Showing posts with label The Cartel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Cartel. Show all posts

Monday, October 26, 2015

The Cartel wins T. Jefferson Parker Mystery Award

Congratulations to Don Winslow for winning the T. Jefferson Parker Mystery Award for The Cartel

The Southern California Independent Booksellers Association (SCIBA) recognizes excellence in books that reflect Southern California culture or lifestyle, with authors/illustrators living within the SCIBA region.

The mystery award is named after T. Jefferson Parker, a life-long resident of Southern California and Edgar Award-winning author.

The Cartel was one of three finalists. The other finalists were:
Marry, Kiss, Kill by Anne Flett-Giordano
The Replacements by David Putnam

Thursday, September 3, 2015

RBA International Prize for Best Crime Novel

Don Winslow's The Cartel won the RBA International Prize for Best Crime Novel (Premio RBA de Novela Negra). This is a Spanish literary award said to be the world's most lucrative crime fiction prize at 125,000 Euros. Go, Don!

Read more here (in Spanish)
http://cultura.elpais.com/cultura/2015/09/03/actualidad/1441299096_009553.html

Friday, July 24, 2015

Don Winslow's The Cartel coming to the Big Screen!

Yesterday, I hosted the always entertaining and brilliant raconteur Don Winslow at a Literary Salon at my home in Berkeley. What a terrific event! The event was also fueled by the news that Don had just sold screen rights for The Cartel to Fox with Ridley Scott directing! Shane Salerno will be writing the script! How cool is that!

From Deadline:

Fueled by Ridley Scott’s commitment to direct, Fox won an auction for screen rights to The Cartel, the new Don Winslow drug epic that settles the score between DEA agent Art Keller and Mexican drug kingpin Adan Berrera, a battle that began with Winslow’s 2006 novel The Power of the Dog. The studio is already moving fast to capitalize on all the money it has spent, courting Leonardo DiCaprio to play the role of Keller, and this one looks promising.

Winslow and his partner in the deal, Story Factory’s Shane Salerno (who’ll write the script), chose Fox over several intriguing options, because of Scott. The filmmaker covered the drug terrain with the Cormac McCarthy-scripted The Counselor, and as riveting as that movie was, its bleak premise and harsh drug violence limited its gross. This one is potentially more commercial in a sprawling crime epic Godfather kind of way.

Read more here. 

Monday, July 13, 2015

Don Winslow Literary Salon: July 23, 2 p.m., Berkeley

Join Mystery Readers NorCal for an afternoon Literary Salon in Berkeley, CA, on Thursday, July 23, at 2 p.m. with the return of Author Don Winslow. Space is extremely limited. Please RSVP to attend for address.

New York Times bestselling author and Raymond Chandler award recipient Don Winslow has written seventeen novels, including The Kings of Cool, Savages, The Winter of Frankie Machine and the highly acclaimed epic The Power of the Dog.

The Sequel to The Power of the Dog, The Cartel,  just came out and hit the NYT bestseller list. It's absolutely amazing!!! 

And, talk about timely. Read Don Winslow's article on El Chapo's Escape in today's CNN.

Read an Interview with Don about The Cartel in Time here.

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Don Winslow, the son of a sailor and a librarian, grew up with a love of books and storytelling in a small coastal Rhode Island town. He left at age seventeen to study journalism at the University of Nebraska, where he earned a degree in African Studies. While in college, he traveled to southern Africa, sparking a lifelong involvement with that continent.

Winslow’s travels took him to California, Idaho, and Montana before he moved to New York City to become a writer, making his living as a movie theater manager and later a private investigator in Times Square – ‘before Mickey Mouse took it over’. He left to get a master’s degree in Military History. Winslow was supposed to go into the Foreign Service, but instead joined a friend’s safari firm in Kenya, leading photographic safaris there as well as hiking trips in the mountains of southwestern China, and directing Shakespeare on summer programs in Oxford.

While bouncing back and forth between Asia, Africa, Europe and America, Winslow wrote his first novel, A Cool Breeze On The Underground, which was nominated for an Edgar Award.
Now with a wife and young son, Winslow went back to investigative work, mostly in California, where he and his family lived in hotels for almost three years as he worked cases and became a trial consultant. A film and publishing deal for his novel The Death and Life of Bobby Z allowed Winslow to be full-time writer and settle in his beloved southern California, the setting for many of his books.

Winslow then branched out into television and film, his work attracting the attention of filmmakers and actors such as Michael Mann, Martin Scorsese, Robert DeNiro and Leonardo DiCaprio. With his friend Shane Salerno, Winslow wrote a television series, UC Undercover, and he and Salerno later wrote the screen adaptation of Winslow’s novel, Savages, filmed by Oliver Stone. Winslow and Salerno currently have several film projects in process.

In addition to his novels, Winslow has published fourteen short stories in anthologies and magazines such as Esquire, The LA Times Magazine and Playboy. He has written columns for The Huffington Post as well a number of foreign newspapers.