Archive for June, 2009

Rock Star Child – Gone Tomorrow!

Child, dubbed by New York Times critic Janet Maslin the “rock star” of the suspense genre, kicked off his 13-city North American tour May 19 to an SRO New York City crowd.  he’s currently meeting hundreds of “Reacher Creatures” (named after leading man Jack Reacher) across the country at bookstores and – new this year- military bases.  Fans can check out Child’s daily progress on his tour blog at www.leechild.com.  Delacorte reports 350,000 copies in print.

 

Order a signed copy of Gone Tomorrow by Lee Child at www.vjbooks.com

The Siege – a stunning novel by Stephen White

The Yale campus becomes the site of an increasingly tense siege in this stunning novel from bestseller White (Dead Time). After unidentified attackers quietly take over a building belonging to one of Yale’s secret societies, they transform it into a virtual fortress holding an unknown number of students hostage. As officials become aware of what has happened, the response escalates in predictable fashion, but these hostage takers are completely unpredictable. They make no demands, agree to no negotiations and execute or release hostages as they choose. Suspended Boulder, Colo., policeman Sam Purdy eventually teams with maverick FBI agent Christopher Poe and CIA terror expert Deirdre Drake in an effort outside official channels to figure out what’s going on. Brilliantly conceived and executed, this intellectually challenging and provocative thriller brings home the lesson that 9/11 might have been a mere prelude to more sophisticated assaults. (Aug.)

Order a signed copy of The Siege by Stephen White at www.vjbooks.com

(Publisher’s Weekly, June 8)

Minotaur Moving Beyond Genre

Andrew Martin is a man on a mission, a mission to change the industry’s perception of the mystery imprint he’s been heading for the last three years. Martin, as publisher of Minotaur Books, which releases some 140 titles annually, is pushing a message to the publishing community that his imprint is about more than str1ong, small-run backlist genre mysteries, it’s also about “big, noisy blockbusters.”Noting that his outlook on publishing was changed by the years he spent working at Sterling, owned by Barnes & Noble, Martin has devised a schedule in which Minotaur publishes one big book a month that is backed by a major marketing push and a 75,000-copy to 200,000-copy first printing.

To find the right lead title, Minotaur takes chances on newcomers as well as writers from what Martin dubs his “farm team.” Chelsea Cain, a Portland journalist who signed a seven-figure, three-book deal with the imprint in 2006, is a good example of the former tack; Cain’s first two novels in her serial killer trilogy—Heartsick and Sweetheart—both hit the bestseller lists.

The other route involves cherry-picking writers from Minotaur’s backlist (aka the farm team)—many of them accomplished genre authors the imprint has steadily done 5,000-copy print runs for. Olen Steinhauer is one such writer. Steinhauer’s The Tourist, published in March, is his sixth book, but the first in a new trilogy, which Martin said was key to giving the Edgar-winning author a higher profile. “[Steinhauer] had great literary chops,” Martin elaborated, “but I can’t make him great on book four or five of a five-book series.” (The Tourist, which has sold 51,000 copies to date, was also acquired for film by George Clooney.)

Martin’s goal is to drive home the message that Minotaur, while it is about genre fiction, is also about big fiction. To that end, the imprint recently signed a three-book deal with bestseller Nevada Barr; it will now release the next titles in Barr’s long-running series featuring Parks Service detective Anna Pigeon.

In addition to bigger print runs—upcoming 100,000-copy pushes include Norb Vonnegut’s Top Producer (mid-September) and Louise Penny‘s The Brutal Telling (late September)—Martin is trying to twist the old publicity standards. The imprint has done away with shipping a crate-full of galleys—known as the Beast Box —to booksellers and the press every season. Instead it’s shipping two “discoveries” and a memory stick with promotional information about other upcoming titles. (The discoveries are two of the house’s lead titles.)

According to Martin, the less is more approach is all part of the plan “to get you reading, buying, selling Minotaur books.”

Although Martin acknowledged that consumers may not check the bindings of their books before they buy, branding is key, he thinks, within the industry. “While I don’t promote the Minotaur brand to the consumer, I do to the customer,” by which he means getting booksellers and the press on board with the new Minotaur.

(Publisher’s Weekly, Jun 8, Rachel Deahl)

 

Connelly on The Scarecrow

“Being a former newspaper reporter, I’ve watched in recent years as the newspaper economy has crumbled…. Along the way, many people I worked with have lost their jobs to buyouts or layoffs. I am also a big fan of the TV show The Wire.  In its last season, the show explored… what was happening to the newspaper business.  Watching that show made me want to take  a shot at the story that would be a thriller first and a torch song for the newspaper business second.”

