Thursday, November 19, 2009

Gloria Feit's Review of DOUBLE EXPOSURE


"Mr. Lister's eloquent evocation of the beauty of the area and its non-human inhabitants makes clear to the reader what has drawn his protagonist back and easily explains James' return to the profession on which he had turned his back. The threats to the region's ecosystem are made equally vivid.

The novel is thought-provoking, while at the same time the author deftly maintains and steadily builds suspense.

Mr. Lister's writing is stylistically fresh, frequently alliterative, and distinctive. "Double Exposure" is a wholly original and ultimately haunting work, and it is highly recommended."

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Double Exposure Comes to Stage and Gallery This Week


There comes a time in every parent’s life when he must entrust the care of his child to another. Babysitter, daycare worker, school teacher—eventually, we give up control.

If you’re like me—more maternal than anything else—this is a frightening proposition. No one will care for my baby the way I do.

As with most things, when looking for someone to share my most treasured treasure with, I use intuition. Sure, I observe character revealed in unguarded moments, but how I feel about the person—what I know without knowing anything is how I make my final decision.

Recently, I entrusted my novel, “Double Exposure,” to Jason Hedden, an actor, producer, director, and a professor at Gulf Coast Community College. This fruit of my loins (and other parts of me) that had gestated inside of me for so long, that I had carried and labored over and had given birth to, this truly beloved child of mine, I gave to Jason.

Jason took “Double Exposure,” a novel, and turned it into “Double Exposure,” an extraordinary theatrical experience. I was right to give Jason my book, and I couldn’t be happier with what he’s done with it.

Jason Hedden is a theatrical genius.

With an amazing vision from the very beginning, Jason carefully, thoughtfully, magnificently adapted a book into a play—a play that honors the book as much as another art form can, one that uses the strengths of theater to lift the story off the pages and set the characters and events twirling across the stage.

I’ve had the wonderful opportunity to watch Jason work, to witness firsthand his enormous effort, his respect for the book, his dedication and determination.

Each night I’ve attended rehearsals, I’ve had the experience of encountering people and places and events from my dreams. It’s a singular, surreal phenomenon.

“Double Exposure,” the theatrical experience, presents the book in a way that combines the best of the original text with the best of staged drama. Characters speak narration as well as dialog, bringing a literary quality to the play unlike any I’ve ever seen. The use of minimalist sets encourages, even forces, the audience to use its imagination in a way not unlike the book.

In the book, I mention that a prominent voice inside the main character’s head is that of his dead father’s. Genius Jason took that and used it to dramatize the experience—for the characters and the audience—by having the deceased father on stage talking to his son.

One more example of genius: In the book, the main character, a photographer, thinks about the greatest photographs ever taken, in an attempt to calm himself in a severely stressful situation. It would have been easy to project the iconic images onto a screen on the stage, but Jason staged them with actors—bringing them to life and preserving the poetic descriptions of them from the book.

Jason Hedden’s play, “Double Exposure,” has my highest recommendation. I hope you’ll see it. Of course, I hope you’ll read the book first, but if you decide not to, it wouldn’t bother me nearly as much as usual because of how much like reading a book Jason’s remarkable production really is.

Here’s more information about the play from the college:

Tickets have gone on sale for GCCC’s latest theatre production, “Double Exposure,” the world premier stage adaptation of local author, Michael Lister’s newest novel. “Double Exposure” is a suspenseful tale of life and death set in the swamps of the Apalachicola River Basin.

The performances will take place in the GCCC Theatre Lab, also known as the black box, which is extremely popular with local audiences. However, due to limited seating, advance purchase of tickets is strongly recommended.

“Double Exposure” will show from Wednesday, November 18, through Saturday, November 21, at 7:30 p.m. On Saturday and Sunday, November 21 and 22, there will be matinee shows at 2:30 p.m. Please be advised that this production is for mature audiences only. Tickets can be purchased at the GCCC Visual and Performing Arts office in the Amelia G. Tapper Center. Box office hours are Monday through Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and from 12:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. until all tickets are sold out. Any remaining seats will be sold at the door. Doors open 30 minutes prior to curtain time and no one will be admitted once the performance starts.

Tickets are on sale for $10. Gulf Coast Community College students, retirees, faculty, staff and dual-enrolled students may pick up their free ticket at the Visual and Performing Arts Division office (ID required). Alumni get a 50 percent discount when presenting their alumni membership card.

