Saturday, May 9, 2020
Friday, May 8, 2020
Very Simple with Beau
This week, Beau takes a look at the Grant Jerkins book, A Very Simple Crime.
A murdered woman. A grieving husband. And their son -- a mentally handicapped adult with a history of violent outbursts. A very simple case. Or is it?Leo Hewitt, an Assistant DA once blamed for setting free a notorious child-killer, is eager to redeem himself with this intimate and grisly crime. As he digs below the surface he discovers more than he ever anticipated-including an emotionally disturbed wife, a husband who'd do anything to escape his disastrous marriage, and an accused young man with no apparent means of defense. But with each shocking new revelation, Leo is only led deeper and deeper into the darkness-an inescapable trap of blood bonds and twisted family secrets.
Thursday, May 7, 2020
ALL THINGS VIOLENT

One of the positive things about being in Lockdown is that I’m finally getting to catch up on some of the books that have been sitting on my To Be Read pile for a while.
It’s notable, I think, how publishing – which is, after all, increasingly part of the Entertainment industry – obsesses on novelty. A book comes out. It’s hot. Then it’s gone, and posting something like this reviewing and praising it months after it’s ‘been and gone’ is unusual.
But really: If we can’t wilfully abandon the prevalent standards in the middle of this global Craziness, when can we?
Books – as a very wise person once told me – do not cease to exist the week after Publication Day, so why – apart from the embarrassment of having to admit it’s taken me serval months to get around to reading it – should I worry about posting an appreciation of one here, well after Publication.
The book I want to bring to your attention – though many of you are already very familiar with it, thus making this piece even less relevant – is All Things Violent by Nikki Dolson.
Once upon a time, Laura Park was a normal college sophomore with her best friend at her side. A year later, Laura was on a deserted road on the outskirts of Las Vegas killing a man.
In Laura's world anyone can become a target, loyalties can shift in a blink of an eye, and when everyone is homicidal, people are definitely going to die.
I read the book a week or so ago, and I’m still obsessing about it. It’s funny, sexy, brutal, exciting, gripping, sad and ultimately a wonderful, razor-sharp and crow-dark slice of Noir that could easily sit alongside the classics of the genre. I’m now awaiting the announcement that Shonda Rhimes has optioned it, because if you can imagine stuffing David Caradine’s Kung Fu series in a Nutribullet with Lawrence Block’s Keller novels and Uma Thurman in Kill Bill then hitting Pulse you’d have some idea of the brilliance – and cinematicness* - of the book.
In my mind It’s a movie. One of those 80s highly stylised movies. Like One from the heart but with murder. Gore. Las Vegas lights - the city as ultra beauty but also dirty. Gaudy. But gorgeous.
(*
One of the characters – a flash of hope in the gathering darkness of Laura’s story - and his ultimate destination - broke my heart a bit.
And Laura’s mentor Frank is the sort of character who’s backstory normally takes up half a Netflix season.
There’s a nihilism to the story that’s perfectly American. It reminded me in some places of American Psycho. But where that book revelled in a completely amoral self-centred view of the world, Dolson’s does what it singularly failed to do: there is hope in these characters. There is a code. There is honour. There is logic and error and humanity.
I’m in awe.
(*what? I'm a writer and I say it's a word).
Derek Farrell is the author of ‘Death of a Diva’ ‘Death of a Nobody,’ ‘Death of a Devil’ ‘Death of an Angel,’ and the novella "Death of a Sinner," all published by Fahrenheit Press.
His novella "Come to Dust" is available for free download from his website derekfarrell.co.uk
The books have been described as “Like The Thin Man meets Will & Grace.” “Like M.C. Beaton on MDMA,” and – by no less an expert than Eric Idle – as “Quite Fun.”
Derek’s jobs have included: Burger dresser, Bank teller, David Bowie’s paperboy, and Investment Banker, and he has lived and worked in New York, Hong Kong, Istanbul, Tel Aviv, Prague, Dublin, Johannesburg and London.
He’s married to the most English man on the planet and lives in West Sussex. They have no goats chickens children or pets, but they do have every Kylie Minogue record ever made.
Tuesday, May 5, 2020
Guilty Bystander
As I've mentioned in a couple of earlier posts, The Dark Brink of Love is the noir volume at BYNWR, the website devoted to little known and eccentric films given loving restoration. Filmmaker Nicholas Winding Refn started the site, and the three chapters of the noir volume are curated by William Boyle.
After chapters devoted to the films Stark Fear and One Shocking Moment, the third and final chapter features a restoration of the grungy and low budget noir film, Guilty Bystander, starring Zachary Scott and Faye Emerson. If you ever saw the version of the film that's been available on You Tube, you know how much this film needed a restoration. It has now been transformed from something nearly unwatchable into something gorgeous. And as with the previous chapters, there are a wealth of pieces to dive into and keep you busy.
Here's the link to the film: Guilty Bystander.
As for the lineup of pieces, they include contributions from William Boyle, Philippe Garner, Marya E. Gates, and Sarah Weinman, Ogden Elson and Jack Pendarvis, and Charlie Rahway. Richard Koszarski provides a vintage audio interview with the director of the film, Joseph Lerner.
