Saturday, August 22, 2009

THE STOLEN is nominated for the Shamus award!

I'm thrilled to announced that my third Henry Parker novel, THE STOLEN, has been nominated for the prestigious Shamus award. The Shamus is given out every year by the Private Eye Writers of America, and has a long and storied tradition. This is a tremendous honor, and my sincerest thanks go out to the members of PWA, and, of course to the readers. Here is the rest of the press release, which can also be found at the PWA blog:

From Ted Fitzgerald, Awards Chair:

PRIVATE EYE WRITERS OF AMERICA ANNOUNCES
2009 SHAMUS AWARDS NOMINEES

The Private Eye Writers of America (PWA) is proud to announce the nominees for the 28th annual Shamus Awards, given annually to recognize outstanding achievement in private eye fiction. The 2009 awards cover works first published in the U.S. in 2008. The awards will be presented at the PWA banquet, to be held Friday evening Oct. 16, 2009, in Indianapolis, Indiana, during the Bouchercon World Mystery Convention. For banquet details, contact Robert J. Randisi at rrandisi@aol.com.

2009 Shamus Awards Nominees

Best Hardcover
Salvation Boulevard by Larry Beinhart (Nation Books), featuring Carl Vanderveer
Empty Ever After by Reed Farrel Coleman (Bleak House Books), featuring Moe Prager
The Blue Door by David Fulmer (Harcourt), featuring Eddie Cero
The Price of Blood by Declan Hughes (Wm. Morrow), featuring Ed Loy
The Ancient Rain by Domenic Stansberry (St. Martins Minotaur) featuring Dante Mancuso

Best First PI Novel
Stalking Susan by Julie Kramer (Doubleday), featuring Riley Spartz
Swann’s Last Song by Charles Salzberg (Five Star), featuring Henry Swann
The Eye of Jade by Diane Wei Liang (Simon & Schuster), featuring Mei Wang
In the Heat by Ian Vasquez (St. Martins Minotaur), featuring Miles Young
Veil of Lies by Jeri Westerson (St Martins Minotaur), featuring Crispin Guest

Best Paperback Original
Snow Blind by Lori Armstrong (Medallion) featuring Julie Collins
Shot Girl by Karen Olson (Obsidian) featuring Annie Seymour
The Stolen by Jason Pinter (MIRA) featuring Henry Parker
The Black Hand by Will Thomas (Touchstone/Simon &Schuster) featuring Cyrus Barker and Thomas Llewelyn.
The Evil That Men Do by Dave White (Crown/Three Rivers Press) featuring Jackson Donne

Best Short Story
“Family Values” by Mitch Alderman (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, June 2008), featuring Bubba Simms
“Last Island South” by John C. Boland. (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Sep/Oct 2008), featuring Meggie Trevor
“The Blonde Tigress” by Max Allan Collins (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, June 2008), featuring Nate Heller
“Discovery” by Kristine Kathryn Rusch (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, Nov 2008), featuring Pita Cárdenas
“Panic on Portage Path” by Dick Stodghill (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, Jan/Feb 2008), featuring Jack Eddy and Bram Geary.


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PWA was founded in 1981 by Robert J. Randisi to recognize the private eye genre and its writers. Previous Shamus winners include Lawrence Block, Ken Bruen, Harlan Coben, Max Allan Collins, Michael Connelly, Robert Crais, O’Neil deNoux, Brendan DuBois, Loren D. Estleman, Carolina Garcia-Aguilera, Sue Grafton, James W. Hall, Steve Hamilton, Jeremiah Healy, Dennis Lehane, Laura Lippman, John Lutz, Bill Pronzini, S.J. Rozan, Sandra Scoppettone and Don Winslow. P.I. Guy logo by Terry Beatty.

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Friday, August 21, 2009

Why is Reed Farrel Coleman scared of Jason Pinter?

If you watch this video, you'll see that they have a WHOLE lot in common...and you'll understand why renowned author Reed Farrel Coleman is just a little bit scared. Happy viewing!

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Monday, August 10, 2009

Grand Reopening!

Today marks the official relaunch of JasonPinter.com. With the publication of two new books, THE FURY and THE DARKNESS, on the visible horizon, I thought this would be a good opportunity to start fresh, reorganize, and give readers a chance to find out more about these new books.

But enough about that...THERE ARE PRIZES TO WIN!

By clicking here, you can enter to win a smorgasbord of awesome prizes, including:

--Win a character named after you (or friend/family member of your choice) in a future Jason Pinter novel!

--A $100 gift certificate to iTunes!

--A $100 gift certificate to the bookstore of your choice!

--Signed advance copies of THE FURY and THE DARKNESS!

--In addition, 5 winners will each receive autographed copies of the first three books in the Henry Parker series (THE MARK, THE GUILTY and THE STOLEN).

To enter, click here and follow the extremely simple instructions. Good luck, happy reading, and stay tuned!

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Wednesday, August 05, 2009

Movie Review: Funny People

Last night I saw "Funny People," and so here is my review, done in more 'train of thought' than formal review. I will try to avoid spoiler.

