In Town Tonight It was,
as it always is, a pleasure to attend the social event of the
crime-writing
year – the launch of a new Dick Francis title – in
the modest surroundings of
Claridges Hotel where the canapés glowed and the champagne
flowed.
The new book, Even
Money (from the
magnificent Michael Joseph), is of course by Dick and Felix Francis and
has,
unusually if not uniquely, a bookmaker or ‘turf
accountant’ as the hero. This
was a point I raised with Dick, now in his 89th
year, over a glass
of champagne, suggesting that as he had (many years ago) had bankers as
his
heroes and in the last novel, Silks,
he had lawyers, he was
rapidly running out of unlikely protagonists and may well soon have to
resort
to weaving the Francis magic on other unpopular characters such as
literary
agents or even publishers.
To fit the occasion, the launch party was
organised as a ‘race evening’ with video-taped
horse races and turf account
tally stands. Each guest was given on arrival a wodge of Bank of
Francis money
with which to place a token bet.
Despite being told several times by Felix
Francis that the token money was unfortunately not accepted in the bar
at
Claridges, several crime-writer guests were seen sneaking in that
direction,
tightly clutching their “winnings”.
Fortunately, that elegant socialite Mark
Sanderson was on hand to generously share the benefit of his latest
“six figure
advance” for his new crime novel and introduce me to the
mysteries of Claridge’s
famous champagne cocktails.
Mark’s forthcoming (in January) book,
entitled Snow Hill
is said to be the first part of a trilogy and has
been forecast to “do for 1930s’ London what Jake
Arnott did for the 1960s.” The
initial announcement of the Snow Hill trilogy apparently took place at
a
publisher’s “crime fiction dinner” some
time ago, but for legal reasons (not
being invited) I was unable to attend.
However, Mark and I were stable-mates for a
short time at the much-missed Do-Not Press which published his first
foray into
crime fiction, Audacious
Perversion, in 1998.
For
those of my readers not familiar with the metropolis, I enclose a small
map
showing the Snow Hill area, taken from the indispensible
Bartholomew’s London
Pocket Atlas. Now I do believe that my edition (the 1938 one issued to
my
cousin Staffelkapitän Otto von
Ripsterhausen) may be slightly out-of-date, but I still find it an
invaluable
guide to facilities of the capital and I rarely venture there without
it.
An Inspector Calls I
cannot mention one of the famous alumni
of the Do-Not Press without mentioning several others making the news.
Firstly,
my old friend Paul Charles.
After a distinguished career in the music
business, working with and promoting such artists as John Lee Hooker,
Ray
Davies, Ry Cooder and Robert Plant, Paul turned to crime fiction in the
1990s,
creating the Inspector Christy Kennedy novels, which were mostly set in
the
urban jungle that is
Now he returns to his Irish roots with a
new hero, Inspector Starrett, who calls (as Inspectors are wont to do)
in on a
family birthday party in the wilds of Donegal. Needless to say in Family
Life (from Irish publisher Brandon), the news
Starrett has to deliver
isn’t good.
And I am also delighted to see that other
Do-Not Press Gang member, the Godfather of British noir,
Russell James has provided crime buffs with the ideal
Christmas present this year with his Great British Fictional Villains
from Remember When (an imprint of Pen & Sword Publishers).
His book does exactly what it says in the
title and is, of course, the natural companion volume to his Great
British Fictional Detectives – a
remarkably comprehensive, nay,
encyclopaedic, study of the genre from ‘Angel’ to
‘Zen’ and probably some
characters created by people not called Michael. Should Have Gone To SpecSavers My
valet and general factotum, Waldo, has adopted an unbearable and
seemingly
permanent smirk since he heard the short-lists for this
year’s (or perhaps last
year’s) crime writing Oscars. With great glee he pronounced
“you could not tip
more rubbish if you had a JCB” (a piece of earth-moving
equipment which I
believe our colonial cousins refer to as a
‘backhoe’).
He
is alluding, unfairly, to my appalling record of trying to second guess
the
likely candidates for what I must, I’m afraid, refer to as The Specsavers Crime Thriller Awards 2009 Crime
Writers’ Association’s
Gold Dagger Sponsored by Booksdirect.
