CITY OF ROSE lending library

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Galleys are in for City of Rose!

If you’re a book reviewer, get in contact with me, or download it  from Edelweiss.

I’ve only got six hard copies. A few are already in the wind. But I’m holding one aside for a lending library.

Here’s how it’s going to work:

Contact me here. First ten people go on a list. I mail the book to the first person. That person reads it and mails it to the second person. Second person mails it to the third person, and so on and so forth, until the end. Last person mails it back to me.

In return, I kindly as that you consider leaving a review on Amazon or Goodreads, but that’s not a requirement.

It’s a fun way for me to cover a little ground with an otherwise limited resource. I very shamelessly stole this idea from Stephen Elliott, who did it for his very excellent book The Adderall Diaries.

So if you’re interested, get cracking. I’m excited for this one to get out in the world.

Signing at the Brooklyn Book Festival

Are you going to the Brooklyn Book Festival this Sunday? Have you not yet acquired a copy of New Yorked? Then stop by the Mystery Writers of America table at 11:15 a.m. I will have books for sale and will also be signing them if you would like.

Where is the MWA table going to be? Good question. I have no idea and I pray that I am able to find it in time. The festival will be full of excitement and surprise.

Staten Island Arts event in the ferry terminal

Staten Island Arts has invited me to read/sign/discuss stuff in their culture lounge, located inside the Staten Island Ferry terminal.

This is very exciting. I am usually super depressed when I am in the ferry terminal because it means I am commuting to or from work and commuting sucks.

So now for once I get to do something very fun in the ferry terminal!

Sept. 10, 7 p.m. (though I’ll be there earlier than that—probably starting around 6:30 p.m. or so). Come on out, or just stop on your way home.

Mark your calendar or RSVP on Facebook here.

A roundup of stuff and things

BookPeople is Austin, TX, is one of my favorite bookstores. In no small part because of their amazing crime and mystery section, MysteryPeople, run by Scott Montgomery. He posed a couple of questions to me for their blog. I was happy to oblige.

If you’re in or around Austin, you must go to this place.

Check that out here.

My short story from Thuglit, “How to Make the Perfect New York Bagel”, made honorable mention in this year’s Best American Mystery Stories edited by James Patterson. Scott Detrow read it for the Word Crimes podcast and did a stellar job.

Thanks for podcastmaster Erik Arneson for the invite.

Give that a listen here.

The Art of Talking About Yourself

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Two nice hits today: My first television interview as an author is running on NY1, and my first really long audio interview just dropped on the Booked podcast.

They are both, to varying degrees, mortifying.

I don’t think I performed poorly. But there’s a reason I’m attracted to being a writer. It’s easier to express myself when I can do it by myself. I could never be an actor. Being the center of attention is not something I actively seek out. I get embarrassed playing charades.

And yet, when you’re promoting a book, you’ve got to take every opportunity you can to talk about it. And yourself. And process. All these things you’ve been perfectly happy to not talk about for so long.

Despite my initial terror, and the fact that I will never listen to or watch either of these ever again, I did learn some stuff that’s going to be helpful going forward.

For example, practice, practice, practice. This is a lesson I learned earlier in the process (and I talked about at LitReactor): You need an elevator pitch ready to go. When someone asks you what your book is about you need to be able to explain it quickly and with confidence.

I stumbled a bit on Booked, so before the NY1 interview, which took place two days later, I wrote something out and practiced it until I had it down.

(They ended up not using that for the clip, but hey, at least I was prepared.)

Also, be careful of filler words. Like. Um. Y’know. Well.

Those words you use to fill empty space. Booked is full of them. Again, something I thought about a lot while recording and went into NY1 being thoughtful of. Because holy shit, it can make you sound like a bit of a goof.

They were both very different experiences—for the NY1 interview, we talked for maybe 45 minutes to an hour, and the whole thing is condensed down into one minute and 48 seconds.

With Booked, we talked for nearly two hours—not all of it made it onto the ‘cast (thankfully—there was some fun off-the-record riffing), but the overwhelming majority of it did. I listened to it on the way to work this morning, and it’s weird, listening to yourself, wishing you’d said things differently, or glad you nailed a thought that, until then, had escaped you.

I’m very fortunate to have landed both of these—and it’s given me some stuff to chew on, about how to be more confident as a speaker.

I will say, though, it was a blast. So thanks to Amanda Farinacci from NY1, and Robb Olson and Livius Nedin from Booked. All three of them asked a ton of smart questions, and were such good sounding boards that the whole process was that much easier.

Recent items of note; Bookpage, The Lineup, a new review

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Two new guest posts just landed. One was really easy to write and one was really hard to write.

First up, the hard one: Over at The Lineup, I wrote about the murder of Imette St. Guillen, which influenced New Yorked.

At Bookpage, I wrote about the art that inspired New Yorked. That was a little easier.

Finally, there’s this review from Elizabeth A. White, which really resonated. This one made me feel really good to read.

Milwaukee Love

Thrilled to see the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel had some very kind words for New Yorked.

“I loved this novel. It may be the most quixotic hard-boiled I’ve read in ages. With clever nods to Chandler (including giving Ash a fedora) and lots of muscular metaphors (“The two of them looked at me like I’m calculus”), Hart has written an achingly lovely farewell to one man’s past.”

Click here to read the whole thing, and see some other excellent books that were highlighted.

Three simple steps to a bulletproof novel outline

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I went into New Yorked, my first novel, without an outline.

It took five years to write. Characters appeared, disappeared, and reappeared. Entire threads were added, removed, repurposes, rethought, and ultimately, trashed.

One of the lessons I learned over the course of those five years was: I’m the kind of writer who needs an outline. I knew the start and I knew the ending, but the middle—that’s where I was getting lost.

The second book, City of Rose, I wrote and delivered to my publisher in six months. Part of that was because I found my voice and my process. But a big part, too, was: I had an outline.

And it was a damn good outline. Because I took a cue from a friend of mine, who has this trick for writing short stories.

He writes the story, then trashes it. A day or two later, he rewrites it from scratch. The logic goes that he’ll only remember the good parts, and the rest, he’s had time to think about.

He trashes the second draft too, waits a few days, writes a third.

The third version is his working version, which gets subject to editing and rewriting.

So for City of Rose, I thought I would give that a try with the outline, because that’s where I was getting jammed up. I outlined the book in a Moleskine after I was done sorting out my notes and character sketches.

I went chapter by chapter, spelling out the place, the characters present, the conflict, and the hook to drive readers into the next chapter. No more than a paragraph for each.

Than I waited a few days. Without looking back, I rewrote it. And I only remembered the good stuff. The places where I hit a wall—I had fixes and answers, since I had time to think them over.

A few days later, I outlined again. That third version nailed the story, hit all the targets I wanted to hit, and guided me through the book.

Simple, right?

Write, trash, think.

Write, trash, think.

Write.

It’s important to note that an outline isn’t gospel. There were a few points where I veered off, or found in the writing that something needed to be moved or added or eliminated.

Think of an outline as a roadmap. You can cut around construction or take a longer route to get in some sightseeing—but you’ll arrive at your destination (the completion of the first draft) so much sooner if you’ve got some semblance of a plan.

What about you? Do you outline? Or do you write by the seat of your pants and hope you find the story in the process?

And you can find New Yorked here.