Showing posts with label Play Him Again. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Play Him Again. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Play Him Again And The Panther


Stories that keep me guessing what will happen next or who the bad guys really are draw me in and hold me captive till the finish.

I have two such books to share today. They are from different eras in history, but both are suspenseful and have lots of history intertwined. First we’ll go back in time to the Roaring Twenties and see how a rumrunner seeks revenge. Then we’ll return to present day for a trip to Yemen searching for an Al Qaeda terrorist.

PLAY HIM AGAIN by Jeffrey Stone

Take a step back in time to the era of the Roaring Twenties just asa5158bac2d81487ac7cbdff1a94673ab8f5f20a1 change is coming to the movie industry and a rumrunner wants in on the action.

Matt ‘Hud’ Hudson is the premier bootlegger to the stars and the movie industry bigwigs. Silent movies are still popular but Hud sees ‘talkies’ as where things are going. He shares his dream of making a ‘talkie’ with his best friend, Danny Kincaid, a con man.

Kincaid gets the idea to run a con on Frank Minnetti, a Chicago gangster recently relocated to California. Kincaid believes Minnetti is the answer to Hud making his movie.
However, when things turn deadly and Kincaid winds up at the bottom of the ocean, Hud’s direction changes. He sets out to run his own con to find his friend’s killer and seek justice no matter what.

The story is well-balanced with historical tidbits scattered throughout for a plausible adventure. Author Jeffrey Stone has done an excellent job researching the era and setting placing the reader back in time with realistic accuracy.

PLAY HIM AGAIN is filled with colorful characters mingling with real-life movie stars such as Mary Pickford and Charlie Chaplain. It details bootlegging and the movie industry giving a look at how the two facets were possible interwoven. The story is action-packed moving at a steady pace but never losing your attention. There’s suspense, mystery, friendship, loyalty, and surprises along the way.

You don’t have to be a movie buff or a fan of the silent screen era to enjoy this tantalizing adventure. Hud is a character well-worth keeping an eye out for in the future.

Play Him Again by Jeffrey Stone, A Matt Hudson Novel, Riverdale Press, @2012, ASIN: B007MDM8EW, Kindle Format, 444 KB, 310 Pages

FTC Full Disclosure - An eBook copy of this book was sent to me by the author in hopes I would review it. However, receiving the complimentary copy did not influence my review.
 
THE PANTHER by Nelson DeMille

coverWhen you find yourself laughing out loud while listening to a suspense thriller set in one of the most treacherous countries in the world, you know author Nelson DeMille has returned protagonist John Corey to the limelight.

Anti-Terrorist Task Force agent John Corey has followed his wife, FBI agent Kate Mayfield, to Yemen. There they joined a small team of specialists assigned to tracking down the mastermind behind the USS Cole bombing. Their job is to apprehend a high-ranking Al Qaeda operative known as The Panther. Their orders are specific in his apprehension as The Panther is an American citizen. 

As more is learned about this particular assignment, John begins to see more at work than they are being told. Turns out he and Kate are the bait to lure The Panther out into the open. John is on a hit list for killing Asad Khalil, a Libyan terrorist known as The Lion. Kate is in the crosshairs for killing a tainted CIA agent, even though the shooting was in self-defense.

The couple soon learn they can’t trust everyone who is supposedly on their side. And it also appears the allies shouldn’t be as trusting either.

Narrator Scott Brick does an excellent job bringing the various characters to life. He brings the emotions to the surface drawing listeners in as the tension builds. His interruption of John Corey and his dry wit will have you smiling and laughing despite the seriousness of the plot.

THE PANTHER is not a story that can be breezed through. At just over 21 hours of listening time, the story goes into great details about the country of Yemen and the lifestyles of its people. DeMille’s eye for details in describing the land, its people, and their customs causes the story to more slow for the first part. However, this background information and set up is necessary for the dramatic conclusion. The intense look at Yemen and the situation there helps place the listeners (and readers) in the midst of the action.

DeMille’s characters are well-developed with strengths and flaws. He writes John as a bit of a smart ass, but as you come to understand him you realize there’s more to him. His wise cracks are a way of coping with tense situations.

When the pace of the story picks up, it’s a roller coaster ride till the finish. There are twists and turns that will blow you away. The suspense will keep you wondering who is really good and how just how far will be bad guys go.

The Panther by Nelson DeMille, A John Corey Novel, Read by Scott Brick, Hachette Audio, @2012, ISBN: 978-1619691827, Unabridged, 19 Discs, Listening Time: 21 Hours 30 Minutes

FTC Full Disclosure - This audio book was sent to me by the publisher in hopes I would review it. However, receiving the complimentary copy did not influence my review.
 
