Friday, January 3, 2014

100 ANSWERS (IN CASE YOU NEEDED TO KNOW)

I HAVE BEEN TOLD THAT READERS LIKE KNOWING SOMETHING ABOUT THE AUTHORS THEY READ.  SINCE I AM NOT STALKED BY PAPARAZZI, I THOUGHT I WOULD TACKLE THESE 100 QUESTIONS AIMED AT REVEALING A LITTLE ABOUT THE PARTICULAR RESPONDENT. 
IF NOTHING ELSE, IT WAS SOMETHING TO DO WHILE EATING CHERRY VANILLA ICE CREAM.
1. ONE OF YOUR SCARS, HOW DID YOU GET IT?
    HIT ON THE HEAD WITH A BIG ROCK.  I WAS TOLD IT WAS AN ACCIDENT. 

2. WHAT IS ON THE WALLS IN YOUR ROOM?
    MOSTLY BOOKS.

3. DO YOU SNORE, GRIND YOUR TEETH, OR TALK IN YOUR SLEEP?
    YOU TELL ME.

4. WHAT TYPE OF MUSIC DO YOU LISTEN TO?
    MUSIC WITH WORDS.

5. DO YOU KNOW WHAT TIME YOU WERE BORN?
    ONE IN THE MORNING

6. WHAT DO YOU WANT MORE THAN ANYTHING RIGHT NOW?
    TO KNOW WHAT QUESTION 100 WILL BE.

7. WHAT DO YOU MISS?
    THE BROOKLYN DODGERS AND HOLDING HANDS.


8. WHAT ARE YOUR MOST PRIZED POSSESSIONS?
    ALL THE TEETH I HAVE LEFT.

9. HOW TALL ARE YOU?
    6 FEET 3-1/2 INCHES.

10. DO YOU GET CLAUSTROPHOBIC?
      ONLY IN VERY TIGHT SPACES.

11. DO YOU GET SCARED IN THE DARK?
      NO.  IT’S WHAT I CAN SEE THAT SCARES ME SOMETIMES.

12. THE LAST PERSON TO MAKE YOU CRY?
       MR. ONION.

13. WHAT IS YOUR WORST FEAR?
       THAT I WON’T GET IT ALL DONE.

14. WHAT DOES YOUR IDEAL MATCH LOOK LIKE?
      HAPPY.

15. WHERE CAN YOU SEE YOURSELF PROPOSING AT?
       I’M DONE PROPOSING.

16. COFFEE OR ENERGY DRINK?
      COFFEE.

17. FAVORITE PIZZA TOPPING?
       ITALIAN SAUSAGE FROM FAICCO'S IN GREENWICH VILLAGE.

18. IF YOU COULD EAT ANYTHING RIGHT NOW, WHAT WOULD IT BE?
      ICE CREAM (AND I AM EATING IT RIGHT NOW).

19. FAVORITE COLOR OF ALL TIME?
      BLUE (SO FAR).

20. HAVE YOU EVER EATEN A GOLDFISH?
      I HOPE NOT.



21. WHAT WAS THE FIRST MEANINGFUL GIFT YOU EVER RECEIVED?
       A SENSE OF HUMOR.

22. DO YOU HAVE A CRUSH?
       SOMETIMES.

23. ARE YOU DOUBLE JOINTED?
       NO, BUT I CAN BAT BOTH WAYS.

24. FAVORITE CLOTHING BRAND?
      THE ONE THAT FITS.

25. IF YOU COULD GO ANYWHERE ON EARTH, RIGHT NOW, WHERE WOULD IT BE?
      THE MEDITERRANEAN.

26. WHAT TIME DID YOU GO TO BED LAST NIGHT?
       TOO LATE.

27. PLAY ANY SPORTS?
       BALL.

28. WHAT'S ONE THING YOU HAVE DONE THAT YOU NEVER TOLD YOUR PARENTS?
       I SPENT THREE DAYS IN JAIL.
 
29. WHAT IS THE BEST SUBJECT TO LEARN ABOUT?
       TRUST.

30. SAY A NUMBER FROM ONE TO A HUNDRED:
      47

31. BLONDES OR BRUNETTES?
      OKAY.

32. FAVORITE QUOTE?
      YOU’RE GOING TO NEED A BIGGER BOAT.




33. FAVORITE PLACE?
      ATLANTIC COAST.

34. HAVE YOU BEEN OUT OF THE USA?
       SURE.

35. YOUR WEAKNESSES?
       CAFFEINE AND NICOTINE.

36. MET ANYONE FAMOUS?
       YES (AND INFAMOUS).

37. IF YOU COULD LEARN TO DO SOMETHING INSTANTLY, WHAT WOULD IT BE?
       PLAY PIANO.

38. EVER DONE A PRANK CALL?
       NOT YET, WHAT’S YOUR PHONE NUMBER?

39. DO YOU THINK EVERYONE OUT THERE HAS A SOULMATE?
       I DON’T BELIEVE ANYONE HAS A SOUL MATE.

40. WHAT WERE YOU DOING BEFORE YOU FILLED THIS OUT?
       PUTTING ICE CREAM INTO A BOWL.

41. HAVE YOU EVER HAD SURGERY?
       NO.

