The
Gathering of the Alumni There was a
splendid turnout for the 18th
meeting of the alumni of St Heffer’s College, It was a
delight to see new faces and meet such stars
of the genre as Roger Morris (remarkably charming and approachable for
such a
successful author), Lee Jackson (amazingly charming for somebody born
in
Lancashire) and Sharon Bolton who revealed that she had received so
many
glowing reviews of her debut novel that she could not possibly remember
any of
them. We await her second novel with interest… A special
mention in the minutes must be made of the
utterly delightful Rebecca Stott, not only the author of the acclaimed Ghostwalk
but clearly a fine and noble human being, for she was seen to desert
her own
fans in order to bring succour and refreshment to some of the older
members of
the college overcome by the heat. At one point,
caught on camera, I did have to restrain
my bodyguard and factotum Waldo from drawing his concealed sidearm when
a group
of autograph hunters surged forward on the mistaken assumption I was
signing cheques.
And it was an
honour to be able to exchange a few
words with Laura Wilson in between her many public engagements this
summer.
In the few
brief moments her hectic timetable allowed,
Laura gave me a strong hint that her next novel would feature the
occult and,
specifically the menace of zombies roaming the streets of Without doubt
the highlight of the day, apart from the
launch of the college’s prospectus (18th
edition) which lists over
700 crime and mystery novels, was the annual High Table dinner presided
over by
the Master, Professor Richard Reynolds.
The Master was
obviously moved to receive a small
token of appreciation from the alumni (a
second-hand book) and the vote of thanks was eloquently proposed by
Ruth Dudley
Edwards who, following her predicted Last Laugh award triumph at
Crimefest last
month, is officially the funniest crime writer in
At an emergency
meeting of the Refreshments Committee
held after dinner (in The Pickerel Arms), it was agreed that if
attendance at
these reunions continues to grow at the current rate, then by next year
we are
going to need a bigger High Table. The
Last Tarot The results of
the recent Crime Writers/Duncan Lawrie
awards have convinced me that it is time to burn my Tarot cards and
retire from
the business of predicting winners, something I did on race courses and
in
casinos many years ago. I felt sure
that Minette Walters’ Chameleon’s
Shadow and
Philip Kerr’s A
Quiet Flame would be hot favourites for the Gold
and Steel
Daggers this year and yet neither even made the short-list. I am, of
course,
delighted at the success of my old friend Frances Fyfield, although I
do not
believe she has ever really forgiven me after our appearance at The
Stoke
Newington Festival of Unpleasantness some years ago – she has
certainly never
knowingly agreed to appear with me in public since. However, I
think However, I am
not alone in being outfoxed by the CWA
Judges. That literate and highly informative website www.eurocrime.co.uk which has a passionate
interest in the
International Dagger category recently ran a poll asking its readers to
vote on
the shortlist of Dagger contenders in translation. The overwhelming
majority of
votes went to the late Steig Larsson for The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and
actually
no-one at all voted for Dominque Manotti’s Lorraine Connection which won. There were
further red-faces in evidence, or so I am
told, at the awards ceremony when an official of the CWA called for
(the late)
Steig Larsson to step forward and take part in group photograph of
Dagger
nominees. In
cyberspace, no one can hear you scream As a founder
member of the Campaign for Real Quill
Pens and Ink, I have long held a sceptical distrust of most things to
do with
the jolly old interweb. It does, I admit, have some advantages. How
else could
I purchase Viagra for only 2 Euros per tab, or an invaluable fake Rolex
so that
I may leave my original at home when taking an evening stroll through
some of
the less salubrious areas of Southwold or Downham Market? The choice of
online Casinos
I have nowadays is quite fantastic and my factotum Waldo is kept fully
occupied
replying to those charmingly personalised emails from young ladies who
live
behind what we used to call the Iron Curtain and who are seeking a
pen-pal. But on the
whole, I am not one for modern technology
and so I was prepared to be disappointed (and baffled) by Home Before Dark by Charles Maclean, from those
sensitive souls at Hodder & Stoughton, for it is a book where
the
characters seem to spend every waking moment on a mobile phone, or on a
‘video
conference call’, or watching a web-cam or scrolling through
their emails. When
they do have a spare moment, they instinctively ‘log
in’ (see how I’m picking
up the jargon and getting down with the kids?) to an interweb chat room
or play
a deeply suspicious ‘virtual reality’ game in
cyberspace.
