Monthly Archives: November 2012

BIG FOOT CLUB FOOT GHOST DRIVE-BY

jesse sublett, murder ballads, grave digger blues, austin, austin music

I saw a ghost today, while singing “Grave Digger Blues.” No joke. It’s on youtube.

A lot of things happened today. Not all of them right here, in my tiny office facing east, but here’s a couple of things I observed. For one thing, I read some startling news about Big Foot. Then some stuff about cheerleaders in East Texas. Had lunch at Hoover’s with a friend and writing colleague. I walked around Lady Bird Lake and went to the Y. I saw a ghost. Captured him or her on video, too. Check it out. It’s right at about the 3-minute mark, right after I come in singing falsetto, slightly off key, “I can still hear him cry, woo…”

 

Here’s the other highlights:

SCIENCE PROVES BIGFOOT IS REAL: That’s what I read today today in TM Daily Post, anyway.

pulp fiction, jesse sublett, noir, crime fiction, post-apocalyptic noir

Why this character didn’t end up with the GOP nomination is beyond me

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

The FIRST surrealist/blues/pulpfiction iPad novella, out now, on iTunes and Amazon. The Kindle version has over 100 cool photos and graphics; the Blues Deluxe Edition for iPad has music AND photos.

A team of scientists based in Nacogdoches claims to have successfully sequenced Bigfoot’s DNA. This “confirms the existence of a novel hominin hybrid species, commonly called ‘Bigfoot’ or ‘Sasquatch,’ living in North America,” according to an announcement by  Melba S. Ketchum, PhD., founder of DNA Diagnostics. A team of “experts in genetics, forensics, imaging and pathology” worked on the Bigfoot project for five years before releasing their conclusion. The announcement has been greeted with skepticism by other members of the scientific community, however, partially because the group has not released any of data to be examined and peer-reviewed, which is generally how scientists like to work.

“Sasquatch nuclear DNA is incredibly novel,” says Ketchum, “and not at all what we had expected. While it has human nuclear DNA within its genome, there are also distinctly non-human, non-archaic hominin, and non-ape sequences. We describe it as a mosaic of human and novel non-human sequence. Further study is needed and is ongoing to better characterize and understand Sasquatch nuclear DNA.” THe rest of the press release from DNA Diagnostics can be read here.

Doesn’t Joe Lansdale live in Nacogdoches? I know he lives way out in the Piney Woods, and he’s a great writer and a pretty weird guy. I would definitely trust him to go check this thing out. He could be working on it right now for his next novel. Joe, if you’re reading this, please get back to me.

And because Bigfoot makes me think of Big Foot Chester, the nickname of the great Chester Arthur Burnet, a k a Howlin’ Wolf, I am posting a poster of him right here, or rather, the last Howlin’ Wolf Birthday Tribute which I produced this year, and you’ll notice, my pals BigFoot Chester are on the bill. Cool band.

howlin wolf, ricardo acevedo, jesse sublett, murder ballad, denny freeman, jon dee graham

And this also makes me think of Club Foot, the long-gone nightclub that used to be on 4th Street downtown, right where Frost Tower is now.

jesse sublett, jon dee graham, bill blackmon, the skunks, club foot, austin music scene, murder ballad jessesublett.com

The Skunks, L-RBill Blackmon, Jesse Sublett and young Jon Dee Graham, down in the basement dressing room at Club Foot, 1979.

A few decades, a few changes. That is indeed a 19-year-old Jon Dee Graham on the right, and me in the middle, Bill Blackmon on the left.

jesse sublett, the skunks, austin punk/new wave, club foot, jessesublett.com + "jon dee graham"

CLICK below to see the video clip of the Skunks doing “Let’s Get Twisted.”

“Let’s Get Twisted” by The Skunks

If you were a devotee of Club Foot back in the day, or you have any interest in the history of the Austin music scene, and you’ve never seen the mini-doc “Dead Venues Live: Club Foot” you should see it right now.  Spoiler alert: I’m in it.

So then while I was reading about BigFoot (and by the way, a guy in Dallas claims that BigFoot threw a rock at him, I got sidetracked by this story about a small town in Texas where they’ve been letting the cheerleaders use run-through banners with Bible verses on them, which is dumb beyond belief, but this is Texas and football and like they say, in Texas football is like a religion, or it actually IS religion. This is happening in a small town called Kountze (I hope that’s not pronounced like I think it might be pronounced). After it was pointed out to school administrators that this kind of thing is frowned upon by the US Constitution, the banners were discontinued, then a temporary restraining order was issued, which allows the practice to continue until the matter is resolved in the courts.

jesse sublett, politics, crime fiction, noir, pulp fiction, grave digger blues, cheerleaders wave religions banners in spite of constitutional prohibition

They’re just doing the Lord’s work, OK?

One cheerleader said that the ban only strengthens the group’s resolve: “I’m actually thankful for it,” Ashton Jennings told Houston’s CBS affiliate KHOU. “Because if someone hadn’t complained, or if there hadn’t been any opposition we wouldn’t have this chance to spread God’s word in this big of a way.”

Hey, isn’t that great? Because the Creator of the Universe really needs some high school cheerleaders to spread the word. You’d think He’d be able to get his message out without pom-poms and stuff. But then this last bit of the story took me by surprise:

Kountze’s previous claims to fame include being the first U.S. city to have a Muslim mayor as well as being home to the world’s only married armadillo couple—named Hoover and Star—according to the Freedom From Religion Foundation.

So then later I was recording a little demo on my iPad of the theme song to Grave Digger Blues. I’ve recently learned a new version that works in open G tuning on the acoustic guitar, and I kind of like it. So I’m recording it, one take, and near the end, this ghost flits through the image on the iPad screen. Seriously, this is no hoax, not a joke. I know I have a bad reputation for being a jokester, but I’m serious.

