Sunday, 13 May 2012

Forthcoming books to look forward to from Orion


Inspector Christian Tell and his team are called to the scene of a double murder. University lecturer Anne-Marie Karpov lies dead in her home, alongside her student and lover, Henrik. The crime appears straightforward: Henrik's girlfriend Rebecca, a woman in therapy for her violent jealousy, had been spotted outside Karpov's flat, and her fingerprints are found on the door. But shortly afterwards, when Rebecca's flat is burgled in a seemingly unconnected attack, Tell begins to wonder whether she might be the victim in a larger game. It emerges that items on the Red List - artefacts raided from Iraqi museums - were found among Henrik's possessions. As the truth behind Anne-Marie and Henrik's past begins to emerge, the dead woman's ex-husband, Danish gangsters and Turkish black marketeers all come into the frame. Tell must unravel a web of hidden motives that spans continents, all while trying to salvage his stormy relationship with Seja. Babylon is by Camilla Ceder and is due to be published in August 2012.

May 1992, and after four LAPD officers were acquitted after the savage beating of Rodney King, Los Angeles is ablaze. As looting and burning take over the city, law and order are swept away in a tidal wave of violence. But under threat of their lives, homicide detectives like Harry Bosch are still stubbornly trying to do their job. With no effective police presence on the streets, murder just got a whole lot easier - and investigating them got a whole lot harder. Escorted by national guard soldiers from murder scene to murder scene, Harry and his colleagues are only able to do the bare minimum in terms of collecting evidence. And for Harry that's not enough. When he finds the body of a female journalist executed in an alley, he cannot accept that he will never be able to bring her killer to justice, and her tragedy starts to eat into his soul. But then, twenty years later, Harry finds himself working in the Open Unsolved Unit, and suddenly the past comes back to haunt him once again, in a way he could never have imagined.  The Black Box is by Michael Connelly and is due to be published in November 2012.
  
Gone in Seconds is the debut novel by A J Cross and is due to be published in July 2012. When the skeleton of a young woman is found near a West Midlands motorway, evidence suggests that it is that of teenager Molly James, who went missing five years ago.  Forensic psychologist Dr Kate Hanson and the Unsolved Crime Unit are called in to re-investigate Molly's case. The deeper they dig the dirtier the clues get, and when a second set of remains is unearthed Kate suspects they're looking for a Repeater: a killer who will adapt, grow and not stop until they are caught. Will Dr Hanson manage to unravel the tangle of clues that the killer has left behind before he has a chance to take another innocent victim?

Disaster strikes when a group of vicious pirates attack and kidnap a pregnant American woman off the coast of Somalia. To get her back before more blood is spilled, Sigma Force enlist the services of former army ranger Captain Tucker Wayne and his war dog, Kane. But what starts out as a straightforward rescue mission rapidly escalates into a deadly hostage situation when the team discovers that the abducted woman is none other than the president's daughter. Meanwhile, a firebomb in the US lays bare a horrifying experiment at a fertility clinic where women from around the world are being enslaved and forced to bear children by artificial means, and where a baby is born with an impossible abnormality - a triple helix of DNA. Commander Gray Pierce and Tucker Wayne must combine forces to uncover an ancient conspiracy and expose a dark truth hidden within our own genetic code. The answer lies in their mission to save the president's daughter and her unborn child, a child whose very existence raises an age-old question of immortality: if you could live for ever, would you choose to?  Bloodline is by James Rollins and is due to be published in August 2012.
  
DI Andrew Hicks thinks he knows all about murder. For Hicks, however horrific the act, the reasons behind killing are ultimately all too explicable. So when a woman is found bludgeoned to death, he suspects a crime of passion and attention focuses on her possessive ex-husband. But when a second body is found, similarly beaten, Hicks is forced to think again about his suspect: the second victim is a homeless man with no links to the other woman. When more murders take place in quick succession, Hicks realises he is dealing with a type of killer he has never faced before, one who fits nowhere within his logic. Fear spreads, as the police search for patterns and reasons where none appear to exist. Then the letters begin to arrive...As the death toll rises, the threat gets closer to home. To survive, Hicks must face not only a killer obsessed with randomness and chaos, but also the secret in his own past. If he is to stop the killings, he must confront the truth about himself and the fact that some murders begin in much darker places than he ever imagined.  Dark Room is by Steve Mosby and is due to be published in July 2012.

Stephen Killigan has been cold since the day he came to Cambridge as a junior lecturer. Something about the seven hundred years of history staining the stones of the university has given him a chill he can't shake. When he stumbles across the body of a missing beauty queen, he thinks he's found the reason. But when the police go to retrieve the body and find no trace, Killigan has found a problem - and a killer - that is the very opposite of reason. Killigan's unwitting entry into Jackamore Grass's sinister world will lead him on a trail of tattooists, philosophers, cadavers and scholars of a deadly beauty. As Killigan traces a path between our age and seventeenth century Cambridge, he must work out how a corpse can be found before someone goes missing, and whether he's at the edge of madness or an astonishing discovery. A fast-paced page-turner The Beauty of Murder is a speculative crime thriller that travels to the heart of gruesome series of crime by way of a city and a person that have far too many secrets written in blood.  The Beauty of Murder is by A K Benedict and is due to be published in November 2012.
  
Strictly No Flowers is by Graham Hurley and is due to be published in August 2012 as an e.pub only.  When writer Scott Plenty heads to France to research French  civilians who died at the hands of Bomber Command in WWII, he is set up in a drugs bust and wakes in prison to find that the French dealers think he’s invading their patch.  Scott’s search for the truth becomes a quest for survival.  But who set him up and why? And does Scott really want to know the truth about the sort of man he is?  Also by Graham Hurley and due to be published in December 2012 is Western Approaches. D/S Jimmy Suttle has finally tired of the relentless struggle against the rising tide of urban crime in Portsmouth. Surely a job in Major Crimes in the West Country will offer some respite? He finds a remote cottage nestled in a fold of Dartmoor and, with his wife and two year old daughter, heads West for what he is sure will be a saner existence. How wrong could he be? Soon he is investigating the murder of a long-distance rower in the small town of Exmouth. The man rowed in the same 5-man boat as a man who, two years before, dodged a murder charge when his wife went missing during a cross atlantic rowing challange. There had been tensions between the two. Has a killer killed again? As the job takes over, Lizzie, Suttle's wife, is increasingly unhappy about the move. Trying to juggle family life with her own new job on a local paper, isolated in a lonely cottage with a demanding toddler and struggling to make new friends, Lizzie thought the whole point of the move was that she and Suttle could at least see more of each other. As his marriage frays at the edges and his first investigation becomes mired Suttle begins to feel the hills around their cottage crowding in, the wind over the moors above ever chillier, the waters ever greyer. He really has reached land's end….

