DONALD E. WESTLAKE is dead.

BLACK BAR OF MOURNING

Aural Noir: News

Chivers Sound Library - Cops And Robbers by Donald E. WestlakeChivers Sound Library - Put A Lid On It by Donald E. WestlakeBooks On Tape - The Ax by Donald E. WestlakeChivers Sound Library - Trust Me On This by Donald E. WestlakeBooks On Tape - The Black Ice Score by Richard Stark (AKA Donald E. Westlake)

Books On Tape - Smoke by Donald E. WestlakeAudio Editions - The Fugitive Pigeon by Donald E. WestlakeBooks On Tape - Bad News by Donald E. WestlakeDurkin Hayes Audio - Tomorrow’s Crimes by Donald E. WestlakeChivers Sound Library - The Hook by Donald E. Westlake

Donald E. WestlakeDONALD E. WESTLAKE (1933 – 2008) is dead.

An Adventure Mystery, Crime, Noir, Science Fiction, Fantasy and AWESOME writer is DEAD.

And that really sucks.

A prolific, award-winning Mystery Grand Master, the creator of the well loved Dortmunder and Parker books died on New Year’s Eve 2008. He was just 75.

According to the obituary it was a sudden heart attack on New Year’s Eve 2008. He died while on vacation in San Tancho, Mexico.

Westlake was an immensely successful and influential author. Having written more than a book a year since the 1950s. He wrote fiction, in varied genres, non-fiction and even a few screenplays. Never again shall Richard Stark, Tucker Coe, Samuel Holt, Edwin West, John B. Allan, Judson Jack Carmichael, Curt Clark, Timothy J. Culver, J. Morgan Cunningham, Alan Marshall, Alan Marsh, or Donald Westlake pen another work, and for that fact alone my world is a far crappier world.

Many of the obituaries you will read about him will talk about his Edgar Award wins, acclaim for his various works, or his Academy award nominated screenplay of The Grifters (based on the awesome novel by Jim Thompson). That’s not for me. I’m here to praise his writing. Westlake was a book-writer first. He dabbled in Hollywood (and came out with some great stories) but much of his work there was really lame

Thus I will only speak of my fondness for his books. It started as a whirlwind romance… and it really was love at first sight. I was introduced to Westlake indirectly by a recommendation of a fictional character in another author’s novel. The character (Bernie Rhodenbarr) recommended I give a book by Richard Stark a try. He read just a few lines from what I at first assumed was just a fake book. But I was so entranced, from the snippets that I got curious, hopeful even. It turned out that this “Parker” character that Bernie was reading to me about was in fact a real character in a real book!

It sounded really good and so I made my way to the shelves of my local bookstore and started buying.

Soon after I was buying every book by “Richard Stark” I could lay my hands on. I even convinced my local library to try to get me an inter-library loan for an out of print and very rare (and extremely expensive) Stark novel (Plunder Squad). She had to get it from a library in the Yukon for me. I then discovered a novel in the “Parker series” written by a guy named “Westlake” – it turned out that I had the information slightly off though as Westlake was Stark and the novel in question wasn’t a real novel as much as a novel within another novel (Jimmy The Kid). So I tracked down the rest of that series (the “Dortmunder” series). Since then I came to a major conclusion about the man:

Donald Westlake wrote great books.

I’ve never read a bad Westlake chapter, I’ve never even read a bad Westlake sentence. His books on every subject and genre are full of good writing, fine entertainment and a joy for books.

Westlake is gone.

Westlake was one of my all time favourite authors.

The news that Westlake has died really pisses me off.

I sure wish Parker were around to pull off one more heist.

He was so bad he could have stolen Westlake back for us.

One Of Us Is Wrong by Samuel Holt (Donald E. Westlake)Kahawa by Donald E. WestlakeA Likely Story by Donald E. WestlakePolice Procedurals (Academy Mystery Novellas 2) includes The Sound Of Murder by Donald WestlakeTwo Much by Donald E. WestlakeThe Operator (original title: Killing Time) by Donald Westlake

The Smashers (original title: The Mercenaries) by Donald E. WestlakeGod Save The Mark by Donald E. WestlakeEnough (two novellas: A Travesty and Ordo) by Donald E. WestlakeHigh Adventure by Donald E. WestlakeMurder Among Children (written as by “Tucker Coe”) by Donald WestlakeKilling Time by Donald E. Westlake

