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.

Roundup time

Two weeks out from the release of New Yorked, and things are chugging along nicely. Figured it was time to round some stuff up, for those who may have missed my incessant social media posts.

(And there’s a point to all this, as you’ll see at the end.)

First up, people have been asking about signed copies. You can order through The Mysterious Bookshop, and I will happily inscribe whatever you’d like. To do that, go here.

The Booked. podcast gave New Yorked some love—it’s a great show that features some really thoughtful, in-depth book talk. I like it a lot. Listen, then subscribe.

I wrote some guest posts, at Crimespree (on book promo), the Daily Beast (five books about NYC that I love), Criminal Element (page to screen on Death Wish), Chuck Wendig’s blog Terrible Minds (things I learned writing New Yorked), and Powell’s (disappearing New York City).

My hometown paper, the Staten Island Advance, ran a piece about the book (with a groovy photo gallery). There have also been some new reviews, over at Out of the Gutter and Pulp Fire.

Also—and this is too cool to not mention again—I had my first Barnes & Noble signing, and we sold out every copy of New Yorked they had. Woo!

This brings me to the point of all this—a new session of my LitReactor class, Sell Yourself, is starting July 14. In this fast-and-furious workshop, I run through the basics of marketing. All the stuff you actually need to know, with none of the bullshit filler people claim you need to know.

This will be the first session of the class I’ll be hosting after the launch of my book, so I’ll have a lot of exciting new things to add to the curriculum. Like, how I got some of the coverage I linked to in this post.

Check it out. It’s a fun class.

Booked. love

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I’m a big fan of the Booked. podcast. The hosts, Robb and Livius—besides being nice guys—do some very thoughtful, in-depth book talk, which you don’t get a lot of these days.

Even better, they give time to a wide mix, from best sellers to small press stuff, shedding light on stories that often need all the love they can get.

It’s pretty thrilling to not only get the Booked. treatment for New Yorked—but to find that they really dug it. It’s a little trippy, listening to people break down and analyze your book. Awesome, too.

Listen to the podcast here. And if you haven’t already, subscribe to this thing.

Crimespree love

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So I was sitting at a bar next to Jon and Ruth Jordan, the lovely couple behind Crimespree Magazine, and I’m talking about the endless slog of promo you need to do before a book launches, and Jon says, “You should write about that.”

So I did. And he was kind enough to run it.

Check out “Grist for the Twitter Mill” here.

It’s a guest post about guest posts. Truly, the snake eating its own tail.

Signed copies

Photo 4People have been asking where they can get signed copies of New Yorked. There are several options!

You can order from The Mysterious Bookshop—there are some copies left over from the event last night. Here’s how to do that.

Or, you can come out to the Staten Island Barnes & Noble on June 17. Details here.

Or, if we’re pals, you can just ask me and we’ll meet up and I’ll sign your copy.

But those first two options are good, too.