The Telegraph's Crime-Fiction Critic Jake Kerridge and Shots Editor Mike Stotter with Peter May in London
So as we
recently surveyed what Quercus
Publishing have in store for 2015, the first one off the block is Peter May’s
latest thriller, Runaway. Unlike last year’s Award Winning ENTRY
ISLAND – this is a deeply personal tale, and fictionalized by May -
exploring this writer’s fascination with the 1960’s London Music scene, and an
echo to the future, which again proves the past is never ever forgotten.
Glasgow, 1965 Jack Mackay dares not imagine a
life of predictability and routine. The
headstrong seventeen year old has one thing on his mind – London – and
successfully convinces his four friends, and fellow band mates, to join him in
abandoning their lives to pursue their goal of musical stardom.
Glasgow, 2015. Jack
MacKay dares not look back on a life of failure and mediocrity. The heavy-hearted sixty-seven year old is haunted by the
cruel fate that befell him and his friends some fifty years before, and how he
did and did not act when it mattered most – a memory he has run from all his
adult life. London, 2015 A man lies dead in a bedsit. His killer looks on, remorseless.
What started with five teenagers five decades before will now
be finished. Runaway is by Peter May and is a tense
nostalgic crime thriller spanning a half-century of friendships solidified and
severed, passions ignited and extinguished; and set against the background of
two unique and contrasting cities at two unique and contrasting periods of
recent history. Runaway is
due to be published in January 2015.
So as Runaway
is based upon an early incident in the author’s career, Peter kindly provided
Shots readers, a few photographs to provide the narrative some context.
This
was our first group, "The Aristokrats". I think we were about
thirteen here, and taking part in a Lewis's/Glasgow Evening Times talent
contest in which we came in third. I'm on the left, Stephen on the right.
All of us in this pic, except for the drummer, were the idiots who ran
off to London. The bass player was Ian Looker, who now lives in Bristol.
We were eleven or twelve here. Backstage
before playing at a school concert.
The two of us pioneering short haircuts,
taken in the art department, probably in 5th year. We'd both had long
hair, and I can remember the collective intake of breath at school assembly the
morning we turned up with our heads cropped!
This was taken when the original band got
together for a reunion concert in France in 2002. We were pioneering even
shorter haircuts then!
To read more
about Peter’s adventures in London click here
So after
lunch with some of London’s literary critics, we retreated to a quiet bar so I
could discover a little about what we have in store with RUNAWAY -
Ali
So after being awarded a Dagger earlier
this year for ENTRY ISLAND, what’s the year been like for Peter May?
Peter 2014
has been an extraordinary year for me.
Entry Island was a Top 3 bestseller in the UK, Top 2 in France, and the
first three Enzo books, published in paperback for the first time in the UK,
have sold phenomenally well, the latest getting into the Top 20. The first two books of the trilogy have now
been published in the US and are also selling well. I came back from a US tour in September to
learn that Entry Island had won the Deanson’s Scottish Crime Novel of the Year,
before going on to win the Best Read Dagger at the Specsavers Crime and
Thriller Awards. I also toured in
France, the UK and Central Europe, and managed to chalk up 35 flights! And as if that wasn’t enough I also wrote
another book - “Runaway”. So now, not
unnaturally, I’m exhausted!
Ali And how do you feel about the reception
for ENTRY ISLAND, being such an interesting slice of history as well as a
gripping read [as it was reviewed widely]?
Peter Writing
“Entry Island” felt like quite a risk at the time, because I was definitely
pushing the boundaries of the crime genre, and there was always a danger that
it would be seen as historical fiction, or even romance. Fortunately, readers and reviewers saw it in
the context that I hoped they would - as a contemporary crime story with its
roots buried deep in history.
Ali
And we see your backlist coming back
into print, so did you do any tinkering before re-publication of your older
work?
Peter Actually,
all of the Enzo books were written between books one and two of the trilogy, so
they didn’t feel like old books to me.
And since the stories were set in very specific years, there was no
question of updating them. But I very
carefully proof read them to excise the Americanisms they contained for first
publication in the US.
Ali
And tell us a little about your new work
“Runaway” as it is something of a departure, something personal, something
troubling.
Peter “Runaway”
was certainly a departure from my recent work and, again, part of that desire
to push at the boundaries of my genre.
It is far more autobiographical than anything I have written before,
since it was very much based on a series of events that took place in my
teenage years. It became a very personal
odyssey through my past - being expelled from school, running away from Glasgow
to London with my fellow band members when I had barely turned seventeen,
living rough on the streets of the Captial and busking in the subways.