Manchester, 1992: Lauren Cawley disappears days before her second birthday, triggering a massive police hunt. But she is never found, leaving her parents bereft and James Lomax, the lead investigator who searched tirelessly for her, broken. Twenty years on, Lomax has finally retired, and his son Tom is scraping a living as a private investigator. Then Tom gets a mysterious phone call: Sara Eaton, heir to a massive fortune, has just watched her mother pass away. Moments before her death, Sara's mother whispered something to her, but all that Sara hears is a name: Lomax. Two days before Sara turns twenty-one, Tom Lomax is flown out to her private yacht. Her mother's will is to be read on her birthday. But when a powerful explosion rips through the boat, Tom has 48 hours to get Sara back to London alive. As they struggle to evade a terrifying series of attempts on her life, the clues lead inexorably back to the case that destroyed Tom's father. He alone can unlock the terrible secret that Sara's mother hid from her - leading to a final, brutal confrontation with reality and a revelation as shocking as it is poignant.  The Vanishing is by Tom Winship and is due to be published in August 2012.

Jon Smith is attending a W.H.O. conference in The Hague on infectious diseases and wakes in his hotel room to find a man aiming a gun at him. Smith neutralizes the shooter, and finds three pictures in the assassin's pocket: one of an unknown woman, one of Peter Howell, his friend and a former agent with Britain's MI6, and one of him. When Smith tries to leave the hotel, he encounters a second group of terrorists in the process of attacking it. The hotel is not the only target in The Hague. Within minutes of Smith's narrow escape, bombs go off at the train station, airport and at the headquarters of the International Court of Justice, where a Pakistani warlord, Oman Dattar, is being held while he is tried for crimes against humanity. In the resulting chaos, Dattar escapes. Dattar has learned of a new strain of bioelectric bacteria that can grow electrical wires as a form of cilia. These cilia connect with another metallic source and can transmit and transport themselves via electric current. These bacteria are carried to the W.H.O. conference in preparation for an international consortium of biologists convened to study them, along with other strains of deadly bacteria. Dattar arranges for his men to steal the bacteria and use them to bring down the West once and for all. Can Jon Smith stop him? Robert Ludlum’s The Janus Reprisal is by the late Robert Ludlum and Jamie Freveletti and is due to be published in November 2012.
  
From Kate Mosse comes the third heart-stopping adventure exploring the incredible history, legends and hidden secrets of Carcassonne and the Languedoc. Set during World War II in the far south of France, Citadel is a powerful, action-packed mystery that reveals the secrets of the resistance under Nazi occupation. While war blazed in the trenches at the front, back at home a different battle is waged, full of clandestine bravery, treachery and secrets. And as a cell of Maquis resistance fighters, codenamed Citadel, fight for everything they hold dear, their struggle will reveal an older, darker combat being fought in the shadows. Citadel is a story of daring and courage, of lives risked for beliefs and of astonishing secrets buried in time.  It is due to be published in September 2012.  A preview can be found here.

A schizophrenic man spends his days and nights on a website called Whirl360, believing he's employed by the CIA to store the details of every town and city in the world in his head. Then one day, he sees something that shouldn't be there: a woman being murdered behind a window on a New York street. Suddenly Thomas has more to deal with than just his delusions, as he gets drawn into a deadly conspiracy.  Trust Your Eyes is by Linwood Barclay and is due to be published in September 2012.  Also due to be published in October 2012 by Linwood Barclay is Never Saw it Coming. Keisha Ceylon passes herself off as a psychic, but really she takes advantage of families who have recently lost a loved one.  Keisha’s latest mark is a man whose wife disappeared a week ago, so she goes to visit and tells him her vision.  The trouble is, her vision just happened to be close enough to the truth that it leaves the man rattled.  And it may very well leave Keisha dead…..

Jack Delton is a hard man to get hold of. There are maybe thirty people who know he exists. Not all of them believe he is still alive. And only one of them knows his real name. So when he gets the email he knows whatever it is, it's going to be bad. Marcus Fairlan and Jack used to work together. Until they had a falling out, after which Jack assumed the only reason Marcus would want to find him would be to kill him. It turns out it's worse than that. Marcus bankrolled a casino heist that has just gone spectacularly wrong, leaving a parking lot full of bodies and an armed and dangerous crackhead named Jerome Ribbons gone AWOL with a million dollars in cash. Marcus had the money earmarked for a major drug deal, and if he doesn't deliver, not only is the deal going down the tubes, but the man known as The Wolf is going to come looking for him. To make things right with Marcus, Jack needs to locate Ribbons, get the money and make the delivery. All in just 24 hours. Even for a man with Jack's resources, it's a tall order. Especially when he has a funny feeling the whole thing is a set-up..  The Ghostman is the debut novel by Roger Hobbs and is due to be published in January 2012.

 When her only sister suddenly dies, Dana Carlson is drawn back to the small Minnesota town she'd turned her back on years before. When she gets there, she discovers that Black Bear has changed, and so have the people in it. Julie's left behind a shattered teenaged daughter and a mystery--what killed her may be killing others, too. Why is no one talking about it? Dana soon finds herself struggling to uncover the truth, but no one wants to hear it, included Peyton, who can't forgive her aunt for her absence all these years. Dana had left to protect her own secrets, but Black Bear has a secret of its own--one that could tear Dana's life, her family, and the whole town apart. Invisible is a stunning novel of redemption, regret, and the complex ties of familial love, examining the truths people keep hidden, and those they fight to expose.  Invisible is by Carla Buckley and is due to be published in November 2012.

