Ed McBain
Name at birth :
Salvatore A. Lombino
Split Second
about author:Real name:
Evan Hunter. Name at birth: Salvatore A. Lombino. Born 15th October, 1926 .Nationality
American. Birth place New York City . Education: Cooper Union, New York, 1943-44; Hunter College, New York, BA, 1950 (Phi Betta Kappa). Career: In the early 1950's taught in vocational high schools, and worked for Scott Meredith Literary Agency, in New York. Pseudonyms: Also writes as Curt Cannon, Hunt Collins, Ezra Hannon, and Richard Marsten. Address: Norwalk, Connecticut. Agent: John Farquharson Ltd., 250 West 57th Street, New York, New York 10019, USA, or 162-168 Regent Street, London W1R 5TB, UK . AWARDS: Ed Mcbain is the only American to receive the Diamond Dagger, the British Crime Writers Association's highest award. He also holds the Mystery Writers of America's coveted Grand Master Award, and received an Edgar Award nomination for his novel Money, Money, Money. His books have sold more than one hundred million copies, ranging from the more than fifty titles in his outstanding 87th Precinct series to the bestselling novels The Blackboard Jungle and Criminal Conversation, written under his own name, Evan Hunter. Writing as both Ed McBain and Evan Hunter, he broke new ground with Candyland, a novel in two parts. He is also the author of the screenplay for Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds. Other awards: Mystery writers of America Edgar Allan Poe award, 1957; Grand master award, 1985
|
 BOOKS:
New and Forthcoming Hardbacks :
August 2004: Hark
(87th Precinct). June 2005 :
January 2005, Alice in Jeopardy. Series
87th Precinct
1. Cop Hater (1956)
2. The Mugger (1956)
3. The Pusher (1956)
4. The Con Man (1957)
5. Killer's Choice (1957)
6. Killer's Payoff (1958)
7. Killer's Wedge (1958)
8. Lady Killer (1958)
9. 'til Death (1959)
10. King's Ransom (1959)
11. Give the Boys a Great Big Hand (1960)
12. The Heckler (1960)
13. See Them Die (1960)
14. Lady, Lady, I Did It (1960)
15. The Empty Hours (1960)
16. Like Love (1962)
17. Ten Plus One (1963)
18. Ax (1963)
19. He Who Hesitates (1965)
20. Doll (1965)
21. Eighty Million Eyes (1966)
22. Fuzz (1968)
23. Shotgun (1968)
24. Jigsaw (1970)
25. Hail, Hail, the Gangs All Here (1971)
26. Sadie, When She Died (1972)
27. Lets Hear It for the Deaf Man (1961)
28. Hail to the Chief (1973)
29. Bread (1974)
30. Blood Relatives (1975)
31. So Long As You Both Shall Live (1976)
32. Long Time No See (1977)
33. Calypso (1979)
34. Ghosts (1980)
35. Heat (1981)
36. Ice (1983)
37. Lightning (1984)
38. Eight Black Horses (1985)
39. Poison (1987)
40. Tricks (1987)
McBain's Ladies: The Women of the 87th (1988)
41. Lullaby (1989)
McBain's Ladies Too (1989)
42. Vespers (1989)
43. Widows (1991)
44. Kiss (1992)
45. Mischief (1993)
46. And All Through the House (1994)
47. Romance (1995)
48. Nocturne (1997)
49. The Big Bad City (1998)
50. The Last Dance (1999)
51. Money, Money, Money (2001)
52. Fat Ollie's Book (2003)
53. The Frumious Bandersnatch (2004)
Hark (2004).
Bingo Riggs and Handsome Kusak (with Craig Rice) :
The April Robin Murders (1958) .
Matthew Hope:
1. Goldilocks (1977)
2. Rumpelstiltskin (1981)
3. Beauty And the Beast (1982)
4. Jack And the Beanstalk (1981)
5. Snow White And Rose Red (1985)
6. Cinderella (1986)
7. Puss in Boots (1987)
8. The House That Jack Built (1988)
9. Three Blind Mice (1990)
10. Mary, Mary (1982)
11. There Was a Little Girl (1994)
12. Gladly the Cross-eyed Bear (1995)
13. The Last Best Hope (1997).
Novels:
The Big Fix (1952)
Cut Me in (1954)
Runaway Black (1954)
Death of a Nurse (1955)
The Spiked Heel (1957)
Even the Wicked (1958)
The Sentries (1965)
Where There Is Smoke (1975)
Guns (1976)
Walk Proud (1979)
Another Part of the City (1986)
Downtown (1989)
Driving Lessons (1999)
Alice in Jeopardy (2005) .
