Rejoice,
You Mugwumps Hands up all
those who were (for a microsecond) fooled
into believing last year’s rumour that Reg Hill was killing
off Fat Andy
Dalziel in The Death
of Dalziel. For once, the clue wasn’t in
the title. Superintendent
Dalziel is back, roaring from his hospital bed with the immortal words:
“HELLO!
HELLO! DALZIEL SPEAKING! LOOK ON MY WORKS YOU MUGWUMPS, AND
DESPAIR!” We will not, of
course, despair. We will rejoice and
rush out to buy A
Cure For All Diseases, from those perfectly
clubbable women
at HarperCollins, next month.
I have had the
delight of reading an advance copy and
will say here and now that despite containing some of the longest, most
rambling e-mails in internet history, the new novel shows Reg and Andy
Dalziel
at the absolute top of their form, which i’nt half saying
summat (as we would
say in mid-Yorkshire). And there’s more
good news from HarperCollins concerning Reg, apart from a new Joe
Sixsmith
novel later this year, in a long-overdue reissue of an anthology of his
short
stories: There Are
No Ghosts in the Soviet Union, from 1987 (when
there
was a This is a fine
collection which I devoured some years
ago, although I have to say I have a sneaking preference for his
earlier
anthology, Pascoe’s
Ghost, from 1979.
I remember that this was quite a difficult book to find in
This excellent
volume (surely the perfect companion to
There
Are No Ghosts) contains two delightful stories, Pascoe’s Ghost and Dalziel’s
Ghost, which top and tail the collection. Moreover, it also
contains Reg’s
superb chiller Exit Line for which
I
am probably sure he won an award, though if he didn’t he
should have. Rumours
(and cash) Fly Rumours fly on
the jolly old interweb about a
“six-figure advance” for a first novel by a young
British writer still several
years short of his thirtieth birthday.
I
refuse to get excited about such things as I well remember the
resentment and
jealousy when, as a fairly callow youth myself, I received my first
six-figure
advance of nineteen pounds, nineteen shillings and eleven pence. I admit that
inflation has taken its toll since those
days (and my factotum Waldo fondly reminisces over the one million
Reichs Mark
note, now long gone), so one should not be shocked at the rumour that
Simon and
Schuster have forked out £200,000 for the UK rights to Child The full
interweb “buzz” actually alleges that the
total publishing deal for Mr Smith’s debut is worth over
$1,000,000, which is
less than 500,000 of our English pounds. I am unclear, though, as to
whether
this includes the reported film deal with that noble Geordie, Sir
Ridley Scott. I am afraid I
do not know Mr Tom Rob Smith, though
obviously would love to meet him during licensing hours. He is rumoured
to be a
television scriptwriter who has contributed to a dramatic programme
called Doctors, which I believe is
shown during
the afternoons, probably to get the blood flowing before the daily
mental
gymnastics of Countdown. I did, however,
find a reference to a Tom Rob Smith
who appeared as an actor in Tooth and
Claw, that jolly exciting episode of Dr
Who where Queen He does now. A
Thousand Welcomes Because of the
idiotic and quite ridiculous
restrictions on international travel which have been imposed upon me
(for
reasons I cannot go into here), I will not, sadly, be able to enjoy Féile Fidemla 2008, the
second
international festival centred on the Sister Fidelma books by Peter
Tremayne,
which takes place from 5th to 7th
September as part of
the Cashel Arts Festival in County Tipperary
in that ultra-hospitable country of Eire. For those not
in the know, Sister Fidelma is the 7th-century
Irish Nun/Lawyer sleuth whose first adventure appeared in print in 1994
and now
has an International Sister Fidelma Society (with members in 20
countries)
named after her. Author Tremayne
is better known in Celtic scholarly
circles under his real name of Peter Beresford Ellis, but began his
career in
fiction in the horror genre, back in 1977, with Dracula Unborn. He will,
of course, be one of the speakers at the Fidelma Festival in September
(www.cashelartsfest.com)
along with
some distinguished Irish academics all showing off their knowledge of
what I
believe is called the Brehon law system, and Karola Hagerman, who, when
not
enjoying life as a Sister Fidelma fan, is a training instructor with
the Lower
Saxony police force.
The latest
Sister Fidelma novel, which I think is the
eighteenth (in 14 years!), Dancing
With Demons, is now out in
paperback from those Happy Historians at Headline. A new title, Council
of the Cursed, is scheduled for July. Angels
Unaware On perusing the
new Robert Hale catalogue, as you do,
I am delighted to see that Yorkshire-based author Roger Silverwood (who
lives,
sensibly, “on the outskirts of My only
reservation is that Mr Silverwood’s detective
hero in his fiction is one DI Michael Angel. Whilst I am sure there are
hundreds of examples of heroic figures in fiction called
‘Michael’ (though I
can think of nary a one off-hand), the very idea of having a hero
called Angel is quite preposterous. |
New
Year’s Honour I am reliably
informed that the most significant of
the Honours to be dispensed so far in 2008, is the granting of honorary
membership of the Crime Writers’ Association to Geoff
Bradley, the editor of CADS (Crime and
Detective Stories), who
served for many years as the non-voting chairman of the Dagger Awards
judging
panel.
