Tuesday, March 09, 2010

New Lamps for Old - Part III

And another one cleaned up and shifted from old treeware into e-bookery. This is a mystery novel, set on a wheelworld, and it features M. Gil Sivart, my homage to John D. MacDonald's Travis McGee. Thirteen years since the original publication, and enough to get me a membership in the Mystery Writers of America. The usual kind of stuff -- murder, mayhem, martial arts and a good-looking redhead ...

7 comments:

Joe said...

Nice! Thanks for this. I've been wanting so many of your books in a e-format for years now. Ever since I had got my first pocket pc. Any idea when the rights to the Matador series or the Stellar Ranger books might revert back to you? How has your foray into audio books gone? I quite enjoyed Musashi flex in that format. Let's see any more questions..... why is the sky blue?... on second thought forget that. :-)
Well best to you on future endeavors.

Steve Perry said...

Long as the book company makes an effort to keep a book in print, the clock keeps resetting. If I sell another Matador novel -- and my editor has indicated to me that she's not opposed to the notion -- then there might be life in the old book in that series.

Stellar Rangers were work-for-hire -- I wrote 'em, but I never owned 'em, they were Bill Fawcett's idea, and I assume he still owns the copyright.

Justin said...

Why a battleship, may I ask?
It's been maybe a year since I read this, but I just don't see the relationship.

Steve Perry said...

Not a battleship. See any big guns on it anywhere? Gil makes tiny ship models, and I wanted to use a sllhouette of a vessel done in a negative color.

And the silhouette, by the by, isn't of any ship that exists as such, but a composite of three vessels that I cut and pasted into one. If anythng, it looks more like an oil tanker than any kind of warship.

Justin said...

Oh, right...his model-making affinity. Thanks for clearing that up; makes perfect sense now.

I guess it just reminded me of the board game, Battleship -- more specifically, the aircraft carrier piece.

Rob Reed said...

I'm rereading my dead tree copy of The Digital Effect and that's what made me do a search and find your blog.

I know this is an old entry, but if you see this comment here's a question: Did you ever write any other books using Gil or in that setting?

I really enjoy this book and would love to read any others with Gil.

Rob

Steve Perry said...

Gil was a one-off, never got around to any more books with him.