Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Crime Fiction News

According to Charlotte Williams at the Bookseller, Orion is publishing an exclusive trilogy of short stories by crime writer R J Ellory, called Three Days in Chicagoland. The first e-exclusive novella, The Sister, will be released on 15th March, followed by The Cop on 5th April and finally The Killer on 26th April. Each will be priced 99p. The stories are set in Chicago between 1956 and 1960. They are inter-related but can also be read as standalones. The first is from the point of view of the murder victim's sister, the second from the detective in charge of the case, and the third from the man accused of the murder as he waits on death row.

The publisher also reports success digitally with Michael Connelly, with his exclusive e-books Suicide Run and Angle of Investigation selling more than 51,000 and 31,000 copies respectively, according to Orion. The publisher also plans an exclusive e-book by crime writer Graham Hurley, called Strictly No Flowers, for publication in August 2012

According to the Metro, BBC’s Sherlock has caused the sale of Arthur Conan Doyle’s novel to double since the recent incarnation of the character played by Benedict Cumberbatch.

Corvus has acquired the rights to two books by debut adult fiction author, Mark Roberts. Sara O'Keefe, Editorial Director of Corvus, bought the UK and Commonwealth rights to The Herod Killings and an untitled second book by debut thriller writer Mark Roberts, from Peter Buckman at the Ampersand Agency. Peter Buckman has sold German rights to Rowohlt and Longanesi won Italian rights in a pre-empt. The Herod Killings is the first in a gripping thriller series starring DCI David Rose.

For Fans of George Pelecanos and if you are like me looking forward to reading his new book What it Was then the Independent have produced the Blaggers Guide to George Pelecanos.

Interesting and well-written article in the Telegraph by Henning Mankell on Charles Dickens and why his greatness lies in channelling the defiant spirit of the poor.

Thursday, 2 February 2012

James Craig talks about launching a new detective series


Today's guest blogger is James Craig who was born in Scotland. A former journalist and TV producer he has lived in London for over 30 years. He is the author(so far) of two books in the John Carlyle series. His character owes much to two Italian police detectives Venetian Guido Brunetti and Sicilian Salvo Montalbano. He talks about launching a new detective series, marketing and e-books.

James Craig
February sees the formal launch of the paperback version of Never Apologise, Never Explain. The digital edition of the book has already been on sale since Christmas. Increasingly, digital considerations are dominating the production and marketing schedules. With Amazon selling 4 million kindles in December that is not really so surprising.
In terms of the book itself, the plot revolves around the killing of an elderly woman called Agatha Mills. It looks like a simple domestic argument gone too far; there is only one suspect – her husband Henry. For Inspector John Carlyle, it looks like welcome a chance for a quick win. But, much to the Inspector’s annoyance, Henry refuses to confess. Worse, he comes up with an alternative version of events that is almost impossible to investigate. When a distraught Henry kills himself on the way to prison, doubts begin to surface. Slowly, Carlyle has to face up to the fact that the man may just have been telling the truth.
The trail leads all the way back to the murder of a Catholic priest on the other side of the world and a family’s forty-year fight for justice. Carlyle sets off on an investigation that spirals out of control as he uncovers a killer stalking the streets of London. How much more blood will have to be spilt before the past can be put to rest?
So far, so good.
But are people reading it on their shiny new Kindles? Happily, yes.
What we’re selling here is contemporary crime fiction; Carlyle is a new character from a new crime writer so it aims to do what it says on the tin, if a potential reader checks it out and reads it on the basis of the blurb at the back the hope is that they won’t feel short-changed.Even better, they will like it enough to check out the next one.
Never Apologise, Never Explain is the second in a series featuring Inspector John Carlyle, working out of Charing Cross police station in central London. The first book, “London Calling”, was published in 2011.
I don’t know the precise numbers but, overall, the vast majority of my sales are digital.
Is that an issue? No.
How people consume the novel matters not a jot – you have to get the product (the book) to people in the way they want it. If you can do that, then it’s a question of getting the pricing right to that everyone – in no particular order the vendor, the publisher, my agent, my SEO guy and me - is kept happy.



