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Showing posts with label BritCrime Festival Author Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BritCrime Festival Author Interview. Show all posts

#BritCrime Festival 2016: Links to all the material


You can find links below to print, audio and video interviews with bestselling, award-winning British crime writers (and two Americans!) as well as nine UK book bloggers as part of the BritCrime Festival 2016. Thank you for joining us!

Author interviews
Author interviews and discussions, audio and print

Alan McDermott + Russell Blake | Nick Quantrill + Barry Forshaw | The Joined Up Writing podcast + Sarah Hilary | Anya Lipska + Fergus McNeill | John Martin + MP Wright + Tony Cox

Ms Marsh Investigates
Ms Marsh Investigates... Author Ava Marsh interviews book bloggers and reviewers:
Liz Loves Books | Lucy V Hay | Grab This Book | Bibliophile Book Club | Neal James | Damp Pebbles | Crime Book Junkie | By the Letter Book Reviews | The Book Trail

Chelmorton Festival
Watch Chelmorton Festival: The Movie
Daniel Pembrey, Bill Rogers, Zoe Sharp and Sarah Ward say hello from the Chelmorton Festival in Derbyshire

The Art of Suspense
Watch The Art of Suspense
A guide to creating suspense in your writing by Angela Clarke, Claire McGowan and Jake Kerridge



Visit The Booktrail for links to maps, locations and behind-the-scenes insights for books featured in the BritCrime Festival.

This is a really wonderful site. Search by destination, book title, author, or type of setting to explore the books available.




Day in the Life posts from British crime writers

Find out how writers really spend their days...

Angela Clarke | Azma Dar | Derek Farrell | Scott Hunter | Tim Lebbon | Ava Marsh | Thomas Mogford | Claire Seeber | William Shaw 




Replays of live panel discussions with authors

Derek Farrell, Amanda Jennings, Douglas Skelton, Helen Smith, Jay Stringer, Cally Taylor
Tammy Cohen, Fergus McNeill, Michael J Malone, Marnie Riches, Luca Veste, William Shaw
Mason Cross, Julia Crouch, Cass Green, Elizabeth Haynes, Tom Mogford, Sarah Ward
Quentin Bates, Nick Quantrill, Alex Shaw, Simon Toyne
Graeme Cameron, Steven Dunne, JM Hewitt, Matt Johnson, Faith Mortimer, Alex Sokoloff
Lucy Atkins, Jenny Blackhurst, Rebecca Bradley, Tim Lebbon, Caroline Mitchell


Read articles by BritCrime Authors on Crime Time

#BritCrime Festival: The Art of Suspense by Angela Clarke, Claire McGowan, Jake Kerridge

Writers Angela Clarke, Claire McGowan and Jake Kerridge discuss The Art of Suspense



Angela Clarke is the author of psychological thriller Follow Me
@TheAngelaClarke




A Savage Hunter
Claire McGowan is the author of  The Paula McGuire series
 and a senior lecturer in crime writing at City University
@InkstainsClaire



Jake Kerridge is a journalist and crime fiction critic for The Telegraph
@JakeKerridge

More BritCrime Festival author interviews

Exclusive Interview with Sarah Hilary by Joined Up Writing Podcast for #BritCrime Festival

Joined Up Writing Podcast

Sarah Hilary has recorded an exclusive interview with authors Leah Osbourne and Wayne Kelly over at the Joined Up Writing Podcast as part of the BritCrime Festival.

Visit the Joined Up Writing Podcast to learn more
Listen to the Sarah Hilary interview now

Sarah writes crime thrillers that have been described as ‘superbly disturbing’, ‘stunning’ and ‘meaty, dark and terrifying’. They all feature the central character of DI Marnie Rome. Sarah’s debut novel, ‘Someone Else’s Skin’ won the 2015 Theakston’s Old Peculier Crime Novel of The Year Award and she already has three books in the series with a fourth due in 2017.

@Sarah_Hilary
Website: http://sarah-crawl-space.blogspot.co.uk/
Sarah Hilary's books at Amazon

♠ Find other BritCrime author interviews with the Joined Up Writing Podcast

♠ Find other BritCrime Festival author interviews on this site.

#BritCrime Festival Special: John Martin, MP Wright and Tony R Cox talk about writing


BritCrime Festival Special: John Martin, MP Wright and Tony R Cox in discussion about their writing: their literary heroes, whether their former careers helped or hindered their writing, how it felt to see their books in a bookshop for the first time, why reading reviews is not like going to the dentist... and more! Read on:

Crime Scene Britain and Ireland
John Martin is a retired librarian. He was a judge for the CWA Dagger in the Library Award for 3 years, and is a regular speaker on crime fiction, most recently at the Penzance Literary Festival 2016. He lives in Leicester. He is the author of Crime Scene Britain and Ireland
John Martin's book on Amazon

First Dead Body
Tony R. Cox is a retired journalist and public relations consultant. He lives near Leicester. He is the author of First Dead Body (available now) and A Fatal Drug (due out later this year with Farenheit Press.)
Tony R. Cox's books on Amazon


All Through the Night
Mark Wright worked in the music industry before spending some time as a private investigator. He then retrained and worked for 20 years in mental health and the probation service. He lives in Leicester. He is the author of the Heartman series and other books.
MP Wright's books on Amazon


Did you always want to be a writer?

