While catching up with my to-be-read pile in
Ireland, I had the privilege to read the latest thriller from the award winning
and prolific Irish writer
Ken Bruen, whose latest - the 6th Jack Taylor PI novel 'Cross' is due for
publication in April 2007 from Transworld Publishing [UK]. While in the US his
novel 'American Skin' has been released to great acclaim as have several of his
other recent releases such as the collaboration with Jason Starr’s 'Bust', from
Hardcase crime, 'Dublin Noir', 'Calibre' - I could go on and on, such is the
massive output from this gentle Irishman. If you wonder how such a gentle and
highly educated man could write such dark and disturbing tales, perhaps I should
lead you to some articles that could shed some light into the Noir. Bruen would
probably like to forget some of these dark memories, but they played a major
part in making him the melancholic and dark writer he is today, and indicate how
his dark wit makes his work accessible despite the pitch-black subject matter.
The stark truth is that Bruen began
writing novels - focusing on what his wife calls ‘the stabbing books’ - as a
cathartic therapy, expunging the nightmares that had haunted him since he was
wrongly imprisoned and tortured for four months in Brazil. In 1979, Bruen
accepted a teaching post in Rio de Janeiro, but soon after his arrival he was
arrested, along with four other Europeans, after a fight broke out in a bar.
‘The first night the jailors put my head
in a bucket of excrement, just to wake me up. The second night they came for the
rape sessions. There's not enough alcohol or Valium in the world to wipe out
those memories, and there's the odd night when I'm back in the cell,’ Bruen
says. ‘After a couple of sessions I went into a kind of catatonia and they gave
up on me. I was six stone when I came out, very traumatised, and they put me on
a plane to London. I tried to keep in contact with the four other guys. But I'm
the only one still functioning: two are dead and two are missing.’
After his release, Bruen based himself in
Brixton, where he started work on his first novel, ‘Funerals’, about an Irish
boy who attends funerals as if they were football matches. It was published
within a year of his return, and he resumed teaching at a school for
marginalized children. Three more ‘mad, tormented books’ followed before he
embarked on all-out crime fiction with the White Trilogy, three blackly-comic
books about two near-psychotic policemen in Brixton, a kind of anti-Morse world
that Channel 4 has optioned as a two-part series. After his release, Bruen based
himself in Brixton, where he started work on his first novel, Funerals, about an
Irish boy who attends funerals as if they were football matches. It was
published within a year of his return, and he resumed teaching at a school for
marginalized children. Three more "mad, tormented books" followed before he
embarked on all-out crime fiction with the White Trilogy, three blackly comic
books about two near-psychotic policemen in Brixton, a kind of anti-Morse world
that Channel 4 has optioned as a two-part series.
The edgy, pitch-black humour in all of
Bruen's crime novels springs, he is convinced, from a combination of his Irish
background and the dark days of his imprisonment. ‘What saved me was what they
call the bad drop in Ireland,’ he says. ‘The little drop of bad blood in you
that kicks in when you are up against the wall. I didn't know I had it. I
seriously considered suicide after I came back from Brazil, but something in me
said, “If I do that, those fuckers have won.” So I decided to write books, just
to prove to myself that I was still alive if nothing else.’
Read More about Bruen's past from the Guardian.
I have to first thank novelist Donna Moore
who championed 'The Guards' by Bruen - bringing the debut of troubled Irish P.I.
Jack Taylor to my attention. I was in Ireland in the summer of 2002 and read an
article he penned about his relationship with his young daughter Grace in the
Irish Times. It was a very moving piece and my first viewing of Bruen's
writing. Shortly after I purchased 'The Guards' and read it in a matter of hours
such was the beauty of Bruen's words. The following year at Bouchercon 2003 [Las
Vegas] I had the fortunate pleasure of meeting Ken in the flesh at the St
Martins Party. A friendship soon flowered between us and that night we clinked
glasses. One of the many memorable events in Las Vegas was a night of very
serious drinking at The Peppermill with Ken Bruen, Chris Mooney, Eddie Muller
and many others. This led to Bruen and I meeting up the following day for a
'pub-crawl' along the Las Vegas strip which culminated in us being questioned
and detained by Casino Security and incurring liver damage.
I soon tracked down Bruen's backlist and
then interviewed him about his work.
I noticed that Bruen's early work has been
collected by Busted Flush Press and released as 'A Fifthof Bruen'. But it has
always been his Jack Taylor P.I. series that has struck a particular resonance
in me. I guess it has something to do with me spending so much time in Ireland
over the years, as I have family there, but perhaps also the way Bruen maps the
changes in Ireland which forms a backdrop to this award-winning series is the
real reason. Last year Bruen moved from Jim Driver's independent The
Do-Not-Press and Pete Ayrton's Serpent's Tail to Transworld Publishing [a
division of Random House] taking with him the Troubled Irish P.I. Jack Taylor.