The e-book edition ofLondon Callingwas published ahead of the paperback edition in June last year. This was about profile-raising as well as sales. When it reached #1 on the kindle chart (for an hour!) the strapline “the No.1 e-book bestseller” was added to the paperback before that went on sale August.
The Kindle launch was the (very good) idea of Rob Nichols, the Marketing & Digital at my publisher, Constable & Robinson. The other smart thing that he did was price it at a quid, so that it would be competitive with other titles hovering around the top of the kindle lists.
Another great thing that Rob did was hook me up with Chris McVeigh at 451. Chris is a publishing and a social media expert and he has been driving the online marketing for both the first and second books.
It is an interesting time to be a new(ish) writer in the publishing business – the world is clearly changing, so my complete lack of experience is not necessarily as much of a handicap as it might previously have been. I have been extremely lucky to hook up with people who understand both the old and new worlds and are hugely enthusiastic and innovative.



I have stirred the pot occasionally, with book competitions on Twitter and promo videos to provide some more content. However, I would say that all of the success on kindle has been down to Rob and Chris. Rob had the foresight to try it and is constantly working on the marketing. And Chris has the skills and experience to make the most of what C&R are doing.
The key thing remains to get the books out there and get some awareness and reaction. As you can see from the Amazon reviews to London Calling, not everyone is going to love it but, ultimately, there's no such thing as bad publicity.
So far, the whole thing has worked quite well. For the first couple of days, you get addicted to rankings (it’s gone up to 56, hooray!; shit, it’s down to 82, what’s going on?) then you kind of settle down into making sure you engage with the potential readership and make sure that people who are reading similar titles get to know about your book.
In the first month, we sold 15,000 copies ofLondon Callingon Kindle. This gets you in front of the trade as well as the reader. It gave book buyers a certain level of comfort as they calculated their advance orders. It also helped sell the rights for the first two books in Germany – the German translation of London Calling will be published in May.
Like others, we are seeing that if you can demonstrate good sales figures more deals will follow.
So, what next? The plan remains to make sure that we try and put in the right effort in the right places at the right time. Rob got Never Apologise, Never Explain into Amazon’s Christmas promotion and when it went into the top 100, London Calling followed it back in.
Digital is also impacting the print publication strategy, leading to shorter time gaps between titles. Book number three, Buckingham Palace Blues, which has Carlyle hunting down child traffickers, should be out later in the year. Number four should be out next year.
The online world never stops. Better stop surfing and get writing.
Find out more at

Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Crime Fiction News!

The nominations for 2012 Left Coast Crime Award have been announced.


The Lefty for Best humorous mystery novel:

The Real Macaw by Donna Andrews (Minotaur)

Getting Old Can Kill You by Rita Lakin (Dell)

October Fest by Jess Lourey (Midnight Ink)

Magical Alienation by Kris Neri (Red Coyote Press)

Dying for a Dance by Cindy Sample (L & L Dreamspell)

The Albuquerque Turkey by John Vorhaus (Crown)


The Bruce Alexander Memorial Historical Mystery Award for Best historical mystery novel covering events before 1960:

Naughty in Nice by Rhys Bowen (Berkley Prime Crime)

A Game of Lies by Rebecca Cantrell (Forge)

Mercury's Rise by Ann Parker (Poisoned Pen Press)

A Killing Season by Priscilla Royal (Poisoned Pen Press)

Troubled Bones by Jeri Westerson (Minotaur)

A Lesson in Secrets by Jacqueline Winspear (Harper)


The Golden Nugget for Best mystery novel set in California:

Disturbance by Jan Burke (Simon & Schuster)

The Drop by Michael Connelly (Little, Brown)

Bit Player by Janet Dawson (Perseverance Press)

V is for Vengeance by Sue Grafton (Putnam)

City of Secrets by Kelli Stanley (Minotaur)


Eureka! for Best first mystery novel:

The Baffled Beatlemaniac Caper by Sally Carpenter (Oak Tree Press)

Darrell James, Nazareth Child by Darrell James (Midnight Ink)

Dead Man's Switch by Tammy Kaehler (Poisoned Pen Press)

Who Do, Voodoo? by Rochelle Staab (Berkley Prime Crime)


Theakston’s Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival have announced that due to family commitments Charlaine Harris has had to withdraw from attending the festival this year. Her replacement is Kate Mosse.


