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		<title>Q&#038;A: James Grady, Author of &#8216;Shadows on Sidewalks&#8217;</title>
		<link>https://thenerddaily.com/james-grady-shadows-on-sidewalks-author-interview/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Elise Dumpleton]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 03 May 2026 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Author Interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Writers Corner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James Grady]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thenerddaily.com/?p=62966</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>We chat with author James Grady about Shadows on Sidewalks, which is a cinematic and propulsive thriller from the author of Six Days Of The Condor and American Sky. Hi James! Can you tell a little bit about yourself? I&#8217;m a small town Montana guy who got incredibly lucky before I was 25 and got my work dream come true with SIX DAYS OF THE CONDOR. Now I&#8217;m a &#8212; gulp! &#8212; 77 year old happily married, two adult kids, one grandson, still getting to [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://thenerddaily.com/james-grady-shadows-on-sidewalks-author-interview/">Q&amp;A: James Grady, Author of &#8216;Shadows on Sidewalks&#8217;</a> appeared first on <a href="https://thenerddaily.com">The Nerd Daily</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We chat with author James Grady about <a href="https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Shadows-on-Sidewalks/James-Grady/9798897101238" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><em>Shadows on Sidewalks</em></a>, which is a cinematic and propulsive thriller from the author of <em>Six Days Of The Condor</em> and <em>American Sky.</em></p>
<h4>Hi James! Can you tell a little bit about yourself?</h4>
<p>I&#8217;m a small town Montana guy who got incredibly lucky before I was 25 and got my work dream come true with SIX DAYS OF THE CONDOR. Now I&#8217;m a &#8212; <em>gulp!</em> &#8212; 77 year old happily married, two adult kids, one grandson, still getting to work my dream guy in a D.C. suburb after also being a muckraker and a filmed screenwriter.</p>
<h4>When did you first discover your love of writing?</h4>
<p>I was 10 when the dream rose up in me that what I wanted to do was write fictions like I was reading in library books and seeing in the movie theater.</p>
<h4>Quick lightning round! Tell us:</h4>
<ul>
<li>First book I ever remember reading and absorbing was STUART LITTLE.</li>
<li>First book that made me want to become an author had to be a mystery novel, probably one of the Hardy Boys series.</li>
<li>It&#8217;s a tie for the book I can&#8217;t stop thinking about between THE GRAPE OF WRATH. THE MALTESE FALCON and TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD.</li>
</ul>
<h4>Your latest novel,<em> Shadows on Sidewalks</em>, is out May 5th ! If you could only describe it in five words, what would they be?</h4>
<p>&#8220;A noir novel revealing us.&#8221;</p>
<h4>What can readers expect?</h4>
<p>Readers will get triggered into an erotic noir thriller set in a heartland American small town with corruption, racism, choices, sex, heroism, more murders than they&#8217;ll anticipate plus love and redemption and a picture of all of us. </p>
<h4>Where did the inspiration for Shadows on Sidewalks come from?</h4>
<p>I realized too many novels were being set in &#8220;big city&#8221; America and not dealing with the realities of where we all are now. Bob Dylan&#8217;s 2020 quote: &#8220;Sex and politics and murder is the way to if you want to get people&#8217;s attention&#8221; triggered me with a vision of a guy like me  coming back to his hometown and <em>wham!</em></p>
<h4>Were there any moments or characters you really enjoyed writing or exploring?</h4>
<p>The climatic end of the novel in a graveyard modeled on the one where I was a teenage gravedigger really excited and inspired me with a WOW! vision.</p>
<h4>Did you face any challenges whilst writing? How did you overcome them?</h4>
<p>I had to figure out how to report on our unavoidably politicized times without insulting any reader. And I had to do that honestly and with truth.</p>
<h4>What’s next for you?</h4>
<p>SHADOWS ON SIDEWALKS inspired me to focus on Dylan&#8217;s sex/murder/politics again but this time set in &#8220;real time&#8221; &#8212; i.e., April, 2026 &#8212; and in a fictional neighborhood like I and many readers live in. And do so with another erotic noir approach combined with  historical and existential fiction. The novel is now called THE PROMISED LAND and I&#8217;m about 50% done with the first draft.</p>
<h4>Lastly, what books are you looking forward to picking up?</h4>
<p>I&#8217;ve got a huge stack of books waiting for me. I just got through David Swinson&#8217;s latest, have Ada Limon&#8217;s poems coming up, and am waiting for new books by S.A. Cosby, K.T. Nguyen, Jess Walter, S.J. Rozan, Jeff Deaver, Lou Bayard and a dozen more great authors. </p>
<h3>Will you be picking up <em>Shadows on Sidewalks</em>? Tell us in the comments below!</h3>


<p></p>
