I’ve enjoyed Simon Kernick’s crime
and thrillers for over a decade now, being energized by his early police
procedurals featuring corrupt cop [turned hit-man] Dennis Milne. Simon debuted
with ‘The
Business of Dying’ in 1991, and followed up his furious London-based police
action with The
Murder Exchange, A Good Day to Die
and The
Crime Trade. I always wonder where the time went, as I recall vividly going
to my first Bouchercon
in 2003 with Simon in Las Vegas. We also went, with Sarah Weinman to the
very first Harrogate
crime writing festival in the same year. We found time to record a lengthy
interview with Paul
Johnston at the last Dead-on-Deansgate
Crime Convention, meet up and interviewed
Lawrence Block when he was presented with the Diamond Dagger Award by the
British Crime Writers Association. We even went to a waste oil recycling plant
in the East End of London. Our visit to this industrial plant was integral to the
plot of one of his novels. During the visit, the hard-man of crime fiction felt
somewhat queasy due to the pervading stench produced in the chemical process.
Simon changed writing direction
radically in 2007 turning his hand away from the police procedural into
thriller territory, with Relentless, a
novel printed on solidified adrenaline. It was greeted to great acclaim winning
the Richard and Judy Award in 2007, other winners in the crime and thriller
category have been R J Ellory [A
Quiet Belief in Angels], Linwood Barclay [No Time for Goodbye], Gregg
Hurwitz [You’re Next] among others. The Richard and Judy Award in the UK is akin to
the Oprah Winfrey Book Club awards.
So while at Harrogate
earlier this year I got talking to Simon asking when would his thrillers
finally surface in US; as several of my American colleagues were asking when
they could access these titles, so I asked Simon to let us know -
Relentless, which is released on ebook in the US on
September 18th at a special introductory price of $2.99, is my fifth novel, and
my first one published in the States for seven years. I’ve recently signed a
four book deal with Simon & Schuster, which will see Relentless and The
Last Ten Seconds out in ebook this year, before my latest, Siege, is released
in paperback next spring.
And I’ve got to say, after all this time it’s good to
be back. I’ve still got a lot of readers and friends in the US from the
time when my early books were published, and I’m looking forward to renewing
acquaintances. I’ve also had a huge amount of encouragement from American
writers like Harlan
Coben and Lee
Child, who’ve said some really nice things about my work, so I’m hoping to
reach a lot more people with the books this time round.
Relentless is a good great one to be starting with
too, as it was my breakout book. To date it’s sold over 400,000 copies in the UK , and 300,000
more copies overseas. It’s a high-octane, twisting and turning, thriller about
an ordinary suburban man, Tom Meron, who suddenly finds himself on the run from
a group of ruthless killers. With his wife missing, and wanted for murder, Tom
only has hours to find out why he’s being targeted before his luck runs out.
Take a look at it. I promise you won’t be
disappointed.
Following Relentless, he
continued his thriller theme with Severed
which was based upon a nightmare Kernick suffered, which he detailed here.
Long known for his late nights and drinking, one night when Mike Stotter , Micheal
Marshall, Simon Kernick and I were drinking late at the opening party on Thursday
at Crimefest 2008; at 4am Friday Morning, the Shots Editor-in–Chief Mike Stotter asked if [when Simon had the nightmare
that lead to the plot of Relentless] he had wet his bed? We all roared
laughing, especially Simon, as he has very good sense of humour, something he
deploys to bring relief to the unbearable tension he ratchets up in this
thriller novels.
Though full of life and fun, Simon Kernick takes his writing
very seriously, and is on the board at The Crime Writers Association and always
working hard promoting literacy.
I urge you to explore the
threatening world of Simon Kernick’s thrillers now that they are available
in the US in eBook editions.
More information is available
here
Top Photo of Richard and Judy Award Winners Linwood
Barclay and Simon Kernick at Theakston’s Crime Writing Festival Harrogate © 2011 A Karim
Bottom Photo of Simon Kernick being interviewed by ITV3 at Theakston's Old Peculiar Crime Writing Festival 2011
No comments:
Post a Comment