In
fact, I actually predicted only one of the Gold Dagger (I
can’t be bothered to
repeat the full title) short-list correctly: Kate Atkinson’s When
Will There Be Good News. Naturally I wish it well
when the final
judgement is announced later this month, but I cannot hide my
disappointment
that Elizabeth Wilson’s War Damage, Val
McDermid’s A
Darker Domain and Sophie Hannah’s The Other Half Lives are not also in competition.
When it comes to the (Specsavers
etc.) Ian Fleming Steel Dagger, then I did a lot better
– twice as well in
fact, predicting two of the
short-list: Olen Steinhauer’s The Tourist and
Andrew Williams’ The
Interrogator.
Hiding
my disappointment not to see Lee Child’s Gone Tomorrow, John Le
Carré’s A
Most Wanted Man or Charles Cummings’
prophetic Typhoon in
contention, I
will, of course, be rooting for Andrew Williams for not only has he
done a
fantastic research job and written a jolly good book, but he cheekily
includes
Ian Fleming as a character. He is also the only Briton on the list,
which is
surprising and more than a little depressing and does mean that if the
organisers insist on the attendance of the five short-listed authors
who have
to fly the
However, I have to own up to not guessing a
single one on the short-list of the (Specsavers
etc.) CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger Sponsored by Louise Penny and
Michael
Whitehead and
can only assume that
the judges, who I am sure are entirely distinguished whoever they are,
have set
the bar incredibly high to be able to ignore Aly Monroe’s The Maze of Cadiz,
Jeremy
Duns’ Free
Agent or Elliott Hall’s The First Stone not to
mention Andrew Williams’ The Interrogator, which...er....just
happens to have been shortlisted for the
Steel Dagger....
Perhaps
the judges have spotted talent where I have missed it. Perhaps, as
Waldo
suggests, I should have gone to...
In for a Penny One
cannot mention the CWA/Specsaver/John Creasey/New Blood (etc.) Dagger
without
mentioning Louise Penny. Well, one can, but it would be churlish not to
mention
the generosity of that fine Canadian writer and her husband Michael
Whitehead
who have sponsored the Specsaver/John Creasey (etc.) even though Louise
is one
writer who cannot possibly win it, as she has won one already (along
with a load of
other awards).
All members of the CWA should immediately
run out and order her new book, The
Brutal Telling (published by
those happy purveyors of homicide Headline) in gratitude for selflessly
stumping up the prize money. They won’t, of course, because
crime writers are
notoriously badly-read, but I know thousands of Louise’s fans
will.
The
Brutal Telling is, I believe,
the sixth novel to feature Chief Inspector Gamache of the
Sûreté du Quebec, a
character once described by an intelligent and discerning reviewer as one of the most human and endearing
fictional detective creations of recent times.
|
Yet perhaps
even the most
ardent reader of Penny’s fiction is unaware that thoughtful
and humane Armand
Gamache is closely modelled on the charming and gentle Michael
Whitehead. Far
less of a secret, of course, is Louise Penny’s international
reputation as a
lumberjack (or rather ‘lumberjill’) and her skill
at blending 90? -proof
bootlegged maple syrup.
Missing in Action in September? Dan
Brown’s The
Lost Symbol, the much-trailed follow-up to The
Da Vinci Code, arrived like a hurricane coming
ashore in September,
sweeping everything before it and creating aftershocks in the book
trade with
finger-pointing and name-calling about 70%+ discounts which enabled the
book to
be retailed at £4.99 instead of the £18.99 cover
price.
The
chattering classes were also waiting in
ambush, demanding to know if the new book “could be as
bad” as the last one
(which I seem to remember sold rather well).
I have to admit I’m rather enjoying it,
though Freemasonry leaves me pretty cold (and was much better
‘done’ by
Reginald Hill over 25 years ago) and I did get the sneaky feeling that
I was
intruding on to the set of one of those hammy National
Treasure movies. But then, I am fairly benignly disposed
towards our colonial cousins who like to elevate their Founding Fathers
to
either super-hero or super-villain status. Whatever one feels about the
subject
matter and the at times rather laboured explanatory style,
there’s no doubting
Mr Brown can hook a reader and string them along at a pretty furious
pace.
Yet with all the over-hype and hysteria
which greeted the mega-seller last month, many a decent thriller
probably went
missing-in-action. Some, thankfully, did not, at least not in this
column.
There was, for example, the 17th
thriller starring series hero Sean Dillon The Wolf at the Door
(HarperCollins)
from veteran Jack Higgins now in his 80th year.
