Thursday, October 11, 2012

"The Ginger Man for Modern Times"

I've been flattered beyond belief. J.P. Donleavy is one of my all time favourite authors. His first novel, The Ginger Man is one I have read at least six times. And it gets better with every reading. I've read practically everything since then that Mr. Donleavy has produced.

So it was with humble gratitude that I read the first review of my novel The Libertine....

A five star review that one could not even pay for.

Click here to see the review


Saturday, July 28, 2012

A New Shot of Modern Noir: The Club

My latest noir novelette, The Club, has just been published in eBook format.

The Club is a story built around a rich married couple whose teenage daughter goes missing following a seedy sex party at an exclusive private members' club.



With nowhere else to turn and having been let down by the first private eye they hired, the aging couple turn to P.I. Jimmy O'Hanlon, who sets off to discover the sordid and sad truth behind the teenager's disappearance.


In order to make a meal out if it I've also published my three shots of modern noir in one volume, entitled Sharp Shots. It is available via Amazon at a special launch price.


Click here to get to my Amazon author's page


In this volume you can find:
- The Club
- Sunset Strip
- Candy Says Kill


Dip your toes in the world of Modern Noir...

Friday, July 20, 2012

Death Call in print once again...

After almost thirteen years out of print, Death Call will be once again made available in dead tree format under the Breffni Books imprint, published via our friend Jeff Bezos at Amazon.


Kindle sales were doing so well that I thought it would be a good idea to re-release this one in print. Other old titles may follow... 


Death Call is available through normal sales channels at a rather reasonable price.... 


Here's the direct link...

Good reviews are always welcome!


The blurb looks like this:


It was all he could do to stop his hangover from spilling out onto the victim as he studied her neck and what he made out to be the initial puncture wound in her abdomen. From that point, he thought, she had been opened like an envelope with a paper knife, revealing a mess of entrails and blood.

With a deranged serial killer on the loose, Detective Sergeant Dan Carroll and his new partner Detective Constable Samuel Grant find themselves trawling the seedy side of London in search of a brutal killer who preys on prostitutes.

A Shot of Modern Noir.



And I've added one or two words of praise from the Paddy Pack (the Irish Crime Writer's fraternity), including the one from the original print version from Eugene McEldowney.



"Death Call is a rattling good read and T.S. O'Rourke is a crime writer to watch."
Eugene McEldowney, crime writer


"As blunt and effective as the average anvil, TS O'Rourke's prose in Death Call was hardboiled, pickled and left out to dry under a post-apocalyptic sun."
Declan Burke - crime writer and blogger extraordinaire


Saturday, July 14, 2012

Dark Days of Summer - Sale


I'm on vacation. And I'm guessing that most of you will be on vacation soon enough (or perhaps not quite soon enough - I know that feeling too).

In order to celebrate the coming (but so far elusive) sunshine I've slashed the prices on all of my books and short stories...

So if you are in the mood for some Modern Noir this summer look no further

You can find the books on Amazon.com here: http://www.amazon.com/T.-S.-ORourke/e/B001KCID38
or on Amazon.co.uk here: http://www.amazon.co.uk/T.-S.-ORourke/e/B001KCID38

Have a good one!

Sunday, June 17, 2012

An intelligent and insightful book....



I'm not easily flattered. I guess I'm too cynical for that. I always look for a motive. Perhaps that's why I enjoy writing crime/noir stuff so much.

So it was with something of a shock that I discovered the 'perfect review' if such a thing exists, for my historical fiction/faction novel The Republican: An Irish Civil War Story.

To prove that I'm not imagining things or making stuff up I've added the link below.

REVIEW

There - you see... I'm not imagining it, am I? 

Friday, April 13, 2012

Another Shot of Modern Noir in the works...

I've been beavering away on a new noir novelette (a little alliteration is good for the soul) and I'm quite pleased with it. Should be finished in the next month or two... time permitting.

Here's the general gist of the story....

Working title 'The Club'

A wealthy couple join an exclusive club and are invited to participate in rather unusual activities at a party. Both man and wife and their teenage daughter are separated during these activities and they each go through a series of 'tests' that will define their position in the inner circle of members.
They discover, after the party, that their daughter has mysteriously disappeared. No one saw her leave the club grounds...
Finding little solace in the club's management or the local police department, the exasperated couple turn to hiring a private eye to find their daughter.... But can they reveal what went on at the party? And is that connected to their daughter's disappearance?

Coming soon!



Saturday, March 10, 2012

Killing me softly....

Every now and then I run a book promotion to get a little notice out in the big bad world.


My mainstream literary novel, Killing a Friend, will be available for free on Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk in ebook format for the next several days, starting later today/early tomorrow. Here's the cover blurb. It's a mix of love and rage, set in exotic West Sweden...



