$LAYYYTER
Three Goblin Art
todays bird
almost home
No title available

titsay

izzy's playlists!
Mike Driver

Andulka

tannertan36
Sade Olutola

Product Placement

Kiana Khansmith

Kaledo Art
Claire Keane

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
No title available
DEAR READER
Cosimo Galluzzi

Discoholic 🪩

seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from South Korea

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Israel
seen from United States

seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Indonesia

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from United States
@mackenzie-brown
Cary Grant and Alfred Hitchcock photographed on the set of Notorious at RKO Pictures studio in Hollywood, 1946
“Literature is the most agreeable way of ignoring life.”
— The Book of Disquiet by Fernando Pessoa (via bookaddict24-7)
Let me know your thoughts on my article ‘Watching The Detectives’ written for #Readers Magnate club
#writerscommunity #amwriting #noir #books
https://www.readersmagnet.club/watching-the-detectives/
Let me know your thoughts on my article ‘Watching The Detectives’ written for #Readers Magnate club
#writerscommunity #amwriting #noir #books
https://www.readersmagnet.club/watching-the-detectives/
Watching the detectives
WATCHING THE DETECTIVES
The Prince of the City series is an homage to the best hardboiled, pulp fiction from the USA that sprung up in the 1930s and 1940s. As a lover of the work of Chandler and Hammett, I continued my foray into the world of noir by reading John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee series, Ross MacDonald’s (no relative) Lew Archer books and these days I enjoy reading Robert Crais’ series featuring Elvis Cole and Joe Pike. As a result of my love for these classic authors and their characters, I developed a desire to create my own version of noir fiction. So, you must forgive me if a few Americanisms find their way into the language of Vic Prince and his cohorts, particularly in the first book in the series, The Cat’s Whiskers.
As the series developed into book two and three, I found that, as I’ve become more comfortable in the genre, my prose these days is littered with fewer phrases from US noir fiction and I’ve created something of a hybrid. I might call it British noir, so I suppose that leads me nicely into explaining why I set the series in Liverpool in the first place.
Liverpool is the city of my birth, a city steeped in history—not all of it positive—and, during research for a previous book, I found that enjoyed writing stories set in the forties.
As many fans of detective stories will attest, one of the many tropes is that the central character is often the underdog—someone who is fighting on all fronts, when everyone around them seems crooked and rotten. That was one of the reasons why I opted to portray my titular character, Vic Prince, as a black man of African ancestry. This ties in well with one of the shameful things about the city I love: the slave trade and the rampant racism of the era in which the series is set. This harsh environment Prince finds himself in also provides another way in which readers can empathise with the protagonist.
In the second book, Nine Lives, Vic ventures to Southport, an affluent and prominently white seaside resort.
Here, Prince faces an alien landscape in which the usual odds stacked against him are even more acute.
Each book has an individual mystery, but the series actually takes place over the course of a year. A more complex, overarching mystery runs through the series like a thread, acting as a bridge that connects the narrative across all five books.
In book three, Picture Purrfect, the most famous black actor in Hollywood is filming in the city and hires Vic to solve a rather delicate problem. Vic is forced to lock horns with a hard man from the North East in his quest to stop a stone killer in a dress.
The idea of using cats as a way of connecting each of the titles sprang from my own admiration for our four-legged friends, as well as the fact that, throughout the entire series, Vic is chasing down miniature charms, created in the feline form, known as the Nine Lives—and that every faction in the city is looking to get hold of them and unlock the secret they hold.
The fourth book in the series is almost ready for publication, Return of the Feline.
In this book, we learn that Vic’s best friend and black marketeer, Percy, had a bad breakup a couple of years before, and his former fiancée contacts Vic out of the blue. Vic knows Percy still carries a torch for Agatha, but when he meets her—instead of wanting him to smooth the path to a reunion with Percy—she reveals that she has four items from the Nine Lives collection to sell. It seems other factions in the city know what she is selling, and two men are trying to kill her, while another pair are on the lookout for her and her former business partner. Vic is left to pick up the pieces, managing his best friend’s emotions when she goes into hiding and keeping her alive long enough to keep the items she is selling from falling into enemy hands.
I am currently writing book five, King of the Jungle, which will conclude 1940 and the first overarching narrative of the series, and will be published in early 2021.
Mackenzie Brown, November 2020
COMING SOON!!
Book 4 in The Prince of the City series
Percy’s old flame gets under Ginny’s skin and takes her life her in her hands, when she crosses the dangerously psychotic, Everton Cosgrove, in her return to #1940s #war torn #Liverpool ...
Watching the detectives
WATCHING THE DETECTIVES
