Showing posts with label the man who never returned. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the man who never returned. Show all posts

Monday, December 12, 2011

On the third day of Christmas, Overlook Press gave to me ...

Happy Monday, and welcome to the third installment of the ongoing Overlook holiday giveaway bonanza! Last week two lucky readers scored literary prize packs featuring the complete Charles Portis paperback backlist and a pair of beautiful design books by Milton Glaser and Eva Zeisel. Congratulations to Friday’s winner Carl Scott, and a big thanks to all those who have entered so far.

Are you a history buff who also loves thrilling stories of mystery and intrigue? Do you crave meticulously researched period pieces but also seek a thrill? For today’s giveaway we’re offering three books that combine grisly true crimes and gripping historical mysteries: Murder in the First-Class Carriage by Kate Colquhoun, a signed copy of We Is Got Him by Carrie Hagen, and The Man Who Never Returned by Peter Quinn—the perfect gift for the whodunit enthusiast who seeks historical accuracy along with their white-knuckle suspense.

Kate Colquhoun’s Murder in the First-Class Carriage tells the true story of the death of Thomas Briggs, who in 1864 became the first murder victim in the history of the British rail system. The hunt for Brigg’s killer takes readers on a transatlantic journey from Victorian London to New York and reveals a suspenseful account of the investigation and trial of Briggs’ assailant.

Carrie Hagen was kind enough sign this copy of We Is Got Him, the captivating true story of the abduction of four year old Charley Ross in 1874, the first kidnapping for ransom in the history of the United States. The Philadelphia Inquirer calls We Is Got Him, “an elegantly told, superbly accomplished history of good and bad intentions gone awry.”

Peter Quinn’s The Man Who Never Returned blends fact and fiction in its original retelling of the disappearance of New York State Supreme Court Justice Joseph Crater on August 6th, 1930. Judge Crater’s disappearance remains one of New York’s most famous unsolved mysteries to date, and in addition to the book, we’ll also be giving away a Man Who Never Returned t-shirt, featuring the original missing person’s poster advertising his disappearance.

To enter, simply:

1. Comment on this post

2. Tweet at us the hashtag #OverlookChristmas

3. Leave a comment on our Facebook page

You can enter once in each area until 8 AM tomorrow morning, and we will be announcing a winner in tomorrow’s post. After all entries are received, we choose a winner using random.org. Please leave an email address when entering so we can contact you if you’ve won.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Peter Quinn at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House RECAP!!

As devotees of the Winged Elephant know, Peter Quinn read from THE MAN WHO NEVER RETURNED last Thursday night at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House. We were lucky enough to have some bloggers report back from the scene.

Here's some of the post from From the Balcony, A Publisher's Blog...


In a fulsome introduction, the representative of Ireland House noted that Peter Quinn's last opus, Looking for Jimmy, about Irish America, was a huge hit with students of NYU. "The one copy is always in demand and we are endlessly copying chapters for students," she said. Opening his reading, Peter Quinn spluttered in disgust: "Just one copy. And you're breaking the law by photocopying it. My attorney is present and I saw him take notes at that." He was only kidding, I think. Here he is signing copies. Fintan Dunne, the detective Peter created, rides again in the new novel. Read it.


...and here's some from Hell's Kitchen, the blog of TheWildGeese.com.


Quinn, never at a loss for words, talked colorfully and candidly about his work, his writing process, and the judge’s disappearance, more than he actually read. Quinn suggested, perhaps seriously, that readings such as his were archaic. They certainly do provide a vehicle for engaging with an auteur and his work, and the evening provided that in spades.

The Man Who Never Returned” took shape, Quinn said, during a conversation he had a few years back with Paul Browne, deputy commissioner of public information for the NYPD and a fellow Manhattan College alum. Quinn added later that his writing was driven by character, not plot, and his characters emerge from conversations he has and those he readily imagines. This process emerges for him, in part, because, he said, “you are always writing about yourself,” even in historical novels, which, he suggested, draw on the author’s experience and personal history. He is famously in love with the historical research his books require, but said to be averse to the writing part. Novel writing is not only autobiographical, he wryly noted, “but psychotic.”


What fun! We're glad you both enjoyed the event.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Peter Quinn at NYU's Glucksman Ireland House TONIGHT!