I saw the ghost go by, from left to right, while I was recording, and I thought, “Gee, that looks like a ghost, but I’ll keep recording because it’s near the end of the song.” Link to the youtube clip is below the screen shot below. The quality is crude and a couple of notes are off, but you know, I thought this was kind of interesting. The ghost–or whatever it is–appears right at 3:00 into the song, with 13 seconds to go. Right after the last refrain, where I come in with the falsetto “whoo-hoo” a little off-key, because my throat is shot again.

jesse sublett, crime fiction, murder ballads, jon dee graham, james mcmurtry,

Screen shot of the ghost–almost like snot flying out of my nose. Click below for video.

“Grave Digger Blues” in open G with ghost drive-by

So, yeah, here we are, at the end. We have the Abominable Snowman, a k a The Yeti, Sasquatch and/or Big Foot, being declared genuine by some scientists based in the piney woods of East Texas. We have cheerleaders spreading the word of God (and damn the Constitution, anyhow), in good old’ East Texas. And I’m playing this song, inspired by the great blues songster from Nacogdoches, Mance Lipscomb, and a ghost appears. These things could be connected, don’t you think?

I don’t know what to do, other than put it on YouTube, and I already did that. Actually the best part of the day was having lunch at Hoover’s, and having dinner with my wife, Lois, who is a phenomenal cook and damn good looking, too.
jesse sublett, jessesublett.com, crime fiction, pulp fiction, murder ballad, noir, jessesublett.com

Leave a Comment

Filed under BLUES, MURDER BALLADS & OTHER COOL RACKET, Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, NOIR & TRUE CRIME

KING OF NOIR

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly"

I’ve been thinking about pulp fiction.

In the 12 days since my new novel Grave Digger Blues went on sale, I’ve been thinking more about pulp fiction. Sometimes wherever I am this genre seems to reach out and grab me, like some random demons in waiting. Certainly I’ve some experiences of my own that were right out of a pulp fiction nightmare. I’ve written about them, and will probably write about them again. At other times, writing from the noir state of mind just helps me put things in perspective, in the same way that writing a blues song helps me communicate.

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

A band called the Tin Can  44s contacted me and asked me if I could share some more scans of my vintage paperback novels to help them in their development of artwork for an upcoming release. and I’ve been doing some research that required digging through my book collection and files (but nothing new about that), so I fired up the scanner and flipped through some files and found this piece I wrote about Jim Thompson published by Texas Monthly in November 1999. The idea for the story came to me all at once. Novelist Jim Thompson, widely acknowledged as the “King of Noir,” lived in Texas for many years, and many of the rough and tumble experiences, including his stint as a teenage bell hop in Fort Worth during the Roaring Twenties and his work and fucking off in the oil fields of West Texas, became fodder for many of his classic pulp fiction novels. And here’s Texas, a state that’s always bragging about the great, famous people who are from here, yet this fact was rarely acknowledged and even more rarely–as in never–celebrated.

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly"

So here’s that story, in its entirety, as published in Texas Monthly, with my own scans of my copies of the novels which I loaned the magazine for their illustrations back in 1999. (Oddly enough, there did not seem to be any hardboiled crime collectors in the offices of Texas Monthly at the time.)

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly"

Commercial Announcement: If you haven’t done so yet, do yourself a favor and download a sample of Grave Digger Blues right now. The Blues Deluxe Edition for the iPad (with an hour of audio, including original blues music and audio chapters, over 100 photos and graphics, plus a video intro) is available on iTunes for $6.99, and the Kindle version (100+ photos and graphics and the same wild story) is available in the Amazon Kindle Store for $4.99. Much more info on the Grave Digger Blues page, with updates here and here.

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

From the Kindle edition.

 

WILD TOWN: JIM THOMPSON’S FORT WORTH YEARS

Many of Jim Thompson’s noir novels drew on his days as a  bellhop at the old Hotel Texas, when Fort Worth was rowdy and the twenties were roaring.

 by Jesse Sublett

When Jim Thompson died in Los Angeles in 1977, his career was almost as dead as he was. Not one of his more than two dozen books was in print. His last important screen credit had been for Stanley Kubrick’s Paths of Glory, twenty years earlier. But during the past decade and a half, Thompson has blazed a comeback trail from oblivion to mainstream popularity and recognition as a  unique voice in American literature. Almost all of his novels are back in print, including the ultimate noir novel, The Killer Inside Me, one of the scariest ever written. Even Stephen King thinks so.

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly"

Generations of filmmakers, from Orson Welles to Quentin Tarantino, have admired his work. Among his eight books that have been made into movies, the best known are  probably The Getaway, filmed in 1972, and The Grifters, which was nominated for four Academy awards, including best adapted screenplay, in 1990. Too bad Jim Thompson isn’t around today to enjoy his amazing comeback. In a perfect world he’d be the star  attraction at this month’s Texas Book Festival. At least half of Thompson’s books are set in Texas, and all of them are informed by his experiences here during his teens and twenties, between 1919 and 1935—times that were quite likely the worst of his life.

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly"

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly" Jim Thompson playing dead. By the 1970s, his reputation was face-down, too.

He was born James Myers Thompson in 1906 in Anadarko, Oklahoma, where his father, James Sherman Thompson, was the county sheriff. The following year, his father fled to Mexico and parts unknown for two and a half years after being implicated in a murky scandal involving financial improprieties. The family moved around Oklahoma and Nebraska for years before relocating to Fort Worth in 1919. For the next four years the senior Thompson dabbled in numerous schemes and ventures, including drilling  wildcat oil wells in West Texas, but by 1923 the family  was destitute. His son chronicled this chapter of his life in his first book, Now and on Earth: “Pop went broke and his was the irremediable brokeness of a man past fifty who has never worked for other people.”

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly"

Things were booming in Texas, however, and sixteen-year-old Jim Thompson was able to get a job working nights as a bellhop at Fort Worth’s Hotel Texas, at 815 Main Street. Rubbing up against and running errands for gamblers, gangsters, con artists, rich oilmen, and lonely females in a big-city hotel gave Thompson plenty of  material for his future novels. One example is the swindle known as “the twenties” that figures in The Grifters; Roy Dillon (played by John Cusack in the film) uses sleight of hand to get $20 of change for a $1 bill. Thompson learned that trick and a slew of others at the Hotel Texas, a thinly disguised version of which is featured in numerous Thompson novels and is the focal point of all action in his hotel novels, like Wild Town and A Swell-Looking Babe.