After his wife, Helen, is brazenly abducted before his eyes, Special Agent Pendergast furiously pursues the kidnappers, chasing them across the country and into Mexico. But then, things go terribly, tragically wrong; the kidnappers escape; and a shattered Pendergast retreats to his New York apartment and shuts out the world.  But when a string of bizarre murders erupts across several Manhattan hotels--perpetrated by a boy who seems to have an almost psychic ability to elude capture--NYPD Lieutenant D'Agosta asks his friend Pendergast for help. Reluctant at first, Pendergast soon discovers that the killings are a message from his wife's kidnappers. But why a message? And what does it mean?  When the kidnappers strike again at those closest to Pendergast, the FBI agent, filled anew with vengeful fury, sets out to track down and destroy those responsible. His journey takes him deep into the trackless forests of South America, where he ultimately finds himself face to face with an old evil that-rather than having been eradicated-is stirring anew... and with potentially world-altering consequences.  Confucius once said: "Before you embark on a journey of revenge, first dig two graves." Pendergast is about to learn the hard way just how true those words still ring.  Two Graves is by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child and is due to be published in December 2012.

Alyshia D'Cruz, daughter of Indian tycoon Francisco 'Frank' D'Cruz, has grown up in London and Mumbai wanting for nothing. But one night, after a boozy evening out, she gets in the wrong cab home...  Charles Boxer, ex-army, ex-police, has found his niche in private security. His speciality: kidnap and recovery. But it's a rootless life that doesn't impress his teenage daughter, Amy, or her mother, DS Mercy Danqah.  When D'Cruz hires Boxer to find Alyshia, Boxer knows Frank's crooked business empire has made him plenty of enemies. Despite the vast D'Cruz fortune, the kidnappers don't want cash - instead favouring a cruel and lethal game. But the UK government don't want their big new investor to lose his daughter in the heart of the capital. MI6 officers in India follow Boxer's leads and soon it seems more lives than Alyshia's are at stake, as the trail crosses paths with a terrorist plot on British soil.  To save Alyshia, Boxer must dodge religious fanatics, Indian mobsters and London's homegrown crimelords. Capital Punishment is a thrilling journey to the dark side of people and places that lie just out of view, waiting for the moment to tear a life apart.  Capital Punishment is by Robert Wilson and is due to be published in January 2013.

Other books to look forward later on this year are untitled books (so far) by Lawrence Block, Ian Rankin and Raymond Khoury

Saturday, 12 May 2012

BRITISH NOIR CELEBRATED...

...specifically Patrick Hamilton's "Hangover Square", a seminal work of British Noir.  Or maybe British Seedy?  Anyway, the highly intelligent and acutely funny LAURA WILSON engaged in a terrific conversation with Hamilton biographer, NIGEL JONES, (ditto intelligence and humour) as part of the Brighton Festival on Friday 12 May.  Although "Hangover Square"   is sub-titled "A Novel Of Earls Court" and has been claimed by Iain Sinclair and others as a great London novel it has a strong Brighton resonance - and Hamilton himself, born in Keymer, just up the road, had strong Brighton connections.  (Graham "Brighton Rock" Greene thought Hamilton's "West Pier", the first of his Gorse trilogy, the best book ever written about Brighton.)

The packed event was linked to an interesting art installation in the Phoenix Gallery in which several rooms featured in the novel are recreated.  Most tantalising?  A glimpse through a pane of glass in a door of the bathroom where Bone, the protagonist of the novel, killed Netta, the woman who so cynically led him on.  See it if you can.

The photo (by Nigel Bailey) shows Nigel Jones in full flow, Laura Wilson ready to respond and me just enjoying the show.

Peter Guttridge

Friday, 11 May 2012


A NICE TOUCH - FILM NOIR AND JAZZ


CHELTENHAM JAZZ FESTIVAL, MAY 2012



A NICE TOUCH is a 12 minute short made by debut director Dick Jones, set in 1953 and starring DOUGRAY SCOTT as a sociopathic actor who, by telephone, persuades his long-distance lover to murder her husband. He is also having an affair with PALOMA FAITH, his co-star in an "I Love Lucy" style TV show. Yes, all that in 12 minutes.  It's a kind of reverse film noir in that it swaps the usual premise for those films (man is doomed because of his obsessions with femme fatale).  
The score is by GUY BARKER, trumpeter and composer, who arranged that great jazz score for Anthony Minghella's The Talented Mr Ripley.  PALOMA FAITH, who is, of course, a skilled singer/songwriter too, sings a suitably smoky song over the end credits.
I was at Cheltenham Jazz Festival to orchestrate (see what I did there?) a panel discussion of the short after its screening. In addition to Jones, Faith and Barker the panel had neuroscientist Benedetto De Martino who was there to talk about the decision-making in the movie. (The event was sponsored by the wonderful Wellcome Trust - check out their gallery and library if you're ever in London near Euston.)
The short is based on a story that was first filmed by Alfred Hitchcock in the early Sixties in his Alfred Hitchcock Presents TV series.  You can watch that version (featuring a young George Segal) on YouTube.  Find the short if you can though.  I think it might be on Vimeo and it's well worth a watch.
Peter Guttridge

Wednesday, 9 May 2012

Criminal Splattering's Film News

Walter Mosley has formed along with TV series and documentary producer Diane Houslin a production company according to Indiewire.com.  The production company to be known as B.O.B. Filmhouse (Best of Brooklyn Filmhouse) has been set up with the goal being to play an "active role" in the adaptation of Mosley’s novels into films and TV series.

According to the Hollywood Reporter Canadian indie producer, New Franchise Media has tapped Brian D. Young to do a re-write of the Jeffrey Archer novel False Impression, which is now in the script stage.  They have also (according to Deadline.com) hired Richard Regen to adapt the separate novel, A Matter of Honor, into a multi-film franchise property.

Elmore Leonard has according to Deadline.com signed with United Talent Agency who will represent him in film, TV, digital and allied rights. With the overwhelming success of Justified, Leonard, who continues with literary agent Andrew Wylie, is eager to see more of his books adapted for the screen.

