Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Tom Wood - Victor and I


© Michael Hinshelwood
Today’s guest blog is by Tom Wood who is the author of the series featuring Victor a professional assassin.

THE GAME, the third novel in my series about a professional killer known only as Victor, has just been published in the UK. The story begins with Victor stalking a fellow assassin through the streets of Algiers and from there he is drawn into his most dangerous assignment yet: posing as his victim to uncover the assassin’s next mark. It’s a job that pushes Victor to the absolute limit, both physically and emotionally. It was a tough book to write, but very rewarding.

When I first began working on my debut, THE HUNTER, it was many moons ago and I had no grand plans for a series back. I had absolutely no idea what might second book would be, let alone my third. In fact, I didn’t even dare think that there might be a second book. It was hard enough getting that first one finished to the point where I felt it was ready to send out to an agent and then a publisher, let alone plan for what came next. I suppose if I had been on the ball back then I would have done a few things differently with THE HUNTER to make writing the following books a little easier on myself. In fact I took some decisions then that have come back to bite me on the behind more than once, and will forever more. Nevertheless, I think for the majority of writers the first novel is such a mountain to climb that it would be foolhardy to think about what mountains we might later attempt while still struggling to reach that first summit.

I’m not yet experienced enough to know whether writing a series is more straightforward than writing standalones, but I do know that I thought it would be more straightforward than it’s turned out to be. There is a lot to consider. With each book a back-story is being cemented and with it potential future scenarios are increasingly limited if one wishes to provide originality with each novel. However, maybe readers don’t want something new each time out, maybe they want to read more of the same. I don’t know. I don’t think I can know. I can do only what I think is correct. From my own selfish perspective, I want to try something a little different with each book. I don’t want repeat myself. I’m writing about a professional assassin, so at the simplest level (and without giving too much away) I use his line of work to place him in a different situation each time out. In THE HUNTER Victor is betrayed and on the run in the aftermath of a hit at the very start of the book, whereas in THE ENEMY he is very much the aggressor, performing a number of individual (but connected) assignments that cause him increasing amounts of difficulty, while in THE GAME he has one single job to do that becomes far more complex and challenging than even he could anticipate.

When I took the decision to write a second book about Victor, it immediately felt right. I realised I just had to find out what happened to him next. He had survived against impossible odds and in doing so his whole life had been turned upside down. His story couldn’t be over. So I went back and made sure to leave a few story threads open at the end of that first book, partially because I never intended the book to wrap up everything neatly, but also to potentially draw upon those threads at later points. As a reader, I’m not a big fan of finding out in book nine of a series that the main character has beloved cousin who he or she now must do anything to protect. If that cousin were so important, why has there been no mention of them in the previous eight books? I didn’t want to be that kind of writer. However, I also didn’t want my books to be inaccessible to readers who had not read the previous ones. Therefore, I find myself with two opposing philosophies that must be balanced. I did mention earlier that I don’t make things easy on myself, right?

But, regardless of the difficulties of writing a series I couldn’t be happier doing what I’m doing. Victor, despite his nefarious profession, is great fun to write about. He can be as ruthless or as honourable as I want and gets into the kind of dire straits that would be implausible if not downright silly with any other kind of protagonist, and perhaps most importantly of all he can get himself out again.  That combination lets my imagination go berserk with possibilities and means that his escapades are never dull.

Moreover, that is probably the single biggest reason why I ended up writing about him and not another character. I am easily bored. I do not like sitting still. As a reader, I want to get to the meat of the story as soon as possible. I do not want padding. I want thrills and spills. I do not want endless back-story (if it’s so interesting it should be the main story!) Victor’s high-octane adventures were born out of my own short attention span. My motto when I began writing was to pen thrillers with the boring bits taken out. I like to think if they can hold my interest writing them they should easily hold a reader’s attention when they’re clutching the finished product.

-----

The Game - Victor is the perfect killer. He has no past. He will stop at nothing. And he can find you anywhere.

