but I'm not yet sure about Charlie Parker: I have read the first one and found it kind of astonishing, the amount he fit into a single book--it seemed to me like two full thrillers. The supernatural twists in the first one were fairly mild--the insistent vision of a girl seeking justice--but that was for me somewhat surprising. I have another couple Parkers, a YA he did, and a short story collection and the non-Parkers definitely have a supernatural bent.
John Connolly as an guy, on the other hand, is a really fun person. He's well read, opinionated, and very Irish and very funny. He was the toastmaster at the Bouchercon in Cleveland in 2012 and I somehow managed to end up next to him waiting for something and we got to talk for about 40 minutes. He talks about how his secondary studies almost put him off reading, but not enough to keep him from writing. Everything else followed. He also explained why he uses an American (anti)hero instead of Irish. He felt there was a larger range of possible stories for his primary focuses of fall and redemption. He did, though, feel it true to his Irish roots, to include elements of the supernatural in something not otherwise supernatural.
With another member of the Irish crime writers, Declan Burke, he put together a book where about 100 crime writers list their favorite (and possibly unexpected) mysteries. Previously I'd seen the two of them do a pretty hilarious yet enlightening of what the 25 mysteries you can't miss over a lunch at the San Francisco Bouchercon in 2010. I should probably look up the notes on that, but I do remember that _Red Harvest_ was in there and some Jim Thompson and James Lee Burke.