If I feared
that most of this would leave me slightly cold
I was right, for I find it difficult to empathise with supposedly
intelligent,
successful and rich characters who have to be surgically removed from
their
electronic gadgets in order to get a life even if they all seem to
smoke like
chimneys as we all used to do. However, Home Before Dark is a very
well-written thriller with some moments of genuine suspense and
jeopardy
(especially a double murder on a train going from A Luddite like
me was never going to be enraptured by
a book like this, but I will not hear a word said against it as the
author is
the son of Sir Fitzroy Maclean, a name close to my own heart and the
author of
the classic (and true) war story Eastern Approaches.
Not only is
Charles Maclean now the 16th
Captain and Keeper of Dunconnel in the Isles of the Sea – a
noble hereditary
title if ever there was one – but he is also the author of
such seminal works
as Maclean’s Miscellany of Whisky
and
Scotch Whisky: A Liquid History. Added to which,
he produces his own single malt, The MacPhunn,
named after a 17th
century murderer and sheep stealer (the latter being the more serious
crime in
the Western Isles), and as long as a case of this nectar continues to
arrive
monthly at Ripster Hall, I will continue to recommend Home Before Dark to all
and sundry. As an aside, I
must also press my friends at Headline
Review to consider republishing Eastern
Approaches if it is out of
print, for they have recently produced attractive editions of
“forgotten
classics” from WWII including Richard Pape’s Boldness Be My Friend and Jerrard
Tickell’s Odette. A
Danger to Santa It is quite
likely that Santa Claus is in for some
heavy-lifting this Christmas, at least in the crime-writing world, for
my
distinguished colleague Professor Barry Forshaw tells me that his epic
(possibly two volume) British
Crime Writing: An Encyclopaedia
is to be published by Greenwood World
Publishing in December in time for Christmas. |
Indeed it is
already available to pre-order on Amazon
where the published price of £90 automatically qualifies it
for free delivery. And speaking of
Professor Forshaw, he is to be
congratulated as I understand he has been nominated for a prestigious
“Macavity” Award at this year’s
Bouchercon in October, for his rough Guide To
Crime Fiction. Oh,
I’m sorry. That should of course read his Rough
Guide To Crime Fiction. Spot
the Ball Competition I have long
resisted attempts by the editor of this
esteemed organ to inject an element of sordid popularism into this
column by
running a “quiz” or
“competition” of some kind. (Frankly I thought the
editor
would have learned his lesson following the premium-rate phone line
scams of
recent months.) However, should
another threatening memo arrive from
the editor’s office (The 4-Ale Bar of The
Fallen Strumpet, High Holborn) I will respond with this
modest offering as
a possible Caption Competition.
My illustration
comes from The Roar
of the Butterflies
by Reginald Hill and features his Luton-based private eye Joe Sixsmith
confronting a suspect in the showers of the
Royal Hoo Golf Club. Or at least
that’s his story. Dissed
by a Penguin The Ripster
family solicitors, Motley & Slapp,
recently drew to my attention the fact that I may have grounds for
legal action
following a gross misrepresentation by Penguin Australia Ltd., who have
issued
statements about “the Machiavellian Mike Ripley”
who is described as
“enormously fat ..(with)..a face that looks like a scrubbed
potato.” However, all
became clear when I discovered that the
“Mike Ripley” in question is a character in a novel
entitled Boned
by an anonymous author who goes imaginatively under the name
“Anonymous”, which
reputedly lifts the lid off male chauvinism in the Australian
television
industry. Australians as male
chauvinists? Good heavens, who would have thought that? It
must be a
really, really imaginative piece of fiction. L’autopsie The first in a
series of historical mysteries set in
14th century rural
It is written
by Apart from
being an award-winning author in her own
right, Madame Japp has another criminal claim to fame. She happens to
be the
French translator of the novels of Patricia Cornwell. Legal
Eagles As I have been
invited to speak at this year’s
national conference of the Criminal Law Solicitors’
Association, I thought it
wise to start looking more closely than usual at that predominantly
American
sub-genre, the legal thriller. With immaculate
timing by those immaculate publishers
Orion (and I say that even though I have been blackballed from their
parties) I
am sent an advance proof of Michael Connelly’s The Brass Verdict, to be
published in October. Despite having
a cover which looks like a hundred
other American legal thrillers, I look forward to this book with great
relish
for it is the second outing for Mickey Haller, the hero of
Connelly’s 2005 novel
The
Lincoln Lawyer which I thought was an excellent
read. In fact I
remember saying at the time I reviewed it that Michael Connelly had
already
proved himself the master of the modern police procedural and the stand-alone thriller and had now
conquered the legal
thriller, which gave me three reasons for hating him. The proof comes
with a front-page blurb with the
advice “Move over John Grisham” from someone called
Mark Billingham. Surely a
writer of Michael Connelly’s stature hardly needs such
playground endorsements
and if he did they really ought to come from a trusted source. Lee
Child,
perhaps? Manga
Cum Laude Just when you
think you’ve seen it all, crime fiction
throws up something new. Death
Note: Another Note by Japanese
author “Nisioisin” and published by VIZ Media is,
as far as I know the first
(and possibly only) crime novel based on a 12-volume
“manga” comic series which
has reputedly sold over 21 million copies (in Japan).
