Summer
Daze The crime
publishing scene is positively hectic at the
moment. I cannot remember a summer (once the traditional down-time when
publishers deserted London for the grouse moors) where I have been sent
so many
books to review and I have by no means been sent all
the 138 titles scheduled for publication in the UK between July
and September. That’s roughly one every 16 hours and that is
a conservative
estimate as some publishers – they know who they are
– no longer bother sending
out review copies or even press releases. So where to
begin? How do I choose the books to which
I will devote my failing eyesight? Straight to the
top of my list, of course, must fly We
Know by American Gregg Hurwitz which arrives here
as a paperback
original from Sphere.
The reason this
book takes precedence should be clear,
for it comes recommended (“Outstanding in every
way”) by none other than Lee
Child, which I estimate is the 20th
such recommendation by the frighteningly well-read Lee so far
this year
and, as Jack Palance might have said, the year ain’t over yet. I have already
set aside some quiet time for Ashes
to Ashes (Headline), the third in Barbara
Nadel’s most excellent
Francis Hancock series set in In August I am
spoiled for choice. Not only is there a
new Christopher Brookmyre novel, A Snowball in Hell (Little
Brown),
which shows Chris has finally taken my advice to choose titles which
are
shorter than the space we reviewers are usually allocated for the
entire book. I am
also anxious to try Megan Abbott’s debut
Die
A Little (Simon & Schuster),
which comes
highly recommended from the Somehow I must
find quality time for the third crime
novel by Whitbread Book of the Year winner Kate Atkinson, When Will There Be Good
News?
(Doubleday) for her first two came highly praised by just about
everyone.
As indeed is
the second novel of Tana French, The
Likeness, which has been somewhat sprung on me at
the last moment (as
have several titles in the summer frenzy) by publisher Hodder.
Tana
French’s debut In
the Woods, was
described by that eminent critic Marcel Berlins as “a
terrific debut” and went
on to take the Edgar Award for best first novel in September will,
I predict, be dominated by the big
names of the profession. Not only are the senses already quivering over
the
publication of The
Private Patient (Faber) by P.D. James and James Lee
Burke’s
new novel Swan Peak (Orion),
but I will also be celebrating the arrival
across the finish line of a new horse-racing thriller Silks (Penguin) by the
father and son team of Dick and Felix Francis. There is also a
new Val McDermid, A
Darker Domain
(HarperCollins) which, I am reliably informed, summons up ghosts from
the
miners’ strike of 1984 and I must make room that month for
the latest, and I
think his twentieth, from one of Britain’s most consistent
(and consistently
popular) thriller writers, Robert Goddard, with his novel Found Wanting (Bantam).
Spannungsliteratur When Sebastian
Fitzek’ first novel Die Therapie was published in Germany in
2006 it knocked The Da Vinci Code
from its #1 bestseller
perch. For that alone, the author deserves a drink, and now his debut
arrives
in English as Therapy,
from those profoundly perky publishers Pan.
Many a crime
novel is trumpeted as a ‘psychological
thriller’, but Therapy
really is a thriller about psychology and a very good
one too –the sort of book Alfred Hitchcock, had he been
around and working
today, would have bitten Herr Fitzek’s hand off for the film
rights. As with a
film like The Usual Suspects, the
reader knows they are being misdirected from the start, but suspends disbelief totally and goes along with the book
just to see up
which particular garden path he or she is being led. Interestingly, one
path
leads to a storm-lashed German holiday island on the North Sea coast which I suspect is in the
area of the
ancestral home of the Angles (as in Anglo-Saxons) and the first novel
|I’ve read
set in that region since Riddle of the
Sands. Perhaps not
surprisingly, Sebastian Fitzek is
enthusiastic about his first book being published in He even
supplies an address to his website www.sebastianfitzek.de and perhaps dangerously
asks readers to tell
him what they thought of the book. The website, in
German, is full of lots of nuggets of
information. Sebastian, who bears an uncanny resemblance to a young
Mark
Lamarr, is 37, a Berliner, has three dogs, two rabbits and a horse, and
admits
to his earliest reading experience being the works of Enid Blyton,
though his
favourite author is Michael Crichton. I am not sure what the various
psychiatrists in Therapy
would make of that; probably nothing good. The
Book Itself Disturbing news
reaches me from our colonies across
the That young and
awesomely talented writer Marcus Sakey,
who chronicles the mean streets of
The
Headmaster’s Study I have had the
dubious honour of being summoned in to
many a headmaster’s study, but in the case of the one
occupied by Paul Doherty
in leafy
The prolific
Paul – surely the undisputed King’s
Champion of the medieval whodunit – has just published his (I
estimate though I
may have failed in my arithmetic) 53rd novel; Nightshade,
from the
irrepressible Headline corporation. |
There will be
much celebrating in the shires this
Michaelmas for in it, Paul returns to the adventures of his most
popular series
hero (and I think his first series hero), Hugh Corbett, Keeper of the
Secret
Seal and special emissary of King Edward I. Ten-Year
Stretch Whilst doing
the weekly filing and shredding of the
paperwork which mounts up here at Ripster Hall, my factotum Waldo
discovered,
among some unanswered writs and a few summonses, a copy of the souvenir
edition
of the 500th anniversary edition of Red Herrings, the esteemed organ of the
Crime Writers Association.
