Weekly Blog

Monday 16th March

There's no blog at present as I'm currently on vacation.  Please check back in early April for the next edition.

Cheers,

Steve



Monday 9th March

It’s official – the second novel in the Zac Hunter series, Blood Law, will be released in the UK, Eire and South Africa on the 17th July 2009.  To give you a brief teaser as to what the book’s about, here’s the blurb that will appear on the back cover:

All hell is breaking loose in the city of Angels...In this breakneck sequel to "Justice for All", ex-LAPD detective Zac Hunter receives a cry for help from an old snitch, gangbanger Angel Cortez.  Angel's daughter Gracie has gone missing, and her boyfriend knows more than he's letting on.  Discovering that a rival gang grabbed Gracie from an East Los Angeles park, Hunter agrees to do what he can to find the missing girl.  As two rival gangs wage war on each other, only Hunter and the mysterious vigilante Stone will be able to save Gracie - and prevent a city from going up in flames.

I hope that’s enough to grab your interest!  And if you stay tuned in the next couple of weeks you’ll witness the grand unveiling of Blood Law’s cover art.  As for the third Hunter novel, The Beholder, that’s now back in the hands of my agent for further comment. 

On the gig front, I had a great night at the Norwich Waterfront last Monday, one of my all-time faves at the venue in fact, when I saw The Gaslight Anthem ably supported by Frank Turner (apologies to the first band on, Polar Bear Club – I got there too late to catch your set).  It’s fair to say that the folk poet stylings of Frank Turner (former frontman of punk band Million Dead) don’t fall into my usual listening habits, but when you stumble across genius you have to embrace it.  Armed with just a semi-acoustic guitar and a seemingly never-ending supply of outstanding lyrics, Frank captivated the sold out venue with his tales of love and loss in modern day Britain.  His gift is to capture the human condition with eloquence and passion, transforming his tales of everyday life into something extraordinary.  Highly recommended, and if there’s any justice in the world, soon to be treasured by the masses.

After a support slot like that, it was always going to be a tall order for the headline act to measure up, but The Gaslight Anthem managed it with ease.  I’m a real sucker for bands like Gaslight, with their blue collar, heart on their sleeves tales of Americana, taken straight from the Springsteen school of rock (they even name check some of the boss’s songs within their own work, and word has it that Bruce personally chose them as support for his Hyde Park show coming up later this year.)  Brian Fallon’s vocals drip with passion and sincerity, while the driving punk sound created by the band grabs you by the throat and refuses to let go.  The highlight of the show came courtesy of the second encore, when a lone Fallon was joined onstage by Frank Turner to cover Billy Bragg’s seminal ‘A New England.’  Mind blowingly good stuff, and a night that will live long in the memory for all those that were fortunate enough to have been there.

Cheers,

Steve

What’s Steve been listening to this week?

The Devil And God Are Raging Inside Me– by Brand New
Love, Ire, and Song – by Frank Turner
Siren Song Of the Counter Culture – by Rise Against



Monday 2nd March

It’s reached that time of year when the summer writing festivals start assembling their line ups, and I can now reveal that I shall be attending CrimeFest in Bristol, which runs from the 14th – 17th May.  CrimeFest is a convention for people who like to read an occasional crime novel as well as for die-hard fanatics, and it features a series of panels, interviews, reading groups, crime writing workshops, dinners and award presentations.  I have been invited to appear on two of the panels:

  • Sunday 17th May, 9.30am – 10.30am
    Pick Up On South Street: A Date With Debut Authors

  • Sunday 17th May, 11.00am – 12.00pm
    Edge Of Doom:  What Pushes Your Characters Over the Edge?

This will be my inaugural appearance as a panellist, and should any of you be planning on attending the event, I’d be more than happy to meet up for a chat.

Last week was spent working through the comments that my agent, Broo Doherty, had on The Beholder.  Broo’s comments have also got me thinking further ahead as to how I might develop my lead character, Zac Hunter, and I’ve come up with a couple of pretty exciting ideas, although I’ll be keeping them to myself for now as I kick them around in my head for a while.  On the gig front, I saw up and coming Welsh rockers Attack! Attack! At the Norwich Waterfront, and as usual they put on a great show.  I’ve previously seen them in a couple of prestigious support slots (with Lost Prophets and Funeral For A Friend), but this was the first time they were headliners (or co-headliners to be precise) in their own right, and they continue to look like a band that’s destined for greater things.  Check out their eponymously titled debut album if you get a chance – they’re a bit like a cross between Fall Out Boy, Foo Fighters, and Lost Prophets.

Cheers,

Steve

What’s Steve been listening to this week?

The ’59 Sound – by The Gaslight Anthem
Attack! Attack! – by Attack! Attack!
Love, Ire, and Song – by Frank Turner