All stories relating to Terry Griggs
Comments Off
Death to critics
Over the past few weeks, the Ontario-based publisher Biblioasis has been running a contest called Revenge Lit, in which authors were invited to submit 250-word tales about the murder of a literary critic. (The contest was created to promote Terry Griggs’ new mystery novel Thought You Were Dead, which kicks off with a freelance critic meeting an untimely demise.) The winner hasn’t been chosen as of yet, but all of the submissions have been posted online.
Some of the stories are essentially just venting, but others display moments of solid inspiration. Virginia Winters’ untitled piece wins the prize for best opening line: “The [chalk] outline looked like his ego: bloated, empty, one accusing hand outstretched.” We also liked the basic idea behind Charles Schaeffer’s “Leaping to Conclusions,” which posits that John Wilkes Booth wasn’t actually aiming to shoot Lincoln, but a New York Times critic one box over.
Two of the strongest entries, however, belong to RW Morgan and Ken Duffin. From Morgan’s “Little Guys Don’t Count”:
“Why are you so upset with me?”
Was he dense? “You wouldn’t review the book! We can’t get into the stores now. She’s the best author we ever published – we put everything we had into it. I know we’re a small company, but you could have at least looked at it. We’re ruined!”
“It’s not just me. All reviewers do the same thing. A book needs to fit our standards [...] We look at the size of the publisher, the amount of money spent on promotions, the number of booked interviews, the scope of the campaign. We try to weigh the potential impact on the media. It’s a calculated strategy.”
I pulled out my tape measure. I was ready. Woody sounded concerned for the first time. I think he finally got it. “What are you measuring?”
“Your coffin.”
And from Duffin’s “The Tell-Tale Parts”:
“Byron Lunquist,” he called out. “I’m arresting you for the murder of Julius Pinkle.” Lunquist, clad only in pajama bottoms and tanning ointment, asked the sergeant what had given it away.
“Pinkle was sporting radioactive dye in his nether bits. He’d had a scan the day before. Your dog’s wearing the evidence,” he said. “Plus,” he noted, pointing to the nicely decorated spruce, “you’ve used Pinkle’s head as a tree topper.”
It was safe to say that the Sergeant could appreciate symbolism and irony as much as the next guy.
Comments Off
Richard Poplak and more in the May Q&Q
Jet-setting author Richard Poplak travelled to 17 different countries to research his latest book, which looks at the influence of American pop culture in the Muslim world, and he’s Q&Q’s cover subject in the May 2009 issue. Also in the issue, we look at the surprising success of Harlequin Enterprises at 60 and at how print-on-demand is changing the bookstore of the future. Our Library Special Report examines the tricky task of putting Canada’s archival history online. Plus reviews of new books by Colin McAdam, Emily Schultz, Giles Blunt, Lynn Johnston, Barry Callaghan, and more.
Pop goes the world
Richard Poplak bets that tawdry TV and banal bubblegum can bring cultures together
Print-on-demand: The dream and the reality
The bookstore of the future, and why POD machines are waiting for books in the present
Love wins out
While other major publishers are bleeding money, Harlequin Enterprises is raking it in. How the firm has managed to beat the odds
History, bit by bit
What’s the best way to put our national heritage online?
AND MORE IN THE LIBRARY SPECIAL REPORT: Coping with rising patron demand, and learning to LOL at the reference desk
FRONTMATTER
- Ninety minutes with Stuart Ross
- Comedy is easy, kidlit is hard
- The adventures of Pierre Turgeon: a timeline
- Cover to Cover: Lauren Kirshner’s Where We Have to Go
- Snapshot: Alexandra Moore of Word on the Street
- Breakwater unbroken
- David Bezmozgis moves from control to collaboration
REVIEWS
- Heaven Is Small by Emily Schultz
- Though You Were Dead by Terry Griggs
- The English Stories by Cynthia Flood
- Plus more fiction, non-fiction, and poetry
BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
- Dance Baby Dance by Andrea Spalding
- Dracula Madness by Mary Labatt and Jo Rioux
- Soccer Sabotage by Liam O’Donnell and Mike Deas
- Swim the Fly by Don Calame
- Plus more fiction, non-fiction, and picture books
THE Q&Q/BOOKNET CANADA BESTSELLERS
THE LAST WORD
Lesley Choyce does the math on three decades in writing



















podcast

Recent comments