Between 1993 and 2006, I wrote eight novels not intended for children. These were funny "mysteries" about criminal types and other misfits. My first published book, Drawing Dead, is about a small-time professional poker player named Joe Crow who becomes unwittingly involved in a scheme to sell counterfeit rare comic books. The book got a fabulous review from the New York Times, as did the next two in the series, Short Money and The Mortal Nuts.
Alas, the first four books in the series went out of print a few years ago, and the fifth, Mrs. Million, was available only as an expensive print-on-demand paperback...but they have been resurrected! The Mysterious Press is reissuing my first five novels in ebook format, starting today. (That's the Amazon link, but they will soon be available on Nook, iTunes, Kobo, Sony and Google.)
UPDATE: Here's a link to my Mysterious Press page, with links to all the major ebook retailers.
Otto Penzler's The Mysterious Press has been doing a great job of bringing quality out-of-print crime fiction back for readers who may have missed it the first time around. Check out their catalog. They also have a nice selection of originals.
And, if you are in New York, visit The Mysterious Bookshop, the oldest mystery bookshop in the U.S. Otto will be lurking owlishly in the back room. He would probably rather you didn't bother him, but pop your head in anyway, and say hello for me!
I've posted a couple of scenes from the first chapter of Drawing Dead below, to give you a taste of what I was up to before I got distracted by writing YA novels. And, since you asked (or even if you didn't) I am working on another adult novel. With elves.
DRAWING DEAD
Chapter 1
I don’t
care who you are—nothing rides like a fucking Cadillac.
—Joey
Cadillac
Joseph Caruso Battagno (better known as Joey Cadillac, Joey
C. to his friends and customers, Mister C. to his employees, Joe Chicago to his
Las Vegas investors, and occasionally referred to as “Stallion” by Chrissy
Swenson, his twenty-two-year-old side- squeeze, former Miss Minnesota, recently
imported from the frozen wastelands of the north) said that the copy of Batman #3 he held in his chubby right
hand was not for reading—it was for investing.
“Oh, come on, Joey,” Chrissy whined. “It’s just a comic book.
Open it up. I want to read about the Batman.”
It was Friday night, their night, and they had just finished
a late supper—takeout from Tony’s—in her Lake Shore Drive condo. Joey was
showing off his latest acquisition. Joey always had something new to show her.
Sometimes it was a present for her, but more often it was something he had
bought for himself. Last week he had brought along his new electronic cigar
lighter, which Chrissy thought was the coolest thing ever. Chrissy always made
it a point to be impressed by Joey’s toys.
“I can’t, doll. This here is called a Stasis Shield, see?” He
handed her the comic in its rigid Mylar sleeve. “It’s, like, permanently sealed
in there so the air and the, like, pollution don’t get at it. Thing’s worth
three grand, you don’t want to fuck it up.”
Chrissy was examining the plastic sleeve, her brow furrowed,
glossy lips pushed out past the end of her button nose. “What good is it if you
can’t read it?”
“Like I told ya, it’s worth money, honey. Last year it was
worth two grand, this year it’s worth three, next year who knows? It’s like an
investment, dollface. Like you buy
gold or something. Or a classic car, y’know? Look.” Joey took the comic and
pointed out a small card that had been sealed into the plastic sleeve. “See the
signatures? That’s so you know it’s the real thing.”
Chrissy looked at the card. “Who’s B. Disraeli?”
“That’s Ben, the notary, doll. And the other one, Tommy
Paine, he’s the country’s number-one comic book expert. That’s who I got them
from. What they do, they seal the book in with some kinda special gas so it stays
perfect, what they call mint condition, and you can buy and sell it without its
getting wrecked by people like you pawing through it.”
Chrissy pushed her lips out another quarter of an inch. “I
don’t paw,” she said. “I just wanted
to read about the Batman, Joey.”
“Well, you can’t. I open this up, it loses value. Then I got
to pay to have it resealed and notarized and like that.” He held the sealed
comic with both hands, holding it out like a new baby. “Three large for a comic
book. Ain’t that something. And I got twelve more like this, three more Batmans and a bunch of other stuff,
every one of them worth two grand or more.”
“Wow, Joey, that’s really cool.” Chrissy made her eyes go
big. “That’s a lot of money.” Joey loved it when she got excited by his money.
He liked her to be there, sitting behind him, when he used her place for poker
night. He liked it when she clapped her hands when he won. When he lost, of
course, he was just impossible for the rest of the week. But he still paid her
rent.
Joey grinned. “Didn’t cost me a dime, babe. I traded the guy
one of our demos, a Fleetwood spun back to ten K on the speedometer. Got thirty
K in rare comics for a ten-thousand-dollar demo.”
Chrissy had the comic again and was looking at the purple
cover through the thick plastic. The Batman and Robin running straight at her,
looking like they were going to jump right through the Mylar shield. She shook
her head and licked her lips.
