Saturday, August 25, 2012

The Best is Yet to Come

Friends and relatives are reading my book now. Normally, they are the kindest critics, but my people all know I expect the brutal truth from the them. My son weighed in with the greatest review a father could hope for: “I started reading at 10 in the morning and have read 126 pages and I can’t put it down. The writing is fantastic.” Remind me to raise that kid’s allowance.

The subtext of any excitement I feel now is that I have already written books 2, 3, and 4 in The Frank Boff Mystery Series, so there is so much more good reading to come. And dare I say, books 2-4 are better than the first book, The Hurting Game, which is a terrific book, as noted by a reporter for the New York Times:

"Nathan Gottlieb, who knows the fascinating behind-the-scenes world of professional athletes inside-out, takes us on a compelling and suspenseful trip into the underbelly of the glitzy Las Vegas strip in order to chase down the killer of a world champion boxer. Gottlieb's prose is as fast and firm as the stiffest jab, and his ending is simply lights-out. First-rate, fun and irreverent story telling." (Harvey Araton, New York Times, author of Driving Mr. Yogi)

Each book just  seemed to be better than the predecessor. Call it writer growth, or just getting a stronger handle on my main characters. What really was fun for me in writing the sequels was the way my characters kept evolving, as human beings do. Ditto for relationships between the characters.

Already started book 5, featuring a brand new co-lead whom I’m pumped about getting down on “paper.” She’s my first major woman protagonist, Gena Lynch. Tall lady, ex-Iraq and Afghan vet, recently suspended indefinitely by the NYPD because of a drinking problem. Fate conspires to throw Lynch together with Boff on a case involving a string of  murders in which illegal guns were left at the scene, positioned near the victims head each time. And oh yeah, did I mention that the victims are all cops?

Once again, as in all the books in the series, the surface murders lead to a deeper crime conspiracy that is still going on. That’s echoes Boff’s consistent belief that, “Things in my world are rarely as they seem.”

And from my website, here is a brief description of what you can expect in books 2 and 3:

Boff and Cullen are back in THE PUNISHING
GAME.
Cullen is  nearly killed when he, his
trainer Ryan McAlary, and trainer Nino Biaggi get
caught in the crosshairs of a drive-by shootout
between Brooklyn street gangs. A bullet grazes
Cullen’s head, Biaggi is dead, and the cops say
they were just in the wrong place at the wrong
time.

Boff doesn’t think so. He believes the shootout
was staged and Cullen was the real target. So
Boff flies from Las Vegas to Brooklyn to
investigate. Cullen, who is in Brooklyn training for
a major fight at Madison Square Garden, doesn’t
for a moment think he was the target. Once
again he and Boff are at odds.

But when evidence starts to turn up that the
gang shootout indeed had been a charade,
Cullen once again joins forces with Boff. Their
investigation will take them into a dangerous
world where powerful people are playing a game
of high stakes poker in order to pull off a multi-
million dollar scam. Boff himself is nearly killed,
and now he and Cullen are dead set on not only
stopping the scam from coming off, but punishing
the people involved.

In THE KILLER SEX GAME, Boff and Cullen
have moved permanently to the Big Apple, where
they bite into a complex case involving a
murdered Cuban boxing legend, high class call
girls, and a string of related deaths. One of those
killed is Cullen’s girlfriend, who is raped and
murdered in a Brooklyn alley. The killer is caught
in the act and slain by a couple cops who just
happen to be on the scene…or so it seems.

As Boff and Cullen look into both the murder of
his girlfriend and the boxer, some ugly truths
emerge, including the fact that Cullen’s lady
friend lived a dual life as a second-year law
student at Columbia, and also as a hooker for an
elite escort service. When the dead boxer is also
linked to the escort service, Boff and Cullen find
themselves searching in a world where the price
of sex is cheaper than the cost for betrayal:
death.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012


After the Writing, Comes the Marketing

My book, The Hurting Game, in Kindle and trade paperback formats is up and rocking on Amazon.com. Biggest problem to deal with now is who do I send free ones to and who must pay. I limited the freebies to close friends, reviewers, and those who helped me with the book.

My son, Alex, goes to this NYC nightclub a lot and has sold 5 Kindle copies of my book. His friends just took out their wifi devices and ordered on the spot. Since he is now a salesman for my work, I bought him custom-designed business cards and a silver card holder.

The only downside is that publishing has proven to be a huge infringement on my writing time. There is so much to do, like marketing. But it is what it is.

Meanwhile my author website is almost done, and it’s awesome. Created (with input from me) by the very talented William Trillo, who also did my trailer. The website is: www.NathanGottlieb.com.