<p>The post <a href="https://thenerddaily.com/james-grady-shadows-on-sidewalks-author-interview/">Q&amp;A: James Grady, Author of &#8216;Shadows on Sidewalks&#8217;</a> appeared first on <a href="https://thenerddaily.com">The Nerd Daily</a>.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">62966</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>Where We Find Ourselves</title>
		<link>https://thenerddaily.com/james-grady-author-guest-post/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[The Nerd Daily]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 02 Feb 2024 08:00:09 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Writers Corner]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[James Grady]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thenerddaily.com/?p=48410</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Guest post written by The Smoke in Our Eyes author James Grady with an excerpt at the end!James Grady’s first novel Six Days of The Condor became the classic Robert Redford movie Three Days of The Condor and the current Max Irons TV series Condor. Grady has received Italy’s Raymond Chandler Medal, France’s Grand Prix Du Roman Noir and Japan’s Baka-Misu literature award, two Regardies Magazine short story awards, and been a Mystery Writers of America Edgar finalist. He’s published more than a dozen novels and three times that many short stories, been a [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://thenerddaily.com/james-grady-author-guest-post/">Where We Find Ourselves</a> appeared first on <a href="https://thenerddaily.com">The Nerd Daily</a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Guest post written by <a href="https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/176443308-the-smoke-in-our-eyes" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><em>The Smoke in Our Eyes</em></a> author James Grady with an excerpt at the end!</strong><br /><b><span class="il">James</span> <span class="il">Grady</span>’s </b>first novel <i>Six Days of The Condor</i> became the classic Robert Redford movie <i>Three Days of The Condor</i> and the current Max Irons TV series <i>Condor</i>. <span class="il">Grady</span> has received Italy’s Raymond Chandler Medal, France’s <i>Grand Prix Du Roman Noir</i> and Japan’s <i>Baka-Misu</i> literature award, two Regardies Magazine short story awards, and been a Mystery Writers of America Edgar finalist. He’s published more than a dozen novels and three times that many short stories, been a muckraker journalist and a scriptwriter for film and television. In 2008, London’s <i>Daily Telegraph</i> named <span class="il">Grady</span> as one of <i>“50 crime writers to read before you die.”</i> In 2015, <i>The Washington Post</i> compared his prose to George Orwell and Bob Dylan.</p>
<hr />
<p>We wake up wondering.</p>
<p>That’s why you love novels. Your kind of music. Art from the heart of someone else who’s been there, too. Someone who creates a world that lets you in. Entertains you like a great a William Carlos Williams prescription, a Don Winslow thriller or a  dive bar juke box dancin’ song. Poetry coming out of the car radio or a playlist giving you moments of transcendent recognition with where you’ve been, where you’re going, what you <em>hope hope hope</em> to find beyond your windshield. A crimson splash of Andy Warhol. The vibrating stillness of an Edward Hopper painting. Your screen capturing <em>that look</em> from Marilyn Monroe. </p>
<p>What you wonder is the essence of what triggers creators like me, a scarred &amp; gray haired ex-muckraker prose-slinger in a loft office above the home for a family he often feared he’d never get. Because we – <em>I</em> – wonder like you.</p>
<p>Poet Richard Hugo once told our class at my home state of Montana university that certain places have a preternatural spiritual strength that its growing-up souls can never escape even as it shapes what they do and who they become. He glanced around the seminar table and asked us mostly Montana “kids” where we were from. He’d nod. Grunt. Frown or smile. Came to me.</p>
<p>I said: “Shelby.”</p>
<p><em>Oh the look of those bulldog eyes from a WW II bombardier, Boeing factory line worker, minor league baseball catcher and poet honored by Yale!  </em></p>
<p>“Yeah,” he said. “You know what I’m talking about.”</p>
<p>Gave me a shrug that said <em>`Sorry!’</em> and <em>`It’s got you but you got it.’</em></p>
<p>My <em>growin’ up</em> Shelby sat on rolling golden prairie 60 some miles from the sawtooth Rocky Mountains of our western horizon. Canada slumbered 36 miles to the north. The nearest “city” that could almost fill one Brooklyn neighborhood was 85 miles to the south. The rest of the world was a million miles away in those days when America was coming-of-age as <em>Dr. Strangelove</em> and Oppenheimer’s bomb made us a superpower. Chain-linked Apocalypse missile sites ringed our town and made you feel like both a shooting savior and a target’s bullseye.</p>
<p>My one grandfather rode as one of the last free range cowboys. The other was a homesteader. The town gave our family a parade in 2014 honoring our 100 years there as the first settlers after the Blue Coats cavalry pushed the Blackfeet nation onto a Reservation that became the blooded home to Academy Award nominated Lily Gladstone and author James Welch.</p>
