There’s no point in denying that 2022 was a rotten year in many ways, but there’s also no point in dwelling on that. So let’s turn our attention to more pleasant endeavors, such as writing, reading, editing, and publishing.
To take those things in reverse order, for most of this year I was the editor
of Rough Edges Press, the mystery/thriller/men’s adventure imprint of Wolfpack
Publishing. It was a wonderful job, as I got to work with Mike Bray, Jake Bray,
Patience Bramlett, and all the other great people at Wolfpack, in addition to
all the authors involved. While there, I was privileged to edit some really
excellent books, and I’m proud of what the line accomplished. However, I
stepped down at the end of October because I discovered that I couldn’t both
edit and write at the level I wanted to, and although I didn’t mind slowing
down some on my page production (more about that in the next paragraph) I just
wasn’t ready to stop writing full-time. There are still too many books in my
head clamoring to get out.
As I mentioned a few posts back, 2022 was the first year since 2004 that I didn’t
write at least a million words of fiction. So the streak ends at 17 years, and
while I might have preferred an even number (yes, I am a little OCD), I’m
absolutely fine with that. I wrote approximately 900,000 words this year. That’s
plenty. I think 750,000 would be a good total for 2023. I wrote at that level
for many years before I started hitting a million, and I think I can continue
producing at that level for a while yet. My plan for next year is to keep up
with my regular ghost-writing job (I’m committed to approximately half a
million words there) and devote the rest of the wordage to a few books of my
own. We’ll see.
On the reading front, it was a good year, not at all rotten. I read 138 books.
Here are my top ten favorites, in the order in which I read them:
A GUIDE TO THE GOOD LIFE: THE ANCIENT ART OF STOIC JOY, William B. Irvine
GUNS OF THE DAMNED, Stone Cody (Thomas E. Mount)
IN THE PULP FICTION TRENCHES, Len
Levinson
STAND UP AND DIE!: THE LOST
THRILLERS OF MICKEY SPILLANE, Mickey Spillane
THE SPIDER: SCOURGE OF THE
SCORPION, Will Murray
GHOST OF THE HARDY BOYS, Leslie
McFarlane
FROM THE FILES OF . . . MIKE
HAMMER, Mickey Spillane
THE RANCH CAT (apa STRAIGHT FROM
BOOT HILL), Willliam Hopson
JANE FURY, James Robert Daniels
CALICO, Lee Goldberg
I’m aware that’s a pretty odd mix. Two of them I edited (the Levinson memoir
and the Spillane prose collection; the other Spillane book is a collection of the Mike Hammer comic strip I had nothing to do with). Two of them aren’t out yet because I read
them in manuscript, JANE FURY and CALICO, but they’ll be out next year and you
should remember those titles because they’re great. The pulp influence is there
in GUNS OF THE DAMNED, the first novel in the Silver Trent series originally published in THE WESTERN RAIDER and STAR WESTERN, and in the
Hopson novel because he got his start in the Western pulps, and in the new
Spider novel by Will Murray since the Spider is one of the iconic pulp hero
characters. My study of Stoic philosophy kind of petered out as the year went
on, but the lessons I learned from it came in handy more than once and I still
plan to get back to it.
There were at least two dozen other books right on the verge of making this
list, including quite a few I edited, starting with Jamie Mason’s Father
Barrett series and Ryan Fowler’s Father Tag Nolan series. Both of those feature
priests/detectives and both are absolutely excellent, but beyond that, they
couldn’t be more different. You should check them out if you haven’t already.
Chuck Dixon’s Levon Cade series continued this year with several great entries.
Brent Towns added another top-notch action/adventure series to his tireless
output with TALON and also gave us some fine hardboiled private eye novels set
in Australia. Nik Morton’s Leon Cazador books are fast-paced international
thrillers with a great protagonist. Stephen Mertz’s latest Cody’s War novel demonstrates
that he hasn’t lost a step and is still a legend in the action/adventure field.
And these are just Rough Edges Press books. I also read some great pulp
reprints from Altus Press/Steeger Books and several superb hardboiled/noir
novels from Stark House/Black Gat Books/Staccato Crime. I swear, if you can’t
find plenty of great books to read these days, you’re just not looking hard
enough!
Finally, this blog suffered a bit in 2022 because I just didn’t have enough
time to devote to it. As a result, there were fewer posts than any year since I
started it in 2004—and since I started it in July, that was only half a year. I
hope to post more in 2023, including more book reviews, the return of movie
reviews, and maybe an occasional post about what else is going on in my life,
although generally, that stuff is pretty boring. My thanks to all of you reading
this, whether you’ve been a regular reader since 2004 or just found the blog.
Like the WesternPulps email group (which will celebrate its 24th
anniversary this spring), I intend to keep this going for a good long while
yet.
7 comments:
Only 900,000 words? You lazy ass :-) You still amaze me. I'm exhausted writing 225,000 +/- words a year.
Thank you for the very kind comments about my novel CALICO and James' fantastic JANE FURY. I really appreciate it.
An even happier new year, we continue to hope, for you, and for the world at large, to come. Very glad to be a reader of this blog and an (infrequent, to be sure) contributor to WesternPulps.
James, a healthy, happy, and fulfilling 2023 to you and your family.
Still an amazing output, James. And thanks for the mention regarding Leon Cazador. All the best for 2023! Best wishes, Nik
I'm glad you plan to continue Rough Edges and Western Pulps for the future. I read them every day. Happy New Year!
Many thanks for those kind words, guys! Todd, other than me and the late Kent Johnson, you were the first person to post to the WesternPulps group, and you were one of the earliest commenters on this blog, as well. I appreciate your friendship all these years.
My hero.
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