In sweltering Algiers, ultra-efficient hitman Victor executes a fellow assassin. But when the CIA comes calling, Victor must pose as his victim to identify the dead man's next mark, a mission that takes him across Europe to the bloody streets of Rome. Working alongside a group of vicious mercenaries, Victor faces an impossible choice: to do what's right, or to sacrifice the only thing he cares about . . . his life
.

Tom Wood can be found on Facebook and can be followed on Twitter @thetomwood



Friday, 19 July 2013

John Grisham News and Cover reveal for October 2013

 
The UK cover reveal for the eagerly awaited new novel by John Grisham happened yesterday 18th July 2013. SYCAMORE ROW is Grisham’s 31st work of fiction and publishes on October 22nd 2013. It returns to the world of his first novel, A TIME TO KILL and features hero lawyer Jake Brigance in what promises to be a heady tale of suicide, contested wills and racial tension in America’s Deep South.

To celebrate publication and reward John’s loyal fans, the first edition will be a special run of just 5,000 copies. Known as the ‘Trunk Edition’ this exclusive printing will contain extra material in the form of a short story and will also carry a facsimile of the author’s signature.




The ‘Trunk Edition’ is designed to echo the very first publication of A TIME TO KILL back in 1989 by a small independent American publisher. An unknown writer at the time, John Grisham had to buy up copies of the 5,000 copy print run to sell out of the trunk of his own car. After a faltering start, he decided to write one more book before giving up his dream of writing completely. This book was THE FIRM and the rest is literary history…
 
A TIME TO KILL has gone on to sell 19 million copies worldwide as well as become a major Hollywood blockbuster starring Matthew McConaughey, Samuel L. Jackson and Sandra Bullock.

John Grisham has become an internationally bestselling author, with 275 million copies of his books in print around the world. Seven of his novels have been filmed, with several more currently in pre-production.
 
The accompanying video clip features previously unseen footage of John talking about his experiences of publishing A TIME TO KILL and why he decided to finally to return to Ford County and write SYCAMORE ROW.



This Trunk Edition is available to pre-order now from all major book retailers and once all copies have been sold, the standard hardback will be available.

SYCAMORE ROW by John Grisham is published in hardcover on 22nd October 2013 by Hodder &   Stoughton at £19.99

For further information please contact Kerry Hood on 020 7873 6l73 or at Kerry.hood@hodder.co.uk



Wednesday, 17 July 2013

Criminal Splatterings!

According to Deadline.com, both Tom Hank s and Ron Howard will return as star and director in the Dan Brown novel Inferno.  Sony, which has film rights to the franchise, has just set a December 18, 2015 release date.  It also looks as if Hanks will reprise his role as symbologist Robert Langdon in The Lost Symbol but it looks as if it will not be Ron Howard who will direct it and The Lost Symbol is currently on the backburner.  More information can also be found here and here.

According to Book2Book Jade Chandler, Commissioning Editor for Sphere has acquired UK and Commonwealth rights from Lance Fitzgerald at Simon & Schuster US in Face Off, an unprecedented collaboration between twenty-three of the world's bestselling crime writers in which the authors' series characters meet in eleven co-written stories.  More information about the deal can be found here.  The collection will be published in June 2014.

According to The Guardian Ben Affleck is set to star as Nick in the lead role of the film adaptation of Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl.

Congratulations go to the brilliant Jason Pinter who has according to Book2Book launched   a new digital publishing venture called Polis Books.  The company will be publishing e-book editions of new and backlist fiction in three genres: crime, under an imprint called Vice; science fiction/fantasy, under an imprint called Elysium; and romance/erotica/commercial women's fiction, under the Crave imprint.  The website www.polisbooks.com will go live in around a month.

Former MP Chris Mullin’s thriller The Year of the Fire Monkey has according to the Telegraph been optioned by Paul Greengrass, who directed two of the Jason Bourne movies.  The thriller, about a CIA sleeper in Tibet, is set against the backdrop of the meeting between Chairman Mao and President Nixon in 1972.  It was first published in 1991 and has long been out of print.

