Tampilkan postingan dengan label Hard Case Crime. Tampilkan semua postingan
Tampilkan postingan dengan label Hard Case Crime. Tampilkan semua postingan
Sabtu, 24 September 2011
How Charles Ardai Picked Up a Cocktail Waitress
This past week noir-heads were were thrilled to learn that Hard Case Crime's Charles Ardai had found a lost James M. Cain novel called The Cocktail Waitress, and will be publishing it next fall. I first read about this supposedly "lost" novel in Roy Hoopes's excellent biography Cain, never imagining we'd all have the chance to enjoy it. Ardai, who's clearly the Indiana Jones of pulp fiction, agree to talk about how he tracked the novel down.
Secret Dead Blog: How did you manage to unearth The Cocktail Waitress manuscript? Can you tell me more about the "detective work" involved?
Charles Ardai: A little more than nine years ago, when I first approached Max Allan Collins with the idea of writing for Hard Case Crime (this was a year before we signed the original deal with Dorchester, two years before the first Hard Case Crime book ever got published), we were brainstorming about what authors and books might be a good fit for our new line, and he mentioned that he knew of one last crime novel James M. Cain wrote at the end of his life but never published. He hadn’t actually seen or read the book, all he knew was the title: The Cocktail Waitress. But he knew that it existed. And he suggested that it might make a good addition to the Hard Case Crime list.
Well, I couldn’t disagree with that. I’ve been a huge Cain fan since age 18, when on my way home from my first day at Columbia I found a dog-eared copy of Double Indemnity on a used-book table and read it from cover to cover before my bus ride ended. (It’s a short book. And a long bus ride.) I’d tracked down and read every single book Cain ever wrote, even the obscure ones, even the bad ones. Even the short stories. I’d done the same thing with Chandler, with Graham Greene, with Vonnegut. It’s what I did with authors who really struck a chord for me. And Cain struck one that had resonated for fifteen years.
So I began the process of trying to find The Cocktail Waitress. Talked to the literary agents who handled the estate – they’d heard of the book but didn’t have a copy, didn’t know where a copy might be found, discouraged my looking because, well, if it had remained unpublished all this time, how good could it be? I thanked them and went on with my search. Rare book dealers? Collectors of manuscripts? Fellow Cain devotees? I won’t say I talked to everyone, but I talked to a good cross-section, and no one had ever read The Cocktail Waitress. You could get a copy of Willeford’s forbidden Grimhaven (and I did); you could get a two-volume samizdat edition of Salinger’s uncollected short stories (and I did); but not The Cocktail Waitress. There were 34 boxes of writings archived at the Library of Congress, and if I were a Dan Brown character I would have gone down to D.C. and started hunting through them (and wound up chased at gunpoint through the sewers by a maniacal albino, but I digress), but I didn’t – if I had, I would have found it sooner, I now realize, but at the time I assumed what they had was all correspondence, tax returns, and legal papers (most of it is). I did travel a bit, to book shows and conferences, and got the word out about what I was looking for, and none of it did a bit of good. Until one day I was out in Hollywood – Hollywoodland, I suppose I should call it, in deference to the opening of Double Indemnity – and talking with my film and TV agent about the quest, and he said, “You know, I inherited the papers of an old Hollywood agent who used to represent all the big authors when they came out here – Faulkner and Fitzgerald and Chandler and Cain…” And Cain, too? Yes, Cain. Could he take a look through the old man’s files (I’m not being disrespectful, the man had been 91 when he died) and see if maybe, just maybe, there was some germ of a hint of a clue I might follow up on, some thread I could start tugging to see what unraveled? A few days later, I got a package in the mail, containing the manuscript of The Cocktail Waitress. It really was one of those Spielberg moments, as I told Dave Itzkoff in the Times: You open the box and your eyes go wide as your face is bathed in a golden light from below. The thing itself. It was in my hands at last.
SDB: Forgive the hardcore noir nerd question I'm about to ask, but... it sounds like you're working from Cain's original typescript. What does a typed James M. Cain page look like? Pristine? Lots of crossouts? Do the letters practically bleed onto the page? Did you run your fingertips all over the pages in a slightly-orgasmic frenzy? (I would have.)