As a former
judge myself, I can vouch for Geoff’s
dedication to duty, total impartiality and diplomacy when dealing with
judging
panels of writers, critics and academics. {So many egos; such a small
room!} This honour
will have been announced (or “gazetted” as
we used to say) in the monthly journal of the CWA, Red
Herrings, although as I am not entitled to see this august
organ, not being a member of the CWA, I can only hope that the news has
been
published and is freely circulating in the crime writing community. I must say this
is recognition of service well above
and beyond the call of duty and thoroughly deserved, and whoever
suggested it
deserves commendation. That
Dare Not Speak It’s Name I have sworn
not to mention, publicise or blatantly
plug any forthcoming crime writing conventions or festivals unless I am
invited
to them. Several of the
ones I will therefore not be mentioning
in this column are: Love Is Murder
in
Rosemont Nor will I
mention Malice
Domestic which is to be held in I would quite
like to mention Deadly Ink, though
I do not know what it is, which is to be held in
June in Friends
on D Wing I was unable to
make the launch of Screwed,
the memoirs of former Prison Officer “Ronnie
Thompson” (a pseudonym) in
January. To be honest, I have been somewhat un-nerved by the recent
television
documentary City of Vice, depicting
the seamier side of London and my doctors advised that the music to be
played
at the swanky launch party in a West End club (“dirty
house/hip hop/rock”) might
adversely affect my pacemaker.
Nor have I
actually seen the book (published by those
sparkling people at Headline) and so I cannot comment on its merits,
although I
would say it does seem to be part of a trend. After years of
(unfortunately)
successful “true life” memoirs from well-known
criminals, it now seems that
their custodians in the prison system are cashing in on their side of
the
story, for it is barely a month since we saw the publication of The
Loose Screw (Apex Books), the memoirs of former prison officer
“Jim Dawkins” (which may or may not be a pseudonym). I have not seen
that book either, and so I will
consult with my chums in the Diamonds
Are Forever This
year’s Cartier Diamond Dagger
‘supersleuth’ is
American Sue Grafton, author of the famous
“alphabet” series of private novels
featuring Kinsey Millhone. Her latest
title published in the I must confess
that Sue Grafton was a mere snip of a
girl when I met her, way back around “G” or
“H”. Her British publisher Macmillan
had invited her over here and thrown a party in her honour at a swanky
hotel,
if memory serves (which it rarely does these days) in The charming Ms
Grafton was understandably somewhat
overwhelmed at first by the presence of several hundred press
photographers
surrounding the hotel – a throng which I, along with other
hacks from the crime
fiction world, were forced to slash our way through, clearing a path
with
sabre-like strokes of our furled umbrellas. Only when the
publisher’s party was
in full swing did we realise that the jackals of the press were lying
in wait
for someone called ‘Madonna’ who was staying in the
same hotel. At first I
thought it quite reassuring to see the
British press taking an interest in religious matters but then I was
informed
that this ‘Madonna’ was a visiting American singer
in the popular style,
probably a member of one of those modern beat combos. I often wonder
what became of her. In
receipt of funds The corridors
of Ripster Hall echoed this week to the
sounds of the celebrations which greeted the arrival of the annual
Postal Order
from those wonderful people at the PLR. It means, of course, that the
children
will not have to be sold for medical experiments, that Lady
Ripster’s line of
credit with the local licensed victuallers can be reduced (in part),
and that
the under-stairs boot boys may, at last, have boots of their own. The Public
Lending Right is a wonderful institution
which reimburses writers for theoretically lost sales due to lending of
their
books through our marvellous network of public libraries. As long, that
is, as
the writer is British and preferably alive. Some 24,000 writers
received
payments from PLR this year, though of course these are by no means all
writers
of crime fiction, or even fiction at all. I understand that in recent
years,
several cooks and potboys, whose names (Oliver? Smith? Stein?) are
known below
stairs here at Ripster Hall, have even written cookery
books and received payments from PLR. Which is nice, for the
catering trade is often as poorly paid as crime writing. A lucky few
(242 this year) received the maximum
payout of £6,600 whereas, sadly, over 18,000 received sums in
the range of £1
to £99. Saddest of all, though, were those 11,000 authors who
received
absolutely nothing, as their books failed to achieve a significant
number of
borrowings. Viking
Invasion I have to admit
to deliberately resisting, in the
past, the growing tide of Scandinavian crime-writers. My reasons for
this are
not irrational. We in the East of England have long memories and there
are
still unresolved matters as a result of the last Viking invasion of
Maldon (991
AD). True, it was mostly Danes involved, but old scars run deep. |
I am however,
instructed to throw off such churlish attitudes
by those vivacious publishing pixies at HarperCollins, get out the
pickled
herring and aquavit and prepare
myself for the arrival in the UK in April of The Ice Princess by
Camilla Läckberg, one of the leading (at a shockingly young
age) Swedish crime
writers.
