A
reader’ history of the boom in British thrillers 1953-1975 (roughly, Casino Royale to The Eagle Has Landed), a period when
Britain lost an Empire, was demoted in terms of global power and status and was
economically crippled by debt yet its fictional spies, secret agents, soldiers,
sailors and even (occasionally) journalists saved the world on a regular basis.
British
thriller writers, from Ian Fleming and Alistair MacLean in the 1950s through
Desmond Bagley, Dick Francis, Len Deighton and John Le Carré in the 1960s, to
Frederick Forsyth and Jack Higgins in the 1970s, dominated the bestseller
lists, not just in Britain, but internationally.
The
spread of eye-catching mass market paperbacks in the 1960s also boosted the
careers of already-establish thriller writers (such as Hammond Innes and Victor
Canning) but also encouraged new entrants into the field – a large proportion
of them coming from the military and/or journalism and almost all of them male.
Many
have been labelled ‘boys’ books’ written by men who probably never grew up, but
as Mike Ripley recounts, the thrillers of this period provided the teenage (male)
reader with adventure and escapism, usually in exotic foreign settings, or as
Lee Child puts it in his Foreword: “the
thrill of immersion in a fast and gaudy world.”
In Not Single Spies, award-winning comedy
crime writer and crime fiction critic Mike Ripley examines the rise of the
thriller from the austere 1950s through the boom time of the Swinging Sixties
and early 1970s, examining some 150 British authors (plus a few notable South Africans).
Many flourished only briefly, in the wake of the success of the James Bond
films after 1962; some were ground-breaking and wrote novels now rightly
regarded as classics of the genre; some authors became national treasures, some
became synonymous with parts of the genre (as Graham Greene and Eric Ambler of
an earlier generation had done); many were disgracefully forgotten, many
probably rightly so.
The genesis
of Not Single Spies dates
from 2010 when Mike Ripley was asked to develop a creative crime
writing class for Cambridge University’s Institute of Continuing
Education and through his work as consultant editor for the Top Notch
Thrillers imprint, which has reissued over 50 British thrillers ‘which did not
deserve to be forgotten’. In his researches he drew on many of the personal
contacts he has made in over 25 years as a crime writer and reviewer as well as
25 years before that as an avid thriller reader.
He
met and discussed thrillers with many of the authors mentioned in the book,
including Len Deighton (to whom the book is dedicated), Anthony Price, Dick
Francis, Duncan Kyle, Alan Williams, Gavin Lyall, Lionel Davidson and Brian
Callison, and has made contact with the children and families of others, such
as Adam Hall, Geoffrey Household, John Gardner and Berkely Mather.
Not Single Spies attempts to define
the term ‘thriller’ and show how British writers, working very much in the
shadow of World War II, came to dominate the field of adventure thrillers and the two types of spy story – spy fantasy (as epitomised by Ian
Fleming’s James Bond books and then films) and the more realistic spy fiction created by Len
Deighton, John Le Carré and Ted Allbeury, plus the many variations (and
imitators) in between.
When
today’s leading thriller writer Lee Child (who is of the same reading
generation as the author) was approached to write the Foreword to Not Single Spies, he said he knew: ‘It
would be a book I would want to read – maybe even pay for!’
********
MIKE
RIPLEY is the author of 21 crime novels, was a scriptwriter on the BBC’s
“Lovejoy” series and the crime fiction critic for the Sunday and then Daily
Telegraph (1989-2000) and the Birmingham Post (2000-2008) during which time he
reviewed 978 crime novels. For more than ten years he has written the Getting Away With Murder column on www.shotsmag.co.uk and has
appeared at innumerable crime fiction conventions and literary festivals. A
former journalist and Director of Public Relations in the brewing industry, his
obligatory mid-life crisis resulted in him becoming a field archaeologist,
enabling him to claim that he was one of the few crime writers who really did
trip over bodies on a regular basis. He is currently continuing the adventures
of Albert Campion, the ‘Golden Age’ fictional detective created by the late
Margery Allingham.
ADVANCE INFORMATION:
Not Single Spies
AUTHOR:
Mike Ripley
FOREWORD:
Lee Child
PUBLISHER:
Harper Collins
DATE:
18 May 2017
*[NB:
the illustrations here are purely for decorative purposes and will not be the
ones to appear in the finished book.]
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