Ali
And what was it like fictionalising the
past? And did you tell your friends about what you were up to in “Runaway”, and
if so, how did they react?
Peter It
was actually great fun taking the bones of a true story and fleshing them out
with fiction, particularly as I was able to draw so much on my own memories and
feelings and family background. And
researching 1965, which is when the boys run away in the book, was immensely
enjoyable - not only a trip down memory lane, but a voyage of discovery. The only one of my friends that I told about
the book was my best friend, Stephen Penn, who ran away with me back in the
sixties, and with whom I returned to Glasgow, having split up with the
others. He was excited to read it - the
first person to do so (apart from my wife), and loved all the memories it
brought back. He was desperate to know
which character was him - but in fact all the characters were really composites
of the many friends that I played in bands with in my youth.
Ali
So did you know what the journey the
friends were embarking upon, and plot heavily, or did your hitch-hike on the
journey with the muse?
Peter I
always plot meticulously before writing, so in terms of storyline I knew
exactly where I was going. But, then, my
process takes place in two parts - the storylining and the writing (something I
brought with me from my time as a screenwriter). While some writers start on page one and go
with the muse throughout the book, I reserve that for the first of my
processes, leaving the second to give the story and characters density.
Ali
There quite a few twists, and surprises
for the reader in “Runaway”, so without spoiling the twists, can you let us
know if they were plotted ahead of time, or did they surprise you?
Peter I
plot everything in advance. But, of
course, things change and evolve in the process of the writing, and lots of
things emerged from the dark recesses of my memory to put sometimes unexpected
flesh on the bones of my story. Writing
is always like a journey - even although you have plotted your route in
advance, you can never predict what will be waiting for you round the next
corner.
Ali
So what was it like going back in time
in your memory, and what advice would the grown-up Peter May say to his teenage
self if he had a time machine?
Peter Writing
this book was an emotional rollercoaster for me. I was amazed at how much I remembered from
back then, details and emotions. They
were exciting days for me as a teenager, playing in bands, touring all over
Scotland and the North of England in a group called The Harlem Shuffle, which
was billed as Scotland’s top soul band.
I made mistakes, of course. Did
things I regretted, made choices that Peter May today would certainly advise
against. But looking back, I don’t think
I would change a thing - unlike some of the characters in the book whose lives
are blighted by disillusion and regret.
Ali
And what’s this about an album called
“Runaway”? by Penn and May
Peter Stephen
Penn and I met when we started primary school together, aged four. We did everything together as kids, including
start our first band, and of course run away to London together. But as adults we went our separate ways - he
to London, where along with his wife he established the top UK child modelling
and acting agency, Scallywags. He is now
retired and lives full time in the south of Spain, and last year when I spent
the winter down there writing “Runaway”, we wrote and recorded an album of
songs that told the story of our lives.
And, of course, one of the seminal events in our lives was running away from
home. Hence the song, “Runaway”, which
became the title song of the album. It’s
now available as a download from iTunes, and all the songs, and the videos that
go with them, can been heard (and seen) on our website, www.pennandmay.com.
Ali
So tell us about the musical side of
your life?
Peter If
I hadn’t been a writer, what I would most have wanted to be in this world is a
musician. Music was my life as a
teenager and young man. I played in many
bands, intially guitar, then keyboards and latterly bass guitar and flute. But I understood my limitations, and
appreciated that there were so many better musicians around than me, so that
when I made my career choices, writing was the thing I was best at, and
probably most wanted to do. But I have
never lost my passion for music, and am currently finding renewed interest in
it through the writing of songs, which I have never really done before.
Ali
I’ve interviewed many writers, and been
surprised how many are musicians as well, one writer mentioned the linkage
between music and writing, and that rhythm is important, be it in a lyric, or
narrative, would you agree?
Peter I
certainly would. I think that writing is
to a large extent about rhythm and lyricism in the narrative. I think you “feel” the writing in the same
way as you sense and respond to the dynamics of a melody. Poetry and music is the key, for me, to good
writing. So the links between all three
seems clear, and I am not surprised that so many writers are also musicians.
Ali
So in Runaway, you tell the tale of the
three old friends re-visiting the past and seeing the significance of what they
discover and how it relates to their present and future. The theme of how the
past impacts the future is evident in much of your work, like The Black House
[and others], so why does the linkage in the deeds of the past interest you so
much?
Peter It’s
true that the past-present coaxial is a theme I have returned to often in my
recent work, I think largely because it is such a universal experience - the
way those things we have done in the past, and the choices we have made, so
shape our present and future. It is
possibly also the process of growing older that has made me more aware of that
relationship between past and present.