Thanks for stopping by today. Do you enjoy historical tidbits sprinkled throughout stories to give them a real-life feel?

Friday, October 19, 2012

Author Jeffrey Stone: Best/Worst Writing Advice


I’m always delighted to meet new authors, discover their books and find out more about their writing. I’d like to introduce you to author Jeffrey Stone and his latest release, PLAY HIM AGAIN, a historical mystery.

I must admit it was the cover and then synopsis of PLAY HIM AGAIN that quickly drew me in. It has such a feel to it. Here’s a brief synopsis so you can see:

It's the Roaring Twenties but silence remains golden for Hollywood. Sound is expensive. Only two studios have installed sound equipment. Matt Hudson, the preferred bootlegger of the film industry, wants to produce a talking picture but neither sound studio will lease him their facilities. 

After Hud's oldest friend, con man Danny Kincaid, dupes a gangster who controls a small movie studio into buying a bogus sound device, the gangster gets wise and Danny ends up dead. To settle the score, Hud runs another con to play the gangster again. A con that will either avenge Danny and land Hud a studio, or get him killed.

While Jeffrey may be a bit new to the writing game, he has come across his share of good and bad advice related to art. I asked him to share some of that advice with us today.

The best piece of writing advice I've come across is to write the type of book you would like to read. That may seem obvious or even trite but it runs deeper than it sounds. 

The obvious part is if you read predominantly in the mystery/crime/thriller genre, don't attempt to write a paranormal romance or a vampire novel or whatever genre appears to be hot right now. Stick to the genre you know best for your first book. You've absorbed a lot more about structure, plotting, craft etc. than you realize by having read all of those mystery/crime/thriller books.

The key part of the advice, for me, is to write the type of book YOU would like to read. How many times while reading a novel have you asked yourself "Why would he/she do that?" after some illogical action by a character. 

a5158bac2d81487ac7cbdff1a94673ab8f5f20a1Story twists and turns are intriguing and keep the reader engaged but how many times has a twist out of left field or an implausible plot development stretched your suspension of disbelief to the breaking point and diminished your enjoyment of the story? Whatever your particular peeves are, here's your chance to write a story where characters and plot and everything else develops and proceeds in a manner that YOU believe constitutes good story telling.

Anyone who reads a lot has over time, formed conceptions of what does and doesn't work for them in a story. As a writer, take great pains to leave out the things that don't work for you as a reader. Be true to your own convictions of what constitutes good story telling. 

This isn't always easy. There will be times when you've set a character on a course that follows logically from the previous story events and the plot requires that character to take a certain action. Then you realize that there's some other element in your story that would keep that character from doing what you need him to do. When that happens, go back and fix it. It may be a simple fix or it may mean days of replotting and rewriting but don't ever allow yourself to take an expedient shortcut. Don't give readers cause to ask themselves "Why would he do that?"     

The worst piece of advice I've read is don't expect to get constructive criticism of your writing from friends and family. Go to a third party for objective criticism. I couldn't disagree with this more.  

I don't take writing classes or belong to a writers group. I don't even personally know another writer. My only source of feedback is friends and family and in my opinion, they are the ideal source. You feel very vulnerable the first time you show your writing to someone else. That alone is a good enough reason to show your work to someone you trust. Someone who cares about you for who you are and is not going to judge you on your writing ability.

Of course your friends and family want to be supportive. They want to like your writing because it's important to you. But if you can't tell their honest opinion from them just trying to be nice, you're in trouble as a writer because you have to be able to read and understand people to write believable characters.

I asked the two people I'm closest to, my best friend and my sister, to read my book. Overall, they both liked it. Neither of them liked everything about the story and they each disliked different things in the story but they both gave me their honest opinion. 

I considered their feedback and made some changes but I didn't change everything they disliked because I didn't always agree with their reasoning. Their telling me they liked my book buoyed my confidence in myself as a writer and their constructive criticism made my book better.        

Jeffrey, thanks for joining us today. You made some very helpful points with both good and bad advice. I like the fact that while you considered the advice of your first readers, you didn’t change everything they disliked.

PLAY HIM AGAIN is the first book in Jeffrey’s new Matt Hudson Series so hopefully we will be seeing much more of both in the near future.

What advice would you give to a new writer just starting out? Thanks so much for stopping by today. Be sure to keep out an eye out for my review of PLAY HIM AGAIN on Nov. 4th.