The BBC have confirmed that there will not be a second series of Body Farm. According to the Radio Times the Body Farm which was a spin-off from Waking the Dead appears to have suffered from falling viewing figures. The full notice can be read here.


According to the BBC the third series of hit Danish drama The Killing will probe the personal and moral consequences of the economic crisis. Broadcaster DR has revealed that Sarah Lund’s final case will see her investigating the apparently random killing of a sailor. The unfolding story, again penned by Soren Sveistrup, will find Lund encountering the prime minister, the financial community and various social strata, all of which have been affected by the downturn.

Of the look of the new series, production designer Jette Lehmann commented: “We’re trying to describe a Denmark on the way down, which was not the premise of the first two seasons. It has become darker and heavier.” Forbrydelsen III (to give the series its original title) will once again star Sofie Grabol as Lund and Morten Suurballe as Lennart Brix and is scheduled for broadcast in Denmark in September. No date has yet been set for transmission on BBC4 in the UK.


According to Deadline.com John Grisham’s novel The Partner is due to be directed by John Lee Hancock who directed Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. The Partner is the eighth book written by Grisham to be filmed with all seven of the novels that preceded it.


According to the Independent to celebrate the 25th Anniversary of the Singing Detective BBC 4 are due to show the Singing Detective on Thursday 2 February at 9pm. The story involves blocked thriller writer Philip E Marlow, who is hospitalised due to the acute skin and joint condition.


According to the Telegraph Andrew Davies’s is set to adapt the Quirke crime novels, written by John Banville under the pen name of Benjamin Black, which are set in 1950s Dublin for the BBC. A little known piece of information is that John Banville is also the co-writer of Academy nominated Albert Nobbs.

Tuesday, 31 January 2012

Profile: Charles Maddox, Victorian investigator by Lynn Shepherd


Today’s guest blogger is Lynn Shepherd. Tom-All-Alone’s is her second novel to be published and features Charles Maddox a descendent of the Charles Maddox found in her debut novel Murder at Mansfield Park. It is due to be published in the US on 1 May 2012. Lynn offers us pass-notes on her Victorian investgator. More information about Lynn and her work can be found on her website www.lynn-shepherd.com. You can also follow her on Twitter @Lynn_Shepherd.


Charles Maddox is the young detective at the heart of Lynn Shepherd’s Dickensian murder mystery, Tom-All-Alone’s, which is published by Corsair on February 2nd. The title Tom-All-Alone’s is one of the alternatives Dickens considered using for Bleak House (as is the US title, The Solitary House), and Lynn’s story runs in parallel with Dickens’ plot and draws in some of his most memorable characters, though in a completely new story that stands on its own. Charles Maddox is most definitely Lynn’s own creation, and here’s our low-down of this intriguing new boy in dark and dirty London town….


Let’s start with some background

It’s 1850, and Charles Maddox is 25. As the book opens he’s living in a room in a lodging-house near the British Museum with his cat, Thunder. As you look round his room you can tell that this is a young man with a scientific bent – the whole place is crammed with his books and maps and his precious collection of specimens, which range from fossils to shells to stuffed birds. As for his appearance, he looks rather like Tom Hiddleston (or so Lynn tells us!). He has charm, no mistake about that, though he seems rather engagingly unaware of it, and if he’s vain about anything it’s certainly not his clothes.

So how did he become a private detective, of all things?