CA: It wasn’t word-processed, that’s for damn sure. Hammered out on a manual typewriter, good old metal-struck letters in nice even rows. Most pages clean, but where he had an idea for something to insert, it’s scrawled by hand in the left or bottom margin with an arrow showing where he meant the new sentences to go. Cross-outs when he no longer liked a phrase and wanted it changed. He caught word repetitions and fixed them. On the other hand, there were two places where a bit of math is required and he got it wrong both times – computing how much tip is left after you pay for a drink with a twenty dollar bill, and (more forgivably) computing compounded interest on an old debt. Cain’s handwriting is not easy to read, but you have to remember that the man was in his 80s and had had some health problems by then. But when you decipher it, it’s good writing. His editorial instincts were spot on – I don’t think there was one case where he made a change and I thought, That’s a mistake, I preferred it the way he had it originally. One spot of whimsy: When he got to the last page of the novel, he had a lot of blank space left after typing the last line, and he filled it up by typing “T H E E N D” vertically on a slant. You can almost feel the man’s relief and joy at having made it to the end. He knew he was getting on in years and according to his biographer would talk about his own death a lot; he wasn’t sure he still had it in him to write a novel. But man, did he ever.
SDB: Cain seems to be having, as they say, a "moment" (what, with the Mildred Pierce mini-series and snazzy retro Vintage reprints). What is it about his work that keeps it relevant and fresh all of these decades later?
CA: Cain’s work draws you in irresistibly, and I’ve tried over the years to figure out how he does it, but it’s hard to say. Something about the way he inhabits his characters’ voices, something about the intimate first-person narration, something about the sense of desperation – you can feel his characters sweating and breathing hard. There’s usually an element of sex, of course, and one of economic hunger, and since when have lust and greed ever been boring? There’s just something elemental about Cain, like you’re reading about men and women stripped bare, the human animal at its most raw. The emotions aren’t subtle. His people are cruel, they’re passionate, and when they sin, they go all the way.
SDB: Are there other "holy grails" out there? Or is The Cocktail Waitress the big one?
CA: This is the big one for me – there’s nothing else I’ve been looking for this long. You hear rumors about a last, lost “black” Travis McGee, but I’m 99% sure that just doesn’t exist. There’s the original pulp version of THE MALTESE FALCON, but you can find that easily enough if you pay a pulp dealer for it, and I don’t think the differences between the original and the final book version are huge. There are great obscure books I’d love to reprint and the authors have so far said no, but that’s not the same thing – the books exist, anyone can find a copy if they really want. This is the last great undiscovered manuscript that I know of.
Photo: "Cocktail Lounge in New Union Hall," J.R. Eyerman, 1942. Courtesy Google/LIFE.
Sabtu, 04 Juni 2011
Hard Case Returns... With Some Westlake in its Back Pocket
If you're a Hard Case Crime fanatic like myself, the past year has felt a little like limbo, hasn't it? The last HCC release was back in August 2010, and every month since then I've been glancing at my TBR pile with a forlorn expression, missing those red-and-black-and-white spines with the yellow ribbon that represented my assurance of quality. (Sigh.)
Thankfully, we've all been sprung from purgatory. Hard Case Crime is officially back this September with out four new novels by Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Mickey Spillane and Christa Faust. And February 2012 brings something I never thought I'd see again: a new Donald E. Westlake novel. Hard Case honcho Charles Ardai explains:
Glad you're back, Hard Case.
Thankfully, we've all been sprung from purgatory. Hard Case Crime is officially back this September with out four new novels by Lawrence Block, Max Allan Collins, Mickey Spillane and Christa Faust. And February 2012 brings something I never thought I'd see again: a new Donald E. Westlake novel. Hard Case honcho Charles Ardai explains:
The book is called THE COMEDY IS FINISHED, and it's going to be our second hardcover ever. Don wrote it between the late 1970s and early 80s, but never published it because he found himself worrying that its premise -- the kidnapping of a famous television comedian -- was too similar to the movie "The King of Comedy," which Martin Scorsese released around the same time. He shouldn't have worried -- the book and the movie aren't similar at all outside of sharing that basic premise. It's a hell of a good book and one that very much deserves to be in print, and we're very excited to be bringing it out for the first time, with a fabulous cover by Greg Manchess.While I hated the hiatus, I've gotta say... this news kind of made it worth the wait. And look at that gorgeous Manchess cover. Hard to say which is more risque; this one, or Manchess's cover for Lawrence Block's Getting Off.
