Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Tippi Hedren in Bodega Bay

Tippi Hedren: star of Alfred Hitchcock’s “The Birds” will be appearing and  Autographing at The Tides Wharf, Bodega Bay, CA this weekend: 

Saturday, Sept 4 10AM – 5PM
Sunday, Sept 5  11:00 AM – 5PM

The Tides Wharf (707) 875-3652

Found this Clip on YouTube of The Birds and some more recent footage of Bodega Bay and Tippi's last signing. I spend a lot of time in Bodega Bay, and I can tell you that the Birds are abundant. Lots of turkeys, seagulls, redwinged blackbirds and more. Of course, not quite as fierce as in Alfred Hitchocock's film. No worries about being caught in a phone booth. There aren't any any more, and there's very spotty cell service as well! Nevertheless, it's always fun to see Tippi Hedren, and Bodega Bay is a beautiful spot. The Schoolhouse is actually located in the town of Bodega about 5 miles inland. I've done some corporate Murder on the Menu events there. Perfect setting. I love coastal Sonoma County.



Monday, August 30, 2010

2010 Davitt Award: Sisters in Crime Australia

Australia's 2010 Davitt Awards were announced at a dinner at the Melbourne Writer's Festival on August 30. This year is the 10th anniversary of the awards.

Best Adult Crime Novel: Sharp Shooter by Marianne Delacourt

Children's &YA Adult Fiction: Liar by Justine Larbalestier

True Crime: Lady Killer by Candace Sutton and Ellen Connolly

Readers Choice: Forbidden Fruit by Kerry Greenwood

For the Full list of Nominees, go HERE

Hat Tip: Mysteries in Paradise

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Legendary Criminals in one 'Wild West' photo

From the BBC Washington office comes this amazing photo. It's not been photoshopped, but it just might be a photo that includes Wyatt Earp, Butch Cassidy, the Sundance Kid, Teddy Roosevelt and Judge Roy Bean, among others.

If it is real, it is extraordinary: a moment when the myths and legends of the Old West crystallised for a moment into a single group photograph before evaporating again into the anonymity of the hot afternoon.

The story is told that the 15 men include Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, Wyatt Earp, his brother Virgil and their friends Doc Holliday and Bat Masterson. The lounging figure is - or might be - Judge Roy Bean, who conducted trials in the bar of the saloon he owned in Texas and encouraged jurors to buy drinks between cases.  A few feet away, apparently on an upturned crate, sits a figure identified as Theodore Roosevelt, the future president. 

The picture is genuine in the sense that it is a real photograph of 15 men from the 1880s.  Just can't be quite sure who they all were.

Teddy Roosevelt did retreat into the western wilderness in 1883 after the death of his first wife and when Butch Cassidy, Wyatt Earp, Doc Holliday and Bat Masterson were all dotted somewhere around America's ragged and dangerous western frontier.

Read the article HERE

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Dorothy Sucher, R.I.P.

Dorothy Sucher, 77, a retired psychotherapist, mystery writer and journalist whose 1965 news story about a Greenbelt City Council meeting became a test case for freedom of the press that reached the U.S. Supreme Court, died Aug. 22 at her home in Silver Spring. She had thyroid cancer.

As a psychotherapist, she practiced in Washington with the Group Health Association from 1975 to 1980 and subsequently operated a private practice in Greenbelt for seven years.

Later she turned to full-time fiction writing. She wrote three books: two mysteries, Dead Men Don't Give Seminars (1988) and Dead Men Don't Marry (1989), and a collection of personal essays, The Invisible Garden (1999).

Her short stories and articles were published in periodicals such as The Washington Post Magazine, Vermont Life and Mystery Readers Journal. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Mrs. Sucher taught mystery and fiction writing at Duke University, Georgetown University and the Writer's Center in Bethesda.

In the late 1980s, Mrs. Sucher served four years as treasurer of Sisters in Crimes. She founded the group's Chesapeake chapter.

Read her obituary in the Washington Post.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Swedish Stamps Honor Crime Fiction Authors

Sue Trowbridge just sent me this news of these great Swedish stamps that honor Swedish mystery writers. Sue reads Swedish, I don't, but you can get the gist...or you can run the articles below using Google Translate.

These Swedish stamps were recently released. In Sweden you needn't be dead to be put on a stamp. Swedish stamps are collected by people worldwide because of their beauty and interesting subject matter, so it's only natural that the postal service would introduce a set of stamps featuring one of the country's most popular exports -- crime fiction!