Dated ‘Summer 1998’, the magazine contained a Quiz
for which, it seems, I set
the questions, though I have no memory of this, just as I have no
memory of
being a member of the CWA at the time.
Though I am
quite willing to accept I did set the
quiz, I have no idea who won the competition or the star prize of
“A Summer
Hamper of Crime Books”. Entrants had to
submit their answers by 1st
September 1998, by post charmingly enough, to: “Public Face,
Bank Cottage,
Streat, West Sussex” which I suspect is an address of
convenience or, as my
spy-writing colleagues would say, a dead-letter box. Perhaps I will
drop a postcard to that address to see
if that hamper remains unclaimed… Cast
of Thousands I have looked
forward to reading Tony Pollard’s debut
historical thriller The
Minutes of the Lazarus Club since I first saw it
listed by
those perky publishers at Penguin, for Dr Pollard is a noted
archaeologist of
international reputation. I was myself merely a humble
“digger” but the bond
between archaeologists is strong and none have ever been known to say
anything
unpleasant about a fellow digger’s writing. I am already
prepared to say that I
feel Tony’s book will be the best fiction written by an
archaeologist since Sir
Mortimer Wheeler, who once astutely observed: “Archaeology is
not a science,
it’s a vendetta”.
Lazarus Club did not
disappoint. It is a rip-roaring thriller
which cuts through the Victorian world of science, technology and
medicine (via
the odd brothel and opium den) with an impressive cast including
Florence
Nightingale, Charles Darwin, Joseph Bazalgette (sewers), Robert
Stephenson
(railways), Charles Babbage (computers) and, central to it all, The plot
involves mutilated bodies fished out of the Bad
Guys, White Hats Ever since the
Talented Miss Highsmith introduced us
to Tom Ripley, both crime writer and reader have had a moral problem
when the
hero of a book is also a professional criminal, or, in a more recent
trend, a
professional murderer. Richard
Stark’s character Parker (a professional bank
robber) is a famous example of a bad man wearing a white hat, but Stark
(Donald
Westlake) always manages to inject a moral authority into the stories,
where
conflict is usually with other bad guys (this time clearly wearing
black hats)
and “civilians” are placed off-limits. Then of course,
Frederick Forsyth brought us The
Jackal, a professional assassin whom the reader actually starts
cheering for as
he doggedly attempts to complete a mission we know is going to fail. Now comes
Columbus – no. not Columbo – better known as
The
Silver Bear – no, not The
Silver
Bears, that was the title of the late Paul Erdman’s
financial thriller back
in 1974 – in a debut thriller from Hollywood screenwriter Derek Haas, published here
ahead of schedule
by those enthusiastic hotshots at Hodder.
As a character
in recent thrillers, he is not alone.
Tom Cain’s The
Accident Man is a professional assassin (though one
notably
lacking the savvy and pure evil ruthlessness of The Jackal) and more
recently
in The
Deceived, Brett Battles’ hero is a
“cleaner” – someone who disposes of
the bodies of murder victims (though he’s nowhere near as
cool as Mr Wolf in Pulp Fiction). For all the
moral dilemmas posed by the central
character, Derek Haas (who bears an uncanny resemblance to our own thrillmeister Nick Stone; or is it just
me?) has produced a short, sharp, electric shock of a book.
|