Glad you're back, Hard Case.
Rabu, 26 Januari 2011
You Gotta Get Up If You Want to Get Off
If you're a fellow Lawrence Block fan (and if not, what the hell's the matter with you?) you have to admit: we are living in golden times. There's a brand new Matt Scudder novel, A Drop of the Hard Stuff, out this spring from Mulholland Books. There's a virtual treasure trove of ebook editions of many hard-to-find Block novels available on your Kindles and your Nooks and iPads. (If you haven't already ready, drop a ten spot on Such Men Are Dangerous, a short-but-blistering action thriller unlike anything else you've ever read. Trust me; you'll thank me in the morning.)
And now comes word that a brand-new Block novel is leading the relaunch of Hard Case Crime from a.) a new publisher, and b.) in hardcover.
Strangely it's Block writing as one of his former pseudonyms, a la Stephen King/Richard Bachman. Confused? Let Charles Ardai explain:
(And that's just the beginning for the new Hard Case. Getting Off will be followed by a new Mickey Spillane/Max Allan Collins, a new Max Allan Collins, and a new Christa Faust.)
So yeah. These are golden times.
And now comes word that a brand-new Block novel is leading the relaunch of Hard Case Crime from a.) a new publisher, and b.) in hardcover.
Strangely it's Block writing as one of his former pseudonyms, a la Stephen King/Richard Bachman. Confused? Let Charles Ardai explain:
GETTING OFF: A Novel of Sex and Violence by Lawrence Block (writing as Jill Emerson) -- The story of a beautiful young woman who sets off on a mission to kill every man she's ever slept with (and she's slept with quite a few). For this book, Lawrence Block is reviving a pseudonym he hasn't used in almost 40 years, under which he wrote seven particularly sexy books back in the day. When he saw how sexy this new one was coming out, he thought...that's the Jill Emerson in me coming out again...Me? I'm already sold. By the premise, as well as that 1970s-style chunkalicious font and the rather, uh, cheeky Gregory Manchess cover art.
(And that's just the beginning for the new Hard Case. Getting Off will be followed by a new Mickey Spillane/Max Allan Collins, a new Max Allan Collins, and a new Christa Faust.)
So yeah. These are golden times.
Minggu, 09 Agustus 2009
Never Heard of Him
In an e-mail early this morning, Charles Ardai finally revealed the title and author of Hard Case Crime's top-secret extra December release:And what is the book...? It's the very hard-boiled story of a man murdered by a blast from a sawed-off shotgun to the face at point-blank range; of a criminal on the run from Chicago who comes to a dirty Pennsylvania coal-mining town and winds up locking horns with the corrupt Masonic lodge that runs the town; of a Pinkerton detective who sets out to clean up the town; and of the doom that pursues a man across an ocean and leaves him at the mercy of the world's most ruthless criminal mastermind. It's a story narrated by a veteran of the war in Afghanistan, whose partner in investigating the twisted plot is a drug addicted private investigator with a brain like a steel trap. And wait till you see the cover -- Glen Orbik has really outdone himself here, with his portrait of a gorgeous, bosomy dame in a transparent negligee watching with horror as a man with a brand on his arm appears in her doorway. And the author -- it's one of the best-selling authors in the world. His books have been made into movies, computer games, comic books; they've sold tens of millions of copies. He's not someone you'd think of as a Hard Case Crime author in a million years!
Ardai's dug up some real obscure gems in the past, but I think he's outdone himself this time. Anybody know anything about this "Doyle" guy?
