Soho Press Rights List - Michael Meller Literary Agency
Transcription
Soho Press Rights List - Michael Meller Literary Agency
Soho Press London 2016 Foreign Rights List For inquiries and manuscript requests, please contact: Amara Hoshijo [email protected] (212) 260-1900 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights Table of Contents World War Porn by Roy Scranton (August 2016) 3 Murder on the Quai by Cara Black (June 2016) 4 The Aimée Leduc Investigations by Cara Black 5 Fields Where They Lay by Timothy Hallinan 6 The Junior Bender Mysteries by Timothy Hallinan 7 The Poke Rafferty Thrillers by Timothy Hallinan The Blue Madonna by James R. Benn (September 2016) 8 9 The Billy Boyle WWII Mysteries by James R. Benn 10 World English What My Body Remembers by Agnete Friis (May 2017) 11 The Second Day of the Renaissance by Timothy Williams (May 2017) 12 The Inspector Trotti Novels by Timothy Williams 13 Cruel Is the Night by Karo Hämäläinen (April 2017) 14 The Works of Fuminori Nakamura 15 Bad Seeds by Jassy Mackenzie (March 2017) 16 August Snow by Stephen Mack Jones (February 2017) 17 Savage Theories by Pola Oloixarac (January 2017) 18 The Nantucket Mysteries by Francine Mathews 19 Blood Crime by Sebastia Alzamora (September 2016) 20 I Shot the Buddha by Colin Cotterill (August 2016) 21 2 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights War Porn by Roy Scranton “War porn,” n. Videos, images, and narratives featuring graphic violence, often brought back from combat zones, viewed voyeuristically or for emotional gratification. Such media are often presented and circulated without context, though they may be used as evidence of war crimes. War porn is also, in Roy Scranton’s searing debut novel, a metaphor for the experience of war in the age of the War on Terror, the fracturing and fragmentation of perspective, time, and self that afflicts soldiers and civilians alike, and the global networks and face-to-face moments that suture our fragmented lives together. In War Porn, three lives fit inside one another like nesting dolls: a restless young woman at an end-of-summer barbecue in Utah; an American soldier in occupied Baghdad; and Qasim al-Zabadi, an Iraqi math professor, who faces the US invasion of his country with fear, denial, and perseverance. As War Porn cuts from America to Iraq and back again, as home and hell merge, we come to see America through the eyes of the occupied, even as we see Qasim become a prisoner of the occupation. Through the looking glass of War Porn, Scranton reveals the fragile humanity that connects Americans and Iraqis, torturers and the tortured, victors and their victims. US publication: August 2016 Praise for War Porn World “What impresses is the brutal immediacy of the writing, its authority. Roy Scranton is a truth telling war writer.”—E.L. Doctorow, National Book Critics Circle Award-winning author of Ragtime and The March A visceral look at the consequences of war, at a time when it is at the forefront of the world’s conscience. “I have never read a book like War Porn . . . Roy Scranton writes with unnerving power.”—Phil Klay, National Book Award-winning author of Redeployment Based in part on the author’s own experience as an artilleryman in Iraq. “War Porn is dire, savage, and brilliant, a simmering fever-dream of a novel that's as pure and true in its vision of the long war as anything I've read. Roy Scranton is merciless—and why should he be anything but?” —Ben Fountain, author of Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk Roy Scranton is the author of Learning to Die in the Anthropocene: Reflections on the End of a Civilization, and co-editor of Fire and Forget: Short Stories from the Long War. He grew up in Oregon, dropped out of college, and spent several years wandering the American West. In 2002, he enlisted in the US Army. He served from 2002 to 2006, including a fourteen-month deployment to Iraq. After leaving the Army he earned a bachelor's degree and a master's degree at the New School for Social Research, then completed his PhD in English at Princeton. 3 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights Murder on the Quai by Cara Black The world knows Aimée Leduc, heroine of 15 mysteries in this New York Times bestselling series, as a très chic, no-nonsense private investigator—the toughest and most relentless in Paris. Now author Cara Black dips back in time to reveal how Aimée first became a detective . . . November 1989: Aimée Leduc is in her first year of college at Paris’s preeminent medical school. She lives in a 17th-century apartment that overlooks the Seine with her father, who runs the family detective agency. But the week the Berlin Wall crumbles, so does Aimée’s life as she knows it. First, someone has sabotaged her lab work, putting her at risk of failing out of the program. Then, she finds out her aristo boyfriend is planning to get engaged to another woman. And finally, Aimée’s father takes off to Berlin on a mysterious errand. He asks Aimée to help out at the detective agency while he’s gone—as if she doesn’t already have enough to do. But the case Aimée finds herself investigating—a murder linked to a transport truck of Nazi gold that disappeared in the French countryside during the height of World War II—has gotten under her skin. Her heart may not lie in medicine after all—maybe it’s time to think harder about the family business. US USpublication: publication:January June 2016 2014 Praise for the New York Times bestselling Aimée Leduc novels World World + Media “Forever young, forever stylish, forever in love with Paris—forever Aimée.” —The New York Times Book Review “As always, with airfares so high, Black offers armchair travelers a whirlwind trip through the City of Light.” —USA Today “Transcendently, seductively, irresistibly French.” —Alan Furst, author of Night Soldiers “A winning mystery, as stylish and sexy as the city Cara Black knows so well.”—George Pelecanos Cara Black is the author of sixteen books in the bestselling Aimée Leduc series. She lives in San Francisco with her husband and visits Paris frequently. Previous series sales to: Italy: Edizioni Clichy Spain: Factoria des Ideas Germany: & Brandstattere Okey NdibeThiele has begun writing forVerlag the New England: Constable & Robinson (reverted) York Times on Nigerian political issues. France: Editions Anatolia, City Editions Soho Press will be reissuing Ndibe’s debut Italy: Hobby & Work novel, Arrows of Rain (originally part of the Norway: Schibste Forlag A/S prestigious Heinemann African Writers SeJapan: Hayakawa ries), in January 2015. Israel: Keter Books Due to an unexpectedly early sell-through of A prequel to a New York Times bestselling the hardcover Inc.entry is series, which edition, providesForeign both aGods, perfect now available in paperback! point and standalone potential. ForPacked with atmospheric detail, please for those more information or a full list of publicity, visit: who love the city of Paris in its many facets. sohopress.com/books/foreign-gods-inc/ For a full list of publicity, please visit: sohopress.com/books/murder-on-the-quai Please see the next page for more information on the Aimée Leduc series. 