Monday, 2 February 2026

2026 International Thriller Writer Award Nominees Announced


 

Best Standalone Novel

Cross My Heart by Megan Collins (Atria)

Zigzag Girl by Ruth Knafo Setton (Black Spring Press)

The Burning Library by Gilly Macmillan (William Morrow)

The Locked Ward by Sarah Pekkanen (St. Martin’s Press)

So Happy Together by Olivia Worley (Minotaur)


Best Series Novel

Chain Reaction by James Byrne (Minotaur)

The Big Empty by Robert Crais (Penguin/Putnam)

Head Cases: A Novel by John McMahon (Minotaur)

The Tourists by Christopher Reich (Thomas & Mercer)

Terminal Moonlight by Vincent Zandri (Down & Out Books)


Best First Novel

Death at the White Hart by Chris Chibnall (Pamela Dorman Books)

Party of Liars by Kelsey Cox (Minotaur)

Count My Lies by Sophie Stava (Gallery/Scout Press)

History Lessons by Zoe B. Wallbrook (Soho Crime)

Julie Chan is Dead by Liann Zhang (Atria)

 

Best Audiobook

King of Ashes by S. A. Cosby (Macmillan) Narrated by Adam Lazarre-White

The Wasp Trap by Mark Edwards (Simon & Schuster) Narrated by John Hopkins and Anna Burnett

Best Offer Wins by Marisa Kashino (Macmillan) Narrated by Cia Court

When Devils Sing by Xan Kaur (Macmillan) Narrated by Michael Crouch, Anjali Kunapaneni, Jennifer Pickens and Landon Woodson

The Cheaters Wife by C N Mabry and N’Dia Rae (Simon Maverick) Narrated by Ruffin Prentiss and Machelle Williams

The White Crow by Michael Robotham (Simon & Schuster) Narrated by Katy Sobey


Best Young Adult Novel

Murder Between Friends by Liz Lawson (Delacorte Press)

This Stays Between Us by Margot McGovern (Penguin Young Readers)

Shiny Happy People by Clay McLeod Chapman (Delacorte Press)

The Silenced by Diana Rodriguez Wallach (Delacorte Press)

The Thrashers by Julie Soto (Wednesday Books)


Best Short Story

Level Up by Katrina Carrasco (Bywater Books)

The Seduction of Dr Dimension by Scott William Carter (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine)

Eleven Numbers by Lee child (Amazon Original Stories)

False Note by David Lagercrantz (Amazon Original Stories)

The Violent Season by Jessica Van Dessel (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine)


ITW will announce the winners at Thrillerfest XXI on Saturday, May 9, 2026 at the New York Hilton Midtown, New York City.

Congratulations to all the nominated finalists!

Sunday, 1 February 2026

The Extraordinary Gwen Moffat

In all the publicity due to the American Climber Alex Honnold free-climber scaling the skyscraper in Taiwan - Renaissance Man The Talented Mr Ripley pointed out that BBC Radio 4 referenced British Rock Climber Gwen Moffat on their ‘Rewind’ programme this week.

Here’s a 3.5 minute clip from Rewind’ about Gwen Moffat © 2026 BBC Radio 4

I use the term extraordinary as not only is she an acclaimed and accomplished mountain climber, as well as a prolific writer of detective / crime fiction BUT also one of Shots Magazine’s longest serving book reviewers.

And Gwen is now 101 Years Young and as fit as ever and continuing to provide her incisive book reviews in our review pages.

“Longevity isn’t how many years you’ve lived, it is how you’ve spent them. In youth the fun is enhanced by danger; in old age by serenity” – Gwen Moffat on her 100th Birthday

For more information about the extraordinary Gwen Moffat CLICK HERE

For Gwen Moffat’s book reviews at Shots Magazine CLICK HERE



Saturday, 31 January 2026

Denise Mina to be Guest Programmer for Bloody Scotland 2026

 



Denise Mina Revealed to be Guest Programmer for 
Bloody Scotland International Crime Writing Festival 2026



International bestselling crime writer, Denise Mina, is today revealed to be the guest programmer for the Bloody Scotland International Crime Writing Festival 2026 which will return to the historic city of Stirling from 18-20 September.

She follows the success of Sir Ian Rankin, who as the first ever guest programmer brought a host of big names to the 2025 festival including Kate Atkinson, Kathy Reichs and the Reverend Richard Coles.

Denise is working alongside festival director, Bob McDevitt, and the programming team - which includes fellow authors, Abir Mukherjee, Lin Anderson, Craig Robertson and Gordon Brown - to bring another world class line-up of authors and special guests to the prestigious Festival.

All will be revealed when the programme launches in June 2026. Bob McDevitt said:

I'm very much looking forward to working with Denise on this year's programme and can't wait to share some of the details of what she's bringing to the party! She's one of my favourite writers, a passionate advocate for Scottish culture, a champion of other writers, and a huge supporter of book festivals.’ 

Denise Mina said:

“Bloody Scotland is the high point of the crime fiction calendar in Scotland and I’m thrilled and honoured to be the second ever guest programmer. Established by crime writers for crime readers, every year feels like coming home.