Collections :
The Jungle Kids (1956)
The McBain Brief (1957)
I Like 'em Tough (1958)
Happy New Year, Herbie (1963)
The Beheaded (1971)
Seven (1972)
Running From Legs: And Other Stories (2000)
Anthologies edited:
Crime Squad (1968)
Downpour (1968)
Homicide Department (1968)
Ticket to Death (1969)
The Best American Mystery Stories 1999 (1999) (with Otto Penzler).
Anthologies containing stories by Ed McBain:
Great Tales of Mystery and Suspense (1981)
The Best of the Best (1998)
Short stories:
"J" (1961)
Where or When (1998)
DAVID BALDACCI
 Split Second
Book Description:
From #1 bestseller David Baldacci comes a new thriller reminiscent of his phenomenal bestselling debut, Absolute Power.It was only a split second--but that's all it took for Secret Service agent Sean King's attention to wander and his "protectee," third-party presidential candidate Clyde Ritter, to die. King retired from the Service in disgrace, and now, eight years later, balances careers as a lawyer and a part-time deputy sheriff in a small Virginia town. Then he hears the news: Once again, a third-party candidate has been taken out of the presidential race--abducted right under the nose of Secret Service agent Michelle Maxwell. King and Maxwell form an uneasy alliance, and their search for answers becomes a bid for redemption as they delve into the government's Witness Protection Program and the mysterious past of Clyde Ritter's dead assassin. But the truth is never quite what it seems, and these two agents have learned that even one moment looking in the wrong direction can be deadly. Full of shocking twists and turns, and introducing a villian to rival Jackson in Baldacci's The Winner, SPLIT SECOND is pure, mind-numbing adrenaline to the last page.
|
Last Man Standing has the essential elements of a terrific David Baldacci novel: a tough but tender-hearted hero, dirty dealings in the nation's bureaucracy, and a roller-coaster plot. Web London, a member of the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team, froze up on a drug raid and thus became the sole survivor of a remote-controlled ambush that killed six of his compatriots. Now the only witness has disappeared and the inside man on the botched raid has gone underground.
As a pretty psychiatrist puzzles over the corners of Web's brain that kept him alive, Web himself stays on the move. He's certain that the ambush is connected to the prison escape of a neofascist leader, Ernest B. Free, whom he helped arrest five years earlier, and a series of new murders leads him to a Virginia horse farm and the driving force behind all the carnage. It may seem as though Baldacci gives away the mastermind too soon, but both the bad guys and the good guys are complex enough that there's plenty of punch all the way to the last page. --Barrie Trinkle
About the Author:
David Baldacci was born in Virginia, where he continues to reside.
David received a Bachelor of Arts in political science from Virginia Commonwealth University and a law degree from the University of Virginia. He practiced law for nine years in Washington, D.C., as both a trial lawyer and a corporate lawyer.
Books by David Baldacci:
The Mighty Johns.
Additional stories include:
The Ehrengraf Reverse by Lawrence Block,
Semi-Pro by James Crumley,
A Sunday in January by Brendan DuBois,
Whatever it Takes to Win by Tim Green,
Good Seats by Colin Harrison,
Gone Down to Corpus by Dennis Lehane,
No Thing by Mike Lupica,
The Empire Strikes Back by Brad Meltzer,
The Arcane Receiver by Carol O'Connell,
The End of Innocence by Anne Perry,
Hollywood Spring and Axle by Gary Phillips,
Gone to the Dawgs by Peter Robinson,
Rumors of Gravity by John Westermann.
These tales of football (and in one case European football, rugby) include macabre deaths, ultimate suspense, theft, drugs, big money and football. Tales of Super Bowl Sunday, NFL teams, has-been players, great fans, and final plays are a collection like no other.
