Hi folks,
I'm really... I mean... REALLY jazzed! Jon Bassoff, my publisher at New Pulp Press has just sent me the cover for my nihilistic novel, THE RAPIST, and it's just gorgeous! Take a look and see what you think. (Just click on it to enlarge it.)
The publication date is March 20, 2013, but it may be offered early in a pre-pub sale. I'll keep you informed.
This novel is the best work I've ever done and I'm extremely proud of it. I cannot wait to have a copy in my hot little hand! It'll come out as a paperback and an ebook.
Please keep it in mind next spring when it's available!
Blue skies,
Les
P.S. Here are some of the other blurbs that will appear in the novel. Also, Cort McMeel is writing the forward for it. Cort was the initial champion for it and has a lot to do with it getting into the right hands and published.
Other blurbs:
BLURBS FOR THE RAPIST
1. Les Edgerton presents an
utterly convincing anti-hero. The abnormal psychology is pitch-perfect. The
Rapist ranks right up there with Camus' The Stranger and Simenon's Dirty
Snow. An instant modern classic.
Allan
Guthrie, author of Slammer and
others. Publisher, Blasted Heath Books
2. So, I’m reading Les Edgerton’s
The Rapist. The title has already
made me uneasy.
Five pages in and I can hardly
breathe.
Ten and I’m nauseous.
For the next 50, I’m a mixture of
all of the above, but most of all, angry.
I feel like ringing my feminist
friends and confessing: Sisters, I’m reading something you will kill me for
reading.
I feel like ringing my ex
colleagues - parole officers and psychologists who work with sex offenders in
Barlinnie Prison, Glasgow - and asking them if they think it’s helpful to
publish an honest and explicit transcript which shows the cognitive distortions
of a callous, grandiose, articulate sex offender; one which illustrates his
inability to have a relationship with a woman and his complete lack of empathy?
I’m thinking I don’t know what I
should be thinking.
Will it turn sex offenders on?
Should we listen to this guy?
Is it possible to separate the
person from the offence, and to empathise with him as he waits to die?
I don’t ring anyone.
I read on.
And the breathlessness, nausea,
anger and confusion increase all the way to the end, at which point all I know
is that the book is genius.
Helen
Fitzgerald, author, Dead Lovely, Bloody
Women, The Devil’s Staircase, Donor and others.
3. Take a Nabokovian narrator
trying to convince the reader of his innocence and filter it through An
Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge and you've got The Rapist, a raw and frightening
journey through the inner psyche of a damaged man.
Brian
Lindenmuth, Publisher, Spinetingler
Magazine and Snubnose Press
4. One never knows what to expect
when reading a novel entitled “The Rapist,” yet, similar to “The Bitch” which
precedes this, with Les Edgerton you know you're in for an interesting ride.
Tackling a tough subject with great aplomb, Les Edgerton proves once again why
he is one of the most exciting writers of this generation. The structure of
this just astounded me. I've never read anything like it before. I've never
been so engrossed in a novel as I was with this one. I had no idea Edgerton had
this literary part of his writing. I don't know of any other writers that can
go from crime fiction to literary so seamlessly. Edgerton should be very proud
of this novel...
One of the bravest pieces of
fiction you are likely to read this year, and also one of the best. This is a
novel you'll want to read again and again, an outstanding read!
Luca
Veste, author of the story collections Liverpool
5, and More Liverpool Five. He is
also the editor of the story collection, Off
the Record
5. The Rapist blends Camus and Jim
Thompson in an existential crime novel that is as dark and intoxicating as
strong Irish coffee. Les Edgerton pulls us into the corkscrew mind of Truman
Ferris Pinter, a twisted man with skewed perception of the world, as his life
spirals toward oblivion, like dirty dishwater down a plughole. It reminded me
of Jim Thompson's Savage Night in its
delirium.
Paul
D Brazill, Author, 13 Shots Of Noir
and others.
6. Les Edgerton’s book The Rapist is Albert Camus’ The Stranger retold as if by the
lovechild of Edgar Allen Poe and Charles Bukowski. Yes, it’s disturbing, yet
layered and provocative, with its combination of mysticism and perversion. I
particularly like the cat and mouse relationship between the protagonist Truman
and the prison warden—it’s reminiscent of The
Shawshank Redemption. This tale, with its many twists and turns, is
definitely not for the faint of heart—but then, the title should have made that
clear.
Scott
Evans, Editor, Blue Moon Literary and Art
Review, Author, First Folio
7. William Faulkner
on steroids or Hannibal Lecter on meth; neither as literate or frightening as
Les Edgerton in his ground-breaking novel, The Rapist. This intellectual
tour-de-force rips open the mind of a delusional psychopath taking the reader
on a raw journey that challenges Dante’s Inferno. And the last line of the book
is the penultimate example of a sociopath’s naked ego.
R.C. Stewart, author of The
Blackness of Darkness, No Remorse
and others.
8. A
deathdream swan dive from the existential stratosphere plummeting into the
personal hell of a tormented, broken psyche, The Rapist introduces us to a gentle and philosophical misanthrope
named Truman Pinter, at once reminiscent of Albert Camus and Patricia
Highsmith, even John Gardner’s Grendel
and the journal of Carl Panzram. Les Edgerton melds introspection and visceral,
human brutality in this death row narrative from a masterful storyteller, whose
dissection of a psychopath will haunt you long after the final page.
Thomas Pluck, Well-known commentator on the noir scene, many short
stories published in magazines such as the Utne
Reader, Editor of the anthology, THE PROTECTOR.
9. The Rapist is a disturbing look into the
twisted mind of a narcissistic psychopath on death row. A vulgar odyssey
reminiscent of Nabokov’s Lolita, although far more depraved, Les Edgerton has
crafted a dark and brilliant story that leaves you as equally unsettled as it
does in complete awe.
Julia
Madeleine, author of No One To Hear You Scream and The Truth About
Scarlet Rose
I was ready to be offended. I’m a
strong advocate for women’s equality and won’t tolerate or put my name near
anything that belittles woman. With a
title of “The Rapist” it had two and a half strikes before I read the first
line because rape is all about a man having power over a woman.
From the first pages the words
and voice made me think of American literature masters like Mark Twain and
Edgar Allen Poe I was forced to read in high school. The difference was in
school I still muttered about reading dead masters and times, but grew to love
the descriptions, plots and characters that transported me to another moment in
history. In “The Rapist” I read greedily to see where the book was going,
totally engrossed in the story. The honesty and freshness of the words from the
main character kept me glued to the page to see what happened to the man caught
in the worst circumstances and an act of degradation to woman. That is about
all I want to say about the plot. I understand Les’s reasons for not explaining
the details. You need fresh eyes to appreciate it but that isn’t to say I won’t
go back and reread it like other writing masters savoring it. It is one of
those books that each time you read it, you find another kernel of truth, a
pearl of wisdom. It has that many facets wrapped in rich layers of dialogue,
characterization and setting that pounded with each of the rapist’s heartbeat.
I was hooked from the first page.
Wendy
Gager, author of A Case of Infatuation, A
Case of Accidental Intersection, and
A Case of Hometown Blues.
11. Les
Edgerton’s masterly The Rapist is a
deeply disturbing journey into the murky recesses of the mind of psychopathic
death row inmate Truman Ferris Pinter. An intellectual, erudite, philosophical
misanthrope, Truman draws the reader inexorably into his fractured web. There
are times when one nods one’s head in agreement with his well-reasoned
arguments, only to shrink back in horror at the realisation. Sympathy for The
Devil, indeed, in this dark vision of a black heart that is both astoundingly
honest and ultimately terrifying.
Lesley Ann Sharrock
former publisher/editor Moondance Media,
author of 7th Magpie.
8 comments:
Great cover. I liked the one in the prison cell. Still- it's the words that count.
Killer cover, Les. KILLLLEEER! I really, really love it. Plus I command you for the upfront-ness of the title. Other authors would've tried to be a little more subtle about it. I love that you're not. Me wants to read. Bad.
Thanks, Sarah and Ben--your opinion means the world to me!
I'm soooo excited for you Les!! I know how hard you've worked and how strongly you feel about this book (and rightfully so, as it happens to be fantastic!). I'm damn proud to call you my mentor and friend.
p.s. LOVE the new cover!!!
That's the one! Mega!
Ooh--haunting. Cool. And just what the book deserves--along with those great blurbs.
Thanks Maegan, Paul and Jenny!
Thanks Maegan, Paul and Jenny!
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