Ali :
          Simon hello, just to say congratulations on the great reviews for your
          debut 'The Business of Dying'. Can you tell us a little about the
          book, for the readers unfamiliar with your work? 
        
        Simon : Basically it's a detective story
          but one with a little bit of a difference, as the detective in
          question, Dennis Milne, is also a hitman on the side. I suppose there
          are two stories effectively. On one hand it's him committing a hit on
          three people that he believes are violent drug dealers, when it turns
          out that they are not criminals, but two customs officers and an
          accountant. The ramifications of that are that a hunt for him
          commences. All the while he's involved in case of a murdered
          prostitute. So the book sees the case through his eyes, but all the
          while he's also being hunted, so the book, I feel, is pretty fast
          moving in that respect, and I dont want to give too much away. 
        
        Ali : Dennis is a likeable character in a
          Tom Ripley/Patricia Highsmith kind of way, so what are your thoughts
          on amoral heroes in crime novels? 
        
        Simon : Well I'm not one for greatly
          supporting people that have no redeeming features, like a gruesome
          serial killer, but funnily enough I read a number of books about
          hitmen, where they don't seem to have any morally redeeming features.
          My own preferences are not to write about characters like that. Dennis
          has some redeeming features so he's not completely bad. I think you
          can have morally ambiguous characters, but not out and out bad guys as
           the heroes. 
        
        Ali : Dennis is deliciously amoral, but
          has his own code, so could you tell me where Dennis Milne as a
          character came from? Is he based on a friend of yours?  
        
        Simon : People have asked if there is any
          of me in him
laughing
No funnily enough I got the idea for
          Dennis from talking to friends of mine in the Metropolitan Police, and
          they had a cynical view, and depressed at the way things were going. I
          always thought that it would be interesting to write about a corrupt
          police officer. A book I had written a few years back but never tried
          to get published had a chapter about two guys waiting to kill a group
          of drug dealers, and I thought it would be interesting if one of them
          turned out to be a copper. From that chapter came the seed for 'The
          Business of Dying'. Originally, I thought I'd make it a short story,
          but then I decided to make it a novel. I think out of sheer
          frustration, you could get someone who could be like that. 
        
        Ali : So whats your background.
          What do you do for a living? 
        
        Simon : I'm writing full-time now
          thankfully, but for the last ten years I've been an I.T. Salesman,
          nothing to do with the industry really just an amateur writer. 
        
        Ali : Have you always been interested in
          the crime genre? 
        
        Simon : I've always been a big crime
          reader. I guess 95% of everything I read has been crime with an
          emphasis on true crime non-fiction. In terms of authors I like, well
          Ian Rankin, but I feel I'm most influenced by the American crime
          writers, such as Lawrence Block, Dennis Lehane, Harlan Coben - the
          usual guys. I think Lawrence Block is my main influence, as I've read
          nearly everything he's ever written, which is saying something as he's
           pretty prolific. 
        
        Ali: What's next , are you working on a
          follow-up? 
        
        Simon : I am, but Dennis is going to be
          resting for then next couple of books. The next book, yet untitled, is
          going to be a detective story using a number of minor characters from
          'The Business of Dying' in fact it takes place in the same police
          station but introduces a new detective, who morally is a nicer
          character than Dennis Milne. I have had some very good feedback about
          Dennis, that he will be making a come back. 
        
        Ali : Excellent news.  'The Business of
          Dying was a great debut, and we wish great success with the book. 
        
        Simon : Thank you, Ali and to all the
          SHOTS readers for their support. 
        
        
        
          
        
         
        
        'The Business of Dying' is available as a Hardcover and Trade
          Paperback from Transworld/Bantam Press 
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