According to Digital Spy, FX has put in development a drama series adaptation of Chelsea Cain’s best-selling book series Heartsick. The thriller novels, Heartsick, Sweetheart and Evil At Heart, center on beautiful therapist-turned-series killer Gretchen Lowell and her relationship with damaged Portland detective Archie Sheridan.Heartsick is the first book in the series — there are four to date — introduces the Portland detective and his pursuit of serial killer Gretchen Lowell. In the end, she was the one who caught him, but after torturing him for days, she mysteriously let him go and turned herself in. Since then the she has been locked up, leaving Archie damaged but alive in a prison of another kind — addicted to pain pills, unable to return to his old life, powerless to get those ten horrific days or Gretchen off his mind.  When another killer begins snatching teenage girls off the streets, Archie has to pull himself together to head up a new task force, but even then he can’t stop him without getting information from Gretchen — an encounter that may destroy him.  With Susan Ward, a hungry young newspaper reporter, profiling Archie and his team, Archie, the killer, and Gretchen enter into a dark and deadly game.

Authors Don Winslow (Savages and The Winter Of Frankie Machine) and Chuck Hogan (Prince of Thieves) have (according to Deadline.com) teamed up to write an untitled crime script.  The script is a contemporary crime thriller and the plot revolves around two men who inevitably collide, amidst a host of supporting characters.

According to Variety.com, Sean Bean has been signed on to play Detective Benny Griessel in a film based on South African author Deon Meyer’s “Devil’s Peak” book trilogy.  Bean will play a recovering alcoholic detective who is struggling to keep his family together, while also trying to solve a case of a vigilante killer who is executing personal vendettas. Devil’s Peak is followed by 13 Hours and 7 Days and will be produced by Malcolm Kohll.

Sunday, 6 May 2012

Forthcoming books to look forward to from Duckworth Overlook


When Ben, a talented British psychiatrist working in New York, first meets Harry, the former chief executive of a failed Wall Street bank, he diagnoses him as suicidally depressed and admits him to hospital.  But when pressure is brought by his superiors to discharge Harry, Ben must keep him under observation, and is slowly drawn into the financier's gilded world, where nothing is what it first seems.  After a colleague of Harry's dies amid revelations of fraud, Ben realises he has made a terrible error that threatens both his career and his life.  A Fatal Debt is by John Gapper and brilliantly sets a mysterious death amid the fallout of the global financial crisis and the workings of high finance in New York and London.  It is due to be published in September 2012

Agent Dmitri is by Emil Draitser and is due to be published in October 2012.  A sailor, artist, lawyer, and writer, fluent in many languages, Bystrolyotov was one of a team of outstanding Soviet spies operating in Western countries between the world wars.  He was a dashing man whose Modus Operandi was the seduction of women - among them a French embassy employee, the wife of a British official, and a disfigured Gestapo officer.  He stole military secrets from Nazi Germany Fascist Italy and enabled Stalin to look into the diplomatic pouches of many European countries.  Idealistically committed to the Motherland, he showed extraordinary courage and physical prowess - twice crossing the Sahara Desert and the jungles of the Congo.  But in 1938, at the height of Stalin's purges, Bystrolyotov was arrested and tortured.  Sentenced to twenty years of hard labour in the Gulag, he risked more severe punishment by documenting the regime's crimes against humanity.  With amazing stamina, he survived the repression and came to realise the true nature of the ideology he once served unquestioningly

One midnight in January in the early 1960s, the Russian freighter Domatova quietly slipped out of Beirut harbour.  The ship had sailed with a single passenger on board: an Englishman named Harold Adrian Russell Philby, nicknamed Kim.  He had fled the Lebanese capital with little more than the clothes on his back.  The Englishman had used editions of James Hilton's "Lost Horizon" for enciphering purposes (page, line and letter number) when he communicated with his Soviet controllers.  As the lights of Beirut vanished, he tried to imagine the life that awaited him in the Soviet Union.  Would Moscow Centre welcome him as a senior Soviet intelligence officer?  Would the Great Game the Englishman was so keen to play have a third act?  For a spy, like a climber on a cliff, was there really no way out except up?  Young Philby is by Robert Littell and is due to be published in November 2012.

Thursday, 3 May 2012

The Setting for Crossbones Yard, by Kate Rhodes


Today’s guest blog is by debut novelist Kate Rhodes. She has had two collections of poetry published and her poems have been published in the Guardian and the Independent newspapers.  Her debut novel Cross Bones Yard is the first in a series of novels featuring Dr Alice Quentin a Psychologist at Guy’s Hospital.

The idea for my first crime novel Cross Bones Yard arrived one evening, when I was out walking with my husband. I was working in Borough, and we often used to walk the city streets, because I’d grown to love this area of London.  It seemed so full of history, and I loved stumbling across buildings which are mentioned in Dickens’ novels, like the brick wall in Angel Place, which is all that remains of Marshalsea Prison, where his father was incarcerated for bad debts. Every turning seemed to draw me further into the city’s history, from Shakespeare to Frances Drake.

The first time I saw Crossbones Graveyard I couldn’t believe that it was a burial ground. We stumbled across the site without looking for it in 2005, on Redcross Way. I was curious about the locked gates, adorned with ribbons, dolls, and other tributes left by well wishers. Then I saw the bronze plaque which marks the place. I stared at the black tarmac behind the gates. It was hard to believe that such a derelict, neglected space contained the bodies of thousands of sex workers, who gave their lives for the pleasure of others.  It seemed very sad that the rest of South Bank had been expensively gentrified, while the burial ground had been forgotten and ignored. I felt compelled to write about it, and when I came to begin my first novel, Crossbones had to be the starting point.

My interest in Crossbones inspired me to do some research, and the more I learned, the more fascinated I became. Crossbones became a burial ground for 'single women' in 1598. ‘Single women’ being a euphemism for the prostitutes who worked in Bankside's brothels or 'stews'. From the 12th to the 17th century, Winchester Palace stood between Southwark Cathedral, and the Clink Prison, and it was the Bishop of Winchester who gave licenses to the prostitutes. Many activities that were forbidden behind the City walls were permitted in Southwark. By Shakespeare's time, this section of the South Bank was firmly established as London's pleasure quarter, containing theatres, bear-pits, taverns and brothels. The brothels were sanctioned by Thomas Becket, and it’s ironic that although the sex workers enjoyed protection from the church while they were alive, most were denied a Christian burial.

