Thrillfest I have much enjoyed the
recent anthology Killer
Year (Mira Books) despite the fact that it did not
come
with a recommendation from Lee Child. There is a very good reason for
this, as
Lee is, in fact, the
editor of this
collection of new short stories by American writers (and Irishman Ken
Bruen,
who seems to hold honorary citizenship) which emerged as a result of
the
International Thriller Writers organization nominating 2007 as a
“Killer Year”
and encouraging new talent through a network of mentoring by
established
authors, and of course, this anthology.
The
book includes wise words from Lee Child, a blessing by Laura Lippman
and a
short essay entitled “The
Class of Co-opetition”
(which I have to admit is
a new word for me) by M.J. Rose. Other well-known names chipping in
with
comments and recommendations include: David Morrell, Tess Gerritsen and
Joe R.
Lansdale. But the
stars are the new kids on the block, many of whom will be unknown on
this side
of the This is
an excellent “sampler” (as Lee calls it) of the
rather scary wealth of talent
emerging on the American crime scene. Killer Year aims to do what
the Fresh
Blood anthologies did for new British talent in
the 1990s, when one of
the showcased authors was an almost unknown Lee Child. (Oddly enough,
Ken Bruen
was involved in that project too. I think he must have been an honorary
Brit
back then.) And
speaking of Lee Child, as I occasionally do, I am delighted to report
that as
Visiting Professor, he recently returned to his old alma mater,
The
current undergraduate residents of that now famous house (and surely a
blue
plaque cannot be long in coming) were delighted to meet Lee and
probably had
several books waiting for him to read.
In fact
I know for certain that one of the present inhabitants of
Lee’s student digs, a
third-year scientist named Beth had a copy of Angels Unaware to present
to Lee. I do hope he likes it. Grim (Reaper) News It was
sad and depressing to hear of the death of Michael Crichton at the
ridiculously
young age of 66 last month. Although
he will be most remembered for ER and
There
were times when perhaps the brilliant ‘high
concept’ behind some of his novels
didn’t quite work out on
the printed
page – Timeline
(time
travel
and 14th century France) or Prey (when Nanobots attack)
for
instance – but you couldn’t argue with the breadth
of the guy’s imagination,
and that’s what he should be missed, and remembered, for. Going Straight It
seems that historical spy fiction writer David Downing is going
straight, or at
least as straight as a historian can go these days. In May
next year those super people at Simon & Schuster will publish Sealing
Their Fate, a day-by-day historical survey of the
days leading up to
the attack on Pearl Harbour (or Pearl Harbor
for American viewers). The only problem is that the Simon &
Schuster
catalogue for 2009 can’t actually agree on how
many days the book will survey.
Whilst
the cover illustration (above) clearly sub-titles the book The Thirteen Days That
Decided
The Second World War, the catalogue’s
text states twice that the book
covers the (terrifying) Twenty-Two
Days That Decided the Second
World War. But
I will not carp.
Whether the book covers the 13 or the 22 days immediately prior to the 7th
December (or 12/7 for American viewers) 1941, I am sure the author of Zoo
Station and Silesian Station will do a
splendid job enlivening the dry
bones of history, for he certainly does in his fiction. Relatively Speaking I have
commented before on the dynastic connections in crime writing, which
are more
widespread than one might think. There
are some well-known instances of ‘keeping it in the
family’: Dick and Felix
Francis, Elmore and Peter Leonard, the Kellermans (all of them), Peter
and Phil
Lovesey and, more recently the niece of Alistair Maclean, the nephew of
Ian
Fleming and the son of Sir Fitzroy Maclean. (OK so he wasn’t
a crime writer,
but I just couldn’t resist.) And of course, I
couldn’t fail to mention crime writer
Paul Johnston, the son of thriller writer Ronald.
And I
forgot entirely to point out last time that octogenarian crime writer
Roderic
Jeffries, is in fact the son of famous thriller-writer Bruce Graeme
(1900-1982). But
possibly the “hottest” family connection (or so the
Dowager Lady Ripster, with
bosom heaving, informs
me) is in the
debut novel Loser’s
Town, a hardboiled private eye tale set in
Hollywood to
be published by Simon & Schuster in March 2009, written by
Daniel Depp,
brother of the slightly better-known Johnny, who I believe is a
thespian of
some notoriety.