Not
to mention the new female detective inspector tracking a murderer
whilst
fighting her own battle within the police force, in Silent Scream (Simon
& Schuster) from
a writer who has made that particular sub-genre entirely
her own, the vivacious Lynda La Plante.
And I am delighted to report that Douglas
Lindsay’s seventh Barney Thomson book, The Final Cut (from
Sadly, this could well be the last in Irish Crimes No
sooner did I admit that I find reading
“True Crime” quite scary, then I receive a copy of Blood Ties
- The Real Stories Behind Ireland’s Most
Notorious Murders by leading Irish crime reporter
Niamh O’Connor.
The book chronicles three bloody,
family-related murders all from the last decade, none of which I was
previously
aware of (which is probably why I slept well until now). I am sure many aficionados
of such reportage
will find the book fascinating, but for me the most interesting bit was
the
Epilogue interview with Niamh O’Connor herself where she
talks about the perils
of investigative journalism in
She also reveals that she is turning to
crime fiction with a debut novel If I Never See You Again,
featuring
a female Garda detective, Jo Birmingham, which will be published here
by
Transworld in April next year. The Outrageous Artist formerly
known as Colin Not
content with one highly successful comic crime novel this year,
Ulsterman Colin
Bateman has produced a second – The Day of the Jack Russell
– which
will be made available to mere mortals by Headline in November.
Featuring
the same anonymous, petulant, anally-retentive Belfast
bookseller-cum-private
eye who blundered through Mystery
Man earlier this year (a
book which contains the best Titanic joke
since James Cameron’s initial budget proposal), Day of the Jack
– as it
is bound to become known – is certainly going to give Mystery Man
a run for its
money for the title Funniest Crime Novel of 2009.
Not that it will be to everyone’s taste,
for the humour is often dark and very cruel, especially if you know
someone who
has had a stroke, or if you frequent specialist crime book shops (such
as No
Alibis in Belfast), or if you have a mother, or if you are Norwegian.
Norwegian? Well, here is our un-named hero
discussing Scandinavian crime fiction:
“I
am not entirely convinced by the recent vogue for Scandinavian crime
fiction –
who’s to say if it’s the author who is a genius, or
his translator? Also, it’s
difficult to care if a Norwegian gets murdered....
There
are lots of good jokes about crime writers and crime writing, though
James
Patterson and John Grisham may not agree; an excellent gag about
Frankie Valli
and a not half-bad one about Kylie Minogue. All of which makes
– though it
pains me greatly to say it
–
“Bateman” (I hope he can see me making the inverted
commas with my fingers) the
funniest working crime writer around.
There is already talk of adapting the two
“Mystery Man” books for screen and as soon as you
mention
“Bateman” and his hero will be
relieved to
hear that I make no charge for this valuable piece of casting advice. The Fourth Queen Just as
69 AD, as everyone knows, was ‘the year of the four
emperors’ in
If Marsh’s name is not automatically linked
to the other three queens, it could be because she is perceived as
being
something of a late-arrival to the Golden Age, her debut novel being
published
14 years after Agatha’s, 13 years after Dorothy’s
and five years after
Margery’s. Yet apart from Christie, she was probably the most
prolific,
publishing no less than 32 crime novels.
To mark the 75th anniversary of
her debut, A Man Lay
Dead, in 1934, Harper are publishing a biography
(previously published in New Zealand): Ngaio Marsh: Her Life in Crime by
Joanne Drayton along with the entire Marsh canon in 11 volumes as a
‘Diamond
Anniversary Collection’ and Volume 11 contains not only her
later crime novels Photo-Finish
and Light
Thickens but also her overlooked autobiography Black
Beech and Honeydew.
My one and only contribution to the diamond
jubilee celebrations is a piece of Ngaio Marsh trivia certain to turn
up in a
crime quiz at some point: which British actor played both Ngaio
Marsh’s
Inspector Alleyn and Ruth
Rendell’s
Inspector Wexford in television adaptations?
There are no prizes, but anyone guessing George Baker
would not be
wrong. Why not
mention the war? On the
right-hand side of the
Naturally it put me in mind of Ralph
Hammond Innes, who lived here in the eastern marches and was an expert
sailor
on its beautiful waterways and coastline. In September 1939 Hammond
Innes,
already the author of four thrillers (now so rare they would cost you
£1,200
each if you could find a copy), was on holiday in
Whilst I was never totally convinced that
the chemical reaction crucial to the plot would actually work (but I am
no
scientist), it is still a cracking story of a secret U-boat base
operating from
a cavern in the Cornish cliffs, justifying the opening line of the
book: Cornwall is a wrecker’s coast.