All the best writers in one book, edited by the famous Otto Penzler, founder of The Mysterious Press.
Wish You Well. (Mass Market Paperback - September 2001) It is 1940 and the accidental death of their father sends two children, Lou and her younger brother Oz, along with their invalid mother, from New York City to the rugged mountains of southwestern Virginia to live with their great-grandmother, Louisa Mae Cardinal. Life is different in Virginia where food is homemade, school is a long walk down the road, and chores involve rising early in the morning. The children flourish. Then the local coal-and-gas company comes around, conniving to seize the property. The climactic courtroom battle, which will decide the fates of Lou, Oz, and their mother, is as unpredictable as it is relentless. More "literary" than Baldacci's traditional thrillers, WISH YOU WELL is a coming-of-age tale that will move and captivate readers.
Saving Faith.
(Mass Market Paperback - September 2000)
It sounds like a movie pitch: "The story is like Tom Clancy crossed with John Grisham set in the Washington D.C. political world." But David Baldacci's Saving Faith successfully fuses elements from both of these chart-busters in this political thriller spiced with techno-wizardry.
The villain is a classic spy caricature: cold-war CIA super-patriot Robert Thornhill wants to reclaim the glory days of the Central Intelligence Agency--when money flowed like the Mississippi during a flood, and the FBI watched helplessly from the sidelines. Working from his secret underground bunker, he blackmails Danny Buchanan, one of the great Washington lobbyists, to front an enormous bribery scheme that will force Congress to bend to the CIA's whims. But Thornhill's plan springs a leak: Buchanan's assistant Faith Lockhart discovers her boss's dirty dealings, and she intends to expose the whole mess to Thornhill's nemesis, the FBI. Thornhill's associates attempt to assassinate Faith, but their bullet kills her FBI escort instead. Faith finds herself on the run with Lee Adams, a fit-and-trim PI who had been shadowing her at the behest of Buchanan.
If all this sounds a bit confusing, it is at times. Baldacci works hard to keep the tension steadily rising, but it is sometimes difficult to remember why Faith and Lee can't just stop running and go for help. Nevertheless, they are very likable heroes, and Baldacci's depiction of the world of lobbyists and the internecine warfare of the FBI and CIA (complete with state-of-the-art spy gadgets and transmission-proof chambers) elevates the novel with details that can come only from careful research. --Patrick O'Kelley --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
The Simple Truth .
(Audio Cassette - January 1999)
Rufus Harms is rotting in a Virginia military prison. As readers learn in the terse opening of The Simple Truth, he was convicted 25 years ago of the brutal killing of a young girl. Readers also learn that Rufus did not commit the crime; out of a haze of memories and with fragments of evidence, he has reconstructed the truth about the horrid event that ruined his life. He knows his discovery could cost him his life, so he breaks from prison after sending an appeal to the Supreme Court that details a massive conspiracy tied into the foundations of Washington.
The complex drama of Rufus Harms is only one of the interwoven threads in this massive, violent legal thriller that also draws from the vocabulary of hard-boiled crime fiction. Baldacci offers glimpses into the arcane politics of the high court, where Justice Elizabeth Knight wages war with the manipulative Chief Justice Harold Ramsay. And while Harms struggles to keep out of harm's way and the justices duke it out, Supreme Court law clerk Sara Evans toils with ex-cop John Fiske to discover the import of Harms's appeal (and, simultaneously, to uncover the murderer of Mike Fiske, John's law clerk-brother and the original holder of the appeal). Their interest in the document apparently draws the attention of the same deadly conspirators who manipulated Harms over two decades earlier. While the armed mayhem sometimes rises to the point of excess, Baldacci's novel continues to offer new surprises until the final pages. --Patrick O'Kelley --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
Total Control . (Mass Market Paperback - December 1997)
