1st April 2010 |
The Blood Apple This is
an auspicious day indeed, for I can reveal the first sighting of
Scandinavian
crime fiction’s next big thing, a book whose title will
probably be translated
as The
Blood Apple which has taken the publishing world by
fire and storm.
Blodäpplet
introduces a unique
Swedish crime-fighting duo, Inspector Orm Tostesson – a
tortured soul who has
problems with drug, alcohol and sex addiction – and Sergeant
Toke
Grey-Gullsson, a cross-dressing transsexual fired with born-again
religious
fervour.
Although yet to be translated into
English, I understand that Blood
Apple involves multiple
murders in a Volvo plant where the management has been infiltrated by a
right-wing pagan cult and the search for the missing ‘rune
stones’ first
discovered by Olaf Wormius in the 1640s.
Can Orm and Toke solve what appear on the
surface to be run-of-the-mill killings by a vampire, crack the ancient
code of
the runic symbols (the futhorc) and
discover the identity of the mysterious Rig the Runemaster, whilst
solving the
mounting problems in their personal lives? And does the conspiracy go
all the
way to the highest levels of Swedish society?
First time author Nisse Ektorp, at the age
of 23, is already a household name in Sweden, as a super-model, a
Michelin-starred chef with her own TV show, a campaigner against
Improvised
Explosive Devices and as an investigative journalist. She has crossed
the
(frozen)
I am led to believe that a ruthless
bidding war has already broken out among British publishers.
The Spring Season The
Spring social season on the
Publishers Orion were first off the mark,
hosting a luncheon at the famed Soho House (in the private dining
quarters of
course) for visiting American authors George Pelecanos and Lisa Gardner.
Mr Pelecanos remained polite and charming at
all times, despite being surrounded by millionaire playboy Prince Ali
Karim and
Shots editor Mike Tombstone Stotter. The strain must have eventually
told
though because George seemed to be under the impression that I was American, obviously due to the fact that
I was not wearing a tie. (A mistake I will not make again).
The vivacious Lisa Gardner, after revealing
some of the very sobering secrets of her research into violent
children, found
herself in deep discussion with Lady Antonia Fraser – the
crime writer,
historian and now reviewer of crime fiction for, appropriately, The Lady.
Meanwhile Professor Barry Forshaw treated
us all, but especially the charming Sophie Mitchell of Orion, to his
famous
mime of a circus juggler he had once seen.
Sadly, the current financial constraints on
publishing began to show and during the main course of the sumptuous
feast
provide, my fellow boulevardier Chris
Simmons, of Crime Squad, and I had to be pressed into service as
waiters.
There
was just time to draw breath, exercise the hounds and beat the
boundaries of
the Ripster Hall estate, before it was back up to town and to a
secluded
private members’ club deep in the heart of the theatrical
Those perky party animals at Penguin have
something of a reputation for throwing good parties, and a bevy of them
immediately swooped on my Shots colleague Ayo Ontade. Such is the
pulling power
of a Penguin party that even that distinguished critic and creative
writing
guru Mr Peter Guttridge, was tempted into
With the Headline Crime Party still to
come, I for one was very grateful for a respite in the blissfully quiet
surroundings of the book-lined library of The Travellers’
Club in
The dedicated Deighton fan will of course
remember that the Travellers’ Club Library featured in his
novel Winter. Deadly Dame Although
referred to as a Duchess in her latest biography, I do not think Agatha
Christie actually made it above the rank of Dame; still, Duchess of Death is a
catchy enough title and the book is said to draw on previously
unpublished
letters and notes from the Christie estate.
Duchess
of Death, to be published by
JR Books in June is by “investigative writer”
Richard Hack, which you have to
admit is a pretty good name (suspiciously good) for a journalist. Forgotten Master Whilst
idly perusing the shelves of the library in the East Wing of Ripster
Hall the
other day, I came across yet another name which seems to have been
air-brushed from
most modern reference works and “encyclopedias” of
crime writing: Rupert
Croft-Cooke. Not even his pen-name, Leo Bruce, or either of his
fictional
detectives – Sergeant Beef and Carolus Deene – seem
worthy of mention these
days, which really is a crying shame.
A prolific writer, publishing over 50 books
of fiction, plays, memoirs and non-fiction, Croft-Cooke (1903-1979)
turned to crime
in the mid-1930s, but with tongue very firmly in cheek. The exploits of
his
first series hero, the bluff, slow-moving country police sergeant
William Beef
poked very gentle fun at his fictional contemporaries and actually
featured
spoof versions of Lord Peter Wimsey, Hercule Poirot and Father Brown in Case For Three Detectives.