I understand
that Mr Johnny Depp has a small country estate here in the Eastern
Marches of
England, which is unusual, but not unknown for an American (for many
years,
that nice Miss Highsmith rented a tied cottage near Ripster Hall), and
I look
forward to the launch party he will undoubtedly throw to mark his
sibling’s arrival
on the crime fiction scene. As I
never travel abroad after All Souls’ Day, I will not be
attending the
Historical Crime Fiction evening to be held at Borders’
bookshop in Cardiff on
December 4th (at 6.30 p.m.). Sadly,
I will miss hearing the wit and wisdom of the outstanding panel
assembled
there, comprising of Andrew Taylor, Roger Morris and my old friend and
sparring
partner, Professor Bernard Knight the former Home Office pathologist. Professor
Knight was the only reader to spot the deliberate mistake in my own
humble
offering in the historical thriller field, The Legend of Hereward, which
concerned the parentage of Giraldus Cambrensis, one of the best-selling
authors
of the 12th century.
He did,
however, completely fail to spot the blatant reference to The Magnificent Seven, from which I do
take a crumb of comfort. Gore Blimey I think
there must have been some sort of election over in the American
colonies
recently, for who should I spy appearing on television offering pearls
of
wisdom but my young fellow boulevardier Gore Vidal. http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=k2L8iUHZ2sY I am
not surprised at this as Gore has always had an unhealthy interest in
politics
and produced a stunning book in 2003 detailing the foibles of those
rebellious
colonists Washington, Adams and Jefferson [Inventing
A Nation, Yale University Press] probably as a bit of light
relief from
writing his most excellent fiction. (Including wonderful mysteries
under the
name Edgar Box.) I am
informed that our American friends have indeed elected a 44th
“President” which does seem rather profligate as I
believe we have only had
seven or eight monarchs since 1776, but I will not press the point. I
am told
that the new holder of the office is a Mr O’Bama, which to me
suggests he is of
Irish origin, and that his favourite film is Fitting Tribute(s) Those
shy and retiring publishers, Robert Hale, have produced a fine and
fitting
tribute to the late Michael Gilbert in the anthology of previously
uncollected
short stories A Pity
About the Girl.
The
collection, edited by John Cooper, will probably be the last such
retrospective
of the 50-year career of one of British crime writing’s true
gentlemen. The
stories here were written as far apart as 1951 and 1997 and include
Gilbert’s
Sherlock Holmes pastiche, The Two Footmen. |
And, as
extensively trailed in this column, Moriarty by the late John
Gardener
is now out from Quercus, much to the relief of the fans who have waited
33
years for this third instalment in the originally proposed trilogy.
There
was a party to celebrate the event, my friend Prince Ali Karim managed
to take
this picture of John’s children Simon and Alexis with the
long-awaited book. Long Stretch It
seems like an age since I have been sent a new book to review by that
distinguished critic and Professor of Creative Writing, Peter
Guttridge.
Coupled with his absence from the London Scene this season, I have
quite
forgotten what he looks like.
However,
I now have his new book, The
Great Train Robbery, to remind
me of his deathless prose even though this is not a novel but rather a
factual
account of the infamous “heist of the (last)
century” when £2.6 million went
missing in a day from the railways and no one put it down to Richard
Branson. Peter’s
book, along with James Morton’s companion volume The Krays,
are the
latest Crime Archive publications from The
National Archives at
Kew, which celebrate some of the more colourful aspects of British
social
history.
One
fact missing from Mr Guttridge’s excellent account of the
Train Robbers,
however, is that for several years Mr Ronald Biggs had his own personal
chair
in the visitors’ room at Her Majesty’s Prison
Belmarsh. I know, because I was
given special dispensation to rest my weary bones in it whilst visiting
said
establishment. Just visiting, mind; just visiting. On the Psychiatrist’s Couch News
that the fourth in the highly regarded Max Liebermann series, Darkness
Rising, written by Harley Street psychiatrist Frank
Tallis, is to be
published by Century in January reaches me rather late in the day, for
I had
already spotted an uncorrected bound proof of the book for sale (at
£30) on the
jolly old interweb.
The
series, once described as “Cracker
set in early 20th century Vienna” is said to be in
development with the BBC
under the title The Liebermann Papers with
the first two books – Mortal
Mischief (aka Death in
Vienna) and Vienna
Blood ? starting the ball rolling, hopefully in
2009. The British Are Coming No
doubt full details will be announced at a lavish dinner party to which
I will
not be invited, so I will mention now the forthcoming promotion by
publisher
Orion which goes under the banner Best of
British.
