FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Award-winning author Gary Phillips put his own mark on the Private Eye genre with his creation of Nate Hollis. Originally a comic character, Nate made the transition to prose and to Pro Se Productions in HOLLIS, P.I. Hollis returns in a brand new collection set to debut December 13. GARY PHILLIPS’ HOLLIS FOR HIRE is now available for pre-order in digital format.
New York Times bestseller Sara Paretsky, Edgar winner Naomi Hirahara, Deadly Ink nominee Sarah M. Chen, hardboiled adept Scott Adlerberg, and new pulpster Phillip Drayer Duncan along with Hollis’ creator and Anthony Award Winner Gary Phillips (Black Pulp, Peepland) deliver tales of a P.I. who Kevin Burton Smith in Mystery Scene magazine called “Slick as spit, big-shouldered Hollis walks the walk and talks the talk…” This edition also includes two previously published Hollis stories by Phillips, “King Cow” and “Hollywood Killer.”
GARY PHILLIPS’ HOLLIS FOR HIRE, featuring a great cover by Jeffrey Hayes and digital formatting by Antonino Lo Iacono and Marzia Marina, is available for pre-order in ebook format for $2.99 at https://www.amazon.com/Gary-Phillips-Hollis-Hire-ebook/dp/B07L2HQCVW/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1543971249&sr=8-1&keywords=hollis+for+hire.
Both the print and digital copies will be available on December 13th, 2018 via Amazon and the Pro Se store at www.prose-press.com.
Showing posts with label Hollis P.I.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hollis P.I.. Show all posts
Sunday, December 9, 2018
GARY PHILLIPS’ HARD BOILED DETECTIVE RETURNS TO GRITTY ACTION IN ‘HOLLIS FOR HIRE’ NOW AVAILABLE FOR DIGITAL PRE ORDER!
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
Bobby Nash: Coming Out the Other Side Stronger
If you've followed this blog for any time at all,the name of Bobby Nash will not be unfamiliar to you. Bobby's not only a prolific and gifted writer but also a good friend. As we hadn't really focused on him and his latest work, it only seemed right and proper to do so now.
Tell us a bit about your latest work.
My latest prose release is Gary Phillips’ Hollis P.I., a hard-boiled
detective anthology from Pro Se Productions featuring Gary’s Nate Hollis
character. Nate first saw print at DC’s Vertigo in the Angeltown mini
series. My story in this collection is called “Naomi” and has Nate
trying to find out who murdered a young woman and why. His search takes
him into some dark places.
You can find Gary Phillips’ Hollis P.I. at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Smashwords, and more.
Pro Se’s website: http://prose-press.com/
Links:
My
latest comic book release is the Operation: Silver Moon graphic novel
published by BEN Books. Written by me, with art by the amazing Rick
Johnson, Operation: Silver Moon is the story of secret agent Tom Lupis
(not his real name) who happens to be a werewolf. Agent Lupis goes
behind enemy lines during World War II teaming up with a vampire lord to
stop a power mad Nazi general from unleashing hell on Earth with a
recently discovered ancient weapon. Rick and I have plans to do more
stories with these characters.
You can find Operation: Silver Moon at Amazon, Barnes and Noble.
The official website: http://operationsilvermoon.blogspot.com.
Links:
What are the themes and subjects you tend to revisit in your work?
I like to see characters overcome obstacles and come out the other side
stronger. I also like to write about family, whether it’s the one
you’re born into or the one you create around yourself. I like to play
with interpersonal relations. I also like to blow things up and kill
people, in literary realms only, of course.
I
also like a good mystery thriller so that always seems to mix into
whatever genre I’m writing. There’s almost always a hit of a thriller in
there.
What would be your dream project?
I want to write The Fantastic Four comic book for Marvel one day.
If you have any former project to do over to make it better, which one would it be, and what would you do?
Tough question. I don’t have a good answer. Every project has at least
one thing I wish I could change, but I prefer to look forward and not
back. Once the story is done and published, I don’t want to look back
and wonder if I could re-do it better. I’d rather look to the next
project and see if I can tell that story better.
What inspires you to write?
Stories continue to pop into my head. If I didn’t write them down, they
would keep coming. At least this way I can share them and hopefully
entertain others with them. Having a reader tell me he or she enjoyed
something I wrote is an amazing thing. It makes the long hours I put
into writing worth it.
What writers have influenced your style and technique?
I want to be Sean Taylor when I grow up.
In all seriousness (first time for everything), I am influenced by a little bit of everything. It can be an overheard conversation, people I see at a restaurant, even a bill waiting for me in the mailbox. All of these things help kickstart the part of my brain where creativity begins.
In all seriousness (first time for everything), I am influenced by a little bit of everything. It can be an overheard conversation, people I see at a restaurant, even a bill waiting for me in the mailbox. All of these things help kickstart the part of my brain where creativity begins.
