Wednesday, May 11, 2011
Hard City by Clark Howard
Ed here: Clark Howard is one of my all-time favorite writers. And this, I think, is his most important novel. Truly a magnificent achievement of the kind few genre writers ever attempt let alone master.
Here's news about it:
Clark Howard is an award winning and acclaimed mystery writer. In 1981, his story The Horn Man won the Edgar Allan Poe award for best short story of the year from the Mystery Writers of America. In 2009, Howard won the Edward D. Hoch Memorial Golden Derringer Award for Lifetime Achievement from the Short Fiction Mystery Society.
A professional writer for over 40 years, he has written sixteen novels, six books of non-fiction, and has two published collections of short stories, in addition to more than 200 uncollected short stories.
He enlisted in the Marine Corps at 17 and served as a rocket launcher gunner in the Punchbowl in Korea. He was one of eight survivors in a platoon that survived the battle of the high ground north of the Punchbowl. He was discharged from the marines at age 20.
In 1990, Dutton published Howard's novel Hard City in hardback. Hard City was never published in paperback, and the book is now hard to find even on the shelves of used bookstores.
Hard City was Howard's most personal novel. The semi-autobiographical novel features Richie, a young boy from a troubled family, who lives on the streets of 1940s Chicago at age 12 while sleeping in a bowling alley every night. Eventually, Richie's love of reading is key to Richie's surviving, and eventually leaving, the street life.
Writing about Hard City in a new Author's Preface for the publication of Hard City as an ebook, Howard writes, "Because much of it is based on my life as a wayward boy on the mean streets of Chicago's lower West Side, a life frequently fueled by truancy, petty thievery, gang membership, and other disreputable behavior, I had, as a respectable adult, left those bleak days far behind and buried them deep in my memory. The things I had done back then, the life I had experienced, as well as vivid recollections of my mother's drug addiction and my father's incarceration in federal prison and subsequent disappearance, had all melded together into some dark recess of my mind and, I thought, been locked away forever."
Now, Hard City is widely available as an eBook. For those who missed Hard City's hardback publication in 1990, you now have the chance to share Richie's life on the streets of Chicago, and his ultimate redemption via books, reading, and writing.
Here are links to the books on Amazon and Barnes & Noble.
http://www.amazon.com/Hard-City-ebook/dp/B004ZH8DYO
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Hard-City/Clark-Howard/e/2940012489296
My favorite Clark Howard has always been DIRT RICH.
ReplyDeleteClark and I met when we were both younger. He always said he thought I looked like Roberto Duran. Years later we ran into eacxh other at a Bouchercon and he said--in good humor--"What happened, you got fat?" I said, "So did Roberto Duran!"
RJR
I'd like to read HARD CITY but I do NOT read e-books.
ReplyDeleteRJR
I am Clark's granddaughter, Amanda. It was really nice to read this, thank you for appreciating my Grandfathers work and continuing to pass it on through your blog.
ReplyDelete-Amanda Howard
Your grandfather has a Lot of fans around these (virtual) parts...
ReplyDelete