Alma
Mater The annual
reunion of the alumni of St Heffer’s
College,
The gathering
of the alumni, all graduates in crime
writing (the only subject St Heffer’s teaches) will see the
usual parade and
doffing of caps ceremony before the Master, Dr Richard Reynolds. Once
again,
this ceremony will be open to the public (literature@heffers.co.uk)
and will
be followed by the annual High Table Feast which sadly is now
restricted to
senior members of the college under the Health and Safety Act following
an
unfortunate incident with a stuffed swan some years ago. For those
wishing to attend who are unfamiliar with
Cambridge, or Grantebridge as we
more
accurately call it, the main gates
of
St Heffer’s are to be found between the Porters’
Lodges of Fisher College and
St Martha’s. It seems that
the College has branched out and is now
offering short, sandwich courses to first degree level (as opposed to
full time
MSc – Master of the Scene of Crime). These are known among
the students as “Crimecracker”
sessions and tutorials are held in the cavernous wine cellars built
under St
Heffer’s in the days of the first Master, Sir Ranulph
Reynolds.
I am told these
seminars are popular, not just because
of the ample supplies of Sack, Malmsey and Claret on offer, but because
of the
presence of visiting tutors from abroad. This month, the guest tutors
taking
advantage of the tropical In
Town Tonight With the London
season well underway, I attended what
is traditionally the loudest party of the year, that thrown by those
shy and
retiring publishing people at Mssrs Headline & Co. in what I
believe is
called a ‘Night Club’ in fashionable Covent Garden. Present were
guests from around the globe, many having
been jetted in for the occasion, some from as far away as
Karen, whose
most excellent thriller Scream
For Me is published here this month, holds a
special place in the
hearts of SHOTS readers for in the Acknowledgements section of her
dedication
in that book, she boldly states All
mistakes are my own. Here at SHOTS we are sure there
aren’t actually any
mistakes, but it is refreshing to see an author willing to take the rap
if they
have to. So: Kudos, Karen, as I believe our colonial cousins are want
to say. It was a chance
to catch up with old friends. There
was Veronica Stallwood, who had braved the dangerous journey from
darkest
Oxfordshire and, in expansive mood, there too was millionaire playboy
Prince
Ali Karim, who was so taken with the canapés on offer that
he made the club’s pastry
chef an offer he could not refuse. One of the
(many) highlights of the evening was a
chance to catch up with those stalwart supporters of many a writer,
Magna Large
Print, in the form of Boudica Allen and her team. The night was still
sadly
young when they had to leave to catch the Polar Express home to the
land of the
Northern Lights.
And so I was
left to mingle among the crowd of famous
faces present. There was ‘Bateman’, the writer
previously known as Colin, on a
rare visit to the mainland; the multi-talented Barbara Nadel, whom I
was
charmed to meet for the first time; and my old friend Paul Doherty and
I
managed an all-too-brief discussion on the Pelagian Heresy in 5th-century
sub-Roman Britain, a discussion I attempted to continue with critic
Jane
Jakeman but without success.
When I realised
that normally vivacious agent Broo
Docherty was actually asleep at my shoulder, I decided that perhaps it
was time
to change the topic of conversation, make my excuses and leave.
No sooner had I
recovered from one social blur, I made
the long and arduous trip back to London for luncheon with yet more of
the
great and good of crime writing, partly to honour visiting South
African
authors Michael Sears and Stanley Trollip and Louise Penny (who seems
to be
everywhere these days except her native Canada, so goodness knows how
all that
timber will get cut this year).