42. WHAT DO YOU GET COMPLIMENTED ABOUT MOST?
       MY WRITING.  MY WIT.  MY WITTY WRITING.

43. HAVE YOU EVER HAD BRACES?
       YES, SO WHAT?

44. WHAT DO YOU WANT FOR YOUR BIRTHDAY?
       ANOTHER YEAR.

45. HOW MANY KIDS DO YOU HAVE AND THEIR NAMES?
       I HAVE ONE, ISIS. 

46. WERE YOU NAMED AFTER ANYONE?
       MY GRANDFATHER.


47. WHAT IS THE BIGGEST TURN OFF OF THE OPPOSITE SEX?
       TRYING TOO HARD TO BE OPPOSITE.      

48. WHAT DID YOU LIKE MOST ABOUT HIGH SCHOOL?
       WEEKENDS AND SUMMERS.


49. WHAT KIND OF SHAMPOO DO YOU USE?
       WHO CARES?

50. DO YOU LIKE YOUR HANDWRITING?
       SURE.

51. WHAT IS YOUR FAVORITE LUNCH MEAT?
       GENOA SALAMI.

52. ANY BAD HABITS?
       SOME, BUT ONLY POTENTIALLY HARMFUL TO MYSELF.

53. JEALOUS PERSON?
      HAVE BEEN (A BAD HABIT I HAVE TRIED TO BREAK).

54. IF YOU WERE ANOTHER PERSON, WOULD YOU BE FRIENDS WITH YOU?
       I’D GIVE IT A SHOT.

55. FAVORITE FANTASY?
       NOT CERTAIN WHAT YOU'RE ASKING, BUT I'LL SAY "THE LORD OF THE RINGS".

56. DO LOOKS MATTER?
       UNFORTUNATELY.

57. HOW DO YOU RELEASE ANGER?
       IF YOU MAKE ME ANGRY I WILL SHOW YOU.

58. WOULD YOU RATHER GAIN 58 POUNDS OR LOSE 58 POUNDS?
       NO.

59. SNOW?
       NO.

60. WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE TOY AS A CHILD?
       A BALL.


61. HOW MANY NUMBERS ARE IN YOUR CELL PHONE?
      MORE THAN I COULD EVER USE.

62. WERE YOU A FAN OF BARNEY AS A LITTLE KID?
       WHEN I WAS A KID, BARNEY WOULD NEVER HAVE CUT IT.

63. DO YOU USE SARCASM?
       ONLY IN THE LEAST SARCASTIC WAY.

64. MASHED POTATOES OR MACARONI AND CHEESE?
       MASHED POTATOES, UNPEELED.

65. WHAT DO YOU LOOK FOR IN A GUY?
       I AM A GUY, SO I LOOK FOR A BROTHER.

66. WHAT ARE YOUR NICKNAMES?
       BRO.  FALCO. 

67. FAVORITE SUPER POWER?
       FLYING.

68. WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE TV SHOW?
       BASEBALL.

69. WHAT'S THE BEST WAY TO DEAL WITH YOUR ENEMIES?
       LET THEM BE.

70. WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE ICE CREAM FLAVOR?
       GUESS.


71. DO YOU HAVE ALL YOUR FINGERS AND TOES?
       YES.

72. DO YOU HAVE A COMPUTER IN YOUR ROOM?
       IN ONE OF MY ROOMS.

73. PLANS FOR TONIGHT?
       TRY GETTING THROUGH THE REST OF THESE QUESTIONS.

74. WHERE DO YOU WANT TO LIVE WHEN YOU ARE OLDER?
       NEAR THE OCEAN.

75. DO YOU WANT EVERYONE TO ANSWER THESE QUESTIONS?
       I HONESTLY HAVE NO OPINION.

76. WHAT ARE YOU LISTENING TO?
       GENESIS. A TRICK OF THE TAIL.

77. LAST THING YOU DRANK?
       COFFEE.

78. LAST PERSON YOU TALKED TO ON THE PHONE?
       MY SISTER.



79. THE FIRST THING YOU NOTICE IN THE OPPOSITE SEX?
       HEIGHT.

80. WHAT DO YOU LIKE TO DO IN YOUR SPARE TIME?
       IT’S ALL SPARE TIME.

81. FAVORITE THING TO HATE?
       DALLAS COWBOYS OR ATLANTA BRAVES.

82. FAVORITE SEASON OF THE YEAR?
       SUMMER.

83. WHAT'S YOUR FAVORITE TYPE OF CANDY?
       CHOCOLATE.

84. HAVE YOU EVER REALLY AND TRULY HAD A BEST FRIEND?
       I HAVE REALLY GOOD FRIENDS, I DON’T RANK THEM.

85. WHAT IS YOUR HAIR COLOR?
       GREY OVER BROWN.

86. EYE COLOR?
       BROWN.

87. SHOE SIZE?
