Great
party, Edith The party of
this year’s
The winner, as
I accurately predicted, was Ariana
Franklin for Mistress
of the Art of Death and she is pictured here,
thanks
to the efforts of Prince Ali Karim, who was on hand with
diamond-encrusted
Instamatic, with her husband, the film critic and pickled onion
magnate, Barry
Norman.*
This
prestigious award, and one I have the honour of
being disqualified from in 2005, is named after Ellis Peters who was
famously
the creator of the Brother Cadfael mysteries but to some of us old
stagers is
best remembered for her sadly undervalued Sergeant (later Inspector)
Felse
series which she launched in 1951 under her real name of Edith
Pargeter. I have
recently learned that her first novel, published in 1936, was set in
Ancient
Rome, but is for medieval mysteries that she is best known. I believe that
Ariana Franklin’s excellent novel is
the first time this prestigious prize has actually gone to a novel set
in the
Middle Ages. Indeed, in recent years the award has gone to novels set
as
recently as the 1950s.
I discussed
this very point with the dashing Mark
Mills (whose entry into the party was signalled by the sound of ladies
swooning), himself a short-listed nominee for his wonderful book The
Savage Garden which is set in 1957. After less than
hour of listening patiently to my
theory that any book set in a year when I
was alive cannot reasonably be classed as
“history”, he found himself in
total agreement with me. Sadly he was called away before I could
develop my
second point. {* Barry
Norman’s Pickled Onions are now on sale in
Sainsbury’s and very good they are too.} Tomorrow
belongs to… Following his tour-de-force
performance at the Institut Francais recently, my distinguished
colleague Barry
Forshaw, author of the Rough
Guide to Crime Fiction and now
entering his seventy-seventh consecutive year (possibly misheard) as a
judge
for the Crime Writer’s Dagger award, must surely be looking
to expand his
editorial claims in Europe. Following the
success of Le Guide
Degolas des Romans
Policier, can Der Unbequem Reisefuhrer zu Krimis
be far behind? ’Cos
I could I am delighted
to see that the vivacious Claire Seeber
has fallen under the mentorship of those giants of crime fiction
criticism, my
faithful colleagues Peter Guttridge and the aforementioned Barry
Forshaw.
I recently took
Ms Seeber to task for inventing the
word cos and using it repeatedly in
her debut novel Lullaby
(Avon Books) and therefore Mr Guttridge made a
point of
introducing her to me. Ms Seeber seemed genuinely unaware of her
grammatical
mistake and was charmingly (and unnecessarily) apologetic. I know how hard
it can be for first time novelists. If
only there was some one to help them by reading their manuscripts
before they
are despatched to the printer. We could give them a name and call them
“Editors” (from the Latin editio).
It
is just a thought. The idea will probably never catch on. Moving
pictures It has long
been a tradition here at Ripster Hall to
provide uplifting entertainment during the long summer evenings for the
hundreds of itinerant workers who flock to our gates seeking seasonal
employment as strawberry-pickers, game-beaters and scarecrows. Most
popular are
the twice weekly film shows, when a moving picture is projected by my
factotum
Waldo, on to the whitewashed wall of the big barn where many of our
temporary
staff prefer to sleep, nestled in the warm straw. Waldo has run
these shows for many years now with a
library of classic movies starring the likes of Charles Chaplin and
Buster
Keaton (although we withdrew a two-reel Tom Mix adventure as it excited
the
audience too much). If the weather is fine, the Lady Ripster will have
one of
her grand pianos carried out to the barn and will provide musical
accompaniment. I mention this
tradition solely because the latest
book by Stuart Pawson, cunningly entitled Grief Encounters, begins with a
visit to a cinema “complex” (I think the more
vulgar term is “multiplex”) by a
gentleman of some years with a coquettish 30-years-younger lady on his
arm. Not
that there is anything wrong with such a miniscule age difference,
I’d have you
(and the Court of Appeal) know. What struck me
was that this opening scene quite
specifically takes place in July 2005 and that the film the couple see
at this
modern “complex” is the wonderful Shakespeare
In Love, a film made, I believe, in colour and with sound and
released in
1998. Obviously the setting for the book is somewhere up North, where
the pace
of life is agreeably slower and it takes seven years for an
Oscar-winning film
to get there. “The
The organisers
of the most excellent Harrogate Festival
of Crime Writing (unfairly known as “The
Horrorgate” in some circles), which
takes place somewhere in the North in July 2008, have kindly sent me
details of
their ‘headline acts’. And mightily
impressive they are too, including, as
they do: Peter Robinson, Jeffrey Deaver, Robert Crais and the name
which
immediately caught my eye, Tess Gerritsen, whose thriller Vanish of
a couple of
years ago was, in my not-so-humble opinion, an absolute cracker.