But we are all affected by it, and regret is such a common human
experience, that there is hardly anybody who can’t identify with that
particular emotion - often in a very bittersweet way.
Ali
So with Runaway launching in January,
can you let us now if you are planning a tour, like the extensive one for Entry
Island, and where will details be posted?
Peter Yes,
I am planning a major two-week tour of the UK in the second half of January,
taking in events in London and Scotland, along with radio and press interviews
up and down the country. Details will be
posted on my Facebook author page - https://www.facebook.com/petermayauthor
- as well as on Twitter and various print magazines and blog sites, and of
course the website of my publisher, Quercus.
Ali
As an expat-Scotsman living in France,
can you tell how you felt about the recent Scottish Independence referendum,
and where did your allegiance lie?
Peter I
followed the referendum debate very closely, mainly through social media and
the internet. I gave several interviews
on the subject to the French press, as well as participating in a
coast-to-coast political radio show in the US, dedicated to the subject. I was very much in favour of independence,
not in any kind of anti-English sense, but from the perspective of creating a
political structure that truly reflected the views of the voters - which the
present set-up patently fails to do for most Scots. Although I also believe the same can be said
for many regions of England, and I am very much in favour of a federal solution
to a political problem that is denying democracy and creating apathy in the
population for the whole political process.
Ali
You have always been big into social
media / internet – so how important is online visibility in these tough days
for publishing?
Peter I
think a strong internet presence is crucial for writers and the future of
publishing. Mediums like Twitter have
become the new “word of mouth”, which has always been the best way of selling
books. It’s something that happens more
or less spontaneously, and is very hard to manipulate or predict. But you have to be part of it to benefit from
it.
Ali But how do you manage your time, as you need
to write as well?
Peter Managing
your time as a writer these days is very difficult. The demands of promotion are huge, and I find
that anything up to two-thirds of my year is now taken up with that
pursuit. So it’s very important to set
writing time aside and simply shut the door on the world while you’re doing it.
Ali
So I assume you have little time for
freelance Journalism then? Do you miss your days as a journalist?
Peter I
don’t miss those days at all. I had an
absolute ball as a journalist during the seventies, which was an exciting time
of huge change and transition in Britain.
It was exhilarating and educational, but in the final event it wasn’t
really what I wanted to do. And since
then I have been very lucky in being able to pursue my career as a fiction
writer, both in television and in books.
Ali
And what have you read recently that has
fired your imagination?
Peter The
best book I read in 2014 was William
Kent Krueger’s “Ordinary Grace”.
I’ve always admired his writing, but this book was a great novel, as
well as a crime book that took the genre to a new level.
Ali
And what’s next for Peter May?
Peter 2015
looks like being another very busy year.
It will kick off with my launch tour of “Runaway”, followed by a
research trip to the Hebrides, after which I will be locking the doors on the
world to write my new novel - and, yes, it’s a return to the Hebrides, though
not to the characters of the Lewis Trilogy.
I will have another US tour in the autumn, after which I will be writing
the final book in the Enzo Files.
Ali
Thank you for your time
Thanks to Quercus Publishing we have one limited
edition proof copy of RUNAWAY
[limited to 300 copies] signed by Peter May to give away in an exclusive competition.
[limited to 300 copies] signed by Peter May to give away in an exclusive competition.
Which one of these titles is not one of Peter May’s
Black House Trilogy
[a] The Black House
[b] The Draughtsmen
[d] The Lewis Man
[e] The Chessmen
Send your answer in an email to shotscomp@yahoo.co.uk marking the subject line “PETER MAY RUNAWAY” and please include a postal address.
Closing date for entries is Sunday 11th January
2015
Terms and conditions for the Peter May Runaway Competition
Closing date
for entries is Sunday 11th January 201512:00:00 AM
All correct
entries will be entered into a prize draw and the first correct answer picked
at random on 11 / 1 / 2015 will be declared the winner of the book.
The winner
will be notified by email within 14 days of the promotion closing date and is
required to accept their prize by email or phone call within 14 days of
notification.
In the event
of non-acceptance within the specified period, the promoter reserves the right
to reallocate the prize to the next randomly drawn correct and valid entry.
The winner
will be notified within 28 days of the closing date. No responsibility can be
accepted for lost or misplaced entries
The prize is
non-transferable and there is no cash alternative
Only one
entry per person
Incorrect or
illegible answers or entries received after the entry date will not be entered
into the prize draw
The judges
decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into
Unfortunately
geographical restrictions apply, with entries only accepted from the UK and Southern
Ireland
1 comment:
Great post! I love the premise of this novel, and I haven't read anything by this author yet. I'm adding it to my list as we speak. :-)
Post a Comment