Posted by Jesse Willis

BLACK BAR OF MOURNING

StarShipSofa No. 57 Geoff Ryman/David Brin Special

SFFaudio Online Audio

Star Ship Sofa Podcast Science Fiction Magazine

Listen Now to Aural Delights No 57 Geoff Ryman/David Brin Special mp3

Poem: Fifty Cents by Mark Rich 02:22

Blinded By The Light: Part 1 Jetes de Vries 04:22

Fact: Science News by JJ Campanella 55:15

Main Fiction: Film-Makers of Mars by Geoff Ryman 13:44

Beardie Book Review: Sean Keogh 47:54

Serial Part1of 3: Temptation by David Brin Contrary Brin 01:18:00

Narrators: Julie Davis, Diane Severson Geoff Ryman

Link to Tor.comSubscribe to the podcast via this feed:

http://www.starshipsofa.com/rss

Posted by Tony C. Smith

Yabba Habba – The Subtle Knife

SFFaudio Online Audio

BBC Radio 7 - BBC7 The Subtle Knife
His Dark Materials – 2 of 3
By Phillip Pullman
Dramatized by Lavinia Murray
Saturday January 3
9am, 8pm and 3am GMT

Full cast audioplay: Philip Pullman‘s award winning epic trilogy continues. 12 year-old Will escapes Oxford into the parallel world of Cittagazze, where he meets Lyra. Together they acquire the most powerful weapon in all the Universes – The Subtle Knife. With Emma Fielding and Ray Fearon.

BBC7 | The Subtle Knife | Schedules (stays online for 6 days)

Listen to part one, Northern Lights (The Golden Compass), here through Friday January 2.

Posted by RC of Radio Tales of the Strange & Fantastic

The Agony Column Interviews Jeremy Lassen (Night Shade Books)

SFFaudio Online Audio

The Agony Column The Agony Column interviews Jeremy Lassen of Night Shade Books on Eclipse 2 |MP3|

You can subscribe to the feed at this URL:

http://bookotron.com/agony/indexes/tac_podcast.xml

Posted by Charles Tan

The SFFaudio Podcast #018

Podcast

The SFFaudio PodcastThe SFFaudio Podcast #018 – a podcast about audiobooks, audio drama, History and most of all mutiny! This is mutiny mister!

Talked about on today’s show:
One way to get around DRM (swapping iPods), Blackstone Audio arrivals, The Selected Stories Of Philip K. Dick Volume 1, The Selected Stories Of Philip K. Dick Volume 2, X-Minus One: Colony, The Days Of Perky Pat, Alpha, Catherine Asaro, Inferno, Larry Niven, Jerry Pournelle, New Releases, Starship: Rebel, Mike Resnick, Allen Steele, Coyote, Wayne June, The Strange Case Of Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde, audio drama of The Maltese Falcon, Yuri Rasovsky, The Three Stigmata Of Palmer Eldritch, The Sacred Book Of The Werewolf, Victor Pelevin, Canadia: 2056 – Season 2, Matt Watts, Steve The First, Steve The Second, sez Scott: ‘Matt Watt’s stuff is way better than Red Dwarf, Matt Watt’s blog entry on Canadia: 2056, Nova Swing, M. John Harrison, Tantor Media, The Steel Remains, Richard K. Morgan, Replay, Ken Grimwood, Sherlock Holmes Was Wrong: Reopening the Case of the Hound of the Baskervilles, Pierre Bayard, Pandora’s Star, Peter F. Hamilton, The DIY Scholar Blog, Stephen Pott’s UCSD Literature Of The World course on Science Fiction, LibriVox’s release of Uller Uprising, H. Beam Piper, the Sepoy Mutiny, 1984, George Orwell, what’s wrong with writers today (their works are not inspired by History), Mike Resnick’s the exception to this rule.

Posted by Jesse Willis

LibriVox: Uller Uprising by H. Beam Piper

SFFaudio Online Audio

In The SFFaudio Podcast #017 I went on a little rant about why so much of the Fantasy fiction written today sucks (half of my idea for which was that a distinct lack of history informs today’s bad Fantasy). Here is an SF novel that embraces History (as much of good SF does). Whether Uller Uprising is good SF, or not, is now for the the listener to decide…

LibriVox Science Fiction Audiobook - Uller Uprising by H. Beam PiperUller Uprising
By H. Beam Piper; Read by various
16 Zipped MP3 Files or Podcast – Approx. 5 Hours 8 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher: LibriVox.org
Published: December 24, 2008
Uller Uprising is the story of a confrontation between a human overlord and alien servants, with an ironic twist at the end. Like most of Piper’s best work, Uller Uprising is modeled after an actual event in human history; in this case the Sepoy Mutiny (a Bengal uprising in British-held India brought about when rumors were spread to native soldiers that cartridges being issued by the British were coated with animal fat. The rebellion quickly spread throughout India and led to the massacre of the British Colony at Cawnpore.). Piper’s novel is not a mere retelling of the Indian Mutiny, but rather an analysis of an historical event applied to a similar situation in the far future.

Podcast feed:

http://librivox.org/bookfeeds/uller-uprising-by-h-beam-piper.xml

Posted by Jesse Willis