The luncheon
was also partly to say farewell to
Headline’s Becky Fincham, the Mary Poppins of publishing
publicity, on her
departure for a new job with Faber & Faber. This naturally drew
distinguished guests such as Maxim Jackubowski and Professor Barry
Forshaw and
took place in the fashionable, if not trendy, Joe Allen’s
restaurant. Professor
Forshaw is, of course, a regular diner there
and was recognised by the staff who enquired politely if he would like
the
usual table he shared with Cliff Richards, whom I believe to be a
singer in a
popular beat combo. Mystery
Solved A mystery which
has been puzzling me for twenty years
has finally been solved thanks to Stephen Jones’ biography Basil Copper: A Life In
Books. In
this magisterial volume
(from PS Publishing), Mr Jones
tells the story of his first meeting with his hero, the prolific crime
and
horror writer, Copper. It was in 1988, at the
lunchtime opening of a new crime and mystery bookstore in How
interesting. I had often wondered where the name Murder
One had come from, not realising until now that it
was taken from the
title of one of the 52 (yes, fifty-two)
“Mike Faraday” private eye novels written by Basil
Copper between 1966 and
1988. How clever of founder Maxim Jakubowksi to take his inspiration
from that
particular Basil Copper novel. Where would we be if he had chosen one
of the
other titles from the extensive Mike Faraday canon such as A Good Place To Die or
Tight Corner or even Big Rip-Off? Malice
Afterthought I had always
regarded the brilliant Malice
Aforethought by Francis Iles as the pioneer
“psychological suspense”
crime novel – the one that broke the mould of the so-called
“Golden Age” Monopoly
(or should that be “Cluedo”?) of whodunit detective
stories. It did so, of
course, by telling you who did it in line one of Chapter One, which
caused
quite a stir in 1931, and the rest of the book was really a question of
does he get away with it? It was one of
my students on the course I teach for
C.S. Forester
became famous for The
Gun, The
African Queen and of course, the Hornblower books,
to such an extent
that two of his earliest novels – crime novels –
are almost totally forgotten. Payment Deferred, written when
Forester was only 25 and published in
1926, could be said to have beaten Malice Aforethought to the
punch by
five years. If not in that dramatic opening line, but certainly by the
end of
Chapter One, Forester tells you who has done the murder, why, and how,
and the
rest of the book is how the murderer gets his comeuppance, although no
detectives are involved and almost all violence is described
‘off-stage’. It is also a suburban
murder – not a country house in sight – and a
wonderful examination of lower
middle class morals and manners in a closely observed family unit, only
one of
whom (the most cynical) actually survives. This is not a novel of
detection,
rather a novel about the consequences of a grubby little murder and a
stunning
portrayal of how the fear of being discovered (rather than any feeling
of
guilt) gnaws away at the murderer. |
His second (and
last?) crime novel, Plain
Murder, appeared in 1930 (still a year before Malice Aforethought)
and,
again using a suburban lower middle class setting, begins with a murder
conspiracy and a murder echoed in Len Deighton’s Funeral In Berlin
more
than three decades later. The whodunit, whydunit and howdunit are all
given in
the opening chapters and the main plotline follows the disintegration
of the
conspiracy and how the murderers turn on each other. Both are
pioneer crime novels of psychological
suspense rather than “detective stories” and, given
the tragic inevitability of
the events set in train by the murders and their nihilistic tone, I
might even
suggest they are prototypes of noir
fiction. The creator of Mr
Midshipman Hornblower as the great-grandfather of British noir? Who’d have thought it? Things
in common Manda Scott is
a writer whose crime novels I much
admired, particularly Hen’s
Teeth and No
Good Deed. At one time
I would have suggested we had much in common. We both live in the East
of
England, we have both written crime novels and we have both written
books about
the Iron Age Queen Boudica, even spelling it the same, correct, way,
albeit I
only did one and Manda four. We also both have new paperbacks out this
summer. But there the
commonality ends, for the paperback
edition of Manda’s The
Crystal Skull (published by Bantam with immaculate
timing
considering the exploits of my old friend Professor Indiana Jones),
comes
replete with the review: “Original,
scary, rooted in the past but as current as tomorrow’s
nightmare. An
enthralling read” from none other than the
inexhaustible Lee Child. At this point I
have to humbly bow out of any
comparisons, for I cannot boast a Lee Child endorsement on any of my 18
titles. Father’s
Day Reginald
Hill’s ‘other’ series, featuring
Luton-based
private eye Joe Sixsmith, has been fairly well eclipsed by the
popularity of
his stunning Dalziel and Pascoe novels, even though Sixsmith has made
numerous
appearances in print since his debut in 1993. Personally, I blame However, Joe is
due for a boost in a superbly packaged
(and illustrated) new novel, The
Roar of the Butterflies, from
Reg’s perky publishers (for the last 38 years) at
HarperCollins.