The authors on the stamps are Stieg Larsson, Liza Marklund, Henning Mankell, Håkan Nesser and Maj Sjöwall & Per Wahlöö.

The first article can be found at: http://www.dn.se/kultur-noje/konst-form/skicka-mankell-vart-du-vill-1.1134653

and the Postal Service's page in English where you can buy these stamps for 60 kroner ($8) is HERE. Click on Buy next to the stamps you wish to purchase, and when you check out, it should take you through the steps in English. Thanks, Sue.

Very cool!

Seth Harwood: Fog on the Horizon

Photo: Mark Coggins
Continuing the San Francisco Mystery Theme this week, I'll be posting a few articles that appeared in the Mystery Readers Journal: San Francisco Mysteries I (Volume 24:3) 2008. To see the Table of Contents of this issue or to buy the issue as a .pdf download or hardcopy, go HERE.

Seth Harwood is the author of JACK WAKES UP, the world’s first crime novel to be serialized as a podcast. He has since podcast two more novels in the JACK PALMS Crime series and is the host of CrimeWAV.com, a weekly series of crime stories by various writers. JACK WAKES UP will be published in Summer 2009 by Three Rivers Press. For more info, visit sethharwood.com

Fog on the Horizon by Seth Harwood

James Joyce said a writer has to have three things: silence, exile and cunning. I don’t know about how my silence or cunning stack up, but when I landed in the Bay Area three years ago from my native Boston, it didn’t take long to realize I’d found my share of exile. From one coast to the other is far! Factor in the reality that by 8PM here most of my family and friends are asleep, and I’ve been good to go.

Until I got to San Francisco, I never fully understood why Joyce said exile was important. I know when he moved from Ireland, he thought he could create it better, make his own Dublin in his head and on the page without the distractions of reality. For me, it worked differently: I saw San Francisco as a new landscape without emotional attachments or the distortions of memory. I saw the city like a painter would see his subject. I started exploring San Francisco and pretty immediately found myself writing my first crime novel, JACK WAKES UP.

Suddenly I wrote scenes set on Market St., at Fisherman’s Wharf, in Sausalito, North Beach, and Embarcadero Plaza. I don’t think it was any coincidence that the novel I was writing was crime. Outside of my own slow realization that the kind of movies and TV shows I’ve always loved—James Bond, Hong Kong Cinema and Kung Fu action, Dirty Harry, cops and spies—it was something about the city that brought out the action and crime in my writing. This city isn’t infused with it, but there’s a sense of the blood on the streets—at least in a literary sense—that I couldn’t ignore. Whether it’s Hammett’s Sam Spade or the Continental Op, Dirty Harry, Frank Bullitt, or whomever else you’d like to mention, there’s always been a great history of crime thrillers, or mysteries, if you prefer, in San Francisco. This, without a doubt, has infected my writing, perhaps even changed the genre in which I write.

I think it must be the fog that started it all. The way it creeps in off the ocean and rolls out over the bridge, over Twin Peaks, and out into the Bay. Now that I live high in the hills of Berkeley, I watch it regularly take the Golden Gate out of sight, then Alcatraz and Angel Island, and finally the tall buildings of downtown. On a particularly foggy night, it claims Berkeley too and all but a few houses on the street below mine. It’s a menacing fog, with crevices instead of shadows, that creeps in and seals the spaces between skyscrapers and row houses. Add in the hills, not only the ones that defy a car chase for those less rugged than Mr. Bullitt, but the ones you never want to scale, the ones you’ll walk five blocks out of your way to avoid, and you have a great recipe for fear. The way the heights limit your range of exploration makes the city even darker, more narrow-seeming, makes its inhabitants feel even more trapped in.

In my own way I’ve been able to observe this from a detached standpoint. I might always be an outsider here in San Francisco, and maybe that makes me a lot like everyone else, but the exile that I’ve found here and the fresh eyes it’s given me have enabled one important thing: for me to see the city’s true mood, the dark brooding tension of the strip clubs so radiantly lining North Beach, the pockets of the city that you don’t even want to drive through (but often do), the ranting, meandering homeless of these streets and the iconic, unintentionally ironically-named “Hall of Justice.” I see it all and most importantly I can see my characters. Wherever they’ve come from—Boston, New York, SOMA, Sausalito, Scarface, or Pulp Fiction—they’re here on these streets walking among the fog, hiding in the alleys. Perhaps you’ve seen them or might soon hear them shout.