John Martin
John Martin: I have always loved books, but never thought of myself as a writer. I did quite enjoy writing stories while at school, and I wrote some concert reviews of Pink Floyd in the late seventies, but never did anything with them (though one of them is now on a Pink Floyd fan site!). In 2001 I started writing talks on crime fiction for library audiences, and it was one of those that led to the opportunity to write the book.

Tony R Cox: From Biggles to editing the school magazine; then 15 years in newspapers (including writing reviews of the great 70s bands – marrying my two loves, writing and rock); and 25 years in the writing-heavy PR industry. It was eventually great to get out and indulge my wish to write crime fiction.

M P Wright: I’ve always written; lyrics for punk bands back in my long lost youth, Short stories, plays, poetry and screenplays... the road to become a Novelist was a long journey, which I kept hidden from family and friends for over 20 years. Now, there is nothing else I’d rather do.

Did your original career help or hinder you in your writing?

JM: As a librarian I had access to a huge number of crime novels across many different libraries, which was great. As the Fiction Specialist for Leicestershire Libraries I saw all new novels, so that kept me up to date with new authors, publishing trends etc, so when I was given the opportunity to turn a one hour talk into a book I had plenty of knowledge to base it on.

Tony R Cox
TRC: A massive help in that I was disciplined and guided, then was able to discipline and guide others. The leap between journalism and then the public relations commercial world, into fiction was a massive chasm, but unbelievably exciting. The encouragement of friends was, and is, a vital factor.

MPW: In a single word... No. The kind of work I used to be involved in (Probation Service, Offender Risk Assessment, Criminal Mental Health for over 25 Years) defies a literary voice. I’d find no personal pleasure in writing about such life experiences and detailing or chronicling incidents or individuals in fiction. Most of the offenders I worked with had committed heinous crimes. I’d struggle to put those offences into words. One thing that smacks to me as totally inaccurate in modern crime writing is how little the present day crime writer knows about the true criminal mind. What actually makes them tick. That fact always rings true on the page for me, the prattling on about the brilliance of the criminal mind. Utter tosh. Most serial offenders are not Hannibal Lector. Rather they are socially timid, ignorant of world events and the people in it and deeply, emotionally and mentally complex. If a book blurb mentions a serial killer on the back page... that’s it, I’m offski!

Who are your literary heroes/ who would you like to be compared to?

JM: As a child my hero was Biggles. Then I discovered Christie and Doyle, and never looked back. Amongst contemporary writers I am a particular fan of Peter Robinson, Belinda Bauer and Graham Hurley. I also now follow the work of Barry Forshaw very closely, and would like to follow in his footsteps. He gets all the best panels at the best festivals - which he deserves, as he is the pre-eminent commentator on crime fiction.

TRC: Hemingway, Ian McEwan, Shakespeare – anyone who can paint a picture in words and make the reader live every moment. There are so many great authors out there: I don’t aspire to comparison, but I do feel I want to be one of them.

MP Wright
MPW: Both James Lee Burke and Walter Mosley have influence my own writing immensely. I could waffle on endlessly about the reasons, but to be concise, both writers offer up to the reader an important quality in their main characters of Robicheaux and Rawlins – And that’s integrity. Yes, both men are flawed but they are very real on the page and I wanted to emulate that in my own characters, flaws and all. Burke and Mosley’s characters are not heroic and JT Ellington is far from being a hero, but there is a heroic nature that develops in the man which is unfurled by his strong moral compass. He’s a man who is forced into a job he really doesn’t want. Desperation and necessity are what dictates his decisions as Heartman’s story develops. The relevancy of the American author angle is that I wanted to bring some of the ‘Man Alone’ feel to the current British Crime Fiction arena. Not in the ‘Maverick’ detective sense of the police procedural but as in the Hammett/Chandler/MacDonald world weary and cynical feel. I hope I’ve created that kind of vibe in Heartman. As a comparison to my own writing the critics have been kind, citing my writing to be bed fellows with MacDonald, Mosley, Burke and the great William Faulkner. I hasten to add, those are critics comparisons, not mine.

How did you arrive at your central character, and what makes him unique?

TRC: Simon Jardine is a combination of many of the young reporters I have known. His is an era where drinking copious amounts of beer and still coming back with the story was seen as an asset. I want him to encapsulate a time and a profession that will never be repeated; I want him to be fallible and naive as well as single-minded and dedicated – just like some of the best journalists I have known.