The
narrator and chronicler of Beef’s adventures is the snobbish
Lionel Townsend,
very much the ‘Watson’ to Beef’s rather
lackadaisical ‘Holmes’. When Beef
retires from the police force and sets himself up as a (highly
unlikely)
private detective, in Case
With No Conclusion (1939), he
actually complains that he is losing potential clients because of the
shoddy
way in which Townsend writes up his cases! Why, Beef moans, could he
not get
the more generous treatment Anthony Gethryn, Albert Campion or Dr
Gideon Fell
got from their respective authors?
(Philip MacDonald, Margery Allingham and John Dickson Carr
if you have
to ask.)
Croft-Cooke was an intelligent and, as
Bruce, a very funny writer. He travelled widely, served in Military
Intelligence in |
He did continue to write, however, and
produced 29 novels featuring gentleman sleuth (and history teacher at a
minor
public school) Carolus Deene, up until 1974.
I believe there was a valiant attempt to
revive interest in the Deene character about twenty years ago, but the
wonderful Sgt. Beef (‘his
straggling
ginger moustache which always looked as though it had been dipped all
too
recently in beer’) seems long forgotten in this country,
though his adventurers
stayed in print in the USA much longer. Which is a pity, as he was one
of the
great creations of comedy-crime. Ten Rules Although
they’ve been around on the jolly old interweb for a few
years, it is good to
see Elmore Leonards’ famous 10 Rules of Writing in book
form, as
a small but perfectly formed volume from Weidenfeld & Nicolson,
attractively illustrated by Joe Ciardiello.
I was never too sure how seriously Elmore
Leonard meant his ‘rules’ to be followed and
certainly the one which most confuses
would-be writers anxious for tips from the Old Master is Rule #10: Try to leave out the part that readers tend
to skip.
And I always had the sneaking suspicion
(though I might be completely wrong) that his Rule #1 – Never open a book with weather – was
a bit of a dig at the late Ed
McBain, who started most (if not all) of his 87th
Precinct mysteries
with the weather, most famously with: “Winter came in like an
anarchist with a
bomb.” (The
Pusher, 1956)
To celebrate the book, the
I have always felt more comfortable among
writers who admire other writers. It’s the ones who
won’t admit anyone can
write as well as they can that you have to watch. To The Max Murder One may have closed its famous
doors, and he may now be a grandfather, but there is no sign that Maxim
Jakubowski is retiring from the crime scene just yet. In fact the
author once
dubbed ‘the King of the Erotic Thriller’ is now
editing his own imprint of
crime novels, MaXcrime, for John
Blake
Publishing Ltd.
The first two MaXcrime titles were launched
last month, with relatively little fanfare considering Hit is by Tara Moss, the
former super model who
is now
‘Australia’s No. 1 Crime Writer’
(according to the blurb) and Watching
the Wheels Come Off is the debut crime novel of
Mike Hodges, the
director of that classic British gangster movie Get
Carter.
For those bemoaning the recent dearth of
Erotic Thrillers, there is the good news that Maxim, acting as his own
editor,
will be publishing I
Was Waiting For You as a MaXcrime title in the near
future.
The book will see the return of his hit woman character Cornelia
(named, I
suspect, in honour of that dark master Cornell Woolrich) and if you
think a
certain late Swedish author invented a female character with a striking
tattoo,
then you’ve never met Cornelia.
My picture shows Maxim and I on guard duty
protecting the valuable second-hand section of the much-missed Murder One from prowling crime fiction
fans.
Shoot the horses, not the
serpents Serpent’s
Tail, who have introduced us to some innovative crime writers in their
time
(Mosley, Pelecanos, Peace, Duffy and Blincoe to name but a handful),
also have
a good track record in re-issuing master-works from the past and this
November
do exactly that.
First published in 1935, Horace McCoy’s They
Shoot Horses, Don’t They? Is a genuine,
bolt-on, undisputed classic of
American noir and a copy really
should grace the shelves of anyone who even pretends to be well-read in
crime
fiction. For Whom the One of
the most enjoyable thrillers of last year was Tom Macauley’s The
Warning Bell, which is now out in paperback from
Orion.
This is a wonderfully atmospheric tale –
part study of a flawed father/son relationship, part war story in
flashback –
set mostly in a secretive fishing village in Southern Hemisphere Noir No
sooner did I mention a South African thriller writer (Geoffrey Jenkins)
last
month, than two more cross my groaning reading table and both, I
believe, with
debut crime novels which both stake a strong claim for Cape Town to be
hailed
as the crime (fiction) capital of the southern hemisphere.
