Poacher Turned Gamekeeper As
regular readers of this column will know, I am not one to blow my own
trumpet,
even though it is a classic 1919 B-flat model from Boosey &
Hawkes. I may have mentioned in the
past that I
once wrote some crime novels which, in the last century, won an award
or two
and I could have remarked, in
passing, that I served as the crime fiction critic for ten years on the
Daily Telegraph when it was once a
great
newspaper. But I have never admitted – or had to admit
– to being a publisher
until now; may the gods of
writing and the spirit of Sarah Caudwell forgive me.
I can, however, remain in the closet no
longer and declare myself to be the series editor for the Top Notch
Thrillers
imprint of Ostara Publishing, a relatively new print-on-demand
publisher which
has already had some success reviving classic detective stories.
The mission statement (see how I’m down
with the modern lingo?) is to “revive Great British thrillers
which do not
deserve to be forgotten” which, I am sure you will agree, is
a noble aim.
The first four Top Notch titles are now
available – in time to make excellent Christmas presents
– and can be ordered
from any bookshop or from Amazon over the jolly old interweb. They make
not
only excellent reading (which is why I chose them) but taken together
show what
a range and variety the British ‘thriller’ covered.
Alan Williams, who later
made his name with excellent spy stories, cut his novelist teeth on
tough tales
of violence and adventure in exotic locations of which Snake Water, set in the
mountains, swamps and deserts of a South American banana republic, is a
prime
example.
The late George Sims, in his debut suspense
thriller of 1964, restricts himself to the world of rare book
collecting, a
world he knew well as in real life Sims was a well-known antiquarian
book
dealer. In The
Terrible Door, the suspense comes through the
increasingly
weird and at time Dickensian characters encountered by mild-mannered
book
dealer Robert Sheldon on the trail of some missing (and probably
scandalous)
literary letters. Sims, who was later to be elected to the Detection
Club, was
a master of the uneasy atmosphere and here he is particularly good at
describing a tired and shabby
Philip Purser’s 1968 thriller Night
of Glass is an absolute gem though I have to admit
I only discovered it
after reading the follow-up Lights
in the Sky, which was written
some 35 years later! Disgusted with Appeasement and the British
handling of the
‘Munich Crisis’ in 1938, four Cambridge
undergraduates decide – almost as a Rag
Week stunt – to engineer the escape of a prisoner from Dachau
concentration
camp. To begin with they have little idea what they are up against, but
an
ex-inmate now a refugee in
A Clear
Road to Archangel by
Geoffrey Rose is, as one reviewer put it “pure
chase”. A un-named, badly
trained and ill-equipped British spy, pursued by secret police and the
mysterious ‘Captain S’, is on the run across
northern Russia in the icy winter
of 1917 dodging both Red and White armies, deserters, bandits and
wolves.
Geoffrey Rose only wrote three novels but they stand out for their
unique style
and his ability to conjure up fantastical and slightly surreal
landscapes.
More Top Notch Thriller titles are planned
for 2010, drawn from the 1960s and 70s, which I have come to regard as
just as
much a Golden Age for British thrillers as the 1930s was for the
English
detective story. It was a period when thriller-writing names such as
Alistair
Maclean, Hammond Innes, Len Deighton, Ian Fleming, Francis Clifford,
Adam Hall
and Gavin Lyall (I could go on) dominated the bestseller lists to the
exclusion
of conventional crime novels with detective heroes. That, of course,
was to
change, probably from the mid-1970s onwards and the fictional police
detective
rose to prominence in the UK whilst American writers such as Tom
Clancy, Robert
Ludlum, Clive Cussler, David Morrell et al,
staked a claim to the thriller.
Names such as Fleming, Maclean and Deighton
live on, but many other fine craftsmen and imaginative writers are
fading form
the memories of publishers and booksellers. We should not let them go
quietly
into that dark night and I know I am not alone in feeling this. My
friend
millionaire playboy Prince Ali Karim has already
“blogged” about Top Notch
Thrillers on one of the many websites he owns on the interweb. I am
told he was
also “whiffling” and
“twittering” but I understand there are tablets for
that
sort of thing these days. In Town Tonight Top
Notch Thrillers were, naturally, the talk of all of
The most lavish hospitality was on offer at
the
But soon the pub next door emptied and the
party was joined by assorted hacks and scribblers and I managed to
catch Peter
Guttridge of The Observer making
a point
– no doubt about Top Notch Thrillers – to the young
but ruggedly handsome Jake
Kerridge of the Daily Telegraph.