MPW: J T Ellington as a character came to me very easily. I’d mapped out a huge back story and had a moleskin notebook containing his family history, much of it created from my own imagination, some of it garnered from research into family histories on the island of Barbados. I’ve had the luck to travel to the Caribbean and many of the Southern states of the USA, especially Louisiana. I wanted to hang around the JT’s persona a strong layer of credibility and a sense of the real whilst giving the readers a feel for an ‘Old Age’ detective, on that harks back to the times of Raymond Chandler and Ross MacDonald. I say to my Daughters that JT is the hero I could never be, but his Cousin Vic, is in some ways (I’m shame faced to admit) very much me. His humour and no nonsense attitude certainly hark back to my own rather irascible personality. Carnell and Loretta are very much ‘Real People’ who I have known for a long time. They know who they are but I’m not telling. They are two strong characters in the book that I’m very proud of.


The setting of the books is important- how well do you know the places where your books are set? 

TRC: The Simon Jardine murder thrillers are set in Derby, where I worked as a reporter from 1970 to 1978 and knew every inch of the town and county. But in A Fatal Drug I have also travelled to Spain to capture the burgeoning leisure industry and the birth of cheap flights to the country’s Costas. I feel it is important to take the reader on a journey with you, certainly emotionally, but also geographically.

MPW: Of all the questions I’ve been asked about Heartman; ‘Why Bristol?’ is the one that is sprung on me most. Originally I’d tried to set the book here in my home town of Leicester, but logistically and on scale, it simply didn’t work. Bristol is a big and beautiful city. Its also strong connected to the West Indies in a commercial and commerce sense, most certainly historically for all the wrong reasons; slavery being the foremost. Heartman is set in St Pauls which sits just outside of Bristol city centre. It was ghettoised early on by greedy, white landlords who packed new immigrants from the West Indies who had travelled thousands of miles to the mother country seeking work and the promise of ‘Streets That Were Paved with Gold’. What they got was far from the truth. Cramped tenement homes, badly paid jobs nobody else wanted and not always the warm welcome that the British political state had promised them either. Bristol was the right place for JT to make his new home. I wanted to put him in a world that was both familiar and alien. Ellington understands how British society works to some degree, he’s witness first hand the White ‘Officer Class’ of the Barbadian Police Force in which he used to serve but at the same time is knocked for six by a country that is far removed from the Caribbean life he has led.

How did you decide on the scope of your book, John?
JM: I wanted to write a book that was accessible to the general crime reader, and so I wanted it to be readable and reliable. I likened it to the Good Pub Guide - exhaustive coverage countrywide, but broken into specific areas, looking to encourage readers to try new authors, and making their own decisions as to whether to read more of that author's work.
 
And how did you decide where to draw your area boundaries? eg why does your West Country include The Cotswolds?

JM: Originally I tried to write a county by county guide, but soon realised that this wasn't feasible as too many authors wrote across too many counties. Therefore I broke the country into regions, and had to make some controversial decisions such as putting the Cotswolds into the West Country rather than the Midlands, and adding Aberdeen to the Scottish Highlands and Islands section.

What were the key decisions that influenced the layout of your book?

JM: I soon realised that as well as having to use regions, I had to limit the amount I wrote about any one author to 400 words, with a minimum of 60. Also I decided to concentrate on authors writing since 1960, with a selection of Golden Age and earlier authors to ensure comprehensive coverage.
I also decided to leave out authors if I could not be certain of the setting - the best example being Susan Hill. She does not make it clear whether her cathedral city of Lafferton was meant to be in Devon, Wiltshire or Gloucestershire. Even so I ended up with 96,000 words on 400+ authors who have written around 5000 crime novels!

If we could be a fly on the wall and watch you writing, what would we see?

JM: I write on a PC in an upstairs room - which is permanently untidy, with books everywhere. I always write with something on in the background, either music (usually) or cricket commentary (often).I also tend to talk to myself as I write!

TRC: A body bent over a laptop in a small office, staring at a blank wall waiting for inspiration. No distractions and, when I am really stuck, a few yards walk to my allotment to discuss the plot with the cabbages and beans. They’re often right.

MPW: A madman waving his hands about, swearing, playing Public Image Ltd way to loud with a picture of Noel Coward looking at me...

Describe the excitement of seeing your book in a bookshop for the first time

JM: The best moment of my writing life was seeing the book on the shelf in Foyle's in London - I turned it face out and took a photo for posterity!

TRC: I was self-published with First Dead Body, but the thrill of the launch and book signing at Scarthin Books, Cromford (best signing they’d ever had, they said) will stay with me. A Fatal Drug is published by Fahrenheit Press, so it’s currently digital and will be paperback through Amazon soon. I await the thrill of seeing my book in a bookshop.

