Showing posts with label Reed Farrel Coleman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reed Farrel Coleman. Show all posts

Thursday, April 27, 2017

Reed Farrel Coleman to Co-Write Michael Mann's Heat Prequel

Congratulations, Reed!!!

From Deadline:

After a long manhunt that involved months of interviews with substantial authors, Michael Mann has found his co-writer for the prequel novel to Mann’s landmark crime film Heat. Writing with Mann will be Reed Farrel Coleman, the four-time Edgar Award-nominated author who is up for the award tonight for his 2016 novel Where It Hurts, part of mystery series that revolves around the retired Suffolk County cop Gus Murphy. 

Coleman will collaborate with Mann to tell an origin story involving the characters that populated the Al Pacino-Robert De Niro-led ensemble drama that Mann scripted, directed and produced. The novel will be published next year under the Michael Mann imprint at William Morrow/HarperCollins.

Read More Here.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Reed Farrel Coleman: A Thank You

Today I welcome back one of my favorite writers and one of the nicest guys I've ever meet, Reed Farrel Coleman.


Reed Farrel Coleman is the former executive vice president of Mystery Writers of America. He has published fourteen novels: two stand-alones and three series, including seven books in the Moe Prager series. Tower was co-authored with award-winning Irish writer Ken Bruen, and Gun Church was released as an exclusive audio download from Audible.com.
Reed is a three-time recipient of the Shamus Award for Best Detective Novel of the Year and is a two-time Edgar® Award nominee. He has also received the Macavity, Barry, and Anthony Awards. Reed was co-editor of the poetry journals Poetry Bone and The Lineup and the editor of the short story anthology Hard Boiled Brooklyn. His short fiction, essays, and poetry have appeared in The Long Island Quarterly, Wall Street Noir, Brooklyn Noir 3, The Darker Mask, These Guns For Hire, Crimespree Magazine, and several other publications.

Reed Farrel Coleman: A Thank You

The other night at the Edgar banquet, I sat and listened to Dennis Lehane’s acceptance speech when he won the Edgar® Award for Best Novel. The unscripted speech was very moving in an unexpected way. There was Dennis, standing at the podium, dumbfounded, gathering himself, turning the statuette to face him, and introducing himself to Poe. Great moment. During his brief remarks, Dennis thanked his publisher, his agent, his family, and all the people you would expect him to thank. Nothing out of the ordinary there, but then he added one last thank you and that’s what got to me. Dennis thanked the city of Boston. Yes, he acknowledged the recent tragedy. Yet, that wasn’t the point, not exactly. He was thanking Boston for helping to shape the person, good and bad, he is, and, by extention, the writer he is. I understood his sentiment completely because it is precisely how I feel about Brooklyn.

The other day, when I was contacted by a childhood friend whom I hadn’t heard from in forty-years, it dawned on me that I have lived away from Brooklyn (though not that far away) longer than I lived in Brooklyn. The thing is, I have never been able to escape Brooklyn. I have never wanted to. Brooklyn gave me everything I ever needed and, I suppose, a lot of stuff I could have done without. Or maybe not. As a writer and as a middle aged man, It’s impossible to separate what you need from what you don’t. One part of Brooklyn in particular, Coney Island, is so integral to me as a person and as a writer that I sometimes feel like a bird who, as a hatchling, imprinted on the parachute jump instead of his parents.

In no book have I felt this connection to my hometown like I did while writing Onion Street. As Onion Street is a prequel set in 1967 and Moe is just another aimless college student, I had to get into Moe’s head and the setting in a profoundly different way than I had before. Moe is thirty or so in Walking the Perfect Square, the first novel in the series. He’d been on the job as a NYPD cop for ten years. Basically he’d been there, done that, no matter where there was or what that had been. So the eyes through which he saw New York and his old Brooklyn neighborhood were more than a bit world weary and jaundiced. But the eyes of the twenty year old Moe were still untainted. In getting into the young Moe’s head, seeing the world through his inexperienced eyes had the effect of bringing me back in time. It got me back in touch with how I had once felt about Brooklyn, not as a grown man but as a kid. How it was a world of dangerous wonder to me.

I hope the readers get that when they read Onion Street. And if I’m ever lucky enough to win an Edgar, I think I’ll get up behind that podium and steal part of Dennis Lehane’s acceptance speech. Because, frankly, I don’t know where I’d be as a writer or as a person without Brooklyn.

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

Partners in Crime: Reed Farrel Coleman

Today Reed Farrel Coleman is Guest Blogger on the Partners in Crime series (Authors who Write together). Reed and Ken Bruen are the authors of Tower, one of my personal 10 bests for 2009. Mystery Readers NorCal chapter has been lucky to have both Reed and Ken as guests at our Literary Salons (aka At Homes) at my home in Berkeley, CA, but at different times. Check out the At Home Online interviews with Reed (interviewed by Megan Abbott) and Ken (interviewed by Reed) on the Mystery Readers website.