I’m
also certainly influenced by other writers. I learn so much from seeing
how others craft their tales, the decisions they make in storytelling,
they way they market their work, even the way they interact with their
fans and readers. I’ve learned so much from watching others. Just not…
you know… in a stalker-ish kind of way.
Where would you rank writing on the "Is it an art or it is a science continuum?" Why?
While there is a science to writing, I think the storytelling aspect
definitely springs from the art side. I don’t use a formula for creating
stories. They sometimes come to me in fragments, other times fully
formed, and sometimes I don’t realize until later that separate ideas
are actually part of the same story. That’s not very scientific, in my
mind.
Any other upcoming projects you would like to plug?
Well, if you insist. 2015 is already off to a good start. I don’t have specific dates for these yet, but here are some books to be on the look out for in 2015:
Prose: Snow Storm, Alexandra
Holzer’s Ghost Gal: A Haunting We Will Go…, V-Wars vol. 5, The Big Bad
II: Another Anthology of Evil, The Ruby Files Vol. 2, Evil Intent,
Deadly Deals! (maybe 2016), Blood Shot, Pro Se Signature Series -
Freelancer: The Traveler Sanction, an as yet untitled Nightscape novel
(I believe some guy named Taylor is also involved with this one), and a
few others I’m sure I’ve forgotten or simply can’t talk about yet.
Comics:
the graphic novel adaptation of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ At The Earth’s
Core (art by Jamie Chase) is slated for September, I believe. Domino
Lady Threesome (a new team-up series I’m co-writing with Nancy Holder
with art by Marco Santiago and others) begins in 2015. Strong Will
(co-written with Mike Gordon with art by Wendell Cavalcanti and Rob
Jones), All-Star Pulp Comics #3 (a Lance Star: Sky Ranger story with art
by Rock Baker and Jeff Austin), and a few others are in the works.
Film: Camp Massacre (the movie formerly known as Fat Chance) will be out on DVD March 2015.
Yeah. Looks like a busy year ahead of me.
You can keep up with the progress and release dates for all of these projects and more at www.bobbynash.com
Tuesday, February 10, 2015
Gary Phillips -- The Pulpster Soul of Angeltown
I should have known Gary Phillips and his work for a lot longer. I really, really should have. After all, I've been a fan of both noir and the Vertigo imprint for years, and Gary blended the two seamlessly in his neo-classic comic book series Angeltown. But alas, I came late to the party. In an effort to keep you from the same fate, here's Gary to introduce his work to you.
Tell us a bit about your latest work.
I’m very happy with my latest, a collection of six original short stories featuring Nate Hollis, a modern day, rough and tumble private eye in the big, bad City of Angels, Los Angeles. He began in comics a few years back for a DC/Vertigo miniseries, Angeltown. In fact that sequential effort was collected under one volume brought out by Moonstone.
But this new prose anthology from our friends at Pro Se, Hollis, P.I., has two new stories by me, one of them featuring not Nate but his sometimes rival, the bounty hunter Irma Ducett, aka Irma Deuce. But my buddy, New York Times bestseller Juliet Blackwell (the Witchcraft Mystery series) wrote a Hollis story, as did acclaimed young crime writer Aaron Philip Clark (A Healthy Fear of Man) and new pulp heavyweights Bobby Nash (Domino Lady: Money Shot) and Derrick Ferguson (Four Bullets for Dillon).
What are the themes and subjects you tend to revisit in your work?
I think genre and so-called mainstream writers wrestle with themes of redemption and sacrifice, selfishness and obsessions. That all of us are capable of both good and bad, that there are days we might engage in both in big or small way and though writing fiction we capture the big acts in our characters.
What would be your dream project?
Writing the short story, novel, graphic novel, radio script and screenplay, each chronicling a part of the overall adventure of one of my characters – one big story arc across those various mediums.
If you have any former project to do over to make it better, which one would it be, and what would you do?
If I could do a reboot of my first novel, Violent Spring, which introduced my other private eye character, Ivan Monk, back in the ‘90s, that’s the one I’d like to write over. Since I wrote that book I think I’ve gotten a better handle on how a mystery should flow, unfold, and sharper dialogue.
What inspires you to write?
Writing is therapy. If I can’t write or think about what I want to write, I’d go nuts. I guess then keeping what passes for my mental health keeps me writing.
What writers have influenced your style and technique?
The one that always come to mind are Dashiell Hammett, Richard Wright, Ross Macdonald and Jack Kirby – I mean, the King did write but it was his visuals that inspired me to want to write and draw comics that set me on the road to prose.
Where would you rank writing on the "Is it an art or it is a science continuum?" Why?
That’s an interesting question. I teach in a MFA writing program part-time. As I’m the genre guy, I get those who either write that stuff or want to try their hand at it from writing the supposed mainstream work. As Raymond Chandler advised long ago, there are only something like 8 or 9 plots when you boil it all down. Then you figure the human factor; greed, lust, guilt, and so on. We know too a mystery or crime novel or pulp demands certain convention yet you also know you have to make it fresh, somehow different enough so the reader comes away entertained and dare I say, possibly even think about the work afterward.. Now with the aforementioned in mind, since I have to take apart my student’s work and explain what works and what doesn’t, it has forced me to be more critical of what I write.
