Sunday, 16 August 2020

An interview with Denise Mina

    Ayo:- Your last couple of books Conviction and The Last Drop and have been quite different from your other books. What made you decide to to make a foray into true crime as the background to the books?

    Denise:- I have always used true crime stories as starting off points, I think a lot of writers do read the newspapers or keep their ears open for striking incidents, so it was more a question of degree than a volt face. I have always loved the form of true crime though and I think knowing that a story is largely true can add to the resonances for a reader like me. 

    Ayo:- The Long Drop is a reimagining of the trial and of the drunken night the two men spent carousing in Glasgow, Convicton about a true crime podcast and sexual violence whilst your latest book The Less Dead is about violence against women inspired by a series of real murder cases. What made you decide to write about this particular topical issue?

    Denise:- Books have to be written a year or so before they’re published so if the topic in them seems timely it’s usually just good luck! With The Less Dead it was the Staunch Book Prize which was established to draw attention away from crimes of violence against women by rewarding books that did not do that. It was very well intentioned but I think neglected the fact that victims in the real world are valued differently. I wanted to write about that and about a woman who couldn’t choose not to face up to her own privilege. 

    Ayo: Do you believe that violence against women is taken as seriously as it should be?

    Denise:- Yes, but only against some women: white middle class stranger women. Everyone else gets a lesser service and that’s not just from the police or the courts. It’s from the public and from juries and from newspapers. If domestic violence was taken as seriously as it should be other crimes associated with it could be stopped. Crimes of violence against sex workers are treated as if they are inevitable. They’re no more inevitable than football violence.

    Ayo:- Are you often struck by the different ways in which books can be interpreted by those who read them and have you any thoughts on the way you expect The Less Dead to be interpreted?

    Denise:- I believe a book is half the work of the writer, half the work of the reader – readers bring the prism of our own experience and our own prejudices with us to every book. I don’t believe in original intention with book interpretations. Of course, sometimes people tell me what my book is about and I’m secretly thinking they’re completely wrong but I wouldn’t say that. For me the best writers ask questions that raise more questions. Boring writers tell you what to think. Some people are already very offended because I’ve used the terms ‘sex worker’ and they don’t think it should be classed as work, which I understand but I think if people are going to be legally protected the categorisation is useful.

    Ayo:- In all your books you appear to have this nuanced approach to seediness. Is this deliberate and do you feel that it is inevitable due to what you are writing about?

    Denise:- The great thing about crime fiction is that the story can go anywhere and I like there to be contrast in my books – from the top to the bottom. I’m always aware of how visceral the city is and how seediness can lie anywhere.
    Ayo:- What was the most interesting thing that you’ve found out while preparing to read a book that you’re working on?

    Denise:- The ring road around Glasgow (M8) was proposed after WW2 to contain a Bolshevik uprising. It was felt that Glasgow was the city most likely to fall to the Communists and the road was built so that the city centre could be cut off by the army.
    Ayo:- While you’re never one to repeat yourself, The Less Dead, on the surface, reads as a very different kind of thriller for you. How did it come about?

    Denise:- Several of my family members are adopted and quite recently made contact with their birth family, so there was that experience going on in the background. There was also the series of murders of sex workers in the 1980s and ‘90s that really bothered me. The last person to be murdered was a lovely person and came from a really sweet family, it was devastating for them, but I kept thinking about the women who had been killed before and how little of the same sort of coverage there was because so many grew up in care. They didn’t have nice families to go on Crime Watch and if felt wrong.
    Ayo:- What generally sparks the idea for what you want to write about next?

    Denise:- Usually I stumble on a story that makes me wonder ‘what does THAT feel like?’ It can be a bit of a newstory or something over heard in conversation. If I find it intriguing I think a reader might.
    Ayo:- I believe that writing crime fiction and reading crime fiction is a good way of having an insight into society and its ills. Do you agree that this is the case and do you think that today's crime writers do so.

    Denise:- I do agree but crime fiction is such a broad church. Some is sociological or criminological. Some criminological crime friction is completely wrong, for example, profilers are a bit useless on the ground but they’re all over crime fiction. You can’t find a murderer by correctly guessing he lives with his mum, can you? Some crime fiction is basically a puzzle and some is a very familiar story that we’ve heard a hundred times and I do love that sort of crime fiction as well. It would be a shame if we were all writing the same things.
    Ayo:- Over the years you have won many accolades for your writing how does your success make you feel as a writer?