A rainy fall Thursday in New York City--sounds like the perfect time to head over to NYU's beautiful Glucksman Ireland House to hear Peter Quinn read from and discuss his acclaimed new book, THE MAN WHO NEVER RETURNED.

This event is made possible by the New York Council for the humanities and is free for all with an NYU ID (all others are asked to make a $10 donation at the door).

Thanks for supporting Glucksman Ireland House along with Peter and we hope you enjoy hearing about The Man Who Never Returned as much as the rest of his standing-room-only audiences have this summer and fall!

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Peter Quinn in the WSJ


The Wall Street Journal introduced its Greater New York section earlier this year, and we've enjoyed it greatly as a companion to our other classic New York papers--the Times, the Post, the Daily News. Our author Peter Quinn always seemed like a great fit for the section, and Steve Kurutz agreed, featuring Peter and his new book, The Man Who Never Returned, in his weekly Q&A with a New York personality.

Click here to go to the site and read the full article, but a few of our favorite questions and answers below!

The book does a wonderful job of evoking mid-1950s New York, with references to Wanamaker's department store and the Herald Tribune.

That's the city I grew up in. I'm old enough to have been on the Third Avenue El. That city is gone. Of course, that's part of the magic and pain of living in New York—it's always going away.

So are New Yorkers forced to be less sentimental?

New Yorkers are incredibly sentimental. They're never quite happy in the city that is. They want the city that was. When I was a kid, my parents talked about the city at the end of the war. Now people are saying it was such a great city in the '70s. It was so alive and creative. Yes, but the crime was also so bad that you couldn't ride the subways.

...

How did your years as a speechwriter for two governors and five Time Warner chairmen influence your fiction?

It helped me write for the ear. I went through two mergers at Time Warner. I got to observe human behavior in extremis. It's all in my books.

You retired as a speechwriter in 2007. Without a day job, have you become more productive as a novelist?

The day I retired I took my dog down to the train station to say goodbye to the people I rode the 6:18 train with. Since then I haven't got up at 5:30 once. I get done in 12 hours what I used to get done in two. It's hard to write all day, although James Patterson seems to be very productive. He sat behind me in English class at Manhattan College. I tell people, "Jim and I together have sold 150 million books, worldwide. James Patterson has sold 149,996,000. I sold the rest."


For more information on Peter Quinn, check out our archives here on the Winged Elephant or his website, which has gotten praise from reviewers and bloggers alike. And if you're looking for a smart, fun, and unpredictable thriller, check out The Man Who Never Returned and let us know what you think!

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Internet Housekeeping: Events on OverlookPress.com


Did you know that Peter Quinn is reading tonight in Tribeca? Or that Frank Deford is speaking Thursday in White Plains? If not, that means you're not keeping up with the Calendar section of Overlook's website. And you're missing out!

While our website has a ton of information about Overlook, our books and our authors (have you checked out the reader's guides?), it also constantly updates our author events with detailed information about the type of event as well as the time and location.

If you're a fan of our wonderful authors, check it out! And make sure to come back periodically--we try to publicize our events on Facebook, Twitter and right here on the Winged Elephant, but don't miss out!

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Behind the Scenes with Overlook: With Peter Quinn and New York 1

Here's a sneak peek at Peter Quinn's interview on NY1, where he retraced the steps of Judge Joseph Crater on the last day he was seen alive. The New York State Supreme Court Justice disappeared on August 6, 1930, and was never seen again. It remains one of New York's most famous unsolved mysteries.

But it's not unsolved in Quinn's new book The Man Who Never Returned, on sale next Thursday from Overlook. Using his real-life knowledge of New York and extensive research, Quinn has crafted a story whose conclusion is both "logical and surprising" (Publishers Weekly, starred review).

A few photos of his walk down W. 45th Street in New York City with NY1 reporter Rebecca Spitz are below. Enjoy! And get excited for The Man Who Never Returned!






Monday, July 26, 2010

Missing Since August 6, 1930: The Man Who Never Returned


This is the original Missing Person poster for the Honorable Joseph F. Crater, gone missing on August 6, 1930. The story of Judge Crater is one of the most interesting unsolved cases in New York--the New York State Supreme Court Justice was last seen leaving a restaurant near Times Square, and simply disappeared.