Part of that can be broken down into an equation, x amount of action versus introspection, how much narrative versus dialogue. But each story is its own thing, so we also know conventions are made to be broken and should be routinely in writing. The story’s pace and flow emerges and takes us along and that’s the trick, that’s the art; doe sit feel like it works the way you’ve written the tale?
Any other upcoming projects you would like to plug?
I have a short story, “Bulletville” in the, wait for it, 50 Shades of a Gray Fedora anthology out in e-book initially this February from the newly formed Dagger imprint of Riverdale Avenue Books to capitalize of the infamous 50 Shades movie version also debuting in February. In March, will have out Day of the Destroyers. This is a linked anthology I edited featuring Jimmie Flint, Secret Agent X-11 as he battles coup plotters out to overthrow FDR. The Green Lama,. the Phantom Detective and the Black Bat guest star. In hardback and trade paperback from Moonstone.
And since I’m plugging, for more of my work, folks can check out my website at: www.gdphillips.com.
Tell us a bit about your latest work.
I’m very happy with my latest, a collection of six original short stories featuring Nate Hollis, a modern day, rough and tumble private eye in the big, bad City of Angels, Los Angeles. He began in comics a few years back for a DC/Vertigo miniseries, Angeltown. In fact that sequential effort was collected under one volume brought out by Moonstone.
But this new prose anthology from our friends at Pro Se, Hollis, P.I., has two new stories by me, one of them featuring not Nate but his sometimes rival, the bounty hunter Irma Ducett, aka Irma Deuce. But my buddy, New York Times bestseller Juliet Blackwell (the Witchcraft Mystery series) wrote a Hollis story, as did acclaimed young crime writer Aaron Philip Clark (A Healthy Fear of Man) and new pulp heavyweights Bobby Nash (Domino Lady: Money Shot) and Derrick Ferguson (Four Bullets for Dillon).
What are the themes and subjects you tend to revisit in your work?
I think genre and so-called mainstream writers wrestle with themes of redemption and sacrifice, selfishness and obsessions. That all of us are capable of both good and bad, that there are days we might engage in both in big or small way and though writing fiction we capture the big acts in our characters.
What would be your dream project?
Writing the short story, novel, graphic novel, radio script and screenplay, each chronicling a part of the overall adventure of one of my characters – one big story arc across those various mediums.
If you have any former project to do over to make it better, which one would it be, and what would you do?
If I could do a reboot of my first novel, Violent Spring, which introduced my other private eye character, Ivan Monk, back in the ‘90s, that’s the one I’d like to write over. Since I wrote that book I think I’ve gotten a better handle on how a mystery should flow, unfold, and sharper dialogue.
What inspires you to write?
Writing is therapy. If I can’t write or think about what I want to write, I’d go nuts. I guess then keeping what passes for my mental health keeps me writing.
What writers have influenced your style and technique?
The one that always come to mind are Dashiell Hammett, Richard Wright, Ross Macdonald and Jack Kirby – I mean, the King did write but it was his visuals that inspired me to want to write and draw comics that set me on the road to prose.
Where would you rank writing on the "Is it an art or it is a science continuum?" Why?
That’s an interesting question. I teach in a MFA writing program part-time. As I’m the genre guy, I get those who either write that stuff or want to try their hand at it from writing the supposed mainstream work. As Raymond Chandler advised long ago, there are only something like 8 or 9 plots when you boil it all down. Then you figure the human factor; greed, lust, guilt, and so on. We know too a mystery or crime novel or pulp demands certain convention yet you also know you have to make it fresh, somehow different enough so the reader comes away entertained and dare I say, possibly even think about the work afterward.. Now with the aforementioned in mind, since I have to take apart my student’s work and explain what works and what doesn’t, it has forced me to be more critical of what I write.
Part of that can be broken down into an equation, x amount of action versus introspection, how much narrative versus dialogue. But each story is its own thing, so we also know conventions are made to be broken and should be routinely in writing. The story’s pace and flow emerges and takes us along and that’s the trick, that’s the art; doe sit feel like it works the way you’ve written the tale?
Any other upcoming projects you would like to plug?
I have a short story, “Bulletville” in the, wait for it, 50 Shades of a Gray Fedora anthology out in e-book initially this February from the newly formed Dagger imprint of Riverdale Avenue Books to capitalize of the infamous 50 Shades movie version also debuting in February. In March, will have out Day of the Destroyers. This is a linked anthology I edited featuring Jimmie Flint, Secret Agent X-11 as he battles coup plotters out to overthrow FDR. The Green Lama,. the Phantom Detective and the Black Bat guest star. In hardback and trade paperback from Moonstone.
And since I’m plugging, for more of my work, folks can check out my website at: www.gdphillips.com.
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