Ken Bruen and Reed Farrel Coleman have both been twice nominated for the Edgar Award and between them have won almost every other American mystery writing award including the Shamus, Barry, Anthony, and Macavity. In addition to TOWER's movie option being sold, Ken has had an amazing year. His THE GUARDS, LONDON BOULEVARD, and BLITZ have all been adapted for the screen. Reed's 6th Moe Prager novel, INNOCENT MONSTER, will be published by Tyrus Books in October 2010. New paperback editions of SOUL PATCH with a foreword by Craig Johnson and of EMPTY EVER AFTER with a foreword by SJ Rozan will be published by Busted Flush Press in 2010.


All Kinds of Partners and Partnerships
by Reed Farrel Coleman


Almost from the day Ken Bruen and I met seven years ago at Partners and Crime Books—talk about auspicious beginnings—in Greenwich Village, we had kicked around the idea of writing together. We were big fans of each other’s work and often joked that Jack Taylor was sort of Moe Prager inside out. Ken had granted me permission to use Jack Taylor in two short stories—“Requiem for Jack” Crimespree Magazine and “Requiem for Moe” Damn Near Dead. So when Ken approached me with a serious offer to write a book together, I assumed it would be a Jack and Moe book of some sort. Wrong! Of course I said yes before Ken told me what he had in mind. Besides, even after Ken described what he had in mind—two childhood friends from Brooklyn, Nick and Todd, whose fates are inextricably linked, fall into a life of low level crime—I didn’t blink. What, I wondered, could be so hard about that? Stupid me.

Six months after I said yes, I got a one line email from Ken—a rare thing from a man whose emails in those days tended to be the length of a football field. The email read, “Have at it, brother.” Attached to this terse note was Nick’s narrative. That’s it, nothing else: no suggestions on how to proceed, no advice, no nothing. It was like getting a model airplane kit with only half the parts and without the instruction booklet. Suddenly, saying yes without thinking about it didn’t seem like such a brilliant idea. I’ve joked many times that at that moment I understood how my wife must have felt six months after we were married. Nonetheless, I was committed and had a book to finish.

At first, I confess, I was daunted. We’ve all heard the Buddhist line about the sound of one hand clapping. My task was to figure out how to be the other hand and to change the sound so as not to simply double the volume. There had to be a reason Ken needed a co-author, so I understood he didn’t want whatever I was going to write to be an imitation of his voice. After all, he could do his own voice better than I could. And as his section of the book was one character’s narrative, I figured out that the form of the book would be a dual narrative: Nick’s then Todd’s. Beyond that, I had nothing, but instead of seeing it as Ken torturing me, I chose to see it as Ken challenging me to push myself past my limits, to push myself harder. I just had no idea how hard hard was going to be.

First thing I did was absorb Nick’s narrative as if I were preparing to take over that character’s life. In so doing, I realized that what the book needed was more than a simple dual narrative. What it needed was a parallel narrative; Nick and Todd giving their POVs on the same period in time, about the same events, involving the same characters. Think the movie Casino. I would give Todd a life that alternated between diverging from and converging with Nick’s. Easier said than done. Think about writing a novel with a timeline, characters, events, settings that are not of your own creation. Believe me, I wasn’t optimistic that I could manage it.

Several months later, I had Todd’s narrative. That narrative appears in Tower essentially unchanged. What I noticed as I wrote was that Ken had written Nick’s narrative with spaces between the lines. His narrative was sparse and lean and left me room to develop both protagonists, not just Todd. What at first appeared to me as Ken abandoning me on an island with no escape was, in the end, something very different. What Ken had done was to let me do the showy stuff, to crash the cymbals as the book crescendos. He had done a lot of the heavy-lifting, but done it quietly. If he had written Nick’s narrative densely, I would have had nowhere to take it and the book wouldn’t have worked. I liken it to the movie Rain Man. Dustin Hoffman had the part on which everyone’s attention is focused, but it was Tom Cruise (and I am no fan of Tom Cruise) who did the heavy-lifting.

Yet, when the two narratives were in place, Ken and I agreed the book wasn’t finished. It was of a piece, but not a whole book. It needed context. We struggled nearly as long to come up with a solution as it took us to write our narratives. First we agreed to try a prologue, a page out of my style book. We both contributed to it and we got it to work, but the book still lacked the necessary context and balance. Well, if you have a prologue, you might as well have an epilogue, right? Great in theory, a nightmare in practice, because no matter what we tried, nothing worked. We had balance, but still no context. Finally, when we were both ready to just give up, we hit upon introducing a third narrative voice, a voice of a character who had appeared earlier in the book. Ta-da!