By the 19th century, the story of Crossbones had become part of local folk-lore, and Redcross Way was an overcrowded, cholera-infested slum. When Charles Booth conducted his survey of London poverty, he described it as ‘a set of courts and small streets which for number, viciousness, poverty and crowding, is unrivalled in anything I have hitherto seen in London.' It was also the haunt of body-snatchers, seeking specimens for the anatomy classes at nearby Guy's Hospital. As early as 1831, concerns were being raised about the condition of the graveyard.  Following reports from the Board of Health, Crossbones was closed in 1853, on the grounds that it was 'completely overcharged with dead.' In 1883, it was sold as a building site, prompting Lord Brabazon to write: 'with a view to save this ground from such desecration, and to retain it as an open space for the use and enjoyment of the people.' But just one year later the sale was declared null and void, under the Disused Burial Grounds Act.  Attempts to develop the site were fought by local people, and Southwark residents are still campaigning to have it declared a sacred site, with a memorial garden to commemorate the dead. In the 1990s, London Underground built an electricity sub-station for the Jubilee Line Extension. Prior to the work, Museum of London archaeologists conducted a partial excavation, removing some 148 skeletons. It’s estimated that 15000 people still lie buried at the site.

The shrine at the gates attracts tens of thousands of visitors every year, and it features in many guidebooks, on guided tours and in television coverage of the vigils held by local people. For more than ten years Friends of Crossbones have pioneered a campaign to protect the future of the site. They propose that the memorial gates and the oldest part of the graveyard (between the memorial gates on Redcross Way and the junction with Union Square) should be protected and opened to the public as a community garden, local park, heritage site and visitor attraction - the Crossbones Garden of Remembrance. If my book helps in any way towards the campaigners’ goal, I would be delighted. But the city still seems to be struggling to find an appropriate way to acknowledge and pay respect to the sex workers who lie buried in Crossbones Graveyard.

It will probably seem strange that after becoming mildly obsessed by the history of Crossbones, I hardly mention it in the novel, apart from using the site as a murder scene.  I was anxious not to overburden or bore readers with too much information from the past, because the story unfolds in present time. But the story looks closely at the neglected lives of exactly the same women who worked in the Crossbones area for hundreds of years. I found myself wishing while I was writing the book that sex workers enjoyed better legal rights in the UK. I think my strong belief that prostitutes should enjoy better protection comes from the fact that I lived in Ipswich while Steve Wright carried out his horrific series of murders on London Road. There’s no doubt that all of the women who died in Ipswich would still be alive, if they had worked in regulated centres. One of the characters, Michelle, in Crossbones Yard, works the streets of Borough, risking her life by getting into clients’ cars.  

On the 3rd of May, my publisher, Mulholland, is running a guided walk around the sites which are mentioned in my book, including Crossbones Yard itself.  The book’s heroine, psychologist Alice Quentin lives in Southwark and goes running in this area of London, which is so rich in history. When I lived in London I used to run along exactly the same routes, and the area still makes me feel proud to have been born and raised in South London, despite its complex past. As my book developed it became increasingly important to me to describe a part of London that I know intimately, as accurately as I could. Alice the central character in the book lives in Shad Thames and from her office at Guy’s hospital she can see the murky Thames rolling by, full of dark secrets. I wanted to make Alice as real as possible, with complex family and work relationships, and for readers to see her walking through real locations. I was thrilled to hear that Mulholland have put maps on their website, so readers can walk the same streets as Alice if they choose to, because I love becoming immersed in the settings my favourite authors choose for their books.  One day, I’m looking forward to making a trip to Edinburgh, so I can walk the same streets as John Rebus. It would please me hugely if any reader enjoyed my book so much, they felt inspired to explore Alice Quentin’s London. If anyone does decide to go looking for Crossbones Yard, wear comfortable shoes, take a camera, and allow yourself plenty of time. The place has a way of drawing you in.

More information about Kate Rhodes and her work can be found on her website and her blog.

Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Crime in Chipping Norton - but not phone hacking

(left to right) Interviewer Peter Guttridge with S.J. Bolton, Dan Waddell, Sophie Hannah and Mark Billingham on stage at the inaugural Chipping Norton Literary Festival.  They discussed the idea that deceit and deviousness must come naturally to crime writers for them to be any good with such gusto several psychotherapists in the audience offered their services.  Later in the day, Guttridge theoretically interviewed Colin Dexter - in other words, he sat beside Morse's creator whilst the Great Man held entertaining court.  Dexter is slightly deaf these days but deafness is a strange thing.  He heard quite clearly questions from the audience but couldn't hear at all the three-times-repeated question from the man sitting beside him about his opinion of TV's "Endeavour", the dramatisation of Morse's early days.

Forthcoming books to look forward to from Penguin and Michael Joseph


Bloodline is the latest novel by Felix Francis and is due to be published in September.  When Mark Shilling ford commentates on a race in which his twin sister Clare, an accomplished and successful jockey, comes in third, he can't help but be suspicious.  As a professional race-caller, he knows she should have won.  Did she lose on purpose?  Was the race fixed?  Why on earth would she do something so out of character?  That night, Mark confronts Clare with his suspicions, but she storms off after an explosive argument.  It's the last time Mark sees her alive.  Hours later, Clare jumps to her death from the balcony of a London hotel ...or so it seems.  Devastated by her death, and almost overcome with guilt, Mark goes in search of answers.  What led Clare to take her own life?  Or was it not suicide at all?

Psychotherapist Frieda Klein is consulted on a grisly and seemingly unsolvable crime.  Sometimes the mind is a dangerous place to hide.  The rotting, naked corpse of a man is found amidst swarms of flies in the living room of a confused woman.  Who is he?  Why is Michelle Doyce trying to serve him afternoon tea?  And how did the dead body find its way into her flat?  DCI Karlsson needs an expert to delve inside Michelle's mind for answers and turns to former colleague, psychiatrist Frieda Klein.  Eventually Michelle's ramblings lead to a vital clue that in turn leads to a possible identity.  Robert Poole.  Jack of all trades and master conman.  The deeper Frieda and Karlsson dig, the more of Poole's victims they encounter ...and the more motives they uncover for his murder.  But is anyone telling them the truth except for poor, confused Michelle?  And when the past returns to haunt Frieda's present, she finds herself in danger.  Whoever set out to destroy Poole also seems determined to destroy Frieda Klein.  A gritty heroine, a gruesome crime and a terrifying hunt for a psychotic killer. Tuesday’s Gone is by Nicci French and is due to be published in July.