In this chapter also is a piece I contributed, called "Things Ain't What They Used to Be". It 's the real story about a great uncle of mine, the jazz trombonist J.C. Higginbotham, a guy who was a professional musician from the late 1920s through the 1960s and who lived a pretty noir life himself. He toured around the country, played in Europe, had periods of relative fame and others of stark obscurity. Alcohol figured heavily. I didn't know all that much about his life before I started the piece, so it was all quite interesting to research,
Anyway, here it is, Things Ain't What They Used to Be, complete with photos and plenty of footage of J.C. playing.
The noir volume, The Dark Brink of Love, is now complete at ByNWR, and it has a variety of riches worth checking out.
Sunday, May 3, 2020
Virtual Book Event: Elena Taylor in Conversation with James L'Etoile

Hi, James L’Etoile, here. Claire Booth was kind enough to let Elena Taylor and I
guest post on Do Some Damage today. When you have plans, the world has other
ideas. Elena Taylor and I had a few joint events scheduled this spring to
celebrate the release of her latest book, All
We Buried. Then, the landscape shifted—travel restrictions, lockdowns, and
stay-at-home orders made this release season a bit more “unique.” Elena,
Claire, and I were all chased home from Left Coast Crime in San Diego in early
March, which will be known as the best one day crime fiction event ever. It was
at a Left Coast Crime convention a few years ago where I first met Elena. We’d
connected with one another on social media, and if I'm honest, it was more about
Elena getting to meet #NotMyCat.
Elena
has a rich background as a playwright, developmental editor, mentor, and a
talented author in her own right, so it’s no surprise that All We Buried was released to critical acclaim and raving fan
reviews.
She’s
agreed to share some of her thoughts about the book, her sources of
inspiration, and creating and writing in this unique time.
JL: All We Buried is set
in the fictional small town world of Collier, Washington. Why did you create a
fictional setting instead of using more familiar locations?
![]() |
Salish Lodge at Snoqualmie Falls. |
ET: My fictional setting is actually a
combination of familiar locations. Set high in the Cascade Mountain Range,
Collier is based on Roslyn, Washington, a very real town just off Interstate 90
east of Snoqualmie Pass. Readers might recognize it as the shooting location
for Northern Exposure back in the '90s. But I also wanted Collier to be in a
hanging valley, similar to the place where I live, just west of Snoqualmie
Pass. A hanging valley is a high valley with one end coming to an abrupt drop
off. For the Snoqualmie Valley, where I live, the drop off is filled with the
famous Snoqualmie Falls, a 268-foot high waterfall that is home to another
famous TV sight. The Salish Lodge, better known as the “Great Northern” in Twin
Peaks. It's one of my favorite spots for breakfast or a cocktail with a
gorgeous view of the falls. Combining the hanging valley where I live with the
old, historical mining town of Roslyn, then locating it not far from the very
real highway 97, Collier is a combination of places you can visit in the real
world. I liked having the real world details of my beautiful state and the
Cascade Mountains, but the freedom to make changes to best suit the story and
the isolated mountain town I wanted Bet to live in.
JL: Bet Rivers comes back to Collier and assumes her father's role
as sheriff. She doesn’t feel like she belongs, does she?
ET: She really doesn't. As a person who has
moved around a LOT in my life, I share her sense of rootlessness. I have lived
in four states and countless towns and communities since I turned eighteen. I
have enjoyed all the places I've lived, but I've always felt like an outsider.
I don't have the lifelong attachment to a place that some people enjoy. Bet
doesn't have the wanderlust that I spent much of my life following, but she has
been gone from her tiny hometown long enough to feel out of place. She thought
she was going to have a different kind of life than the one she's living now,
so she also feels like an outsider to her own story. This book is a lot about
her figuring out where she fits, in and out of her own skin.
JL: There are two secondary characters that have gotten a great
deal of attention from bloggers and reviewers: Alma and Schweitzer. Did you
expect them to be as popular as they turned out?
ET: I love that Alma and Schweitzer are
finding their own set of fans. Alma is based on a real person, so it's fun to
see her become such an appreciated character. Then, what can I say? I love a
good dog character and I'm thrilled other people love him too.
JL: #NotMyCat wants to know why you made the
flawed decision to select a dog as a character in this book, as opposed to say,
a cat? Your cat, Coal Train, cannot be happy about that either.
![]() | ||
Cocoa and Coal Train. If you can't tell who's who, that's your problem. |
ET: Coal Train has made it clear in no
uncertain terms that I have failed miserably by not putting a cat front and
center in All We Buried. I feared
that #NotMyCat would feel the same. In fact, I think I heard Cocoa calling
#NotMyCat on the phone the other night to discuss ways to interrupt both our
writing schedules until we promised to include a strong feline character in our
next books. What I've reminded both Coal Train and Cocoa is that cats are so
wonderfully independent and wily that they are hard to capture in prose. It's
easy to have Schweitzer stay at Bet's side as her most important helper, but it
would be totally unrealistic to have a cat serve that same purpose. They both
said they understood my dilemma. I'm just not a good enough writer to create
the perfect cat.
