News & Extras
- Self-publishing is not a last resort for authors (NY1 TV)
- David Carnoy: Self-publishing is minor-league -- and that's good (Booklist Online)
- Banned in Cupertino (news.com)
- E-Book Banned from App Store for Obscene content (Yahoo News)
- E-Book barred from app store due to obscene content (Engadget)
- iPhone App Store bans book app for naughty language (Gizmodo)
- Books go digital (well, maybe not the racy ones) (L.A. Times Tech blog)
- CNET censors story on iPhone censorship (Guardian--UK)
- Prudery in the case of cyber-censorship? Hardly. (news.com)
- Apple rejects book app for "objectionable content" (ilounge.com)
- To restrict or not restrict: The conundrum for operators and app stores (RCR wireless)
- The Year in Review (Metro Silicon Valley)
- CNET Executive Editor defends self-publishing (Media Bistro's Galleycat)
- The unvarnished truth about self-publishing (The Book Deal: An Inside View of Publishing)
- Doing it yourself (Booklist Online--Likely Stories blog)
- 'Self-publishing a book: 25 Things you need to know'--including challenges facing e-authors: CNET editor's tips (Teleread)
- Self-publishing a book, 25 Things you need to know (Mystery Book News)
Reviews
“Carnoy's debut is gripping, suspenseful, totally believable--and shockingly good.”
--New York Times Bestseling Author, Harlan Coben
“Impressive is the debut of David Carnoy with the surprisingly complex and sophisticated Knife Music. It's a combination legal/medical novel, so neatly plotted it seems the first-timer might have over-reached. Yet Carnoy resolves everything with enough originality to deliver a satisfying jolt.”
--ForeWord Magazine
“Carnoy injects an uncommon level of medical expertise, from physical trauma through hospital hierarchy, into his fine debut thriller about the fraught world of doctors. The novel certainly works as medical drama, but it is also a gripping detective story and a revealing character study about what makes docs tick. We learn, for example, that many doctors’ lack of empathy can be seen as stemming from the fact that they were trapped in labs and libraries during the crucial social-skills-gaining years. One such doctor may be Ted Cogan, a surgeon, who is questioned by detectives after the death of one of his former patients, a female high-school sophomore. Cogan saved her life after a car accident six months before. Now the girl has taken her own life, and a trail of evidence points to a sexual relationship with Cogan and a motive for him to have killed her. Veteran detective Hank Madden, in charge of the case, is a brilliantly realized secondary character. Utterly baffling until the very last page.”
--Connie Fletcher, Booklist:
“A doctor defends himself from an all-too-plausible rape allegation in this scalpel-sharp medical thriller.
When 17-year-old Kristen Kroiter, a former patient, kills herself after penning a diary entry describing a sexual encounter with him, hotshot emergency-room surgeon Ted Cogan faces an uphill battle to clear his name. Kristen had indeed spent the night at his home when she washed up there drunk after a frat party. Cogan had been drinking a little too, and Kristen’s best friend swears she saw them in bed together. Anyone who knows him can imagine the 40-something Cogan, a notorious womanizer with an eye for college girls, in the scenario. For detective Hank Madden of the Menlo Park, Calif., police department, that—along with a personal animus stemming from his traumatic past—is enough to charge Cogan with statutory rape and manslaughter. It’s also enough to draw readers into this subtle and engrossing mystery.
As Cogan struggles to reconstruct that night’s events, first-time novelist Carnoy paints a landscape of complex, flawed characters, mixed motives and twisting intrigue. He takes readers into the toxic office politics of a hospital surgery department, the rancid machinations of a frat house full of horny kids on the make and the romantic fantasies of young girls, fueled by a
volatile mixture of innocence and desire. Tautly paced and full of crisp dialogue, Carnoy’s prose is pitch-perfect whether delving into medical and police procedural or sussing out the nuances of campus hookup culture. In Cogan, he’s concocted an appealing, edgy protagonist—cocksure, arrogant and abrasive towards his less competent colleagues and “difficult” patients, but possessed of a roguish charm that makes readers want to tag along, even if they’re not sure where his moral compass is pointing.
A gripping thriller debut that is just what the doctor ordered.”
--Kirkus Discoveries