Dr Gerritsen
has a new novel, The
Bone Garden,
published by those energetic people at Bantam in January, which I will
devour
before deciding whether or not I will attend next year’s
celebrations. It will be five
years since I was allowed at the
Festival and although the share price of the sponsors
(Theakston’s brewery) has
since recovered, I believe there may still be some lingering animosity.
Otherwise they would surely have lifted the Restraining Order by now. Full details of
this rather peculier festival can be
found on crime@harrogate-festival.org.uk
or by ringing the ‘hotline’ on 01423 562303. More festival
news, just in. The 2008 Essex Book
Festival will feature a strong contingent of crime writers appearing
throughout
the county in a month long programme starting on 6th
March. My sources tell
me that the star-studded cast list
will include: The ratepayers
of One
particularly famous crime-writing Essex Girl,
Dorothy L. Sayers, died fifty years ago this month and those dedicated
and
enthusiastic people at the Dorothy L. Sayers Society are determined to
make
sure that the anniversary does not go unnoticed. On the actual
anniversary (17th December)
there will be simultaneous memorial ceremonies in St Anne’s
Church, On
Details of the
DLS Society can be found on www.sayers.org.uk. New
Year, Old Friends In January I
will, of course, be joining my fellow
critics and reviewers on the Greek island of Skyros for our annual
retreat
where we open those bulging brown envelopes from publishers (hopefully,
some
will have money in them this time) and decide among ourselves which
crime and
mystery titles will be reviewed in 2008. |
Among the
fresh-faced debutantes and new arrivals in
translation, I will be urging my colleagues to reserve space on their
shelves
for two firm favourites who richly deserve the red carpet treatment. Inspector
Ganesh Ghote, the creation of Harry (H.R.F.)
Keating, first pounded those mean streets of In his 81st
year, Harry Keating gives us Inspector
Ghote’s First Case
from those
charmingly modest people at Allison & Busby. Also in May 2008,
the same
publisher completes a notable double with the return of Lovejoy in
Jonathan
Gash’s The
Faces in the Pool. Jonathan Gash is a mere
stripling in his
early 70’s, and his roguish, antique-dealer hero first
appeared in 1977, spawning
a hit TV series which in turn gave rise to an entire industry of
cash-in-the-attic/car boot sales/ road-show programmes for which
neither the
original character nor the author should be held responsible. Birthday
Treat No mention of
the coming year can be made without
reference to the fact that in August, the flagship crime fiction
bookshop
Murder One celebrates its 20th birthday and that
will surely be the
occasion for the party of the year. Now many crime
writers have claimed that they had a
book published the day Murder One opened by Maxim Jakubowski
(originally at The official
opening party took place on
In those days,
books were rarely published on
Wednesdays but on Thursday 18th August, Collins
Crime Club released
two titles on to an unsuspecting world. One was The Final Analysis of Dr Stark by American Rabbi Joseph
Telushkin (a highly
respected academic authority on Judaism) and the other was Just Another Angel,
by
yours truly. So new was my
first novel that there was actually a
gap in the ‘R’ section of the shelves when I
arrived at the party. The gap was
quickly plugged by the arrival, in a black A
near relative My old and
distinguished friend Catherine Aird is no
stranger to the world of archaeology, being something of an expert on
late
Saxon sites and early Norman churches in her home
In her
detective fiction she has made use of her
expertise, most notably in A
Late Phoenix back in 1971, and
though her latest novel Losing
Ground, from Allison &
Busby, is not directly concerned with archaeology, the books refers on
numerous
occasions to a bequest to the famous Greatorex Museum in Berebury,
Calleshire
from that well known local archaeologist “the
late Professor Michael Ripley”. How kind of
Miss Aird to name-check the late Professor,
who was of course a very near relative of mine, thus acknowledging his
contribution in shining a small flicker of light on to the Ages
previously
known as Dark.
His time spent
excavating in Calleshire was counted
among the Professor’s happier years. It is typical of the
generosity of Miss
Aird that she
deliberately did not dwell
on his subsequent, rather questionable, activities involving the Ripping
Yarns I have been
sorely tempted of late to retrieve the What has
reminded me of my digging days is the
positive plethora of ripping yarns harking back to ancient history and
legend
published recently.