JL: All We Buried is
quite a departure from your earlier series. This release is more intense and
deliciously dark. What drove you to the dark side?
![]() |
#NotMyCat prefers intense and dramatic. |
ET: As a playwright I wrote a lot of very dark
plays, then I turned to fiction and wrote my light, funny Eddie Shoes Mysteries
as a departure. So the darkness of All We
Buried is actually a return to my roots. I guess it would be more accurate
to say I was driven to the light side for three books and now I'm back over on
the intense, dramatic side.
JL: We’ve both lived in small towns and they are filled with
secrets. There are closely held secrets in Collier, aren’t there?
ET: So many secrets. I'm still uncovering them
as I work on the second book in the series! I can't wait to see what else I can
discover about Bet's past and the town's.
JL: When you're not plotting and planning, what do you do to keep
sane, especially during our pandemic lockdown?
![]() |
Radar and Elena. |
ET: Spending time with my horses is my
favorite past time, and that's become even more true during this pandemic.
Being out with a thousand+ pound animal requires you stay in the moment, in the
present. And while my mind sometimes wanders, it can't for long. They keep me
upbeat and outside enjoying our beautiful springtime. Between the two of them,
Jasper and Radar are making this lockdown bearable. I'm grateful for all my
animals, with them and my hubby, I'm getting through.
That's
what's going on with me and Bet Rivers. Thank you for asking, Jim!
![]() | |
Elena with Jasper, who points out that horses make good book characters, too. |
ET: But I'll bet readers would love to hear
from you too. And I'd love to hear what's going on with #NotMyCat, and
your adorable Corgis, Emma and Bryn.
![]() |
#NotMyCat belonged to the neighbors, came in through the doggie door one day, and now refuses to leave. |

![]() |
Emma hard at work. |
ET: What
are you working on now?
JL: I’ve been busy on revisions to a speculative
fiction project. It’s something new for me and I’m enjoying diving in on fear,
betrayal, and loss (something all writers can relate to). If I had to give a
comp for the new project it would be pitched as Backdraft meets The Sixth
Sense. I’ve also submitted a new procedural and #NotMyCat makes her
debut in that novel. A couple of other projects are out there and I hope to
have some news to announce soon.
ET: How are your animals helping you with your writing and social distancing?
ET: How are your animals helping you with your writing and social distancing?
JL: Helping? They have no clue about social
distancing. I can’t keep #NotMyCat off my keyboard as I work and the Corgis
have decided to practice their CPR techniques on my chest every morning before
sunrise. But, they do remind me that as bleak and scary as our personal lives
can get in the midst of all we’re going through, being happy as a Corgi isn’t a
bad goal in life.
ET: I'm really looking forward to rescheduling our live events together. Besides live book events, what are you most looking forward to when we can return to a less restricted life?
ET: I'm really looking forward to rescheduling our live events together. Besides live book events, what are you most looking forward to when we can return to a less restricted life?
![]() |
The Face in a Book store mascots suggest buying local and independent. |
JL: I’m looking forward to hitting the reset
button too. When they release us from bondage, I’m looking forward to spending
some time with my kids. They don’t live at home anymore and I miss spending
time with them. I’m looking forward to catching some live music shows and
bookstores—I’m going to spends days in bookstores, like my local Face In a
Book.
I’m
glad you could spend some time with us, Elena. Huge congratulations on the
release of All We Buried. Thanks to
Claire Booth who let us come and splash around in the pool.
Take care everyone…
ALL WE BURIED
Interim sheriff Elizabeth "Bet" Rivers has always had one repeat
nightmare: a shadowy figure throwing a suspicious object into her
hometown lake in Collier, Washington. For the longest time, she chalked
it up to an overactive imagination as a kid. Then the report arrives. In
the woods of the Cascade mountain range, right in her jurisdiction, a
body floats to the surface of Lake Collier. When the body is extricated
and revealed, no one can identify Jane Doe. But someone must know the
woman, so why aren't they coming forward?
Bet has been sitting as the interim sheriff of this tiny town in the ill-fitting shoes of her late father and predecessor. With the nightmare on her heels, Bet decided to build a life for herself in Los Angeles, but now it's time to confront the tragic history of Collier. The more she learns, the more Bet realizes she doesn't know the townspeople of Collier as well as she thought, and nothing can prepare her for what she is about to discover.
Bet has been sitting as the interim sheriff of this tiny town in the ill-fitting shoes of her late father and predecessor. With the nightmare on her heels, Bet decided to build a life for herself in Los Angeles, but now it's time to confront the tragic history of Collier. The more she learns, the more Bet realizes she doesn't know the townspeople of Collier as well as she thought, and nothing can prepare her for what she is about to discover.
All We Buried is available from here from independent bookstore Face in a Book, or from IndieBound, which will link you to other independent bookstores. You can also get it from Barnes & Noble and Amazon.
James L'Etoile's Det. Penley mysteries, At What Cost and Bury the Past, are also available through Face in a Book, Indiebound, or at B&N and Amazon.
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