Irritatingly trite woman-in-periler from lawyer-turned-novelist Baldacci. Moving away from the White House and the white-shoe Washington law firms of his previous bestsellers (Absolute Power, 1996; Total Control, 1997), Baldacci comes up with LuAnn Tyler, a spunky, impossibly beautiful, white-trash truck stop waitress with a no-good husband and a terminally cute infant daughter in tow. Some months after the birth of Lisa, LuAnn gets a phone call summoning her to a make-shift office in an unrented storefront of the local shopping mall. There, she gets a Faustian offer from a Mr. Jackson, a monomaniacal, cross-dressing manipulator who apparently knows the winning numbers in the national lottery before the numbers are drawn. It seems that LuAnn fits the media profile of what a lottery winner should be--poor, undereducated but proud--and if she's willing to buy the right ticket at the right time and transfer most of her winnings to Jackson, she'll be able to retire in luxury. Jackson fails to inform her, however, that if she refuses his offer, he'll have her killed. Before that can happen, as luck would have it, LuAnn barely escapes death when one of husband Duane's drug deals goes bad. She hops on a first-class Amtrak sleeper to Manhattan with a hired executioner in pursuit. But executioner Charlie, one of Jackson's paid handlers, can't help but hear wedding bells when he sees LuAnn cooing with her daughter. Alas, a winning $100- million lottery drawing complicates things. Jackson spirits LuAnn and Lisa away to Sweden, with Charlie in pursuit. Never fear. Not only will LuAnn escape a series of increasingly violent predicaments, but she'll also outwit Jackson, pay an enormous tax bill to the IRS, and have enough left over to honeymoon in Switzerland. Too preposterous to work as feminine wish-fulfillment, too formulaic to be suspenseful. (Book-of-the-Month Club main selection) -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
Absolute Power
This entry in the Washington murder mystery sweepstakes has plenty of commercial potential, yet, on the literary side of the ledger, Baldacci's first novel could stand some polishing in plot and story structure. Here's the premise: the wick-dipping president gets into a drunken knife fight with his mistress; the Secret Service rescues him but kills her; and scandal will erupt unless all witnesses are eliminated. Quite a few are, lending the story its high-velocity pace, which is its chief attraction. The chase takes off from the swanky hunt-country mansion where the killing occurred; there aging but wily burglar Luther Whitney, on site for his last heist, inadvertently witnesses the death of the presidential mistress through a handy one-way mirror. When the coast clears, Whitney leaves the scene with a letter opener covered with presidential DNA, which the cover-uppers naturally are anxious to recover. The murderers' efforts eventually lead to hero lawyer Jack Graham, a rising yupster conflicted by women and career. A finishing action chase through the Washington Metro portends the probable climax scene in the movie slated to be made from this material; such celluloid prominence plus BMOC selection ensures demand for a tale that is all action and no message. Gilbert Taylor --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
 Absolute Power (1997) DVD
Director Clint Eastwood's 1997 box-office hit stars himself as Luther Whitney, a highly skilled thief who finds himself in the wrong place at the wrong time, witnessing the murder of a woman involved in a secret tryst with the U.S. president (played by Gene Hackman). Determined to clear his name, Whitney cleverly eludes a tenacious detective (Ed Harris) while investigating a corruption of power reaching to the highest level of government. Adapted by veteran screenwriter William Goldman from David Baldacci's novel, this thriller balances expert suspense with well-drawn characters and an intelligent plot that's just a pounding heartbeat away from real White House headlines. Absolute Power features the great Judy Davis in a memorable supporting role as the White House chief of staff who desperately attempts to cover up the crime. --Jeff Shannon
|
L'ultimo eroe 1ª ed.
Web London è un uomo d'azione, un veterano dell'Fbi. La partecipazione con la sua squadra all'appostamento per catturare un potente boss della droga si rivela, però, un'imboscata infernale, dalla quale Web esce misteriosamente vivo. Schiacciato dall'angoscia e dal senso di colpa, vittima della diffidenza da parte dei colleghi, si rivolge a Claire Daniels, una psichiatra, anche per far luce sugli eventi che gli hanno consentito di scampare all'agguato. Web dovrà intraprendere un lungo e travagliato viaggio all'interno della sua vita e allo stesso tempo rintracciare un'altra persona sopravvissuta alla strage, un bambino di dieci anni che da allora è scomparso. Da Washington alle colline della Virginia, osteggiato perfino dai suoi superiori, Web si addentra nei meandri di un complotto dagli sviluppi imprevedibili che lo riportano sulle tracce di un'organizzazione razzista protagonista in passato di episodi sanguinosi. Quasi da solo, braccato da nemici invisibili che fanno il vuoto intorno a lui, grazie al suo istinto, Web riesce a individuare la pista giusta. Solo che, questa volta, potrebbe non uscirne vivo. Con questo romanzo David Baldacci si conferma autore dal singolare talento, costruendo un thriller psicologico ad alta tensione che vede protagonista un uomo alla ricerca della verità, anche di quella interiore.