Sam Mendes is set to return to direct the next James Bond film.  The next (yet unnamed) instalment is due to be released on 23 October 2015.  More information can be found here.

Another addition to Christopher Fowler’s Invisible Ink: No 181 – Saved From Obscurity can be found here.


Interesting article in the Independent about the rise of French Noir.

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Michael Stanley I Presume

Shots are delighted to feature a guest article by the two writers Michael Sears and Stan Trollip who write the Detective Kubu Mysteries collaboratively under the name Michael Stanley. The latest novel is Deadly Harvest, and a dark tale about the African Ritual of Muti which we reviewed at Shots recently. Deadly Harvest is the 4th in the Detective Kubu series – but can be read as a standalone.




At times this novel is frightening in terms of feeling lost in a dangerous and unforgiving region [filled with ritual and superstition] but balanced by a light sense of humor that keeps this tale from veering into dry melodrama. The sparse but comprehensive delineation of the vast array of characters is masterfully done, as is the authenticity of the backdrop, and its detail. Special mention must be made of minor character Big Mama, the owner of “BIG MAMA KNOWS ALL” Bar and Lounge [aka ‘Shebeen’] as she, like her drinking parlor adds a vivid streak over the proceedings.

It was Anglo-Irish Politician Edmund Burke who once said that ‘for evil to thrive, all it takes is for good men to do nothing’. David ‘Kubu’ Bengu is a example of one of Burke’s good men, for he, with help from his colleagues uncovers the truth behind not only the missing school girls, the death of the Politician, and finally uncovers who is referred to as ‘the man who is invisible’, the malevolent being at the centre of the Shakespearian tragedy that is Deadly Harvest.
This makes Deadly Harvest into one of the finest crime thrillers of 2013, but do not let the African location put you off. Instead, embrace it as once you open its covers, you’ll hear the voice of the missing American school-girl Dorothy utter ‘we’re not in Kansas anymore’

Read the full Shots review here

So after finishing this remarkable novel, we asked the Michael Stanley duo a little about the background research that makes Deadly Harvest such an interesting read -

It’s difficult for westerners to appreciate just how pervasive and important the belief in the power of witch doctors is in many African cultures.  As the joke goes, if you ask someone if he believes in witchcraft, he replies: “No, of course not.  But it is true!”

It’s even difficult to come to grips with the term witch doctor, which is used for a wide spectrum of practitioners.  (In Botswana the term ngaka is used; the same word is also used for an ordinary doctor.)  At the one end of the spectrum are traditional healers (like Kubu’s father), who have skills and knowledge of local herbs and plants and who provide a useful service.  At the other end are reprehensible characters who promise impossible results at huge expensive using potions involving human body parts.

The underlying belief of the latter group is that it’s possible to transfer the powers or attributes of an animal or human to another person through a potion or muti that is used as an ointment, consumed, or just carried.  Thus a muti containing the heart of a lion confers courage; a youth’s testicles heightens a man’s sexual prowess; and parts of an animal thought to be lucky bring good fortune.  As most of these desirable outcomes are governed by the recipient’s mind, it’s easy for witch doctors to achieve success and gain respect.  As their fame grows, so do their claims.  In the seventies, a witch doctor known as Ovambo Sophie provided freedom fighters in Namibia with muti that she claimed made them immune to bullets.  Few of her believers returned to refute her powers.

The rarer the donor, the more powerful the muti.  Albinos are particularly sought after, and their body parts fetch huge prices.  Dreadfully, it’s thought that the muti becomes even more powerful if the harvest takes place while the victim is still alive.

Unfortunately, the practice is becoming more common rather than less.  Of course, these are brutal murders, and the police take them very seriously.  But there are several reasons why the killers are seldom caught.  In the first place, there is no clear connection between the victim and the murderer, a similar problem to serial killer cases.  Secondly, witnesses (and the police themselves) are scared of black magic and dubious about taking on the wielders of it.  And, finally, given the cost of these potions, the end users will be rich and powerful people that one wouldn’t like to cross. 