--You have to start with Adam Sandler, who gives the best performance of his career, and perhaps the best of the year so far, as George Simmons. Simmons is an Adam Sandler-type guy, who started out as a stand up comedian then made it big as a movie star. He lives in a huge mansion, has every toy money can buy, and has legions of people who do whatever he asks. On the surface, he's what every young boy wants to be when they grow up. Once small difference: George Simmons is completely miserable, and is miserable to others. What makes Sandler so good is that his George is both despicable and sympathetic: he hates what his life has become, hates himself, but doesn't know how to do anything about it. He's too accustomed to living alone in his huge house with maids and revolving sexual conquests and lackeys who kneel before him. Sandler still makes goofy noises and funny faces, but there's a pathos beneath it, and an edge we've never seen before. He is the sad clown. If you're used to neutered Sandler starring in family-friendly comedies like "Big Daddy" and "Bedtime Stories," this is a whole different ballgame. Simmons is mean, ornery, and can be nasty. What makes it worse is that is nastiness comes with a smile. Let's just say my brain is still fried with the image of Sandler/Simmons having sex with a girl who doing an impression of a character from one of his movies: "Mer Man." Sandler's typical character is a man/boy who refuses to grow up, whereas in this movie he plays a man who's forgotten the wonder and happiness he had as a boy.

--The movie offers what feels like a pretty authentic look at the stand up comedy scene. Lots of young people performing for free hoping to get noticed, working crappy jobs in the interim and sleeping on friends' couches. They're hyper competitive (even though they pretend not to be), and aren't above trying to get closer to stars through ways other than their talent.

--The acting is solid, but I think Apatow needs to start casting other people in his movies. We've seen so much of Seth Rogen recently that it's hard to believe him as 'Ira Wright.' To me he's still Seth Rogen, acting in a Judd Apatow movie. Rogen is very funny, but I also think his role (as a struggling comedian who takes a job as Simmons's assistant/joke writer in the hopes that Simmons's fame will rub off on him) could have used a little more gravitas. Rogen is all wide-eyes and fart/sex jokes, which is fine, but there are scenes toward the end that needed a little more. They do smartly give Rogen's Ira something of a sweet love story, as he is smitten with a droll comedienne named Daisy (the very funny Aubrey Plaza). Their unusual courtship is far more organic than anything Rogen had with Katherine Heigl in "Knocked Up."

--My wife mentioned this last night, and she's totally on the money. Apatow's real life wife, Leslie Mann, should not have played George's love interest, aka 'The One Who Got Away'. Mann is terrific in small roles (i.e. "Knocked Up), but she just doesn't pull off a relatively complicated role that, in many ways, the film's success hinges on. Plus most people know she's Apatow's wife, and so it makes the casting decision seem inauthentic. Apatow's kids are also in the movie (as they were in "Knocked Up"), and while they're cute as buttons between them and the casting of Mann there are portions of the movie that seem remarkably self-indulgent.

--Sandler and Apatow do a great job of conveying the loneliness of celebrity, and how it can steal part of your soul. The movie opens with home videos of the real Sandler playing telephone pranks as a teenager. They're warm, funny, and joyful. Contrasting that with the sullen person George has become is a pretty remarkable transformation. George has everything and yet has nothing--he even has to pay musicians to jam with him because he has no real friends.

--There are some great cameos, including a scene with a hostile Eminem and defensive Ray Romano that had me cracking up. Yes, a scene with Eminem and Ray Romano. Together. That's the comedy equivalent of crossing the streams.

--Eric Bana, whom I normally don't care for, was actually quite good. As Mann's husband, he conveys real charisma and earthiness, perhaps because for the first time in a mainstream movie he uses his real Australian accent and can concentrate on other things. He has a real chemistry with Mann, which makes their scenes work because the audience isn't supposed to be quite sure whether they want them to end up together. Bana comes off as likable, a feat considering his character probably shouldn't be.

--As always, some of the best scenes are the supporting characters just sitting around shooting the breeze (a la the 'You know how you know you're gay' scene in "The 40-Year Old Virgin"). There's a great Thanksgiving dinner scene, some funny scenes with Rogen and Jonah Hill, and Jason Schwartzmann (another actor I haven't cared for in the past) does a funny turn as a young comedian who's found a modicum of fame on a terrible sitcom, and is more than happy to shove it in his friends' faces while using his 'celebrity' to his advantage.

--In the end, this movie is worth seeing for several reasons. Yes, it is too long by half an hour. Yes, the second half feels as much like an Apatow family reunion. But Sandler's performance is truly wonderful, and he deserves to be an early candidate for awards consideration. Though the movie is very long, it does make you laugh constantly and consistently, and even though we've seen Jonah Hill and Seth Rogen in seemingly every movie for the past two years, they're prolific for a reason: They're both darn funny. This is Apatow's most mature, heartfelt and personal movie ever, and thankfully he has a foil in Adam Sandler who gives a heartbeat to it. His character has a mean streak, a nasty edge, that I've never seen Sandler possess before. I can't imagine this movie being half as good without him.




Tuesday, August 04, 2009

THE STOLEN is Nominated for a CrimeSpree Award!

I woke up this morning to find out that THE STOLEN had been nominated for a CrimeSpree award! Naturally I'm thrilled about this. And the reason I use the word 'had' instead of 'has' is because it's not too often you learn that you were nominated for an award and lost it on the same day. Guess it saves the anxiety of waiting.

Thanks to the good folks at CrimeSpree and the people who voted, and my heartiest congratulations to all the winners and nominees. There are some great books and great authors on this list, and it's cool just to be a part of it. Check out the full list of winners and nominees over at the CrimeSpree blog.

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