MPW: Surreal is the first word that comes to mind. Wonderful to see it on the shelf after months of hard slog. I’m accused by those who love and know me of not enjoying the moment when the books are published, and that’s very true. I’m very much a ‘Pit Face’ writer, I love to write, but I’m not too hot with all that comes with it, the self PR, Facebook, Twitter and festivals... Great for those writers who do enjoy that side of the industry, but for me its simply a necessary evil. Give me the pub any day of the week.

How many words do you aim to write on a good/bad day?

JM: I have no set amount, really. When writing the book, I would aim to write 6 or 7 entries on a good day (on average about 2000 words)

TRC: As an ex-journalist I can easily knock out 3,000 to 4,000 words, but then comes the hard part of re-writing, editing, honing and producing something worthy.

Are Amazon reviews important? More/less so than other reviews?

JM: Amazon is a major player in publishing, so reviews on their site have to be important. Unfortunately I've not had very many.

TRC: Amazon is, I believe, the world’s biggest bookshop, so every review is gold dust, even the negative, nasty ones. The difficulty is asking the reader to take the jump from reading to writing about the book they’ve read.

MPW: I’m very grateful to all of the fantastic folk who have take time to write aReview, good or bad. Amazon reviews are important for the consumer, for the reader and it lets me, the writer, now how I’m doing. If it wasn’t for the readers, where would we writers be? So yeah, very important.

 
For Tony and Mark: Do you set out to shock readers? If so, how?

TRC: To a small extent. Torture, murder and sundry violence is always shocking so I hope to share that emotion with the reader.

MPW: I’ve never set out to shock the reader; that’s not my writing style...
 
Do you know the end of the book before you start writing it?

TRC: No! The narrative takes on a life of its own and moves the writer and reader along. That said, once the first draft has been written, while the re-writing and editing is brutal, the structure and finale remain.

MPW: Yes.

What is your view on epublishing? Is your book available electronically? 

JM: Epublishing is a sea change in publishing - and my book is available via Amazon kindle. Having said that, nothing beats the smell of new books!

TRC: The publishing world continues to change. Some would claim ebooks are a major advance, and I am among them; some that the printed word is still the most tangible and pleasurable, and I’d agree with that as well. Sales of First Dead Body and A Fatal Drug (which is in its infancy) have been significantly greater digitally than print.

MPW: If folk are reading, that’s great news. Ebook, paperback or hardback; whatever suits the individual. I’m just chuffed that books are being read by ‘Joe Public’

Describe the excitement of publication day

JM: My excitement really began when I received my 6 personal copies and saw the published book for the first time - actually about 5 days before publication.

TRC: First Dead Body was my debut and was a new baby. The launch and signing were just one long party at Scarthin Books. That smile still sweeps across my face when I think back. A Fatal Drug’s publication day was a totally different methodology with Fahrenheit. There was a ‘Twitter storm’ and I was then told that nothing would happen for at least two months: that two months isn’t up yet.

MPW: I’m probably not the best writer to ask this; I don’t get the buzz perhaps other writers do for publication day. I’m pleased that the book is out and that readers can dip in if they wish, but otherwise, it's business as usual...

What, briefly, do you want readers to get from your work?

JM: I want to encourage readers to broaden their reading and try fresh authors, both new and old. As a librarian my role to encourage reading - and I see my book as a continuation of this.

TRC: A little escapism and, to some extent, an insight into the world of newspapers, rock music, drugs and decadence in the early 1970s. The ‘free love’ of the 1960s was slowly creeping up the M1: we could read about it, hear about it, but it was the 1970s, probably prefaced by The Pill becoming more widespread, before attitudes were loosened up.

MPW: To fall in love with the characters I’ve created and to become lost in the world in which they are set...

Do bad reviews hurt?

JM: You have to accept that not everyone will like your work, and to an extent take it on the chin. What does hurt is when it is justified and you think - I could have done better.

TRC: So far not at all. The fact that someone has read the book and taken the trouble to write and express an opinion is good. Mind you, I was a little put off by my work being called ‘turgid’: it’s a fantastic word, but I’d rather it wasn’t used in conjunction with my writing!

MPW: It’s a review, not the dentist... Reviewers are out there. Its there job to critique. I have no axe to grind with them. I have to say, the UK Book Bloggers and press have been both generous and kind to my work and I love ‘em for it. Bad reviews come with the writers turf, same as good. As Clint Eastwood’s Dirty Harry once said; “Opinions are like ass’ oles, everybody’s got one.”

What promotions have worked best for your book?

JM: Taking part in literary festivals and talking to library audiences, WI's, U3A etc.

TRC: I did the full round of newspaper and regional/local magazines and local radio, but what has worked best, it seems, has been Amazon’s own promotions. Plus Fahrenheit’s global presence and know-how.

MPW: EDPR the London based PR company, headed up by the brilliant Emma Draude and Sophie Goodfellow. Proof that PR specialists really do help sell books and get your work out to the big, wide world. I doff my cap to ‘em.