Published in
June, with a clever eye on the Father’s
Day market, Butterflies
starts with scandalous goings-on in the local golf
club and murder before we reach the safety of the 19th
hole. I am
resisting the urge to create an armoury of reviewer’s
epithets such as “A hole
in one” (if it’s good) and “Below
par” (if it falls below Hill’s own high
standards), and will keep my powder dry. I will admit
now, though, that I have never been a
golfer as I have never seen the point of putting the bar at the end of
such a
long and convoluted stroll. And then there is Dawn
Patrol My cap is
doffed in deference to those hardy devotees
of crime fiction who will be attending Crimefest
in How can any
rational person possibly choose between
the following panels, which all run at the same time: “How To
Write A Thriller”
(chaired by SHOTS’ very own Mike Deadwood Stotter and
featuring my fellow boulevardiers Mr
Nicholas Stone and the
Hon. Charles Cumming); “Scared To Death – Chills
and Thrills” moderated by
Irish Private Eye writer Declan Hughes; or, possibly the pick of the
bunch,
“Does Size Matter?” chaired
by the
voluptuous Ayo Ontade? An impossible
choice, though an easy one for me, were
it not for the Restraining Order which prevents me from attending, as
these
three panels are not only all on at the same time, but all commence at But what do I
know of crime writing conventions? In
the heady days of the original Shots On the Page conventions in Return
of the Hero I freely admit
to boyhood hero-worship when it came to
the early maritime thrillers in the relentless machine-gun prose of
Scotsman
Brian Callison, ever since I discovered his 1970 classic A Flock of Ships back in
the days when a new hardback first edition cost £1.50 (or
thirty shillings in
real money.)
That wartime
cat-and-mouse chase in the
But it is his
writing ‘voice’ which singles out Brian
Callison as a unique stylist (in the same way Anthony Price in his spy
stories
had a unique, though different, narrative voice), and I am delighted to
say that,
at the age of 74 (and now Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Dundee
University),
Callison’s writing has lost none of its trademark pace. His
new novel, from
those modest people at Severn House, Trapp’s Secret War,
is just out and
fans will welcome the return of one of Callison’s finest
creations: that
utterly disreputable, professional survivor, Edward Trapp, a
professional
pirate who probably shares Captain Jack Sparrow’s gene pool.
With a setting
of the Arctic convoys to Terrible
Admission I have always
been slightly bemused when people tell
me, quite openly, that they indulge in “blogging”.
For many years I was under
the impression that this activity involved acts of a sexual nature
between
consenting adults in a municipal car park, a practice which was long
ago banned
on National Trust property. However, I am
now sufficiently down among the kids to
realise that “blogging” is something which takes
place on the jolly old
interweb and it is clear to me that personal blogs perform a cathartic
function
as a form of electronic confessional. How else can
one explain the awful confession of crime
writer Martin Edwards, who has recently “come out”
(as I believe the modern expression
is) and admitted publicly to the millions of readers of his
“blog” on www.martinedwardsbooks.com
that
he has never read anything by John
D.
MacDonald or Ross Macdonald. Such a
staggering confession surely deserves a penance
of huge proportions from a spiritual higher authority, and I shall take
my time
deciding what it should be. Dog
Days I know there is
no copyright on titles, but publishers
usually try their best to avoid confusing bookseller and reader. I
myself was
once forced to change a title because an American thriller writer also
had a
book called Angel
Eyes due for publication from the same publisher. I
naturally
accepted their decision with good grace and rumours of my attempts to
change my
name to Eric van Lustbader have been grossly exaggerated. But I am
worried about the recent publication of
another novel with the title Dog
Eats Dog. The original
one of course, was written by Edward
Bunker (famously “Mr Blue” in the film Reservoir
Dogs) and published here in 1996. |
And now comes Dog Eats Dog by
Iain Levison,
published by those usually inventive people at Bitter Lemon Press, and
it is a
book, like its famous predecessor, which comes with a fascinating
author back
story. Born in
Now that is not
a bad title – I’ve certainly come
across worse (Hands Up Miss Seton springs
to mind) – but it’s not as good as Dog Eats Dog, which is a pity
because
it might upset hardboiled fans for the reason that those who loved the
late
Eddie Bunker’s book will absolutely adore this one. One of
the lead characters
has a career in “weapons-based financial
reallocation” (armed robbery), another
is a seedy, over-ambitious small town college professor writing a
thesis
entitled Hitler Was Right, and a
third is a female FBI agent determined to smash through the glass
ceiling of
male chauvinism, or at least put a bullet through it. The opening
bank robbery which inevitably goes wrong
and the subsequent interaction between career criminal, civilian and
pursuing
law officer, are quite brilliantly done. In fact I had to check whilst
reading
this book that it wasn’t Elmore Leonard or Richard Stark
writing under another
name for tax reasons. Reflected
in the Mira Those
relatively new kids on the crime publishing
block in Britain, MIRA Books, are getting noticed for their list of
fast-paced,
no-nonsense thrillers, mostly by American authors who ought to be
better-known
(over here) than they have been. One cannot, of
course, suggest that Tess Gerritsen is
an unknown quantity, and MIRA’s forthcoming Whistle Blower is eagerly
awaited. And growing in reputation here is Alex Kava, with six of her
backlist
championed by MIRA plus her latest heady mix of greed and corruption, Whitewash,
out now.