For more information, call Sherri Renfroe at 872-3886.
(Picture by Jordan Marking)


ALSO . . .

The Visual & Performing Arts Division at Gulf Coast Community College is proud to present “Adaptation,” a collection of photographs inspired by Michael Lister’s latest novel, “Double Exposure.” The exhibit focuses on black and white photography techniques.

Gulf Coast Community College’s photography I and II students created the photography which represents a wide range of visual interpretations of the text. The artists have endeavored to create thoughtful works that reflect a variety of the novel’s themes, both literal and otherwise.

The exhibition will be held at Gulf Coast Community College’s Amelia G. Tapper Center in the Main Gallery. The Opening Reception will be on Wednesday, November 18, from 5:00 - 7:00 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. The Exhibit will remain open until November 20.

If you have any questions or would like to visit the gallery, please contact Tammy Marinuzzi at tmarinuzzi@gulfcoast.edu or call 769-1551, ext. 2890.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

DOUBLE EXPOSURE a Riveting Page-Turner, Poem in Prose!


by Jackie Minniti, The Island Reporter

Michael Lister is a writer whose roots go deep into Florida soil. He was born and raised in Wewahitchka, a small town in the Panhandle where his great-grandfather settled after leaving Mississippi. After earning his graduate degree in theology from Oral Roberts University, Lister returned home and took a job as a prison chaplain, the youngest in the Florida Department of Corrections. But he had already been bitten by the writing bug. “I always knew I wanted to write,” Lister says. “Since I had to do a lot of writing in graduate school, I decided to continue after graduation.” By 1997, he had completed his first novel, Power in the Blood, the story of John Jordan, a prison chaplain whose career, reputation, and life are imperiled when he witnesses the bloody death of an inmate. Praised as a “Taut, highly readable story that manages to deliver a few surprises and a unique hero” (Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel), this was the first in what would become a critically-acclaimed series of John Jordan jailhouse mysteries.

In 2000, Lister decided to follow what he calls his “passion and obsession” and become a full-time writer. “I love writing so much, I can’t imagine anything better. I’m so grateful to be doing this. There’s something mysterious about the process, about tapping into something transcendental.” And much of his inspiration comes from his surroundings. “The pace of small town life is conducive to writing. My hometown is like my little Walden.” He calls the Panhandle “the undiscovered part of Florida, an area that’s special and unique.”

The Panhandle plays an integral part in most of Lister’s works, particularly in his latest novel, Double Exposure. The story of a wildlife photographer who unexpectedly captures images of a young woman’s murder, Double Exposure is what Lister describes as “my heart on the page.” In addition to being a riveting page-turner, the book is a poem in prose about the wild beauty of the Florida Panhandle. The story resonates with Lister’s reverence for the land. “I’ve always been connected to the land. I think we lose something when we separate from it. It’s good for us to reconnect to the earth that we come from.” He hopes the Panhandle will learn from the mistakes made in other regions of Florida and will take care of its resources. In fact, Lister intends to donate the book’s proceeds to the Mother Earth Fund, an environmental group dedicated to preserving the area.

In addition to volunteering as a prison chaplain and spending time with his wife and three children, Lister is putting the finishing touches on his next novel, Thunder Beach, a mystery/thriller set at the Panama Beach motorcycle rally. Lister hopes his books will give readers a good reading experience on all levels. “There’s a place for entertainment, but I aspire to more than just that. I want to inspire my readers in some small way; to leave something lasting that will remain with them after the last page is turned.”

Monday, September 14, 2009

DOUBLE EXPOSURE is HERE! Order today. Please!



Be sure to use these numbers when you order:


Paperback | ISBN 978-0982520925 | $14.95

Hardcover | ISBN 978-0982520932 | $24.95



“Double Exposure” is absolutely riveting! Elegiac prose, insightful characterization and a wonderfully ingenious plot." Michael Connelly

"A Hitchcockian thriller. A spellbinding page-turner .” Booklist

"Lyrical, evocative prose, reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy‘s 'The Road.'” Panama City News Herald

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Magic Words by Tim Croft


Michael Lister is one of a kind, a Renaissance man and wordsmith that make him a county asset.