4 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights The Aimée Leduc Investigations by Cara Black About the Series Paris, 1990s: Aimée Leduc is a chic, no-nonsense former hacker who took over her family’s private investigation agency when her father was killed by a car bomb. She runs Leduc Détective with her best friend, René Friant, and her cases bring her to every corner of Paris, as she uncovers secrets from her own past. A New York Times bestselling series with incredible commercial appeal, particularly for those who love Paris. Author routinely travels to Europe and has both fans and author friends in several cities throughout, creating potential for fantastic launch events. This series is undergoing an exciting new cover repackage! World Previous individual book sales to: Spain: Factoria des Ideas England: Constable & Robinson (reverted) Italy: Hobby & Work Japan: Hayakawa Germany: Thiele & Brandstattere Verlag France: Editions Anatolia, City Editions Norway: Schibste Forlag A/S Israel: Keter Books Praise for the Aimée Leduc Investigations “Francophiles and mystery-novel lovers alike will devour investigator Aimée Leduc's latest outing.”—Entertainment Weekly “Pity the knife-wielding villain who offends that infallible sense of style.” —The Wall Street Journal “Wry, complex, sophisticated . . . One of the very best heroines in crime fiction today.”—Lee Child, author of the Jack Reacher Series “So authentic you can practically smell the fresh baguettes and coffee.” —Val McDermid #1 Murder in the Marais #2 Murder in Belleville #3 Murder in the Sentier #4 Murder in the Bastille In Paris’s historic Jewish quarter, Aimée finds a dead woman with a swastika carved into her forehead, plunging her into a web of ancient secrets and buried war crimes. Tension runs high as a hunger strike escalates among Algerian immigrants and Aimée barely escapes a car bombing in this tale of terrorism and greed. When a mysterious visitor promises contact with her long-lost mother, Aimée finds herself hot on the trail of 70s radicals. Aimée is attacked in the shadowy Passage Boule Blanche. Regaining consciousness, she finds herself temporarily blinded but is determined to identify the assailant. #5 Murder in Clichy #6 Murder in Montmartre #7 Murder on the Ile Saint-Louis #8 Murder in the Rue de Paradis An act of kindness ends in a stranger’s death, leaving Aimée with a bullet wound, a check for 50,000 francs, and a trove of Vietnamese jade artifacts whose provenance is a mystery. In an attempt to clear a friend’s name, Aimée encounters Corsican separatist terrorists, Montmartre prostitutes, and learns of the French “ear in the sky.” Aimée tries to identify the mother of a missing child while two murders and an abortive bombing by environmental protestors propel her into danger. Finding out who cut her lover’s throat leads Aimée into Kurdish and Turkish politics as she tries to track down his contacts above and beneath the streets of Paris. #9 Murder in the Latin Quarter #10 Murder in the Palais Royal #11 Murder in Passy #12 Murder at the Lanterne Rouge Aimée, a virtual orphan, embraces a Haitian woman claiming to be her half-sister, involving her in murky Haitian politics that lead to murder in the old university district of Paris. René Friant, Aimée’s partner at Leduc Détective, is wounded, and eye-witnesses have pegged her as the culprit. Someone is impersonating Aimée—someone who wants revenge. In one of Paris’s wealthiest neighborhoods, a murder investigation leads Aimée to police corruption, a radical Basque terrorist group; and a kidnapped Spanish princess. A missing woman, an illegal immigrant raid, botched affairs of the heart, the French secret service, scientific secrets and a murderer on the loose—what has Aimée gotten herself into? #13 Murder Below Montparnasse #14 Murder in Pigalle #15 Murder on the Champ de Mars A man who claims to know Aimée’s mother suspects that a long-lost Modigliani in his possession puts him in danger. When he is viciously murdered, Aimée is on the hunt for a killer. A serial rapist is terrorizing Pigalle, targeting schoolgirls. Aimée, five months pregnant, stays away from the investigation—until her young neighbor Zazie disappears. A Romany boy begs Aimée to visit his ailing mother, who may hold the key to her father’s murder. But the woman has vanished; the ensuing search leads to the city’s seats of wealth and power. 5 For more information about the author, please see the previous page. For a full list of series publicity, please visit: sohopress.com/authors/cara-black/ Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights Fields Where They Lay by Timothy Hallinan Hollywood's favorite burglar, Junior Bender, is back for the most Christmas-y heist in burglar history! It's December 20th, and the Edgerton Mall isn't exactly full of holiday cheer, despite its two Santas. The mall is a fossil of an industry in decline; many of its stores are closed, and to make matters worse, there is a rampant shoplifting problem. Enter burglar Junior Bender, the unwilling fixer for the City of Angels’ various underworld bosses. The murderous Russian gangster who owns the mall makes Junior look into the shoplifting problem for him. But Junior's operation doesn't go well: Within two days, two people are dead. It's obvious that shoplifting is the least of Junior's problems. Meanwhile, he must confront his own deep-seated melancholy at the very notion of Christmas—both present and past. Praise for the Junior Bender Mysteries “Bender’s quick wit and smart mouth make him a boon companion.” —The New York Times Book Review “If you're looking for a mystery with a fresh new hero, then you'll want to run right out and get this book. It's just fabulous.” —NPR’s Morning Edition “Every now and then a writer comes along with the imagination and skill to make the whole thing feel fresh and new again. That's what veteran crime novelist Timothy Hallinan has accomplished.” —The Washington Post “Laugh-out-loud.”—The Boston Globe “Donald E. Westlake, the casually brilliant master of the comic caper, may be pushing up daisies, but his spirit clearly lives on in Timothy Hallinan . . . Swift, sure-footed and awfully funny.”—The Seattle Times “Crackles with cleverness.”—The Philadelphia Inquirer Timothy Hallinan's novels have been nominated for the Edgar, Nero, Shamus, and Macavity awards. winner After years of working in the television and music industries, he now writes full-time. He divides his time between California and Thailand. 6 US publication: October 2016 World A cheery new holiday installment in a series for which Soho has newly acquired translation rights. Please see the next page for more information on the Junior Bender mysteries. Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights The Junior Bender Mysteries by Timothy Hallinan Praise for the Junior Bender Mysteries About the Series “If Carl Hiaasen and Donald Westlake had a literary love child, he would be Timothy Hallinan.”