    Denise:- I don’t feel successful but I do feel incredibly lucky that I get to do this for a living. That sounds trite and ever so humble but the longer I do this the more I’m aware that better writers than me stopped or got ill or got dropped or made a load of money and forgot to write the next book, got sucked into teaching or whatever. Sometimes I get all my prizes out of the cupboard and look at them to remind myself how incredibly fortunate I’ve been.
    Ayo:- Bearing in mind the issues that you write about do you think that there is such a thing as an apolitical writer?

    Denise:- No. All fiction is political. What we perceive as neutral is just closer to the status quo. I can’t believe we still have police procedurals with a resolution of the cops shooting the suspect. 
    Ayo:- Are the narratives of crime and justice still as important to you today as they were when you wrote Garnethill?

    Denise:- More so. I think I’m more nerdy about them and the hunch I had that they mattered -that the way we constructed victims and notions of justice in narrative fiction was important – is even more acute now. I see legal policy being made on the basis of fictional constructs. 
    Ayo:- What do you think about the state of crime writing today and do you think that it has become more gratitious?

    Denise:- It’s hard to answer that because I’m not really all the way across the genre. It’s vast now! I remember when it was just you me and Val McDermid, I don’t know how you do it!
    Ayo:- What question would like to be asked but never are?

    Denise:- Are you grateful? I think we should all ask ourselves that but it’s a bit existential. Anyway the answer is – not enough.

    Ayo:- What next?

    Denise:- OOOOO! I’m writing a follow up to Conviction called Confidence. Someone has found a document that proves Jesus of Nazareth was crucified by the Romans, they kill themselves and then the document ends up on the international market for historic artefacts. I’m very lost in that whole world right now!
The Less Dead by Denise Mina (Published by Vintage on 20 August 2020)
 When Margo goes in search of her birth mother for the first time, she meets her aunt, Nikki, instead. Margo learns that her mother, Susan, was a sex worker murdered soon after Margo's adoption. To this day, Susan's killer has never been found. Nikki asks Margo for help. She has received threatening and haunting letters from the murderer, for decades. She is determined to find him, but she can't do it alone...

The Less Dead can be bought here.

Thursday, 13 August 2020

In The Spotlight - Tom Wood


Name:- Tom Wood
Job:- True Crime Writer, Retired Detective, Columnist for The Scotsman
Website:- tomwoodwriter.co.uk
Twitter @TomJWood25

Introduction
Tom Wood was one of Scotland’s most senior and experienced operational police officers. He is an authority on serious violent crime, the policing of large-scale events and a noted authority on the police perspectives on drugs and alcohol. He was Deputy Chief Constable and Director of Operations of Lothian and Borders Police and Officer in Overall Command of the linked murder investigation into the deaths of a number of young women including Helen Scott and Christine Eadie (The World’s End Murders). His current book is Ruxton: The First Modern Murder.

Current book?
I am currently reading Max Hastings expansive history of The Vietnam War - Vietnam. I am currently writing a book about prostitution ‘A public service, stories and voices from the sex industry’ - wonderful subject. 

Favourite book?
Robert Louis Stevenson’s ‘Treasure Island’ fascinated me as a boy and gave me a love of the sea. 

Which two characters would you invite to dinner and why?
As a former detective it would have to be Sherlock Holmes and for pure entertainment it would be GM Fraser’s great anti-hero Harry Flashman - whatever else it wouldn’t be dull! 

How do you relax?
I’m an outdoor person, sailing, fly-fishing, motor cycling. 

What book do you wish you had written and why? 
I wish I had written ‘The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner’ - which was written by James Hogg (The Ettrick Shepherd). This novel influenced Edgar Allan Poe, Wordsworth and Robert Louis Stevenson. A wonderful study of human nature. 

What would you say to your younger self if you were just starting out as a writer?
‘Get a move on’ I won a pretty big essay competition when I was at primary school then wrote nothing except police reports for fifty years! 

How would you describe your series character?
Since I write about real crimes I don’t have a series character as such- but I do like to draw forgotten heroes back into the light. I am fascinated by histories partiality- who is forgotten and who and why others are remembered. 