A series of mystery novels, screenplays, plays, short stories and essays, Lister not only writes in those genres, he excels, providing for readers words that engage, words that offer a reader a glimpse into their own world.

And Lister is generous with his talent.

Last year, as economic times toughened, Lister donated some 1,000 copies of his books to any interested reader.

His Tupelo Theater offers a showcase for local talent and films, such as tonight when the theater will host an environmental film festival. He also holds an annual writing workshop to promote and engage local writers.

This is a man who follows a muse, yes, but also his heart, in his writing and in his actions.

This Saturday, at Gaskin Park, he will officially launch his new book, Double Exposure, which represents a significant departure from his John Jordan mystery series.

Lister calls the book his best to date.

And he will be donating all profits from the book to conservation efforts in the area.

There is a reason.

Double Exposure is primarily set in the swamps of North Florida, where the protagonist has, after life events, most particularly the death of his father, altered his course, returned to an early love, wildlife photography.

In doing so, the main character becomes enmeshed in a murder mystery, but more importantly he finds himself facing his own mortality and pondering life and all its meaning.

“It’s a literary thriller,” Lister said. “It is not your traditional murder mystery, but it also deals with the mysteries of life.”

But this slim volume of just over 200 pages represents an achievement for the author that will pay off handsomely for the reader.

Photography, the snapshots of time, feed the prose, which, in short bursts, fills in the blanks of Remington James’ life, world, mind and soul.

The succinct prose, the absence of much punctuation calls to mind several prominent authors, including Cormac McCarthy.

“That is a high compliment,” Lister said. “I didn’t necessarily want the prose to be spare, but I wanted the punctuation to be spare,” he added, noting it was a product of the writing style he adopted for his latest book and the look of the printed story on the page.

That style is one of the reasons that Lister labels Double Exposure his best, which will be published by Tyrus Books of Madison, WI.

“I’m really pleased with the stylistic achievement,” Lister said. “It is the next step for me.

“The subject matter lent itself to the style. It is almost impressionism through content.”

The story jumps from third person narration to first person flashbacks of James’ time on earth, his contemplation of what this life is all about, his memories and how the world and the events in his life have shaped him.

“It says a lot of things I wanted to say, about the meaning of life, meditation, how events shape lives,” Lister said.

Lister said the book started with a simple image.

“That image was this ghastly image of those green-hued photographs that a wildlife photographer would capture, particularly at night or around dusk,” Lister said.

From there it was a matter of decoding a story in his mind and on paper and adopting a style that would fit that image.

Those often ghostly images of wildlife permeate the story, and some frames that James captures ultimately set in motion a murder mystery which threads its way through James’ meditations on his life in the novel.

Those frames bring danger and lead to the circumstances in which James must take stock of himself while saving himself.

While Lister perceives the book as a literary evolution of sorts, and Double Exposure is a unique writing achievement, he somehow pulls off a story that is also an action adventure.

“I try to tell an entertaining and suspenseful story that will leave the reader thinking,” Lister said.

In January, after the book had already been submitted to his publisher, Lister had a brainstorm while preparing lunch in his kitchen.

Recalling the Christmas book giveaway, Lister wanted to donate the profits from Double Exposure to conserving the very lands that provide the setting for the novel, the Apalachicola River basin and its swamps and sloughs.

His protagonist is fighting to survive in the book; Lister is trying to ensure the landscape surrounding James for much of the novel also survives.

His editor agreed to the idea, the publisher was on board and Lister’s agent made it unanimous.

“This whole thing is just unique,” Lister said.

The launch party will be held from 4-6 p.m. CT on Sept. 5 at Gaskin Park in Wewahitchka, a great launching spot to see the Apalachicola River and therefore an appropriate spot for launching a book in which the river plays an important role.

And for a book which Lister hopes will ultimately help conserve the river by donating money to efforts in Gulf County to do just that.

The launch party will also include a photography exhibit and a film about the Apalachicola by Elam Stoltzfus, who movingly told the story of Florida’s largest river and the people who live along it in a movie two years ago.

In two weeks, Lister will also hold a book signing at Palm Tree Books in Port St. Joe, an effort, Lister said, that in part is about promoting reading and the assets Gulf County has for the written word.

