Christmas
Cheer I was unable to
attend the annual Christmas Party
thrown by the Crime Writers’ Association, partly because no
one invited me, but
mainly because the event clashed with the launch of my old friend Paul
Doherty’s new novel
The Templar, splendidly published by those charming
people at Headline.
It was back in
1990 that I first met Paul when we both
spoke at an evening seminar at Redbridge Library. He was already an
established
master of the historical mystery (under several pen-names then,
including Paul Harding,
Michael Clynes, C.L. Grace, Anna
Apostolou and Ann Dukthas) whereas I was only marginally less unknown
than I am
today and had just published my second novel. A splendid evening ensued in one of the several
baronial halls situated on the Doherty estate in
I was not at
all surprised to discover, lurking behind
a crate of books, none other than Ralph ‘The Postmortem
Man’ Spurrier. I have
already reported on The Postmortem Man’s tenacious approach
to obtaining the
signatures of authors on first editions of new novels, which he then
retails
through his vast business empire.
The Postmortem
Man’s own website (www.postmortembooks.com)
not only contains
numerous slanders about
myself (which have been referred to my solicitors, Motley &
Slapp Ltd.) but
even advertises signed first editions of a book not due to be published
for
another six months. It caught my eye as it is the latest Joe Sixsmith
adventure, The Roar
of the Butterflies, by my friend and mentor
Reginald
Hill, and is due from that delightful publishing posse at HarperCollins
in June
2008. I do hope The
Postmortem Man does not pester Reg, a
gentle and charming fellow, unduly in search of his signature. On nights where the claret
has flowed and I
have eaten cheese at a late hour, I have recurring nightmares of poor
Reg being
pursued across the Cumbrian Fells by the fanatical Postmortem Man in
his
armoured Humvee. We
are the Campions In the Daily
Telegraph just before Christmas, Booker prize-winner A.S.
Byatt penned a
loving eulogy to the work of Margery Allingham, creator of that
“Golden Age”
sleuth Albert Campion. “I
have never been able to read Agatha Christie” she
wrote and always preferred the writing of Dorothy L. Sayers, Ngaio
Marsh and,
best of all, Allingham, who “gave us elegantly plotted love
stories mixed in
with the threads of death and detection.” For many years,
Margery Allingham lived in the Dame
Antonia’s article has reminded me of my own brief
encounter with Albert Campion back in 1989. The BBC were filing their
disgracefully forgotten adaptations of the Campion books in the Suffolk
village
of Kersey, where a local pub had been called into service as The Three
Drummers, which featured in Allingham’s 1931 novel Look To The Lady.
The TV series
featured former Dr Who Peter Davison as
the mild-mannered Campion and the wonderful Brian Glover as his butler
Magersfontein
Lugg. Fine actors though they be, they were made to wait until my vital
role in
the production had been performed, for in those days I worked in the
brewing
industry and I had been called in as a consultant to the set designers
to
advise on how to make the interior of a 1989 Suffolk pub look
convincingly like
that of a 1931 Essex pub. Fortunately,
this being Badly
Kept Secret I have received
the usual “confidentiality agreement”
from those terribly serious publishing people at Century, which I
always
receive when a new John Grisham novel is in the offing. As my legal
advisor, Sir Bufton Tufton, assures me
that these agreements are worth less than the tree that died to provide
the
paper they are printed on, I always ignore them, as I did the latest
one which
demands that, in return for a review copy, I keep “the Text
strictly
confidential” not submitting the Text (the novel The Appeal)
to any
“outside party in any circumstances” before the
publication date of 25th
January 2008. I cannot really
believe that an author as successful
as John Grisham (though he is a lawyer so I must be careful) needs to
generate
such an obviously fake air of excitement among reviewers, when millions
of
genuine fans will be waiting, wallets open, for his new book anyway. By
any other name I have
discovered, quite by chance, that my old friend
Gillian Linscott is now writing under the name Caro Peacock.
I do not know
the reason for this change of identity
but I used to love Gillian’s splendid (and prize-winning)
mysteries featuring
Nell Bray, whose theme song was surely ‘Once you’re
a suffragette / You’re a
suffragette / All the way from your first cigarette / To your last
dying day’ which
she would perform with gusto, a top hat and a cane, though only a rare
fragment
of a photograph survives.
