The Swan Song of a Hardboiled Master: GBH pubs on 4/21

GBH is a novel as direct as it is stunning . . . I reckon he knew a good deal of what he was writing about from very close to—perhaps dangerously so. That leaps out of the work immediately.
— Derek Raymond, author of the Factory novels

PREORDER FROM

IndieBound  |  Barnes & Noble  | Amazon
  Syndicate

The most enigmatic novel by the author of Get Carter and the Jack Carter Trilogy, GBH is perhaps Ted Lewis' finest piece of writing and soon to be available for the first time in decades.

Among crime fiction enthusiasts it is a book of near mythical legend, available only via rare book dealers for exorbitant prices. GBH was published as a paperback original at a low point in the career of its author. Within a year of its publication the book was out of print and its author dead of alcohol related disease. Lewis was only 42.

That last and grimmest detail is what perhaps makes GBH so fascinating and tragic. The two novels that preceded it were among Lewis' least inspired. The sharp wit was there but so too was a cynicism and meanness that no longer contained the emotional resonance of his previous work.

And yet while his health was failing, and at the lowest point in his still young career, Lewis wrote the brilliantly sinister GBH, a novel that captures nearly every theme the author addressed during his all too short life. In a pair of narratives you are given "The Smoke" of 1970s London, where a ruthless crime lord is losing grasp on his sanity and empire, and "The Sea" of an English beach town in the off season, where the same man now lives in hiding, his empire in shambles and his identity uncertain.

The classic Lewis themes concerning the contrast between big and small town life, the ruthlessness of organized crime, and the high cost of violence are all present in GBH just as they were in his groundbreaking second novel, Get Carter. So too are the richly drawn characters, whether they are vicious gangsters or boardwalk townies living out their lives in the sleepy off-season. But GBH has something more: a delightfully clever twisting of plot that lends it a near supernatural air.

GBH is not the influential "blueprint" that Get Carter was. It did not influence the way crime stories are told. It is however a masterpiece of crime fiction and a wholly singular novel. Gritty, creepy, fascinating. 

It is now available for the first time in North America, and for the first time in hardcover and ebook formats. It's time this novel finds its place in the crime fiction canon. 

Syndicate Books Acquires the Estate of Margaret Millar, MWA Grandmaster

Syndicate Books is very excited to announce that we have acquired publishing rights for the complete works of Margaret Millar, MWA Grandmaster and one-time Los Angeles Times Woman of the Year. Millar was a pioneer of the modern psychological and domestic thriller. She was also the wife of Kenneth Millar, aka Ross Macdonald.

There was a lot of bad wood beneath the veneer of the "Greatest Generation" and Millar exposed a lot of it. See the official press release below and sign up for our newsletter for more details about the project as it develops.

Millar's Beast in View won the 1956 Edgar Award for Best Novel and she in turn received the title of Grandmaster from the Mystery Writer's of America in 1983.

Millar's Beast in View won the 1956 Edgar Award for Best Novel and she in turn received the title of Grandmaster from the Mystery Writer's of America in 1983.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

New York, New York, October 23rd 2014—Paul Oliver, Publisher of Syndicate Books, has reached an agreement with Craig Tenney at Harold Ober Associates and the estate of Margaret Millar to publish the MWA Grandmaster’s complete works in North America.

Millar (1915-1994) was the author of 27 books and a pioneer of the modern psychological thriller. Millar's novel Beast in View won the 1956 Edgar Award for Best Novel and she was the recipient of the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award in 1983. In 1965 she was selected by the Los Angeles Times as "Woman of the Year." Syndicate Books will publish all 27 of Millar’s books in ten print volumes in the fall of 2015 and all 27 titles as individual ebooks throughout 2015, starting in January.

2015 is the centennial of Margaret Millar’s birth. She was married to fellow crime writing legend Kenneth Millar, who is better known by his nom de plume, Ross Macdonald.

Syndicate Books is distributed to the trade by Soho Press, Inc.

Syndicate Store Open and Other News

Buy direct and support Syndicate Books.

Buy direct and support Syndicate Books.

With a few tweaks to the Syndicate website we are now able to offer you direct shipment on physical editions of our books—domestic and international. We also hope to have eBook deliver capabilities just around the corner.

So please check out the new Syndicate Shop. We'll be updating it with additional books, you know, as we make them.

Also check back in later this week for an important announcement about our next project.

Syndicate also hopes to have some concrete dates for the publication of the rest of Ted Lewis' novels in the next two weeks. The plan is still to publish all of them as eBooks by end of year.