—Julia Spencer-Fleming Junior Bender is a professional burglar who keeps being blackmailed into being private investigator for Los Angeles’ most dangerous criminals. Luckily, he’s got a sense of humor and a very particular skill set. “Donald E. Westlake['s] spirit clearly lives on in Timothy Hallinan . . . Swift, sure-footed and awfully funny.”—The Seattle Times Hilarious, Hiaasen-esque crime novels set in/around Hollywood. “Dangerously outrageous.”—Associated Press A critically acclaimed, well-established series newly arriving on “A modern-day successor to Raymond Chandler.” the foreign market! (Rights acquired August 2015). —Los Angeles Daily News For more information about the author, please see the previous page. World For more information or a full list of publicity, please visit: http://sohopress.com/authors/timothy-hallinan/ Film rights currently under option. US publication: Nov 2012 US publication: Jan 2013 US publication: July 2013 US publication: July 2014 US publication: Apr 2016 Crashed (#1) Little Elvises (#2) The Fame Thief (#3) Herbie’s Game (#4) King Maybe (#5) Junior Bender has never been caught in his 22 years as a burglar. But now he’s being blackmailed by Trey Annunziato, a terrifying LA mob boss, into acting as a PI on her pornography set. Thistle Downing, a beloved child actress (now a drug-addled teenager), is starring in the film, which someone is sabotaging. Junior knows he should get Thistle out and find her help, but doing so will anger a powerful criminal. Can he devise a miracle solution? Unfortunately, Junior has developed a reputation as an investigator for criminals. He’s being bullied into proving music mogul Vinnie DiGaudio didn’t murder a tabloid journalist he threatened to kill, but the journalist’s widow won’t stop trying to seduce him. As the investigation spirals out of control, Junior's landlady begs him to find her missing daughter. And worst both Junior's ex-wife and teenage daughter have new boyfriends. What a mess. 93-year-old Irwin Dressler, Hollywood’s scariest mob-bossturned-movie king, wants Junior to solve a 70-year-old “crime”—the tabloid-fueled destruction of actress Dolores Lamarre, who was ruined by compromising photos from a Las Vegas party. Dressler wants justice for Dolores and the career she never had. Junior thinks the whole thing is crazy—it’s been 70 years—but he starts digging. And he soon finds that some vendettas never die. Wattles, LA’s top “executive” crook, sets up a hit, keeping the list of criminals involved in his safe. But someone breaks in and takes the list, and the people on it start to pop up dead. Wattles then approaches Junior, who already knows who stole the list: the signature belongs to Herbie Mott, Junior’s criminal mentor. Junior seeks him out and finds Herbie murdered. As he tracks the killer, he finds disturbing secrets about Herbie’s past—and his own. Junior is in the middle of stealing one of the world’s rarest stamps from an assassin when his luck turns sour. It takes an unexpected assist to get him out alive, but his escape sets off a chain reaction of blackmail and escalating crime. By the time Junior is forced to commit his third burglary of the week in the impregnable fortress that’s home to a ruthless studio mogul called King Maybe, he’s starting to wish he’d just let the killer take a crack at him. “Fabulous.” —NPR's Morning Edition SHAMUS AWARD NOMINEE A CRIMESPREE MAGAZINE BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR WINNER OF THE LEFTY AWARD “Too many lovable crooks in contemporary crime fiction? Well . . . one thing’s for sure: they’re all chasing Junior.” —Booklist, Starred Review A CRIMESPREE MAGAZINE BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR NERO AWARD FINALIST A PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR 7 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights The Poke Rafferty Thrillers by Timothy Hallinan About the Series Praise for the Poke Rafferty Thrillers American writer Poke Rafferty lives in Bangkok with his Thai wife Rose, and their adopted daughter Miaow. The happy trio is rocked by their separate, often dangerous histories. “You could drown in the waves of corruption that surge through Timothy Hallinan’s Bangkok mysteries.” Intelligent, socially minded political thrillers focused on the pre- “A relentless-as-the-rain paced thriller, sprinkled with an offbeat, cynical humor.”—Seattle Post-Intelligencer —The New York Times Book Review sent-day consequences of colonialism in Southeast Asia. “Truly remarkable . . . In Hallinan’s Bangkok, the ugly truths of poverty, homelessness, corruption, caste and crime are shaded with tremendous compassion.”—The Arizona Republic The below novels function within the series as a trilogy, and have never before been sold on the foreign market! World “Heart-rending, unforgettable.”—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review “Stellar.”—Library Journal, Starred Review For more information about the author, please see p. 6. For more information or a full list of publicity, please visit: http://sohopress.com/authors/timothy-hallinan/ The Hot Countries (2015) A talkative stranger named Arthur Varney turns up in Bangkok and befriends the old men at an expat bar on Patpong Road. They accept him without suspicion, failing to see that he’s actually using them to get to Poke Rafferty. The next Poke Rafferty thriller, Fools’ River, is coming Fall 2017! Varney wants two things: money Poke doesn’t have and a person he’s is unwilling to hand over. It becomes apparent quite quickly that there’s nothing Varney won’t do to secure his goals. As his actions threaten the foundation of Poke’s life in Thailand, the aging men of the Expat Bar discover that they might still be a force to reckon with. (Manuscript available September 2016.) For the Dead (2014) The Fear Artist (2012) After seven years in Bangkok, American travel writer Poke Rafferty finally feels settled: his family is about to grow, and his adopted Thai daughter, Miaow, seems to have found her place at junior high school at last. But all that is endangered when Miaow helps her boyfriend buy a stolen iPhone—an iPhone that turns out to contain photographs of two murdered police officers. As Miaow’s carefully constructed personal life falls apart, Rafferty discovers that the murders are part of a conspiracy that reaches the top rungs of Bangkok law enforcement and beyond. A chance collision on a Bangkok sidewalk goes wrong when the man who bumps into Poke Rafferty dies in his arms after uttering three words: Helen Eckersley. Cheyenne. Seconds later, the police arrive, denying that the man was shot. Poke is interrogated by Thai secret agents who demand to know what the dead man said. When he's finally released, Rafferty finds his apartment ransacked and realizes he's under surveillance. When men in uniform reappear at his door, he flees and begins life as a fugitive. As he unearths more, it becomes apparent that he's caught in a war on terror, and