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The first Caro
Peacock title, Death
At Dawn, is
published by those utterly super people at Harper (Collins) and is set
in the
1830s, featuring a
new heroine, However, since
the Hands
Up Miss Seton scandal of many years ago, reviewers have for
the most part
curbed their naturally childish senses of humour. It seems that
more and more crime writers are turning
their faces away from the sordid commercialism of actually writing
novels and
towards the groves of academe by teaching others how to do it instead. Janet Laurence,
a former CWA chairperson, began the
trend last year with her Writing
Crime Fiction: Making Crime Pay,
although “how to” books are by no means a new
phenomenon. My old friend H.R.F.
(Harry) Keating produced one of the most famous ones – Writing Crime Fiction –
in 1986, when it was recommended by Ruth Rendell as “a
private godsend”. But to the best
of my knowledge, the first “e-book” on
the subject has now appeared, composed by Mark Timlin. (I have to admit
that
for many years I assumed “eee-books” was something
one said on entering a
public library in Available for
‘download’ (whatever that might mean) at
www.60daybooks.com
for the paltry sum
of £14.75 or thereabouts, Mark’s instructional
manual is pithily titled Write
A Novel In 60 Days That Will Sell. The accompanying
promotional blurb
makes much of the fact that Mark “tells the time on a genuine
Rolex watch” but
also points out rather incongruously that, being an e-book, this title
“cannot
be bought in any bookstore”. Another former
Chairman of the Crime Writers’
Association, Russell James is also forsaking crime fiction for
reflection on
crime fiction, or at least on fictional detectives. His
“illustrated compendium
of sleuths past and present” entitled Great British Fictional Detectives
will be published in March by the Remember When press, which I believe
to be an
American company. I am unsure as
to whether the title implies that the
book covers fictional detectives from the The new year
begins well too for Martyn Waites, known
to his friends in many of Her Majesty’s prisons as
“Sven”. His is known to a
far wider audience for his acting career and indeed who will ever
forget his
performance as “Duty Constable” in the Dead
On Time episode from Series Six of the hit show Inspector Morse?
Not only does
he have a new novel, White
Riot, out from those fun-loving people at Pocket
Books, but I learn
that he has been created Literary Fellow at the I myself have
never previously met a Literary Fellow,
though I have come across several Good Fellows. It can only be a matter
of time
before Legal
Eagles I have long
been astounded at the inordinate number of
lawyers in In Britain,
such literary legal eagles are thinner on
the ground, though there are some notable ones: John Mortimer (now
surely a
National Treasure), the elegant Frances Fyfield (who always seemed far
too nice
to be involved with the law) and Martin Edwards, who is a practising
solicitor
on Merseyside and therefore cannot possibly have any spare time on his
hand. But now those
cheerful people at Avon Books launch a
new legal name upon the world: Helen Black, with her debut novel Damaged
Goods.
Although she
now works in the fields of criminal and
family law (which after the recent festive holiday I regard as one and
the same
thing) in I am lead to
believe that Ms Black herself hails from
“oop north”, specifically the
In years gone
by – a long way by – I was indentured to
serve my journalistic apprenticeship on that noble organ the Pontefract & Castleford Express,
which involved slaving over a hot typewriter for up to 26 hours a day
and
quaffing pints of unspeakable Darley’s bitter, both
activities being supervised
by a cruel regime of sub-editors who were armed with whips and clubs. Still, it never
did me any harm and some of my fondest
memories are of summer mornings lazily strolling, thigh deep, through
the waving
liquorice fields of Pontefract, from which the local population made
small
black cakes on an industrial scale. On one such morning I happened
across a
tousle-headed junior reporter covering the annual liquorice harvest for
one of
those new fangled television stations. He was a charming lad with a
thick I often wonder
what became of him. Festival
Fury In a previous
column I sang the praises of the
Harrogate/Theakston’s Old Peculier Crime Festival, even
though my own presence
there is clearly not required. I thought I had done them proud, all
things
considered, but it appears not, for I have received complaints from one
of the
organisers that I did not praise or promote the festival enough. I will
therefore repeat that Theakston’s Old Peculier
is an exceptionally good beer and that Apart, that is,
from Crimefest which is to take place
in And I cannot
fail to mention the annual convention of
the Dorothy L. Sayers Society, which will take place in August at the I am obliged to
mention the DLS Society (www.sayers.org.uk) as I was invited to
accompany the new
Vice-Chairman, Seona Ford, at a brief memorial event to mark the
fiftieth
anniversary of Sayers’ death in Witham, Essex just before
Christmas.
