Books. I read this information is really very nice.

Privatdetektiv

Dennis said...

Yes! We're not all idjits over here! Thank you Dan Mayer! Congrats Adrian.

Sean Patrick Reardon said...

Congrats. Loved the novel and just gave it a "like" on Amazon.

seana said...

It's a weird thing, but I tend to forget that my cousin is somehow involved with the highest level of security for the Olympics and has been through the last few games. It's weird, because he actually came into this through banking or something. I don't see him that often, so I don't know all the details.

I was flying home from London on Virgin airlines when they announced on board that London had won this year's Olympics. And the very next morning was the London terrorist attack, so I guess the two things are married in my mind.

Peter Rozovsky said...

John and Adrian: It's not a large gathering, but we do have Noircon here in Philadelphia in November.

lil Gluckstern said...

I have nothing pithy to say: I'm just happy for you, and a truly wonderful book.

swooperman said...

I've never heard of Banville, but I'm not sure I'm missing much by the sounds of it. Hold on, he's a nice bloke? Dunno, pass. Had to read that Irish golf quote twice....the shame!
Nice one anyway, & I agree with Paul about the cover.

verymessi said...

Congrats Adrian! I bought the book on pre order from Amazon. I have only read Fifty Grand which I really liked and look forward to reading this.

adrian mckinty said...

David

We're trying to get something sorted out for a trip. Hopefully it will work out. I have a feeling Banville is nice to people he believes can help him (like Dec Burke) and a shit to everyone else.

adrian mckinty said...

Dana

Well staying in print is a whole other story! But hopefully I'll shift a few units. Fingers crossed anyway.

adrian mckinty said...

John

I'd both love to come to Bouchercon and also would like nothing less in the world than to hang around with a bunch of narcissistic self promoting crime novelists. Be nice to see my mates though. I'll have to give it serious thought.

adrian mckinty said...

Dennis

Very many uneejits. We'll see exactly how many when the book comes out.

adrian mckinty said...

Sean

Thanks for that.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

If I was in London I'd be psyched for the athletics.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

I'd be up for that too.

adrian mckinty said...

Lil

thank you.

adrian mckinty said...

Swooper

Banville won the Booker Prize and is one of Ireland's "literary greats".

The golf thing made me laugh but not at the time.

adrian mckinty said...

Very

I hope you like this one.

seana said...

I know this is way way off topic here, but you are all a bunch of crime fic writers and fans, so I just saw this ad on Slate from Prudential that had the tagline:

"Making sure people don't outlive their money in retirement."

If any of you have Prudential insurance, I'd be watching my back right about now...

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Funny.

adrian mckinty said...

John

Marcia Clark, yeah, heh.

Erec Stebbins said...

Welcome aboard, Adrian! Glad to have signed up with you on Seventh Street! I'm looking forward to reading your novel, and really liked your post on publishing. So much is in flux now in writing and producing books. It's a mad, mad and interesting world!

Erec Stebbins

adrian mckinty said...

Erec


Hopefully we can meet later in the year!

Publishing is certainly mad but I dont know if its that interesting. What I see is an ocean of conformity and sameness and a culture amusing itself in tediously familiar ways. But hey maybe thats just me.

Erec Stebbins said...

"Publishing is certainly mad but I dont know if its that interesting."

I mean more the changes that are underway. I'm not sure I'm right, but to me it looks like a tsunami approaching.

It would be great to meet, but we are separated by quite a distance! If you are going to be in New York, please let me know and we'll work something out.

And just so you know, another Seventh Street author had this to say about The Cold Cold Ground:

"I'm dying to read the one by the Irish guy. Sounds like literary heroin." ;)

adrian mckinty said...

Erec

I'm very pessimistic about the e book revolution. I think the e books that will do well are the ones whose authors are savviest about niche marketing and social networking. The quality of the book is basically irrelevant, what counts is branding yourself and to me that's a pretty bleak prospect.

seana said...

If you brand yourself as literary heroin, you'll be fine.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Branding yourself as anything is, I feel, the road to hell.

seana said...

I'm actually in total agreement with you. But maybe all that heroin will make the journey a little smoother.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Better watch what you say to John about narcissistic, self-promoting crime writers at Bouchercon. At Bouchercon in 2008, I go tinto a discussion of Montreal bagels that included John and Declan Burke. Get into a discusison like that this year, and you just might learn something.
=============================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com

Erec Stebbins said...

"I think the e books that will do well are the ones whose authors are savviest about niche marketing and social networking. The quality of the book is basically irrelevant, what counts is branding yourself and to me that's a pretty bleak prospect."

I think branding and success have always been a dance team, and, of course, quality is subjective. I think people will always gravitate toward what moves and engages them. They still have to decide what to do with their money and time.

There is and always has been a social component, a large one, and many books somewhat arbitrarily find success or do not. It can be "timing", but it can also be a strong voice in marketing. I look at product and marketing as orthogonal components to the "success vector."

But I think everyone's guess is wild at this stage about what ebooks will do culturally, outside of dramatically changing the way human beings obtain and interact with longer narratives in the written word.

The one sure thing is that massive change is coming, and that always shakes things up, for good and bad, usually.

Erec

adrian mckinty said...

Erec

You're right. Big change is coming. The 6th Avenue dont publishers dont quite realise it yet but it is coming.

I had to look up "orthogonal" on Wikipedia. To be honest I'm none the wiser.

Erec Stebbins said...

Adrian, sorry, was in geek mode. Linear algebra, spanning sets for describing multidimensional vectors. Weirdly enough, I use it as a framework to think about other things in life. :)

The idea was that "book quality" and "marketing" are two things that don't affect each other, are independent of each other (orthogonal - no part of one "lies along" the other, they are at 90 degrees), yet together add to the combined entity we call "commercial success".

Safety Products said...

Its good source of information as i like the way you written your post ......

AdamH said...

Just finished the book. Could be my favorite of your books so far! Though I love the underworld settings of your novels, having a "peeler" as the protagonist was a refreshing change. Sorry to finish it but very glad it's the first of three!

PS Gave you props on audible (again).

adrian mckinty said...

Adam

Yeah it was fun to write a novel from the other side of the fence. You dont quite have the same freedom of course, but the challenge is pretty interesting too. Glad you liked it!

Jill Maxick, Prometheus Books said...

May as well direct your fans to the website at http://www.seventhstreetbooks.com/ and the book that's front and center. Adrian, I hope we can alleviate some of your publisher cynicism! We are very excited about The Cold Cold Ground.

Glenna said...

Congratulations Adrian!! I'm thrilled to hear it. I'm assuming that if you do make it to this part of the world you will post the tour schedule here?

adrian mckinty said...

Glenna

If I do a tour or even one reading, I'll let everyone know about it, promise!