My book trailer, a shade over two minutes, can be found here on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-fsJZlvxYYk

The exciting thing is that there is so much more writing to come. The Hurting Game is just book 1 of The Frank Boff mystery series, and I have already finished books 2, 3, and 4, working on five. Plan to bring out a new book roughly every 5 months.

Saturday, August 18, 2012


Birth of A New Mystery Series

Excited that my trade paperback is finally available on Amazon.com. My author website, www.nathangottlieb.com will be going up this week. The site will contain among other things, a short synopsis of books 2 and 3 in the Frank Boff Mystery Series. They are titled respectively, The Punish Game, and The Killer Sex Game.

Here are the four editorial reviews of The Hurting Game on my author page:
“Nathan Gottlieb, who knows the fascinating behind-the-scenes world of professional athletes inside-out, takes us on a compelling and suspenseful trip into the underbelly of the glitzy Las Vegas strip in order to chase down the killer of a world champion boxer. Gottlieb’s prose is as fast and firm as the stiffest jab, and his ending is simply lights-out. First-rate, fun and irreverent story telling.” (Harvey Araton, New York Times, author of Driving Mr. Yogi)
The Hurting Game is a compelling, suspenseful mystery with a stunning climax. What dies in Vegas, doesn't stay in Vegas. I can't wait for the second book in this unique series.” (Kevin Kernan, NY Post)
“Nathan Gottlieb introduces a colorful array of cops, mobsters, drug dealers, snitches and flawed heroes in this unpredictable page turner.  The Hurting Game is a heart-pounding, gritty escape from the mundane.” (Jen Estes, author of “Big Leagues” and “Curveball”)   
“This is more than just an engrossing read, this is destined to be one of the most compelling series that have come down the mystery pike in a very long time. Exploding out of the alpha-male Vegas underworld are two sleuthing superheroes: the ethically challenged but hilarious Frank Boff and the headstrong yet cunning Danny Cullen. Nat Gottlieb has made them cornerstones of this genre, and I can’t wait for their next case. Dave D' Alessandro, The Newark Star-Ledger.

Obviously I am going to have each title in the series include the word “Game.” And the book covers will all look the same, red dripping colors, suggestive of blood. So anyone who has read the first book and sees the cover for the second book, will know immediately who wrote it and the fact that this is a novel in the Frank Boff Mysteries Series.

Thursday, August 16, 2012


All Dressed Up and Nowhere to Go

My Kindle version of The Hurting Game is up, but Amazon.com is still processing my trade paperback version. Frustrating, all this waiting. But then waiting goes along with the job description for a writer. Wait on getting an agent. Wait on getting a publisher. Wait on…well you get the point.

I’ve got terrific new business cards and a beautiful shiny silver holder for them. My author’s website is under construction by the same person who made my excellent book trailer, William Trillo. In case you haven’t seen my two minute trailer, here is a link:


So. Book written and professionally edited. Check.
Book loaded on Amazon.com as a Kindle. Check.
Business cards made and delivered. Check.
Paperback formatted and submitted by my publisher, Endless String, to Amazon.com. Check.

Paperback up on Amazon.com. Uh uh.

All dressed up and nowhere to go. Looking for a dance partner for my novel. Any volunteers?

Tuesday, August 7, 2012


Learning How to Let Go Was Really Hard

“The Hurting Game” is within hours of going up on Amazon.com and I’m feeling really, really anxious.

It is the first book in a new mystery series, featuring former legendary DEA agent-turned rogue private investigator, Frank Boff.  I am surprised that the excitement I feel is just as strong as when I published for the first time. That first book, “Stinger,” gave way to a second, “The Zukovka Experiment.” Now comes “The Hurting Game.” I am already well into the second book in the series, and have outlines for three more Frank Boff mysteries.

As I put my new book on public display to friends, relatives, and strangers, I feel like a parent letting go of a child who has grown up and is ready to leave the nest.

Even when I thought this book was completely done, I had the urge to rewrite and tweak it. “The Hurting Game” went through over 50 drafts. Part of me didn’t want to let it go. But another part understood that now was the time to share what I have written during thousands of lonely hours at the computer, filling up blank page after blank page.

As the book grew and blossomed, I realized I had written a terrific novel. Yet I was the only one in the world who had seen the book. And so the urge to let the world in to view my book overcame the fear of letting go. “The Hurting Game” was all grown up and ready to leave the nest.

I am reminded of these words from a great poet:

A poem  [or literary work] is never finished, only abandoned." --Paul Valery