- Ian Ludlow: .357 Vigilante #1
- Ian Ludlow: .357 Vigilante #2: Make Them Pay
- Ian Ludlow: .357 Vigilante #3: White Wash
Beyond the Beyond
"Outrageously entertaining!" KIRKUS REVIEWS. Now available for $9.99 including media mail postage to anywhere in the United State. Just click the button below to order.
Diagnosis Murder #1: The Silent Partner
"A whodunit thrill ride that captures all the charm, mystery and fun of the TV series... and then some" JANET EVANOVICH
Diagnosis Murder #2: The Death Merchant
"For those who have, as I do, an addiction to Mark Sloan, Lee Goldberg provides a terrific fix. Will cure any Diagnosis Murder withdrawal symptoms you might have had." SJ ROZAN
Diagnosis Murder #3: The Shooting Script
"RX for fun! Lee Goldberg's Diagnosis Murder series is the perfect prescription for readers looking for thrills, chills and laughs. I know I'll be standing in line for my refill!" MEG CABOT
Diagnosis Murder #4: The Waking Nightmare
"Can books be better than television? You bet they can -- when Lee Goldberg is writing them. Get aboard now for a thrill ride," LEE CHILD, author of the Jack Reacher novels.
Diagnosis Murder #5: The Past Tense
"What a great book! I enjoyed it tremendously. It's a clever, twisting tale that leaves you guessing right up to the heart-stopping ending." LISA GARDNER, bestselling author of ALONE
Diagnosis Murder #6: The Dead Letter
"More plot twists than a strand of DNA," ELAINE VIETS
Diagnosis Murder #7: The Double Life
"With books this good, who needs TV?" CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Diagnosis Murder #8: The Last Word
The final novel in the series...in stores now!
Hollywood and Crime: Original Crime Stories Set During the History of Hollywood
"Top billing should go to Michael Connelly's Harry Bosch story, 'Suicide Run,' and to Lee Goldberg's 'Jack Webb's Star'—the former for the detection and the latter for biggest laughs." PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Man With the Iron-on Badge
"As dark and twisted as anything Hammett or Chandler ever dreamed up...leaving Travis McGee in the dust" KIRKUS REVIEWS (Starred)
Monk #1: Mr. Monk Goes to the Fire House
"It's funny, with some great Monkisms, and tightly plotted, the characters are expanded beyond their TV confines, and there's even a clever twist at the end. How TV tie-ins should be," The Works Magazine (UK)
Monk #2: Mr. Monk Goes to Hawaii
"Goldberg makes Adrian Monk much more interesting than the TV version," CHICAGO TRIBUNE
Monk #3: Mr. Monk and The Blue Flu
"Goldberg's succinct writing style -- with an emphasis on witty dialogue, laugh-out-loud hijinks, and nonstop action -- will make a devoted Monk fan of anyone who picks up this surprisingly entertaining read." BARNES & NOBLE 'RANSON NOTES'
Monk #4: Mr. Monk and The Two Assistants
"Even if you aren’t familiar with the TV series “Monk”, this book is too funny to not be read. Goldberg’s comic genius is channeled by Monk throughout and the truth of the crime is always worth waiting for..." THE WEEKLY JOURNAL
Monk #5: Mr. Monk in Outer Space
"I've never seen so much as a single scene from the television series. So why do I enjoy Lee Goldberg's books about the character so much? Well, let's see. They're funny, they're well-written, they're carefully plotted, and they're poignant. They probably have other good qualities, too, but those should do for starters." -- BILL CRIDER
Monk #6: Mr. Monk Goes to Germany
"Goldberg has such an incredible way with words, the story flows so smoothly it’s effortless to read, it’s almost as if it was being read to me. And the plot has some wonderful twists and turns and is a perfect classic mystery. Whether you watch the show or not, you should really be reading these books." Jon Jordan CRIMESPREE MAGAZINE
Monk #7 Mr. Monk is Miserable
"Series fans will find much to enjoy and celebrate. And for everyone else there is a neat, surprisingly literate and well-written mystery starring a most unlikely crime solver." -- Alan Cranis, Bookgasm
Monk #8: Mr. Monk and the Dirty Cop
"Monk is my all-time favorite comic detective and Lee Goldberg has honored him by writing some of the finest tie-novels ever conceived." - Ed Gorman
My Gun Has Bullets - Kindle Edition
“A very funny novel…a pinch of Carl Hiaasen, a dash of Donald Westlake, and a heaping portion of avarice and inanity Hollywood Style. It’s boffo!”— Booklist
My Gun Has Bullets
"It will make you cackle like a sitcom laugh track. Goldberg keeps the gags coming right up to the end.”—ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
Remaindered
An Amazon Short about every author's worst nightmare.
- Science Fiction Filmmaking in the 1980s: Interviews With Actors, Directors, Producers and Writers
Interviews and features by me, William Rabkin, and Randy & Jean-Marc Lofficier.
