Top 15 Crime Movies of All Time

I made a list today at MaineCrimeWriters, and as I said in my post, I had a hard time stopping at fifteen. Looking at it in the cold light of day, I'm struck that I left off any of the films of David Fincher. Zodiac was a near miss. Maybe if I could bring myself to watch Se7en again, I would put it onthe list. I remember seeing Se7en alone at a theater in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, not knowing what to expect, and being disturbed in a way that almost never happens to me at the movies, not just grossed out, but sent emotionally and psychologically reeling. Anyway, go check out my fifteen. I'm curious to hear what you think. It probably won't come as a surprise to anyone who has read my novels to discover that I'm a big fan of the Coen brothers.

Serial Box

Over at Maine Crime Writers today I have a post about one of the challenges of writing a mystery series: using the books to tell an on-going story in which readers learn more about the characters with each volume, without making each new novel impenetrable to prospective readers who stumble into the action after the curtain has gone up. It's a difficult balance, and as I say in the post, I envy writers of fantasy novels who seem to have an indulgence from readers to tell true serials.

Happy Birthday, L.L. Bean

Maine's iconic bootmaker turns 100 this year, and it's planning quite a big party. I've been privileged to be among the planners, as I write this month over at the day job. Down East Books helped produce an anniversary edition of Leon Leonwood Bean's classic guide to the outdoors, Hunting, Fishing and Camping in collaboration with L.L.'s great-grandson, Bill Gorman. The book is really a hoot, containing as it does bits of Bean's wood wisdom like, "If you get lost, come straight back to camp." I've owned an old edition of this guide for years, so working to update it for the twenty-first century was a dream come true. It's one of those classic titles that really does belong on the shelf of every outdoorsperson.

BookMania Begins

Tonight was the first night of BookMania and I had the pleasure of catching up with Andre Dubus after many years. (I also shook Jum Lehrer's hand.) Here Andre is with my wife Kristen plugging TRESPASSER. More updates tomorrow.

Introducing BAD LITTLE FALLS (Coming August 7, 2012)

Maine game warden Mike Bowditch has been sent into exile, transferred by his superiors to a remote outpost on the Canadian border. When a blizzard descends on the coast, Bowditch is called to the rustic cabin of a terrified couple. A raving and halffrozen man has appeared at their door, claiming his friend is lost in the storm. But what starts as a rescue mission in the wilderness soon becomes a baffling murder investigation. The dead man is a notorious drug dealer, and state police detectives suspect it was his own friend who killed him. Bowditch isn’t so sure, but his vow not to interfere in the case is tested when he finds himself powerfully attracted to a beautiful woman with a dark past and a troubled young son. The boy seems to know something about what really happened in the blizzard, but he is keeping his secrets locked in a cryptic notebook, and Mike fears for the safety of the strange child. Meanwhile, an anonymous tormentor has decided to make the new warden’s life a living hell. Alone and outgunned, Bowditch turns for assistance to his old friend, the legendary bush pilot Charley Stevens. But in this snowbound landscape—where smugglers wage blood feuds by night—help seems very far away indeed. If Bowditch is going to catch a killer, he must survive on his own wits and discover strength he never knew he possessed.
Yeah, I'm excited.
And yeah, you can preorder it now