Hachette Livre’s UK
publishing team understand the importance of the Crime Thriller Genre, as a key
constituent of their publishing portfolio. Contained within the Hachette UK
Fiction Operation, is the Little, Brown Group
which was originally part of AOL-Time Warner with many niche imprints such as
Sphere, Virago, Constable, Robinson, Atom, Piatkus, Corsair [among others]. Hachette’s
UK operation also contains the mighty Orion Publishing Group,
which incorporates the Weidenfeld & Nicolson Imprint.
Also contained within the
Hachette Livre UK conglomerate are six separate imprints, each ploughing their
individual niches: Hodder & Stoughton, Mulholland UK, Quercus, riverrun,
John Murray and of course the mighty Headline Publishing, home of my very dear
friend and publishing dynamo Martina Cole
[among others]. These imprints combine their Crime and Thriller publications,
pooling them for an excellent web resource entitled Crime Files, which can be
accessed Here
The Crime Files team, put on
an annual party, hosted on the fifth floor of Hachette UK’s corporate HQ
situated on the Thames Embankment in London. There is good natured rivalry
between Hachette and Penguin-Random House as to which publishing conglomerate has
the best roof-top view of London and the river Thames; with Penguin-Random
House’s vantage-point being along The
Strand, while Hachette’s is on the Northside of the Thames Embankment.
Here’s the view from
Hachette’s fifth-floor roof garden, taken at night –
The start of a calendar year
is a busy time for Publishers, Booksellers, Reviewers, Award-Judges, Bloggers and
Journalists. I was intrigued to see that the Crime Files Team of Hodder & Stoughton, Quercus, riverrun, Headline,
Mulholland, John Murray are the first crime-fiction publishing team announcing
their list of books and authors that will be coming to our physical, as well as
digital bookshelves in 2017.
The annual preview by these
five imprints, under the Crime-Files
umbrella comes in the form of a literary party / gathering entitled ‘Warming the Blood’. Click Here to see last year’s ‘Warming the Blood’ 2016
So the Shots Team of Mike Stotter, Ayo
Onatade and I joined our colleagues
from the London bookselling and reviewing community to head to the Thames
Embankment. As we all age, [for Time’s Arrow
goes only in one direction] it is good to spend time with colleagues from the
literary world, many who have become friends. Traversing Time’s Arrow is a good method of getting to know people, for many
become more than colleagues thanks to a shared passion for the darkest edge of
literature: Crime, Mystery & Thriller Fiction.
It was good to compare notes
with fellow literary enthusiasts such as Broadcaster
/ Journalist Mike Carlson, Crimesquad’s Chris
Simms, Kirstie Long, Jon Coates
from The Express and Jake Kerridge of The Telegraph, and many others.
The Marketing Teams from
these six niche imprints [and many of their Authors] were in attendance; with canapes,
beer and wine to assist lubricate the conversations; as we anticipate what is
coming in terms of publication schedules; and our own timing for reviewing.
Welcoming us to the event,
in an amusing faux Headmaster’s Assembly Roll Call, was the legendary Publisher
Nick Sayers of Hodder and Stoughton. We’ve known Nick for many years now; from
the days when he was Publishing Director at HarperCollins, before taking on
Directorship of Hodder and Stoughton. Nick is softly spoken and one of the
major Gentlemen of British
Publishing. I recall when Jamie Hodder-Williams
referred to him as "one of the best
fiction editors in the industry".
I took the opportunity to
thank Nick for managing to persuade former Journalist and acclaimed political
thriller novelist Gerald Seymour
to attend last year’s Theakston’s Old Peculier Crime-Writing
Festival in Harrogate; as I managed to get
my collection [of the Harry’s Game author’s work] personally signed.
Nick took the opportunity to
tell me about a new work he’s rather excited about publishing in May [as he was
aware of my avid interest in the work of Joseph Conrad, especially The Secret Agent].
The debut is entitled “The
Irregular: A Different Class of Spy”, introducing me to the writer H B Lyle. The
novel is set in London in 1909 and picks up the story of Wiggins, now an
ex-soldier earning a hard living as a bailiff on the streets of East London.
Once the leader of a group of urchins, known as the Baker Street Irregulars,
employed as spies by Sherlock Holmes, Wiggins is persuaded by Captain Vernon
Kell to join the battle against covert threats to the Empire by becoming an
agent in his newly-fledged Secret Service.
Sayers said: "I love the way Kell knows he can’t win
the secret war with officers trained on the playing fields of Eton, but he
still finds it hard to deal with Wiggins and his street smarts. This is the
start of a wonderful series, which will appeal to thriller fans and historical
fiction fans alike. And the Sherlock Holmes connection won’t do any harm. It
will make for fantastic television – but first it will be a very enjoyable book
in its own right. We are really looking forward to publication."