       12 OR SO.

88. FAVORITE FAST FOOD PLACE?
       ANYWHERE WITH A REALLY GOOD BREAKFAST BURRITO.



89. FAVORITE RESTAURANT?
       IT CLOSED.

90. DO YOU LIKE SUSHI?
       NAH.

91. WATCH TV TODAY?
       MAYBE.

92. FAVORITE DAY OF THE YEAR?
       THANKSGIVING.

93. PLAY ANY MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS?
       A LITTLE GUITAR AND A SMALLER UKULELE.


94. REPUBLICAN OR DEMOCRAT?
       RUSSIAN-ITALIAN-AMERICAN.

95. KISSES OR HUGS?
       OKAY (A SMILE WILL DO IN A PINCH).

96. RELATIONSHIPS OR ONE NIGHT STANDS?
       ONE NIGHT AT A TIME RELATIONSHIPS.

97. WHAT WAS THE LAST THING YOU BOUGHT?
       HALF AND HALF.

98. WHAT BOOK ARE YOU READING?
       THE ONE I AM WRITING.

99. HAVE YOU WRITTEN YOUR WHOLE LIFE?
       NOT YET.

100. DESCRIBE YOUR LIFE.
         IN PROGRESS.







Thursday, December 19, 2013

FIRST AND FOREMOST A FAN

AN INTERVIEW WITH DOWN & OUT BOOKS' ERIC CAMPBELL ON INDIE PUBLISHING 

 
As DOWN & OUT BOOKS moves toward a third anniversary, the two-year-old is walking with better balance and greater confidence.  The toddler is finding its identity. I was interested in hearing about why anyone would feel compelled to tackle the challenging and risky business called Independent Publishing—and who better to ask than Eric Campbell—the founder, publisher, editor, sometimes copy editor and avid crime fiction fan who stands at the helm of the young Indie.

Q: You are obviously passionate about crime fiction.  What grabbed you?

A: I remember my mom taking my brother and me to the library when we were nine or ten and picking out a book in the Alfred Hitchcock and The Three Investigators series.  It was the beginning of my love for crime fiction.  There were periods when I would read other genres, but I always came back to crime—only in books, of course. When I was in my early teens I stumbled across a copy of Headhunter by Michael Slade, it was the first adult crime book I remember reading. A terrific novel and a very scary one for a fourteen-year-old—combining murder, mystery, horror and psychological suspense.  I was hooked.
 
 
Q: Headhunter, as well as The First Deadly Sin and Red Dragon before it, changed crime fiction by featuring the serial killer and a heightened level of graphic violence.  What other novelists and sub-genres of adult crime fiction fed your passion?
 
A: There are far too many crime writers who I enjoy reading to list here. Dennis Lehane, Michael Connelly, George Pelecanos, Reed Farrel Coleman and the great James Crumley just to name a few. Did I forget to mention J.L. Abramo. In terms of sub-genres, I continue to get pleasure from serial killer books, particularly those which offer a fresh take on the subject. I am also drawn to the police procedural, some espionage, and find the quirky Florida crime novels of John D. MacDonald and Tim Dorsey very entertaining. On the top of my list is the hard-boiled private eye novel.  And any work of fiction, be it a crime novel or otherwise, earns my admiration if it is smart—written with wit, intelligence and a true and honest understanding of human strengths and weaknesses.
 