Killing a Friend is a novel about people that love each other, about friends, acquaintances and life partners.
Lost souls clinging to the familiar, despite their better judgment - a story that takes normal life one step further.
Two friends, two artists, two men that love the same woman - a tragedy, an unforgivable able deception and a chance to begin again.
Killing a Friend is a book of love, longing and lust.

Friday, March 2, 2012

A Cracker of a Book.... a four star review of Death Call



4.0 out of 5 stars
 
A Cracker of a book29 Feb 2012
By 
Mr. Stephen D. Wassell "sdwassell" (Norfolk, England) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Death Call: The London Serial Killer Case (Carroll & Grant Mysteries) (Kindle Edition)
I hate it when I read " I couldn't put this book down" because I always find myself let down. However, in this case If I had read that sentence about "Death Call" I would have had to agree with it. I was hooked on it from the start. It has pace throughout and vivid descriptions of both the crimes and the two totally different people who, by virtue of their job, have to work together to solve them. it's a very readable crime novel and, personally, I found it almost a throwback to the likes of John Creasey. If you like a decent 'tec book get this one. One quibble, a couple of the(thankfully short) sex scenes could have been omitted without any detriment to the book. I am looking forward to reading the next one in the series.



Death Call at Amazon.co.uk

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Death Call hits a high point!

I'm humbled and delighted.


Death Call, written in the heady days of 1996 and published for the first time in paperback in 1997, has just climbed mysteriously high in the UK in eBook format.


At the last count it was number 11 in Books > Crime, Thrillers & Mystery > British Detectives


To quote our friend and crime novelist extraordinaire Declan Burke over on Crime Always Pays, here are the words of the wee blurb elves....

"It was all he could do to stop his hangover from spilling out onto the victim as he studied her neck and what he made out to be the initial puncture wound in her abdomen. From that point, he thought, she had been opened like an envelope with a paper knife, revealing a mess of entrails and blood.

With a deranged serial killer on the loose, Detective Sergeant Dan Carroll and his new partner Detective Constable Samuel Grant find themselves trawling the seedy side of London in search of a brutal killer who preys on prostitutes.

A Shot of Modern Noir.

T.S. O'Rourke's writing has been declared powerful, beautiful and hard-boiled by both readers and critics alike."
If you like hard-boiled London-based serial killer stories that come with a sense of humour, a smattering of steamy sex and a little social commentary on the state of the underbelly, then you might like this. And for those of you that do, you might also like Death Call's follow-up, Damned Nation (which has also spiked in terms of sales recently, I'm delighted to say).
Here's the UK link: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B003X978GO
And for the rest of the world, via Amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B003X978GO

Thank you all!

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Review: "A Noir Streak as Deep as a Femme Fatale's Cleavage"

I just recently received a very gratifying review over on amazon.com for my novelette Candy Says Kill, which I've copied and pasted below, with another earlier review below it...




4.0 out of 5 stars Mick Says Cool: A Shot of Unruly ReviewJanuary 12, 2012
By 
M. Halpin (Dublin Ireland) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Candy Says Kill: A Shot of Modern Noir (Kindle Edition)
I read Candy Says Kill yesterday in two sittings- it's a jawbreaker. (That's a candy that lasts a good long while, for anyone not familiar.) Some of the layers: 
- New York hood, 
- backwoods beauty, 
- seedy bar, 
- cheap motel, 
- rednecks swinging axe handles, 
- roundhouse kicks, 
- stolen cars, 
- showercaps. 
- and blood. Lots and lots o' blood. 


T.S. O'Rourke has a Noir streak deep as any femme fatale's cleavage- and just as much fun. Reknowned Alabama Public Radio reviewer Don Noble would ask in wonder if the author has ever actually spent a night drinking with locals in an Alabama town, but Candy would just say Kill.




4.0 out of 5 stars Rusting quietlyMarch 29, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Candy Says Kill: A Shot of Modern Noir (Kindle Edition)
This is a fast-paced, powerful short story that turns on a coincidence--a man who has killed before for money stops in a small Alabama town and the bartender's young and gorgeous wife takes him for the contract killer she ordered. His lust and experience lead him to take advantage of the situation, with some chilling and realistic dialog and action. They say every good short story could be a novel and every bad novel might be a short story. This is a good one, and God knows it's harder to write a good short story than a novel. I write hardboiled stuff and this one fits the bill nicely in a more modern setting. Well worth the price.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Ganglands update

I'm slowly but surely going through all the covers of my existing books and short stories trying apply a sense of order.
I'm not a great one for order or processes, so it will most likely take some time to get them all done....
Howsoever, to wit, herewith and without further ado, I present the updated Ganglands cover.

Hope y'all like it!