One of those would be the author himself.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Lister's lyrical novel reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy's “The Road"


Author Michael Lister hopes to get twice the bang for his new novel, “Double Exposure.” Not only is he donating all profits from the book to environmental protection and local conservation efforts, but also he’s organized a traveling cultural/arts event around the book’s release.

“This book is a gift,” Lister said. “Well, I guess they all are, but there’s something special about this one. It’s a literary love letter to this area I so love.”


The area is the Apalachicola River basin, and it’s deep inside these dangerous river swamps that the novel’s suspenseful tale of life and death survival unfolds. A wildlife photographer, Remington James, comes across a shocking crime when he ventures into the swamp to test new equipment. He’s hunted through the night by psychotic killers, while trying to survive the dangers of the natural world.


“I see the river system the same way — fighting to survive, and I’m trying to do my small part to make sure it does,” Lister said. He added that the primary menace in the story comes from other human beings, but the land itself is dangerous and deserves respect.


The novel is lyrical and literary, written in a sparse but evocative prose reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy‘s “The Road.” Lister is rightfully proud of the work, which he calls a contemplation of life and death, art and meaning. It’s a paradox, he says, that the very places that connect with us through beauty and spirit are also so often deadly.


Lister decided to give away his proceeds for “Double Exposure” during this past holiday season. The tough economic times meant many people were struggling to buy gifts, and he was inspired to give away more than 1,000 copies of his novels.


“It was one of the very best experiences of my writing career so far,” Lister said. “The response was stunning. The books went so fast, and then I started getting e-mails and thank-you notes. They were so complimentary of the books, but also they were so moved that it had been a gift. It felt so amazing that I knew for the rest of my life, I would look for ways to give back using the gift of writing.”


Lister plans to donate profits from “Double Exposure” to protect the habitat and wildlife of the Apalachicola River basin. He hopes to give to established groups including the Nature Conservancy, Apalachicola River Keepers, and Big Bend Wildlife Sanctuary, as well as the Mother Earth Fund.


“It feels so good to bring some attention to the river and the swamps and the endangered species of vanishing Florida,” he said. “Nothing feels better than giving — and to give my very best in this novel, then give the profits from it to help protect the land and animals it honors ... it’s indescribable.”


Lister has arranged a traveling multimedia show to help debut the novel around the region. Events will feature readings from “Double Exposure” alongside art, photography, film and music inspired by the river lowlands. The book will also be rendered into audio and e-book formats, and has been reworked for the stage.


“Few things give meaning to our lives the way art does,” Lister said. “That’s one of the things the book is about and something I’m continually exploring.”


Lister and other artists will pool their talents: Sept. 3 for an Environmental Film Festival at the Tupelo Theatre, Wewahitchka; Sept. 5 at Gaskin Park, Wewahitchka; Sept. 8 at the Bay County Public Library, Panama City; Sept. 10 at The Rabbit Hole, Panama City; Sept. 12 at Books-a-Million in Panama City and Borders in Panama City Beach; Sept. 15 at Palm Tree Books, Port St. Joe; and Sept. 19 at the Gulf Coast Writers Conference, Panama City.


Jason Hedden, assistant professor of theater at Gulf Coast Community College, adapted “Double Exposure” as a play, which will be performed Nov. 18-22 at GCCC in conjunction with an art/photography exhibit.


“It’s so exciting to see another artist adapt and interpret my work,” Lister said. “(Hedden) is doing an amazing job. It won’t be a traditional play as much as a dramatic presentation of the book. It’s very cool. I hope everyone will go see it — I just want them to read the book first.”

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

Booklist: DOUBLE EXPOSURE is "Hitchcockian thriller, Spellbinding Page-turner"


Booklist
Issue: September 1, 2009

The greatest strength of crime fiction is the genre’s elasticity, opening its doors to the cuddliest cozies and the darkest of noirs. Unfortunately, too many publishers insist that authors remain glued to easily marketable slots. Lister, known for a soft-boiled series starring a prison chaplain, thankfully throws away the book in this stand-alone. The result is something akin to a Warner Brothers chain gang yarn crossed with a Hitchcockian thriller. The reader is intensely aware that a man’s life is at stake, and it’s not at all certain that everything will be all right in the end. Here’s the deal: ad-agency executive Remington James suffers a mid life crisis when his marriage goes to hell and his job loses it satisfaction. He returns (from Orlando) to the Florida panhandle to run the family pawn shop, take care of his ailing mother, take up fine-arts photography, and enjoy the wild life in the family woods (leased out to a hunt club). All goes awry when he unwittingly photographs an errant game warden murdering a young woman. He’s seen, and an excruciating chase ensues involving a pack of hounds. A spellbinding page-turner.