The
promotion seems to do exactly what it says on the tin, highlighting
five
authors which Orion class as “the cream of British Crime
Writing”. All of them
are well-known names in the business and deserve to be better known out
there
in the bookshops and the promotion will roll out over the first half of
2009.
The titles to be featured are: No
Lovelier Death by Graham Hurley
(February); Uncut by
John Connor (March); The
Edge by Chris Simms
(April); The Man Who
Wasn’t There by Laura Wilson (May); and Still
Bleeding by Steve Mosby (June). Heard it here first Just
remember that you heard it here first, but Alexander McCall Smith may
have a
serious rival next year.
My
spies tell me that those perky publishers Piatkus are hugging
themselves at the
prospect of a new series of cosily gentle, but exotically situated
crime novels
featuring the fat (but loveable) Inspector Singh of the Singapore
police,
written by Shamini Flint. The
first, due round about June 2009, has the far from snappy (though
totally
descriptive) title: Inspector
Singh Investigates: A Most Peculiar Malaysian Murder
with most of the action taking place in And
another debut to watch out for (in February, from Orion) is
“an unusual,
hauntingly atmospheric crime novel” entitled Tethered by former
congressional aide Amy MacKinnon.
I am
far from clear what a ‘congressional aide’ is, but
Ms MacKinnon certainly
catches the reader by the throat with the opening to her novel, set as
it is in
the business end of a funeral parlour. On the opening alone I would say
that
the publicity hype of “unusual” and
“haunting” seems perfectly justified. Irish Eyes Like
John Connolly, Irish crime writer Alex Barclay has chosen to give her
thrillers
American settings and characters, or at least she has in Blood Runs Cold (from
HarperCollins) where she introduces a “dynamic new female
lead” (it says here),
FBI agent Ren Bryce.
Set in
snowy I have
always had a sneaking admiration for writers who can convincingly
set their books in a foreign country; or at least
convincingly enough to convince me,
which admittedly probably doesn’t take much doing. (I was
rather proud of the
fact that I set part of one of my novels in Alex
Barclay has made no secret of the reason why she has opted for crime in
the
Having
had quite a hit with her debut novel Darkhouse in 2005, I will be
interested to see how her take on the American thriller goes down in |
Return of the Saint I
allowed myself a smile when I learned that publishers Hodder were
reissuing two
volumes of The Best
of the Saint and then raised a wistful eyebrow on
reading that the introduction to Volume 2 had been written by none
other than
that great thespian, Sir Roger Moore.
In it,
Sir Roger reveals that he personally had tried to buy the television
rights to
the Saint stories in the late 1950s, but failed to interest author
Leslie
Charteris. By 1962, however, television mogul Lew Grade was able to
announce
that The Saint was to hit the small
screen and dear Roger was given the part without an audition or screen
test and
by all accounts, Charteris approved of the casting, though he certainly
did not
approve of some of the scripts. Four
decades on from the famous TV version (and goodness knows how many
decades on
from the first Saint book), the two Best of the Saint volumes
contain
over two dozen stories, Volume 1 (with an introduction by Ken Follett)
selecting pre-WWII stories and Volume 2 concentrating on the 1950s.
They will
undoubtedly feature on the Christmas list of members of The Saint Club,
which
is still going, with over 4000 members.
Leslie
Charteris (born Leslie Charles Bowyer-Yin) was an incredibly prolific
and
successful writer, who wrote books, short stories and comic strips
featuring
his most memorable character, as well as working in I met
him only once, in the House of Lords, where he received the Crime
Writers
Cartier Diamond Dagger (thanks mainly to the efforts of Peter Lovesey),
at the
age of 85. Wheelchair-bound
and very
frail, he was as polite and charming as his hero could be when not
scuffling in
fisticuffs with a dastardly villain.
The
crime writing community, who had almost forgotten him until then, was
saddened
to learn of his death shortly after, in 1993. Nice package The
packaging of publishers’ proofs (as sent to bookshops and
reviewers) rarely
excites comment, unless, that is, it is so over-the-top that it pricks
your
conscience as to whether a tree had to die for it all.