Then it was off to the curiously name
Or rather in honour of Cathi’s new novel,
from Profile, named I am sure after that seminal recording by the late
Humphrey
Lyttleton, Bad Penny
Blues, which is set in the Ladbroke Grove area in
the
years 1959-1965 – an area terrorised by a serial killer who
preyed on
prostitutes and became known to the police and the media as
‘Jack the
Stripper’. From
this officially unsolved
case, Cathi has crafted an atmospheric novel which comes with advance
praise
from such notables as Jake Arnott and David Peace. And I am sure, had
he been
still with us (or at least in The Coach
and Horses in
On the invitation to the launch party, given
the setting of the book, I was advised that the Dress Code was
“Party Like It’s
1959” and it was such a relief not to have to get dressed up
for once.
Next up was an evening with my old and
distinguished dancing partner, the elfin Stella Duffy at the
Writer’s House
courtesy of the Authors Collecting and Licensing Society – a
noble institution
to whom many of us are ridiculously grateful.
I was also entreated, nay begged, to attend
the Crime Writers’ Association’s Christmas party by
at least one person and two
CWA members who ought to know better offered to smuggle me in as their
guest/lover/bodyguard/evil twin. But good sense and the spirit of
Christmas
prevailed. It is now ten years since I darkened the doors of the CWA
and I saw
no reason to spoil their party. |
For legal reasons (not being invited), I was
unable to enjoy the festivities arranged by Serpent’s Tail
and, yet again,
HarperCollins, from whose guest lists I seem to have been thoroughly
tippexed
in the last twelve months though I honestly can’t think why,
but I am sure
there is a good reason.
Badfellas Imagine
the Soprano family being relocated to
I have
long thought that Bitter Lemon deserve more credit than they get for
promoting
crime fiction in translation without resorting to even further
saturation of
the Scandinavian market.
Their forthcoming titles for 2010 show
their range, which includes not only the latest Benacquista (French
born of
Italian parents), but also the second novel, Entanglement, by Zygmunt
Miloszewski, a Pole whose first (horror) novel had him acclaimed as
“the Polish
Stephen King” and Needle
in a Haystack , in June next year, from
Argentinian
playwright and screenwriter Ernesto Mallo.
But probably their most significant title
in 2010 will be the English edition of A Jew Must Die, which caused
quite a
stir when first published, by noted Swiss author Jacques Chessex, who
sadly
died after giving a library talk in October. It was
a pleasure, as it always is, to visit the Dorothy L. Sayers Centre
house in the
public library in Witham, Essex, last month for a crime fiction coffee
morning.
The speakers included the charming Seona Ford of the Dorothy L Sayers
Society
and the awesomely knowledgeable Barry Pike of the Margery Allingham
Society for
both Margery and Dorothy were honorary Essex Girls who lived, for many
years,
less than ten miles apart in that fine and cultured county.
I was particularly fascinated by one of the
artefacts Barry Pike brought along, a percussion-cap pistol presented
to
Margery Allingham on her being voted “Best Active Mystery
Writer” by the
readers of the Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine in 1951.
Double Indemnity I
remember being mightily impressed with the early adventures of
rugby-playing
French policeman Chief Inspector Daniel Jacquot when Englishman Martin
O’Brien
launched his series a few years ago.
I seem to have lost sight of the adventures
of this
I will do that whilst also catching up with
Storm
and Avalanche,
the adventure thrillers of Jack Drummond, who just
happens
to be a certain Martin O’Brien. Shots of the Year It’s
that time again, when I dish out those most-misheard of awards the Shots
of the Year for 2009; the only awards in crime
fiction which come with
absolutely no financial reward, no glitzy ceremony, no photo
opportunities and
a total lack of regard for democracy in the selection process.
It was a very good year for thrillers,
especially thrillers with an historical background (a large number of
them set
in or around WWII) and just to confuse matters, several books qualified
in
multiple categories.
So I shall plunge straight in as declare
that the Shots Thriller of the Year
was The
Information Officer by Mark Mills, a memorable
story set on the
besieged island of Malta in 1942 and my Historical
Shot of the Year also goes to a wartime thriller, Andrew
Williams’
fantastically assured first novel The Interrogator which
includes in
its cast-list a real life Naval Intelligence officer called Ian Fleming! My Shot In
Translation goes to the veteran
(and oddly overlooked) Cuban writer Leonard Padura for Havana Fever whilst the Crime Shot of the Year goes to the
up-and-coming young American writer Marcus Sakey for At the City’s Edge, a
stunning but thoughtful mystery as hard as the streets of its
But just to show that One tries to give back... It has
become something of an annual tradition now for me to give my bespoke
Creative
Crime seminar, which is open to all with a passing interest in crime
fiction.
Usually held in the Gun Room (for obvious reasons) here at Ripster
Hall, a
redecoration project by the Lady Ripster, heavily influenced by her
addiction
to Feng Shui
(and Gordon’s gin) resulted in a minor
disaster when she insisted on placing the rock directly next to the
hard place.