Thompson also befriended notorious bank robber and gangster Airplane Red Brown, who made a big impression on him. Brown would serve as the inspiration for the protagonist or a major character in many of Thompson’s novels, including Airplane Red Cosgrove in Recoil, Allie Ivers in Bad Boy and Roughneck, and professional thief Doc McCoy in The Getaway.

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly""jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly"

During the wild and woolly oil boom and Prohibition years, bellhops at places like the Hotel Texas didn’t just carry luggage for the guests; they also procured bootleg booze (Thompson used to carry a couple of extra half-pints in his socks), hookers, and drugs. A bellboy who was killed while scoring drugs for a guest is at the center of the short story “The Car in the Mexican Quarter,” one of Thompson’s few private-eye stories: “The Lansing is one of the biggest hotels in town, but I knew that it stood for a lot of dirty work from its employees. One suicide a year is plenty for a big hotel and the Lansing had one almost every month.”

Things have changed in Fort Worth since Thompson lived there. The Hotel Texas is now the Radisson Plaza, and the wildest thing that went on while I stayed there recently was a convention of Seventh Day Adventists. The fifteen-story luxury hotel was completed in 1922, and despite having been extensively remodeled inside, it still exudes a sense of grandeur and history. President John F. Kennedy spent his last night there, in room 850.

"jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" pulpfiction, "jim thompson" "reed farrel coleman" "james ellroy" "jim thompson" "david goodis" jessesublett.com "michael connelly"

To be fair, the Hotel Texas never had a lock on decadent behavior in downtown Fort Worth. It was located in a part of town known as Hell’s Half Acre—a concentration of brothels, saloons, gambling halls, and like enterprises that had catered to cowboys and cattlemen back when Fort Worth was a major stopover on the Chisholm Trail.

Thompson’s father used to regale him with stories about the infamous lawmen and outlaws he’d known, many of whom spent time sampling the delights of places like Two Minnies, where customers in the downstairs bar could view the naked prostitutes prancing about upstairs through the glass ceiling. Two Minnies was long gone, but there were still plenty of holdovers from the days of Hell’s Half Acre when Jim Thompson walked these redbrick streets. In his autobiographical novel Bad Boy, Thompson recounts a day he spent with his Grandfather Myers in downtown pool halls, arcades, and burlesque houses:

. . . following lunch we went to a penny arcade.

Pa had brought the bottle with him, and he became quite rambunctious when ‘A Night With a Paris Cutie’ did not come up to his expectations. He caned the machine.

Great story material, but working seven nights a week while attending Polytechnic High School devastated Thompson’s health. Whiskey, cocaine, and three packs of cigarettes a day kept him going. After two years of this hellish routine, he suffered a total physical and mental breakdown at the age of eighteen.

In more than a few Thompson novels the protagonist’s spiral of doom and dissolution is propelled by an Oedipal streak a mile wide. It doesn’t take a degree in psychology to guess that Thompson wrote to get back at his father for his various failings, not to mention the torturous routine he himself had to endure to support his family. He created numerous wicked caricatures of his father. Both The Killer Inside Me and Pop. 1280 are narrated by a slow-talking, joke-spinning West Texas deputy sheriff who is actually a serial murderer.

A bleak, menacing backdrop is a staple of noir fiction, but Thompson’s portrayals of Texas and Texans are so bleak and bitter that they veer into the category of surreal cartoons. As he explains in Bad Boy:

. . . Texans were distasteful—or so I soon convinced myself. I studied their mannerisms and mores, and in my twisted outlook they became Mongoloid monsters. I saw all their bad and no offsetting good.

Texans made boast of their insularism; they bragged about such things as never having been outside the state or the fact that the only book in their house was the Bible.

Interestingly, as Thompson’s narratives move westward, his tone mellows considerably. In Texas by the Tail, written in the mid-sixties, his con man narrator berates Houston for, among other things, its weather and its racial politics. He definitely favors Fort Worth over Dallas:

Neighboring Dallas started an evil rumor about its rival. Fort Worth was so rustic, the libel ran, that panthers prowled the streets at high noon. Fort Worth promptly dubbed itself the Panther City, and declared the lie was gospel truth.

Certainly, there were panthers in the streets. Kiddies had to have somethin’ to play with, didn’t they? Aside from that, the cats performed a highly necessary service. Every morning they were herded down to the east-flowing Trinity River, there to drain their bladders into the stream which provided Dallas’ water supply.

Thompson’s own sympathies ran along similar geographic lines. In 1926, after recuperating from his first stint as a bellhop, he hitchhiked to West Texas on a strange pilgrimage that took him to the very same oil fields and towns where his father had gambled away his family’s future. He spent the next two years laboring at backbreaking, dangerous jobs in the oil fields, working in gambling joints, briefly running a diner, and hoboing.

In Bad Boy, Thompson says that becoming a writer was foremost in his mind when he lit out for West Texas. “Oil Field Vignettes,” the first of several pieces he wrote while in the oil fields, was published in Fort Worth—based Texas Monthly magazine (no relation) in 1929. Ironically, the oil business—which had broken his father—provided the means for Thompson to reinvent himself.

It had already transformed Cowtown into Fort Worth, a major hub of the Texas oil business. The black gold that bubbled beneath their ranchland made West Texas cattlemen like Burk Burnett and W. T. Waggoner—who weren’t exactly poor before—into wealthy oil barons who funneled a great deal of their prosperity through the city that had always been good to them. Jim Thompson undoubtedly encountered many of these men while working as a bellhop, and certainly breathed construction dust as monuments to their success shot skyward: the W. T. Waggoner Building (810 Houston), oilman R. O. Dulaney’s cool art deco Sinclair Building (106 West Fifth), the Petroleum Building (also built by Dulaney, 611 Throckmorton), and others, all built between the teens and the early thirties.