<p>I grew up in the Roxy movie theater my Dad managed. The county library. The subscription to <em>Playboy Magazine</em> my four years older sister gave me for my eighth grade graduation to drive our parents crazy. They decreed I had to keep the coming every month issues <em>only</em> in my bedroom with its cowboy drapes.</p>
<p><em>Darn</em>.</p>
<p>And poet Hugo was right: Shelby in rock ‘n’ roll’s a-bornin’ years was electric. Other Montanans called it the second toughest town in the state after Butte, the mining city where Dashiell Hammett turned down a corporate murder contract only to see the target lynched from a downtown railroad trestle.  There was a badge-protected two story red stucco whorehouse on the north edge of my hometown. There was an <em>everybody knows</em> abortion mill run by a hero frontier doctor/conservative mayor inside dark second story windows of a flat-faced storefront on Main Street. There were more bars per capita than in Manhattan and the second toughest one was The Bucket Of Blood.</p>
<p>Besides my Chicago health care czar sister, our town produced Dr. Leroy Hood who helped realize DNA and Jack Horner, whose dyslexia almost flunked him out of high school and who after the Marine Corps, became the globally renowned dinosaur-finding savant mimicked in the movie <em>Jurassic Park.</em> </p>
<p>Even as I created thrillers like <em>Six Days Of The Condor</em>, <em>Mad Dogs</em> and <em>This Train</em>, my hometown thumped my heartbeats.</p>
<p>And <em>yeah</em>, I wrote about it a dozen published short stories and poems.</p>
<p>But a full novel of Shelby….I couldn’t do it.</p>
<p>Hell, <em>can’t</em> do it.</p>
<p>Not just because of politeness or the legalities of protecting people.</p>
<p>Because….Because….I didn’t know the <em>why</em> of <em>because</em>.</p>
<p>Until one of my trips “home” in the before plagues summer of 2019.</p>
<p>I parked my rental car in the gravel paths cemetery where my family and friends are buried &#8212; a flat plateau with sprinklers trying to green the grass surrounded by golden prairie underneath a 100 miles wide blue Big Sky. Got out of the car near my family “plots.” Smelled the sod. Gas fumes from a hurrying past pickup. The warm July breeze brushed my bare &#8212;</p>
<p><em>Suddenly</em> the wind swirled arctic cold.</p>
<p>Swept me up and away while shoving me down into that earth.</p>
<p>A realization, an articulated epiphany, a bone-deep <em>knowing</em> grabbed me:</p>
<p>`All the old ghosts are leaving town.’</p>
<p>And I knew I had to honor them. To pay back the fates that gave me my driving talent and great luck.</p>
<p>Especially now when all of us everywhere wonder with awe and horror:</p>
<p><em>`Where are we going?’</em></p>
<p>As Ziggy Marley sings: <em>“’Don’t know your past, ’won’t know your future.”</em></p>
<p>What hit me then and there in that prairie cemetery moment was <em>how</em>.</p>
<p>How to be faithful and true to the old ghosts.</p>
<p>How to pay back the luck that blessed me.</p>
<p>How to be honest and loyal to the realities of <em>everyone’s</em> hometown.</p>
<p>How to portray our past so we can learn of &amp; from it for our future.</p>
<p>How to give readers a ticking-clock meaningful <em>Wow!</em> of a story.</p>
<p><em>Look in your mirror.</em></p>
<p>Who you see in there is not you.</p>
<p>It’s your reflection. A flipped view of the <em>who</em> you might be.</p>
<p>Like the street foreman on my old road crew used to say: <em>“I had to laugh.”</em></p>
<p>Only 1.7 million authors before me in a blink realized &amp; solved the <em>how</em> that had haunted and stymied me for years:</p>
<p>Don’t write a novel set in or about your real hometown.</p>
<p>Write about the totally fictional Montana small town of Vernon.</p>
<p>And be true to the fictional, flipped mirror reflections of your <em>growin’ up</em> like Bruce Springsteen – the great American author of my generation – and others like Emily Dickinson, Barbara Kingslover, Ray Bradbury, Toni Morrison, Bob Dylan, John Steinbeck, S.J. Rozan, Blake Crouch, Joni Mitchell, Stevie Wonder, Stephen King, Miles Davis, Jess Walter, William Faulkner, Taylor Swift, Paul Vidich, Thelonius Monk, Richard Thompson, Tom McGuane, Janet Skeslien Charles, S.A. Cosby and thousands of other creators I love have done.</p>
<p>What hit me then was a <em>sensation</em> of our burning-up past.</p>
<p>And the title of that <em>gotta-do-it</em> novel: The Smoke In Our Eyes</p>
<p>And its <em>when</em>: 1959. The year the music <em>didn’t</em> die. The year of our first “noticed” KIAs in a place then spelled Viet Nam. The first scientific warning of global warming. The start of the “modern” battles for Civil Rights and women’s rights. The last year of the great Republican President Dwight Eisenhower who built superhighways to bring the country together and fought for the best possible public schools for <em>every</em> child so we could all know &amp; think &amp; do to save ourselves in this coin-toss world of fanatics plus communist or fascist dictators.</p>
<p>And the novel all starts with a tragic car wreck on a dark night highway.</p>

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