Originally posted by brlesh
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I appreciate all of the tips of Piccirilli's output, thank you all! I have all three of the titles mentioned here by you both Ron & brlesh, I can't wait to dig in a bit....
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Originally posted by Chuggers View Post
Man that's unfortunate, he truly has a magnificent voice. I'll be looking for some of those collections, I appreciate the response Ron
It was released in the late 90’s or early 2000’s, and it was a huge collection of over 40 stories and well over 500 pages.
I believe it pretty much collected all of his published fiction up to that time.
I don’t know what the going cost is on the secondary market, as this is long out of print and the publisher (Terminal Frights) is also long gone.
Probably more horror oriented, as that was where Tom cut his teeth in the publishing business, but still a little bit of his earlier crime fiction too.
DITDP provides a fascinating glimpse into the beginning of a very talented writer whose career was cut way too short.
Highly recommended if you can track down a copy.
B
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Originally posted by Chuggers View Post
That's interesting Ron, I'm currently reading Fuckin' Lie Down Already by T. Piccirilli and it's brutal and grim and I'm loving every second. I've not read much else by him but that's changing immediately. Did they ever collect those "noirellas" in physical copies?
As I recall (it’s probably been 15 years since I’ve read it), The Fever Kill was a very fast paced story written in a similar noirish / crime drama tone as FLDA.
Definitely two of my favorite pieces from Piccirilli.
B
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Originally posted by Chuggers View PostThere's a preview/sample in the back of the copy of FLDA for a novel entitled The Last Kind Words, a mafia story it seems....his prose is incredible there as well. Has anyone read that one?
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There's a preview/sample in the back of the copy of FLDA for a novel entitled The Last Kind Words, a mafia story it seems....his prose is incredible there as well. Has anyone read that one?
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Originally posted by Sock Monkey View Post
Man, I've had a lettered copy of Bad Dog on my shelf for a long time now. I keep meaning to give it a read. Every time I do, though, I remember the last book I read from him years ago called The Dead Letters, which from my memory dipped into some ridiculous moments and kinda turned me off from his stuff. Your recommendation to Chuggers has got me tempted to give it go once I get through the two other books I'm working on.
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Originally posted by Sock Monkey View Post
I've been trying to work more crime fiction into my reading to help break up the horror, expand those horizons, so to speak. Right now, I'm working my way through The Black Dahlia by Ellroy and liking it quite a bit.
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Originally posted by RonClinton View Post
I haven't read THE DEAD LETTERS, but if memory serves, that's one of the novels he wrote during his transition from horror writer to crime writer (generally speaking), so it's kind of a hybrid, IIRC. For my money, Tom was best when he stayed focused in his lane, either horror or crime...his few mash-ups are less satisfying, I find. I'm really taken with his aforementioned noirellas, but his crime pbos THE COLD SPOT and THE COLDEST MILE are terrific, and his Terrier Rand crime duo is also quite good. Some of his other more straightforward mysteries, cozies, and mash-ups just didn't hit me the same. I find it amazing that the same author who wrote such stripped down, dark novels like the COLD duo was also responsible for the dense, fantastical stories of his unnamed Necromancer and his demonic familiar "Self"...quite a transition, and it shows a writer of tremendous versatility with skill to pull it off.
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Originally posted by Sock Monkey View Post
Man, I've had a lettered copy of Bad Dog on my shelf for a long time now. I keep meaning to give it a read. Every time I do, though, I remember the last book I read from him years ago called The Dead Letters, which from my memory dipped into some ridiculous moments and kinda turned me off from his stuff. Your recommendation to Chuggers has got me tempted to give it go once I get through the two other books I'm working on.
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Originally posted by RonClinton View Post
You bet. Btw, if you're after more of his crime fiction than his horror stuff, his Cemetery Dance collection BAD DOG -- subtitled "Collected Crime Stories" -- is the way to go.
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Originally posted by RonClinton View Post
You bet. Btw, if you're after more of his crime fiction than his horror stuff, his Cemetery Dance collection BAD DOG -- subtitled "Collected Crime Stories" -- is the way to go.
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Originally posted by Chuggers View Post
Man that's unfortunate, he truly has a magnificent voice. I'll be looking for some of those collections, I appreciate the response Ron
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Originally posted by RonClinton View Post
FLDA was collected in one of his collections, either BAD DOG or FUTILE EFFORTS, can't recall which, but unfortunately there isn't an omnibus that collects his noirellas, and I'm not even sure the others (four? five?) ever received a reprint. Unfortunately, and like too many authors, once they pass on and there's no one around to champion their work, new releases tend to grind to a halt, and that seems to have left his noirellas orphaned with just their original appearance. A shame, because they're great. What missed potential for Tom and his career and his readers...just when he had finally found his voice in crime fiction, with a number of really praise-worthy releases, he was stricken down...very sad on a number of levels. Plus, in my limited interactions with him, he was a helluva nice guy.
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Originally posted by Chuggers View Post
That's interesting Ron, I'm currently reading Fuckin' Lie Down Already by T. Piccirilli and it's brutal and grim and I'm loving every second. I've not read much else by him but that's changing immediately. Did they ever collect those "noirellas" in physical copies?
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