that his opponent is a virtuoso whose medium is fear. 8 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights Blue Madonna by James R. Benn It's late May 1944. Captain Billy Boyle is court-martialed on spurious charges of black market dealings. The chief witness against him is Archie Chapman, a London gangster with a personal grudge, and Boyle is convicted. Stripped of his officer's rank, reduced to private, and sentenced to three month's hard labor, Boyle is given an opportunity: he can avoid his punishment if he accepts a dangerous mission. A secret chamber and tunnels once used by escaping Huguenots in the 17th century has since been taken over by the Allies. But this “safe house” on the outskirts of Chaumont turns out to be anything but. Two officers, one a British escaped POW and the other an American pilot, have been murdered. Billy is parachuted in as part of a three-man team on June 5, 1944, the night before the Normandy invasion. Billy must solve the mystery of who is behind the murders, then lead a group escape from France back to England, with both the Germans and a killer hot on their heels. Praise for the Billy Boyle WWII Mysteries US USpublication: publication:September January 2014 2016 “Spirited wartime storytelling.” —The New York Times Book Review World World + Media “A fast-paced saga set in a period when the fate of civilization still hangs in the balance.” Previous series sales to: Italy: Edizioni Clichy Poland: Bellona S.A. —The Wall Street Journal Okey Ndibe has begun writing for the New A detailed whodunit provides York Timeshistorical on Nigerian politicalthat issues. a new perspective on prominent WWII fig ures. Soho Press will be reissuing Ndibe’s debut novel, Arrows of Rain (originally part of the James R. Benn is well-established in the miliprestigious Setary fiction Heinemann genre, and isAfrican gainingWriters internationries), in January 2015. al award recognition. “Full of action, humor and heart.” —Louise Penny “Billy Boyle gets better and better. This is a must-read series.” —Lee Child “Terrific . . . Razor-sharp.” —Joseph Finder Due toFor anaunexpectedly early sell-through of full list of publicity, please visit: the hardcover edition, Foreign Gods, Inc. is sohopress.com/books/blue-madonna/ now available in paperback! James R. Benn is the author of the Billy Boyle World War II mysteries, including, Billy Boyle, a top mystery of the year by Book Sense and a Dilys Award nominee, A Blind Goddess, which was long-listed for the Dublin Literary Award, and The Rest Is Silence, a Barry Award nominee. A librarian for many years, Benn lives in Connecticut with his wife, Deborah Mandel. 9 Please see the next page for more information For more information a fullWWII list of mysteries. publicity, please visit: on the BillyorBoyle sohopress.com/books/foreign-gods-inc/ Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights The Billy Boyle WWII Mysteries by James R. Benn About the Series WWII Europe: Billy Boyle, an Irish-American cop from Boston, is promoted to detective at the outbreak of war. Billy is unwilling to fight—and perhaps die—for England, a country he barely knows. To protect him, his mother wrangles him a job through family connections. But it turns out his aunt’s husband is US General Dwight Eisenhower, whose headquarters are in overseas London during the Blitz. “Uncle” Ike has hired Billy as his private investigator in sensitive wartime military investigations throughout Europe. Praise for the Billy Boyle WWII Mysteries “Benn's Billy Boyle mysteries are always entertaining, filled with riveting characters, and beautifully plotted stories.” —Seattle Post-Intelligencer “Stark and poignant.” —Denver Post A sensitive exploration of major events in WWII through the “Exceptionally written . . . Whether a reader holds WWII books or suspense books close to their heart, this one will be a true find.” lens of James R. Benn’s masterfully crafted mysteries. The US paperback edition of Billy Boyle, the first-in-series, has —Suspense Magazine gone through several reprints in recent years due to continuing sell-through. “Captivating . . . Benn does a superb job of simultaneously capturing the personal anguish of war and creating a splendid adventure novel.” —Library Journal, Starred Review World Previous individual book sales to: For more information or a full list of publicity, please visit: Poland: Bellona S.A. http://sohopress.com/authors/james-r-benn/ #1 #2 #3 #4 Billy Boyle, a 22year-old cop from Boston, finds himself in London during the Blitz. He must catch a Norwegian spy, and proves a better detective than even he thought. Billy is to help arrange the surrender of Vichy forces in Algeria. But dissension among the army, militia, and de Gaulle’s Free French leads to multiple murders. Billy wakes up in a hospital in Sicily with amnesia. Despite this and several attempts on his life, he must fulfill his mission to enlist the head of the Sicilian Mafia for the Allies. Billy heads to Northern Ireland to find a stash of stolen weapons and to prevent the Irish Republic from joining the Axis, all with the help of a beautiful British Intelligence officer. #5 #6 #7 Billy is sent to London amidst a Luftwaffe bombing offensive to investigate the murder of a Soviet official. The crime may stem from the discovery of mass graves in the Katyn Forest. Two US officers in Caserta have been murdered, a playing card found on each body. As the invasion at Anzio begins, Billy must keep levelheaded as the killer calculates his next move. An American monsignor is killed at Death's Door, one of the entrances to St. Peter's Basilica. Billy is smuggled into neutral Vatican territory, with the secret intent of rescuing his lover. #9 #10 Just weeks before D-Day, Billy is sent to southern England to investigate an unidentified corpse that has washed ashore in a restricted training area, but hundreds of soggy corpses Flashback to 1943: Billy is summoned to the South Pacific to solve a murder. A grudge between the Boyles and politically powerful Kennedys fuels the investigation in unknown territory. 10 #8 Racism within the US Army is revealed as Billy races to stop an innocent African American soldier from being executed for a murder he didn’t commit. For more information about the author, please see the previous page. . Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights What My Body Remembers by Agnete Friis Translated from the Danish by Lindy Falk van Rooyen From an author of the New York Times bestselling Nina Borg series comes a standalone thriller, set among the troubled in Denmark. Ella has spent most of her life as a societal outcast, underserved by several foster parents and orphanages before becoming welfare-dependent. Ella has never held a real job because of unpredictable, violent anxiety attacks and a somewhat hostile attitude toward a system that has failed her. Her only goals are to get by in her dingy Copenhagen suburb without making waves and to give her twelve-year-old son, Alex, a better life than she's had. COVER COMING SOON! But when Ella has a very public breakdown and is sent to the psychiatric ward for a few days, the government threatens to take Alex from her and put him into the same foster care system that she's suffered though. Panicked, she grabs him and flees to the only place she can think of: her grandmother's abandoned house in her hometown of Klitmøller. Weather on the western coast of Denmark is windy and rough, but the move is the only way for Ella to put a roof over her head and temporarily evade social services. Returning to the small town brings Ella back to a nearly forgotten childhood and forces her to confront a family tragedy that has cast a shadow over her entire life. US publication: May 2017 World English Full English manuscript available. Praise for Agnete Friis “Packs an almighty punch.” —The New York Times Book Review, Notable Crime Book of the Year “Fans of Nordic crime fiction, rejoice: Something is rotten in Denmark. But never fear, Red Cross nurse Nina Borg is on the case . . . A wild ride.” —New York Post “Terrific . . . Once you start reading, you can’t stop.” —The Washington Post “A frightening and tautly told story of the lengths to which people will go for family and money.”—USA Today Agnete Friis has co-authored four novels in the New York Times bestselling, award-winning Nina Borg series: The Boy in the Suitcase, Invisible Murder, Death of a Nightingale, and The Considerate Killer. She currently works as a journalist in Copenhagen. 11 Marks the solo debut of a co-author of Soho Crime’s all-time bestselling series. The Boy in the Suitcase, Friis’s first Nina Borg collaboration with Lene Kaaberbøl, has been translated into 30 different languages and sold more than half a million copies worldwide. As with the internationally bestselling Nina Borg thrillers, What My Body Remembers features a captivating female protagonist, and has a strong political backbone. Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights The Second Day of the Renaissance by Timothy Williams COVER Timothy Williams’ celebrated Inspector Trotti series makes its longawaited return with a brand-new installment. COMING Northern Italy, 1990s: Inspector Piero Trotti has been called to Siena to meet with his old friend, Spadano. He is told that someone is out to kill him as revenge for events linked to a case from 1978—over a decade ago. The murder of Valerio Gracchi, a media sensation at the head of an addiction recovery center in the south called BRAMAN, remains unsolved. Gracchi had angered the Mafia with his outspoken vitriol against corruption in local politics, but no one ever claimed credit for his fatal shooting, and several key leaders at BRAMAN also benefitted from his fall. SOON! Meanwhile, Trotti meets a young African American girl named Wilma, who is searching for her father—the very same deceased Valerio Gracchi. But it seems Wilma is hiding something, and Trotti and his loved ones are drawn into a web of violence that will result enormous personal cost unless he can find Gracchi’s killer. Praise for the Inspector Trotti Novels US publication: May 2017 World English “[Williams’] simple but stylish dialogue-driven prose is convincingly Continental, his plotting impeccable.”—Time Out “Long live Trotti.”—Financial Times “Wake up and smell the grappa. Big Italy is a chilling education, a scalpelsharp exploration of Italy’s body politic. Timothy Williams knows the ABC of corruption—Andreotti, Berlusconi, Craxi—and is a convincing and compelling voice.”—Ian Rankin A new installment in a well-loved series with fantastic review coverage. Timothy Williams has won the Crime Writers’ Assocation Award and is recognized by the Observer as one of Europe’s best contemporary crime novelists. Please see the next page for more information on the Inspector Trotti novels. “Breathtakingly good.” —Evening Standard CWA award-winning author Timothy Williams has written six crime novels set in Italy featuring Commissario Piero Trotti, as well as two mysteries set on the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe (Another Sun and The Honest Folk of Guadeloupe). The Observer placed him among the ten best modern European crime novelists. Born in London and educated at St. Andrews, Williams has taught in Poitiers, France; Bari and Pavia in Italy; and at Jassy in Romania. He has lived in the French West Indies, where he teaches, since 1980. 12 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights The Inspector Trotti Novels by Timothy Williams About the Series Praise for the Inspector Trotti Novels Commissario Piero Trotti investigates crime in a small, unnamed city on the river Po in northern Italy. Set against the backdrop of the political unrest reshaping Italian cities after the “Italian miracle” of the mid20th century, the Trotti novels capture a historical moment with grace, subtlety, and authenticity. “[Williams] capture[s] the Northern Italian milieu with particular insight into the changing attitudes of its people as a younger generation discards the old traditions of family life.” —The Washington Post “A delight.” —The Observer, “10 Best Modern European Crime Writers” A wonderfully literary, atmospheric crime series set in northern “Subtle, tense and gripping” —Val McDermid Italy. Beautifully repackaged for US reissue, which has gone through multiple printings. “Commissario Trotti is clever and tough . . . His investigation is fascinating to an American reader because it offers insights into the Italian power structure, which is far more interesting than it is stable.” Accompanied by a brand-new series installment from the author. —Newsday For more information or a full list of publicity, please visit: World English Converging Parallels (#1) 1978: Commissario Trotti has two difficult cases to solve. An unidentified, dismembered body has been found in the Po, and an estranged friend’s six-year-old daughter—Trotti's own goddaughter—has been kidnapped. Following the botched investigation of the kidnapping of Aldo Moro, president of Italy’s majority party, the distraught father does not trust the police. http://sohopress.com/authors/timothy-williams/ The Puppeteer (#2) 1982: Inspector Trotti is enjoying a holiday off a northern Italian lake. He is breakfasting at a café when gunmen drive up and shoot the man sitting at the next table. Was Trotti their intended target? He isn't sure, and though case falls under the jurisdiction of the local Carabinieri, he decides to make his own inquiries. Persona Non Grata (#3) Commissario Trotti, whose colleagues are attempting to force him into an early retirement, is assigned to find the person who stabbed 11-year-old Laura Vardin as she slept in her bed. Meanwhile, an old friend asks Trotti to look into several murders that date back to World War II and the death of Trotti's only brother. Black August (#4) Winner of the CWA Award When a brutally battered corpse with a disfigured face turns out to be an old friend of Commissario Trotti’s, he joins the manhunt, despite objections from his superiors. Faced with a seemingly unsolvable mystery, Trotti must also grapple with obstructive colleagues and the problems arising in his private life. For more information about the author, please see the previous page. 13 Big Italy (#5) Commissario Trotti, again on the brink of retirement, is looking forward to a docile life of chicken farming at his lakeside villa. But as always, there are complications: A seedy private investigator begs Trotti to find the murderer of a prominent doctor, fearing for his own life, and Trotti's superiors place him at the head of a child abuse unit. Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights Cruel Is the Night by Karo Hämäläinen Translated from the Finnish by Owen F. Witesman Inspired by puzzle-mystery great Agatha Christie, prizewinning Finnish author Karo Hämäläinen (The Buyout) presents us with a comedy of murderous intentions Three cell phones ring in an opulent London suite. The calls go unanswered, because their recipients are dead. Earlier that night, four old friends and lovers meet for a reunion dinner. It's been ten years since the host, Robert, who made millions by way of unethical (but not illegal) interest rate manipulation, has seen Mikko, an investigative journalist feared by corrupt financiers and politicians. Mikko's wife, Veera—with whom Robert once had a secret affair—and Robert's young trophy wife, Elise, are also joining the fray. Mikko thinks he's about to get away with murder, but he has no idea what's on the menu for the night: not only does every diner have a bone to pick with another, but there's an arsenal of deadly weapons hiding in plain sight. And by the end of the night, there will only be one. Praise for Cruel Is the Night US publication: April 2017 “A compelling setup. The diners’ repartee and the flashbacks revealing their relationships call to mind Herman Koch’s The Dinner . . . But Hämäläinen’s novel takes things to a completely different level. The reader follows the events safely through a wall of Plexiglas, holding back laughter, yet absolutely absorbed.”—Helsingin Sanomat, Finland “QUOTE 2 TK.” —SOURCE 2 World English Full English manuscript available. Karo Hämäläinen is the recipient of several literary awards, including: The Tampere Literary Prize The Savonia Literary Prize “QUOTE 3 TK.” —SOURCE 3 Sports Book of the Year from The Sports Museum of Finland “QUOTE 4 TK.” ——SOURCE 4 Though lighthearted in tone, Cruel Is the Night has dark themes recalling Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None & Herman Koch’s The Dinner. Karo Hämäläinen’s two passions are literature and the stock market. He works as the managing editor of the leading Finnish investment magazine Arvopaperi (Securities), and as the editor-in-chief of the online literary criticism magazine Kiiltomato. His first novel, The Buyout, was awarded the Tampere Literary Prize. He now lives in Tampere, Finland. 14 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights The Works of Fuminori Nakamura The Gun (January 2016) The Kingdom (July 2016) Translated from the Japanese by Allison Markin Powell Translated from the Japanese by Kalau Almony From the moment university student Nishikawa spots the gun next to the dead man he's stumbled across on a nighttime walk, the world around him blurs. The gun—loaded with four bullets—brings an intoxicating sense of excitement to his life. But soon merely possessing the gun is not enough. He must shoot it. Yurika poses as a prostitute to blackmail her clients. Unfortunately, the organization she works for has overlapped with another syndicate run by the sadistic crime lord Kizaki. Yurika must act as a double agent in both groups to save herself. Also forthcoming from Fuminori Nakamura: The Boy in the Earth (April 2017) Translated from the Japanese by Allison Markin Powell An unnamed taxi driver has experienced a rupture from his everyday life. He cannot seem to stop thinking about suicide, envisioning himself returning to the earth in what become blackout episodes. He must entangle his own past to determine what to do next. Literary crime fiction with a philosophical bent, often compared Praise for Fuminori Nakamura with the work of Fyodor Dostoevsky and Osamu Dazai. “Crime fiction that pushes past the bounds of genre, occupying its own nightmare realm . . . Guilt or innocence is not the issue; we are corrupted, complicit, just by living in society.” Fuminori Nakamura is an award-winning, prolific young author whose first novel to be translated into English, The Thief, was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. —Los Angeles Times World English “This slim, icy, outstanding thriller, reminiscent of Muriel Spark and Patricia Highsmith, should establish Fuminori Nakamura as one of the most interesting Japanese crime novelists at work today.” Full English manuscripts of all titles available. —USA Today Previous books by the author sold to: UK: Corsair “[A] thought-provoking and unpredictable new novel by the Japanese zen-noir master Fuminori Nakamura.” About the Author Fuminori Nakamura is the winner of several literary prizes, including the Ōe Prize, Japan’s largest literary award; the David L. Goodis Award for Noir Fiction; and the prestigious Akutagawa Prize. His works include The Thief; Evil and the Mask; The Gun; Last Winter, We Parted; The Kingdom; and The Boy in the Earth. —The Wall Street Journal For more information or a full list of publicity, please visit: http://sohopress.com/authors/fuminori-nakamura/ 15 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights Bad Seeds by Jassy Mackenzie Johannesburg PI Jade de Jong has been hired by Inkomfe Nuclear Research Center's charming security director, Ryan Gillespie, to trace a missing employee after an attempted break-in at his plant. The target of her search is Carlos Botha, a security official who often clashed with Gillespie and vanished mere days after the incident. Jade traces Botha to the quiet suburb of Randfontein, but then discovers that she's not the only one looking for him—someone has put a hit out on Botha, and the two suddenly find themselves working together to escape a set of highly trained assassins. As it becomes clear that someone intends to use Inkomfe's nuclear power to heinous ends, Jade must figure out whether that someone is Botha. If she doesn't place her trust in the right person, and soon, she risks watching the world perish. COVER COMING SOON! Praise for Jassy Mackenzie “Mackenzie’s shrewd plotting is enlivened by her sharp eye for both Johannesburg’s high life and its desperate poverty.” —The Seattle Times “A terrifying ride into a world of corporate greed, potential terrorism and the ways that South Africa’s future still resonates with its brutal past.” US publication: March 2017 —Richmond Times-Dispatch World English excl. South Africa “Top-notch crime fiction . . . A terrific adventure with intrigue and a beautifully plotted mystery.” Full English manuscript available. —Crimespree Magazine “Remarkable.” Gritty, feminist South African crime fiction with a protagonist in gray moral territory. Compelling writing that will please both commercial and literary audiences. —The New York Times Book Review “A white-knuckle thriller with an utterly chilling finale.” —Tess Gerritsen, author of the Rizzoli & Isles series “Jade de Jong is a heroine to cherish: tough, passionate, and packed with enough flaws to keep her interesting.” —Sophie Littlefield, author of A Bad Day for Sorry Jassy Mackenzie was born in Rhodesia and moved to South Africa when she was eight years old. She is the author of four previous Jade de Jong novels, Random Violence, Stolen Lives, The Fallen, and Pale Horses, and she edits and writes for the annual publication Best of South Africa. 