Wednesday, July 11, 2012

I Hear The Sirens In The Street

I've uploaded the first 8 chapters of the second Sean Duffy, novel, I Hear The Sirens In The Street, here. The best way to read this is probably to cut and paste it into word and then print it out, but it works ok on the computer screen too. 
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I'm finishing off editing the book at the moment and when I'm done with that I'm hoping to have a rather special competition/give away later on in the week, so please do stay tuned. 

48 comments:

John McFetridge said...

Excellent news.

Deb Klemperer said...

This is jolly generous of you!

lil Gluckstern said...

I have read into the second chapter, and I am hooked. I need to stop because I want to read the whole book. Once again, I like the immediacy of the writing, and Sean is refreshingly self aware, I think :) I'd like to wait for the whole book, and I look forward to it. I like the musical references, even if I don't know the all. so I can put my iTunes to work. (More stretching).

Monica J. said...

That is wonderful news. You just made my day. And possibly my week. :)

I meant to wait and stretch this out a bit, but I read through it all, already. Can't resist. Good to see Newberryport again. :) Still thinking about a Michael cameo?

Deb Klemperer said...

just read all eight chapters - ace! and I know all the music references - they work so well - hooking me back into that time.. And it reminded me that we were very patient with LPs, singles and cassettes - and we probably loved them more.. (I digress, as usual)

swooperman said...

Outstanding. Can't wait for the whole thing. Keep it up mate

adrian mckinty said...

John

Cheers, mate.

adrian mckinty said...

Deb

Glad you're enjoying it so far.

adrian mckinty said...

Lil

I can understand that. It should be out in January.

adrian mckinty said...

Monica

I'm definitely planning to have a Michael Forsythe cameo but I think I'll have to squeeze it in in book 3.

adrian mckinty said...

Swooper

Glad you're digging it.

seana said...

Do you know yet if Seventh Street Books will pick it up for American readers?

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

I havent heard yet although I think its interesting that Seventh Street are calling Cold Cold book of the Troubles trilogy, so that would imply, I guess, that they're going to publish all 3.

I assume everything will be fine unless book 1 completely tanks.

seana said...

Or unless they do.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

True. Naming your publishing imprint after the place where they found a famous author dead in the street isnt perhaps the best omen.

Glenna said...

I was on Amazon hoping CCG was on Kindle when I notices someone in Florida was selling a copy...for $137.30 plus shipping. It must be a hit!

seana said...

Okay, I know I should know this, but who is the famous author? My Google searching skills, though of aid to others today, did nothing for my own quest.

adrian mckinty said...

Glenna

They must have printed that on gold leaf.

Bizarre. Apparently its available now on Nook for 10 bucks and it'll be an amazom.com e book in a few weeks too.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Edgar Allen Poe. 7th Street.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Poe lived on Seventh Street in Philadelphia (you can visit his house to this day), but he died in Baltimore. That’s why he’d buried in there and why a group of us at Bouchercon in Baltimore in 2008 talked about digging up his body and bringing it back to Philadelphia.

I wrote about this in a blog post at the time:

I can't reveal what plans were hatched at the pub and restaurant – call it the Bucket o' Bait – but had I been able to score a doggie bag big enough, Poe's body would be back in Philly now.
============================
Detectives Beyond Borders
"Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
http://detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com

seana said...

I thought of Poe, but looked up the Wikipedia article and it said Baltimore as well.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter, Seana

Have either of you see that John Cusack movie about Poe? Its not out here and I've heard very mixed reviews about it. Ebert wasnt so keen but he gave 4 stars to Prometheus so what does he know.

seana said...

No. Netflix gives it three stars for me, and they are usually pretty accurate. I did read the Linda Fairstein mystery called Entombed, which dealt with used the fact that Poe had lived briefly in Greenwich Village. I like Fairstein for the way she unearths NYC environs for her stories.

Peter Rozovsky said...

I saw clips from it, along with an interview in which Cusack talks about the movie. It looked like it might be an exciting, flashy adventure story, though I'm not sure how much it has to do with Poe.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana, Peter

Ok sounds like a DVD movie for sure rather than a cinema one.

I do like Cusack though he's in 2 of my favourite films: Gross Pointe Blank and The Thin Red Line.

Peter Rozovsky said...

He's also in The Ice Harvest, which is worth a look, just as the novel on which it's based is worth a read.

Peter Rozovsky said...

I think the Poe movies is one of those deals that imagines a great author as a detective.

seana said...

Great authors really have very little else to do but be detectives, do they? Crank out a few chapters, call it a day, and then it's really just a kind of civic duty to go out and solve crimes.

It's kind of similar to how Abraham Lincoln, after a long day of trying to win the Civil War, seems to have a few hours left to be a vampire slayer.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Oscar Wilde is a detective, and I think Samuel Johnson is as well. Other literary figures have cast as fictional detectives, but al probably lived in times before authors had to promote their own books and so had more time to detect.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Someone should have Jesus solving mysteries in first century Galilee or maybe Hitler as a grubby divorce detective in Freud's prewar Vienna.

adrian mckinty said...

the Jesus one would be good, because he could use magic to solve all those tricky locked room problems and of course he could resurrect the dead and ask them who killed them.

seana said...

He would need a Watson, but then, he would have twelve to choose from.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Hard-boiled Jesus: "Forgive them, Father. They know not what the hell they do."

adrian mckinty said...

seana

it would have to be Judas, the rule of contrasts and all that.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

HBJ: "Them fuckas is going down like the Gadarene swine. Them bitches dont swim no mo."

Peter Rozovsky said...

Read It Had to Be Judas, the first Jesus of Nazareth mystery.

Peter Rozovsky said...

It;s a locked-tomb mystery!

seana said...

I don't think so. I would choose Peter (no offense Peter R.) or maybe more likely, Doubting Thomas.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Peter is too much of a yes man but Thomas would be good.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

You'd have to have a running gag about Jesus's lousy carpentry skills or something.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Peter would have a significant role in at least novel in the series: Bust-Out.

seana said...

It depends on how smart you think Watson is.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter, Seana

Didnt Monty Python already do this? Sort of.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, but their version was a comedy.

seana said...

Probably. But the profit lies in the permutation.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Anonymous, my ointment-coated foot! That was me.

John McFetridge said...

And to think when I suggested to Declan Burke the idea for a novel about Oliver Twist tracking down Jack the Ripper he thought I was crazy...

seana said...

Write it as a screenplay, John.