It’s hardly surprising that most cases go unsolved.  A famous one in Botswana led to riots when the police failed to make progress on the muti murder of a young girl.  Eventually the government called in Scotland Yard to conduct an unbiased review.  They did their own investigation and reported to the government, but their report has never been released. It’s in this context that Kubu and new female detective Samantha take on a feared witch doctor, reputedly invisible and horribly powerful, in DEADLY HARVEST.

We recommend this dark tale highly and it available here from the Shots Online Bookstore [which helps support Shots]. If you do purchase books online, we’d appreciate you using the Shots Bookstore – thank you

More information about Michael Stanley is available here and the first two chapters are available here – but we warn you that once read, you’ll be downloading or ordering Deadly Harvest, such is the intensity of the writing.

Photo Credits
“Witch Doctor Ovambo Sophie” © Alex Zaloumis
“Mike Stotter with Mike Sears and Stan Trollip’ © Ali Karim
Anne Zouroudi with Mike Sears and Stan Trollip’ © Ali Karim
“Deadly Harvest” cover © HarperCollins US

Text © Michael Stanley


2013 Crime Writers Association Dagger winners and long list announcements

A number of the CWA Daggers were announced on Monday 15 July 2013 at the Dagger Dinner that were held at King’s Place in North London.

The announcement of the Daggers Awards is always an exciting moment in the CWA’s calendar” says CWA chair Alison Joseph. “For months our judges have been reading all the entries, in all the categories, and once again their shortlists show their care, discernment and thoughtfulness”.
  
Frederick Forsyth last year’s winner of the Diamond Dagger was present to introduce and award the Diamond Dagger to this year’s recipient Lee Child.

The International Dagger was shared between two novels for the very first time. The two novels were the –
Ghost Riders of Ordebec by Fred Vargas, translated by Siân Reynolds, and Alex by Pierre Lemaitre, translated by Frank Wynne. 

The other books on the short list were-
The Missing File by D A Mishani, translated by Steven Cohen (Quercus)
Two Soldiers by Roslund & Hellström, translated by Kari Dickson (Quercus)
Death in Sardinia by Marco Vichi, translated by Stephen Sartarelli (Hodder & Stoughton)
The Collini Case by Ferdinand von Schirach, translated by Anthea Bell (Michael Joseph)

The Short Story Dagger was awarded to Stella Duffy for her story Come way With Me in The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime Volume 10 (edited by Maxim Jakubowski)

The other stories on the Short list were –
Method Murder by Simon Brett (The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime Volume 10 edited by Maxim Jakubowski)
Stairway C by Piero Colaprico (Outsiders, edited by Ben Faccini (MacLehose Press))
The Case of Death and Honey by Neil Gaiman (The Mammoth Book of Best British Crime Volume 10 edited by Maxim Jakubowski)
Ferengi by Carlo Lucarelli (Outsiders, edited by Ben Faccini (MacLehose Press))
Lost and Found by Zoë Sharp (Vengeance, edited by Lee Child (Corvus))

The Dagger in the Library was awarded to Belinda Bauer whose latest novel is Rubbernecker.
The other short listed authors were:-
Christopher Fowler
Alison Bruce
Gordon Ferris
Elly Griffiths
Michael Ridpath

The CWA Non-Fiction Dagger was awarded to Midnight in Peking by Paul French.
The other shortlisted authors were
The Boy in the River by Richard Hoskins (Pan Macmillan)
Against a Tide of Evil by Mukesh Kapila (with Damien Lewis) (Mainstream)
A Fine Day for a Hanging by Carol Ann Lee (Mainstream)
Injustice by Clive Stafford Smith (Random House)
Murder at Wrotham Hill by Diana Souhami (Quercus)

The CWA Debut Dagger was awarded to Finn Clarke for Call Time
The other nominated authors were –
The Assassin’s Keeper by Aine O Domhnaill (Ireland) 
TAG by Sue Dawes (UK) TAG
Working in Unison by Alex Sweeney (UK) 
Lesson Plan for Murder by Marie Hannan-Mandel (USA) 
Honour or Justice by Ron Puckering (UK) 
Torment by David Evans (UK) 
When the Bow Breaks by Jayne Barnard (Canada) 
Fighting Darkness: The Killer Trail by DB Carew (Canada) 
Born in a Burial Gown by Mike Craven (UK) 
The Journeyman by Emma Melville (UK) 
A Cure for All Evils by Joanna Dodd (UK) 