Q: Without getting to Down & Out Books quite yet, what about you? What compelled a huge fan of crime fiction to explore publishing and what were the first steps you took in an effort to scratch the itch?
 
A: Being a fan of crime fiction, I was always on the lookout for publishers who released unique books. I found that with Dennis McMillan. What started out as consumer-company relationship developed into a friendship. Dennis would talk about the issues he was struggling with—fewer readers, eBooks, recession— the same kinds of stuff any business deals with. I had a day job that afforded me the freedom to get involved in more personally satisfying projects outside of the daily grind, so I threw out a business plan to Dennis. Unfortunately, he had already made up his mind to make a change in his career so it didn’t come together.
 
In the meantime, Ben LeRoy had recently left Bleak House Books and started Tyrus Books. He and Alison Dasho were looking for some investors in Tyrus—so I invested in Tyrus and became the CFO. I learned a great deal about the publishing business in a very short time. Ben and I sold Tyrus to F+W in April 2011. Ben went to work for F+W and I was out of the publishing business.
My hiatus didn’t last too long. I still had a burning itch to be involved. I had made a lot of good friends. In particular, Jon Jordan and I had become close. There had been discussions about Tyrus publishing the eBook version of Crimespree Magazine, but after the acquisition by F+W it fell off the table—so Jon and I talked about an alternative plan for publishing the e-Magazine, and  Down & Out Books was born.

 
 
Q: From publishing the eBook version of Crimespree, D&O quickly moved on to publishing crime fiction eBooks—beginning with the re-issues of out-of-print novels you particularly admired and wanted to see out there again.  How did you go about acquiring those initial titles—and when did you get the wild notion to take a chance with previously unpublished works?
A: I looked at my personal book collection and asked, “What happened to this writer, and this one?” I made a list of several who I had read and really enjoyed and who seemed to have disappeared. When I first started D&O, I had a partner. I gave him the list and asked him to try to make contact with the novelists on the list. We had quite a bit of success in contracting some of these authors. Then I asked Jon Jordon and Jeremy Lynch of Crimespree for additional recommendations of crime writers who would fall into the where are they now category.  I pursued those folks and again had some success. Each time I began the process with a writer, I asked if they had unpublished works and what they were doing with them. Several had books; so after releasing their previously published catalog, I started working on the new ones. I can’t tell you how much I’ve enjoyed that aspect of what I’m doing. To be one of the first readers of some really great books is very exciting and rewarding. It will be even more rewarding when any of them is deservedly discovered by the general reading public in a big way.
 
Q: There is so many books out there, getting discovered is a formidable task— particularly for a small Indie publisher with a limited promotional budget.  What can Down and Out Books do within its financial means to bring more attention to the house and its stable of writers, and how can the D&O authors help in this effort?
 
A: You hit the nail on the head.  In most cases, a small independent publisher does not have the financial means to really push a single book the way the major New York publishing houses can—and even the big houses spend a great majority of their marketing bucks on their big names, those in their stable who have profitable track records.  Many of our writers were dropped by traditional New York publishers—not because they weren’t writing good books—but because these very good books weren’t selling enough to suit the publisher’s needs—largely due to the fact that they were not getting the kind of marketing attention needed to turn it around.  As an Indie publisher, Down & Out Books has been able to reissue some terrific out-of-print titles—and release previously unpublished titles—from a group of excellent crime novelists. That said—D&O Books does commit funds for publicity to each new book. It could be as simple as a formal press release or as robust as engaging a dedicated publicist or running ads in crime fiction magazines. I'm a finance guy by day, so I like to measure results. The success rate of these efforts has been challenging to measure—nothing has produced a rocket ship ride to the moon in sales—but I believe it is worthwhile and necessary. It's all about repeat exposure to create a brand awareness for the author and D&O Books. Many of our ads feature several covers of recently released or forthcoming books.  Maybe one or more will catch an eye or two and generate sales—and just as enjoying a novel by an individual writer creates interest in that author’s other books, so might enjoying a book by one D&O writer create curiosity about our other writers.

 
I truly believe we—the authors and publisher—need to work together to move the needle. Readers want to hear from the authors more than the publisher. I'm just the back office guy who should be in the shadows while the authors are the spokespeople in the spotlight. So far, I've found that only a handful of authors really want to participate in a joint promotional effort. And that's a shame because if the individual authors did more to promote each other it would multiply the brand reach significantly—and that is what will sell books for all.  So we are waging a campaign to encourage our authors to become more involved in team promotion.
 