The novel is,
it seems, a prequel to the Death Note ‘manga’
comic series and
introduces the series hero, a super sleuth known only as
“L” on the track of a
serial killer in Swaggering
On Stephen Hunter
is an American thriller writer who has
also turned Japanese in his latest, The 47th Samurai,
which
is published here as a paperback original from those straight-arrow
people at
Arrow. I cannot say I
am a regular reader of Mr Hunter’s work
because, for reasons I simply do not understand, I seem to miss more
books than
I hit. I do remember, as does everyone who read it, his debut, Dirty
White Boys, though my favourite by far is his 2003
epic Pale
Horse Coming, which I lobbied for in that
year’s Gold Dagger stakes but
was outvoted, outnumbered and outgunned. None of which is likely to
ever happen
to Hunter’s two generations of protagonists: WWII hero Earl
Swagger and his son
(and
The fortunes of
father and son Swagger are linked in 47th
Samurai –which features an ageing Bob Lee
– by a legacy from the battle
for But then if a
tough 60-year-old ex-alcoholic,
ex-Marine who speaks no Japanese can get away with multiple killings
(by sword)
of assorted Yakuza gangsters
anywhere, it’s in a Stephen Hunter book. No-one, but no-one
writes better
scenes of violent action and Hunter knows every familiar trick from the
movies,
both Japanese and traditional Westerns, and he utilises them splendidly
here,
though his master-class, I maintain, is Pale Horse Coming. Hard
Labour I have
discovered, to my horror, that the Things have
certainly changed in publishing. I
remember the entire industry being up in arms when that great Prime
Minister
Edward Heath tried to impose a full three-day
week. (And we all know what happened to him as a result…) The
profit-driven culture of ruthless efficiency has
obviously gone too far and I would not be at all surprised to hear it
suggested
that publishers’ luncheons will be curtailed to a maximum of
four hours. That
surely will be the last straw and editors and publicists from the
Embankment to
Uxbridge will rise up in revolt and the Central Line will become a war
zone. I fear the
writing is on the wall (and an editor will
get back to you on it in about three months). Money
Back Guarantee I have to admit
that I had always assumed that “ But now I
believe the city actually exists and my
enlightenment comes courtesy of meeting Brian Freeman, the talented and
utterly
charming author of a series of mysteries featuring Lieutenant Jonny
Stride of
the
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Stalked is also
interesting for reasons other than simply
being a good thriller. For a start it tells ill-informed Eurotrash like
me something
of life in Brian
Freeman’s book also comes with a sticker
proclaiming As good
as Michael Connelly or your money back. This is a
stroke of marketing genius which is sure to
catch on and already I can announce that it is being taken up by other
publishers.
Later this
month Allison & Busby’s next
bestseller, Angels
Unaware, will carry a special promotional sticker
declaring: As funny
as Mike Ripley or your money back. Branching
Out Another mystery
writer branching out into the ‘young
adult’ market (James Patterson, Andy McNab and Jack Higgins
have already gone
there) is Diamond Dagger winner John Harvey, whose novel Nick’s Blues is to be
published by Five Leaves in August. The novel was
originally published in Believe
it or not Those shy and
retiring people at Macmillan have
recently sent me a copy of David Baldacci’s
“terrifying global thriller” The Whole Truth.