While train travel isn’t a frequent fixture in Thompson’s novels, most of the grifters, gamblers, and other fun-seekers he hopped bells for came into Fort Worth via the old train stations that are just a short walk from downtown: the Santa Fe Depot (1601 Jones) and the Texas and Pacific Terminal (West Lancaster Street between Houston and Throckmorton). The former, built in 1899, evokes old Cowtown more than it does the Roaring Twenties, while the latter is a magnificent 1930 art deco structure that conjures up fedoras and big-city film noir. (To take a guided walking tour called “Hell’s Half Acre to Sundance Square,” contact Bill Campbell at 817-253-5909 or dwcjr@swbell.net. A “Downtown Fort Worth Walking Tour” brochure is available from the Fort Worth Convention and Visitors Bureau, 817-336-8791.)

In 1931 Thompson married Alberta Hesse, and before long he had found a job at the Worth Hotel (at Seventh and Taylor, where the expanded Fort Worth Club stands today). Thompson was working at the Worth when Will Rogers gave him a $50 tip for retrieving his car. Despite occasional nights like that and the fact that he was working 84 hours a week with no days off, he still wasn’t making enough to get by. Things only got worse as the Thompson household expanded to include three children born between 1932 and 1938.

In a bold stroke that, in hindsight, seems to have been preordained, Thompson turned from writing for oil trade journals to writing for true-crime magazines. A gentle, well-mannered soul who loathed violence and bloodshed, he churned out lurid stories for publications like True Detective, Daring Detective, and Startling Detective, managing to eke out a living and at the same time developing many of the stylistic techniques he would employ in his later novels. In 1935, lured by a lucrative offer from a true-crime magazine, Thompson moved to Oklahoma, ending the strange, bittersweet, and often brutal saga of his Texas years.

Once Thompson got to Oklahoma, his crime-magazine job suddenly fizzled out. In 1936 he obtained a position with the Oklahoma Federal Writers’ Project and not long thereafter was appointed its director. Also actively involved in left-wing politics, he gained many influential colleagues and admirers, including Woody Guthrie, who essentially agented Thompson’s book deal for Now and on Earth, published by Modern Age in 1942. A sort of semi-autobiographical protest novel—cum—psychological study, it met with mostly great reviews but lackluster sales. His first crime novel, however, Nothing More Than Murder (1949), struck a nerve with critics and the reading public alike.

As chronicled in Robert Polito’s excellent 1995 biography, Savage Art, Thompson’s writing career is the stuff of hard-boiled literary legends: He wrote like a demon between 1952 and 1954, turning out twelve explosive novels for Lion Books. Although he never really fit into the neat category of mystery or crime fiction, the trajectory of his life from 1942 until his death in 1977 was eerily similar to that of noir giants like Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler, who also emerged from the ghetto of pulp fiction into mainstream American culture. Such men often wrote for two main reasons: because they needed the money and because if they didn’t write, their head would explode. They also tended to live hard and drink hard, and when they were hot, they were on fire.

One night during a recent stay at the Radisson Plaza, I lay in my bed sleepless, thinking about young Jim Thompson toiling up and down these halls where the Roaring Twenties howled with a uniquely Texan decadence, leaving a young man with a hangover that would last a lifetime. If these walls could talk, I wondered, what would they say? Maybe they would say some of the things that are said in the pages of Jim Thompson’s books. In Bad Boy he wrote:

   It was a weird, wild and wonderful world that I had walked into, the luxury hotel life of the Roaring Twenties. . . . a world whose one rule was that you did nothing you could not get away with.

   There was no pity in that world. . . .

At the end of Thompson’s life his declining health made it all but impossible to write—and no one seemed interested in his style of writing anyway, since all his books were out of print. Shortly before he died he told his wife, “Just you wait. I’ll be famous after I’m dead about ten years.” Wherever he is now, Jim Thompson must be enjoying a hell of a last laugh.[The End]

 

Leave a Comment

Filed under Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, NOIR & TRUE CRIME

Digging deeper & deeper

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

Photo Ricardo Acevedo

UPDATE AT 10 PM Monday: GRAVE DIGGER BLUES, the upgraded Kindle edition, is now live on Amazon. That means you can read it and look at 100+ groovy pictures on your Kindle, iPhone, etc. Click here to order. It’s not your average eBook with eText and an eGeneric plot. Here’s a couple of screen shots. (The other screen shots on this post are from the iPad edition, which also has music and some video.)

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

From the Kindle edition.

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"
From the Kindle edition.

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

The Blues Cat has women trouble, Kindle edition on the iPhone.

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"
Grave Digger Blues calling on my iPhone.

It started with an idea. A phrase, actually: “The last detective at the end of the world.” So, I had a title, and some images. That was back in January, when I did a reading at the quarterly art event known as Tertulia, held at the Continental Club Gallery, hosted by Gretchen Harries Graham, Robert Asher Kraft, and Kellie Sansome. The theme was “The End of the World (As We Know It).” I wrote a 1400 word short story for the gig, narrated from the point of view of Hank Zzybnx, a damaged vet from the last war in Afghanistan (or, as they commonly refer to it in the near future, Murderstan).

"hank zzybnx" "grave digger blues" "last detective at the end of the world" jessesublett.com

Hank Zzybnx, The Last Detective at the End of the World

Hank returns to civilian life troubled not so much by his memories of killing and destruction, but by the huge gaps in his memory–gaps that were put there by the same men who trained him to do his job. Hank was in psy-ops, a specialized assassin, programmed to kill in close quarters, black ops, grim chores assigned to a special section of the military known as “the messenger service.” When one of these guys has a message for you, you don’t want to be home, see? So now Hank is back in civilian life, in the last weeks before the planet implodes and sinks into its own rotting juices.

hardboiled, detective fiction, noir, grave digger blues, jesse sublett, denis johnson, reed farrel coleman, crime fiction

A scene from “Heartbreaker” in Grave Digger Blues. Bob the Barber’s “Things to do” list goes up in flames.