-Steve Glassman

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Click here to Hear DOUBLE EXPOSURE audio clip



Hear actor Jason Hedden read pages 28-39 of DOUBLE EXPOSURE:

Click on title heading above or copy and paste the link below:

http://www.box.net/shared/1br5zod1li

Thursday, July 30, 2009

DOUBLE EXPOSURE receives rave review


From Jen Forbus (Jen’s Book Thoughts Blog)

Remington James is a successful but unhappy advertising executive when his father dies. He returns to his hometown to run his father's store and care for his mother who is dying of MS. While he is home, he decides to pick up the hobby, the passion, he gave up years ago, wildlife photography. He has set trap cameras in the woods of the Apalachicola River Basin in hopes of maybe catching the elusive Florida panther. As he is out taking pictures and checking his traps one evening, he discovers that he has caught not the panther on his camera, but a murder. And now the murderers are hunting Remington through the pitch black of the Florida woods.

WARNING: I am about to gush over this incredible work of art. My hope is simply that it is a coherent gushing. O.k., you've been fairly warned.

If readers want to read DOUBLE EXPOSURE surfacely and minimally, they are in for a heart-pounding thriller. Lister's written a tight plot that doesn't allow one to slow down for even a second, just like his protagonist.

Lister created a powerful effect by being a minimalist in this novel. His protagonist is a photographer out taking pictures in the woods. Lister's prose mimics that process so you can hear the camera shutter click as you read:

Evening. Glow.
Dark figures.
Shot.
Explosion.
Bloom of blood.
Body dropping to the cold ground.
Death. Digging.
Fire.

And Lister's setting development carries you smack into the middle of Remington's Eden that is horrifically transformed into his Hell all in the course of one night. Remington reminds himself to "Use your senses. All of them." And Lister helps the readers to use their senses, all of them. Whether they are seeing the beauty of the landscape or the nightmare of a murder. Whether they are hearing life:

"Somwhere in the distance, a woodpecker taps out his mating morse code on the resonant bole of a hollow tree, and when a gentle breeze sways the tops of oaks, cypresses, magnolias, and gums, the falling leaves around him sound like the start of a soft rainfall."

Or feeling fear:

"Hairs rise.
Goose bumps.
Quickly. Quietly."

Readers will definitely be in the woods with Remington James on the most terrifying night of his life. But they'll have to listen carefully to hear nature's sounds over the thumping of their own hearts.

If you want to delve deeper, you will find a complex interweaving of theme, plot, character and setting that results in a magical reading experience. Remington is almost a unique character in crime fiction in that he comes from a functional family. His parents loved him and he loved his parents; while Remington doesn't seem conscious of it, the reader quickly learns that both parents taught him skills that made him a great man.

And of course, nature is a prominent theme as well as a symbol in DOUBLE EXPOSURE. The dark of night is essential to build up the suspense, but it plays a role also in the idea that man is destroying nature. So Remington's manic race is not just a race for his life, but a race for nature. Can they both make it out alive?

Brilliant.
Beautiful.
Must-read!
Double Exposure by Michael Lister.

DOUBLE EXPOSURE will be released by Tyrus Books in September. It will be available in hard cover (ISBN 978-0-9825209-2-5) and trade paper (978-0-9825209-3-2). Michael Lister will be donating all profits from DOUBLE EXPOSURE to environmental protection and conservation.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

New Double Exposure trailer at You Tube



Copy and paste the below link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MfE_QNWpNqU


Or go to MichaelListerBooks at You Tube

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Michael Connelly recommends DOUBLE EXPOSURE at Seattle Signing