Tower was the hardest thing I’ve ever taken on in terms of writing. I think Ken would agree that neither of us anticipated the difficulties we would run into along the way. I don’t think either of us would suggest doing a collaboration this way. It certainly isn’t for the faint-hearted. Working on this project created the only real strain on our friendship (long ago resolved) we have ever experienced. Yet it is difficult to argue with the results. It is not for Ken or I to judge Tower’s merits, but it is a unique book. I don’t think that’s debatable. The movie option was sold even before Tower was published. The project suggested the form of the collaboration and the form of the collaboration directly affected the end results. What I can say is that none of the tension between Ken and I during the creation of Tower had anything to do with ego. We never disagreed over who had final say. There were no pissing contests. But as I joked during the tour, it was probably a good thing there were three thousand miles of ocean between us when we were working on Tower and that neither one of us owned a handgun.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Reed Farrel Coleman: October 9

Mystery Readers NorCal welcomes Reed Farrel Coleman on Friday, October 9, for a literary salon at my home in the Berkeley (CA) hills. 7 p.m

RSVP for address and directions. Space is limited.

Reed Farrel Coleman, former Executive Vice President of Mystery Writers of America, was Brooklyn born and raised. He is the author of ten novels in three series published under his name and his pen name Tony Spinosa.

His sixth novel, The James Deans, won the Shamus, Barry, and Anthony Awards. The novel was further nominated for the Edgar, Macavity, and Gumshoe Awards. Reed is also a published poet, and for several years was a co-editor of the journal Poetry Bone.

He was the editor of the short story anthology Hard-boiled Brooklyn. His short stories and essays appear in Wall Street Noir, Mystery Readers Journal, Damn Near Dead, Brooklyn Noir 3, Expletive Deleted, These Guns for Hire, Crime Spree Magazine and several other publications. He lives with his wife and teenage children on New York's Long Island.

His latest novel Tower is a collaboration with Irish noir author Ken Bruen. I'm putting it on my top ten for the year! Read my review.

Join MRI October 9 for an evening with Reed Farrel Coleman. Guaranteed to be fun and enlightening.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Tower by Ken Bruen & Reed Farrel Coleman

As some of you know, I'm an eclectic reader. I like thrillers, cozies, suspense, noir and whatever else is out there. Ken Bruen is one of my favorite authors, and I was especially glad to get a copy of Tower, a new collaboration between Ken Bruen and Reed Farrel Coleman (another favorite).

This is a very different and difficult collaboration. Unlike many other writers who collaborate by writing every other chapter or smoothing over all chapters together, Ken and Reed wrote separate sections, first person, from the point of view of two different characters. They then had to add a prologue and epilogue. No mean feat, but something these two did extraordinarily and seamlessly well.

The characters definitely have different voices as they tell the same story from two different points of view. This is not an easy story to read, either. It's pretty brutal in parts. The characters are from Brooklyn. They grew up in the 'hood" together and went from petty crime to murder and mayhem. Both Ken and Reed capture the substance and edginess of their characters as they carry the reader through the plot. You might not like the characters or want to spend time with them personally, but you'll sure get a grip on how they think. Tower is not all brutality, though, the characters are so well developed that you will also feel for them. There's even a sense of poignancy in the novel.

The two writing styles are as different as the characters. Even if you didn't know there were two writers, you'll recognize Ken's lean poetic writing and Reed's fuller prose style. Tower really works on all levels.

Busted Flush Press does a great job by including interviews with both Ken and Reed as well as their editor. In addition, Ken has a wonderful introductory essay on how this novel came to be written. Be sure and hang out in Bars. I enjoyed these auxiliary pieces to the novel and encourage you to read them.

Read an excerpt: Tower:

Looking forward to the next collaboration between Ken and Reed.

And Breaking News: Tower was optioned for a movie by Brad Weston, Gil Adler and Shane McCarthy. (Hat Tip to Jon Jordan of Crimespree Cinema for the news!)

Weston is a former head of Paramount and was behind the second and third Scary Movie films as well as Bad Santa. He is also a producer on the upcoming Sin City 2 as well as the forthcoming remake of Footloose.

Gil Adler has been working in film and television for almost three decades. His films include Valkyrie, Superman Returns and Starsky and Hutch. He is also working to bring Bruen's Once Were Cops to the big screen as well as Havana Nocture by T.J. English, another book about the end of the mob that both Jon and I agree is pretty fabulous!

Shane McCarthy has worked on a trio of shorts and is co-producing several projects, including Havana Nocturne, with Adler.

From Crimespree Cinema:

Reed: "It’s amazing to see how a simple idea nurtured with a mix of mutual respect and friendship can blossom into this project."
Ken: "I give all the credit to Reed, Al (Guthrie, agent and a fine author himself) and of course, David (Thompson of Busted Flush Press) who published the book. I'm the roadie in this terrific band, cross me heart."

Wow!!! Hope this gets made. The whole time I was reading the book, I was thinking about what a great movie it would make.

But don't wait for the movie. Go down the Mean Streets with Tower. Buy the Book!

Cover Photo: CrimeSpree Magazine