16 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights August Snow by Stephen Mack Jones Tough, smart, biracial, and struggling to stay afloat, August Snow is the embodiment of Detroit. The son of an African American father and a Mexican mother, August grew up in Detroit’s Mexicantown, joined the Detroit Police, and then was drummed out of the force and then out of town by wrongful dismissal settlement that left him $12 million and low on friends. He has just returned to the house he grew up in after a year away, and quickly learns he has lots of scores to settle. It’s not long before he’s summoned to the palatial Grosse Point Estates home of business magnate Elenore Paget. Powerful and manipulative, Paget wants August to investigate the increasingly unusual happenings at her private wealth management bank. But detective work is no longer August’s beat, and he declines the case. A day later, Paget is dead of an apparent suicide—which August doesn’t buy for a minute. What begins as an investigation into Elenore Paget’s death soon devolves into the dark worlds of off-shore banking, mercenaries with Russian prison tattoos and bloody agendas, a still-embittered Detroit Police Department painting a target on his back, an ugly case of embezzlement and a disturbing double homicide. From the wealthy suburbs to the near postapocalyptic remains of a city teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, August Snow is a fast paced tale of murder, greed, sex, economic cyber-terrorism, urban decay and race in modern Detroit. COVER COMING SOON! US publication: February 2017 World English Full English manuscript available. Stephen Mack Jones is a published poet (The Dream of Thirteen Black Women, The Atlantic Monthly), award-winning playwright (Back in the World), and recipient of the prestigious Kresge Arts in Detroit Literary Fellowship. He survived a number of years in advertising and marketing communications. Mr. Jones was born in Lansing, Michigan, and currently lives in Farmington Hills, outside of Detroit. August Snow is the first August Octavio Snow mystery. 17 One of our few Soho Crime titles set in the US, this possesses a unique cultural depth, told from the perspective of a wealthy former cop in one of America’s poorest cities. A debut author who lives and works as a playwright in Detroit, and knows the ins and outs of the city. Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights Savage Theories by Pola Oloixarac Translated from the Spanish by Roy Kesey A novel of seduction and madness, hate and love, set in the world of Argentinean academia and animated by the spirits of Wittgenstein, Rousseau, Nabokov and Bolaño. A student at the Buenos Aires School of Philosophy attempts to put her life (academically and romantically) in the service of a professor whose nearly forgotten theories of violence she plans to popularize and radicalize— against his wishes. Meanwhile, a young couple—a documentary filmmaker and a blogger—engage in a series of cerebral and sexual misadventures. In a novel crammed with philosophy, group sex, revolutionary politics, and a fighting fish named Yorick, Oloixarac leads her characters and the reader through dazzling and digressive intellectual byways to an Internet hack that confronts us with a catalog of historical violence, devastation, and atrocity throughout the centuries. Spellbinding, strange, groundbreaking, and already translated into several languages, Savage Theories is the debut of a major new voice on the world stage. Praise for Pola Oloixarac “Pola Oloixarac's prose work has proved a revelation in contemporary Argentinian fiction. Her novel is unforgettable, philosophical, brutal and extremely confident.”—Ricardo Piglia US publication: January 2017 World English “Bestselling Argentinian novelist Pola Oloixarac is part of a new generation of Latin American writers, haunted by the ghosts of Bolaño and Borges.” Full English manuscript available. —The Telegraph A brilliant debut from an acclaimed young Argentinian writer. “Clearly one of the first classics that the twenty-first century has given American literature.”—Le Monde, France “A truly unusual novel, written by an exquisite anthropologist of contemporary barbarity.”—Ignacio Echevarría “Monstrously clever and funny. Rather than a debut, this is the book many of us spend our lives attempting to write.”—Javier Calvo “A dazzling philosophical comedy.”—Dorr Mariano Pola Oloixarac is a fiction writer and essayist. Her debut novel, Las Teorías Salvajes (Savage Theories), has been translated into several languages. Her fiction was included in the 2010 collection Granta: The Best of Young Spanish Novelists, and she was a writer in residence at the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa. 18 A searingly fresh take on academia, with unbridled sex, violence, and intellectual debate. Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights The Nantucket Mysteries by Francine Mathews About the Series Massachusetts, 1990s: Nantucket is one of America’s most popular summer beach towns. But it’s not exempt to crime, and that’s why the dogged, intuitive Merry Folger joined the Nantucket police force as a detective over the objections of her father, the residing police chief. An unexpected but realistically dark take on what happens outside of peak tourist season at a vacation destination. This series is being modernized and republished for the first time in twenty years, in a lovely new paperback repackage. Francine Mathews is currently writing a brand-new installment to the series, Death in Nantucket, which will publish in the US in April 2017. World English Praise for the Nantucket Mysteries “Wonderful . . . Nantucket and its impenetrable fog and characters come to life.”