The first in a trilogy which will appear
with staggering speed between now and September, is Payback by Mike Nicol,
from Old Street Publishing (following titles will be Killer Country and Black
Heart) and I have to say the series is off to a
cracking start. Payback
introduces the heroic tough-guy duo of Mace Bishop
and Pylon Buson
although these guys are certainly no angels, with a track record of
gun-running,
too-close-for-comfort
contacts in
This is a very impressive debut indeed, written
with pace and starring some flawed but incredibly well-drawn
characters. I have
no idea how accurate a picture of
Oddly enough, Wake
Up Dead by Roger
Smith (from Serpent’s Tail in August, though I think already
available in the
Recession? What recession? One
author cocking a snoot at the current recession is the bestselling
Peter James
whose hardback sales in 2009, according to his publicity, are up 40%
year-on-year. |
Well, I’m predicting a further rise this
year when his new Detective Superintendent Roy Grace novel, Dead
Like You, comes out from Macmillan in June.
Yet in
a year which had seen fiction editors made redundant because of
‘increased
paper costs’, it seems that the more successful crime novels
are the longer
ones, although some of them may have more pages than their word-counts
would
normally expect.
Peter James’ new novel, for instance, clocks
in at just over 550 pages and the paperback of John Harvey’s Far
Cry (now out from Arrow) at just over 560. I
refuse to suggest there are any marketing possibilities in the totally
spurious
sub-genre ‘Yorkshire Noir’ – which
I’ve just made up - but curiously, three
female crime writers with strong
Joanne Harris, already an acclaimed
novelist, is not only a
An acclaimed poet as well as a crime
writer, Sophie Hannah may have been born on the wrong side of the
I also discovered, almost by accident, that
the venerable Catherine Aird, a former chairman of the Crime
Writers’
Association, also has a new book out, Past Tense, featuring her much
loved
policeman Inspector Sloane. Catherine of course, famously not only
invented a
fictional policeman, but an entire fictional English county.
Born in the West Riding (“God’s Bloodsuckers Michael
Gregorio, that husband-and-wife writing team (Michael Jacob and Daniela
De
Gregorio) based in
Yet they are set on becoming even more
successful when, in August, those Fabulous Faber people publish their
new
novel, Unholy
Awakening, with its secret ingredient. Not only
does
hero town magistrate Hanno Stiffeniis have Napoleon’s
invading army to deal
with but this time the murders which happen on his patch seem only
possible to
be the work of vampires!
Given the current popularity of our ubiquitous,
un-dead friends, I can only assume that in the summer there will be
treble
Bloody Marys all round in the Gregorio villa. Coles to Two
more contenders for the crown of that Queen of gritty, urban,
family-saga
crime, Martina Cole have new books out: Kimberley Chambers with The
Feud, from publishers Preface, and June
Hampson’s fifth ‘
I would
be very surprised if there were not more potential usurpers before
summer is
upon us, but I have seen no sign that Martina is planning to abdicate. Bang Up To Date That
master of the medieval mystery Professor Bernard Knight comes bang up
to date
with his new novel Where
Death Delights, or at least 1955. Why 1955? Well
this is
a ‘blatant piece of nostalgia’ on the part of the
author as it is the year
Bernard Knight became a pathologist.
The new novel, he tells me, is a “retro
tale of forensics” set in the wonderful Wye valley and
Bernard knows both his
forensics and the Wye valley well. I hear that publishers Severn House
have
persuaded the former Home Office pathologist to write a second in the
same
series and I wouldn’t be at all surprised if there was a
third. Tales of Auld Reekie Scottish
and proud of it publisher Polygon, famous for a mixture of violent
‘Tartan
Noir’ tales and those slightly less noir of Alexander McCall
Smith (not to
mention some fine reissues of John Buchan thrillers), are producing a
tantalising anthology in May, Crimespotting.
Published in support of the OneCity Trust,
which works for social inclusion in that ‘Athens of the
North’ Edinburgh, or
‘Auld Reekie’ as some of us still know it, the
brief for the stories included the
anthology was that they must be set in Edinburgh and contain a crime.
Step
forward then a fine platoon of contributors including Kate Atkinson,
Ian
Rankin, Christopher Brookmyre, Margaret Atwood and Denise Mina among
others.
And with a title like Crimespotting
the anthology just had to have an Introduction by
Irvine Welsh. Green Plaque The
most famous crime-writing son of
One time Tory MPs now turned crime writer
Gyles Brandreth, has used the Doyle/Wilde connection in his fiction and
fittingly, it was he who unveiled a commemorative Green Plaque to mark
that
publisher’s party at The Langham Hotel near Broadcasting
House.
It was always an ambition of mine to unveil
a series of plaques to commemorate all the crime writers over the years
who
have fallen at (or at least fallen out of) The Groucho Club on Toodles! The
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