My two historic crime novels would be - 
His Bloody Project ‘completely different, fresh and compelling (Graeme M Burnet) and ‘The Suspicions of Mr Witcher ‘A police procedural with a difference - wonderfully interpreted. (Kate Summerscale)

Ruxton: The First Modern Murder by Tom Wood (Published by Thomas J Wood)

Two dismembered bodies discarded in the borderlands of Scotland, hideously mutilated to
avoid identification.  Forty-three pieces of rotten flesh and bone wrapped in rags and newspaper.  A jigsaw puzzle of decomposing human remains. A glamorous young wife and her dutiful nursemaid missing.  A handsome, mild-mannered town doctor insanely jealous of his wife’s friendships with other men. It is 1935 and the deaths of Isabella Ruxton and Mary Rogerson would result in one of the most complex investigations the world had ever seen.  The gruesome murders captured worldwide attention with newspapers keeping the public enthralled with all the gory details. But behind the headlines was a different, more important story: the ground-breaking work of Scottish forensic scientists who developed new techniques to solve the case and shape the future of criminal investigation.   With access to previously unseen documents, this book re-examines the case and reveals for the first time the incredible inside story of the investigation and its legacy.  This is the first modern murder.


Megan Goldin on writing Courtroom Dramas

"I want the truth.”
You can't handle the truth.”
Who among us doesn't know which movie these lines are from!

The courtroom scene from the showdown between Tom Cruise and Jack Nicholson's characters in the 1992 movie A Few Good Men is one of the most quoted and memed movie scenes ever.

There's arguably no moment more suspenseful in literature or cinema than a trial with justice hanging in the balance, and the awful possibility of injustice triumphing. For my money, no jump scare, or shootout can ever trump a great courtroom scene.

From Tom Robinson’s murder trial in To Kill A Mockingbird to the trial in John Grisham’s legal thriller A Time To Kill, fictional trials provide almost unparalleled heart stopping drama without a a single shot being fired. The palpable surge of elation when good wins out, or tears and bitter disappointment when justice does not prevail, make courtroom dramas compelling reading or watching.

Among my favorite courtroom dramas is the 1957 movie Witness for The Prosecution. The suspense. The twist. The brilliant tactics of the defence lawyer, played by Charles Laughton. Or Spencer Tracey's fiery courtroom rhetoric in the film Inherit The Wind, about the 1925 Scopes 'Monkey' Trial which pitted Darwinism against Creationism but which was also a parable for McCarthyism, at its height when the film came out in 1960.

Or of course Gregory Peck's famous courtroom scene as Atticus Finch in the 1962 film adaptation of To Kill a Mockingbird. The heart-wrenching consequences of that trial hung over the rest of the novel, and the film, like a dark shadow as it did the life of the young narrator of the story, Scout. .

Having watched, read and loved many of these movies and books, it was as if I'd been preparing to write about a trial all my life when I wrote the courtroom scenes for my thriller The Night Swim. The novel is about a true crime podcaster covering a rape trial in a small coastal town while investigating the mysterious drowning of a teenage girl decades earlier.

In preparation for the courtroom battle between the prosecutor Mitch Alkins and the defence lawyer Dale Quinn, I did plenty of research. I watched trials and talked to lawyers and judges and many others. I read transcripts and judgements from many different trials and I researched all sorts of details in the interests of accuracy. Then I wrote, and rewrote, those scenes until they were exactly as I’d seen them unfolding in my imagination when I first thought of the plot for the novel.

Research is important and it's one of my favorite parts of writing a novel. Although, too much research may be a double edged sword when it comes to writing a fictional trial. Writing suspenseful fiction often necessitates taking liberties with the truth. Real trials can be a snooze fest.

Sit in the public gallery in a real courtroom and you will be forced to endure excruciatingly long hours of listening to witnesses giving dry and repetitive testimony as well as plenty of hushed inside-baseball discussions on rules and legal technicalities.

There will be chairs squeaking, throats clearing and endless re-reading of transcripts in the echoey courtroom. But dramatic cross-examinations will be few and far between. In the fictional courtroom, days or even weeks of dry testimony are boiled down to a few dramatic moments. Lawyers can and do catch witnesses in lies in the most delicious ways. Watch Witness For The Prosecution for one of the best examples of this.

There’s a constant flow of clever repartee between sparring lawyers. Closing statements are filled with passionate rhetoric that move the courtroom to tears. Judges are irascible. Witnesses drop unexpected bombshells, or are broken under cross-examination. It’s rare in real life for a lawyer to break a witness on the stand and force him, or her to confess to being the real culprit as happens almost routinely in episodes of the long running TV show Law & Order and its spin-offs as well as many other legal dramas.