From Jane Davis on Michael Connelly.com

I attended Michael's signing in Seattle last night. When asked what he likes to read he said his favorite crime writer was George Pelecanos. He also said he had just read an advance copy of a book coming out in September. He gave it a rave review and said it was absolutely riveting. The author is Michael Lister and the book is called DOUBLE EXPOSURE. Here's Lister's web site:

http://www.michaellister.com/

Thursday, July 16, 2009

New Podcast --- Ben LeRoy interviews Michael Lister about DOUBLE EXPOSURE


There's a new podcast interview about DOUBLE EXPOSURE at http://tyrusbooks.libsyn.com/

www.tyrusbooks.libsyn.com

www.TyrusBooks.com

www.MichaelLister.com

Monday, July 13, 2009

What People are Saying about DOUBLE EXPOSURE


“Double Exposure is absolutely riveting! I sat down, plugged in and didn't get up until the last page. With elegiac prose, insightful characterization and a wonderfully ingenious plot, Michael Lister has squeezed every ounce of terror and thrills out of a dark night in the woods.” Michael Connelly

"A great thrill ride! I remember when David Morrell’s "First Blood" appeared in paperback. On the cover was a statement that went something like: "the publisher envies you the opportunity of reading this book." I felt that way reading this trenchant, racing, instantly involving novel!" Ron Hansen, The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford

“Michael Lister possesses a poet’s eye, an environmentalist’s intellect, a conservationist’s fire, a North Floridian’s wisdom, and a mystery writer’s talent for intrigue. Double Exposure contains all of this and more. What a fine book!” Connie May Fowler, Before Women had Wings

“For readers and writers, one good word is worth a thousand pictures. And in his engrossing new novel, Double Exposure, Michael Lister has masterfully chosen wonderful words to paint both a humbling picture of a special Florida environment and a story of intrigue and danger.” Jonathon King, author of Acts of Nature


"Michael Lister's Double Exposure is simply stunning. I raced through it, hardly able to breathe. It's riveting --- a remarkable blend of thriller and literary novel. Total surrender is the only way to read this powerful new book that pulls readers deep into the dangerous beauty of North Florida river swamps in a tale of murder and the struggle to survive. Double Exposure cannot be read --- it must be devoured. Lister's accomplishment deserves major recognition." Carolyn Haines, Fever Moon


"As an artist, Michael Lister is not afraid to take a risk. And his gamble pays off big for the reader, in Double Exposure, a great stylistic achievement, cleverly imagined, and cleverly realized on the page. It is jazz on paper. With every rapid click of the camera, Double Exposure delivers a fast paced, can't-put-it-down page-turner. The images framed by Lister's camera, though, also produce an intimate character portrait, giving the story a satisfying depth." Judge Terry Lewis, Conflict of Interest

Monday, June 1, 2009

Florida Author Donates Profits from New Novel to Panhandle Conservation Efforts


Florida author, Michael Lister, is donating all the profits from his new novel, “Double Exposure,” to environmental protection and conservation.

“This book is a gift,” Lister said. “Well, I guess they all are, but there’s something special about this one. It’s a literary love letter to this area I so love.”

The area is the Apalachicola River basin. “Double Exposure” is set deep in the dangerous river swamps. It’s a suspenseful tale of life and death survival.
“In the book, a wildlife photographer, Remington James, is struggling to survive and the odds are against him. I see the river system the same way—fighting to survive, and I’m trying to do my small part to make sure it does.”

In “Double Exposure,” one fateful fall evening, as the sun sinks and the darkness expands, wildlife photographer, Remington James, ventures deep into the river swamp to try out some new equipment and check his camera traps.

While checking his camera traps, scanning the eerie images of overexposed deer and bats and foxes, Remington comes across the most haunting images of his life -- the frame-by-frame capture of a shocking crime.

By exposing the criminal, Remington has exposed himself to danger, even possible extinction. Hunted like an animal, by the predator and his psychotic friends, Remington must do two things: make it through the night and make it to the river --and the odds of doing either are slim to none.

Lyrical, literary, and told in poetic photographic impressions, Double Exposure is filled with far more than just exciting adventure and suspense. It's a contemplation of life and death and art and meaning you won't soon forget.

“I’m so proud of this book,” Lister said. “And it feels so good to bring some attention to the river and the swamps and the endangered species of vanishing Florida. Nothing feels better than giving—and to give my very best in this novel, then give the profits from it to help protect the land and animals it honors . . . it’s indescribable.”

The idea to give away his proceeds for “Double Exposure” came to Lister this past holiday season, when because of tough economic times so many people were struggling to buy gifts, he decided to give away over 1,000 copies of his novels.