The key thing here is that this Charles Maddox is not the first. Young Charles is the great-nephew of the first Charles Maddox, the great Regency thief taker who solved the mystery in Murder at Mansfield Park. Of course old Maddox is elderly now, and quite early in Tom-All-Alone’s Charles moves from his lodgings to his great-uncle’s house in Buckingham Street, between the Strand and the river. The old man has become erratic of late – lucid one minute, and angry and violent the next. The disease that afflicts him won’t be identified for at least another 50 years, but Charles is sure of one thing: his uncle needs him. He’s idolised Maddox since he was a little boy, and the two of them are far closer than Charles has ever been to his own father, who’s a distinguished doctor, though distant and aloof. It was his father who insisted Charles follow him into medicine, and his father who was incensed when he gave it up less than a year later and joined the Metropolitan Police.


But didn’t you say he was a private detective?

Indeed he is. Because he made the mistake of tangling with Inspector Bucket, the formidable detective of Bleak House, and questioning his judgement in the investigation of the murder of a low-life called Silas Boone. One charge of insubordination later and Charles is back on the street, trying to establish himself on his own, just as his great-uncle did all those years ago. Only business is slow, and the only case he has is threatening to prove a dead end. It’s this case – the disappearance of a baby from a workhouse 16 years before – that brings Charles to the broken-down and rat-infested graveyard of Tom-All-Alone’s, at the opening of the book.

So what sort of person is Charles?

Clever, quick-witted, and resourceful. Acutely observant of other people’s behaviour and motivations, but very much less so when it comes to his own. Hot-tempered and impulsive (that skirmish with Bucket wasn’t the first time his temper has got him into trouble, and it won’t be the last). He’s also extremely reserved, and rarely willing to become emotionally involved with anyone, with the sole exception of his cat, and his uncle Maddox, whom he loves and reveres in almost equal measure, though even their relationship can hardly be described as frank and open. As to why that might be so - you will have to discover for yourself…


How does he become involved in the story of Tom-All-Alone’s?

He’s hired by Edward Tulkinghorn, the formidable lawyer of Bleak House, to track down the man who’s been sending threatening letters to one of his rich and powerful clients. But what starts as a simple commission rapidly turns into something deeper and darker, which will pitch Charles into open antagonism with Tulkinghorn, and threaten to expose a terrible secret he will stop at nothing – even murder - to conceal...

Monday, 30 January 2012

Crime Fiction News



A new poster for the forthcoming film The Raven which is based around the author Edgar Allan Poe. John Cusack who plays Poe becomes entangled in the search for a serial killer who is using the more gruesome pieces of his work as motivation. The new poster is definitely eye-catching, the blood-red wings creating a real sense of menace. The Raven is due to be released in the UK on 9 March 2012.

Date for your diary! The successful Crime in the Court that first took place last year in July and organised by David Headley of Goldsboro Books will once again take place this year. The date is 5 July and is to coincide with Independent Booksellers Week. Watch this space for further information.

Calling all budding US based writers! Poisoned Pen Press have announced the first annual Discover Mystery Award, a first book contest for unpublished writers trying to break into the mystery genre. This spring, join them by entering your mystery manuscript of 60,000-90,000 words in an effort to win a $1000 prize, the Discover Mystery title, and a publishing contract from Poisoned Pen Press.

At Poisoned Pen Press, they take their mission to “Discover Mystery” very seriously. They have always prided themselves on the discovery of new writers, and now they are on the hunt for fresh voices and new stories. They are not afraid of something different, either, so if you’ve got a mystery, they want to see it! Poisoned Pen Press is waiting to discover you!

Here’s what to do:
Visit www.poisonedpenpress.com/contest

Read the guidelines carefully and fill out the form on our website, pay the $20 entry fee, and attach your manuscript. All entries are due by 11:59 pm (Pacific), April 30th, 2012. A winner will be announced by May 31st, 2012. Entries will be judged based on their synopses and manuscript text, with the assistance of celebrity judge, Dana Stabenow!

