Showing posts with label gary ruffin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gary ruffin. Show all posts

Monday, August 16, 2010

The writing of Hot Shot: Gary Ruffin's AJC Profile

Every once in a while, we come upon a story that is truly inspiring. For us at Overlook, that was the story of Gary Ruffin, whose first book, HOT SHOT, came out last week.

But our tiny "about the author" sections and space-constrained posts here (you might remember Gary from this one) can't possibly describe the full story of how Gary survived a brain tumor and wrote Hot Shot. For that, we have this fantastic profile that recently appeared in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Here's our favorite excerpt from the article, but we definitely encourage you to head over to the AJC website and read the whole thing. Monday mornings can be discouraging--this story is the opposite.

In 2001, Ruffin was diagnosed with a benign brain tumor the size of a plum. Surgery saved his life but left him with a slew of disabilities. For nearly a decade, he has lived with double vision, fainting spells and an inability to swallow properly. He can't eat or drink and must absorb nutrients through a feeding tube.

In addition, he can no longer play guitar or sing in public, a painful reality for a working musician since age 12. But he doesn't complain. That's not his style.

"I miss it, but it's one of those crying-over-spilled-milk deals," he says. "You have to move on and concentrate on the things you can do."

Like writing.

On Sunday, Ruffin will have an informal book-signing of his first novel, "Hot Shot," a detective mystery. Part of a three-book deal with Overlook Press, "Hot Shot" is the story of a man who has had it easy for a long time, then gets slapped in the face with difficult situations. It sounds like Ruffin's life.

In 2002, Debra Rivard, a friend of Ruffin's and an English literature teacher in Indianapolis, told him he had a knack for writing and suggested he pen a book about his brain surgery.

"I just felt that if he started writing about his experience, it would be a catharsis to him and an inspiration to others," Rivard said. "He never groveled in self-pity. He just accepted his fate and even made fun of his Chewbacca voice."

Ruffin wrote a few pages about the surgery, then gave up.

"I realized it was depressing as all hell," he says. "It was difficult to tell my story without sounding like I was complaining."

The full article is definitely worth a read. You can learn more about Gary by checking out the previous coverage here on the Winged Elephant, and coming back for updates. Have a fantastic week!

Monday, August 02, 2010

Gary Ruffin's HOT SHOT: A Tale of Murder and Mayhem on the Florida Beaches

Arriving in stores this week is Hot Shot, a humorous and fast-paced new mystery from a promising new voice in crime fiction.

Musician and debut novelist Gary Ruffin brings both the evocative small-town atmosphere of James Lee Burke’s best mysteries and side-splitting humor of Carl Hiassen’s brilliant stories of his beloved Floridians. Along with the memorable Coop, the lone detective on the Gulf Front, Florida police force, Hot Shot offers an unforgettable cast of quirky characters, including Mafia men Joey Carrabba and Don Carmine, Louisiana Senator Harry James Quitman, and the beautiful Special Agent Shelley Brooke – Coop’s love interest. From the Florida beaches, to the shores of Gulf Coast Alabama, and all the way to the city of New Orleans, Hot Shot is a rollicking thrill-ride.

Author Gary Ruffin was born and raised outside of Atlanta, GA. His early career as singer, songwriter and guitar player with the progressive rock band Smoke Rise culminated with the first American Rock Opera, Survival of St. Joan (1970), to be staged on Broadway. He was contracted to write 8 songs for James Brown but they were never produced before his death. Gary also wrote and helped direct some of the first country videos (12 Pack and Two Steppin’ Out On Me). After battling a series of illnesses, and “technically dying,” Gary had an operation to remove a brain tumor and had a tracheotomy and has been on a feeding tube for eight years. Continuing to overcome all his challenges and obstacles in order to find some creative outlet, Gary began writing novels. Hot Shot is his debut.
Teresa Weaver of Atlanta magazine notes: "Longtime Atlantan Gary Ruffin, a guitarist and songwriter for the 1970s rock band Smoke Rise, riffs on comic mystery in this debut novel set in a small town in Florida. Ruffin’s music career ended after a 2001 operation to remove a brain tumor left him disabled. Now a published novelist, he says he is “happy to be working, and completely inspired.”

Gary Ruffin will be at Barnes & Noble in Snellville, Georgia on Sunday, August 15, at 3pm.