Showing posts with label Alex McKnight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alex McKnight. Show all posts

Thursday, June 9, 2016

The Second Life of Nick Mason (Nick Mason) by Steve Hamilton

I was intrigued when I heard Steve Hamilton had a new series coming out. I've been enjoying his McKnight books forever.
Nick Mason manages to leave prison because of the intervention of criminal kingpin Darius Cole. As part of this deal he will have to answer his new cell phone at any time and do what Cole orders him to do.
At first I figured he would do some kind of detective work, allowing him to stay a heroic character. I was wrong. He's used as a hitman, killing people (although criminals) in cold blood. Still we are able to like him, partly because he was kind of suckered into this and the fact he deeply loves his child and protects his friends.
During the novel we follow his comeback to society, meeting a new love, struggling not to meddle to much into the life of his daughter and clash with the cops who think he's their ticket to nabbing a killer.
Nick Mason is the closest thing to Richard Stark's Parker we can find in novels right now and I love him.
I have to mention that Steve's writing is better than ever in this one. It's a bit tighter and cleaner than it used to be. The plot a bit more fast-paced.
Yeah, I guess he managed to top his Alex McKnight series!

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Die A Stranger (Alex McKnight) by Steve Hamilton

This is one of the best Steve Hamilton novels. When his Native American friend Vinnie Leblanc is missing ex-cop and sometime PI Alex McKnight investigates. He is helped by Vinnie's dad, a dangerous ex-con and gets involved in a war between potsmugglers.
The pacing in this one is just excellent, a real page-turner. There's a bit of mystery, some violence, great descriptions of the surroundings and great insights into the character of Alex McKnight, one of the most believable tough guys in fiction.
I loved the ominous ending, making me anxious to read the next in this excellent series.

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Q & A with Steve Hamilton

I had the great pleasure to interview Steve Hamilton, who has a new book out right now featuring reluctant investigator Alex McKnight.

Q: What makes Alex McKnight different from other hardboiled detectives?

He lives in a very isolated town, first of all. That's a little different from most private investigators, who typically have an office or at least somewhere to meet clients. To find Alex, you have to drive for hours to get nowhere. But beyond that, he's not high-tech, he's not smooth, he's not even that young anymore. But he's the most loyal friend in the world, and he's a total sucker for anybody who really needs his help.

Q: How did you come up with the character?
I honestly don't know where Alex came from. He's not based on me, that's for sure. Or on anyone I know in real life. (Maybe my father, a little bit. Practical, hardworking, a little stubborn...) I tried to write what I thought a PI novel had to be, and when I failed utterly... Well, he was just there. This man in a cabin, on the edge of a huge lake, trying to get over something, hoping that his past would go away. (But of course it never does.)

Q: What are your thoughts on the whole eBook revolution?
Well, it's here to stay, that much I know. I went from 1% ebook sales to over 50% in two years. It may be levelling off a little bit, but I don't think anybody really knows where that percentage will end up. I still love real books, of course, but then I also read on both my Nook and my iPad. If people are still reading about Alex, in whatever form, I can't complain!

Q: What's next for you and Alex?
I'm shooting for one more book (number ten in the series) to come out next summer. Then I might take a break, as I did for "The Lock Artist." But I'll always go back! I can't imagine not wanting to know what Alex is up to next...

Q: How do you promote your work?
The rules are changing, but I'll still go out on tour for three weeks after a new book comes out. Radio and TV interviews are also still worthwhile, but the rest is all on the Internet these days. Facebook, my website (http://authorstevehamilton.com), and of course great online interviews like this one!

Q: What other genres besides crime do you like?
Short answer is, I like anything great. Right now I'm reading "Canada" by Richard Ford, which I suppose you'd call literary fiction, and "Kraken" by China Mieville, which I suppose you'd call mainstream fiction bordering on sci-fi. If it grabs you and keeps you reading, I'm there.

Q: What's your idea about the psychotic sidekick in PI novels like Hawk and Joe Pike?
Like any other device used in any kind of fiction, even if it's seemingly been done to death, there's always room for another if it's done well enough. You're as good as what you can get away with, and getting away with yet another psychotic sidekick may be a tall order but I know it can be done!

Q: In the last century we've seen new waves of PI writers, first influenced by Hammett, then Chandler, Macdonald, Parker, later Lehane. Who do you think will influence the coming generation?
I was influenced by all of the above, plus my own writing idol, James Crumley. And don't forget Sue Grafton. But bottom line, who's writing the truly great PI fiction these days? (Dennis Lehane isn't even doing it anymore, and Sue Grafton's getting close to the end of the alphabet...) Harlan Coben, Robert Crais, Laura Lippman, SJ Rozan, plus a few others, but even those writers are often leaving their series to write other kinds of crime fiction. I'm the current president of the Private Eye Writers of America, and I guess I consider that part of my mission -- to help bring PI fiction back to the forefront. (I believe I'll have to start with some guilt-tripping and then move on to blackmail.)

Q: Charles Collyot came up with the following question: Why write a PI story?
Because it's a classic American form, elevated by some great writers in the past, and capable of being so many different types of story altogether. A PI solves problems, and a problem is at the heart of any good story!

Q: What question should we ask every PI writer we interview and what is your answer?
I would ask every PI writer what they think the future of this genre holds, because on paper the outlook isn't that bright these days. (Lower sales, fewer PI books published, etc.) For me, I hold out hope that there are some brand new writers out there who will help rejuvenate PI fiction. Toward that end, I always try to publicize the PWA/SMP Best First Private Eye Novel Competition, which is how I got my start. To find out more, please go to http://us.macmillan.com/Content.aspx?publisher=minotaurbooks&id=4933. It's one of four annual St. Martin's Press writing competitions, and still the best way to break into crime fiction!

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Misery Bay (Alex McKnight) by Steve Hamilton


Finally Alex McKnight, the PI from Paradise is back. Steve Hamilton did some standalones which were so well-received I was getting worried Alex might never return.
There's no love lost between police chief Maven and Alex, but still the old cop asks for his help in finding out who is killing state troopers and their children, making it look like suicides. What follows is as much a thriller as it is a PI novel and will probably also appeal to fans of the Kellermans or Tess Gerritsen. It read a bit too much like a regular thriller for me, and I could've done without the pretty FBI agent that we see pop up in so many hardboiled novels these days but it WAS good to see Alex and his pals return and hopefully he'll be back soon.