It
was the first Hammond Innes novels I ever read and remains a personal
favourite
as do two of his sea-faring classics: Wreck of the Mary Deare and The
White South. It
is now over ten
years since Hammond Innes died, age 85, after a string of best-selling
thrillers spanning half a century. |
Sadly, except in second-hand bookshops in
coastal towns where there are marinas, his novels are not easy to find,
although his name is always mentioned with affection and reverence when
ageing
crime writers gather around roaring log fires in the dead of winter and
tell
tales of who they read in their youth.
I am afraid that Innes is in danger of
slipping into the limbo to which good writers are often unfairly
consigned –
and yes, I can hear a High Horse coming so I will not hesitate to jump
into the
saddle.
Possibly the one author most mentioned by
professional writers as being undeservedly consigned to
“thriller limbo” is Francis
Clifford, who died in 1975 and very quickly, and disgracefully, faded
from the
memory of all but the discerning reader.
Long before he adopted the writing name
Francis Clifford, Captain Arthur Leonard Bell Thompson was hailed as a
hero for
his leadership, in 1942, of a group of allied soldiers on their on a
900-mile
march through Japanese-occupied Burma. He wrote modestly about his
exploits and
those of his brave ‘Karen’ and Indian troops in Desperate Journey,
though the book was not published until after his death. {One feels
that he and
Joanna Lumley might have ruled this country as benevolent despots
really quite
well.}
As a thriller-writer, he sold well over
five million copies of his novels and several were filmed, most notably
The
Naked Runner, which starred Frank Sinatra, was
directed by Sidney J.
Furie (who also did The Ipcress File)
and was produced by Brad Dexter (the first member of The
Magnificent Seven to be killed on screen). And surely there
are
at least half-dozen Trivial Pursuit questions in there somewhere.
Yet the name Francis Clifford is a mere
echo today in bookshops and libraries and I have searched in vain for
anyone
who might have dealt with his books. If anyone out there in interweb
land has any
idea of his literary agent of the heirs to his literary estate, I would
be
grateful to hear from them. The Wrecking Crew From
Cornish wreckers to American railroad wreckers is a fairly logical
segue, at
least for this column, and I really looking forward to the first
collaboration
from a new ‘wrecking crew’ comprising my old friend
and fellow boulevardier Justin
Scott and that
maestro of the adventure thriller, the legendary Clive Cussler.
Published here in November by Michael
Joseph, The Wrecker will
be the second novel to feature Isaac Bell of
the Van Dorn Detective Agency, the character created by Clive Cussler
in The
Chase. The year is 1907 and the setting is the
still pretty wild
American west where a master criminal known only as ‘The
Wrecker’ is disrupting
(with extreme violence) the regular running of the railroads.
Anyone who thinks co-writing a western
would be a daunting prospect for Justin (who is best known for
sea-going
thrillers and delicately subversive New England mysteries) would be
mistaken,
for his father Leslie Scott was a prolific author of ‘pulp
westerns’.
I do
not believe, however, that Justin has ever written in collaboration
before but
when I asked him how he felt about the process, he had clearly enjoyed
the
process: “What I had not expected
out of
collaborating was the fun. It’s fun to work with somebody.
Looking back on the
early days of my career I realise that in the days when editors were
still at
the centre of publishing there was a lot of collaboration in the
writing of
books. Clive has revived that atmosphere of making things together and
for that
I am grateful.”
Hmm..... editors “at the centre of
publishing”? Those must have been the days. Very Glittering Prizes I hear
that my old and distinguished colleague Philip Kerr has won something
called
the
And Philip and his new book are also
shortlisted (him for the third year running) for this year’s
Ellis Peters Award
for historical mysteries, the winner of which will be announced later
this
month.
Also on the short list are Shona Maclean
(the niece of Alistair) although (for legal etc.) I have not seen her
book;
Andrew Williams’ The
Interrogator, Mark Mills’ The Informnation Officer,
Laura Wilson’s An
Empty Death and Rennie Airth’s The Dead of Winter, all
of which were excellent reads. And that makes one heck of a strong
short list.