The CWA Ellis Peters Historical Dagger was awarded to Andrew Taylor for his novel A Scent of Death.  This is the third time he has won this awarded.  He won his first Dagger in 2001 for Office of the Dead and the second one in 2003 for An American Boy.

The other nominated stories were –
The Heretics by Rory Clements (John Murray)
Pilgrim Soul by Gordon Ferris (Corvus)
The Paris Winter by Imogen Robertson (Headline)
Dead Men and Broken Hearts by Craig Russell (Quercus)
The Twelfth Department by William Ryan (Mantle)

A number of long lists were also announced.  The lists will be whittled down to a shortlist of four later in the summer, with the eventual winner being revealed as part of the Specsavers Crime Thriller Awards in the autumn.

Gold Dagger
Rubbernecker by Belinda Bauer  (Bantam/Transworld)
The Shining Girls by Lauren Beukes  (HarperCollins)
Tequila Sunset by Sam Hawken (Serpent’s Tail)
Dead Lions by Mick Herron (Soho Crime)
Rage Against the Dying by Becky Masterman  (Orion)
Breakdown by Sara Paretsky (Hodder & Stoughton)
Say You’re Sorry by Michael Robotham (Sphere)
The Kings of Cool by Don Winslow (Heinemann

Ian Fleming Steel Dagger
Ghostman by Roger Hobbs (Transworld)
The Uninvited by Liz Jensen (Bloomsbury)
The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter by Malcolm Mackay (Pan Macmillan)
Ratlines by Stuart Neville (Random House)
The Sentinel by Mark Oldfield (Head of Zeus)
The Poison Tide by Andrew Williams (John Murray)
Capital Punishment by Robert Wilson (Orion)




John Creasey Dagger Award
 Ghostman by Roger Hobbs (Doubleday)
Something You Are by Hanna Jameson (Head of Zeus)
The Necessary Death of Lewis Winter by Malcolm Mackay  (Mantle)
Rage Against the Dying by Becky Masterman (Orion)
Norwegian by Night by Derek B Miller (Faber and Faber)
Shadow of the Rock by Thomas Mogford (Bloomsbury)
The City Of Shadows by Michael Russell (Avon)
City of Blood by M D Villiers (Harvill Secker)


Monday, 15 July 2013

Nele Neuhaus is In Good Company

Nele Neuhaus is one of Germany's most widely read crime authors. She was born in Muenster / Westphalia and raised in Paderborn.  She has been living in the Taunus region since her childhood and has been writing just as long.  
  
Ever since my childhood, I’ve loved dreaming up stories and writing them down. At first I used to do this with a fountain pen in my school books; later my parents gave me a typewriter. I’ve written and dreamt about writing books my whole life. 


It would have sounded crazy if I’d told my parents that I wanted to become an author after finishing my A-Levels. So I looked for a job and began to study law. Then I met my husband – reading wasn’t his cup of tea and he had even less enthusiasm for writing. Nonetheless I never let myself be put off and worked away on my first manuscript in every free moment that I had for over eight years.  “Below Sharks” is over 1000 pages long and is set in New York.  I was absolutely convinced that I had written a bestseller, but publishers thought otherwise. I got rejection after rejection. But I was in good company in that respect – even J.K. Rowling didn’t find a publisher for Harry Potter in the beginning.


So I looked for other options and came across the concept of ‘printing on demand’. I had 500 copies of book printed through one provider and immediately began marketing it: I designed my own website, sent off copies of my book here and there on Amazon, but the bookshops didn’t want to sell my book. The office in my ex-husband’s meat factory turned out to be a wonderful sales opportunity with the customers there becoming the first to read my book. My second book (“An Unpopular Woman”) was a crime novel which is set in the region where I come from.