With the
exception of the new title from that
adventurous duo Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child, The Wheel of Darkness [Orion],
whose Riptide
I thoroughly enjoyed a few years back, most of these
titles seem to be by previously unknown authors. Andy
McDermott’s The
Hunt for Atlantis [Headline]
does, I suppose, exactly what is says on the cover whilst Will
Adams’ The
Alexander Cipher [HarperCollins] brings
“the truth and legend of
Alexander the Great to life”, hopefully more convincingly
than Oliver Stone’s
biopic. And no sooner
had I stacked these three volumes on my
“To Read” pile, than a fourth appeared: a debut
“action-thriller” Pyramid
[Pan] by Tom Martin which features
“codes, cartography and ancient
civilizations.”
I have a theory
that this current publishing fad has
been triggered by the success of that prolific (and disgracefully
young)
Australian Matthew Reilly who has produced at least twelve novels in a
career
of less than ten years which began, I believe, with him self-publishing
his
first title. I am afraid I
have to admit that I have not kept pace
with the modern “action adventure” genre since
Alistair MacLean was writing at
his peak (i.e. up to and including, but not beyond, Ice Station Zebra) for I
have a totally irrational hatred of writers (and editors) who feel the
need to spell out the sound of
gunfire, as
TAC-TAC-TAC-TAC or BLAM-BLAM-BLAM or even DADADADADADA. Friends
Like This My old
mess-mate Colin Dexter once coined the phrase
“mean-pocketed” about his fictional creation,
Inspector Morse, which is much
more subtle than simply saying “mean-spirited”. There must be a
suitable “mean-something” epithet to
describe the author of the following extract describing the historical
novels
of the prolific Keith Miles, who also writes as: Conrad Allen, Martin
Inigo,
Christopher T. Mountjoy, A.E. Marston and Edward Marston. And the quote
in question: ‘An author whose period
romps have die-hard fans by the dozen.’
(My italics) The quote is
attributed to that industry publication The
Bookseller and is surprisingly
reprinted in latest Allison & Busby catalogue to encourage
sales of
precisely such a “period romp”. New
Year’s Resolutions As the New Year
looms, the popular press, devoid as it
is of original ideas, will be devoting acres of space to totally
spurious
predictions for 2008. And so, here are mine. One of the most
talked-about debuts will be that of
Sharon Bolton with her novel Sacrifice
from those charming people
at Bantam Press in February. Set in the Shetlands, Sacrifice is a
CSI-meets-The Wicker Man thriller with an intelligent and feisty
heroine who is
a consultant obstetrician who can ride, sail and handle a humane-killer
horse
gun with aplomb, yet still insists (as is traditional) in going out
alone in
the dead of night to confront the baddies, though she does not, in this
case,
trip and sprain an ankle whilst running through the dark woods.
Would it be too
rash and unkind of me to tip the
author, who writes as “S.J. Bolton” (perhaps to
appeal to undiscerning male
readers?) for the Crime Writers’ First Blood Award, or
whatever it is called
this year? Modern For my money,
though, the best practitioner of this
“outsider’s” art is Yorkshireman David
Hewson who has been clocking up the
plaudits with his series set in |
On almost all
my visits to
Unlike Now another
American, Brent Ghelfi, takes up the
challenge with the violent, adrenalin-charged gangster thriller Volk’s
Game which will appear, slightly later than
previously listed, in May,
from those jolly decent people at Faber & Faber. I am sorely tempted to
invoke the Curse of
the Ripsters by predicting that this will be the Thriller of the Year
even
though it might just miss the cut-off point for consideration for the
2008 Ian
Fleming Steel Dagger prize. (Though I have never been privy to the
workings of
that award and so, as usual, have little idea of what I am talking
about.) For devotees of
Scandinavian crime there will be a
steady Viking invasion throughout the year and though I have often
declared
myself to be immune to its undoubted, if gloomy, charm, I will be
seeking out
Norwegian thriller-writer Jo Nesbo’s new one, The House of Pain from
Harvill. Joining the
growing ranks of writers who have opted
for World War II as a setting for their fiction (John Lawton, Barbara
Nadel,
the late John Gardner, Anthony Horowitz, Sarah Waters and others) is
the
effervescent and totally charming crime writer and, importantly,
critic, Laura
Wilson.
Ms Wilson and I
were once caught by the paparazzi in a
fashionable Her new novel,
the start of a promised series
featuring a Detective Inspector Ted Stratton, is published by those
awesomely
efficient people at Orion in February and is entitled Stratton’s War. Unlike
such worthies as Andrew Taylor, Mark Mills and Robert Goddard, who have
provided what I believe are known as “blurbs” for
the novel, I have only had a
chance to read the opening page. I am delighted to see that action
takes place
in picaresque Fitzrovia, an area of My
Kinda Women Another reason
for liking Canadian crime diva Louise
Penny apart from her excellent mysteries, is to be found on her
personal
website (www.louisepenny.com)
where
she candidly revealed a lifelong fear of flying. Since become a
bestselling author, however, cruel
publishers have insisted on a punishing schedule of promotional visits
across
at least one continent. Bravely, Ms Penny agreed to try and conquer her
fear of
flying and, as her publishers were paying, opted to go business class.