But it doesn't really matter because fictional trials might be a little loose with the facts but they often encapsulate the essence of the truth.

The Night Swim by Megan Goldin. Published by Mirror Books (Out Now)
Ever since her true-crime podcast became an overnight sensation and set an innocent man free, Rachel Krall has become a household name - and the last hope for people seeking justice. But she's used to being recognised for her voice, not her face. Which makes it all the more unsettling when she finds a note on her car windshield, addressed to her, begging for help. The new season of Rachel's podcast has brought her to a small town being torn apart by a devastating rape trial. A local golden boy, a swimmer destined for Olympic greatness, has been accused of raping the beloved granddaughter of the police chief. Under pressure to make Season 3 a success, Rachel throws herself into her investigation - but the mysterious letters keep coming. Someone is following her, and she won't stop until Rachel finds out what happened to her sister twenty-five years ago. Officially, Jenny Stills tragically drowned, but the letters insist she was murdered - and when Rachel starts asking questions, nobody in town wants to answer. The past and present start to collide as Rachel uncovers startling connections between the two cases - and a revelation that will change the course of the trial and the lives of everyone involved.

The Night Swim can be bought here.

Bio
Megan Goldin worked as a correspondent for Reuters and other media outlets where she covered war, peace, international terrorism and financial meltdowns in the Middle East and Asia. She is now based in Melbourne, Australia where she raises three sons and is a foster mum to Labrador puppies learning to be guide dogs. The Escape Room was her debut novel.

#TheNightSwim

Wednesday, 12 August 2020

St Hilda's Crime Fiction Weekend goes live online, 14/15 August.


This year will be the 27th Crime Fiction Weekend at St Hilda's, but for many of you, at home and abroad, 2020 may be the first opportunity you have to attend.
Running from Friday evening through to Saturday evening our theme is
All Our Yesterdays’: historical crime fiction.

Join us live to find yourself unleashed upon the London of the Swinging Sixties, the winding backstreets of 1950s Bombay, the gin shops and brothels of Georgian London, and backstage on Brighton pier - all in pursuit of Murder. Subjects include Agatha Christie, Patricia Highsmith, Ian Pears, and CJ Sansom.
Andrew Taylor (Ashes Of London, The American Boy, etc) is our Guest Of Honour
and author of the dramatic Whodunnit:
The Murder Of Lucy Ackroyd
'a chillingly implausible tale set in
 the academic badlands beyond Magdalen Bridge.'
Starring: Chief Inspector Taylor, Val McDermid, Sarah Hilary,
Abir Mukherjee, Miriam Margolyes, and Mick Herron.
Blackwell's Bookshop will be awarding a prize to one lucky armchair sleuth.
Please, head over to the website to peruse the programme, the speakers and
their subjects, both the fresh blood and the usual suspects!

There is a special concession for alumnae and recordings of the whole event will be available to attendees for a month.

We look forward to seeing you.



The Crossroads of Crime Writing: Historical, Sociological and Cultural Contexts/ Intersections/ Perspectives


CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS—EDITED COLLECTION

Proposal/abstract deadline: November 1, 2020

Final essays due: April 2021

This volume, which will be proposed to a leading independent academic publisher, seeks to explore the implications of crime writing in its various narrative forms through essays which situate orientations fictional and non-fictional, past and present in relation to public perspectives. Just as real crime has served as inspiration for fictional accounts, Kieran Dolin reminds us in Fiction and the Law (Cambridge Press, 2009) that crime literature has long influenced popular understanding of social institutions as well. And so, we are not only interested in offering a comprehensive overview of crime writing in its diverse forms, but in examining how crime writing simultaneously reflects temporal biases and influences popular conceptions of politics, the law, psychology, the self, and more.

Over a century ago, in his examination The Sensational in Modern English Fiction (1919), Walter Clarke Phillips declared, “Whatever sources of appeal may come or go, there is one which from the very structure of modern democratic society seldom bids for applause unheeded — that is, the appeal to fear” (2). And, it is to this appeal that we owe the abundance of crime writing at our disposal— a trove of mystery that undoubtedly fascinates in its ability to entertain while safely reflecting the ugliest truths about ourselves and the societies in which we live.

