Official Site of New York Times Bestseller Ace Atkins

Friday, March 18, 2011

G.P. Putnam's Sons Announce Ace's Summer Book Tour

THE RANGER TOUR -- SUMMER 2011
June 9 OXFORD, MS Square Books
June 10 BLYTHEVILLE, AR That Bookstore in Blytheville
June 11 HOUSTON, TX Murder By the Book
June 12 AUSTIN, TX Bookpeople
June 13 DALLAS, TX A Real Bookstore
June 14 SAN FRANCISCO, CA M is For Mystery
June 15 SEATTLE, WA Seattle Mystery Bookshop
June 16 PHOENIX, AZ Poisoned Pen
June 17 NEW ORLEANS, LA Garden District Bookshop
June 18 MONTGOMERY, AL Capitol Book & News
June 21 MEMPHIS, TN Davis-Kidd
June 23 JACKSON, MS Lemuria

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Happy Birthday, Baby


Jean Harlow would have turned 100 this month. Since she only lived 26 years, it's hard to think of her as old.
A couple of years ago, while researching INFAMOUS, Harlow was everywhere. In 1933, she was Marilyn Monroe in the 1950s, Madonna in the 1980s.
I ran across a piece in the Kansas City Star -- the same week as the big train station massacre -- with the news that Harlow was back home. She'd been born and partially raised in Kansas City and the news that the movie star was around town was front page stuff.
Her soft white skin and platinum locks made her the ideal subject for the hundreds of movie star magazines. Her easy comedic style and confident voice made her a sensation in the new sound pictures. How many actresses could have held their own with Gable and Powell?
She'd later fall in love with Powell -- as you'll learn in this month's TCM profile -- when she was hit with kidney failure brought on by a childhood illness. This month, TCM is running Harlow films every Tuesday night. And it's easy to see why she's one of the best remembered actresses of all time.

Tonight kicks off with Red-Headed Woman at 8 p.m. Eastern.

Monday, March 7, 2011

Nobody Could've Done it Better -- Ben Hecht's 007 Script

Just read a terrific piece in the The Telegraph about a recently unearthed 007 film script written by Ben Hecht.
Hecht was the screenwriting genius behind the films His Girl Friday, Gunga Din, Spellbound, and Notorious. He also had a hand in Gone with the Wind.
But it looks like his version of Casino Royale would've been a hell of a movie. Here are a few choice details from the excellent piece by thriller writer, Jeremy Duns. (By the way, Duns retro spy novels are fantastic reads.)
** Characters include Lili Wing, a beautiful but drug-addicted Eurasian madam who once had a fling with Bond, and her girlfriend, Georgie, who carries a black kitten on her shoulder.
** A car chase through Hamburg’s red light district ending with Bond drenched in mud disguised as a lesbian wrestler.
This may have topped Goldfinger as the greatest Bond flick of all time. Check out the entire piece.

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?

Subscribe to Posts [Atom]