Q: What goals and hopes do you have for Down & Out Books in the near and distant future?

A: For the next few years we want to continue publishing books that we think highly of and believe will impress readers—probably six to eight titles each year.  We will continue to build the reputation of our authors and build brand recognition for Down & Out Books as a publishing house that can guarantee top-notch crime fiction.  Within five years, we plan to bring additional experienced and committed professionals into the front office to more effectively create increased visibility for Down & Out Books and our authors—and to continue developing strategic alliances within the crime fiction community.  And, of course, sell lots of really good books.
To learn more about Down & Out Books and its lineup of authors and titles please visit DOWN AND OUT BOOKS and on FACEBOOK.
 


Wednesday, November 27, 2013

BIG GUNS, BOLD GUMSHOES, AND BAD GIRLS

SELLING A BOOK BY ITS COVER

 
There was no lack of pulp fiction in the 30's, 40,s and 50's.  Literally thousands of paperbacks, many by writers who did nothing but pump out books with provocative titles and tantalizing cover art.  Drugstore Novels, Dime Novels, Detective Magazines.  Writers who quickly faded into obscurity.  Artists who attracted cult followings.  Guns, fedoras, and most often a scantily clad dame in peril...or just plain bad.
 
Girls Out Of Hell, Bad Girls, Dames Can Be Poison, She Tried To Be Good, She Couldn't Be Good, Blonde Hellcat, Marijuana Girl, Pleasure Girl, Pit Stop Nympho, Deadlier Than The Male, Big City Girl, Gang Girls, I Prefer Girls, and on and on...
 
 
Along with the sultry babes there were the clever and catchy titles...and the alluring tag lines...
 
She knew what she wanted...a man to take her away from the dirt road and one-room shack she called home.
 
Betty was easy to get...but hard to hold.
 
And from D for Delinquent (no...not a Sue Grafton title)...She was strictly for the boys.

 
And there were the suits and ties, the hats, the handguns close by...and sure...why not a vixen, too...
 
 
It was not only the once obscure, now vanished drugstore novels that used sex and violence out front to promote sales.  Publishers used these eye-catching titles and images for books that would eventually become genre fiction classics...as these editions of some very well-known and admired crime novels illustrate...

 
Bondage and leggy blondes in London and Paris...
 
 
Philip K. Dick (the android in the fur coat and little else), George Orwell (Big Sister with cleavage), and Kurt Vonnegut Jr. (sirens indeed)...
 
 
And let's not forget good old Philip Marlowe and Sam Spade...

 
We have recently seen a return to the pulp cover art tradition...certainly influenced by what has now become a classic image for a new generation...
 
 
Hard Case Crime has published out-of-print classics as well as new titles with striking old-school cover art...including two recent titles by this up-and-comer...

 
Down & Out Books has recently published titles with covers paying homage to the classic artwork of the golden age...

 
Could this brand of pulp cover art be used to boost the sales of classic literary fiction...replete with babes, allusions to Hollywood icons...and tag lines like these...
 
She's...no angel.
 
When it came to loving...he knew which Daisy to pick.
 
Here's looking at you Cathy.
 
Someone thought so...

 
I leave you with the burning question...can you really tell a book by its cover...
 
And I also leave you with a book cover I put together myself...maybe someday I will write a book to represent it...
 

 

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

SAN FRANCISCO BEAT

 
The sights, sounds, tastes and aromas of San Francisco are as unmistakable as they are unforgettable and provide a perfect setting for the fictional exploits of Brooklyn born, Italian-Catholic, Russian-Jewish, unsuccessful movie actor and marginally successful private investigator, Jake Diamond.
 
Jake is more over-easy than hard-boiled and he is more likely to be carrying a worn paperback classic novel than a firearm. Jake’s thirst quencher of choice is Tennessee sour mash bourbon, his favorite foods are those with the highest cholesterol, and the closest he comes to being a purist is non-filtered cigarettes.
         
                The scent of deep fried calamari floated in through my office window
           like an invitation to triple-bypass surgery.
 
So begins the third novel in the Jake Diamond series, Counting to Infinity, following Catching Water in a Net and Clutching at Straws.  Jake’s office sits above Molinari’s legendary Italian Market on Columbus Avenue; in the heart of the rich history and the eclectic street life of North Beach.  From Molinari’s Delicatessen to the Vallejo Street Police Station, to the Shrine of St. Francis of Assisi; the streets of North Beach are often the backdrop for Diamond’s most tense and funniest moments. 
 
