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‘World Gone By’ A Conversation with Dennis Lehane

March 19, 2015 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

Dennis Lehane is known to millions of readers. His novels Mystic River, Gone, Baby, Dennis Lehane c Gaby Gerstner Diogenes, ZurichGone, and Shutter Island became blockbuster movies, with the most recent film being The Drop, which is based on his short story, Animal Rescue.

A Drink Before the War won the Shamus Award. Mystic River won both the Anthony and the Barry Awards for Best Novel, and the Massachusetts Award in Fiction. Live by Night won the Edgar Award for Best Novel, and the Florida Book Award Gold Medal for Fiction.

Read more on the Huffington Post >>

 

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Filed Under: About Books, creativity, crime, Huffington Post Column, Interviews, thriller Tagged With: crime-fiction, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, genre fiction, literary fiction

Fast and Furious: Novels, the Media and our Changing World

April 28, 2014 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

2014-04-26-Brainwaves-thumbI’ve been reading a great deal of fiction (crime, literary and other genres) and observing as much as possible, not only about books, but about entertainment in various media.

It seems there’s more and more blending of crime novels with horror, the occult, with paranormal events, romance, and science fiction. The genres are coalescing.

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Filed Under: About Books, thriller, war Tagged With: attention span, CGI, comics, crime-novels, culture, Facebook, Goodreads, literary fiction, movies, Neural pathways, Pinterest, technology, Twitter

“Graveyard of Memories”: A Talk with Barry Eisler

March 8, 2014 by Mark Rubinstein Leave a Comment

2014-03-09-BarryEislerchoose-thumbBarry Eisler’s John Rain novels are the “Tiffany” of assassin-oriented, suspense thrillers. The recently released Graveyard of Memories is a prequel to the other novels in the John Rain series. At the story’s outset, Rain, 20 years old and fresh from Vietnam, is a courier for the CIA. He suddenly finds himself threatened on all sides: he must survive the yakuza (the Japanese mob) and other imminent sources of danger. He falls in love with Sayaka, a beautiful wheelchair-bound young woman. Balancing love and the horror of what he must do to survive, John learns his trade craft to become a master assassin. We witness his unfolding maturity as he attempts to stay alive without totally losing the sensitive, soulful and remorseful aspects of his persona.

Quoting from Graveyard of Memories: “I was too young to know that some memories don’t fade, or age, or die. That the weight of some of what we do accumulates, expands, coheres, solidifies. That life means coming to grips with that ever-present weight, learning how to carry it with you wherever you go.”

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Filed Under: About Books, crime, Huffington Post Column Tagged With: assassins, backstory, barry-eisler, character-driven novels, erotica, Game of Thrones, genre fiction, Harlan Coben, House of Cards, James Ellroy, John le Carre, john-rain, Lee Child, literary fiction, Michael Connelly, plot-driven novels, The Sopranos, the-detachment, Walter Mosley

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