What is the best piece of writing advice you have ever been given?

JM: Write something that you would want to read yourself.

RC: Write about what you know –and make sure that what you know has a wide and interesting remit and isn’t boring.

MPW: Keep writing... one word at a time and write what you want to read. Also, good reading makes good writing.

John Martin, Richard Cox, MP Wright
July 2016

More BritCrime Festival author interviews

#BritCrime Festival: Sudden Death Q&A: Anya Lipska talks to Fergus McNeil


Two BritCrime novelists interrogate each other on crime, cats, and chocolate biscuits…

First up is Anya Lipska, whose series based on Janusz Kiszka, tough guy/fixer to London’s Poles has been optioned by the BBC as a possible TV drama series.

Highsmith or Chandler? 
Ooh, evil question... but it has to be Chandler. Aged 11, I had to stand on tiptoe on a chair to reach the hiding place where my Dad kept his ‘grown up’ fiction – and ‘The Big Sleep’ was my most thrilling find.

Best TV crime ever? 
‘The Wire’.

Killer twist or killer characters? 
Characters. Always.

Favourite twist book ever? 
‘Rebecca’, by Daphne du Maurier

Favourite murder weapon – in crime fiction, that is…? 
Frozen leg of lamb subsequently roasted and eaten, thus destroying the evidence (courtesy of Roald Dahl)

Male or female protagonist? As a reader, both work for me. But I prefer writing men – I find it easier, perhaps because I can stand back a bit.

Best villain ever? 
Count Fosco in ‘The Woman in White’.

Whodunnit or whydunnit? 
Really good crime novels are always both.

Write whole draft or revise as you go?
Painstaking revision as I go – I can’t move on until a scene is right. It’s like building a house of cards – unless each level is right, the whole idea becomes precarious.

Favourite font? 
Avenir Book.

Mac or PC?
Mac.

Cats or dogs? 
We share a house with a Norwegian Forest Cat. (She says it’s the other way round…)

Tea or coffee?
Coffee – but only one, insanely strong, first thing.

Music or silence (while writing)? 
Silence. Music gets in the way for me.
But if there’s external noise I want to block out, I’ll put on some birdsong.

A Devil Under the Skin by Anya Lipska
Top writing tip? 
Read everything you write out loud.

Hobnobs or chocolate digestives?
I refuse to answer such a divisive question (© A Leadsom)



www.anyalipska.com 
@anyalipska
 A Devil Under the Skin at Amazon


Next in the hot seat is Fergus McNeill, author of the Bristol-based Detective Harland novels, a contemporary crime series published by Hodder.

Fergus McNeill
Highsmith or Chandler? 
That’s deeply unfair, but I’ll have to go with Chandler, if only for the immortal line “she gave me a smile I could feel in my hip pocket”.

Best TV crime ever? 
Another difficult choice, but I can’t think of anything better than series 1 of ‘The Bridge’.

Killer twist or killer characters? 
Twists are fun, but they’re fleeting. Compelling characters are with you on every page.

Favourite twist book ever? 
‘The Murder Of Roger Ackroyd’ by Agatha Christie.

Favourite fictional murder weapon?
Encouraging someone to hammer on an unexploded WWII bomb (from ‘The Wasp Factory’ by Iain Banks).

Male or female protagonist? 
I don’t have any prejudice towards either gender. For me, it’s all about whether I want to spend time with that character.

Whodunnit or whydunnit? 
I love a good Golden Age whodunit, but I don’t think stories should be restricted to a particular structure. As long as the resolution is satisfying, I don’t mind what sort of resolution it is.

Best villain ever? 
Mr Heming from ‘A Pleasure And A Calling’ by Phil Hogan.

Write whole draft or revise as you go?
I know I shouldn’t, but I keep going back and editing my previous chapters as I write. Maybe it helps me to develop the “tone of voice” for a book… it certainly explains why I take forever to get to the end.

Favourite font? 
For writing, Cambria. For reading, Plantin Light.

Mac or PC? 
I love my MacBook Air, but I still use Microsoft Word (an older version, from before they “improved” it).

Cats or dogs?
I have a very tubby tabby cat, who adores my wife and profoundly resents my presence in the house. But other cats like me, so I’m a cat person.

Tea or coffee? 
Coffee. Unless it’s instant coffee, which really isn’t coffee at all.

Music or silence (while writing)? 
I can’t bear silence, so I always play music while writing. Different tracks evoke different moods, and particular pieces can act as “mental bookmarks” – very useful, when returning to a scene after some time away.