The Collini Case is by Ferdinand Von Schirach and is due to be published in September 2012.  From one of Europe's bestselling writers comes a spellbinding and utterly compelling court room drama, which will stay with you for a long time.  Ferdinand von Schirach's "The Collini Case" has been at the top of the German charts since publication.  A murder.  A murderer.  No motive.  For thirty-four years Fabrizio Collini has worked diligently for Mercedes Benz.  He is a quiet and respectable person until the day he visits one of Berlin's most luxurious hotels and kills an innocent man.  Young attorney Caspar Leinen takes the case.  Getting Collini a not-guilty verdict would make his name.  But too late he discovers that Collini's victim - an industrialist of some renown - is known to him.  Now Leinen is caught in a professional and personal dilemma.  Collini admits the murder but won't say why he did it, forcing Leinen to defend a man who won't put up a defence.  And worse, a close friend and relation of the victim insists that he give up the case.  His reputation, his career and this friendship are all at risk.  Then he makes a discovery that goes way beyond his own petty concerns and exposes a terrible and deadly truth at the heart of German justice.....

The year is 1539 and the Portuguese Inquisition ushers in an era of torture and murder.  When the Royal Falconer is imprisoned on false charges to remove him from the inner circle of the boy King, the Inquisitors strike an impossible deal with his daughter, Isabela.  Bring back two rare white falcons from Iceland within the year or her father dies.  Meanwhile in Iceland, a menacing stranger appears to have possessed the soul of a woman chained up in a volcanic cave and is threatening to destroy the community.  The woman's twin sister, Eydis, is desperate to intervene but vivid dreams suggest the twins' only salvation lies with a young girl from afar, travelling in search of white feathers ...Isabela's quest might hold a more crucial purpose then she could ever imagine and there are those among her travel companions who have an interest in doing her harm.  But in order to fulfil her destiny, first she must reach Iceland's shores alive!  The Falcons of Fire and Ice is by Karen Maitland and is due to be published in August 2012.

12-21 is by Dustin Thomason co-author of The Rule of Four and is due to be published in September 2012.  An ancient prophecy foretells that the world will end on 21 December 2012...In Central America, a treasure hunter discovers a Maya relic - a mysterious and ornate codex - but when he smuggles it into the US, he brings with him an old and deadly secret...Early in December 2012, the codex comes to Chel Manu, a Maya world authority.  She is torn between the chance to translate the codex herself and her duty to alert the authorities.  Meanwhile, in an LA hospital, an unknown man is dying of a rare, contagious disease.  When Dr Gabriel Stanton is called in, he realises that this is no ordinary infection - and it will spread uncontrollably.  Stanton and Chel must race to decipher the codex's secrets and prevent the prophesised apocalypse.

The Inside Job is the second book in the series by Felix Riley to feature Secret Service Agent Mike Byrne.  Secret Service Agent Mike Byrne is too late….. Too late to save the one man who knew the truth – the star witness who was about to blow the whistle on the biggest bank scandal in history.  Too late to stop an innocent man from dying, and so plunging the world of high finance into a death spiral of violence and murder.  Because payback for bankers who gambled with other people’s money is being handed out in bullets and bombs.  And now the only person who can keep the bankers alive is Agent Byrne, who finds himself having to protect the very people he swore to take down.  Before long Byrne is locked into a deadly fight with an unseen enemy – an enemy that will stop at nothing to get what they want….. The Inside Job is due to be published in August 2012.

Dark Revelations is the concluding book in the Level 26 trilogy.  In Dark Revelations, Steve Dark faces the most intricate, intense, and explosive case of his career.  The killer calls himself Labyrinth, and the riddles, puzzles, and wordplay with which he announces his new targets have caused worldwide media sensation.  The case has already claimed a number of high profile individuals as victims – not to mention several government agencies, which have tried and failed to stop a growing global panic.  But what point is Labyrinth trying to make?  Who will be his next victim?  It’s up to Dark to assemble a team from among the smoking rubble of the international crime solving community, find Labyrinth wherever he may be, and put a stop to the mayhem once and for all.  Can Steve Dark solve the biggest riddle of them all?  Only time will tell.  Dark Revelations is by Anthony E Zuiker and Duane Swierczynski and is due to be published in December 2012.


The Montsegur Medallion points the way to the most coveted relic, the Holy Grail.  In the wrong hands it could destroy civilisation.  Finn McGuire finds himself framed for a string of murders moments after he uncovers the legendary Medallion in an ancient Syrian chapel.  The culprits are a group of Nazi SS descendants known as The Seven who will stop at nothing to possess the pendant...and the Holy Grail.  Their wish?  To resurrect the Third Reich. Over seven centuries later, Templar expert and former MI5 operative Caedmon Aisquith is stunned to learn that his daughter has been kidnapped.  Receiving an ominous ransom demand - Find the Evangelium Gaspar or she dies – Caedmon is hurled into a dangerous labyrinth of Templar intrigues.  Racing against time, he must solve a series of clues involving esoteric symbols and artfully encoded riddles.  All the while being pursued by the bloodthirsty members of the satanic brotherhood Santa Muerte.  Caedmon Aisquith is an expert in the Knights Templar and the Grail; he knows the Seven can only desire it for evil and when Finn approaches him, the two join forces in a quest to find the deadly relic and halt the bloodshed.  Their race takes them from the Louvre to a medieval citadel in the Pyrenees.  But the stakes are high for the fate of mankind hangs in the balance if they fail.  In an epic quest to save his daughter, Caedmon crosses the globe, the clues leading him from the Malabar Coast of India to the Camino de Santiago in Spain, and finally to a Merovingian church in the heart of Paris.  There he discovers the most explosive secret of all – a two-thousand-year-old cover up of such magnitude that if it’s ever disclosed, it would forever change the course of history.  The Templar’s Secret is by C M Palov and is due to be published in November 2012.