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And, as
we’re in Essex, I might just slip in the fact
that during the Essex Book Festival this year, the following crime
writers will
be strutting their stuff: Stella Duffy (March 6th
in Braintree),
Minette Walters (March 10th in Rayleigh), Jim
Kelly (March 12th,
Witham), Ariana Franklin (March 14th, Clacton),
David Hewson (March
17th, Mersea Island), Sam Hayes (March 18th,
Hullbridge),
Judith Cutler and Edward Marston (March 19th,
Hadleigh), Frances
Fyfield (April 2nd, Maldon) and Paul Doherty
(April 4th,
Saffron Walden). Full details on www.essexbookfestival.org.uk. But apart from
that, there will be no further mentions
of Festivals in this column, unless, of course, I am invited . Deadly Ellis Peters
winner (as confidently predicted by this
column) Ariana Franklin, who is appearing at the Essex Book Festival,
though I
have promised not to mention that, has another claim to fame in that
she has
made the cover of that prestigious American magazine Deadly Pleasures
And though it
may be pushing my luck (it usually is),
I wonder if it is too early to start nominating for the 2008 Ellis
Peters
Award? I had better
not say too much and will refrain from
putting the Curse of the Ripsters on The Mesmerist’s Apprentice
by Victoriana
expert L.M. Jackson, better known as Lee Jackson, the author of the
splendid London
Dust a few years ago. But I am certainly looking
forward to Lee’s new
novel, which is published by those happy Heinemann people in April.
I understand
that Mr Barry Forshaw, the eminent critic
and polymath, having chaired a seminar on French crime novels in
translation,
now turns up the hissing flame of the gas lamp and prepares to chair
another
high-powered seminar, this time on Victorian-set mysteries. Under the title
Gaslit
Vices, the seminar takes place in Waterstones (which I
believe to be a
bookshop) in Hampstead (which I believe to be north and west of That’s
quite an impressive line-up and I am assured
that buckets of oysters and quarts of stout porter will be made
available on
the night, although only to members of Her Majesty’s Press. I will have Waldo shine up
my best brown
boots and brush my bowler (with the
grain, this time) and order me a handsome, for I certainly intend to
venture to
the capital, despite the footpads and painted whores roaming the
thoroughfares,
for an evening of such delights. From
the archives After my recent
mention that my old friend Andrew
Vachss has a new book, Terminal,
out in the Dating from, I
think, 1993, it shows Andrew (with the
eye-patch) and his good friend Oprah Winfrey patiently waiting in line
for what
seems to be a newly-published author to sign a copy of his new book.
I am afraid to
say that neither Waldo nor I have any
idea who the writer at the signing session is, though Waldo is
convinced he
“connected” with the writer’s wife while
she was backstage cutting the crusts
off cucumber sandwiches for the refreshments which Americans generously
provide
in all bookshops during book signings. Demanding
A Recount In his column
in that esteemed organ The Observer,
on 9th
December, my fellow crime critic Peter Guttridge wrote that were
“some 250 new
crime novels published in 2007 – in the UK, presumably. How dull life
must be in the capital these days, for
out here in the provinces, I counted 607 new titles in 2007. I will take the
matter up with him when we meet on the
It’s
an Honour I was delighted
to see that Jacqueline Wilson, the
former Children’s Laureate and the biggest-issuing author
from public
libraries, was created a Dame of the Before she
became an award-winning children’s author,
Dame Jacqueline was a crime writer though she somehow seems to have
been
airbrushed out of the roughest of guide books to the genre. I could
never
understand why, for her four suspense novels from the early 1970s: Truth
or Dare, Snap, Let’s Pretend and Making Hate,
are truly wonderful. Originally
published by Macmillan, I own three of the
four in their Penguin paperbacks but it was only some thirty years
after
reading them that I managed, on the terrace of the House of Lords (or
“the
Lounge Bar” as we regulars call it) to get the author to sign
them.
Most used to
signing copies of her Tracey Beaker books, she remembered those early
Penguins
well and still maintains that Truth
or Dare is one of “the best
covers” she’s ever had. I still cannot comprehend
why these books are not
better known and it is a mystery as to what – apart from huge
commercial
success, recognition as the Children’s Laureate and a
Damehood – ever persuaded
her away from crime writing. Pip!Pip! The Ripster. |
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