Authors: Duane Swierczynski
The idea for
Revolver
was seeded in my previous novel,
Canary,
in what was basically a throwaway line. (My subconscious mind likes to play games with me, I swear.) And it blossomed into life on March 24, 2014, when I read a
Philadelphia Inquirer
piece by Barbara Boyer about the 1963 murders of two police officers in Lodi, New Jersey. The bitter anger of their families, even after all these years, was palpable. It brought to mind a murder in my own extended familyâthat of a Philly beat cop named Joseph T. Swierczynski, who was gunned down by a gangster outside a bar at Ninth and Christian on March 20, 1919. And while the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, wouldn't happen until I was deep into the writing of this novel, cops and race were very much on my mind from the very beginning.
I've dabbled in historical fiction beforeâmy first novel,
Secret Dead Men,
was set in a 1976 I barely remember, and
Expiration Date
is about time travel to the early 1970s. And I've spent seven (plus) years researching a novel set in Prohibition-era Philly that I'm hoping to finish before I die. But now came an opportunity to write some historical fiction and show its visceral impact on the present. I'm a big fan of William Faulkner's line from
Requiem for a Nun:
“The past is never dead. It's not even past.”
To re-create that past, I had some homework to do. I'm hugely grateful to Michael J. Chitwood, Joseph R. Daughen, Steven Swierczynski, and Frank Wallace for spending time and sharing memories with me. Their firsthand accounts helped enormously.
I also devoured heaps of newspaper and website articles and books in researching
Revolver,
but especially useful were
Case Study of a Riot: The Philadelphia Story
by Lenora E. Berson, “That Long Hot Summer of Rage” by Will Bunch,
The Peoples of Philadelphia
by Allen F. Davis and Mark H. Haller,
Black Brothers, Inc.
by Sean Patrick Griffin,
Tough Cop: Mike Chitwood vs. the “Scumbags”
by Harold I. Gullan, and Civil Rights in a Northern City: Philadelphia, which is Temple University's amazing digital archive about the civil rights movement in Philly (northerncity.library.temple.edu).
Feedback and advice from my early readersâLou Boxer, Robb Cadigan, Joe Gangemi, Allan Guthrie, and Robert Kulbâwas very much appreciated.
That lovely map at the front of this book comes to you courtesy of Mark Adams and Jason Killinger, a.k.a. Eyes Habit. My writing area is adorned with their maps, which are a constant source of inspiration. (I'm a map nerd.) Take a peek for yourself at eyeshabit.com.
Huge thanks to my editors, Joshua Kendall and Wes Miller, who not only saw the early promise of the idea, but also helped me find my way throughout the writing process. High-fives to the rest of the team at Mulholland Books as well as Inkwell Management and the Gotham Group.
All of my love to my home teamâMeredith, Parker, and Sarahâwho have to put up with me when I'm staring at a corkboard littered with index cards or walking around the house, mumbling to myself. I couldn't do this without them.
The idea for this novel came literally the day after we adopted Sherlock, our Aussie shepherdâborder collie mix. I plotted quite a bit of this book while walking him. He offered no special insights into the novel or its themes, but definitely thought I should include dead squirrels, if possible.
February 21, 2016
Photograph by Evelyn Taylor
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Duane Swierczynski is the Edgar-nominated author of nine novels, including
Canary, Severance Package,
and the Shamus Awardâwinning Charlie Hardie series (
Fun and Games, Hell and Gone, Point and Shoot
). He's written over 250 comics for Marvel, DC, Dark Horse, Valiant, and IDW, and most recently wrote
The Black Hood,
the first comic for Archie's new Dark Circle imprint. Duane has also collaborated with
CSI
creator Anthony E. Zuiker on the bestselling Level 26 series. He lives in Philadelphia with his wife and children.
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Secret Dead Men
The Wheelman
The Blonde
Severance Package
Expiration Date
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Dark Origins
Dark Prophecy
Dark Revelations
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The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
Copyright © 2016 by Duane Swierczynski
Cover design by Allison J. Warner
Cover photographs: Will Brown courtesy of Laurence Miller Gallery (car); Superstock/Getty Images (officer)
Cover copyright © 2016 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.
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First Edition: July 2016
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Map by Mark Adams and Jason Killinger of Eyes Habit (eyeshabit.com)
ISBN 978-0-316-40322-1
E3-20160607-NF-DA