It is in this vein that Catherine Nickerson asserts in “Murder as Social Criticism,” that crime fiction “is deeply enmeshed with most of the thornier problems of the Victorian, modern, and postmodern eras, including gender roles and privileges, racial prejudice and the formation of racial consciousness, the significance and morality of wealth and capital, and the conflicting demands of privacy and social control” (American Literary History). And, this is just as true of Gothic and Victorian Sensation novels which generally expose social anxieties in relation to cultural, institutional and individual identities as it is of the ever-growing contemporary genre of True Crime which typically concentrates “upon certain events and figures as kinds of cultural flashpoints, and it also has a long history, from colonial narratives to early twentieth-century pulp fiction” (Rosalind Smith, “Dark Places: True Crime Writing in Australia”).

We invite essays that provide new insights into the works of significant authors, series or sub-genres of crime literature that we once thought we knew and/ or examine the intersections of the real and fictional within the broader genre of Crime Writing in meaningful ways. Contributors are encouraged to dissect the historical, cultural, and/ or sociological significance of crime fiction, as well as examine how such works influence true crime writing or vice versa. Possible essay topics could include (but are not limited to) the following:

The History/Genesis of Mystery/Crime Writing and/or its Structure or Tenets
The Nineteenth-Century Police Force and the Detective Novel
Intersections between the Real and Fictional in Historical Crime Novels
British Aesthetic vs. American Hardboiled Crime
The Dime Novel and/or Early Hardboiled Fiction
The Police Procedural and Popular Culture
Historical Mystery as a Means of Contextualizing the Current
Crime Writing and Gender Roles
Racial Consciousness and Detection
Socio-economics of Crime and Detection
Socio-political Readings of the Gentleman Detective and/or Hardboiled Detective
Cross-Dressing and/or Queering in Mysteries
LGBTQ+ Portrayals in Mysteries
Intersections between Detective Film and Literature
Exploring Law through Literature/ Legal Thrillers
Lawyers and the Courtroom Drama
The Serial Killer and Contemporary Culture
Holmesian Influence/Pervasiveness in Western Culture
American Realism in Crime Writing
Capers/The Criminal Mind
Crime Fiction’s Influence on Journalistic Reporting/True Crime
(Neo) Gothic or (Neo)Victorian Sensation Novels

Please email 500-word abstracts along with a 200-word biographical statement to Meghan Nolan (mnolan2@sunyrockland.edu) and Rebecca Martin (doc.rmartin@gmail.com) by November 1st, 2020.

The deadline for selected essays of 5000-7000 words is April 2021.

In The Spotlight: Jill Dawson

©Jill Dawson
Name:- Jill Dawson
Job:- Author, Poet and Journalist
Twitter:- @Jdawsonwriter

Introduction:
Jill Dawson is the author of 10 novels including The Crime Writer which won the East Anglian Book of the Year. Most of her books have either been long-listed and short-listed for a number of awards including the Whitbread and the Orange Prize. She has taught for the Arvon Foundation, the Faber Academy, the Guardian/UEA and for the Sunday Times/Oxford Summer School. She was instrumental in founding Escalator, an award for new writers, and is founder and director of Gold Dust Mentoring Writers, which matches new writers with established ones. Her most recently published book is The Language of Birds.

Current book? 
I have started a new novel set in the late 16th century so it’s a lot of non-fiction reading for research, with titles such as Cambridgeshire Customs and Folklore (Enid Porter) and Hilary Mantel’s favourite: Religion and the Decline of Magic, Keith Thomas.

Favourite book
The Ballad of the Sad Café, Carson McCullers (But it changes, and if you ask me next week I will definitely say something else).

Which two characters would you invite to dinner and why?
Miss Amelia from The Ballad of the Sad Cafe – one of the strangest and most brilliantly drawn characters in fiction and Sula from Toni Morison’s novel of that name, so that I can ask her why she betrayed her friend.

How do you relax?
I’m always relaxed - as I think my friends will testify!

What book do you wish you had written and why?
Michael Ondaatchi’s Divisidero because it’s so sexy and startlingly beautiful on such an achingly sad subject (addiction).

What would you say to your younger self if you were just starting out as a writer.
I know this looks bad. But you know this will be great material, later…

How would you describe your series character?
I don’t have a series. But….my favourite historical crime fiction has to be George Simenon’s The Mahe Circle (1944) for the dreamy troubling atmosphere and brilliant description of an obsession. And Patricia Highsmith knows a thing or two about obsession, too. I’d go for The Talented Mr Ripley, such an original and perceptive depiction of a fantasist and psychopath, where many imitators since are corny, psychologically inaccurate and predictable. 