The Prince of the City series is an homage to the best hardboiled, pulp fiction from the USA that sprung up in the 1930s and 1940s. As a lover of the work of Chandler and Hammett, I continued my foray into the world of noir by reading John D. MacDonald’s Travis McGee series, Ross MacDonald’s (no relative) Lew Archer books and these days I enjoy reading Robert Crais’ series featuring Elvis Cole and Joe Pike. As a result of my love for these classic authors and their characters, I developed a desire to create my own version of noir fiction. So, you must forgive me if a few Americanisms find their way into the language of Vic Prince and his cohorts, particularly in the first book in the series, The Cat’s Whiskers.
As the series developed into book two and three, I found that, as I’ve become more comfortable in the genre, my prose these days is littered with fewer phrases from US noir fiction and I’ve created something of a hybrid. I might call it British noir, so I suppose that leads me nicely into explaining why I set the series in Liverpool in the first place.
Liverpool is the city of my birth, a city steeped in history—not all of it positive—and, during research for a previous book, I found that enjoyed writing stories set in the forties.
As many fans of detective stories will attest, one of the many tropes is that the central character is often the underdog—someone who is fighting on all fronts, when everyone around them seems crooked and rotten. That was one of the reasons why I opted to portray my titular character, Vic Prince, as a black man of African ancestry. This ties in well with one of the shameful things about the city I love: the slave trade and the rampant racism of the era in which the series is set. This harsh environment Prince finds himself in also provides another way in which readers can empathise with the protagonist.
In the second book, Nine Lives, Vic ventures to Southport, an affluent and prominently white seaside resort.
Here, Prince faces an alien landscape in which the usual odds stacked against him are even more acute.
Each book has an individual mystery, but the series actually takes place over the course of a year. A more complex, overarching mystery runs through the series like a thread, acting as a bridge that connects the narrative across all five books.
In book three, Picture Purrfect, the most famous black actor in Hollywood is filming in the city and hires Vic to solve a rather delicate problem. Vic is forced to lock horns with a hard man from the North East in his quest to stop a stone killer in a dress.
The idea of using cats as a way of connecting each of the titles sprang from my own admiration for our four-legged friends, as well as the fact that, throughout the entire series, Vic is chasing down miniature charms, created in the feline form, known as the Nine Lives—and that every faction in the city is looking to get hold of them and unlock the secret they hold.
The fourth book in the series is almost ready for publication, Return of the Feline.
In this book, we learn that Vic’s best friend and black marketeer, Percy, had a bad breakup a couple of years before, and his former fiancée contacts Vic out of the blue. Vic knows Percy still carries a torch for Agatha, but when he meets her—instead of wanting him to smooth the path to a reunion with Percy—she reveals that she has four items from the Nine Lives collection to sell. It seems other factions in the city know what she is selling, and two men are trying to kill her, while another pair are on the lookout for her and her former business partner. Vic is left to pick up the pieces, managing his best friend’s emotions when she goes into hiding and keeping her alive long enough to keep the items she is selling from falling into enemy hands.
I am currently writing book five, King of the Jungle, which will conclude 1940 and the first overarching narrative of the series, and will be published in early 2021.
Mackenzie Brown, November 2020
COMING SOON!!
Book 4 in The Prince of the City series
Percy’s old flame gets under Ginny’s skin and takes her life her in her hands, when she crosses the dangerously psychotic, Everton Cosgrove, in her return to #1940s #war torn #Liverpool ...
Book 4 COMING SOON!
Vic agrees to a clandestine meeting with Percy’s old flame in #1940s #war torn #Liverpool - but doesn’t count on trouble in the shape of a deadly blood feud, in a pulsating, multi layered #thriller, from start to finish...
She looked up at me and tried to smile.
“Easy kid. Just lay still.”
“Okay handsome,” she mumbled.
“Don’t talk, for Christ’s sake Ginny.”
“I knew we were friends,” she said in a whisper.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00FJ6MT3G
Prince of The City: The Cat's Whiskers (Prince of The City Series Book 1) eBook: Brown, Mackenzie: Amazon.co.uk: Kindle Store
Painting: Paris, France | Artist: Evgeny Lushpin || lushpin_
‘Ten Little Thrills’ a collection of ten very different #thrillers
Featuring;
‘The Disciple’ - a best selling author faces the wrath of her biggest fan & A man risks everything when his life is #stolen in ‘Identity Theft’
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Ten-Little-Thrills-Mackenzie-Brown/dp/1976109558/ref=sr_1_1?s=books
Buy Ten Little Thrills 1 by Brown, Mackenzie (ISBN: 9781976109553) from Amazon's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligib
Prince of the City - The Cat's Whiskers youtu.be/X3aaqGLEOQI
‘My #detective #book #series is an homage to the #US dime store novels of the #30s & #40s but set in the city of #Liverpool in war torn 1940’
viewBook.at/CatsWhiskers-B…
#CrimeFiction #readerswanted #writing
Prince of the City - The Cat’s Whiskers youtu.be/X3aaqGLEOQI
“Don’t talk, for Christ’s sake Ginny.”
“I knew we were friends,” she said in a whisper.
I was coming apart at the seams. This beautiful, intelligent woman was hanging onto life by a thread and she wanted to make jokes.
viewBook.at/CatsWhiskers-B…
#books