So here’s Nick Sayer’s
amusing welcome to ‘Warming the Blood’ 2017
>
There was an abundance of
authors in attendance. I enjoyed comparing notes with my fellow reviewers and
literary commentators, chatting to the publicity and marketing teams from the
imprints, and far too many to mention, apart from Kerry Hood,
who is one of the greatest publishing professionals I have had the good fortune
to have worked with. The conversation naturally drifts back to Stephen King,
whenever I have a drink with Kerry; as she handles PR and Publicity for Mr
King. She has looked after Mr King related-reading for more years than either
of us will admit publicly, without a lawyer present.
It was via King’s UK editor Philippa Pride who
also manages The Book Doctor,
a consultancy that provides editorial support for writers; that I got the gig
to write some of the Stephen King Reading Guides [downloadable .pdfs] for Book
Groups that were downloadable from www.stephenking.co.uk
as .pdfs. Kerry was kind enough to organise a party for Mr King, during which I
was shocked and stunned to find myself actually talking to a writer, who has
striated my life and challenged my thinking since my teenage [aka ‘clueless’]
years.
I always recall the frantic
work that Kerry and Philippa had organised, when Stephen King visited London several
years ago. I wrote about that experience for Jeff Pierce’s The Rap Sheet, Here as the memory which
was a decade ago, but remains as fresh in my mind as the first time I read
‘Carrie’, back when I was a clueless teenager, struggling to understand
reality. Though looking at the world today in Macro Geo-Political terms; I
remain as clueless as to what got us to where humanity is today; and more troubling,
is perhaps where we are headed;
especially if you’ve read King’s novel [or the
David Cronenberg film adaptation] - The
Dead Zone,
when taken in context to the upcoming
US Regime Change which is almost upon us, as many of us fear Greg Stillson.
I chatted with Kerry, yet
again about how much I loved King’s last collection The Bazaar of Bad Dreams, which she had sent me as an early review copy. This
startling collection is now currently available in paperback. I know I have
been boring anyone within earshot about my exuberant championing of such a
remarkable series of stories about aging, loss and what it means to live and to
die; for Time’s Arrow only points forward, and for purposes as yet unknown;
though some of us have suspicions.
King has in my opinion, and that of many others
hit second wind for his most recent work
has been in a word, remarkable. Though little had prepared me for the sheer
thought provoking quality of the stories contained within The Bazaar of Bad Dreams. This collection struck a chord with me, as King focuses
on the effects of age, with dark reflections using fiction with the motif ‘that there are
worlds other than these’.
I wrote at the time when
evaluating this extraordinary collection –
It
contains some new work, though a significant proportion of the stories here
have been available previously; but King has updated them for this collection
[as he indicates in his introduction].
There
is also pathos blended in with the horror, such as in ‘Batman
and Robin have an Altercation’, which has the theme of the
ravages of age upon a Son and his elderly Father whose mental faculties are
dimmed, but not totally gone.
The
short introductions by King where he prefaces the stories add welcome insight,
showing the story in context as well as inception.
Specific
favourites are the very droll ‘Drunken Fireworks’,
which started life as an audio novella, and is indeed a very engaging morality
tale that when placed into context, mirrors the inherent madness in humanity’s
need for the arms race. Though my favourite is the dark reflection of age and
the mysteries of death in ‘The Dune’ [originally published as a story in
the British literary journal Granta].
I
subsequently purchased the audio version of this collection from Audible, which
is remarkable, as King prefaces the stories vocally, but each is narrated by
professional actors and vocal artists, such as Craig Wasson; and these
narrations brings the stories to life [and death].
I have an avid
interest in cover design, especially some of the recent work coming from
Headline – Click Here for more thoughts on
crime / thriller fiction book jackets.
It was also great to bump into Peter May
again, as we had lunch earlier that day and toasted his success with Jon Riley’s riverrun imprint. It was also good to meet
Medical Student and Crime-writer Rob McCarthy, as I thoroughly enjoyed
his debut The Hollow Men. It came as little
surprise, after reading that work, that he too was an enthusiastic fan of
Season One of Nic Pizalatto’s TRUE DETECTIVE, an HBO 8-episode mini-
series that had captivated me, and turned me into an obsessive Thomas Ligotti reader.
And another of Jon Riley’s riverrun authors
that I was delighted to meet up with again was William
Shaw. Jon
had introduced me last year mentioning his novel The Birdwatcher, which is a remarkable
narrative. We reminisced about last year’s Bouchercon which took place in New Orleans, Louisiana and the breakfast meeting
we shared. I wear my New Orleans Mardi Gras beads, to remind myself of that wonderful time,
thanks to prolific best-selling Heather Graham, Connie Perry and her Bouchercon
team; besides the beads add much welcome colour to the darkness that pervades
much of our reality, and my own thinking.