Top writing tip? 
There’s no such thing as “writer’s block”; there’s only lack of research (or lack of talent). If you find you’re struggling to write something, there’s a good chance you don’t understand it well enough, and you just need to do more research. (Courtesy of Robert McKee, Hollywood script-doctor)

Hobnobs or chocolate digestives?
Chocolate digestives, because they offer a more predictable dunking experience and, crucially, they are sold in larger packets.
Cut Out by Fergus McNeill

www.fergusmcneill.co.uk
@fergusmcneill
Cut Out at Amazon

More BritCrime Festival author interviews

#BritCrime Festival: Alan McDermott talks to Russell Blake

Russell Blake
By Alan McDermott
It is my great pleasure to introduce one of the true heavyweights of Indie publishing, New York Times bestselling sensation Russell Blake. With fifty (count them, 50!) novels under his belt since he started out just five years ago, Russell has built up a tremendous following and caught the eye of thriller legend Clive Cussler. They have collaborated on two books to date, and Russell’s Jet series has been given its own Kindle World by Amazon.

What was it like teaming up with Clive Cussler?

As you might imagine, getting to work with a living legend was an honor and a thrill. He’s very much a gentleman, and knows more about writing a bestseller than I ever will. I learned a lot, and got the added bonus of having his agent, also an erudite fellow, represent me. So a win all around.

Your latest work is the superb post-apocalyptic dystopian thriller The Day After Never. What is it about, and what inspired you to write it? 

The Day After Never by Russell Blake
I’ve been saying it’s the best writing I’ve done, and I stand by that. It follows an ex-Texas Ranger in the days after the collapse of civilization due to a confluence of economic and disease-related events. Think Clint Eastwood from the spaghetti western days, set down in a Mad Max world, and you pretty much have the idea.

I know you manage an extraordinary daily word count. What’s a day in the life of Russell Blake actually like, and does it really involve so much Tequila? 

Is that some kind of a dig? “So much?” I prefer to think of it as just the right amount. As to a day in the life, I wake up (always good), feed the dogs, eat breakfast and gulp down a cup of coffee, and then begin writing. I’ll break for lunch and at the end of each chapter, and motor through until I hit my word count for the day, which is usually 5K. When really roaring, maybe 7K. Then comes dinner, which yes, often includes something to soothe my brutalized nerves. That will usually end in jail, at a strip club, or spooning a 300 pound Samoan cook on a tramp steamer to Jakarta. But always making for a good story.

I mentioned the Jet series being one of Amazon’s Kindle Worlds. What does that entail, and how can other authors participate? 

Amazon approached me to put JET into their KW program, wherein interested readers and authors can pen stories in that world, using my characters, and those they dream up, in any sort of story that doesn’t involve pedophilia or a donkey. Their rules, not mine. Anyone can write in the world, and they get to keep their characters as their intellectual property. Several talents have sort of kick-started their careers doing it, most notably Jason Gurley and Tom Abrahams, who have gone on to huge success, so it can be a great deal all around.

To be a successful writer, you also have to be a reader. Which authors float your boat? 

Besides the masterful Alan McDermott, you mean? James Lee Burke, David Foster Wallace, Lawrence Block, Kurt Vonnegut, Ray Bradbury, Hugh Howey, Ben Fountain, Boston Tehran. I could go on for an hour. I love a lot of authors for different reasons, but those are my faves at the moment.

Your blog has some fantastic advice for new authors, but what would be the one thing that they need to get right? 

From a business perspective, to view the creation of content as a separate endeavor from operating a publishing company, and to develop the necessary skills and devote suitable time to both. The biggest mistake I see beginning authors make is to eschew the crass commercial aspect of selling books because they are arteests. Creating content is the artistic endeavor, but the day you want someone to care and buy it, that’s publishing and retail, and any competence as a content creator won’t help in the retail marketing business. They are distinctly separate businesses. From a writing perspective, it’s to ensure they can tell a hell of a story that compels readers to turn the pages. Craft, lyricism, grammar, all important, but if the story ain’t racing along, it won’t matter. Assuming competence at crafting a sentence, it’s all about the story.

As a child, what did you want to do when you grew up? 

Marry rich and loaf all my life. Perhaps whip the servants when they misbehave.

What jobs did you have before you became a writer? 

Ha! Name it. Everything you can think of. I ran companies in high tech and import/export, made wine, played and produced music, started an architectural and construction business, did some small venture capital – the gamut. I can’t say I was cheated out of opportunities, that’s for sure.

Is there one question that you wish interviewers would ask you, but they never do? If there is, what is the answer? 

Tough one. I usually just rant about whatever pops into my head, so they’re lucky if they get to even ask the ones they want to. You’ve done a remarkably good job with yours, so I defer to the master.

If you could go back to 2011, when you published your first book, what, if anything, would you do differently? 

I would write in one single genre instead of a mishmash, and I would stick to a series rather than writing stand-alones. Don't get me wrong, I love Fatal Exchange and The Geronimo Breach and Zero Sum, but readers like series, and you either give the reader what he wants, or he goes elsewhere. I didn't want to limit my literary genius to any one thing, which was a mistake. Fortunately, I figured it out toward the end of the year, but doing so ate 6 months I'll never get back.