After a couple of good articles in the papers, word got out that there was a crime novel set in Taunus. Suddenly the bookshops were ordering from me. In the mornings, I would work at the company, in the afternoons I would deliver the books that I was storing in my garage. At the same time, I was continuing to write my next book – despite the protestations of my ex-husband.


The third book (“Murder’s Friends”) had a first run of 5000 copies and then the company’s drivers had to pitch in and deliver the book on their rounds. One day in January 2008, a rep from the Ullstein Publishing House was in a bookshop in Koenigstein when the owner gave her a copy of “Murder’s Friends” and told her that the book had sold better than the latest Harry Potter in the run-up to Christmas. The rep took the book with her and gave it to an editor at the publishing house. Then came the day in February 2008 when everything changed for me: the editor emailed me to ask whether I would be interested in writing for Ullstein Publishing House! Naturally I didn’t hesitate for long and wrote “Deep Wound”, the third in the series about detectives Oliver von Bodenstein and Pia Kirchhoff, which subsequently soared up the bestseller lists. My big breakthrough didn’t arrive for another year until “Snow White Must Die”. Since then I have sold over 4 million books  in over 20 countries, which have also been turned into films. My biggest dream has come true because I believed in myself and didn’t let myself be put off by rejection and failure. Sometimes I have to laugh when I think about how it all began. Back then my books fitted in my garage, today I have to rent out a whole warehouse! 

Snow White Must Die -

On a rainy November day police detectives Pia Kirchhoff and Oliver von Bodenstein are summoned to a mysterious traffic accident: A woman has fallen from a pedestrian bridge onto a car driving underneath. According to a witness, the woman may have been pushed. The investigation leads Pia and Oliver to a small village, and the home of the victim, Rita Cramer.

On a September evening eleven years earlier, two seventeen-year-old girls vanished from the village without a trace. In a trial based only on circumstantial evidence, twenty-year-old Tobias Sartorius, Rita Cramer’s son, was sentenced to ten years in prison. Bodenstein and Kirchhoff discover that Tobias, after serving his sentence, has now returned to his home town. Did the attack on his mother have something to do with his return?

In the village, Pia and Oliver encounter a wall of silence. When another young girl disappears, the events of the past seem to be repeating themselves in a disastrous manner. The investigation turns into a race against time, because for the villagers it is soon clear who the perpetrator is—and this time they are determined to take matters into their own hands.

More information about Nele Neuhaus can be found on her website and on Facebook  She can also be found on Twitter @NeleNeuhaus

Sunday, 14 July 2013

Award results!

The Strand Magazine Critics Awards were announced on Thursday 10 July 2013.

Strand Magazine Critics Award for Best Novel: 
Defending Jacob by William Landay.

Strand Magazine Critics Award for Best Debut Novel
The 500 by Matthew Quirk

Faye Kellerman was given The Strand’s Lifetime Achievement award for excellence in crime writing.  


The ITW (International Thriller Writers) announced the winners the 2013 Thriller Awards on Saturday 13 July 2013.

Best Hardcover Novel 
Spilled Blood by Brian Freeman (SilverOak)

Best First Novel
The 500 by Matthew Quirk (Reagan Arthur Books)

Best Paperback Original Novel
Lake Country by Sean Doolittle (Bantam)

Best Short Story
Lost Things” by John Rector (Thomas & Mercer)

Best Young Adult Novel
False Memory by Dan Krokos (Hyperion Books CH)

Best E-Book Original Novel
Blind Faith by CJ Lyons (CJ Lyons)

Thriller Master was awarded to Anne Rice in recognition of her legendary career and outstanding contributions to the thriller genre.

Congratulations to all the winners!

Literary Silver Bullet Award was awarded to Steve Berry
Corporate Silver Bullet Award was awarded to USO


Congratulations also go to Wiley Cash whose novel A Land More Kind Than Home won the SIBA 2013 Book of the Year Award.  The SIBA Book Award was created to recognize great books of southern origin.