One of the many great times at Bouchercon New
Orleans, was the Saturday Night Rock and Roll Show, hosted by the New
Orleans’ House of Blues, which featured some remarkable jam sessions such as –
Mark Billingham, Doug Johnstone and
Stuart Neville
And direct from Bloody Scotland - The Slice Girls, which featured British
writers AK Benedict, Steph
Broadribb,
Susi Holliday and the American writers Louise Voss, Alexandra
Sokoloff & Harley
Jane Kozak.
And of course, I was delighted to watch Heather
Graham
and her Band perform one of my favourite songs from the late Leonard Cohen
As ever I digress; for New Orleans has that
effect on anyone who has been to this strange and surreal American city; for even
when you leave NOLA - remember The French Quarter stays with you, as does a Bouchercon event.
So with my mind back to London, after a
cognitive digression on days now passed; It was good to see crime-writer Laura Wilson, and her editor, the
renowned Jane Wood; we discussed much, including the work of Philip Kerr [another of her authors]
as many of us are in awe of his Historical Bernie Gunther novels.
As ever Mike Carlson got talking about our
mutual love of Philip K Dick, and how the current
world appears to resemble his writing, frighteningly. Then again, Mike and I share liberal
sensibilities when it comes to political governance, though we rarely share
recipes for Lentil Broth or sing Kumbya, I hasten to add.
There were far too many authors in attendance
to mention; though I was looking forward to meeting the enigmatic JP Delaney,
as I had an early read last year of a remarkable thriller ‘The Girl Before’, which is due out on at the end of January from Quercus Publishing.
I had unfortunately missed Delaney [as he had
to leave the party early]; as I wanted to congratulate him on this remarkable
thriller ‘The Girl Before’.
I had initially groaned when I started reading
it, due to the now ubiquitous ‘Girl’ in
the title which many of us have sighed about its use in titles that commenced
with The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, Gone Girl, The Girl with all the
Gifts, Girl on a Train et. al. However, within a
few pages I was locked into Delaney’s dark tale.
The late Stieg Larsson has much to answer for, I guess changing the direction of the crime / thriller genre, both in novels and film too.
The late Stieg Larsson has much to answer for, I guess changing the direction of the crime / thriller genre, both in novels and film too.
I had initially thought JP Delaney was a female writer, scribbling under a pseudonym; though I have since discovered who JP Delaney really is. In fact I discovered to my amusement that I actually interviewed him, over a decade ago at Crimescene 2003; when he was published by the Transworld imprint of Random House UK.
If you Click Here from my report of
Crimescene 2003, you might discover who J P Delaney really is, by reading
through the author interviews contained within; but in case you think JP
Delaney is in fact my very dear and old friend Martina Cole, I would remind you that
J P Delaney is a male author, and another clue, JP Delaney is not Walter Mosely.
I would also advise that global rights for ‘The Girl Before’
have been sold, as well as a film option from Ron Howard, in Hollywood, and it comes
highly recommended, trust me. Remember it was indeed Quercus Publishing [via
Christopher MacLehose] who discovered this bloke.
So after a most enjoyable day, lunching
with Peter May, thanks to Sophie Ransom, Quercus
Publishing and riverrrun’s Jon Riley, followed by Karen Sullian’s launch of Rupture
by Ragnar Jonasson hosted by David Headley’s Goldsboro
Books and the Warming The Blood party, it was time to say my farewells thanking
the Crimefiles team, Kerry Hood and Nick Sayers for hosting a lively gathering
of Bibliophiles. The only regrets being
I had to miss Angela
Clarke’s launch for ‘Watch Me’ in Piccadilly, as well
as Steph
Broadribb’s Deep Down Dead launch, as I had more diary Clashes than Joe Strummer.
So now we’ll need to evaluate what’s in store for
2017 from the other British Publishing Houses, such as Hachette’s Little Brown
and Orion Publishing divisions; as well as Penguin Random House, Faber and
Faber, HarperCollins, Bloomsbury and Macmillan - as well as other Publishers, especially
the thriving independent sector.
Good Night after what I would term a Top Biff day in London; and Happy Reading as we all need distraction from what
may follow with the imminent regime change in North America.
The world would be a much nicer place, if more people switched off their TV sets, and read novels, especially dark fiction, for it gives narrative contrast against
the surreal backdrop that appears to be our reality; and helps develop critical thinking and empathy towards others - as the ability to think with logic, as opposed to prejudice is vital, for in our World, we see truth and lies becoming intertwined, by some within our ranks, who have an agenda to forward.
I draw comfort from the words of Dr
Hannibal Lecter, of Johns Hopkins, Baltimore when I view our current reality;
contrasted against the fictional world in Crime, Mystery & Thriller Writing
“I collect church collapses, recreationally.
Did you see the recent one in Sicily? Marvellous! The facade fell on sixty-five
grandmothers at a special mass. Was that evil? If so, who did it? If he's up
there, he just loves it, Officer Starling. Typhoid and Swans - it all comes from the same place.”
Ali Karim, London
January 2017
Message Ends
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