The Language of Birds by Jill Dawson (Hodder & Stoughton)
Drawing on the infamous Lord Lucan affair, this compelling novel explores the roots of a
shocking murder from a fresh perspective and brings to vivid life an era when women's voices all too often went unheard. In the summer of 1974, Mandy River arrives in London to make a fresh start and begins working as nanny to the children of one Lady Morven. She quickly finds herself in the midst of a bitter custody battle and the house under siege: Lord Morven is having his wife watched. According to Lady Morven, her estranged husband also has a violent streak, yet she doesn't seem the most reliable witness. Should Mandy believe her? As Mandy edges towards her tragic fate, her friend Rosemary watches from the wings - an odd girl with her own painful past and a rare gift. This time, though, she misreads the signs.

Tuesday, 11 August 2020

In The Spotlight: Sara Sheridan

Name:- Sara Sheridan

Job:- Author and activist

Website:- http://www.sarasheridan.com

Twitter @sarasheridan

Introduction:-
Sara Sheridan is a Scottish writer over over 20 books which the include cosy crime Mirabelle Bevan noir series. The first book n the Mirabelle Bevan series is Brighton Belle (2012) subsequently followed by London Calling (2012), England Expects (2014), British Bulldog (2015), Operation Goodwood (2016), Russian Roulette(2017) and Indian Summer (2019). The most recent book is Highland Fling (2020). In 2017 she wrote the companion guide to the ITV series, Victoria and in 2019 she also wrote the companion guide to Andrew Davies’s adaptation of Jane Austen’s final, unfinished novel, Sanditon.

Current book?
Literally finished last night: Tough Jews by Rich Cohen, which is non-fiction about 1940s Jewish gangsters in New York. 

Favourite book
This is like picking a favourite kid. I mean HOW? I’m going to reply by saying books that resonate with me are Eva Ibbotson’s adult fiction, Lorna Moon’s brilliant short stories, The Green Mile by Ann Enright, The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman.

Which two characters would you invite to dinner and why?
If you mean fictional characters: - Jane Marple because she is my lifelong favourite character (even though someone might get murdered while she was visiting cos that happens a lot) and Johnathan Strange because of the magic. 

How do you relax?
I’m not very good at relaxing but I deep breathe several times a day and that helps me to pace myself. I also love walking and swimming. Plus if things get really stressful I knit. (I know – I’m a granny, basically)

What book do you wish you had written and why? Oh gosh – well you wanted 2 of my favourite historical novels and why and these tie in with this question so….
Water Music by TC Boyle, which is about Mungo Park’s doomed trips down the Niger in the late 1700s/early 1800s – absolutely the best historical novel I ever read. I seethe with jealousy over the way Boyle captures the rambunctious late Georgian era. 

Next – Poor Things by Alasdair Gray, which I love for its wit. Alasdair was a very funny man and this book set in Victorian Glasgow is a riot. 

Now this is tricky cos neither of those are historical crime. I mean – I don’t consider Christie historical crime cos she wrote contemporary crime – it’s just that time passed. This is further complicated because the two genres tell their stories in different ways. So if I’m picking 2 historical crime books ie crime stories written in a past era by a writer not living in that era, it would be:

Name of the Rose by Umberto Eco. The medieval fascinates me and there is an inescapable tension to this book that I LOVE. 
Fingersmith by Sarah Waters which is clever but still manages to engage the heart. I also enjoy Waters’s female characters a lot – they feel real.

What would you say to your younger self if you were just starting out as a writer.
I’d say keep going! I never meant to be a writer so I think the younger me would reply ‘what are you talking about?’ I was always an enthusiastic reader, and then I had to take some time off work and decided to write a novel (really so I could say I was doing something….) It sold 3 weeks after I sent off the first draft and went into the top 50 when it was published and that was that. 

How would you describe your series character?
Mirabelle is an evolving character – we first meet her in the early 1950s when she is grieving and in post-war traumatic shock. Today we’d recognise her as being mildly depressed. The whole country was, pretty much. Over the series, she cheers up (in fact, the series in a way is that story, about how Britain cheered up after WWII). She’s resourceful, moral, clear-sighted and sexy. She also dresses very well. Nothing like me. 