The
professionally-crafted Press Release which
accompanied the book informs me that one of the characters in it is
“an
award-winning, ambitious journalist (who) will do anything to get to
the top of
her profession” by the name of Katie
James. Curiously
enough, the contact name for further
information, printed at the bottom of the release is none other than
Macmillan
publicity executive Katie James! I wonder if, by
any chance, they are related? Familiar
titles I am frequently
reporting on the use (over-use?) of
book titles, although there is no law against it. My latest example
probably
does nothing more than show my age. Peter
Robinson’s new book, which actually marks to 21st
anniversary of the first Inspector Alan Banks novel (so
“Happy Birthday”), from
those inventive people at Hodder, is entitled All The Colours Of Darkness,
which has, without question, a fine ring to it. But does anybody else
remember
a quite well-known science-fiction novel by Lloyd Biggle Jnr with the
same
title? And then I am
urged to read the new novel Run
from American Jeff Abbott, published here as a paperback original by
Sphere –
and so urged by none other than Lee Child, making this, I believe, the
19th
novel Lee has endorsed this year. So far. Before I can, I
find my mind wandering (as it often
does these days) back to April 2000 when I reviewed, for the Daily Telegraph, a debut crime novel
called Run
by another American called Douglas E. Winter, published
here by Canongate. Mr
Winter’s Run
was an amazing book, original,
powerful and with a first-person narrative moving at breakneck speed.
In fact I
still remember the sheer pace of
the
book leaving quite an impression on me. It was, I felt, that very rare
thing in
mystery fiction: a distinctive writing “voice”.
Sadly, Mr Winter did not
continue a career in crime (though he is, I believe, a lawyer) but
reverted to
his first love which appears to be horror and fantasy fiction and his
work has
included biographical studies of Stephen King and Clive Barker. He does
have a
new book out this December: American
Zombie, from Borderlands
Press. As far as I know, there is no other novel out there with that
title. Viva
Barney Douglas
Lindsey, the creator Scotland’s most famous,
most innocent and most inept serial killer, Barney Thomson, is trying a
new
tack with a political thriller Lost
In Juarez this summer.
Published by
his own company, Long Midnight
Publishers, Douglas tells me that this does not mark the end of Barney,
his
long-running (and very funny) series character. Barney will be back
next year. Always
immensely popular in Not
single spies Discovering
(albeit unfashionably late) the spy
fiction of Charles Cumming and David Downing has refreshed my taste
buds for
this much neglected sub-genre of mystery fiction. I will not want
for nourishment for a trio of cracking
titles have just thumped through the letter box here at Ripster Hall.
The first to be
eagerly devoured is the subtle and
positively piquant new novel from that classiest of writers, Alan
Furst. The
Spies of Warsaw, from those unassuming people at
Weidenfeld, is really
quite brilliant and is surely in line for a nomination….(No,
I must not
go there!) Set mostly in For dessert, I
have reserved Daniel Silva’s Moscow
Rules, from those perky publishers at Penguin.
Silva’s series hero is
Gabriel Allon, an Israeli assassin (not to mince words) who seems to
moonlight
as a restorer of great works of art, with one his current clients being
the
Pope, no less. (Is there a growing trend in thrillers set in the art
world, or
is it just me?) With my coffee
and digestif
I will settle down with Alex Dryden’s debut
novel Red to Black,
from those ever cheerful people at Headline who
tell me that “Alex Dryden” is the pen-name of a
much travelled journalist who
was actually born in As far as
recommendations go, that one is, dare I say
it, quite interesting. The
Ninja who came in from the cold I am indebted
to the Daily Telegraph, a once great
newspaper, for the following story. The Gone Away
World, published by Heinemann this month, is by an author who goes under the
name of Nick
Harkaway. It is described as a serious novel, a love story, and it has
Ninjas
in it. It is also written by the son of John le Carre, whose real name
of
course is David Cornwell. Having decided
that he could not use the “le Carre”
pen name, son Nick also had reservations about the much used (in book
publishing) “Cornwell” name. When his novel was
accepted, the problem of what
name to put on the cover came up when Nick admitted his surname was
Cornwell. “No
relation to the author?” asked the publisher. “He’s
my father,” admitted the debut novelist. “I
had no idea Patricia Cornwell was a man,” remarked
the publisher. Poirot
should investigate One of these
images is an illustration of the portly
Hercule Poirot, as taken from the new graphic novel version of Agatha
Christie’s Murder
in Mesopotamia, from those dedicated people at
HarperCollins. But
which…?
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