Nothing works. The power grid is shot. Digital technology is useless because of the high radiation. The only paying gigs left for private detectives are murder for hire and worse things. Hank works a lot. Sleeps rarely, and never dreams. He’s haunted by the benevolent ghost of Marilyn Monroe. A surrealist artist who goes by a different name every day of the week is his assistant. To keep things simple, Hank calls him Alias.

blues, surrealist blues, denis johnson, jessesublett.com, "grave digger blues" "james ellroy"

The author is not The Blues Cat. But The Blues Cat is on his speed dial.

Those are a few details about our hero, Hank Zzybnx. The other protagonist of the book is a doomed jazz musician they call The Blues Cat. He plays a different dive every night of the week, 365 days a year. A 300 pound thug named The Muffin Man follows him wherever he goes. The Cat is rarely without a female admirer in tow, but there have been at least nine attempts on his life by ex-lovers, and at least twice that many by the embittered spouses of some of those lovers. This is one musician who never runs short of reasons to sing the blues.

Grave Digger Blues will hot-wire your iPad, see??

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

The FIRST surrealist/blues/pulpfiction iPad novella.

AND NEXT, the KINDLE version with 100 + photos, drawings, crazy visuals, representing the monumental contributions of leading Austin avant garde photographers/models Mona Pitts and Ricardo Acevedo. (Author photo by Todd V. Wolfson). We are lucky to be so successful in our commitment to weirdness. When these friends of mine got involved in project, that’s when it really started to get real. Working with their images (and have I mentioned this? The book has over 100 photos, drawings, collages and other media), helped push the project forward, turning a dream into a crazy dreamlike state of reality. In other words, one story followed the other, and it became a serial novel.

Today, Monday, November 26, 2012, I finished formatting these 102 complex and strange small masterpieces by these artists (as well as a few modest scribblings by My Terrible Self, and some of my iPhone shots and collages), and delivered same to the Amazon Kindle store. So, with any luck, by Tuesday, November 27, say noonish, you should be able to drive down to your Amazon Kindle Drive-In Liquor Store & XXL Condom Dispensary (OK, or just open it on your digital device) download a version for only $4.99 that is digestible on your Kindle, Kindle Fire (color photos will be in glorious and gory COLOR), iPhone, iPad, whatever. The iPad version with its 30 minutes of original scary blues songs and 30 minutes of audio chapters (with soundtrack collaboration between My Terrible Self and Johnny Reno) is live and moving products at your local iTunes Warehouse and Rogue Elephant Sanctuary.

"jesse sublett" jessesublett.com "denis johnson" "james ellroy" "crime fiction" noir + hardboiled "detective fiction" "crime fiction" + "post-apocalyptic"

Suzee the Madam is based on someone I used to know.

Grave Digger Blues is a dark fever dream that’s part noir, part stand-up. Sublett’s writing is as apt to scare the hell out of you as it is to make you die laughing.” –REED FARREL COLEMAN, three-time Shamus Award-winning author of Gun Church

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

Surrealism = what she says when you say, “Penny for your thoughts, Hank?”

To wrap up, it’s a dangerous world we live in, and you can either pull the covers over your head and cry about it, or you can get out there and put a smile on your face and charge forward and keep the rotten, greedy villains from taking over, mulching paradise and grinding up the last good things on the planet just so they can have a few more zillion dollars to spend.

noir, hardboiled, jesse sublett, raymond chandler, jessesublett.com, detective fiction, james ellroy, jessesublett.com, grave digger blues

Casper Gutman, a k a, The Fat Man, as inhabited by Sydney Greenstreet in The Maltese Falcon. More sophisticated than Mitt Romney, but less cutthroat and monomaniacal.

Yes, it’s a scary world–we just had an election where the choice was either the good guy or some stalk of overcooked brussel sprouts with the personality of a wet Kleenex and the moral spine of … well, no spine at all, just money, stuffed into overseas accounts. Is that noir enough for you? The other bad guys were a bunch of stooges from Central Casting, and if brains and soul sold for fifty cents a pound these guys couldn’t pitch enough pennies together to buy a bag of Doritos.

"grave digger blues" "crime fiction" "charles willeford" "Peter Farris" "Reed Farrel Coleman" "jesse sublett" "grave digger blues" "dick cheney" "dick cheney war criminal"

In the future, the old GOP inner circle has fallen on hard times. Weird quirks of personality, previously hidden, emerge in a rather gaudy fashion.

These people would drill for oil in their own grandma’s kitchen or her lap if there was a barrel of oil to be harvested. They’d promise you any war any time, as long as they or their kids didn’t have to go risk their asses in it. Is that noir enough for you? Lots more where that came from.

"jesse sublett" jessesublett.com "denis johnson" "james ellroy" "crime fiction" noir + hardboiled "detective fiction" "crime fiction" + "post-apocalyptic"

Newt Gingrich was one of the right wingers left out in the cold after the great Republican coup, now working as a security guard for WalMart and strangling puppies in the circus.

Recently some follower on Twitter responded to one of my political tweets saying, “Oh, dude, chill out. Don’t go there. The election is over. Republicans buy books and music, too.” I replied, “Hey man, I’m ALWAYS there. I was born chill. I don’t care if Republicans buy my art or not. I kiss ass to nobody.”

pulp fiction "james ellroy" "michael connelly" "denis johnson" "jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "surrealism" "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "grave digger blues" ebook + ibook + "enhanced ibook" "jessesublett.com" austin "austin music scene"

At JesseSublett.com, we work 24/7 to keep it surreal.

More Grave Digger Blues updates coming. Stay tuned, download, remain cool, dig the blues.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, NOIR & TRUE CRIME

DIG THIS GRAVE DIGGER BLUES

"jesse sublett" jessesublett.com "denis johnson" "james ellroy" "crime fiction" noir + hardboiled "detective fiction" "crime fiction" + "post-apocalyptic"

GRAVE DIGGER BLUES out now for iPad also Kindle, iPhone, etc.