Where can we find out more about you and your books? 

I blog at RussellBlake.com. Have an author page at http://www.amazon.com/Russell-Blake/e/B005OKCOLE where you can find all my books. My facebook is www.facebook.com/Russell.Blake.Books - that about covers it!

Thanks for having me on, Alan. Very kind of you to sully your reputation with the likes of me. Appreciate it.

Alan McDermott is a full time author from the south of England, married with beautiful twin daughters. He used to write critical applications for the NHS, but now he spends his days writing action thrillers.

His debut novel, Gray Justice, has been very well received and earned him membership of http://independentauthorsinternational.org. He was subsequently picked up by Thomas & Mercer, who published his first 5 books.

Alan is currently working on his 6th Tom Gray adventure.

You can follow Alan on Twitter through his @Jambalian account.
Alan's books at Amazon

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#BritCrime Festival: Nick Quantrill talks to Barry Forshaw about Brit Noir

Brit Noir by Barry Forshaw
by Nick Quantrill

So, Barry, piecing together “Brit Noir” must have been something of a thankless task? Allowing for the fact we all have our personal favourites, did you have a set of self-imposed rules to make sense of the contemporary crime writing scene?

I had a few rules. Firstly that Brit Noir was to cover only the contemporary scene – and as it was a relatively compact guide, I’d agreed with my publisher that it should be living writers. Of course, that made the book a hostage to fortune – just before it was published, the great Willie McIllvanney died, and I reluctantly had to remove his entry. I made a point, however, of saying elsewhere in the book that he was the godfather of Scottish crime fiction, influencing Ian Rankin et al.

I had not set out to write a social history of the British crime novel, though I tried to touch on the more radical notions of the genre; however, the ‘reader’s guide’ format I used (with entries ranging from expansive to capsule form to single-line entries) hopefully allowed for a comprehensive celebration of a lively genre, a genre, in fact, which continues to produce highly accomplished, powerfully written novels on an almost daily basis.

You state in the book’s introduction that crime writing is in rude health. What do you attribute that to?

Crime fiction has always been a much-loved genre, but some years ago, it comfortably became (in terms of sales and library lendings) the most popular of popular genres, outpacing romantic fiction. I suppose one might argue that in turbulent times, crime fiction presents solutions to what might once have seemed insoluble problems – giving the reader the kind of closure that one doesn’t really find in real life. Of course, that's pretty well always been case since the time of Dickens, so it's not a new phenomenon. Rude health? Yes – there are a lot of bloody good writers around at present!

I found the geographical split in the book to be fascinating – location is such an important facet of crime writing – did you detect any patterns emerging in terms of regional output? Did you surprise yourself?

Actually, Nick, you touch on one of the nightmares of writing the book -- so many writers (Ann Cleeves, for instance) set their books in a variety of locations. This made it difficult not just to locate writers, but to identify specific geographical trends – and regarding the latter, I’d say that most patterns and trends might be seen to be spread throughout the country; in other words, people are writing domestic noir (for instance) all over the UK. inevitably, though, the genre itself largely remains London-centric.

The second half of the book centres on film and television. Are we still trying to catch up the Americans and Scandinavians when it comes to onscreen crime?

The Scandinavian influence has been largely beneficial, forcing British filmmakers and writers to up the ante in terms of social commitment and sense of place. It's one of the reasons we now have shows such as Broadchurch.

We’re clearly living in increasingly uncertain and unstable times (it’s probably all changed again since I typed this…). Do you expect to see that reflected in the crime fiction we’ll see published in the near(ish) future, or do you think as readers, escapism will be the order of the day?

Escapism will always have a place – and why not? -- but publishers are now cannily aware that an element of societal critique in a crime novel will furnish some added value. Which means we’ll continues to see both.

Indulge me a personal question on the roots of the Brit Noir…I’m a crime writer from the Humber region, the stomping ground for Ted Lewis. Where do you see writers like Lewis and Derek Raymond fitting in? Do you see their fingerprints on present day crime writing?

Derek Raymond
You know, it’s ironic. the influence of Ted Lewis may be seen not so much in his books, but refracted through the use of Newcastle in Mike Hodges’ film of Jack's Return Home, retitled (of course) Get Carter. That film was almost single-handedly the reason why the English provinces are now treated in crime fiction with the kind of richness and thoroughness that was previously seen in books set in the capital. As for the unique (and louche) Derek Raymond, he remains a kind of ‘evolutionary sport’ – his deeply personal books can hardly be said to have created a school, could they? His writing was so individual that no one else could really manage the same idiom.

And lastly, you rightly say you cast the net as wide as possible to include as many writers and locations within the book’s pages. Fancy updating it in the future?

I'd love to update it -- excellent new writers are appearing all the time. And (to my cost) quite a few of them have already ruefully remarked to me that they didn't make the final cut – though you’re in it,Nick! Right now I'm tackling American Noir for the next book, so I have my hands full all over again.

