Yay! The Saints Go Dying is #18 on the Kindle’s “Police Procedural” Mysteries list.

It's working, it's working! Thank you to everyone who purchased the book! After less than 24 hours, The Saints Go Dying is #18 on the Bestselling Kindle "Police Procedural" Mysteries, right between two James Patterson novels. I'm not up to the straight Bestselling Mysteries list yet (Sue Grafton seems to have a lock there right now) but this is a start. If you haven't purchased the book, please do! Especially now that I know this little scheme of mine could work. Here's the key links: 1) download the Kindle reader (if you don't already have it) 2) purchase the book

The Saints Go Dying, by Erik Hanberg — out today!

In 2007 I started working on a novel called The Saints Go Dying, and I'm happy to say that I am releasing it today, exclusively as an e-book. The novel is a detective mystery with some really fun cat-and-mouse games between a detective and a killer. Self-publishing it as an e-book is something of a experiment, and I would love it if my readers would consider helping me out! The Plan My plan is that I can get enough people to buy the book today, Monday, April 5. By having a concentrated effort of a lot of people purchasing the book within Read more…

Hot Tub Time Machine

Hot Tub Time Machine is the kid brother to The Hangover. It very much wants to be like its older sibling, but it just isn't there. I thought The Hangover was incredibly funny, hitting almost all of its jokes. HTTM, on the other hand, has some that flop badly, and some scenes that need a lot more of them. That said, HTTM has what might be one of the funniest running gags in a movie. I could have watched Crispin Glover as the bellhop for the whole of the movie.

The Technium: Twitter Predicts the Future

The Social Computing Lab at HP Labs in Palo Alto, CA found that using only the rate at which movies are mentioned could successfully predict future revenues. But when the sentiment of the tweet was factored in (how favorable it was toward the new movie), the prediction was even more exact. via kk.org As the author asks, if it can do box office grosses, what else can Twitter predict?