During the break between my first and second year of graduate studies at the University of Cincinnati, I hopped into a ten-year-old Volkswagen bus and headed west; across the Mississippi for the first time.  Having grown up on the Atlantic Ocean, I was curious about the Pacific. 
 
I made the mandatory stops; the Grand Canyon, Las Vegas, Hollywood, and then up the coast to the City by the Bay.
 
It was love at first sight.
 
1971.  Richard Nixon was in the White House.  Vietnam was aflame.  The Summer of Love had come and gone, People’s Park sadly abandoned.  But Haight Street and Berkeley were still tie-dyed colors and long hair and civil disobedience.  The Jefferson Airplane and Grateful Dead were still thought of as local bands, and the city was a jewel still sparkling upon the turbulent sea of social change.  I was escorted to the top of Twin Peaks, as was Jake Diamond in Clutching at Straws, and the 360-degree view of the city, the bay and the Pacific was indelible. 
 
I left my heart there too, Mr. Bennett.
 
I lived in San Francisco during the closing years of the seventies; post-Vietnam, post-Watergate, pre-Reagan.
 
First, in the Fillmore, where Jake Diamond lived before inheriting the house in the Presidio.  Later on Frederick Street near Masonic, a short block from Haight Street, where the last Flower Children were fighting to hold the line, with their head shops and music stores and street performances, against the other thirty-something residents who were trying to turn the Upper Haight into a respectable neighborhood.  I worked part time at the Green Apple Bookstore on Clement, where Jake Diamond purchased paperback copies of A Tale of Two Cities and The Count of Monte Cristo.  Catching Water in a Net became a tale of San Francisco and Los Angeles.  Clutching at Straws became a tale of retribution.
 
I explored the city.  Seldom in a car.  Automobiles were impractical in San Francisco; there was no place to put them.  As Jake Diamond once noted, the only way to get a parking space in San Francisco is to buy a parked car. 
 
I explored on foot, walking up and down the city’s hills, from neighborhood to neighborhood, each with their unique personality and their own climate.  The Fillmore, Castro (the setting of One Hit Wonder, a Jake Diamond short story included in The Shamus Sampler), the Mission (where Vinnie Strings squanders his savings at the Finnish Line, a gambling hall run by two brothers from Helsinki), the Sunset (where Jake parks his cherished 1963 Chevy Impala convertible in Joey Russo’s garage), the Presidio, the Panhandle, North Beach and the Haight. 
 
I explored by bike, bus, streetcar, cable car and even sailboat.  I was taken in by the frenzied activity of small theatre, the renaissance being created in the redevelopment of Fort Mason, and a theatre rag found in every small venue lobby.  I began to write about art.
 
I took the knowledge and the passion to Denver where I founded and edited a monthly theatre magazine and placed it in all of the local theatres.  I began writing for some of the smaller independent newspapers.  I had become a budding arts journalist.  I was a professional writer; inspired by my time in San Francisco.
 
In 2000, in South Carolina, I began writing my second novel.  My initial attempt, a crime novel set in Brooklyn, was sitting unread, surrounded by thanks but no thanks form letters from an assortment of literary agents.  I wanted to try my hand at first person.  The natural, unpremeditated form was the private eye narration, and the setting could be nowhere but San Francisco. 
 
Jake Diamond was born.
 
Catching Water in a Net captured the SMP/PWA Award for Best First Private Eye Novel and a year later I was holding a hardback copy in my hand.  Remarkable. 
 
I thank the city of San Francisco.  And as often as possible I visit, preferably in the fall.
 
Autumn in San Francisco, Diamond muses in Clutching at Straws.
 
    
Late September, early October is my favorite time of the year in San Francisco.  In terms of weather, September is the mildest month.  Most of the tourists are gone and that is a great blessing.  In July and August they’re as thick as Buddy Holly’s eyeglasses.  The kids are back where they belong; the nine-week challenge of trying to find a single square inch of ground not infested by swarms of loud and reckless adolescents is finally over.  Unless you’re insane enough to venture anywhere near a school.  I can hardly imagine a better place to be in early fall.
                       Though I’ll admit, I’ll take Paris in the springtime.
 
I visit, I walk the streets, I duck into alleys, check out storefronts, and look for more magical places for Jake Diamond to discover while searching for a clue or two.