"The Killing House" is the amazing first novel in a stunning new series by Chris Mooney.  It introduces fallen angel and former profiler Malcolm Fletcher who is forced to take the law into his own hands in order to uncover the truth in his terrifying first case.  Rule number1: Don't Scream - Four years ago, Theresa Herrera's ten-year-old son Rico was abducted.  The police found little evidence and the case went cold.  Theresa's husband has told her to move on, but she won't give up hope.  Rule number 2: Don't call the police - Today a mysterious woman invaded Theresa's home and told her that Rico is alive.  Theresa talks on the phone to a young man who is, without question, her son.  Rule number 3: Don't run.  Don't fight - The woman promises to reunite Theresa with Rico only if she will follow the rules.  But it is the last rule that fills Theresa with horror...Rule number 4: Kill your husband and your son will live...Malcolm Fletcher - a former FBI profiler and now the nation's Most Wanted fugitive - arrives in Colorado to help Theresa and her husband find their son.  But his arrival coincides with a dangerous and shocking twist in the case.  Barely surviving his first encounter with a suspect, Fletcher embarks on his own secret investigation, with the police just behind him every step of the way.  Behind every door in "The Killing House", death awaits you...  The Killing House is due to be published in August 2012.

 He Is Their Judge...In death, they are purified.  Holding his victims under water, he washes away their sins as they struggle for their last breath.  Then he stakes their bodies to the ground, exposing them for what they really are.  Witches, sent to tempt and to corrupt... Jury ...No one knows about defence attorney Charlotte Wellington's murdered sister, or about her childhood spent with the carnival that's just arrived in town.  For Charlotte, what's past is past.  But others don't agree.  And as a madman's body count rises, she and Detective Daniel Rokov are drawn into a mission that's become terrifyingly personal...  And Executioner.  At last, she is within his reach.  All his victims deserve their fate, but her guilt is greatest.  And with every scream, he will make her see what it means to suffer and repent.... Before She Dies is by Mary Burton and is due to be published in August 2012.

"Vanished" is the brilliant new missing person’s case in the "David Raker" series.  No life is perfect.  Everyone has secrets.  For millions of Londoners, the morning of 17 December is just like any other.  But not for Sam Wren.  An hour after leaving home, he gets onto a tube train - and never gets off again.  No eyewitnesses.  No trace of him on security cameras.  Six months later, he's still missing.  Out of options and desperate for answers, Sam's wife Julia hires David Raker to track him down.  Raker has made a career out of finding the lost.  He knows how they think.  And, in missing person cases, the only certainty is that everyone has something to hide.  But in this case the secrets go deeper than anyone imagined.  For, as Raker starts to suspect that even the police are lying to him, someone is watching.  Someone who knows what happened on the tube that day.  And, with Raker in his sights, he'll do anything to keep Sam's secrets to himself.  Vanished is by Tim Weaver and is due to be published in July 2012.

Once you're part of the pack, there's no getting out...Mild-mannered stay-at-home dad Simon Burns has undergone a life changing transformation - after being indoctrinated into the pack, he has become a werewolf. Fearing that the truth would end his marriage, Simon has told his wife Alison that he is suffering from a psychological condition called lycanthropic disorder, in which a person thinks he is a werewolf. For the moment, his secret remains safe. But NYPD homicide detective Geri Rodriguez has not forgotten about the mysterious wolf-like murders that remain unsolved,and when she hears that one of the witnesses, Diane Coles, was brutally murdered outside her parents' home in Michigan, she resumes her investigation. She's focused on a group of dads - Michael, Charlie, Ramon, and Simon - who had a connection to the unsolved murders. Simon had been trying to stay away from the pack, but he has been tipped off by Michael's father that there may be a cure hidden somewhere in the Brooklyn brewery where Michael lives. He wants to find the cure, and to see that Geri doesn't become another mystery death - but his own life and the lives of his wife and son may be in jeopardy. The Craving by Jason Starr is a hair-raising thriller with a supernatural twist.  It is the sequel to The Pack The Craving is due to be published in October 2012.


The Blood of Crows is the fourth book in her DI Anderson and DS Costello series by Caro Ramsay and is due to be published in September 2012.  For one Scottish cop the beat is about to get dark and very bloody ...DI Colin Anderson is having a bad week.  His conviction of paedophile Skelpie Fairbairn is declared unsafe - putting Fairbairn back on Glasgow's streets and leaving Anderson under investigation.  Add to this a gangster torched alive, a teenage boy tortured then dropped off a bridge and the suicide of a cop who worked an unsolved child kidnapping way back in 1996 and Anderson's got his hands full.  Then one night, a young girl is tied to the river bank and left for the tide.  Anderson gets there, but she dies in his arms.  Working round the clock his team discover these strange crimes are linked to an elusive criminal mastermind known as The Puppeteer.  But unable to find him, unable to stop the murders, Anderson is forced to follow the only lead he has - Skelpie Fairbairn ...But which is worse - the devil you don't know, or the one you do...?


Tuesday, 1 May 2012

Nick Santora Script Writing Competition


Are there any budding scriptwriters out there?  If so here’s your chance to get your work reviewed by Nick Santora.  With the publication of Fifteen Digits Nick Santora and his publishers Mulholland UK are running a completion for one luck person to get the exclusive opportunity to get their TV pilot episode reviewed by the author.  Nick will critique the winning script and give you notes.  The two runners up will also win signed copies of the original Prison Break script.  More information about the competition including information about submission can be found here.

Nick Santora has written and/or produced for several television series such as The Sopranos, Law & Order and The Guardian.  From 2005 to 2009, he was writer/co-executive producer of the hit drama Prison Break, and is currently working on the second series of Breakout Kings.

Is it really insider trading if you’ve been an outsider your entire life?

Five men.  Five walks of life.  Every day they come together at the white shoe law firm Olmstead & Taft.  But they’re not lawyers.  They’re “Printers”: blue-collar guys consigned to the dark basement of the firm charged with copying, collating and delivering the mountains of paperwork that document millions of dollars of sensitive legal secrets.

Until the five are approached by an ambitious young attorney who teaches them what they have: insider information.  Together they make a plan: take the classified documents that pass through their hands every day and use them to get rich.  They create a joint account to deposit the spoils.  An account with a safeguard-each one only knows one section of the access code.

Which means that for all five conspirators, there’s no way out.  But as too much money piles up to go unnoticed, the Printers will discover there’s one thing even worse than being an outsider: being in too deep.

