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The
first in an exciting new series of crime novels featuring policeman Ted
Stratton set in central London during the Second World War, to be published
in February 2008.
London, June 1940. When the body of silent screen star Mabel Morgan is found
impaled on railings in Fitzrovia, the coroner rules her death as suicide,
but DI Stratton of the CID is not convinced. Despite opposition from his
superiors, he starts asking questions, and it becomes clear that Morgan’s
fatal fall from a high window may have been the work of one of Soho’s most
notorious gangsters.
MI5 agent Diana Calthrop, working with senior official Sir Neville Apse, is
leading a covert operation when she discovers that he is involved in
espionage. She must tread carefully – Apse is a powerful man, and she can’t
risk threatening the reputation of the Secret Service. Only when Stratton’s
path crosses Diana’s do they start to uncover the truth – that the intrigues
of the Secret Service are alarmingly similar to the machinations of war-torn
London’s underworld.
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Writing Stratton's War
Having written six stand-alone psychological crime novels that concentrated,
largely, on examining families in turmoil, I decided in 2006 – propelled by
a hefty shove from my then editor, Jane Wood, at Orion – that it was
probably time to leave the ‘closed world’ of the domestic setting for a
series set on a wider canvas.
I say probably because I tend to approach everything in a swivel-eyed
crab-like fashion and because, if I was going to commit to spending the next
however-many years of my life yoked to a single fictional partner, I had to
make sure that he or she was the right person. I’ve heard quite a few
laments from crime authors who have inadvertently begun a series with their
first novel. They tend to go along the lines of ‘If I’d known I’d still be
writing about him twenty years later, I wouldn’t have given him a stupid
name/missing limb/phobia about buttons…’ I was determined, if possible, to
avoid such pitfalls.
After taking out several characters on literary blind dates, I decided to
plump for a policeman, Detective Inspector Stratton. For me, this was a
definite departure from the norm – weirdly, for a crime novelist, I’d never
written about a policeman before.
Then there was the question of when to set the books. I’ve always liked the
idea of crime fiction as social commentary, and, with a background writing
history books for children, I decided that it would be fascinating to show
the changing nature of England between 1939 and 1975 through the eyes of a
London policeman during his working life. This, after all, was the period
during which Britain won the war, lost the peace, discarded the Empire and
acquired the Welfare State, while London absorbed thousands of new citizens
from different cultures. It was a time when the social, political and
economic certainties of the past dissolved into doubt and confusion, and
attitudes to everything from sex, class and capital punishment to popular
music and skirt lengths underwent radical change.
What I am attempting to do, beginning with the first book, Stratton’s War,
set in 1940, is to paint a complex, unsentimental picture of a capital city
from its highest echelons to its underworld. In Stratton’s War, the body of
a silent screen star is found impaled on railings outside her Fitzrovia
home, and Stratton’s investigation leads him, via one of Soho’s most
notorious villains, to MI5. Along the way, he discovers that the intrigues
of the Secret Service are alarmingly similar to the machinations of the
gangsters.
I prefer, if possible, to use real people as spring boards for creating
characters. Stratton is a combination of my father and several male friends;
gangsters Jack Spot and Billy Hill, active between the 40s and 50s, inspired
the character of Abie Marks, and the MI5 boss, Colonel Forbes-James, is
taken from a real section head, Charles Maxwell Knight (who also inspired
Ian Fleming’s ‘M’). Diana Calthrop, Forbes-James’s glamorous female agent,
is drawn from Joan Miller, who, during the war years, was used by Maxwell
Knight as a ‘beard’.
The war itself is also a character, as is London – a changing physical
entity, a symbol, and an autonomous, and sometimes malevolent, force. Big
stuff, and, from a research point of view, pretty labour-intensive. However,
I had a lot to draw on – in 1995, I’d written a children’s book about the
home front in wartime with the Imperial War Museum, who provided numerous
artefacts for the team to photograph. I’d also made extensive use of both
their library, and the Mass Observation Archive, for a previous book, The
Lover (2004). My parents, who were in their teens during the war, were also
helpful. I decided my policeman and his family should live in the north-east
London suburb of Tottenham, like my mother’s family did. Mum not only
provided me with a detailed ground plan of the family home, but also a
number of anecdotes, such as the one about the neighbour who had a
disconcerting habit of pegging up her husband’s re-usable condom on the
washing line, where it dangled like a small rubber sock. Big stuff may be
important, but for me, it is, ultimately, these small details that make a
period come alive (all right, that particular one didn’t make it into the
book, but it wasn’t for want of trying. Maybe next time).
I decided, at the outset, that I did not want DI Stratton to be a
conventionally flawed crime protagonist. He is neither a drunk, a compulsive
gambler, nor an adulterer, and his psyche isn’t scarred by past personal
tragedy – but nor is he a hero of lonely integrity walking the mean streets
or a Dixon of Dock Green-like, salt-of-the-earth embodiment of law and
order. He’s an ordinary man with a realistic background for someone who was
born in 1905 and joined the police force. Lower middle-class and a father of
two, he lives with his family and works in the West End. He is an
intelligent, humorous man, but with rudimentary education; cynical, but kind
and humane; happily married, but with a wandering eye. Above all, he is
pragmatic. He is well aware that police work, far from being a matter of
Sherlockian detection, usually comes down to trapping or coercing people
into incriminating themselves and others. At a time when the police were
less accountable than they are now, he is ambivalent about the grey area of
legalised brutality. He knows that British justice is not always blind,
especially where class is concerned, and he reluctantly accepts this as part
of his job. He witnesses the clear boundaries of respectability begin to
blur during the war, and realises that they can never be re-drawn with the
same degree of clarity.
I loved writing Stratton’s War, but I’m keenly aware that my policeman and I
are still very much in our honeymoon period. However, as with all
relationships – even those with imaginary people – one has to work at it.
God willing, I shall have my job cut out for the next however-many years…
STRATTON’S WAR is published by
Orion Books February 2008
© Laura Wilson 2007
This article first appeared in Publishing News
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