Showing posts with label Steve Ulfelder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Ulfelder. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

My Life According to Books 2012

Several years ago, my friend and fellow blogger, Pop Culture Nerd, started an annual tradition for us. She posted her "Life According to Books" based on a post she had seen. Since then, each year she creates new starter sentences and we each complete the sentences with book titles from things we've read in that year. I always look forward this fun meme.

Yesterday she posted her 2012 version. Be sure to stop over and see her fun responses. And today I have mine for you. So here we go:

Every Monday I look/feel like THE FEAR ARTIST (Timothy Hallinan)

Last time I went to a doctor/therapist was because (of) THE CUT (George Pelecanos)

Last meal I ate was BEFORE THE POISON (Peter Robinson)

My savings account is CRIMINAL (Karin Slaughter)
When a creepy guy asks for my number I LOCKDOWN (Sean Black)

Ignorant politicians make me HEARTBROKEN (Lisa Unger)

Some people need to spend more time ON THE OUTSIDE LOOKING INDIAN (Rupinder Gill)

My memoir could be titled THE WHOLE LIE (Steve Ulfelder)

If I could have, I would’ve told my teenage self THE THINGS THAT KEEP US HERE (Carla Buckley)

In five years I hope I am TAKEN (Robert Crais)

I love to see what others say for this, so either leave your responses in the comments or make your own blog post and share the link with me so I can check them out. It's fun, give it a try.

Happy Reading!

Friday, May 25, 2012

Five on Friday - Steve Ulfelder

We return for a new Five on Friday. Yes, I did make a special effort to finish reading Steve's book before he appeared here. It didn't take too much "effort" though, as you know if you read my review yesterday. Steve is a talented writer, and I'm thrilled that he's a part of the crime fiction community.  I'm excited to know him a little better; I hope you are as well.

If this is your first time visiting us for Five on Friday, this feature is kind of like a Q&A with a bit of a twist. They are quirky questions related to the participants as people. I wanted it to be fun and I wanted it to help all of us get to know people in the industry better.

Steve was given eight questions and asked to pick four to respond to, plus answer "What's the number one thing on your bucket list right now?" So without further ado, please welcome the Edgar nominated author of Purgatory Chasm and The Whole Lie, Steve Ulfelder.

1. The most bizarre place I ever found inspiration for a story was: This is either bizarre or so mundane as to be bizarre: I’m fascinated by self-storage operation, with all their potential for secrets (as in The Silence of the Lambs). It’s more than just the contents, though: something about the businesses themselves intrigues me. The way you see them everywhere, tucked away as if even their owners are half-ashamed of them. An upcoming Conway Sax novel is essentially a Prodigal Son story in which one brother finds fame (and then disgrace, of course!) in Hollywood, while the other stays in Massachusetts to tend a sick parent and run a self-storage outfit.

2. Five songs on my iPod/music player right now are: Guy Clark’s “Dublin Blues,” Elizabeth Cook’s “Mama’s Funeral,” Hayes Carll’s “KMAG YOYO,” Shooter Jennings’ “Fourth of July,” and Jerry Jeff Walker’s version of “L.A. Freeway.” (If I ever write a novel that’s half as rich a story as this latter song, I’ll consider myself a success.)

3. A superstition or ritual I have to observe when I write is: I’m an early riser and a morning writer. If, by 7:30am, I haven’t patted the dog, put on my noise-cancelling headphones and gotten to work, my Teutonic sense of schedule is out of whack and I have a rough time producing anything that day. I’m also a fanatic about counting my words. I begin the day by changing the font color to gold, and I end it by doing a word-count on everything in that color.

4. My favorite toppings on a pizza are: Pepperoni and sausage. The more the merrier. I am a devout carnivore.

5. The #1 item on my bucket list right now is: I’d love to drive in the Rolex 24 at Daytona. It’s one of the world’s premier endurance races, and the only one I have a semi-realistic chance of ever competing in. 

You can learn more about Steve, including his racing and the fact that he went to college not far from me, at his website. You can also catch Steve on Facebook and Twitter. And I hope to be recruiting Steve for future fun on the blog as well.  Many thanks to him for his great sportsmanship in participating and for his wonderful candid photo. Are you all enjoying these photos as much as I am?

Have a super wonderful holiday weekend. I hope it's filled with a lot of great crime fiction and time to read it! Happy Reading! 

Thursday, May 24, 2012

THE WHOLE LIE - Steve Ulfelder

First line: "When Savvy Kane walked into my shop, I was wrestling the rotted muffler from a Maxima."

Conway Sax is an auto mechanic and a recovering alcoholic. He has a strong attachment to his special group The Barnburners who are all recovering alcoholics. They hold a "meeting after the meeting" and share a special bond among themselves. So when Savannah Kane, a former Barnburner, walks back into Conway's life with a problem, he feels he has no choice but to help her. "Once a Barnburner, always a Barnburner."

The problem Savannah "Savvy" Kane needs help with is less her problem and more Bert Saginaw's problem. Saginaw is running for Massachusetts Lieutenant Governor and his ticket with favored Gubernatorial candidate Betsy Tinker seems a shoe-in. However, there's a threat of blackmail that could derail the whole election. Saginaw wants Sax to put an end to the blackmail and he's willing to pay substantially for this service. But the payout isn't necessary when Savvy Kane is found dead and another of Sax's Barnburner buddies is found assaulted and left for dead. Sax will find out who is behind all of this, even if it costs him his family.

Steve Ulfelder was recently nominated for Best First Edgar for his debut novel PURGATORY CHASM. I haven't read PURGATORY CHASM yet, and it didn't prevent me from thoroughly enjoying THE WHOLE LIE.

Ulfelder's hero does possess one of the stereotypical crime protagonist's characteristics: he's a recovering alcoholic. But Ulfelder takes a fresh approach with his character. Instead of the alcohol being Conway Sax's hang-up and all of the issues that drove him to drink in the first place, it's his connection to other recovering alcoholics that's important. Conway Sax isn't out to hang a shingle and start detecting. He will help those who are part of his inner circle. That's it. Otherwise, he just wants to be an auto mechanic and help raise his girlfriend's daughters.

THE WHOLE LIE is full of fascinating characters beyond his protagonist. Randall is Conway's buddy and "partner in crime." Randall also happens to be the son of Conway's probation officer. He's smart, witty and wears a prosthetic leg because he lost his limb to a bomb he encountered while serving in the military. Conway's girlfriend, Charlene, is also a recovering alcoholic and she pulled herself out of the gutter to become a successful and driven business woman. But one of Ulfelder's most stellar characters, in my opinion, is Charlene's daughter, Sophie. She doesn't have a huge role, but it's a powerful one, nonetheless. She reflects the damage we can do to those around us when we get too caught up in ourselves.

The plot of THE WHOLE LIE is rather timely with the presidential race in full swing. And the stark contrast between the haves and the have nots plays a central issue in the novel's layers of conflict - the 1% anyone?

I have to give Ulfelder extra kudos because Elyria, Ohio, (my hometown) comes into play in THE WHOLE LIE, as does Oberlin College. But the majority of the novel plays out in the various segments of Boston and its surrounding areas.

If you have to read THE WHOLE LIE in multiple sittings, you'll likely struggle to put it down and rush to get back to it as quickly as you can. Add Ulfelder to my must-read list. I'm looking forward to hanging out with Conway Sax and friends again.

THE WHOLE LIE was released earlier this month in hardcover (ISBN: 978-0312604547) from St. Martin's Minotaur and is also available in audio from Audible, narrated by Mark Boyett.

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