Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Grinding Down to the Release

Some early words of encouragement for Grinder. Seriously, what chance to you have of not loving it. Even my mom says it's good.

How wonderful to read a novel that just electrifies and entertains at once. Terrific opening chapters on the true reality of what a gun shot actually does, and scenes of deep sea tuna fishing that would have enchanted Hemingway and certainly educated me. Cracker of a great story too, involving the Russian mob, old style gangsters, cross and double-cross, and revenge. Fine, polished narrative that makes it look so easy—the sign of a real pro. Grinder is a terrific read.

Ken Bruen, author of the Guards, winner of the 2003 Shamus Award

Mike Knowles has done a masterful piece of writing in Grinder. He catches the sights, sounds, smells, and feelings just right, and when his characters speak, we know exactly who they are. Wilson's return to Hamilton is fast, angry, smart, and very, very tough.

Thomas Perry, author of sixteen novels and winner of the 1983 Edgar Award for Best First Novel.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Grinder

Coming September 2009




“You brought me back into this because you know what I am. I’m a grinder, I find out everything.”

Bullets squared everything. There was almost nothing left. Wilson left his old boss alive and his old life behind in exchange for a clean slate. He held up his end of the bargain and stayed off the grid. For two years Wilson had some peace until a man came calling. The man brought a gun — and a woman in his trunk. Over a thousand kilometres from home, Wilson learns that the city doesn’t let go and people don’t forget. The city is more than bricks; it’s a hammer, it’s blood, it’s a machine running on the backs of hard men and women and the hardest man there remembers Wilson. And now he wants him to come home.

Mobster Paolo Donati’s nephews are missing and the only suspects are his own men. Wilson is pulled back from his new life to work under the radar and find out who is responsible. Wilson is back to being what he was — a grinder. Now all bets are off and before he’s done, everyone will pay.

Darwin's Nightmare



Wilson spent his entire life under the radar. Few people knew who he was and even less knew how to find him. Only two people even knew what he really did. He worked jobs for one very bad man. Illegal jobs no one could ever know about. Wilson was invisible until the day he crossed the line and risked everything to save the last connection to humanity he had. One day changed everything. Wilson saved his friends and earned the hatred of a vengeful mob boss, a man who claimed he was Charles Darwin’s worst nightmare.

Wilson survived his transgression and went even deeper into the underworld of Hamilton becoming a ghost in the city – an unknown to almost everyone until he was paid back for his one good deed. It started with a simple job. Steal a bag from the airport and hand it off. No one said what was in the bag, and no one mentioned who the real owners were or what they would do to get it back. One bag sets into motion a violent chain of events from which no one will escape untouched. Wilson learns that no one forgets, no one gets away clean, and no good deed goes unpunished.

“Fans of Richard Stark and Andrew Vacchs will immediately recognize his cold-blooded pragmatism and brass-knuckled approach to problem solving...The action is straight, hard and fast and the characters are as sharply etched as this stuff gets...as clean and tight a debut as I’ve seen recently. The sure hand and utterly convincing tone displayed by the first time author, a school teacher, bodes well for not just him and Canadian crime writing, but for fans of hard-boiled fiction everywhere.”