However, superb alternative accommodation
was quickly found at that historic inn, The Swan at Lavenham in The Missing, Missing Author Since
my involvement with Top Notch Thrillers became known, I have been
inundated
with requests from readers to try and include their favourite books in
the
imprint. The majority of suggestions, I am happy to say, were for
authors and
titles which I had already placed on my mental ‘shopping
list’ but one name,
which came up many times, did surprise me: Adam Diment, author of The
Dolly, Dolly Spy.
Adam Diment became the poster boy for the
crime scene in Swinging London when his debut novel appeared in 1967
when he
was a mere 24 years old. His spy hero Philip MacAlpine embraced the
lifestyle
of the period to such an extent that he is regarded as “the
real Austin Powers”
and his creator was never shy when it came to being photographed in
fast cars
or with a super model (or ‘dolly bird’) on his arm.
Yet the really interesting thing about
Diment is that after four novels (the last published in 1971), he
disappeared
and I do mean disappeared; he
simply
dropped off the grid as the young people say these days. Rumours have
abounded
ever since: that he
followed the hippy
trail to India and still lives there in an ashram, that he went on the
run
after being framed in a currency swindle, that he is currently a
successful
businessman in Thailand or an arable farmer in Kent.
Whatever happened to this once very
high-profile author is a mystery and makes the idea of getting his
books back
in to print a tempting one. I am told he was an influential writer by
several
figures in the literary world who, when they arrived on the |
A Fair Pair Everyone
associates, as they should, the name of Erle Stanley Gardner with that
of his
most famous creation, Perry Mason. But few readers on this side of the
Until, that is, I had the opportunity to
acquire a brace of paperbacks published in 1959 and 1960. And what a
fine pair
they make. Indeed they don’t make them like that anymore
– the small Corgi
paperbacks I mean – and I will be settling down in front of a
log fire during
the Festive Season to devour them at my well-earned leisure. Epitaph for Mr Jones? Mystery Book News
reports that “much to our dismay” that fine actor
Tommy Lee Jones has pulled
out of the proposed movie version of Michael Connelly’s The Lincoln Lawyer in
which he was due to co-star and direct. But, says Mystery Book News, “Matthew
McConaughey, much to our dismay,
apparently is still attached to play the lead”.
Mr Lee Jones has not had a happy time with
American crime fiction this year. His long-awaited debut as Dave
Robicheaux,
the Murder, Me Duck? It is
not often that one comes across what I have always thought of as an
Ann Purser’s latest novel Tragedy
at Two, from those sophisticated out-of-towners
Severn House, features
her new series sleuth Lois Meade, a sensible mother who runs her own
cleaning
business and who helps the police out with their stickier cases
whenever she
can. What caught my eye, in these books set ‘in the heart of Christmas More in
hope than expectation, I always make a list of suitable Christmas
presents for
myself to avoid all that time usually spent queuing at the Returns Desk
in
Marks & Spencer in January. Naturally I list books, for whilst
one can have
far too many socks, one cannot have enough books, although I do take a
break
from crime and thriller fiction at this time of year, preferring
something
lighter.
At the top of my wish list is
Chris Wickham’s The
Inheritance of Rome, which is said to shed light on the Dark
Ages, and I simply must catch up on Hitler’s
Empire by Mark Mazower.
Yet I have already received an unexpected
early Christmas present from those sensitive souls at Simon &
Schuster in
the form of I, Sniper
by that terrific American thriller writer Stephen
Hunter.
I was unaware that Hunter had a new book out
over here and he is not a writer whose light should be hidden under a
bushel. I
have been a fan since reading his Pale Horse Coming in 2003, a
book
which, I predict, will go down as one of the classic American thrillers
of the
21st Century with its intermingled themes of old
movies, cowboys,
slavery and a fairly unique (if radical) attitude to penal reform! Flagging Up 2010 A few
things have caught my eye from publishers’ catalogues for the
coming year and I
will certainly be noting titles in my 2010 Hunting
& Shooting Diary – assuming I get one for
Christmas.
I know that a large number of fans keenly
await the new Roger Morris ‘Porfiry’ novel A Razor Wrapped in Silk in
April.
But before then, two books by new (to me)
writers have been drawn to my attention.
Will Napier is, I think, a Scot who now
lives in the
Jane Casey is Irish, but lives in
Indeed advance copies come with an endorsement from Sophie Hannah who is generously enthusiastic about her new rival. Other equally gracious and generous messages of welcome come from Robert Goddard and Reginald Hill. One might say that with friends like that before the book is actually published, The Missing can’t really miss. Season’s
Greetings and Toodles, The
Ripster. |
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