Monday, 30 April 2012

Reporting on Books


On our US trips to Bouchercon and Thrillerfest, it is always a pleasure to hook up with Carol Fitzgerald of Book Reporter, as her weekly newsletter is full of information and insights on what’s hot. Carol has a leaning towards crime and thrillers, as well as other genres, though her Thriller Guru is the writer Joe Hartlaub, a man well versed in the thriller genre. I first met Carol and Joe at the inaugural ITW Thrillerfest in Phoenix 2006, where we were involved in the Jack Reacher ‘trial’.

Carol has some new features that she has put online for readers, the first new site is TheBookReportNetwork.com launched on February 29th 2012 with a goal to reach college students and twenty-somethings with a site all their own.

“20 Over 30,” their newest feature on 20SomethingReads.com features 20 mystery authors over the age of 30 suggesting books for twenty-somethings. Quite a lineup of talent participating in this feature, which is something we look forward to making an annual Edgars Week tradition (it went live last week)
http://www.20somethingreads.com/features/20-over-30-mystery-writers

Joe Hartlaub, Bookreporter.com’s Mystery/Thriller guru created a Mystery Bookshelf for 20SomethingReads.coms with 20 titles published over the last two years that he thinks would be of interest to twenty-somethings. You can see his selections here:
http://www.20somethingreads.com/bookshelves/mysteries/a-mystery-lovers-bookshelf

If you are not part of the Book Reporter Network, then click here and keep informed by signing up for her weekly newsletter, out each Saturday Morning!

Sunday, 29 April 2012

Criminal Splattering's


Norwegian crime fiction authors Gunnar Staalesen (The Writing on the Wall) and Thomas Enger (Burned) are due to attend CrimeFest this year.  However, if you can’t wait until then they will be appearing at a Nordic Noir book club event on 23 May where they will be talking about and exploring the history of and recent trends in Norwegian crime fiction.  More information can be found on the Nordic Noir book club website.

The Agatha Awards were given out at Malice Domestic on Saturday 28 April 2012.  The winners are as follows –

Best Novel: 
Three Day Town by Margaret Maron (Grand Central Publishing)
Best First Novel: 
Learning to Swim by Sara J. Henry (Crown)
Best Non-fiction: 
Books, Crooks And
Counselors: How to Write Accurately About Criminal Law and Courtroom Procedure by Leslie Budewitz (Linden)
Best Short Story: 
Disarming by Dana Cameron, Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine – June 2011
Best Children’s/Young Adult: 
The Black Heart Crypt by Chris Grabenstein (Random House)
Best Historical Novel: 
Naughty in Nice by Rhys Bowen (Berkley)

Congratulations to all the winners.  A full list of all the nominees can be found here.

With The Killing and Borgen winning such a wide fan base, there are a number of articles floating around cyber space about the phenomenon. The BBC’s Emma Jane Kirby visited the sets of both productions to try to unearth the secrets to their success.  Read her report here.  From the Independent.

Very funny and silly but well worth the read.  Forbes have posted their annual 15 fictional millionaires.  Their list of the fiction’s richest.  On the list is C Montgomery Burns the most hated man in Springfield.  Forbes managed to snag an interview with him.  Also on the list are Lisbeth Salander, Tony Stark and Wayne Bruce amongst others.

According to the Guardian and The Hollywood Reporter the estate of cult science-fiction writer Philip K Dick is to revive a legal battle for profits from the futuristic Matt Damon thriller The Adjustment Bureau.  The representatives first filed a lawsuit against director George Nolfi and production company Media Rights Capital in October 2011, claiming its targets refused to pay millions of dollars in royalties.  It was thrown out two months ago.  The Adjustment Bureau is loosely based on Dick's 1953 short story Adjustment Team, in which everyday existence is revealed to be a product of mysterious unseen manipulators.  The full complaint can be read here.

Shotsblog has blogged about the forthcoming prequel to The Godfather, The Family Corleone and the law suits that have surrounded it on more than one occasion.  They can be read here and here.  Now according to Entertainment Weekly now a trailer for the forthcoming book can be seen below.


The Book Bond have previewed a number of the vintage classic James Bond book covers that are due to be published in September 2012.  Personally I am in two minds about them.  Some of them are okay but hmm, I think they could have been better.


The BAFTA 2012 Television Award nominees have been announced.  The full list can be found here.  Once again Benedict Cumberbatch has been nominated for Best Actor in his role as Sherlock.  His co-star and last year’s BAFTA award winner for Best Supporting Actor Martin Freeman has once again been nominated, but this year he will be up against his Sherlock co-star Andrew Scott who plays Moriarty.  The Drama Series category sees previous winners Misfits and Spooks up against each other, alongside ITV1’s Scott and Bailey.  Borgen and The Killing II are up against each other for the International Award.  The award ceremony will take place on 27 May 2012.

Gary Phillips has always been one of my favourite crime writers from the first time I picked-up Violent Springs and read his first published novel featuring PI Ivan Monk to our subsequent and very infrequent meetings.  The last time we met was at St Louis in 2011.  He remains and has always been one of the nicest people to talk to.  I found it most interesting to read his blog post on the MysteriousPress.com blog about what led him to write Violent Springs.  It was also pleasing to note that the Ivan Monk series can now be read as e-books.  If you have not read them yet then please do.  His ability to weave into his stories the social dynamics of everyday life and situations is one of the best things about the series.  I for one would love him to write another Ivan Monk book.

The long list for the Desmond Elliott Prize for new writers has been announced and the full list can be found here.  Congratulations go to all the nominees but specifically to SJ Watson who has made the long list with his novel Before I Go to Sleep.  Not only that but Before I go to Sleep has also been voted TV Book Club viewers best read of the series.  Elizabeth Haynes's Into the Darkest Corner took second place.

CrimeFest is less than a month away and the Shots gang will be there in full force as usual.  As in previous years see here, here and here for some insights to my previous attendance at CrimeFest. I shall once again be blogging and hopefully this year tweeting as well using the hastag #CrimeFest2012.

According to The Bookseller Hodder and Stoughton have acquired the Roman Britain debut novel The Lion and The Lamb, by Durham academic Dr John Henry Clay.  Set in Britain in AD 366, depicts the struggles of a young soldier with a mysterious past, drawn into a conspiracy that threatens all he holds dear as the enemies of Rome rebel during the Great Barbarian Conspiracy.