UPDATE FROM THE ROAD:

“Grave Digger Blues is a dark fever dream that’s part noir, part stand-up. Sublett’s writing is as apt to scare the hell out of you as it is to make you die laughing.”
Reed Farrel Coleman, three-time Shamus Award-winning author of Gun Church

Grave Digger Blues, my new noir novella, is now available as an iBook for the Apple iPad–with original music video, graphics–and also available in eBook form (text only) for Kindle, iPhone, etc. You can download the iPad version from iTunes for $6.99 or the Kindle version from Amazon (text only) for $4.99.

I’ve created a new page for Grave Digger Blues, here, with more details, including a whole bunch of the great, supercool images by ace Austin art photographers Mona Pitts and Ricardo Acevedo, like these two below:

"crime fiction" mona pitts, jesse sublett "james ellroy" pulpfiction, noir, "detective fiction" "denis johnson" surrealist fiction, "ipad"

screen shot of Grave Digger Blues, photo by Mona Pitts

"jesse sublett" jessesublett.com "denis johnson" "james ellroy" "crime fiction" noir + hardboiled "detective fiction" "crime fiction" + "post-apocalyptic"
Grave Digger Blues, photo by Ricardo Acevedo

So I hope you will check it out and dig it. I’ve recorded a little video clip especially for the occasion of the book going live on iTunes, and as time allows, I hope to plan some special events, like gigs, etc., to help spread the word.

"jesse sublett" "upright bass" "crime fiction" "grave digger blues" jessesublett.com "noir fiction" "james ellroy"

CLICK BELOW to hear “Grave Digger Blues”, the theme of this novella.

CLICK HERE: Grave Digger Blues, the song, my personal Grave Digger Blues message to you.

jesse sublett, noir, grave digger blues, pulp fiction, crime fiction, austin author, blues novel

De official photo of de author, Jesse Sublett, by Todd V. Wolfson

Leave a Comment

Filed under Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, NOIR & TRUE CRIME

BOOK EXPLODES KILLS FIVE

"Jesse sublett" "Richard Stark" "Crime fiction" noir "jessesublett.com" "Donald Westlake"

Jack Black, burglar, opium addict, grifter, professional crook, convict, and a helluva memoirist.

jessesublett.com + "james crumley" "crime fiction" noir "Michael connelly"

I wrote a short story called Johnny Heartbreak for my pal, the publisher Dennis McMillan, specifically for his anthology Measures of Poison commemorating his 20th year in publishing. I met Dennis for the first time in 1992 or so, in Vagabond Books in Los Angeles, and we started talking about Charles Willeford. Two hours later we were still talking.

"james crumley" "Jesse Sublett" "Michael Connelly" "Christopher Cook" "Scott Phillips"

As it says on Amazon, “a hefty collection”…

Dennis and I became friends and he loaned me some of Willeford’s unpublished manuscripts and I ended up discovering Willeford’s great “lost” masterpiece, Deliver Me From Dallas (one of those “unpublished” manuscripts), had actually been published in 1961 by Fawcett Gold Medal as a paperback original under the name of Willeford’s old USAF pal, W. Franklin Sanders, with the title The Whip Hand. I was collecting PBs in those days, sometimes buying 30 or so a week. Anyway, nobody knew the book had been published — not, that is, Willeford or his widow, Betsy Willeford, or Dennis… It was a cool, cool, cool discovery. [Click here to read the account I wrote for the Austin Chronicle, which I expanded for the new publication of the book, under the real title, which Dennis published a few years later. Here it is on Amazon.] Here’s a review of The Whip Hand by Ed Lynskey. Thanks, Ed.

"Jesse Sublett" "Charles Willeford" "crime fiction" "Denis Johnson" "Grave Digger B

The 1961 paperback original was published without Willeford’s knowledge, apparently. The editor at Fawcett hated Willeford’s writing, but when it was submitted without his name, he bought this book.


"charles willeford" "crime fiction" "jesse sublett" "grave digger blues"

For some reason, this thing about a woman with a bullwhip stuck in my mind.


Measures of Poison, published in 2002, finds me in great company, alongside such great talents as Willeford, Christopher Cook, George Pelecanos, Michael Connelly, James Sallis, James Crumley, Jon A. Jackson, Scott Phillips, Gary Phillips, and a number of other fine writers. Johnny Heartbreak is about a bootlegger named Johnny in a fictional town during Prohibition years, and as I often do, I wrote a song to go with it. Which reminds me, Michael Connelly has a new novel, The Black Box. Trying to remember if I’ve sent Michael a copy of Jon Dee Graham’s song, “The Black Box.” I’m sure he’d love it. ["red meat and wreckage ... knee deep in a field..." Now THAT is my idea of SONGWRITING. I'm not being ironic, either. )

Here's the song I wrote for Johnny Heartbreak, which oddly enough is called "Johnny Heartbreak Blues."

I just recorded this little video clip of the song as an intro to my next iBook, Grave Digger Blues. More on that later in the week.

"Jesse Sublett" "murder ballads" "James McMurtry" "James Ellroy" "Tom Waits" pulp fiction + noir +

CLICK on the link below to play the video of “Johnny Heartbreak Blues”

“Johnny Heartbreak Blues”

Don’t we love ABE.com? I wonder sometimes how many thousands of dollars I’ve spent ordering books from there in the last ten years. Probably good not to know. Their newsletter, The Avid Reader, makes for fun online window shopping. The latest one, Great Gumshoes, is a subjective survey of classic detective novels. Naturally, it’s a magnet for comments, e.g, “I CAN’T BELIEVE YOUR LIST DID NOT INCLUDE [name of your favorite private eye here].” Actually the editorial comment on these is secondary to the visuals. It’s really fun to look at the cool cover art, and THEN you can click on the image and find out how many times you’d have to mortgage your house to buy a first edition of, say, The Maltese Falcon or The Big Sleep, etc. (If those aren’t among your favorites, don’t hold your breath, I’m not mentioning any others.) Anyway, I like these blogs. A few months ago there was one on woodcut books, really great looking stuff. Did you know that the art of woodcut printing is called xylography? Look it up on wiki if you don’t believe me. I always thought xlography was a memoir by a xylophonist, but what do I know?