However,
giving credit where credit is due, I have to say that the packaging
around the
bound proof of Mark Pearson’s debut police thriller Hard Evidence
(to be
published as an Arrow original paperback in January) is a quite
stunning,
see-through effect map of London done in camouflage colours which looks
for all
the world like a military map of a war zone. (To go with the strap
line: Welcome to DI Jack Delaney’s I am
not sure what the cover of the finished book will look like, I only
hope it is
half as eye-catching as the ‘sleeve’ which
envelopes the proof. So, top marks
to the art department at Arrow, who have certainly persuaded this jaded
cynic
to read the book. I do
hope it is good – the DI Delaney follow-up, Blood Line, is already
scheduled for August 2009 and more are promised – for the
London crime scene
has long been in need of a police detective series to rival
Edinburgh’s Rebus,
Oxford’s Morse and Nottingham’s Resnick. A Caddish scoop Those
scholarly types over at CADS Magazine (‘Crime and Detective
Stories’) have a
bit of a scoop on their hands in the latest issue.
It
comes in the form of the first publication in English of the article Detective Writers in England by none
other than Agatha Christie, breaking her famous reluctance to speak
about her
contemporaries in crime fiction. I say
“in English” for the article was originally written
as the request of the
Ministry of Information in mid-1945, for publication in Russian in a For
more information on CADS magazine, contact Geoff Bradley via email: Geoffcads@aol.com. My
spies tell me that CADS may well have another scoop on their hands next
year
too. Into the Blue The
year now credit-crunching to a close saw over 566 new crime novels and
thrillers published in the One
first novel, however, is off to a flying start, for author Alison Bruce
has
cleverly the held the launch party for her debut in the hallowed
precincts of
St Heffer’s This is
surely a most auspicious start to her career, but not surprising as the
book in
question is Cambridge
Blue, a police investigation into murder,
suspicious
death and some very dodgy family values, set in –
you’ve guessed it – that fine
city of Cambridge.
Alison
Bruce’s confident debut is published here by Constable and
(in 2009) in America
by associate company SohoConstable, by which time I do hope they have
given the
book a new cover for the British edition one is somewhat confusing (at
least to
my failing eyes) and does not do justice to either the book or one of
the most
photogenic places in England. Shots of the Year At this
time of year, just before the port and mince pies begin to kick in, it
falls to
me to announce my nominations for the priceless (but sadly prize-less) Shots of the Year Awards. My
choices for 2008 will no doubt attract the usual amount of opprobrium
and
anonymous letters written in green crayon, if only for the fact that
two of the
category awards go to the same authors who won them in 2007. I make no
apologies for this and point out that being named A Prize Shot in 2007
has done
nothing to dent their careers. Before
making my choices public, I would say there have been numerous books
which gave
me great pleasure this year and I must make special mention of P.D.
James’
timeless English detective story The Private Patient; Ruth
Rendell’s
edgy, almost Dickensian, Portobello;
Michael Connelly’s
masterful legal thriller The
Brass Verdict; Charles Cumming’s
measured and quite delicate Typhoon;
and two excellent
historical spy novels both set at the beginning of WW2: David
Downing’s Silesian
Station and Alan Furst’s The Spies of Warsaw. But my
winning choices (and I am unanimous in this) are as follows: Crime Shot of the Year: When
Will There Be Good News? by Kate Atkinson (Doubleday), a
pyrotechnic shaking up of the genre if ever there was one. Thriller of the Year: A Quiet Flame by
Philip Kerr
(Quercus), the fifth Bernie Gunther novel, set in post-war (if not
post-Nazi) Historical Shot of the Year:
The
Death Maze by Ariana Franklin
(Bantam), the second outing for Adelia Aguilar in this engaging and
well-researched ‘CSI Medieval’ series, giving us a
worthy heir to Brother
Cadfael. Shot in Translation:
from the German, Therapy
by Sebastian Fitzek (Pan) who cleverly offers to
pull
the wool over our eyes and we let him. First Shot: (for
a debut novel) The
Maze of Cadiz by Aly Monroe (John Murray),
historical
espionage again, this time in Franco’s Spain in 1944, but so
densely textured
and convincingly done that I had serious trouble believing it was a
first
novel. Those
who have followed these awards over the years will have instantly
spotted that
I have not chosen a Comic Shot this
year for comedy crime. This is not something I do lightly, but in 2008,
two of
my favourite authors in the comedy field were playing it rather
straight for a
change: Colin Bateman with Orpheus
Rising and Douglas Lindsey
with Lost
In Juarez. Both
excellent novels
but (deliberately) low on the belly-laughs we’ve come to
expect.
Pip!
Pip! The
Ripster. |
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