Lindsay, Jeffry P.
LINDSAY, Jeffry P.
(Jeff Lindsay)
PERSONAL:
Married Hilary Hemingway (a writer); children: one daughter.
ADDRESSES:
Agent—c/o Author Mail, Doubleday/Random House, 1745 Broadway, New York, NY 10019.
CAREER:
Author and playwright. Public Broadcasting Service (PBS), FL, program host. Karate champion.
WRITINGS:
Tropical Depression: A Novel of Suspense, D. I. Fine (New York, NY), 1994.
(With wife, Hilary Hemingway) Dreamland: A Novel of the UFO Cover-Up, Forge (New York, NY), 1995.
(With wife, Hilary Hemingway) Dreamchild (sequel to Dreamland), Tom Doherty (New York, NY), 1998.
(With wife, Hilary Hemingway) Hunting with Hemingway: Based on the Stories of Leicester Hemingway, Riverhead Books (New York, NY), 2000.
(As Jeff Lindsay) Darkly Dreaming Dexter, Doubleday (New York, NY), 2004.
ADAPTATIONS:
Darkly Dreaming Dexter was adapted for audio, read by Nick Landrum, Recorded Books, 2004.
WORK IN PROGRESS:
A novel.
SIDELIGHTS:
Jeffry P. Lindsay has written a number of books with his wife, Hilary Hemingway—daughter of Leicester and niece of Ernest Hemingway—and has also pened novels as a solo author as well. His first novel is Tropical Depression, a mystery set in Key West, Florida, featuring Billy Knight, a former policeman who is now working as a charter boat captain after leaving Los Angeles, where his wife and child were killed in a failed hostage situation. He returns to Los Angeles when fellow cop and friend Roscoe McAuley is killed while investigating the suspicious death of his son during a riot.
Lindsay and his wife first collaborated in the writing of the science-fiction thriller Dreamland: A Novel of the UFO Cover-Up, in which the main characters are also husband and wife. Stanley Katz is an engineer working on a top-secret project in the Southwest. His wife, Annie, who has lost several babies through miscarriage, is again pregnant, until she realizes that the baby is missing from her womb. Booklist's Emily Melton felt that the authors are convincing in this tale of alien creatures, and called it "a good sci-fi tale full of flying saucers and ripping good action."
The subject of Dreamland's sequel, Dreamchild, is Max, a half alien, half human five year old. In the novel, aliens are everywhere, and the government is trying to prevent a takeover. Meanwhile, Max's parents are trying to save their marriage, while dealing with their unresponsive child. Candace Smith wrote in Booklist that this story has something for everyone, "alien abductions, UFOs, sex, government cover-ups, scandals, and loads of action."
When Lindsay's wife's mother died in 1997, Hilary Hemingway received a cassette tape of interviews conducted by a professor with her father, Leicester Hemingway. Like his younger brother, Ernest, Leicester had also died by suicide. The tape contains Leicester's account of the brothers' adventures, from attacks by vicious animals to an encounter with a Nazi U-boat, and Lindsay and his wife decided to work these narratives into stories. Marc Seals noted of Hunting with Hemingway: Based on the Stories of Leicester Hemingway in the Journal of Popular Culture that "as an adventure, [the book] … excels. There is something wonderful in a good yarn well told, and this book has these in abundance. This book also makes a contribution to the growing body of myth that surrounds the Hemingway family. Through the eyes of an adoring little brother, it makes Ernest Hemingway seem a bit more human."
Reviewing the novel Darkly Dreaming Dexter, a Kirkus Reviews contributor called Lindsay's solo novel "a guilty pleasure few monster-addicts will be able to resist." The slasher novel features protagonist Dexter Morgan, by day a blood-spatter expert of extraordinary talent who works for the Miami Police Department. That talent comes from Dexter's own long history as a serial killer, beginning when he was boy. Dexter's foster father, Detective Harry Morgan, had early on spotted his son's abnormal personality traits and suggested that he do away with the truly wicked of the world. The first victim of Dexter's vigilantism was the hospice nurse who was overdosing his father with morphine. Dexter also has an imaginary spirit friend, Dark Passenger, who assists him in disposing of pedophiles, killers, and sadists. He has never left behind any evidence that might connect him with these killings, but now he is worried. A copycat killer is trying to lure him out from hiding, and with his sister, Deborah, newly assigned to the cases, he does not want a misstep to implicate her.
Library Journal's David Wright compared Lindsay's Dexter to Anne Rice's character Lestat, saying that the novelist brings "the same refreshing ebullience to serial killers" that Rice brought to vampires. Wright called Darkly Dreaming Dexter "a macabre gem that will appeal to more than just the Thomas Harris crowd; highly recommended." Booklist contributor David Pitt praised Dexter as one of the genre's "most original, compelling characters to appear in years," calling him "a fascinating narrator, appealing, articulate and ghoulish, all at the same time."
BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL SOURCES:
PERIODICALS
Booklist, July, 1994, West Lukowsky, review of Tropical Depression: A Novel of Suspense, p. 1926; February 15, 1995, Emily Melton, review of Dreamland: A Novel of the UFO Cover-Up, p. 1601; May 15, 1998, Candace Smith, review of Dreamchild, p. 1601; May 15, 2004, David Pitt, review of Darkly Dreaming Dexter, p. 1601.
Journal of Popular Culture, May, 2004, Marc Seals, review of Hunting with Hemingway: Based on the Stories of Leicester Hemingway, p. 744.
Kirkus Reviews, June 1, 2004, review of Darkly Dreaming Dexter, p. 511.
Library Journal, July, 2000, Michael Rogers, review of Hunting with Hemingway, p. 91; June 15, 2004, David Wright, review of Darkly Dreaming Dexter, p. 59.
Publishers Weekly, May 30, 1994, review of Tropical Depression, p. 39; June 26, 2000, review of Hunting with Hemingway, p. 63; April 19, 2004, review of Darkly Dreaming Dexter, p. 36.*