“You’re so smart. How come you’re so smart, Joey?”
“I dunno.” Joey grabbed a piece of cold garlic toast and
pushed it into his mouth, poured himself another glass of Chianti and sucked it
down, feeling good about his comics, enjoying this private time with his girl,
his Minnesota import with the big front end. At that moment the three K a month
she cost him in rent and goodies seemed like nothing, like pocket money. About
the same as one vintage comic book. He wiped his fingers on the tablecloth.
“What the hell,” he said, reaching for the sealed comic. “You
want to read about the Batman, we’ll open the fucker up.” He could just call
the comic guy and have it resealed. What was the guy gonna do—say no to Joey
Cadillac? “Make sure your hands are clean, doll.” He took a steak knife and
pushed the point into the end of the plastic package and tried to slit it open,
but the Mylar, twenty mils thick, resisted the thin-bladed knife. He had to saw with the serrated
edge to open it all the way along the top, scratching the cover of the comic
book in the process. Red-faced from the effort, he handed the open package to
Chrissy.
“Oh, Stallion ...” she said in her little-girl voice. “You’re
so good to me.”
Joey poured the rest of the Chianti into his glass, wiped his
brow with his bunched-up napkin, then settled back and unwrapped one of his
prized Cuban Montecristos. Chrissy slid the comic out of the sleeve, admired it
for a few seconds, crinkled her nose at the Stallion, and opened it to page
one. Joey bit the end off his cigar and, since he had already worn out the
battery on last week’s electronic lighter, lit it with the candle on the table.
Chrissy was big on candles, always had to have one going. He settled back in
his chair to watch his Minnesota import read his three-thousand-dollar Batman comic.
But Chrissy was frowning. She turned the page, looked at
Joey, wrinkled her brow, turned another page, and pouted ferociously. “Oh, you!
You were teasing me.”
Joey sat forward, dropping his fifteen-dollar cigar onto his
leftover puttanesca sauce. “What?” He reached for the comic, pulled it from her
limp fingers, and looked at the inside pages.
“That wasn’t nice,” Chrissy was saying as Joey Cadillac stood
and roared and threw the comic across the room. Empty, blank pages separated
and fluttered to the carpet.
The Tom and Ben Show ran out of rock and roll on Interstate
35, five miles north of Clear Lake, Iowa, twenty-six miles east of the cornfield where the Big
Bopper, Buddy Holly, and Ritchie Valens died.
When Mick Jagger groaned and stuttered during the Sticky
Fingers tape, something he had done many times before but never halfway through
“Brown Sugar,” Tom and Ben looked at
the tape deck, then at each other. The song went on to the end with no further
interruptions, Tom went back to
reading his Spiderman comic, and Ben returned his eyes to the highway, playing the drum part on the
rim of the big Cadillac steering wheel. The lemon-yellow Fleetwood slid up
1-35, Cadillac smooth.
Two cuts later, during the long jam at the end of “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking,” the Stones
went into slow time. Ben pressed his foot down on the accelerator, as though by
speeding up the Fleetwood he could bring the recording back into phase, but as
the digital speedometer counted up, the tape deck moaned and the speakers fell
silent. Tom reached out and pressed the eject button. The tape leapt from its
slot, followed by a cloud of acrid smoke, which was quickly sucked into the
powerful Cadillac climate control vents.
Tom and Ben looked at each other.
Ben lightened his foot on the accelerator and brought the
Fleetwood back down to
sixty-five miles per hour. A hot plastic reek pierced the climate control’s
defenses and attacked his nostrils. He sneezed, three times, violently.
“Now what are we gonna do?” asked Tom. “Middle a fuckin’
nowhere.” He gestured at the rolling, homogeneous farmland that surrounded
them. The land was dotted with rows of small plants. It was early May, planting
time, the new growth electric green on the black Iowa soil.
Ben cleared his throat. “Are we on fire?” His voice was deep
and cavernous. People who heard him over the telephone visualized him as a
big-chested man with a full head of gray hair, a ruddy complexion, and crinkly brown
eyes. When he spoke, words took on prodigious meaning. In person, Ben was a less impressive creature.
He was six feet three inches tall but weighed no more than one hundred sixty
pounds, had both hair and flesh the color and texture of overcooked wheat pasta
and eyes like weak, milky tea. An uneven beard was nearly invisible on his
face. He wore a gray T-shirt with Mickey Mouse smiling on the front.
Tom, the other half of the Tom and Ben Show, leaned forward
and peered into the cassette slot. “It don’t look like it,” he said in his
smaller, more nasal voice. He shook his head. Shanks of black hair separated,
then pasted themselves back together. He picked up the ejected cassette. The
case was warped and too hot to hold. He shifted it from one hand to the other,
then dropped it back on the floor.