Senin, 12 Januari 2009
Oh, Honey
Lester Dent is best known for the bajillion Doc Savage pulp stories he wrote during the 1930s. According to Lee Server 's Encyclopedia of Pulp Fiction Writers, Dent started to turn his hand to crime fiction in the mid-1940s, and even sold a hardboiled novel called Cry at Dusk to Gold Medal in 1952. And then, that was it. Dent retired from the pulp and paperback game... until now. Charles Ardai, somehow, has managed to find an unpublished hardboiled Dent novel called Honey in His Mouth; Hard Case will be publishing it this October. You can check out a sample chapter right here. I'm routinely stunned by the gems Ardai digs up; October can't come soon enough. I want to read everything right now, damnit!
Minggu, 14 Desember 2008
Hard Case Goes Widescreen
I love this cover to next September's Hard Case Crime release, Losers Live Longer, by Russell Atwood. HHC honcho Charles Ardai writes in his most recent e-mail newsletter:The book will be printed and bound the ordinary way, but in order for you to read the cover properly you'll need to hold the book sideways. (There are a few examples of sideways covers back in the pulp days, and we thought it would be fun to do one in our line.)
I know that the Regency Books edition of Jim Thompson's The Grifters was printed sideways, but can anyone remember any others?
Senin, 29 September 2008
Hard Case Crime: The Musical
Okay, maybe not quite. (Though with American Psycho: The Musical, anything's possible, right?) Check out this interesting tidbit from HCC head honcho Charles Ardai's latest email newsletter:
We're also working on an exciting project with a burlesque troupe that will include a crime novel set in the world of burlesque (written by one of the performers) and a live stage show in New York based on the book (starring the author and the cover models).
I'm guessing it's Allan Guthrie, making his triumphant return to the paperback house that launched him in the U.S.
(I know he has the pasties.)
We're also working on an exciting project with a burlesque troupe that will include a crime novel set in the world of burlesque (written by one of the performers) and a live stage show in New York based on the book (starring the author and the cover models).
I'm guessing it's Allan Guthrie, making his triumphant return to the paperback house that launched him in the U.S.
(I know he has the pasties.)
Sabtu, 26 April 2008
The Murderer Vine
And my nomination for Best Opening Paragraph I've Read in a Long Time:Here we sit in Puerto Lagarto—Port Lizard. It's on the old Mosquito Coast. Lizard and Mosquito, the two specialties down here. We're far below Yucatán. Compared this dump Yucatán is civilization. You put on a fresh shirt and thirty seconds later it's sopping wet. No paved streets and only one place with ice. That's the local cantina, La Amargura de Amor. The Bitterness of Love. Narcisco Ramirez owns it. He owns the only refrigerator. He packs it full of beer every morning. I sit in the Bitterness and drink my way from the front to the back of the refrigerator and look at the bay.It's from The Murderer Vine, by Shepard Rifkin, out in May from Hard Case Crime. Bill Crider posted the original cover over at his place. I think Bill Crider owns every paperback ever published.
Rabu, 09 April 2008
Oh Yeah. We've Got a Missile Crisis
Will you please take a look at this? Today, Charles Ardai at Hard Case Crime revealed the imprint's January 2009 release: a Lawrence Block rarity called Killing Castro. I haven't been this excited about the early sixties since the first season of Mad Men. And I love that every January, Charles manages to coax another incredibly rare novel from Block's seemingly endless pseudonymous backlist. This, however, may be it. Charles writes: "All I'll say here is that this is by far the rarest of all Block's books. He wrote it under a pseudonym he never used before or since, it's never been published under his real name (or this title), and he couldn't even locate a copy of it himself for thirty years!"But you? You can read a sample right here.
Rabu, 20 Februari 2008
Hungry For Work
No, not that kind of work. I mean Gun Work. Charles Ardai just posted the cover and a sample chapter of David J. Schow's sure-to-be-awesome Hard Case Crime novel, due out in... egads, November. I'm dying to read this now. Now, damnit. As I've mentioned previously, I've been a huge Schow fan since the old school late 1980s splatterpunk days, and if you haven't read The Kill Riff or Seeing Red or Lost Angels (just to name a few), you have some catching up to do before November. Which feels like a long, long freakin' time away...(By way of consolation, I do have Charles Willeford's Made in Miami on deck, which Bill Crider mentioned on his blog a few days ago. So there's that. But still...)
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