Sunday, 17 May 2026

A River Red With Blood: John Connolly talks to John Parker



Few contemporary crime writers have blended noir, horror and literary fiction as successfully as John Connolly. Born in Dublin in 1968, Connolly first worked as a journalist for The Irish Times before turning to fiction, and he quickly established himself as one of the most distinctive voices in modern crime writing. His debut novel, Every Dead Thing, introduced readers to private investigator Charlie Parker. It became an international success and earned Connolly the distinction of becoming the first non-American writer to win the prestigious Shamus Award. From there everything has been on an upward curve.

We at Shots have been following his trajectory for many years and we are always thrilled to receive answers to questions that we pose to him. He is a man who is constantly travelling (he has recently been in Northern Ireland, for example and is off to Madrid, Spain in due course) but he took a little time off to talk to us about his own future and that of Charlie Parker, “scourge of evil, last hope of the lost¨.

I reviewed his latest work A River Red With Blood, which opens with

17-year-old Scott Theriault, a “problem child” who was consigned to the Spero School (a behavioural-facility) is found dead in the river Kennebec, drowned but with a broken right leg, suggesting a bad fall. Private investigator, Charlie Parker is asked to look into it as the boy’s father, Ward Vose, himself incarcerated in Maine State Prison, does not believe it was an accident.

Read the Shots Magazine’s full review HERE


John Parker: Congratulations on the publication of another Parker novel. I really enjoyed it.   

John Connolly: That’s much appreciated, thank you.

J Parker: The Spero School was probably inspired by the infamous Élan School in Poland, Maine where Moxie Castin passed part of his youth. Was that a story you knew about and had been saving for later or did you learn of it relatively recently?  Did you visit the actual site?

J Connolly: No, the story preceded any research I did for it. I just knew that I wanted to begin with an imprisoned father trying to find out how his son died, and I’d follow the story from there. But as usual, no matter how odd an idea I come up with, someone in Maine has often done something odder, and the existence of the Élan schools gave a certain historical resonance to the book. I didn’t visit any of the original sites because they didn’t really have anything to do with the story. Mostly, I was trying to capture a sense of a very particular time of year in Maine, namely that limbo period between fall and winter in the Kennebec valley.

 J Parker: The “nocturnal raids” to bring the boys to Spero conjure up a picture of the ICE raids that we have been observing in recent months. I imagine that was no coincidence? 

J Connolly: Actually, it may be. The book does reference the crackdowns in the state, but I think the idea of kids being snatched from their beds in the dead of night with parental consent is horrible enough without having to link it to immigration agents.

J Parker: There definitely seems to be a progression towards a conclusion to the Parker stories. Do you have it all planned out now? Or is it too early?  At the beginning of the denouement in Part VI , you quote 15:10 of The Book of Enoch and, having dipped into said book, I am pretty convinced I know where it is going. Of course, you are not going to tell me or (almost) anyone but am I on the right track?


J Connolly: I think Parker’s story deserves a conclusion. I know the destination, including the title of the last book in the sequence and the elements of the final chapters, but not the route that will take me there. For the next few years, I think Parker novels will appear biennially, but that may change. I have no shortage of ideas, but it may be that the series has assumed a momentum of its own. 

J Parker: Ok, the “almost anyone” I refer to is the TV company that are interested in the Parker property. In a recent interview for an Irish newspaper, you said that they wanted to know how it all ends before committing to anything. It’s only been a week or two but is there any more news?    


J Connolly :….…At the moment I can reveal that Blumhouse TV is the Production Company, and Amazon the streaming service. At the moment, the producers are looking for a showrunner, and that person will be responsible for scripting a pilot episode and an outline of the first season, with a more general overview of the seasons that might follow. Should all that meet with the approval of Blumhouse and Amazon, everything would then proceed to casting. But, you know, I’m not counting my chickens. If it happens, that would be lovely, and if it doesn’t, I’ve had some interesting conversations with some smart, decent TV people.

J Parker: In the same interview, you were very disparaging about social media and the virtual cesspool it has largely become (Twitter/X, in particular). Also mobile phones as “addiction machines”.  What is your feeling about A.I.? Is there anything positive to say about it? Would you use it for anything? 

J Connolly: I don’t think most readers will want to read AI-generated novels, though there will be “writers”, and I use the term very advisedly, who will see an opportunity to generate content without any effort in the hope of making some easy money. In reality, they’ll just add to the background noise. We may, I think, soon reach a point where mainstream publishers include a note on the covers of books advising that it has been written by a person, not generated by AI. Some interesting hybrids may emerge, but in general, as a reader, I would prefer to read a book, watch a film, or listen to music that has been created by another human being; and I think the effort and labour that we put into creating art is part of the pleasure of it. But I accept that I may be proved wrong.

J Parker: Platforms like Prime Video, Netflix and the amazing Filmin in Spain (a quick plug for my favourite) seem to be ever-expanding? Do you indulge and do you have any recommendations of things that you have liked? 

J Connolly: I seem to have reached an age where I’m filling in the gaps in my knowledge, so a lot of what I watch, read, and listen to is older material. (I sometimes feel a bit overwhelmed by the new.) Even my radio show has both feet in the past…


 J Parker: What can you tell us about your next publication, The Castle? And will the next Parker be out in 2028? 

J Connolly: The Castle is set in Connecticut, against the backdrop of the Watergate hearings, and concerns a gated community that begins to suspect it is under attack, but why, and by whom, no one seems to know. On one level, it’s about what happens when people lose faith in the system, but it’s mostly about family secrets. I haven’t started the new Parker yet. At the moment, I’m writing a historical novel, and last year I finished a short novel set in England before the outbreak of the First World War. That’s a mystery novel. But I’m not quite sure how either of those will fit into the publishing schedule, if they ever do. 

J Parker: The question I always ask you; what are you reading these days? 

J Connolly: I’m about to start a Bernard Cornwell ‘Sharpe’ novel as a comfort read. I have a couple of proofs waiting to be read, mostly first novels, but generally I seem to be wading through research books for the historical novel. I have a hankering to try to finish Middlemarch at last. I’ve tried and failed twice before. Third time may be the charm…

Shots Magazine would like to thank Laura Sherlock and Hodder and Stoughton Publishing for organising this interview and to John Parker of our Spanish Office.

More information available HERE

And previous reviews and interviews are archived HERE

A Spanish Language introduction to the Charlie Parker Series HERE



No comments: