BOOKS, BONE And BUFFY Reviews Seven Ways To Die

SEVEN WAYS TO DIE by William Diehl with Kenneth John Atchity – Review




William Diehl is a master storyteller who unfortunately died in 2006 before he could complete Seven Ways to Die, his tenth novel. Before his death he was able to write 412 manuscript pages of the novel, which was completed by Kenneth John Atchity, a friend and fellow writer, with the help of extensive story notes and outlines that were left behind.  Diehl’s bestselling crime novels included Sharky’s Machine (1978) and Thai Horse (1987), and I can see why he was, and continues to be, so popular. Seven Ways to Die is a delicious mixture of police procedural, forensics and character study, with an unexpected and healthy dose of sex thrown in.

Micah Cody is a Nez Perce Indian homicide detective with a pony tail and an uncanny ability to communicate with animals. As a main character he’s got it all: good looks, mystery, and the ability to get into the mind of a serial killer.  He’s formed a subgroup of the NYPD called the Tactical Assistant Squad (TAZ) and assembled the best of the best to help him solve homicides, including a computer whiz, a forensic pathologist, and an assistant DA. He also has a white German shepherd named Charley with “the best nose in the business” that accompanies Cody on investigations, and indeed plays an important part in solving this mystery.

TAZ is called in to investigate the murder of a successful stock broker named Raymond Handley. They are first to arrive on the scene and discover the victim dead, naked and tied to a chair. His throat is slashed but there isn’t a drop of blood to be found. Back at headquarters, the team gets to work trying to determine cause of death, and they discover something chilling. Although Handley appears to have died from having his neck slashed, they discover the underlying and true cause of death: drug-induced heart failure and de-sanguination. This mislead occurs in subsequent murders, and the TAZ crew realizes that they have a serial killer on their hands.

In the midst of TAZ trying to get a lead on the killer, we are introduced to Ward Hamilton, a pompous and flamboyant true crime writer who convinces his editor to let him write a series of articles about unsolved cases in the NYPD. Having failed at writing novels, Hamilton feels the need to redeem himself and make a comeback with the articles, which will culminate in a book. And he’s found his first subject for the project: the case of a young dancer named Melinda Cramer, whose apparent suicide was never solved by Cody and his team. Hamilton is a truly unlikable character, and as he tries to get the Cramer case file from Cody to start his research, we get glimpses into his unsavory life as a playboy that he shares with his equally unlikable lover Victoria.

When a second body turns up naked and tied to a chair, the hunt intensifies to find the killer before he or she can strike again. Along with the growing suspense and the terror of trying to stop a serial killer, Diehl introduces a love interest for Cody, a woman named Amelie who coincidentally lives in the apartment across from Handley’s.  The instant attraction between the two was a nice break from the tension, and in a particularly sweet scene, Cody takes Amelie with him to the zoo in Central Park where he demonstrates his rapport with the zoo’s resident wolves.

Diehl is adept at pacing, and he manages to keep the large cast of characters under control while the action escalates toward the final showdown between Cody and the killer. There are all sorts of wonderful elements in Seven Ways to Die that give what could have been a conventional murder mystery extra depth.  One of my favorites was the role that dogs and wolves played in the story.  During a flashback we are introduced to Cody as a boy in the Nez Perce tribe, who is bitten by a rattlesnake while walking through the desert. Near death and hallucinating, he awakens to find a white wolf next to him, licking the venom from the snakebite. In a brilliant parallel, Charley the German shepherd saves Cody’s life by licking poison out of his wound after he is struck by a poisoned arrow.

There really isn’t anything to not like about Seven Ways to Die. I thought the dialog was first-rate, and with snappy lines like “Cody knew his goose was cooked” I was charmed from page one. There has been a bit of flap from other reviewers over the sex scene in chapter 38, which does seem to come out of nowhere.  But because of the way the bodies are found, the team determines that the killer is almost certainly a sex addict, so the graphic scene didn’t really feel out-of-place to me. Diehl and Atchity also neatly tie in the title of the book, with the forensic description of the seven ways homicide victims are killed, which figures into the murders themselves. The only story element that didn’t ring true for me was the believability that the killer had the intelligence and resources to pull off the highly complicated murders, after learning the killer’s identity.  But that was a small thing that really didn’t detract from the rest of the story.
It was a pleasure to read the book of a seasoned and talented writer, and the work that Atchity did to finish it off was brilliant.

Many thanks to co-author Kenneth John Atchity for supplying a review copy.

You can purchase Seven Ways to Die from Barnes & Noble or Amazon.

Thank you Nancy Grace ...



Friends of William Diehl... Nancy Grace, Michael A. Simpson and Judy Cairo
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Wonderful Review From Blog Critics


Book Review: Seven Ways To Die by William Diehl with Kenneth John Atchity




Author: Luanne Stevenson

William Diehl was a New York Times bestselling author. He passed away almost five years ago and his last book, Seven Ways To Die, begins with a touching note written by his widow, Virginia Gunn Diehl. She writes: “He completed over four hundred pages of Seven Ways To Die. He loved this book…He was sorry that he couldn’t complete his final project. He worked so hard on it for several years. He was proud of it.”

His widow goes on to say that her husband’s friend of 25 years, Ken Atchity, did his best to “make sure that Bill’s book would see the light of day.” Ken Atchity is a talented author himself, having written 15 of his own books, and he is the producer of 30 films.

Atchity understood his friend’s writing style and used notes and an outline left by Bill Diehl to complete the book. Ken Atchity’s contribution doesn’t disappoint the reader and he fulfilled Virginia Diehl’s wish; that her husband’s fans would have one more opportunity to enjoy his craft.

Seven Ways To Die is a work of fiction, written in third person, published by AEI/Story Merchant Books. It’s a suspenseful, crime whodunit, laced with colorful characters and an intriguing plot. The main character, Cody, is a 30-something NYPD captain of homicide, who founded a special unit known as TAZ which stands for “The Tactical Assistance Squad.” He’s trying to catch a serial killer, all the while being hounded by a pompous crime writer named Ward Hamilton.

The reader learns that Cody grew up in Idaho on the Nez Perce Reservation. As a boy, he learned to be in tune with nature. He has a special connection, even mystical tie, with animals, and is mysteriously able to communicate with them. Cody learned at a young age to read “signs” of nature and this innate skill helps him as a homicide detective.

We are introduced to Cody at age 13, but the story quickly jumps to the present; Cody working Homicide with the NYPD. The author’s spine-tingling descriptions make the reader feel like they are in the room with the first victim, Melinda. As the tension builds, you quickly feel Melinda’s terror and won’t want to put the book down (I had to keep flipping the pages to see what would happen next).

Diehl had a powerful gift for creating images painted with his words. Be it the beautiful Nez Perce Reservation, the dark and secretive sex clubs, victim number two’s posh brownstone or the ghoulish murder scenes, each chapter descriptively sets the stage for a 294-page story that moves at top speed.

The late writer was also a master at character development. He's able to make you feel the melancholy of the tough and now sober Detective Frank Rizzo, as he enters his small apartment, on the anniversary of his wife’s passing.
On page 160,Diehl writes:

“He got a glass, pored himself a glass of ginger ale, went in the living room and turned on the television set. When the remote turned up nothing of interest, he put on the DVD of “West Side Story” and as the overture began, he slumped down in his easy chair and let memories envelope him like a warm blanket.” [The reader learned earlier that the couple’s first date was spent seeing the movie.]

The characters in this novel amuse, entertain, confuse and mesmerize. From Amelie Cluett, the exotically beautiful masseuse, to Victoria, the sexually deviant lover of crime writer and flamboyant columnist, Ward Hamilton, each character packs a punch, adding dazzle to this superb drama.

Seven Ways To Die was William Diehl’s last (literary) love and the people who loved him made sure his hard work was not done to no avail . It was the inspiration of Virginia Gunn Diehl, the dedication of Ken Atchity, the forensics contributions from Dr. Brett Bartlett, M.D., and the persistence and hard work of others that made Seven Ways To Die more than a suspenseful, top notch thriller. It is a labor of love, and like a diamond, it’s a brilliant and valuable gift left by Diehl and his wife to all his fans.

If you haven’t had the pleasure of reading any of William Diehl’s New York Times Best Sellers (Primal Fear or Sharky’s Machine), I urge you to pick up Seven Ways To Die. It’s a fabulous read and in my opinion, if made into a movie, would become a box office hit.

In closing, I’d like to point out that Diehl dedicated Seven Ways To Die as follows: “For Virginia - She endured.” And because of Virginia’s great love for her husband, his last writing will endure and be enjoyed for eternity.

How Crime Scene Investigation Works


Examining the scene
There are several search patterns available for a CSI to choose from to assure complete coverage and the most efficient use of resources. These patterns may include:
  • The inward spiral search: The CSI starts at the perimeter of the scene and works toward the center. Spiral patterns are a good method to use when there is only one CSI at the scene.



  • The outward spiral search: The CSI starts at the center of scene (or at the body) and works outward.



  • The parallel search: All of the members of the CSI team form a line. They walk in a straight line, at the same speed, from one end of crime scene to the other.



  • The grid search: A grid search is simply two parallel searches, offset by 90 degrees, performed one after the other.



  • The zone search: In a zone search, the CSI in charge divides the crime scene into sectors, and each team member takes one sector. Team members may then switch sectors and search again to ensure complete coverage.



Consider This
  • Crime scenes are three dimensional. CSIs should remember to look up.
  • If a CSI shines a flashlight on the ground at various angles, even when there's plenty of lighting, he'll create new shadows that could reveal evidence.
  • It's easy to recover DNA from cigarette butts.
While searching the scene, a CSI is looking for details including:
  • Are the doors and windows locked or unlocked? Open or shut? Are there signs of forced entry, such as tool marks or broken locks?
  • Is the house in good order? If not, does it look like there was a struggle or was the victim just messy?
  • Is there mail lying around? Has it been opened?
  • Is the kitchen in good order? Is there any partially eaten food? Is the table set? If so, for how many people?
  • Are there signs of a party, such as empty glasses or bottles or full ashtrays?
  • If there are full ashtrays, what brands of cigarettes are present? Are there any lipstick or teeth marks on the butts?
  • Is there anything that seems out of place? A glass with lipstick marks in a man's apartment, or the toilet seat up in a woman's apartment? Is there a couch blocking a doorway?
  • Is there trash in the trash cans? Is there anything out of the ordinary in the trash? Is the trash in the right chronological order according to dates on mail and other papers? If not, someone might have been looking for something in the victim's trash.
  • Do the clocks show the right time?
  • Are the bathroom towels wet? Are the bathroom towels missing? Are there any signs of a cleanup?
  • If the crime is a shooting, how many shots were fired? The CSI will try to locate the gun, each bullet, each shell casing and each bullet hole.
  • If the crime is a stabbing, is a knife obviously missing from victim's kitchen? If so, the crime may not have been premeditated.
  • Are there any shoe prints on tile, wood or linoleum floors or in the area immediately outside the building?
  • Are there any tire marks in the driveway or in the area around the building?
  • Is there any blood splatter on floors, walls or ceilings?
­The actual collection of physical evidence is a slow process. Each time the CSI collects an item, he must immediately preserve it, tag it and log it for the crime scene record. Different types of evidence may be collected either at the scene or in lab depending on conditions and resources. Mr. Clayton, for instance, never develops latent fingerprints at the scene. He always sends fingerprints to the lab for development in a controlled environment. In the next section, we'll talk about collection methods for specific types of evidence.


Read More Here

Ken Atchity Guest Speaker Sunday April 22nd At 6pm (central) The Funky Writer Radio Show


Author Rob Batista's Blog 

Host Of 'The Funky Writer Radio Show', Publisher of W.I.B. Communications and acclaimed author of 'Brooklyn Story', 'The City Game', 'Street Angel' 'Vampire Park' and 'My Baby Has No Name'


Kenneth Atchity will be Our Guest on April 22nd


 

Author Kenneth Atchity will be our guest on Sunday, April 22nd at 6PM Central. To listen live, go to: www.blogtalkradio.com/thefunkywriter 
or call-in at 347-843-4784.

Dr. Ken Atchity is former professor, producer, and writer of seventeen books. His recent film, “The Kennedy Detail,” was nominated for an Emmy Award. As a literary manager, he has been responsible for launching dozens of bestselling books, and for producing thirty films including the forthcoming “Hysteria.” His clients Clint Hill and Lisa McCubbins’ MRS KENNEDY AND ME is currently #2 on The New York Times Bestseller list. Ken divides his time between New York and Los Angeles, and speaks frequently at writers conferences. His next novel, THE MESSIAH MATRIX, a thriller about the origins of Christianity, appears in May.

William Diehl was a 7-time New York Times bestseller, whose PRIMAL FEAR and SHARKY’S MACHINE were made into major motion pictures. Diehl was at work on SEVEN WAYS TO DIE when he died three years ago, a story Atchity was working on turning into a film with Michael A. Simpson and Judy Cairo of Informant Media, producers of “Crazy Heart” and “Hysteria.” 

Ken was asked to complete Mr. Diehl’s novel, and the result is a fast-paced detective thriller about a unique serial killer in Manhattan who sets out to defy NYPD’s TAZ unit, an inter-precinct unit devoted solely to serial killers. The book is a non-stop procedural, focused on the unique character of detective Micah Cody, whose half-Nez Perce Indian heritage comes to the fore when he stalks the killer in Central Park at night aided by the voices of the peregrine falcons and wolves in the zoo.

Ken Atchity
visit:
For free daily updates and inspiration from the Story Merchant companies, inspire@storymerchant.com.

PW Talks with Russell Andrews -

Mighty Aphrodite




PW: How did Aphrodite originate?
Russell Andrews: First, my friend and mentor, the writer William Goldman, called me up to tell me about an obituary that appeared in the New York Times. It turned out that everything in the obit was untrue—and the Times later printed a retraction. Next, as a book editor, I had worked with President Jimmy Carter, who wrote a book for me about aging. He talked a lot about the huge problems that would arise because people kept living longer, like Social Security running out. Third, I became interested in the billions of dollars that were being made by drug companies with products geared for staying young, everything from Viagra to hair restoration. I began to concoct a conspiracy between huge drug companies and the U.S. government—and eventually tied that in to what I'd learned from President Carter and the strange Times obituary.
PW: Robert Ludlum cornered the market on conspiracy thrillers, but Aphrodite seems to take it one step further. Was this a consideration?
RA: I think comparing Aphrodite to Robert Ludlum is a reasonably apt comparison—I certainly hope it is when it comes to sales. But I have to say, I never thought about topping him or taking this book one step further. I just did what felt natural from a character standpoint and a plot standpoint.
PW: Did other mystery writers influence you?
RA: Several other writers have influenced me. William Diehl is one. I admire the way he injects depth into his characters as well as his plots. I've recently become a huge fan of Ian Rankin. I love Rankin's darkness and his ability to reveal weakness, even—well, especially—in his lead character. Finally, although Alfred Hitchcock isn't an author, I've also been tremendously influenced by him, for the suspense he brings to his films as well as the humor.
PW: You seem to be influenced by other films, too. For example, in one scene in Aphrodite, Justin Westwood, the protagonist, looks up a silent movie, The Queen of Sheba, which was a real silent film made in 1921.
RA: I'm a movie fanatic. I've seen a million movies, know a lot about them, and have written quite a few screenplays. I also spend way too much time on sites like IMDB.com and moviecitynews.com. So I thought I'd use all that and have fun with it.
PW: Have the movie rights to Aphrodite been sold?
RA: The film rights have not been sold yet. But my agents are working on it. There has been a reasonable amount of interest.
PW: Have we seen the last of Justin Westwood?
RA: You have definitely not seen the last of Justin Westwood. He's someone I got to love as I was writing Aphrodite. I'm hard at work on the next Russell Andrews thriller, which is called Midas. Westwood returns to find himself in a conspiracy that I think is more frightening—and in some ways even more potentially realistic—than what he has to survive in Aphrodite.
PW: You write under a pseudonym?
RA: There is no Russell Andrews. That's my pseudonym, and my real name is Peter Gethers. The first Russell Andrews thriller, Gideon, was co-written with my now ex-writing partner. He didn't want to keep writing this kind of thriller, and I did. So I took over the pseudonym—the book was quite successful here and was a bestseller in England, so the publishers wanted Russell Andrews more than they wanted Peter Gethers—and I have now written these two [Aphrodite and Icarus] on my own. With this book, Warner Books decided to say that I was really the author. I'm sure it'll help with publicity. And when I tell people that I wrote these thrillers, now I won't have to call my agent or editor to have them swear that I'm not a liar.