"Jesse Sublett" hardboiled + noir + crime fiction + "Michael Connelly" + "James Ellroy" + "James Crumley"

ABE.com listing of “Classic Gumshoes”. Too bad your favorite 6’2″ music/author isn’t listed here.

"jesse sublett" "robert b. parker" "michael connelly" jessesublett.com "crime fiction" "detective fiction" "austin, texas" "austin noir"

Who do I have to bribe to get this image added?

"Jesse Sublett" hardboiled + noir + crime fiction + "Michael Connelly" + "James Ellroy" + "James Crumley"

It would cost you a lot of dough to buy all these first editions.

"Sarah Cortez" "lyrical crime fiction" "jesse sublett" noir

Sarah Cortez, one helluva cop-poet-author-lady.

Last Tuesday the latest edition of Noir at the Bar: Austin hosted Sarah Cortez, poet, crime fiction writer, Houston policewoman, and all-around lovely gal, and I’ve been devouring her How To Undress a Cop collection of gritty and beautiful poetry. She was here at the Texas Book Festival promoting her most recent book, Walking Home: Growing Up Hispanic in Houston. And let’s not forget that Reed Farrel Coleman was our other big star that night, and just this Sunday Morning his new novel, Gun Church, got the big wet kiss of approval from Marilyn Stasio in NYTBR. Cool, daddy-o. Coleman gave a great reading from that book Tuesday night and I look forward to reading more by him.

"jesse sublett" "crime fiction" noir "Michael Connelly" "Denis Johnson"

A great collection of interviews with professional criminals, authors, filmmakers, victims of crime, actors who have portrayed notorious criminals, etc.

"W. K. Stratton" pugilism + "jesse sublett" + pulp fiction + hardboiled + noir + "Kip Stratton"

W.K. Stratton’s great new biography of this heavyweight champ.

I’m also really enjoying reading Floyd Patterson: The Fighting Life of Boxing’s Invisible Champion, by my pal W. K. “Kip” Stratton. In previous books Stratton has written about rodeo, football and Sam Peckinpah, and although he always writes well, I think this may be his most powerful and compelling narrative yet. When I think about that era, the fifties and sixties, I guess I’ve always been a much bigger fan of Muhammed Ali and Sonny Liston, Archie Moore, Marciano, etc., but Patterson, like most boxers, had to claw his way up from nothing to become the champ, and that always makes for a compelling story. Plus you get the story of his manager, Cus D’Amato, whose own story is so compelling and weird that at times you can feel Stratton holding back a big so that D’Amato’s own story doesn’t overshadow his shy, unusually sensitive champ.

"Jesse sublett" "Richard Stark" "Crime fiction" noir "jessesublett.com" "Donald Westlake"

Darwyn Cooke’s graphic novel adaptation of “The Score” by Richard Stark

"Jesse sublett" "Richard Stark" "Crime fiction" noir "jessesublett.com" "Donald Westlake"

"Jesse sublett" "Richard Stark" "Crime fiction" noir "jessesublett.com" "Donald Westlake"

“The Score,” by Richard Stark, the paperback original edition.

One of my favorite books of the year has got to be Darwyn Cooke’s new, graphic novel adaptation of The Score, by Richard Stark. As you may know, Stark was the pen name of Donald Westlake for the brilliant series of crime caper novels, starring the professional thief, Parker. These books represent a kind of penultimate achievement, a kind of perfect art form, always balancing thrills and suspense and humor and a sort of good-spirited-mean-streak, if you know what I mean. This is the third graphic novel adaptation by Cooke and these are just superb, awesome, fantastic. The action and mood and suspense just seem to explode off the page. I read this in two sittings, and I immediately started over on it again. I interviewed Westlake a couple of years before he died, and it was a great pleasure. A real gentleman, humble, funny, gracious. As you may know, sometimes actually meeting your heroes can be disappointing, disillusioning, but this experience was at the opposite end of the spectrum.

And speaking of crime capers, another of my favorite reads of the summer was You Can’t Win, a true crime memoir by Jack Black, no, not the actor, but a professional thief/grifter/slacker from the early decades of the 20th century. Soon to be a motion picture starring Michael Pitt, that studly thug from Boardwalk Empire. Jack Black rode the rails with the hobos, was a burglar, convict, opium addict, and let’s not forget, a big influence on William Burroughs. It’s a little tough to find the edition of the book with the foreward by Burroughs, so for all you Beat people out there, I have scanned the foreward from my copy and posted it here.

Also, you may note that the art on the front and back cover of this edition depicts an incident depicted in the book. Jack was in a hobo camp where everyone was getting blown out on Mulligan stew with his traveling companion and sometime partner in crime, Foot-and-a-Half George, when a con man named Gold Tooth came back to camp and told a story about rumpus he and his pals had gotten into with a brothel-keeper named Salt Chunk Mary, and suddenly Foot-and-a-Half George yells at him.

“Hey you,” said George from across the fire. “You’re a liar.” His little dead blue eyes were blazing like a wounded wild boar’s. “You was a good bum but you’re dog meat now!” A gun flashed from beneath his coat, and he fired into Gold Tooth twice. Six feet away, I could feel the slugs hit him. His head fell forward and both hands went to his chest, where he was hit. He turned around, like a dog getting ready to lie down and fell on his face. His hat rolled into the fire. His hands were clawing a the red-hot coals.

Wow!

Late night update: Just found this link to the old LA Times review of Rock Critic Murders from 1989, byline Charles Champlin. Interesting things happen to insomniacs.