—Diane Mott Davidson “A wonderful find . . . Detective Merry Folger comes across as a real person, albeit a smart one, with doubts and concerns.” —The Denver Post “Mathews uses her setting and its unique population skillfully.” —The San Diego Union-Tribune “[A] spare, atmospheric debut.” —Publishers Weekly Death in the Off-Season Death in Rough Water Death in a Mood Indigo Death in a Cold Hard Light (#1) (#2) (#3) (#4) Facing her first murder case under the skeptical eye of her overprotective police chief father, detective Merry Folger seeks the truth behind the demise of Nantucket scion Rusty Mason, discovered drowned in his family home after a ten-year stint in Brazil to avoid an insider trading indictment. Why would he return, and who would want him dead? Everyone agrees that Captain Joe Duarte's death at sea was an accident, except for his estranged daughter, Merry Folger’s friend Del, whose return fuels gossip. When Merry begins to investigate, she discovers a wake of fishy stories, threatening letters, and scandalous secrets. Two children on Sconset beach discover the skeletal remains of a woman strangled between two and ten years ago. The Massachusetts police then arrest a man they believe to be a serial strangler. Is Merry's Nantucket skeleton the killer's first victim? And do the state cops have the right man? When the murderer strikes again, he'll draw Merry into a deadly cat and mouse game in which she's the final target. Merry Folger is ready for a romantic vacation with her fiancé Peter when fate intervenes. Why was twentyone-year-old Jay Santorski, an athlete and Harvard scholar, alone in the storm-churned bay where he drowned? As Merry digs further, she is confronted at every turn by false leads and dead ends, and traces them back to police chief John Folger. For the first time, Merry begins to distrust her own father. Francine Mathews was born in Binghamton, New York, the last of six girls. She attended Princeton and Stanford Universities, where she studied history, before going on to work as an intelligence analyst at the CIA. She wrote her first book in 1992 and left the Agency a year later. Since then, she has written twenty-seven books. She lives and works in Denver, Colorado. 19 Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights Blood Crime by Sebastià Alzamora Translated from the Catalan by Martha Tennent & Maruxa Relaño Tennent It is 1936, and Barcelona burns as the Spanish Civil War takes over. The city is a bloodbath. Yet in all this death, the murders of a Marist monk and a young boy, drained of their blood, are strange enough to catch a police inspector's attention. His quest for justice is complicated by the politics, dangers, and espionage of daily life in a war zone. The Marist brothers of the murdered monk are being persecuted; meanwhile, a convent of Capuchin nuns hide in plain sight, trading favors with the military police to stay alive. In their midst is a thirteen-year-old orphan novice who stumbles into the clutches of the murderer—but can she escape in this city of no happy endings? Narrated by a vampire who thrives in the havoc of the war, this stunning multi-genre novel, inspired by the true story of a massacre in the early days of the Spanish Civil War, is a gothic reflection on the nature of monsters, in all their human forms. Praise for Blood Crime WINNER OF THE SANT JORDI PRIZE FOR CATALAN LITERATURE “A sepulchral Gothic thriller of serious and mesmerizing beauty, Blood Crime depicts a world on the edge of the abyss with a terrifying gentleness.”—Actes Sud, France “Here is a Gothic novel about a bishop in a style that has no contemporary narrative equivalent . . . An extraordinary discovery.”—Pere Gimferrer “A daring effort to make the impossible connection between vampires and the Spanish Civil War . . . Alzamora portrays anew the apocalyptic beginnings of the National Uprising, bringing together several plots at a thrilling cinematic pace.”—Reading Now, Spain, Book of the Week “A complex novel that presents a dark, seldom seen portrait of Spanish Republicans . . . An unclassifiable novel that requires time for reflection, and a second reading to fully grasp.”—Salon Littéraire, France Sebastià Alzamora i Martin was born in Mallorca and graduated with a degree in Catalan philology. He rose to prominence as a poet with the collection Rafel. Since then, he has written three more volumes of poetry and five novels. He has received numerous prizes, including the prestigious Sant Jordi Prize for Blood Crime. He is the editorial director of the Catalan magazine Cultura as well as a regular columnist for various newspapers, including Avui and Ara. He lives in Barcelona. 20 US publication: September 2016 World English Full English manuscript available. A contemporary Catalan classic by one of Barcelona’s most decorated literary talents. A beautifully literary reimagining of the Spanish Civil War, layered in metaphor and stark depictions of violence. Alzamora is available for events, and is already traveling internationally for his French and US debuts. Soho Press Rights List Phone: (212) 260-1900 Email: [email protected] Foreign Rights I Shot the Buddha by Colin Cotterill A fiendishly clever mystery in which Dr. Siri and his friends investigate three interlocking murders—and the ungodly motives behind them. Laos, 1979: Retired coroner Siri Paiboun and his wife, Madame Daeng, have never been able to turn away a misfit. As a result, they share their small Vientiane house with an assortment of homeless people, mendicants, and oddballs. One of these oddballs is Noo, a Buddhist monk, who rides out on his bicycle one day and never comes back, leaving only a cryptic note in the refrigerator: a plea to help a fellow monk escape across the Mekhong River to Thailand. Naturally, Siri can’t turn down the adventure, and soon he and his friends find themselves running afoul of Lao secret service officers and famous spiritualists. Buddhism is a powerful influence on both morals and politics in Southeast Asia. In order to exonerate an innocent man, they will have to figure out who is cloaking terrible misdeeds in religiosity. Praise for the Dr. Siri Paiboun Investigations “Laughter is a subversive weapon when you live under a repressive regime. That's the take-away lesson from Colin Cotterill's gravely funny novels set in Indochina in the 1970s.”—The New York Times Book Review “Unpredictable . . . Tragically funny and magically sublime.” US publication: August 2016 World English An award-winning series with a cult following that is always widely and well-reviewed. Features dark humor, oddball characters, and rich depictions of Laos in a moment of political upheaval. —Entertainment Weekly “This wonderful series has consistently managed to convey the beauty and sadness of this damaged country through the wisdom and humor of its protagonist.”—The Boston Globe “A gladdening complement to many mystery-reader's table . . . If you are unfamiliar with Paiboun works, it is time to crawl out of whatever cave you have been living in. This is for you.” —The Christian Science Monitor Colin Cotterill is the author of ten other books in the Dr. Siri Paiboun series: The Coroner’s Lunch, Thirty-Three Teeth, Disco for the Departed, Anarchy and Old Dogs, Curse of the Pogo Stick, The Merry Misogynist, Love Songs from a Shallow Grave, Slash and Burn, The Woman Who Wouldn’t Die, and Six and a Half Deadly Sins. His fiction has won a Dilys Award and a CWA Dagger in the Library. He lives in Chumphon, Thailand, with his wife and six deranged dogs. 21 For more information on the Dr. Siri Paiboun mysteries, please visit: http://sohopress.com/authors/colin-cotterill/