“It was one of the very best experiences of my writing career so far,” Lister said. “The response was stunning. The books went so fast and then I started getting emails and thank-you notes. They were so complimentary of the books, but also they were so moved that it had been a gift. It felt so amazing that I knew for the rest of my life, I would look for ways to give back using the gift of writing. Donating the profits from “Double Exposure” toward protecting the land and animals it celebrates is a very small thing to do, but it’s a place to start, and my hope is that it’ll do some lasting good.”

“Double Exposure” will be published by Tyrus Books in September. For more information, go to www.TyrusBooks.com or www.MichaelLister.com

Thursday, May 28, 2009

What a fine book!


“Michael Lister possesses a poet’s eye, an environmentalist’s intellect, a conservationist’s fire, a North Floridian’s wisdom, and a mystery writer’s talent for intrigue. Double Exposure contains all of this and more. What a fine book!”

Connie May Fowler, author of Before Women had Wings

Monday, May 25, 2009

Double Exposure is absolutely riveting!



Bestselling Author, Michael Connelly, praises DOUBLE EXPOSURE

“Double Exposure is absolutely riveting! I sat down, plugged in and didn't get up until the last page. With elegiac prose, insightful characterization and a wonderfully ingenious plot, Michael Lister has squeezed every ounce of terror and thrills out of a dark night in the woods.” Michael Connelly

Friday, May 15, 2009

3rd Blurb for DOUBLE EXPOSURE


“For readers and writers, one good word is worth a thousand pictures. And in his engrossing new novel, Double Exposure, Michael Lister has masterfully chosen wonderful words to paint both a humbling picture of a special Florida environment and a story of intrigue and danger.” Jonathon King, author of Acts of Nature

Friday, March 27, 2009

Like Jazz on Paper


"As an artist, Michael Lister is not afraid to take a risk. And his gamble pays off big for the reader, in Double Exposure, a great stylistic achievement, cleverly imagined, and cleverly realized on the page. It is jazz on paper. With every rapid click of the camera, Double Exposure delivers a fast paced, can’t-put-it-down page-turner. The images framed by Lister’s camera, though, also produce an intimate character portrait, giving the story a satisfying depth." Judge Terry Lewis, author of Conflict of Interest

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

First Blurb for DOUBLE EXPOSURE



“Michael Lister’s Double Exposure is simply stunning. I raced through it, hardly able to breathe. It’s riveting—a remarkable blend of thriller and literary novel. Total surrender is the only way to read this powerful new book that pulls readers deep into the dangerous beauty of North Florida river swamps in a tale of murder and the struggle to survive. Double Exposure cannot be read—it must be devoured. Lister's accomplishment deserves major recognition”
Carolyn Haines, author of Fever Moon

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

DOUBLE EXPOSURE coming in September


Double Exposure will be published in September of 2009 by Tyrus Books in hardback and trade paperback:

Double Exposure (pb) -- 978-0-9825209-2-5
Double Exposure (hc) -- 978-0-9825209-3-2

Double Exposure


Will He Survive the Night?

Following his dad's death, Remington James returns to the small North Florida town where he grew up to assume his father's lifeCtaking care of his dying mother and running the local gun and pawn shop.

Picking up a camera again after a long hiatus, Remington returns to his first love, pursuing in earnest his lifelong dream of becoming a wildlife photographer.

One fateful fall evening, as the sun sinks and the darkness expands, Remington ventures deep into the river swamp to try out some new equipment and check his camera traps.

Encountering the kind of wildlife that made him want to be a photographer in the first place, Remington gets some of the best shots of his life, but he's about to happen upon the most dangerous animal of allCa feral, patient, sociopath who wants Remington dead.

While checking his camera traps, scanning the eerie images of overexposed deer and bats and foxes, Remington comes across the most haunting images of his life --- the frame-by-frame capture of a shocking crime.

By exposing the criminal, Remington has exposed himself to danger, even possible extinction. Hunted like an animal, by the predator and his psychotic friends, Remington must do two things: make it through the night and make it to the river --- and the odds of doing either are slim to none.

An ode to the wild wonder of North Florida, Double Exposure is a minimalist marriage of the literary novel and the action adventure story.

Lyrical, literary, and told in poetic photographic impressions, Double Exposure is filled with far more than just exciting adventure and suspense. It's a meditation on life and death and art and meaning you won't soon forget.