“Please get it out of here.” Ben sneezed again. Tom lowered
his window, flipped the tape out onto the highway, and turned to watch it
skitter down the pavement after them.
The Tom and Ben Show rolled up 1-35 in silence for almost
five minutes before Tom slapped his knee and said, “This is no good. We got to
have tunes.”
“Perhaps you could turn on the radio.”
“You kidding me? Do you know where we are? The middle of the
fucking prairie, and you want to listen to the radio? You know what kind of
shit they listen to out here?”
“Probably the same variety as is listened to elsewhere.”
“Damn straight. We turn that thing on, we might hear Milli
Vanilli or Vanilla Ice or something worse, you can imagine that. I might jump
out the window, sixty miles an hour. Christ.”
Ben shrugged and kept the Cadillac centered in the right
lane. Tom watched a few mileposts flash by, then blew out his cheeks, reached
out, and turned on the radio. The speakers crackled and popped. He pressed the
station selector several times without results.
“Now the fucking radio don’t even work. Where the fuck are
we? Where’s the fuckin’ map?” Tom twisted in his seat and rummaged through the
garbage that had accumulated in the back seat. “Where is it?”
“Perhaps you should check your door pocket,” said Ben.
“Son-of-a-bitch.” Tom turned around and found the wrinkled
and stained road atlas folded into the passenger-door pocket. He opened it and
asked, “Where are we?”
“We passed Clear Lake six minutes ago.”
“What state? Gimme the state.”
“Iowa. Just below Minnesota, west of Wisconsin and Illinois.”
“I know where Iowa is, f’chrissake.” Tom studied the map,
running his finger up the blue stripe that represented 1-35. “I’m sick a this,
man. I feel like we been on the road a week. This really sucks.”
“Consider the alternative,” said Ben. “We could be back in
Chicago entertaining Joey C. We could be having him and Freddy Wisnesky over
for dinner. We could all sit around admiring Freddy’s tie. Freddy would
appreciate that.”
“Freddy and his fucking ties,” Tom growled.
“Maybe Joey would fix the tape deck for us. You’re Joey’s
good buddy, right?” Ben said. “I’m sure he stands behind the cars he sells.”
Tom extracted a bottle of Children’s Tylenol from the pocket
of his black jeans, shook out half a dozen of the purple, grape-flavored
tablets, licked them off his palm, and chewed. Ben compressed his thin lips
until they disappeared, and waited for his partner to finish chewing.
“We’ll be in Minneapolis soon. We can get a nice room, order
some food. Joey won’t be looking for us there. Nobody goes looking for anyone
in Minneapolis. We can make a few calls, get the Galactic Guardians thing in
motion.”
“So who you gonna call? Who the fuck do we know in
Minneapolis?”
Ben looked at his partner, who had both feet up on the seat,
chin on his knees, glaring out at the highway. “Tomas, we don’t know anyone in Minneapolis. That
is why we are going there.”
Half a mile later, Tom said, “Yeah, we do.”
“Yeah, we do what?”
“Yeah, we do know somebody in Minne-fucking-apolis.”
“Who would that be?”
“Cat.”
Ben frowned and adjusted his hands on the steering wheel.
“I’m gonna give her a call soon as we get there,” Tom said.
“Maybe she knows somebody’d be interested in the Galactic Guardians. Maybe her
new hubby.”
Ben cleared his throat. “Catherine got married? I doubt,
then, that she’ll take kindly to us going after her meal ticket.”
“You think getting married is gonna change anything? You
don’t know Cat. She likes a good show more’n anybody. Only thing she can’t
stand is being bored. That’s how come you two never got along. Anyways, I don’t
see you coming up with anything better.”
Ben’s pallid face turned a deeper shade of beige. “I might be
boring, but I thought we
had a good arrangement back in Chicago. And we did, until you decided to lay
the Stasis Shield routine on Joey C. For a used car that gets ten miles to the
gallon.” He slapped the steering wheel.
“How was I s’posed to know he was going to try and read the
damn things? I told him not to open ‘em up.”
“And I told you not
to get involved with people like that.”
“How was I s’posed to buy us a car without I get involved
with guys like that? You know anybody sells cars isn’t connected?”
They had been having variations on the same argument ever
since leaving Chicago. Ben shrugged and kept the Cadillac rolling.
“You don’t think Freddy’ll show up in Minneapolis?” Tom asked
a few miles later. “I don’t want to end up eel bait like Billy Yeddis.”
“Why would he do that? First, he is not likely to find us
there, and if he does, even Joey C. has his practical side. How angry could he
get over a few comic books?”
“All Billy did was miss a few car payments.”
The Tom and Ben Show listened to the hum of the Cadillac’s
big wheels on concrete.
“You’ve got a point there,” Ben said.