80 years later, the case is still alive in the public consciousness (here's a quick primer for those who are unfamiliar with Judge Crater). Beloved Overlook author Peter Quinn has taken this story and woven together true crime and historical fiction in The Man Who Never Returned (coming August 5, 2010). Private investigator Fintan Dunne, the hero of The Hour of the Cat, is hired in 1955 to solve the crime.

Here's a picture of Peter Quinn holding one of the first copies of his new book fresh off the presses.


Early Praise for The Man Who Never Returned:

"Quinn delivers a satisfying solution to the real-life mystery of Joseph Crater... Quinn not only makes the existence of clues at such a late date plausible but also concocts an explanation that's both logical and surprising. The depth and complexity of the lead character is a big plus." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"Freely mixing history, mystery, and novelistic license, Quinn offers a noirish tale... Quinn’s rich, insightful, evocative descriptions of New York, both in Crater’s time and in 1955, will certainly please fans of historical crime novels." --Booklist

"This hybrid of mystery and history builds a compelling case." --Kirkus

Monday, May 24, 2010

Meet Peter Quinn, Author of THE MAN WHO NEVER RETURNED, at Book Expo America on May 26

Attention BEA Attendees! Peter Quinn, author of the forthcoming novel The Man Who Never Returned, will autograph advance reading copies on Wednesday, May 26, 1pm, at the BEA Autographing Area, Table 9.

Novelist, political historian, and foremost chronicler of New York City, Peter Quinn is the author of Banished Children of Eve, Hour of the Cat, and a collection of essays, Looking for Jimmy: In Search of Irish America.

Quinn co-wrote the script for the 1987 television documentary “McSorley’s New York,” which was awarded a New York-area Emmy for “Outstanding Historical Programming.” He has participated as a guest commentator in several PBS documentaries, including “The Irish in America;” “New York: A Documentary Film;” “The Life and Times of Stephen Foster,” as well as the Academy Award-nominated film, “The Passion of Sister Rose.” He was an advisor on Martin Scorcese’s film “Gangs of New York.” He helped conceive and script the six-part documentary “The Road to the White House,” which aired on TG4, in Ireland, in 2009.

Along with his book writing, Quinn was the editor of The Recorder: The Journal of the American Irish Historical Society from 1986 to 1993. He has published articles and reviews in The New York Times, Commonweal, America, American Heritage, The Catholic Historical Review, The Philadelphia Enquirer, The L.A. Times, Eiré-Ireland, and in numerous other newspapers and journals. At present, Quinn is on the advisory boards of the American Irish Historical Society, NYU’s Glucksman Ireland House, the Tenement Museum and the New York City Landmark Conservancy.

In 1979, Quinn was appointed to the staff of Governor Hugh Carey as chief speechwriter. He continued in that role under Governor Mario Cuomo, helping craft the Governor’s 1984 Democratic Convention speech and his address on religion and politics at Notre Dame University.

Peter Quinn joined Time Inc. as the chief speechwriter in 1985 and retired as corporate editorial director for Time Warner at the end of 2007. He received a B.A. from Manhattan College in 1969, an M.A. in history from Fordham University in 1974 and completed all the requirements for a doctorate except the dissertation. He was awarded a Ph.D., honoris causa, by Manhattan College in 2002.

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Starred Review in PW for Peter Quinn's THE MAN WHO NEVER RETURNED

Peter Quinn's forthcoming novel The Man Who Never Returned gets a star from Publishers Weekly: "Quinn delivers a satisfying solution to the real-life mystery of Joseph Crater, a New York City judge who disappeared in 1930, in this stellar hard-boiled historical novel, a sequel to Hour of the Cat (2005). In 1955, a New York newspaper magnate offers PI Fintan Dunne carte blanche to investigate the case in the hope that Dunne will provide him with a sensational exclusive. Crater vanished just as an official inquiry into judicial corruption, ordered by then governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt, was getting underway. Perhaps Crater fled to avoid prosecution—or someone bumped him off because he knew too much. Restless in retirement, Dunne accepts the offer, despite his skepticism that such a cold trail can be meaningfully pursued. Quinn not only makes the existence of clues at such a late date plausible but also concocts an explanation that’s both logical and surprising. The depth and complexity of the lead character is a big plus."