And just because:

"r crumb" "delta blues" "jesse sublett" "jessesublett.com"

Leave a Comment

Filed under Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, NOIR & TRUE CRIME

AUSTIN NOIR

EVENT: NOIR AT THE BAR
TIME: 7 PM – 9 PM, Tues. Nov. 13, 2012
WHERE: Opal Divine Freehouse, 700 West Sixth Street, Austin, TX
WHAT: Tough but pretty crime writers read from their work; murder ballads performed live, booze flows like a .44 magnum to the carotid artery, aficionados buy books & get ‘em signed, everybody is cool & has a cool time.
Johnny Heartbreak Blues, by Jesse Sublett(Click to play)

"Jesse Sublett" welcomes "Sarah Cortez", author of "How to Undress a Cop" and " Walking Home: Growing Up Hispanic in Houston". "pulp fiction" "Crime fiction"

Sarah Cortez was absolutely one of the highlights of the 2012 Texas Book Festival.

"Jesse Sublett" welcomes "Reed Farrel Coleman" to Noir at the Bar. "crime fiction" "pulp fiction"

Reed Farrel Coleman, author of GUN CHURCH

"jesse sublett" "todd v. wolfson" "sam's barbecue" "reed farrel coleman" noir "sarah cortez"

Come to Noir at the Bar & let us entertain you.

 

Sarah Cortez is a cop, a poet, a crime writer, creative writing teacher and a whole bunch of other things besides being a real cool person. The next edition of Noir at the Bar/Austin is positively psyched to welcome her town on Tuesday Nov. 13.

She’ll be reading from How to Undress a Cop and her new memoir, Walking Home Latino, and probably some other works. Sarah will be joined by Reed Farrel Coleman, a hard-charging noir author, reading from his new novel, Gun Church, and maybe Hurt Machine and who knows what else. Coleman has a stellar rep in the hardboiled crowd and this is a great pairing, because he, too, has been called “a poet of the hardboiled” and in fact, is a published poet. He’s got a list of awards and nominations as long as a purse-snatcher’s right arm. Check them out below, and view some highlights of his output at ReedColeman.com. I’ll be present, reading/performing from my soon to be published on iPad Grave Digger Blues, and a special song, just for Sarah, I’ll be singing my bilingual version of the Federico Garcia Lorca poem, Unfaithful Wife (La Casada Infiel), which is pretty damn cool. For more info on Sarah Cortez, visit her at poetacortez.com and view this Houston Chronicle story.

Noir at the Bar is hosted as usual by MysteryPeople, the crime fiction store within a store at BookPeople, presented to you by the inimitable Scott Montgomery, so please check out his blog here.

I’m sort of a poet myself, having written a few hundred songs + actual poems, but one important thing all three of us have in common is that we’ve all been contributors to Akashic Books‘ (and what a fine publisher they are) noir series. Coleman has been collected in the Long Island Noir anthology and Sarah and I can be found in the Lone Star Noir anthology.

As promised, here’s that bullet list of Reed Farrel Coleman accolades. (Sheesh, I almost hate the guy–I never win anything!)

Hurt Machine
nominated for the Barry Award for best novel

Tower (with Ken Bruen)
winner of Macavity – best novel
Anthony – best original paperback
Spinetingler Magazine Best Novel – Legends
Book of the Year – Foreward Reviews
Crimespree Magazine – Best Novel of 2009

Empty Ever After
winner of Shamus – best hardcover

Soul Patch
winner of Shamus – best hardcover
also nominated for:
Edgar – best novel
Barry – best novel
Macavity – best novel

The James Deans
winner of Shamus – best paperback original
winner of Barry – best paperback
winner of Anthony – best paperback original
also nominated for:
Edgar – best paperback original
Gumshoe – best mystery
Macavity – best novel

Please come join us, have a drink, listen to stories, buy some books. If you don’t end up having a helluva time, I’ll pick up your bar tab.

Cheers,
Jesse

PS: All my early crime novels (Rock Critic Murders, Tough Baby, Boiled in Concrete) are now available for Kindle / iPhone / whatever on the Amazon Kindle page. My hardboiled memoir of music, murder and near death, Never the Same Again, is there also. Grave Digger Blues will be released in the iTunes / iBookstore in about 2 weeks, and to Kindle a bit later. Read free samples of Grave Digger Blues here: STARS IN HER HAIR and here: THE LAST DETECTIVE AT THE END OF THE WORLD.

"Jesse Sublett" noir author, thanks to "Mona Pitts" + "Ricardo Acevedo" + "Denis Johnson"

She had the sweetest lips. I could kiss her all night. I think maybe she sucked my brains out of my skull. [Photo: Mona Pitts]

THE LAST DETECTIVE 2, AUDIO VERSION

Follow Mona Pitts, photographer / model extraordinaire, femme fatale of the world of Grave Digger Blues.
Follow the awesome Todd V. Wolfson, who shoots stars in Austin.

Follow Ricardo Acevedo, photographer/artist/poet, dangerously talented, floats like a butterfly stings like a bee.

Leave a Comment

Filed under Books & other writing by Jesse Sublett, NOIR & TRUE CRIME

Q. HOW TO TELL IF YOUR MOM IS ON CRACK

"rock critic murders" + NRA + romney + "tea party"A. Because she’s upset about the presidential election.

A great day in the USA. I’m even tempted to say “It’s morning in America…” but that one ended badly.

You’d never think that bullshit could be stacked so high. Anyway, gravity eventually did the trick.

Yes, it’s a great day in America. President Barack Obama, a great man and a tested leader, who has led our nation through the past years of economic turmoil and international danger, has been reelected. The people have spoken. Democracy is good. We can all stand some improvement and the reasonable among us are praying for a sense of sanity, logic and compromise to return to some of those who can only hate and obstruct.


Meanwhile, we realize it’s a hard time for some of you, so we have loaned out our bulletin board to help the most troubled of you get together and console each other.

This generous spirit even extends to those strange people whom I do not know, who somehow felt motivated to post obscene and outlandish, even racist comments on my Facebook page.

Even had I known these people and, having accidentally found them, and learned that they supported Mitt Romney, a person I despise, I would not have felt moved to post my own opinion on their page. It’s rather inappropriate and obnoxious. I suppose they’re trying to save us infidels. Or something.

Leave a Comment

Filed under politics