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Tag Archives: Gone ‘Til November
Interview: New Jersey crime writer, Wallace Stroby
Wallace Stroby was an award-winning journalist who quit his job as an editor at New Jersey’s Star-Ledger of Newark newspaper, to write crime fiction full time. A life long New Jersey native, he is the author of six books, of which his debut, The Barb Wire Kiss, was a finalist for the 2004 Barry Award for best first novel. His last three books, Cold Shot to the Heart, Kings of Midnight, Shoot the Woman First, feature the female professional criminal character, Crissa Stone. This is an edited version of an interview, which I conducted at Noir Con 2014 in Philadelphia, that originally appeared in issue 17 of Crime Factory. His latest Crissa Stone book The Devil’s Share, is out now.
Let’s start of with your recent books featuring the character of Crissa Stone. What was the inspiration behind writing these?
I always wanted to write a book from the point of a view of a career criminal. In my third novel, Gone ‘Til November, half of the book was from the point of view of an ageing black hit man but the main character was actually a woman, the only female sheriff’s deputy in a small town, a woman in a man’s world and I liked that idea. So coming off Gone ‘Til November I wanted to combine those two and do a story about a career criminal who was a woman in a man’s world.… Read more
Posted in Donald Westlake aka Richard Stark, Fawcett Gold Medal Books, Garry Disher, Interviews, Neo Noir, Noir fiction, Parker, Pulp fiction, True crime, Wallace Stroby
Tagged Clean Break, Cold Shot to the Heart, Crissa Stone, Dan J Marlowe, Dan J Marlowe book called The Name of the Game is Death, Dennis Lehane, Gerald Petievich, Gone ‘Til November, Goodfellas (1990), James Ellroy, James Lee Burke, John D MacDonald, Kings of Midnight, Knox Burger, Lauran Lippman, Lawrence Block, Lionel White, Malcolm Braly, Max Allan Collins, Parker, Peter Rabe, Shake Him Till He Rattles, Shoot the Woman First, Sopranos, The Barb Wire Kiss, The Devil’s Share, The Hot Rock (1972), The Killing (1956), To Live and Die in LA (1985), Wallace Stroby, was a finalist for the 2004 Barry Award for best first novel. His last three books