Less
well-known, at least to me, is Chris Jordan,
whose latest, Lost,
was originally published in the Fangs
ain’t what they used to be In the latest
crop of British publishers’ catalogues
for the second-half of 2008, there seems to be an unhealthy
concentration on
what I can only describe as “chick-lit vampire
fiction.” Pocket Books,
for example, offer the “thrilling and
sexy contemporary vampire world” of Susan Sizemore. Allison
& Busby have
“The Morganville Vampires” series by Rachel Caine
and the “sophisticated, sexy,
surprising” stories of Lady Victoria, vampire slayer, by
Colleen Gleason.
Transworld, meanwhile, have the creator of the Anita Blake (vampire
hunter)
books, Laurell K. Hamilton. And Piatkus proudly publish numerous
“sexy”
series labelled
“Undead”, “Dark Hunter”
and “Dark Carpathian”, from authors Mary Janice
Davidson, Sherrilyn Kenyon,
Christine Feeham and Keri Arthur Now I have
nothing against vampire literature per se.
Indeed, I possess all the
classic vampire books – both dear Bram’s Dracula and
Richard Matheson’s I
Am
Legend.
What I find
slightly unhealthy is the way publishers
are falling over themselves to gorge on this particular flavour-of-the
month
(and surely a minority taste). Still, I suppose it happens in the crime
and mystery
field. Since the success of Henning Mankell, every Spider
Man Crime novels
with Italian settings have always been
popular (think Dibdin, Hewson, Nabb) and serial-killer thrillers (too
many to
mention) are still being churned out on a frightening scale. Why not
combine
the two formats? Yes, I know
Thomas Harris did it a while back in Hannibal,
but now Michael Morley has in is debut novel Spider, a paperback
original from Penguin and jolly convincing it is too.
Michael Morley
is a Brit, I believe, who also lives in
the Netherlands, and the book is set half in Italy, half in the USA,
with the
obligatory loony killer and a burnt-out FBI profiler trying to forget
all the
professional horror he has seen. It is very
confidently written and if the idea of
“criminal profiling”
sounds as if it’s
been done to (a suitably gruesome) death, then think again, for Michael
Morley
does seem to know what he’s writing about. As a television
producer, he has
done his research at the FBI’s Behavioural Science Centre at The fact that
Mr Morley works for Endemol TV, which
brought us such quality viewing as Big
Brother, Deal or No Deal and
Golden Balls, should not be held
against
him, for Spider
is a thrilling, fast-paced read. And speaking of
Ryan
Air One of the more
unusual launch parties of the year was
that for my old sparring partner Rob Ryan’s excellent WWI
thriller Empire
of Sand, held in the exclusive Black Gardenia Club
in one of the
better-lit parts of
Sadly, my
picture of Rob (right) with Headline
Editor-at-Large (does that mean he’s on the run?) Martin
Fletcher and sales
supremo James Horobin, does not do anything like justice to the
capacious club,
with its seventeen bars, three restaurants and more in-store bakeries
than
Tesco’s. It is indeed a veritable Tardis of a club; much
bigger on the inside
than it appears from outside and above ground level. Or so it seemed
after I
had sampled the numerous Bourbon whiskeys on offer. Angel
Unexpected I have been
inundated with a telegram from an irate
book-dealer (Rare and Unwanted Manuscripts Inc.) demanding to know why
I had
been keeping secret my new novel. I have hastily pointed out that the
forthcoming book Angel
Uncovered, from Century, has certainly not been
written
by me, though I do admire its catchy title. The name of the
author appears to be one Katie Price,
but I am afraid I have absolutely no idea who that is. I will
immediately
consult my extensive collection of back copies of the Literary
Review and the Times
Literary Supplement to find out all I can about this
mysterious author. My
factotum Waldo has offered me the loan of his own collection of certain
magazines, which he assures will not only help but give me
‘something to think
about’. Pip! Pip! The Ripster |
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