Entry Requirements and Guidelines:
· Unfortunately, we will not be able to help you decide if your book is a good fit for our contest. If you have questions about the kinds of books we publish, please visit www.poisonedpenpress.com.
· Due to the number of entries, Poisoned Pen Press will not be able to answer questions regarding your contest entry.
· This is a first-book award. It is open to writers who have not published a full-length book in the mystery genre.
· Manuscripts previously submitted to Poisoned Pen Press are eligible for entry in Discover Mystery, provided that those manuscripts have undergone major revisions.
· Manuscripts previously published in print or digitally, including self-published, are not eligible.
· Manuscripts must be between 60,000 words and 90,000 words in length.
· The Poisoned Pen Press Discover Mystery Award is open to all authors writing original works in English for adult readers who reside in the United States .
· Non-fiction of any kind, including autobiography is not appropriate for this contest.
· To avoid conflict of interest and to avoid the appearance of a conflict of interest, friends and former students of a judge or a Poisoned Pen Press employee are ineligible to enter the competition for that year.
· Poisoned Pen Press makes every effort to vary the judges by region and aesthetics, so that writers, if ineligible one year, will certainly be eligible in future years.
· You may not submit your manuscript to other publishers while it is under consideration by Poisoned Pen Press.
· Poisoned Pen Press cannot consider manuscript revisions during the course of the contest. Winning authors will have an opportunity to revise their works in collaboration with our editorial staff before publication.
· Should no entry meet editorial approval, Poisoned Pen Press reserves the right NOT to declare a winner.
· Failure to pay the entry fee will exclude you from the contest.
Write. Win. Publish.
www.poisonedpenpress.com/contest

The third series of Whitechapel starts tonight at 9pm on ITV. The storyline for tonight’s episode is based around four people being butcher at a fortified tailor’s workshop in the East End. Soon everyone in the area are obsessed with horror and panic at this seemingly impossible and grisly murder.

The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo will not be shown in India after all. India’s Central Board of Certification asked for five scenes to be cut which the director David Fincher refused to do. The film was due to be released on 10 February. The full article in the Guardian can be read here. The Telegraph’s take on it can be read here.


Very interesting and thought provoking article by Philip Hensher in the Guardian about Elmore Leonard under the subtitle “the great American novelist”. Whilst I admire Elmore Leonard a lot, I am not sure that I agree with him being cast as the great American novelist. I know that it is all about a matter of taste, but Chandler aside (who is my all time favourite crime writer) what about James Ellroy, George Pelecanos, Philip Roth, James Lee Burke, Hammett, James M Cain and Patricia Highsmith (and those are just a few off the top of my head) to name a few, they are all great American novelists as well.

A very interesting interview with Philip Kerr is in the Telegraph. Certainly worth reading for an insight as to how he started to write the Bernie Gunther novels.

As interviews go, a brilliant one in the Chicago Sun-Times with Walter Mosley who talks about the reaction he received when announced that his Easy Rawlins series was likely to end. Needless to say a lot of people were not happy with the news.

Not sure how I missed this but Hugh Bonneville of Downton Abbey fame has signed on according to Daily Screen to play the lead role in the feature version of Peter James’s Dead Simple.

Rather sadly it appears that the US are planning a remake of Spiral the French police procedural drama. According to the Guardian it will be transferred to the streets of Philadelphia and is being developed by Sam Mendes. It will be interesting to see how this turns out, as the original series that was shown on BBC 4 was a hit.


Saturday, 28 January 2012

Jim Kelly at Death's Door


Today’s guest blogger is Jim Kelly. Jim is the author of the Philip Dryden series which is set in Ely in the Fens. His latest series features Detective Inspector Peter Shaw, is based on the North Norfolk coast and in the port of Lynn. In 2006 he won the CWA Dagger in the Library.