The first release from Transworld was 'Priest', a timely investigation cast
behind the backdrop of the Roman Catholic Church. This was a dark and moving
story and the fifth in the series. The previous being ‘The Guards’ (2001), ‘The
Killing of the Tinkers’ (2002), ‘The Magdalen Martyrs’ (2003) and ‘The
Dramatist’ (2004).
Ken Bruen is a larger than life figure
within the crime writing genre and knows his Glock from his Jameson - critic and
writer Craig McDonald described Bruen as: If you're Irish author Ken Bruen, you
immerse yourself in philosophical researches and cool down with American crime
novels - the classics and the best of the new crop…Crumley, Pelecanos, Lehane,
Mosley, Ellroy and Daniel Woodrell. After penning several mainstream novels that
garnered good reviews, but not enough readers, you try your hand at your own
crime novel and catch a wave, eventually emerging as the undisputed King (and
probably creator) of "Irish noir." You're a stylist - terse and staccato as
Ellroy but more sardonic.”Read
more from the interview exchange” between Bruen and McDonald, and
incidentally McDonald appears as a minor character in 'Cross'.
Selina Walker, a Publishing Director at
Transworld,
organised a launch party in North London last January and many of the
mystery community, including actor and friend of Bruen David Soul, congregated
to drink Guinness and Bushmills to celebrate Bruen's latest release - 'Priest'.
One of Bruen's strengths is his continual championing of new writers because he
is an avid reader himself. It was Bruen who first brought to my attention Nick
Stone's debut 'Mr Clarinet' which later went on to win the 2006 CWA Ian Fleming
Steel Dagger Award. Bruen even wrote about Stone's debut in the special CADS #50
supplement.
Ken Bruen's editor Selina Walker is a big
figure within the genre and is often writing on the crime / thriller genre, such
as this article about
Bouchercon Chicago. For an English editor more used to the staid gentility
of the Edinburgh Book Festival, it was awesome. The degree of enthusiasm for UK
crime writers was palpable. Ken Bruen and Simon Kernick, an author in the
ascendant, were surrounded by fans. Mark Billingham and John Connolly's panel on
what annoys them most in fiction was sold out, while Connolly's rant on what
he'd like to do to the detective cat who solves crimes was memorable but
unprintable, as well as a piece she published in The Times Selina's enthusiasm
for the genre is evident from this article published on the eve of the Harrogate
Crime Writing Festival last summer: “As successful crime writers know, the genre
is one of the most lucrative areas of publishing, accounting for just over 30
per cent of the total fiction market in 2005 (compared with 5 per cent share for
romance and sagas, and 8 per cent for sci-fi and fantasy). According to a recent
survey by Bookmarketing Ltd, Britons bought 20 million crime novels in 2005,
spending £130 million. And they are loyal: half of those purchases are prompted
by having read novels by the same author or in the same series. Publishers know
that once a crime writer breaks into the bestseller lists, their backlists will
enjoy a matching rise in popularity” -
Read More.
'Cross' starts right where 'Priest' left
off, where P I Jack Taylor is still seeking redemption from the death of a child
that fell from a Balcony and the case of the decapitated priest who had the
shadow of child abuse hanging over him. The wonderfully terse writing style of
Bruen means that even if you've not read the preceding novels in the series,
it's what the Irish would call 'No Bother', because you’re thrown right
slap-bang into the story. Taylor is mooching around his haunts, the bars of
Galway city, buying drinks, suffusing himself with the aroma of alcohol and the
atmosphere of the pubs, but not letting himself drift back into the grip that
alcohol had on his life. Ridge, his old friend from the Garda [aka Guards /
Irish Police] tells him that a young boy has been found crucified, while another
contact wants to hire him to track down a missing dog. Stark contrast is always
a fixture in this P.I.'s life.
Taylor is at a crossroads. The city he
called home - Galway is changing fast, like the rest of Ireland. No longer is it
a sleepy backwater in Europe but now a bustling gateway, where the
tiger-economy, finance, property speculation has transformed completely what was
home for Taylor. An influx of immigrants from all over the world is making Irish
society bristle from what was a land where people fled to survive; now the Irish
see strangers come to their shores to share in the new found wealth. And as a
consequence to the changes comes crime in the most brutal of all guises. Bruen's
writing has a beguiling quality, written in very intimate first person, we get
inside the mind of Taylor and his thoughts. I must admit at the scenes that he
describes like walking into the pub and ordering a pint of Guinness and a shot
of Irish whiskey made me do the exact same act. While Taylor leaves his drinks
on the bar, I had to sip mine while I read Bruen's words. Meanwhile Cody - the
kid Taylor considers his surrogate son lies in a hospital ward in a coma, and
all the while we peer into Taylor's existential thoughts about life, death and
what the word humanity means. I can tell you that happiness is not something
that crosses Taylor's path because as he tackles these cases which take over his
life, a dark shadow is cast over Taylor's friends. If you like your crime
thrillers to challenge the way you think, Bruen's your man.
And
if you are still waiting for this disturbing novel to cross your path, why not
read one of Bruen's short stories available online at Hardluck Stories -
click here for 'To have and to hold'.
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