Barry Forshaw’s Brit Noir is published by No Exit Press

Nick Quantrill is the author of  The Dead Can't Talk and other books.

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Crime Scene Britain and Ireland by John Martin #BritCrime Festival

Former librarian John Martin talks to BritCrime about his guide to crime fiction in Britain and Ireland.
Crime Scene Britain and IrelandThis book is for all readers of crime fiction. Dividing Britain and Ireland into thirteen regions, the author describes the work of contemporary and historic crime writers whose settings are crucial, giving their stories context and local relevance. While regional crime novels go back to The Hound of the Baskervilles, regional crime fiction within specific cityscapes and landscapes only came into its own twenty years ago with the work of authors such as Ian Rankin, John Harvey, PD James and Val McDermid. Their work, together with that of hundreds of others, is described in this volume which is essential for the serious crime reader.

Thanks for joining us, John. Can you tell us about yourself and why you decided to write the book?

I have spent most of my working life around books. For almost 30 years I was a librarian in public libraries, specialising in stock selection and reader development, and I have been a lifelong crime fiction reader. Since 2002 I had been giving talks on crime fiction to library groups, and arranging author visits to libraries to encourage reading. When I was a victim of county council cuts and retired in May 2012, I had little idea of what I wanted to do, but I was fortunate enough to be given the opportunity to turn one of my talks into a book - despite never having written anything longer than a University dissertation. I shall always be grateful to Ross Bradshaw, radical bookseller and publisher at Five Leaves Bookshop/Five Leaves Publications in Nottingham, for giving me that chance – taking a punt on an unknown, if enthusiastic, writer.

For the discerning reader there is a huge variety of British crime fiction to choose from, and my career in libraries had shown me that readers were often looking for new authors. Readers want to have some empathy with the characters in a novel, and they also want to picture the setting in their mind. For crime fiction, perhaps more than most genres, the setting of the book is crucial. A crime is often the product of the society around it, and that in itself is heavily influenced by the environment. The setting evokes emotion and knowledge in the reader, which helps to give the narrative a framework. Colin Dexter’s wonderful Morse novels used the backdrop of Oxford, it’s Colleges and architecture to give the murder mysteries a certain air, a certain mystique which would have been quite different if the setting had been urban Manchester, or the Scottish highlands.

What is the scope of the book?

The book is divided into thirteen regions (7 in England, 3 in Scotland, 2 in Ireland plus Wales on its own). I have had to make some contentious decisions as to boundaries, and so The Cotswolds are included in the West Country, Bedfordshire is in The Midlands and Aberdeen has been added to the Scottish Highlands and Islands. It covers the whole history of crime fiction from 1860 (the earliest book included was published in 1862) though it concentrates on the period from 1960 to 2014. It contains mini-essays (400 words or less) on more than 400 crime novelists, who between them have written over 5000 crime novels during the last 150 years.

I see you've got a great endorsement from Barry Forshaw as well as other reviewers and bloggers. What made you think readers would be interested in a guide to crime fiction?

Well, my major inspiration was Barry Forshaw's Encyclopaedia of British Crime Fiction. This is a wonderful reference book, but at £90 for two volumes I felt it was out of reach for most readers. I wanted to come up with something which was as comprehensive as possible but more accessible pricewise, and my publisher agreed.

Is Crime Scene Britain and Ireland currently available as an ebook or is it only in print? 
It's available in paperback and ebook editions.

Thanks, John!

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JohnMartinauthor/
Twitter:  @fl0ydfan
Get Crime Scene Britain and Ireland from Amazon


"A splendid, much-needed book"
Crimesquad

"Enthusiasm and scholarship shine from every page"
Barry Forshaw, broadsheet reviewer and author of Brit Noir

"It's testimony to the strength of British crime fiction that there are such interesting reference books to dip into and savour".
Sarah Ward, author and blogger (Crimepieces)

Hello From Chelmorton Festival #BritCrime Festival

Daniel Pembrey couldn't be with us for a live panel at this BritCrime Festival, so he sent us this lovely video from Chelmorton Festival with contributions from Zoe Sharp, Bill Rogers and Sarah Ward.

♠ Daniel Pembrey is the author of The Harbour Master, due out in a new edition, published by No Exit Press in November 2016
Daniel's books at Amazon

♠ Zoe Sharp is the author of the Charlie Fox thrillers. An Italian Job, her new book with John Lawton, will be published soon.
Zoe Sharp's books at Amazon

♠ Bill Rogers is the author of ten crime thrillers based in Manchester. The first two in a new spin-off series will be published by Thomas & Mercer later this year.
Bill Rogers' books at Amazon

♠ Sarah Ward is the author of In Bitter Chill and A Deadly Thaw.
Sarah Ward's books at Amazon



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