I rarely get the thrill of actually committing a crime. I’m reminded of an exception to this by an item of stolen goods, which sits on my desk. I thought I’d tell you all about this on the basis that I appear – according to legal advice - to be protected by the Statute of Limitations, and by the fact that the object itself is of a value which is unlikely to inspire the interest of barristers. So look upon this as a confession. This is just between you and me.


It’s a key and key fob. For those of you who like detail – and hey, we’re all crime geeks, so that’s all of us – the key was made by PAPAIZ of Brazil. (For those of you with busy lives, that’s a red herring) But it’s the fob that I was after. It is black Bakelite, that kind of brittle heavy plastic that is so resonant of the post-War era in which I grew up. (We had a Bakelite phone at home, which so rang so infrequently that we all jumped when it did. My mother would instantly cover her mouth with both hands on the basis that if it was ringing there must have been a death in the family). Anyway, the point is the black fob carries a single name in stencil: CHRISTIE.


The scene of my crime is Burgh Island off the south Devon coast. The time is 1997 – five years before the publication of my first novel, The Water Clock. I was forty years old and my wife had booked a room at the island’s art deco hotel. It’s a strange place – a tidal island, reached by a causeway at low water and for several hours on either side of low tide by a peculiar sea tractor – a kind of box-car on stilts, which drives out into the water. It’s all very exciting, so much so I had to repair to the Pilchard Inn – the island’s only other building – for several pints to get over the ordeal.


It was here, sitting outside watching the tide finally close off the island from the distant beach that we learnt that this was a very famous island if you are a student of crime writing. In 1939 Agatha Christie published And Then There Were None, a whodunnit not only conceived on the island but set on it – albeit half-heartedly disguised. (The original title was the reprehensible Ten Little Niggers) It sold for 7/6 and has – to date – shifted 100m copies, making it one of the best selling books of all time. The plot is one of adamantine beauty: eight people who have previously committed crimes for which they were not punished are summoned to the island. Their hosts, they are then told, are away, but they will be looked after by two servants. Each of the ten dies – in a fashion mirroring the original nursery rhyme now known as Ten Little Soldiers, until there are none left. The police arrive to find the ten bodies. Who dunnit – who could possibly have done it ? The last death – by the way – is clearly not suicide.


I was taken by this story. I loved the notion of the island as a ‘locked room’, and the notion of the ‘impossible crime’ – the two central pillars of what became known – perhaps unfortunately given the board-game rigidity of the premise – as the Golden Age of British crime fiction. But Christie could plot like no other. So imagine my delight on discovering that we had been allocated the Christie suite ! The very room in which she had devised her masterpiece. On leaving I contrived to discover the key fob in my luggage as the sea tractor groaned its way through the water towards the mainland. I seem to recall my wife making me promise to return it by post. Whoops.



CUT to the early winter of 2009. Fearlessly I have decided to do some research so that I can write a new Shaw and Valentine mystery based on an island. Norfolk is not a very helpful county in this regard – there are only a few sandy islets on its endlessly smooth, littoral coast. I have a ruck-sack, a map, and am wearing a wet suit. (A half one – for summer – but I still look like a tadpole.) The beach is at Wells, a mile from the town, a glorious sweep of sand and dunes looked over by the most complete terrace of beach huts in Britain. Across the sands wanders the channel which links the North Sea to Wells harbour. It is deep and treacherous. On the far side of this channel – so dangerous that in summer a wartime siren wails an hour before the tide turns – lies my destination – the islet of East Hills, a thin spine of sand, topped with pines, surrounded by reed marsh.