Remarkably any fears she might have held in the past quickly
disappeared as she
realised that what she had suffered from all along was a fear of flying
economy. Armed
and dangerous I have never
been comfortable with the idea that crime
writers should be armed and I find it somewhat disconcerting to see
writers,
especially British ones, posing with large weapons in their hands. I take the view
shared by my close friend Fitzroy Maclean
Angel that the only weapon an Englishman or woman should be pictured
with is a
fitted Purdey 12-bore and even then only when grouse are in season. I
take his
advice seriously as he is a member of that bastion of American
democracy, the
National Rifle Association and even has a (genuine) certificate to
prove it.
I was therefore
rather shocked to see thriller writer
Zoe Sharpe pictured toting a handgun in a feature article in this very
magazine
(see Interviews section) but when I remonstrated with the editor of our
esteemed organ, Mr Mike “Tombstone” Stotter, his
response was rather curt.
“That’s mighty big talk for a one-eyed fat
man,” he spat through a stream of
tobacco juice. Mustering all the dignity I could, I replied:
“Fill your hands,
you son of a bitch”. Blatant
Plugging Whilst recently
prowling the jolly old interweb I
discovered an appeal from an American blogger and fan of crime fiction
(noting
Michael Connelly and John Grisham among her favourites), who was
seeking new authors
to discover. I was heartened
by the response – she received well
over 200 replies – but totally shocked to discover that these
were mostly,
almost exclusively, from American
authors
recommending their own books! It would
certainly never occur to me to have put
forward my own historical thriller The Legend of Hereward even
though a
paperback edition has just been published by Severn House at the
reasonable
price of £9.99 and the cover carries hearty recommendations
from such
luminaries as Colin Dexter, Professor Bernard Knight and Bernard
Cornwell.
I’d
Like To Thank The promotional
blurb for the debut thriller of Susan
Arnout Smith, The
Timer Game, asks of the reader “Can
you hold your breath for 512 pages?”
which would indeed by a catchy selling point were it not
for the fact that proof copies of the book contain only 494 pages of
text. That does not
include the five pages of thanks and
acknowledgements by the author (which still only gives a total of 499
pages).
Counting quickly, for I was holding my breath, I estimate that Ms
Arnout Smith
has thanked no fewer than 80 named individuals in this section, which
makes it
worthy of an Oscar winner’s speech. Who said
writing was a lonely business? Christmas
Presents The Christmas
season is almost upon us (or Saturnalia
as we call it in the Eastern Marches), and I have decided not to give
presents
this year, but awards, thus reducing my carbon footprint and at the
same time
reviving a tradition dating back to the last century when this magazine
existed
only in ink-and-paper form. In those
far-off days they were known as the Golden
Shots or sometimes Shots Of The Year and I was actually named a Shot Of
The
Year once myself. At least I think
that’s what the person who telephoned me said, for I was
slightly confused by
the kerfuffle of having to accept a reverse charge call. I will
therefore get into the Christmas spirit, as did
my old friend John Young, the chairman of Young’s Brewery of
Wandsworth, when
he delivered seasonal hampers to all his tenants…
…and
announce my own SHOTS awards for 2007. Best Crime Novel: The
Chameleon’s Shadow - Minette Walters
(Macmillan). Best Thriller: The
One From The Other - Philip Kerr (Quercus). Best Historical Mystery: Mistress
of the Art of Death –
Ariana Funniest Crime Novel: Don’t
Cry For Me Aberystwyth – Malcolm Pryce ( Best In Translation: The
Pére-Lachaise Mystery –
Claude Izner (Gallic). Best First Novel: Little
And there you
have it. Thanks to me, all these authors
are Total Shots at least for 2007. If you disagree
and have your own choices, or think
new categories should be added, do let me know by emailing shotsgawm@yahoo.co.uk
Please note,
calls cost at least £25, possibly more if
from your own phone. Always ask permission of the bill payer. [Note to
Editor: I am not sure if this disclaimer is
necessary but better to be safe than sorry, eh? Especially after we got
burned
with the Blue Peter scam.] Pip!Pip! The Ripster. |
||||
|
Webmaster: Tony 'Grog' Roberts [Contact] |