Today’s guest blog is by author Glen Erik
Hamilton whose debut novel Past Crimes
has received rave reviews from such authors as Lee Child, Greg Hurwitz and J A
Jance. Past Crimes is the first in a series.
I was a good kid, mostly. No arrests, no convictions. Not even a whole lot of activity that might
have led to either of those consequences, had I been caught doing whatever it
was that I wasn’t supposed to be doing.
I credit my parents for instilling reasonable morals and a healthy fear
of the cost to be paid, had I transgressed in a big way.
But boy oh boy, was the urge there. A textbook case of Nurture vs. Nature,
perhaps.
Van Shaw, the lead character of PAST CRIMES, had a very different
upbringing. Raised from a young age by
his grandfather Dono, a professional thief, Van had little fear of
consequences. He and Dono would steal
everything not nailed down and return with a claw hammer for the rest.
As you might guess, I had a lot of fun exploring
Van’s morally skewed point of view. So
much fun, in fact, that I wanted to write it first-hand. Van’s early adventures could have simply been
anecdotes told by the present-day Van, a veteran Army Ranger who rejected the
criminal life ten years ago. He enlisted
to serve his country, finding new purpose and a moral center. But I
wanted to see the world through the younger apprentice thief’s eyes. I wanted to get to know Dono, learn what Van
learned, and yes, take his lumps when those were dished out.
Which led to one of the most enjoyable parts of
writing PAST CRIMES for me – creating
chapters like short stories, interwoven within the main action of the thriller. Chapters, which show Van at age nine, age
eleven, age fourteen, and so on. Far
from just a lark or writing exercise, those became a way to show how Van’s
attitudes had grown and changed. When
it comes time for the young criminal to turn over that new – and heavy, and
razor-edged – leaf, we understand why it must be done.
That doesn’t mean the leaf will stay turned, however. As Van returns to his hometown and is forced
to delve into that world of crooks and schemes again, he might find that his old
sins were not so easily left behind.
Nor is young Van, I’ve discovered while writing the
second book in the series. As modern Van
scrambles to survive the dangers of today, his earlier self insists on telling
his own story, as a reflection on the present day. To boost a car and joyride through the
novel. Maybe to steal a scene here and
there, and crack open a theme to see what might be inside. He’s a young devil, inviting me to ride
shotgun.
And boy oh boy, is the urge there.
You can find
out more information about Glen Erik Hamilton on his website. You can also follow him on Twitter @GlenErikH and you can also find him on Facebook.
PAST CRIME by Glen Erik Hamilton is out now (Faber
& Faber, £12.99)
Past
Crimes –
Van Shaw was
raised to be a thief, but at eighteen he suddenly broke all ties to that life
and joined the military—abandoning his illicit past and the career-criminal
grandfather who taught him the trade. Now, after ten years of silence, his
grandfather has asked him to come home to Seattle. But when Van arrives, he
discovers his grandfather bleeding out on the floor from a gunshot to the head.
With a lifetime of tough history between him and the old man, Van knows he's
the main suspect. The only way he can clear
his name is to go back to the world he'd sworn to leave behind. Tapping into
his criminal skills, he begins to hunt the shooter and uncover what drove his
grandfather to reach out after so long. But in a violent, high-stakes world
where right and wrong aren't defined by the law, Van finds that the past is all
too present . . . and that the secrets held by those closest to him are the
deadliest of all.
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