The only problem is I have to walk there, a prospect not lightened by the knowledge that I am a very poor swimmer. Even at low tide this involves wading through several feet of fast-running current across a fifty yard channel to ribbed sea-sand, then picking a way to the island itself, about a mile distant. I have used tide tables to compute the exact moment when it is best to cross. I pick my spot and begin to wade out, the water quickly rising to my chest, so that I have to hold the rucksack over my head. The water is icy. I have an audience of bemused walkers, and up in the dunes, I sense the eyes of the coastguards in their hut, and the crew of the full-time lifeboat in their second-floor rest-room – which boasts a picture window giving a perfect view of my impending death. Because I’m more scared of looking like a coward than death itself I wade on. I’m now in big trouble. My bones ache with cold, the water is so deep I am now bouyant and my toes are clinging to the sand, and the rucksack is soaking wet. I drift off for a few seconds (seawards – because the wind and tides are still pushing water out of Wells harbour) By pure chance I am deposited on a thin sand bar. My feet grip the sand in a prehensile miracle and I waver there, a inch from being taken out into the North Sea. My heart crashing around in my rib-cage like a fairground dodgem I begin to edge back to dry land.


Defeated, I still don’t want to give up. I yearn to sit on East Hills and think through the plot of the new book I’m planning. So I take advice: wandering up to the Coastguard Hut I ask them if it is safe to cross the channel. (This is typical isn’t it? As if being told by someone in authority it is the right time will in some way make me three foot taller.) They consult various tables and tell me it is the right moment – and exactly where I have just failed to cross. (Let this be a lesson to us all. Never trust someone who has to consult a table). I then go to the lifeboat house. I’m invited up to the restroom with its view north towards the unseen pole. The sea looks Arctic blue from here, and I guess they think I’m an idiot. I ask them the same question. Two crewmen think about an answer. They don’t consult a table, they walk to the window and look at the sea. Give it an hour is their advice. The wind is from the north and it’s bottled up the tide in the vast expanse of Wells harbour, so the water is running out late. And if I want to wade then do it right in front of the lifeboat house – not up the channel where I tried.


An hour later I’m sitting on East Hills. The trip was hair-raising and I’m really not looking forward to going back, but at least I’m here. It’s spooky. In the lee of the island – the seaward side – there’s a kind of petrified forest, and an old pillbox, and evidence of camp fires but no sight of anyone. There’s a solitary trainer hanging from its laces in a stone pine. I find myself looking behind me along the sandy paths as I explore. I sit down with flask, sandwiches, and binoculars and think about my plot: will it work?


The premise is simple – if not as rigid or puzzle-like as Christie’s. A summer boat trip takes 76 people out to East Hills in 1994: tickets are sold, so we know the numbers. The boat returns six hours later to pick up the trippers. As it approaches the floating dock there is a scream – a woman, wading out to swim, encounters the body of a young man, shrouded in a cloud of blood. He dies on the sand from a knife wound. The police evacuate the remaining 75 people from the island. The crime is unsolved. A blood soaked towel is recovered from the island – discovered in the pine woods behind the beach. Forensic analysis confirms two blood types – one of which is the victim’s. But it is not possible to extract a DNA sample given the rudimentary state of the science at that time.


CUT forward to now. West Norfolk police have decided to spend a Home Office grant on re-opening the case. A DNA trace is extracted from the towel which does not match the victim and is from a man. Thirty of the 66 people evacuated from East Hills are still alive and are men. They have been summoned to King’s Lynn police headquarters for a DNA test. Five of the eight who have died are male, and the recovered DNA – Sample X – will be compared to familial samples from their relatives. Given that 76 went out, and 75 came back – plus the body of the victim – the DNA sweep will give them the identity of the killer.


Except that now I sit here on the sand it is clear it might not. The killer could have waded over, or swum, and then got away. So I walk to the northern point of East Hills and look out to sea. I need to create my own island – just like East Hills but a few miles off the coast, isolated by a lethal rip-tide, and inaccessible. It’s a fateful decision because it marks the real beginning of the story of Death’s Door – the moment when I left reality behind and started to build the fiction. I’ve just paused for a moment in writing this BLOG to go downstairs and answer the front door. It’s the postman with a box of copies of the new book – the first time I’ve seen or held it. It’s handsome. I put one copy up on the shelf, and put my CHRISTIE key fob on top.