Reader's Review: Great read. Fast paced yet not forced.

I wont spoil anything. All I'm going to say is it's a great read and I look forward to reading more of his books.

Reader's Review: Excellent book

By K. L. Christensen (Virginia, United States) 

Thoroughly enjoyed this book. It was fast paced and was filled with twists and intrigue that I wasn't expecting. So glad Atchity decided to finish what Diehl started.

Read An Excerpt From Seven Ways To Die

She took the matchbook from her purse and looked at the name and phone number, and closed her eyes, briefly thinking about the man in the tux. The son of a bitch, she thought with a smile.
So he changed his phone number. Wanted her to call him. Well, he could go screw himself.
The wind briefly wrapped the curtain around her before she brushed it away.
She went back to her desk and put the matchbook book down.
Then she noticed that her laptop was on. The screen was lowered but she could see the light from the screen between the cover and the keyboard. She thought she’d hibernated the machine when she’d finished the review.
She reached over and lifted the screen. There was a letter on the screen which began: “Dear Raymond…”
And the fear choked her.
Before she could react she felt a warm breath on the nape of her neck. A plastic bag whished as it snapped over her head.
The opening was twisted tight.
The bag became a deadly trap.
A strong arm pinned both her arms to her sides and lifted her off the floor. Her screams were muffled by the bag, her muscular legs flailing helplessly as she fought for a breath.
She was frantic, staring out across the Park through the gauzy container. Her attempts to breathe merely sucked the plastic into her mouth and popped it back again.
Just one breath, she thought.
But it was denied. The strong arm jerked hard on her abdomen, emptying her lungs.
The struggle lasted four minutes before she went limp.
Her killer was relentless, holding her in the vice, waiting until the lovely dancer certainly was dead.
The plastic bag was pulled off her head. Her chin fell to her chest. The killer moved the free hand and fondled her tight breast, moved down between her legs and then, in one swift move, lifted and shoved her lifeless body through the door.
She flipped over the balcony, plunged fifteen floors, and splattered on the sidewalk below.
While she was still falling, well-manicured fingers Melinda never saw finished typing the artfully ambivalent email that would be accepted as a suicide note.

Reader's Review: Bill Diehl Does It Again!

By 
 
  
Seven Ways to Die is the latest and final book from Best Selling author Bill Diehl. Fast moving, captivating plot spins the tale from the Nez Perce indian reservation to New York City. This is a real page turner and I am so glad to see it published as anew book. You won't want to put it down. Seriously. Buy it today!

Vintage LAPD Crime Scene Photos

This catalog is the result of hundreds of hours of sifting through countless boxes tightly packed with everyday dimestore #10 white letter envelopes, sealed and cut in half to make a convenient open-ended pouch, each containing the forensic negatives for a single case. On most of the envelopes is a hand-written "Division of Report", or DR, number. The DR number uniquely identifies each case and often appears hand-written directly on the negatives. The name or initials of the photographer can also be seen on many of the negatives.





(019) Shoes, arm and knife
Date: 09-23-50
Photographer: P.B.
Print Size: 8x10