Highland Fling by Sara Sheridan.
Scottish Highlands, 1958, Britain is awash in Cold War anxiety as Mirabelle Bevan heads for the Highlands on a holiday to visit Superintendent Alan McGregor's family. More glamorous than she expected, the Robertsons welcome her with open arms and an array of cocktails, but she has scarcely arrived when the body of an American fashion buyer turns up brutally murdered, plunging the local village into disarray and sending shockwaves around the close, Highland community. Mirabelle can't resist investigating, but what she finds lays the limitations of her feelings for McGregor bare and calls into question the loyalties of all those around her from the Robertson's housekeeper Mrs Gillies to the family of the dead woman. What started as a relaxing break in scenic surroundings soon spirals into a week fraught with danger. As the press descend on the Robertson's Highland estate, it rapidly becomes clear that things are not as black and as they first appeared and Mirabelle can't count on anyone . . .

Political Genre-Bending in Bacurau by Kate Reed Petty

I love thrillers. In books, movies, and anecdotes shared over dinner, what I love best are stories about criminals and backstabbers, lies and jealousy, ghosts and uncanny coincidences—all the twisted logics of the human condition. I have many friends who prefer their entertainment to relax; I like mine to thrill. I want to look at the frightening parts of life from the safe vantage of a good story. 

At the same time, I find many of the familiar tropes of thrillers grating. Police protagonists, for example—especially those who "bend the rules" in relentless pursuit of the "bad guys"—look more and more like destructive propaganda. Stories that hinge on violence against women feel similarly insidious. I don't necessarily want a righteous political message to neatly tie up everything I read and watch. It's just that I'm tired of lazy, regressive tropes giving sneaky justification to the rampant unfairness we see in the news every day. 

Which is why I can't stop talking about the film Bacurau. Winner of last year's Cannes Jury Prize, the movie bends and stretches the tropes of my favorite genres in exhilarating ways. 

The film takes place in a subtly-near future; "Bacurau" is also the name of the fictional rural village that is the story's main character. A government-funded dam has cut off the town's water supply in service of elsewhere profits. The residents resist the water theft with dignity and intelligence; they truck in fresh water, smuggle in their own medicine, share food, and throw away the sedatives given as "charity" from a local politician. Co-Director Kleber Mendonça Filho has described Bacurau as one of the world's "helping communities," where people have learned "to live relatively well even on the margins of public power." 

In addition to self-sufficiency, the town is also capable of violent resistance. One of their near-mythic members, a queer revolutionary figure, has gone into hiding after attacking the dam. Another is famous for the surveillance videos on YouTube of his gunmanship. The director based the village on Brazil's quilombos, which were historically settled by people who escaped enslavement; there is a museum in the center of Bacurau that quietly celebrates this history, including a display of antique guns—that still work. 

Watching any thriller brings me two essential kinds of pleasure. The first is akin to the pleasure of eating crème brûlée; it comes from appreciating and enjoying the flawless execution of a classic form. The second comes from innovation. I love watching the classic form inverted, expectations set up and then thwarted, tropes reinvented to new ends. It's less of a crème brûlée than a peanut-butter-and-pickle sandwich. 

The magic of Bacurau is that it delivers both of these pleasures. The movie aligns most closely with the structure of a western—the story of a remote town under siege from foreigners. Yet there is no rugged individualist hero of the story; the entire town is the protagonist, with different people sharing screen time the way they share food. There's horror, with nods to the apocalyptic visions of John Carpenter and George Miller, and an extended sequence that, Predator-like, turns the tables on a group of invaders. There's also a good bit of exploitation film, brilliant in a film that is essentially a commentary on exploitation. The directors masterfully execute tension and suspense and then twist into something totally unexpected. And in doing so, they offer a path through genre that I believe is important for all storytellers in our current era. 

In The Atrocity Exhibition, JG Ballard writes about the homogenizing influence of Disney on museums as well as individual people in the twentieth century, saying that both are packaged to be easily understandable and attractive. "Desperate for the new, but disappointed with anything but the familiar, we recolonize past and future," Ballard writes, complaining about the way tropes become commercial signifiers. 

But something different is happening now, and not only in Bacurau. For the forthcoming horror Antebellum, for example, co-directors Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz sought out the camera lenses used on Gone With the Wind because, Bush says, "We need to correct the record with the same weapon that was used to misinform and mislead."