Ms
Läckberg’s crime novels featuring her hero Patrick
Hedstrom have sold more than a million copies in her native country,
which
means that, roughly, one in every nine Swedes owns one. (I wonder what
the
ratio is for Volvo ownership?) I am also aware that she is highly rated
in I need no
further convincing. I will make a note in my
diary and await The
Ice Princess eagerly. If it is successful in its
English
translation, I have little doubt that The Preacher, The Stonecutter and The
Jinx will follow as smoothly as long ships sailing
up the Veni, vidi, etc. As I have the
dual qualifications of having worked as
an archaeologist and having one of
my
historical thrillers disqualified from the Ellis Peters Award, I am
always
interested in crime fiction set in or at the time of the Roman Empire,
being a
great admirer of the work of old friends such as Rosemary Rowe, Paul
Doherty
and Lindsey Davis, with whom I am pictured (below) in our student days,
no
doubt arguing a point of Scottish history with a young Ian Rankin.
Now a new name
flits across my desk in the shape of
(Mrs) R.S. Downie and her second novel, Ruso and the Demented Doctor,
which
is due from Penguin next month. Such is my surprise and delight at
receiving
any communication from Penguin Books (for I feared I had been
airbrushed from
their mailing lists), that I will of course read this mystery set in
first-century Roman Britain.
And just when
you thought it was safe to go back to
the Dark Ages, Richard Blake sets his debut historical thriller in AD
609, when
I presume, of
course, that they mean the “Flashman” as
brought to life by the wonderful George MacDonald Fraser, who sadly
died on 2nd
January. And I mention him because he too would probably have been
disqualified
from the Ellis Peters, and also because I take every opportunity I can
to
recommend his absolutely fabulous book of recollections of his wartime
experiences in Burma, Quartered
Safe Out Here, which was
first published in 1993 but paper-backed by HarperCollins in 2000 and
hopefully
(if there is any justice) is still in print. Sweet
Smell of Success Ex-pat American
author Joan Brady is reported in the Independent
On Sunday as having won a
£115,000 compensation settlement when solvent fumes from a
local shoe factory
in Totnes, which I believe to be in Devonshire, rendered (if
you’ll pardon the
pun) her “low-brow”. Instead of the
“serious” novel she was working on,
“all she could manage” was a crime novel. Unable to
concentrate on a “proper”
novel because of the fumes, Ms Brady produced Bleedout as (she is
quoted): “It is much easier to write a thriller.”
That may be so, but it
doesn’t mean the book is easier to read.
I know, I tried. But this got me
to thinking of the secondary fumes I
have been forced to inhale over the years. Firstly, there is the
overwhelming
aroma of gin which follows Lady Ripster everywhere, not to mention the
persistent whiff of glue which pervades my study where I make and
display my
Airfix models of the entire Japanese Imperial Navy (1904-1941). I will
not
mention my factotum Waldo, who, over the years, has smoked numerous
varieties
of very interesting tobaccos, many of them imported from the All these fumes
have obviously derailed my career as a
serious novelist and the 18 books I have published have fallen into the
slough
of despond known as crime fiction purely by default. I will therefore
take Ms
Brady’s case as precedent and apply to the relevant
authorities for
compensation. I estimate that 18 mysteries which should have been
proper
novels, at £115,000 a pop, equals something in the region of
£2 million give or
take legal costs. As soon as the
cheque is in the post, it will be, as
they say, trebles all round. Traffic
News A book which
almost slipped completely under my radar,
but I am thankful it did not, is Simon Lewis’ new novel Bad Traffic,
from the
delightfully-named Sort Of Books.
Bad Traffic contains a
fascinating central premise. A non-English
speaking Chinese policeman travels to It’s
an interesting idea and Simon Lewis makes a fair
fist of uncovering a very sordid aspect of contemporary British life
– an
economic and social sore which really deserves to be exposed
– even though the
book isolates all the Chinese characters in an escalating series of
fist and
gunfights which are, I suspect, a hat-tip to the films of John Woo and
Jackie
Chan. Pip! Pip! The Ripster |
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