Lange wrote eight books between
1966 and 1972… and then vanished. The books became unavailable for decades; pulp
collectors would sometimes pay hundreds of dollars for used copies. [His
breakout novel was The Andromeda Strain
under his own name (1969); then followed The
Terminal Man (72), The Great Train
Robbery (75), Eaters of the Dead
(76), Congo (80), Sphere (87) and Jurassic Park (90) and so on; he became one of those authors whose every book seemed to be turned into a movie.]
Then, forty years after “John
Lange” was conceived, Michael Crichton chose Hard Case Crime to bring him back,
personally re-editing two of the Lange books, even writing new chapters for one
of them (Zero Cool) – all still under
the cloak of the Lange identity. This project was interrupted by the author’s
unexpected death from cancer in 2008, just months after the second revived
Lange novel hit bookstores.
Now Hard Case Crime announces it
will bring all of John Lange’s work back into print for the first time in
decades – and the first time ever under the Michael Crichton name. Due for release
this month (October 2013), featuring gorgeous painted cover art by Gregory
Manchess and Glen Orbik, the eight John Lange novels are:
Odds
On (1966): The perfect heist, planned by computer, in a luxury hotel off
the coast of Spain.
Scratch
One (1967): On the French Riviera, a case of mistaken identity could cost
an American lawyer his life when a group of international assassins confuse him
for the secret agent sent to take them down.
Easy
Go (1968): Can an Egyptologist and his band of thieves find a lost tomb
buried for centuries in the desert – and get away with its treasure?
Zero
Cool (1969): An American doctor vacationing in Europe gets caught between
rival criminal gangs who both demand his help to find a legendary gem. [Note the paperback the lady's reading - it's Grave Descend, see below...]
The
Venom Business (1970): An expert on venomous snakes and smuggler of rare
artefacts accepts an assignment working as a bodyguard to a man everyone wants
dead.
Drug
of Choice (1970): Bio-engineers at a secret island resort promise pleasures
beyond imagination – but what’s the secret behind the strange drug they’ve
created?
Binary
(1972): A terrorist mastermind and a federal agent wage a battle of wits and of
nerve when the villain plots to unleash poison gas on San Diego, killing a
million people… including the President of the United States.
The books are also being offered in
e-book editions (without the Manchess and Orbik cover art) by Open Road
Integrated Media.
About Hard Case Crime
Hard Case Crime has been nominated for or won numerous honours since its inception in 2004, including the Edgar, the Shamus, the Anthony, the Barry, and the Spinetingler Award. Big author names such as Stephen King, Lawrence Block, Donald E. Westlake, Arthur Conan Doyle, Harlan Ellison, James M. Cain, Ken Bruen, John Farris, Robert Silverberg, Robert Bloch, Cornell Woolrich, David Gaddis, Alan Guthrie, and David Dodge rub shoulders with new authors in the ever-growing Hard Case Crime line-up. The series’ books have been adapted for television and film, with two features currently in development at Universal Pictures, a TV pilot based on Max Allan Collins’ Quarry novels in production for Cinemax, and the TV series Haven going into its fourth season this fall on SyFy. Hard Case Crime is published through a collaboration between Winterfall LLC and Titan Publishing Group. http://www.hardcasecrime.com
About
Titan Publishing Group
Titan Publishing Group is an
independently owned publishing company, established in 1981, comprising three
divisions: Titan Books, Titan Magazines/Comics and Titan Merchandise. Titan
Books, nominated as Independent Publisher of the Year 2011, has a rapidly
growing fiction list encompassing original fiction and reissues, primarily in
the areas of science fiction, fantasy, horror, steampunk and crime. Recent
crime and thriller acquisitions include Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins’
all-new Mike Hammer novels, the Matt Helm series by Donald Hamilton, and the
entire backlist of the Queen of Spy Writers, Helen MacInnes. Titan Books also
has an extensive line of media- and pop culture-related non-fiction, graphic
novels, and art and music books. The company is based at offices in London, but
operates worldwide, with sales and distribution in the U.S. and Canada being
handled by Random House. http://www.titanbooks.com
2 comments:
The covers on those are great. I have a couple of Lawrence Block ones they republished that really got me into reading his work.
I agree, Pat. Most of the Hard Case capture the mood of the old pulp paperbacks - striking, colourful, good on the eye.
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