- Connelly’s reason for bringing back The Poet protagonist Jack McEvoy.  Scarecrow copies in print:  405,000. (Publisher’s Weekly, June 8)

Order a signed copy of The Scarecrow by Michael Connelly at www.vjbooks.com

Cain Re-Ups at Minotaur

Breakout bestseller Chelsea Cain (Heartsick and Sweetheart) has signed with St. Martin’s Minotaur for three more books. Executive editor Kelley Raglang struck the deal, which is a copublishing agreement with Macmillan in the U.K., with agent  Joy Harris. (A Minotaur rep would not confirm how much the deal was for, though it’s at least high six figures.) Two of the books will be additions to Cain’s thriller series featuring Portland PI Archie Sheridan, with the third title a stand-alone. The first title is slated for 2010; Cain’s third thriller from Minotaur, Evil at Heart, is publishing in September.

Order your signed copy of Evil at Heart by Chelsea Cain at www.vjbooks.com

(Publisher’s Weekly, Rachel Deahl, May 18)

Karin Slaughter Undone

Bestseller Slaughter brings together characters from her two series for the first time with electrifying results. Dr. Sara Linton, who lost her husband in 2007’s Beyond Reach, has left rural Grant County for a new life in an underfunded Atlanta hospital. Georgia Bureau of Investigation agents Faith Mitchell and Will Trent, last seen in 2008’s Fractured, happen to be in the hospital’s ER when a woman known only as “Anna” arrives. Anna was hit by a car after escaping from an unknown captor, whose underground torture chamber Will soon uncovers near the accident site, along with the body of a second woman he believes was held in the same bunker. When another woman is snatched, Faith and Will realize they’re chasing a sadistic serial killer. As the GBI agents try to connect the victims, Sara becomes more involved in the investigation, even as it dredges up painful memories from her past. Slaughter ups the emotional ante with every twist and turn in this disturbing thriller.

Order a signed copy of Undone by Karin Slaughter at www.vjbooks.com

(Publisher’s Weekly, June 1)

Ravens by George Dawes Green gets a PW star!

Soon after Mitch and Patsy Boatwright, two down-home one-step-above-poor-white Georgians, win the $318 million Max-a-Million jackpot in this stellar thriller from bestseller Green (The Juror), they receive two unwelcome visitors—Shaw McBride and Romeo Zderko, who are fleeing nowhere techie jobs in Ohio for a never-never Florida dream. Shaw, the brains, and Romeo, his half-unwilling brawny pawn, threaten to kill the Boatwrights’ loved ones unless the couple agree to hand over half their winnings. Through rapidly shifting points of view, especially the clear eyes of daughter Tara Boatwright, a community college student, Green frighteningly and unequivocally shows how victims can come to adore their tormentors, amid a mix of madness, fear, isolation, greed and delusions of power and glory. This exquisite novel of psychological suspense builds to a devastating resolution that will leave readers with the cold shudders for a long time afterward.

Order your signed copy of Ravens by George Dawes Green from www.vjbooks.com

Iris Johansen – Storm Cycle

Iris Johansen might be giving Noah a run for his money:  the bestselling novelist, says her publisher, is a “big-time animal lover” who has buffalos, cows, horses and seven dogs on her Georgia property.  Dark Summer, which has a cool one million copies in print, centers around a vet who cares for an injured black Lab with an amazing secret.  Next up from St. Martin’s:  Storm Cycle, due July 21, the second hard-cover she’s coauthored with her son, Roy, after last summer’s Silent Thunder.

Order your signed copy of Silent Thunder from Iris Johansen at www.vjbooks.com

(Publisher’s Weekly, May 4)

Penn Cage featured in Greg Iles’ The Devil’s Punchbowl

Bestseller Iles’s stellar third suspense novel to feature Penn Cage (after Turning Angel) finds the former prosecutor and bestselling novelist serving as the mayor of Natchez, Miss., his hometown. Frustrated by his limited ability to change the system, Cage is plunged into a deadly duel of wits with some bad guys after a childhood friend, Tim Jessup, now a card dealer, alerts him to illegal dog fighting and sexual abuse connected with a floating casino. Before Jessup can deliver proof of his allegations, he’s tortured and killed. Convinced Jessup managed to pass on the evidence to the mayor, Jessup’s boss confronts and threatens Cage. Daniel Kelly, an old friend working for a private security organization, lends support, sneaking Cage’s 11-year-old daughter out of town to safety. Iles brilliantly creates opportunities for his characters to demonstrate principle and courage, both on a large and small scale, making this much more than just an exciting read.

Order your signed copy of Devil’s Punchbowl by Greg Iles at www.vjbooks.com

(Publisher’s Weekly, May 25)

Elizabeth George writes about the extra-ordinary

Many of Elizabeth George‘s readers are under the impression she’s British.  (She was born in Warren, Ohio.)  When asked in Publisher’s Weekly Interview why she decided to set her books in England, she replied, “I have a longtime love of England, and I have never believed in the tired advice, ‘Write what you know.’ What I knew was ordinary.  Why would I want to write about that?”

Order signed copies of Elizabeth George’s books at www.vjbooks.com

(Publisher’s Weekly, May 25)

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