Genre tropes are a kind of lens, too. As the horrors of our exploitive and racist economic systems are bursting daily in the news, I'm grateful for storytellers putting these old lenses to new use. Instead of recolonizing past and future, they're starting to decolonize. It's only a movie, but I'm glad it's a start. 

True Story by Kate Reed Petty (Quercus Publishing) Out Now
After a college party, two boys drive a girl home: drunk and passed out in the back seat.
Rumours spread about what they did to her, but later they'll tell the police a different version of events. Alice will never remember what truly happened. Her fracture runs deep, hidden beneath cleverness and wry humour. Nick - a sensitive, misguided boy who stood by - will never forget. That's just the beginning of this extraordinary journey into memory, fear and self-portrayal. Through university applications, a terrifying abusive relationship, a fateful reckoning with addiction and a final mind-bending twist, Alice and Nick will take on different roles to each other - some real, some invented - until finally, brought face to face once again, the secret of that night is revealed. 

Monday, 10 August 2020

2020 Ngaio Marsh Finalists

A diverse array of fresh contenders have amassed to challenge New Zealand’s king of crime fiction as the finalists for the 2020 Ngaio Marsh Awards were revealed today.

Ten years after we launched the Ngaio Marsh Awards to help celebrate excellence in local crime, mystery, thriller, and suspense writing it’s heartening to see so many new voices infusing and stretching our #yeahnoir community,” says founder Craig Sisterson. 

While we’ve had around 80 debut authors enter the Ngaios in recent years, it’s also been fantastic to see many experienced Kiwi storytellers become first-time Ngaios entrants as they’ve entertained readers and explored society through these types of stories.”

Along with the finalists in the Best First Novel category, for the first time two debut authors – Becky Manawatu and RWR McDonald – have been named finalists for the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel. Two of the other finalists – Gudrun Frerichs and Renée – are also first-time crime and thriller writers (having previously published in other genres). They’re joined by 2019 Best First Novel winner JP Pomare and three-time Best Novel winner Paul Cleave. 

The finalists for the 2020 Ngaio Marsh Awards are: 

BEST NOVEL
Whatever it Takes by Paul Cleave (Upstart Press)
Girl from the Tree House by Gudrun Frerichs
Auē by Becky Manawatu (Mākaro Press)
The Nancys by RWR McDonald (Allen & Unwin)
In the Clearing by JP Pomare (Hachette NZ)
The Wild Card by Renée (The Cuba Press)

BEST FIRST NOVEL
Tugga’s Mob by Stephen Johnson (Clan Destine Press)
Auē by Becky Manawatu (Mākaro Press)
The Nancys by RWR McDonald Allen & Unwin)
Into the Void by Christina O’Reilly


This year’s finalists are a fascinating group of Kiwi storytellers who’ve collectively won or been shortlisted for accolades in New Zealand and overseas including the Prime Minister's Awards for Literary Achievement, the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction, the Australian Book Industry Awards, the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards, the Saint-Maur Crime Novel of the Year in France, and the Edgar Awards and Barry Awards in the United States. 

Our international judging panels have been dealing with a range of rāhui and lockdown situations this year but have thoroughly enjoyed reading the range and quality of stories offered by our Kiwi authors,” says Sisterson. “There were differing favourites, tough decisions, and some great reads our judges loved that didn’t become finalists. A decade on from our inaugural Ngaio Marsh Awards, our local genre is certainly in great health.”

Each category of the Ngaio Marsh Awards is judged by a separate international panel, consisting of book critics for print and online publications, bestselling authors, university academics, and festival directors from the USA, UK, Australia, and New Zealan.

The finalists for the 2020 Ngaio Marsh Awards will be celebrated, and winners announced, at the WORD Christchurch Spring Festival, being held from 29 October to 1 November. 

It’s been a tough year for so many people,” says Sisterson. “We’re glad to be able to highlight some great Kiwi storytelling. All over the world, people turned to the fruits of the creative industries while in lockdown – reading books and watching films and shows for entertainment, learning, comfort, and escape. While we were saddened to have to cancel a dozen or more library events in April and May, to help keep everyone safe, we’re stoked we now have a chance to once again celebrate some of our local authors. We’re grateful for the support of Rachael King and WORD Christchurch, and the efforts of all New Zealanders.

A video of the finalists can be seen below:-

For more information on this year’s finalist authors and books, or the Ngaio Marsh Awards in general, please contact founder and judging convenor Craig Sisterson - craigsisterson@hotmail.com