"Informative...examines the making of more than a dozen features" Classic Images
Lee Goldberg & William Rabkin: Successful Television Writing
"Should be required reading for all aspiring TV Writers" HOWARD GORDON, EXEC PROD "24"
"A fantastic, fun, informative guide to breaking into-- and more importantly,staying in -- the TV writing game from the guys who taught me how to play it," TERENCE WINTER, EXEC PROD, "The Sopranos"
- Television Series Revivals: Sequels or Remakes of Cancelled Shows
"useful and entertaining"
Booklist
- The Dreamweavers: Interviews With Fantasy Filmmakers of the 1980s
Collection of Starlog Interviews and features by me, William Rabkin, and Randy & Jean-Marc Lofficier.
"an enjoyable and informative read" - Library Journal
The Walk
"Harrowing and funny," ELLERY QUEEN MYSTERY MAGAZINE
Lee Goldberg: The Walk - Kindle Edition
Lee Goldberg: Three Ways to Die
A collection of my short stories "Jack Webb's Star,' 'Bumsickle,' and 'Remaindered.'
"Lee Goldberg's 'Jack Webb's Star' is a riotous caper crime with a nasty twist," Los Angeles Times
"Top billing should go to Lee Goldberg's 'Jack Webb's Star' for the biggest laughs," Publisher's Weekly
Unsold Television Pilots, Volume 1: 1955-1976
"Irresistible and enthralling."
Hartford Courant
Unsold Television Pilots, Volume 2: 1977-1989
"The best bathroom reading ever!" San Francisco Chronicle
Unsold TV Pilots: The Almost Complete Guide to Everything You Never Saw on TV 1955-1990
"A must-browse for media freaks."
-- USA Today
Thanks for the link. If the movie's half as good as the trailer, it'll still be a major humiliation for the 'CraigisnotBond' bunch.
Posted by: Stephen Gallagher | Monday, September 11, 2006 at 10:44 AM
I have never seen a Bond film in the theatre, prefering instead to watch it on late night TV several years/decades afterward. But this trailer for Casino Royale has got me really excited. I think I might just plunk down $12 to see it on opening weekend.
Posted by: Kelly J. Compeau | Monday, September 11, 2006 at 11:36 AM
It's looking like Snakes on a Plane won't be the last movie I see in theaters until 07.
Posted by: Chadwick H. Saxelid | Monday, September 11, 2006 at 01:52 PM
I'll see the new 007 movie just on the basis that Paul Haggis did revisions on the script.
Posted by: Ann Bardawill | Monday, September 11, 2006 at 04:37 PM
Being a huge Bond fan of both the books and films. I always take the movies with a grain of salt since most later on were title only. True it looks like Craig is playing the thug Bond really is, but the true sacrelige and its because its so hip now. Texas Holdem instead of Baccaret, sure most people understand holdem.
Oh yeah Eva Green hottest Bond girl EVER
Posted by: bruce grossman | Monday, September 11, 2006 at 04:52 PM
I'lll say this...it's the first bond movie since the Dalton years that I've been interested in seeing.
Posted by: JDRhoades | Monday, September 11, 2006 at 07:05 PM
Nice! Thanks for bringing this to my attention.
I don't care who you are, if the Bond theme over a montage of ass-kicking doesn't get your heart pumping a little, you hate both movies and fun.
I didn't like most of the Brosnan movies much, especially the one with Denise Richards, but I loved Die Another Day (don't ask me why, I can't explain it) and am super-jazzed about this one.
Posted by: Dante Kleinberg | Tuesday, September 12, 2006 at 06:31 AM
Yeah, the trailer looks cool and all ... but how can they do a Bond "restart" and have Dame Judi Dench as M?
(My wife explains that CASINO ROYALE is creating a separate, parallel universe for the new Bond. But even if I choose to buy that explanation, something about it troubles me.)
Posted by: Chris Well | Tuesday, September 12, 2006 at 12:39 PM
It's no different than having Bernard Fox as M through Connery, Lazenby, Connery and Moore...
or the same no-name actor as M through Moore and Dalton. (Moore was in his late 60s, Dalton in his 30s...how do you explain THAT??).
Posted by: | Tuesday, September 12, 2006 at 02:54 PM
>> It's no different than having Bernard Fox as M through Connery, Lazenby, Connery and Moore ... <<
No, no, that is different -- even when the actors changed, you still assumed the series was moving forward in time ...
But with Casino Royale, we hit the "restart" button and now we have this "fresh kid" who is going to BECOME 007 ... but he's working for the M from the FUTURE? (Maybe there is some secret time-travel subplot at work here.)
Posted by: Chris Well | Wednesday, September 13, 2006 at 03:08 PM
Thought you might like to see this review of the film itself from the BBC News Website.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/6116286.stm
Looks as though it is going to be very enjoyable.
Posted by: Mandy H | Saturday, November 04, 2006 at 04:46 AM