Mai lontano da qui 1ª ed.
Lou ha dodici anni, è alta e sottile, ha capelli biondi, grandi occhi azzurri e un carattere d'acciaio. Vive a New York con l'amato padre Jack, un promettente ma ancora sconosciuto romanziere, la madre Amanda e il fratellino Oz.
Un giorno, però, in seguito a uno spaventoso incidente stradale Jack muore, Amanda resta gravemente ferita e i due fratelli devono trasferirsi sulle montagne della Virginia dalla bisnonna paterna, Louisa Mae, nei luoghi dove il padre ha trascorso la sua infanzia e che hanno fatto da sfondo a tutti i suoi romanzi.
Da principio i due ragazzini faticano ad adattarsi alla vita spartana e piena di sacrifici della fattoria, ma, a poco a poco, anche grazie all'aiuto di un nuovo amico, Jimmy 'Diamond' Skinner, imparano ad apprezzarne i lati positivi: il rapporto con la natura, il senso delle tradizioni e dei valori familiari, il legame con la terra dei propri avi. E quando la Southern Valley, una grossa compagnia per l'estrazione del gas naturale, cerca di strappare a Luisa Mae la sua proprietà, sarà proprio la tenacia e la determinatezza di Lou a impedire che ciò avvenga.
Con "Mai lontano da qui", David Baldacci si cimenta in un romanzo, in parte autobiografico, in cui ritroviamo le atmosfere dei magici paesaggi della Virginia dove lo scrittore è nato e cresciuto, il fascino dei racconti tramandati di padre in figlio, la forza dei sentimenti più puri e più solidi, che niente e nessuno può contrastare.
Altri libri di David Baldacci tradotti in Italiano :
Sotto pressione
Il biglietto vincente
Il controllo totale
La semplice verità
Il potere assoluto
 David Baldacci è nato in Virginia dove tuttora risiede. Si è laureato in legge alla University of Virginia è ha ricevuto un Bachelor of Arts in political science dalla Virginia Commonwealth University. Ha praticato la professione legale per 9 anni a Washington District of Columbia sia come praticante che come corporate. Ha pubblicato sei romanzi Absolute Power, Total Control, The Winner, The Simple Truth, Saving Faith and Last Man Standing piu' il settimo libro Wish You Well atteso per l'estate 2002. Ha pubblicato anche una novella, Office Hours, scritta per il "Mese del Thriller" olandese del 2000. Suoi lavori sono usciti sul settimanale Panorama in Italia, sul tedesco Welt am Sonntag e in USA su Weekend, Britain's Tatler Magazine and New Statesman, UVA Lawyer, the Richmond Times-Dispatch, the Washington Post. Tutti i suoi libri sono stati bestsellers internazionali, tradotti in 33 lingue e venduti in 80 paesi stampati in piu di 28 milioni di copie. Warner Bross ha prodotto un film con Clint Eastwood and Gene Hackman tratto dal romanzo Potere Assoluto. Sempre Absolute Power vinse il "Britain's W. H. Smith's Thumping Good Read award for fiction in 1997" e fu selezionato da "Page Turner of the Week" della rivista People.
Una curiosita': troverete che i romanzi di David pubblicati da Mondadori fino all'inizio del 2000 sono attribuiti a David Baldacci Ford ! Forse David Baldacci si vergognava del cognome italiano con quella 'maledetta' vocale alla fine? Niente di tutto questo. Raccontano che in Mondadori si inventarono il secondo cognome Ford forse pensando che in Italia fosse meno vendibile un autore italoamericano.
"A chi la tocca la tocca" disse Renzo Tramaglino a Gervaso (Ford?) parlando della peste! Dal 2000, finalmente, i romanzi furono firmati David Baldacci. la redazione italiana di loveitalia.
|
gggggggggggggg
|