Holiday Book Sale

If you happen to be in southern Maine on Black Friday, I hope you'll stop by the Portland Public Library and introduce yourself. The annual Maine Writers & Publishers Alliance Holiday Book Sale is one of the better one-stop-shopping events for book lovers. With 25 Maine authors, you're bound to find something for everyone on your list.

Vermont Reading

I'm wrapping up my five-month book tour for Trespasser by hitting the road one last time. On Saturday, November 19 at 11 a.m. I'll be reading and signing books at Kingdom Books in northeastern Vermont. I have a lot of affection for the Green Mountain State, dating back to my days as a waiter at the Bread Load Writers' Conference, and always appreciate the opportunity to get over to the Northeast Kingdom, which is so similar to Maine and yet has its own unique attributes. Beth and Dave were extremely supportive of my debut, The Poacher's Son, and I'm looking forward to visiting their store and meeting some of my fans from Vermont and New Hampshire (and maybe even Quebec, you never know).

The Movie Version

I got an invitation to write a guest post for a blog called My Book, the Movie where authors are invited to imagine their books becoming films. Here's how I began my reply:

The first thing I should do is quote my film agent who says that, in his experience, novelists are poor casting agents for their own books.

Having said that, I’ll take a stab anyway. Mike Bowditch should be a great character for an actor to play—he’s brave and intelligent but impetuous and haunted by violence, both his own and others’—but Hollywood seems to have a dearth of promising male actors under the age of twenty-five (which is Mike’s age in this book). For that reason, I’d probably go with someone a little older like Ryan Gosling, who has the acting chops and has shown an inclination recently to play more physical roles. I haven’t seen enough of Charlie Hunnam’s work, but his performance on Sons of Anarchy has intrigued me.

No sooner had I hit send than the wisdom of my film agent's observation came home to me.

I had suggested that January Jones might be right for the character of Sarah (whom I have always seen as earnest and beautiful but bland). My wife scoffed. She wanted an actress in the role who could project intelligence, someone like Carrie Mulligan or Amanda Seyfriend or Michelle Williams. She's almost certaintly right.

Hey, what do I know? I'm just a novelist.