John Pielmeier is a three-time Emmy- and Golden Globe-nominated playwright and screenwriter. His successful plays, television movies, and miniseries include Agnes of God, Gifted Hands, Choices of the Heart, The Memory Keeper’s Daughter, and successful screen adaption of Ken Follett’s The Pillars of the Earth. He has received the Humanitas Award (plus two nominations), five Writers’ Guild Award nominations, a Gemini nomination, an Edgar Award, the Camie Award, and a Christopher Award. He is married to writer Irene O’Garden and lives in upstate New York. Hook’s Tale is his first novel.
“A dazzling coming of age story about a boy who too swiftly learns
much about life, love and betrayal. Little James Hook is a loner,
continuously let down by relatives and friends alike, but he finds
easier friendships with fairies, mermaids and a loyal crocodile.
Hook's Tale is the moving story of one boy's crazy hurtle into
manhood and the difficult circumstances that shape him on that
journey. A glorious, alternate look at the forming of the notorious
Captain Hook.”—Nuala O'Connor, author of Miss Emily
"A riveting tale so vivid you’ll wonder if it was
imagined. The world-building is complex and intriguing,
appealing to the treasure hunter in us all. Without question,
John Pielmeier has his A-game on."—Steve Berry, New York Times
bestselling author of The Templar Legacy and The 14th Colony
“John Pielmeier’s Hook’s Tale is an instant classic, written in an
elegant Victorian/Edwardian style deliciously in the spirit of J.M.
Barrie. The purported memoir of Captain Hook (aka James Cook)
is exquisite and exuberant; the tale is swashbuckling yet poignant.
What a gift to readers, who yearn for more adventures in Neverland
and inspired new plot twists—even a newborn crocodile. At every
turn, Pielmeier offers a spine-tingling surprise; an homage to J.M.
Barrie which displays his knowledgeable sensitivity to the literary
provenance. This lost boy’s version of a timeless villain
entertains as it enlightens.”—Laura Shaine Cunningham, author of
Beautiful Bodies and Sleeping Arrangements
"In discovering and bringing to light this record of Peter Pan's
nefarious doings in Neverland, John Pielmeier has done the world a
great service and righted a great literary wrong. James
Cook's account sets the record straight on a number of important
points, not only exonerating the mis-portrayed (and mis-named)
one-handed sea captain, but also revealing the Boy Who Wouldn't
Grow Up as the kidnapping psychopath he truly was. Cook
(aided perhaps by his intrepid editor, Pielmeier) is a masterful
storyteller and a playful wordsmith, and his (completely true)
memoir is a ripping yarn."--Forrest Leo, author of The
Gentleman
“Rollicking . . .[Hook’s Tale] satisfyingly upends all the familiar
elements of Barrie’s children’s story. A splendid yarn.”
—Publishers Weekly
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