I will not blight the chances of any of these authors (some of whom
still talk
to me) by tipping one of them to win. Reissues of the Month Without
doubt: the four early novels of John le Carre from the early 1960s,
attractively repackaged by Sphere.
These
include, naturally, his highly influential The Spy Who Came In From The Cold
and the lesser-known but very interesting The Looking Glass War, and also
his
first two ‘Smiley’ books
Call
for the Dead and
a personal
favourite of mine, the wonderfully observant (and superbly bitchy) A
Murder of Quality. The Plinthster A
figure guaranteed to strike fear in the hearts of newly-published
authors was
the legendary Postmortem Man, aka Ralph Spurrier, who would appear as
if by
magic whenever a new mystery came out and force, with extreme
strictness,
innocent authors to sign hundreds of copies of their books for his
“business” (www.postmortembooks.com)
until many
expired from cramp or dehydration.
Although rarely photographed, the
Postmortem Man was once caught on camera by my factotum Waldo when I
was
employed as a bodyguard for Inspector Morse creator Colin Dexter. (My
duty was
to form a human barrier between Colin and rapacious autograph-hunters
and be
prepared to “take a pen-nib” if necessary.)
I say ‘rarely photographed’ until now,
that
is, for The Postmortem Man has broken cover in a truly spectacular way
in order
to promote the crime novel he himself is writing.
Last month he came out of the Postmorten
book cupboard and burst into the public eye in his new super-hero
identity, The
Plinthster. Taking his place on the fourth plinth in The
Plinthster’s full oratorical performance
in front of an adoring crowd can be seen on http://www.oneandother.co.uk/participants/Ralph-The-Book
but the gist of it was the story of how Ralph the bookseller acquired a
collection of books belonging to one Henry Sweetman, who was hung for
murder,
aged 23, in 1953. What is more, Ralph has traced the story of Henry
Sweetman
through the books Henry had with him in the condemned cell and, now
convinced
of his innocence, has turned the whole story into a novel,
provisionally
entitled A Taste for Death (although
I think someone’s beaten him to that title).
Ralph’s mounting of the fourth plinth took
place, aptly enough, at 9 a.m., for that is the hour at which
executions for
those convicted of capital crimes always took place in Britain prior to
1965. I
am sure it was also a popular hour (for they are known to be early
risers)
among the hundreds of publishers and literary agents swarming around
the
Plinthster bidding for the manuscript of his first novel. To the Max I read
that Maxim Jakubowski, the man behind the legendary Murder One
bookshop, is not
retiring quietly into the Soho night but has dusted off his
editor’s
deerstalker and meerschaum pipe (or whatever it is editors use to
accessorize
these days) to launch a new crime fiction imprint for John Blake Publishing, which
until now has been
better known for ‘true crime’ books.
The new imprint will be called either Maximum
Crime or maXcrime
depending on who you believe and will launch in 2010 with Hit by
the Australian super-model turned crime-writer Tara Moss.
I confess I do not know the work of Tara
Moss, who has, I believe, been selling well in This week I am mostly
reading... I have
been looking forward to Aly Monroe’s second historical spy
mystery, Washington
Shadow (from the Jolly Magnificent John Murray)
ever since I read her
first, The Maze of
Cadiz, last year and I am delighted to say it does
not disappoint.
In
fact, I think it’s even better. Set in the economic crisis
immediately after
WWII – when Britain posed as the great champion of liberty
and democracy but
was actually flat broke and on its uppers – it beautifully
captures the
political skulduggery going on between supposed allies, the pomposity
of formal
diplomacy (and the British class system) and does something I never
thought a
thriller could: it makes economics interesting. Maybe not the new rock
and
roll; but interesting. The Old Master To mark
my eleventy-first birthday last month, I treated myself to a book I had
promised myself ever since I discovered its existence and managed to
track down
a copy to a book dealer in
Against
the Wind is the
autobiography of Geoffrey Household, written in 1958, and is simply
quite
brilliant as one might imagine from the man who wrote Rogue Male.
The opening paragraph says it all, with
Household admitting that in his fiction he always
tried as soon as possible to describe his
hero’s economic background and how he has earned his living,
or as he puts it:
‘What does it eat?’
is the first question that the interested observer of any animal must
ask.
Substitute the word ‘hunter’ for
‘interested observer’ and you have a sentence only
Geoffrey Household could
have written. Toodles! |
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