Denise is one of most charismatic authors writing in Scotland today and a great ambassador for crime writing internationally. She first won the McIlvanney Prize in 2017 with The Long Drop when she led the inaugural torchlit procession from Stirling Castle flanked by Val McDermid and Ian Rankin. She won again in 2019 with Conviction. The second time, slightly by default, when the chosen winner announced her intention to share the prize with her fellow finalists. The other winners looked perplexed; Denise was delighted.

She has a busy year in 2026. The world premiere of The Long Drop is on at The Citizens Theatre in Glasgow this summer and the play of her novella Rizzio (Polygon) is currently in development. Her most recent book, The Good Liar (Vintage), is published in paperback in March and will be Scottish Book of the Month for Waterstones. The Guardian, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal and the FT selected it as one of their Books of the Year 2025.


David McCloskey on The Persian

I’d originally envisioned my new novel, The Persian, to be about a joint CIA-Mossad operation in Iran, but as I tinkered with that it became clear that the more daring and, importantly, kinetic the operation became, the less likely it was that CIA would be involved. For example, when Mossad ran a targeted killing program aimed at Iranian nuclear scientists, the CIA stayed out of the fray. Most often CIA did not even know these operations were underway.

So this just wasn’t a CIA story. In fact, I was beginning to feel the CIA might not have a role in it at all. This was a novel about the secret shadow war playing out between the intelligence services of Israel and Iran. Why complicate it by injecting an inauthentic American presence? So the CIA went by the wayside for this novel, and what emerged was a rich tapestry of Israelis and Iranians, all of whom are in desperate conflict, all of whom think they are doing what’s best for their families and their countries. 

My starting point is always to get the setting right, and then let the characters and plotlines grow from there. When I began writing The Persian, I tried to nail the current dynamics of the Israel-Iran relationship and how their intelligence services fight in secret. Where might the plot take me from there? I hope this approach gives the book a dose of authenticity and the ability to speak to something true in the present, wherever the headlines may go. 

My principal characters in The Persian – as in my other novels – are intelligence officers and agents, so to depict them authentically I need to deal authentically with their craft, which means getting the tradecraft right, whatever the geopolitical or technological environment. This involves a lot of research. It means drawing on my experience working for the CIA, certainly, including in Stations around the Middle East. It means extensive time spent interviewing former case officers and CIA Chiefs of Station. Discussions with former Mossad officers. A lot of time spent with Iranians. Sessions with former Delta Force operators about special operations and asymmetric warfare. Studying technical drawings and specs for next generation UAVs. Even sitting for a week-long course on what we call the ‘Ubiquitous Technical Surveillance’ environment – how tradecraft can be adapted to operate in a world of phones, cameras, sensors, biometrics, cheap data storage, and AI-powered analytic tools. It’s fun, it’s a lot of work, and it’s all in service of the characters. 

In some ways you might think a dentist, Kamran Esfahani, a Persian Jew living out a dreary existence in Stockholm is an unlikely main character for a spy novel. He’s not an intelligence officer, and he’s certainly not a character in the mould of the Hollywood Superhero Spy. But he’s exactly the sort of person who might get a look from an intelligence service such as the Mossad, because he can move in and out of Iran, fly under the radar (he’s a dentist, after all), and, at a deeper level, he’s got cracks in his heart and soul that make him a viable recruitment target. He’s a dentist, but he’s the perfect dentist to turn into a productive support asset. He’s exactly the sort of nondescript but fascinating player who’s rolling the dice in the spy game. Spies can have a loose relationship with the truth, and Kam’s confession is written in the first person for exactly this reason: he’s been keeping a secret. Throughout the novel we wonder if he is being truthful, or if he’s lying, or if he is plying the borderlands between.

I’m often asked how research for my novels and for The Rest is Classified podcast, which I do with Gordon Corera, inform one another? Because I am attempting to write authentic espionage novels, and because the podcast deals with true spy stories, the two streams are complementary. In particular, I’ve found that the podcast provides a great deal of grist for the novels, everything from ideas for characters, to tradecraft, to the spytech. Turns out the real world of espionage contains a host of wild stories a spy novelist might draw from. 

And I draw inspiration from other writers. I’m a longtime reader of the espionage genre, so the list is long. Le Carré of course. Charles McCarry (who I consider the American answer to le Carré). Graham Greene. David Ignatius, Jason Matthews, Daniel Silva, Tom Clancy, Martin Cruz Smith (though he’s perhaps more of a mystery / crime writer). Dozens of others. Outside the genre the list is even longer, but one of the writers is Quentin Tarantino. I like stories that accelerate madly toward the end, and that usually go out with a bang.

And finally, for those of you worried about Artemis Aphrodite Procter, CIA case officer, five foot ball of ruthless spy craft and inspired profanity, and feature of my first three novels, do not fear. She will return. Her adventures are far from over though, though she may need to dial down her drinking if she wants to stay healthy enough to keep having them…


The Persian by David McCloskey.(Swift Press)

What happens when a spy is forced to reckon with the consequences of his deception? Kamran Esfahani, a Persian Jewish dentist from Stockholm, dreams of starting afresh in California. To finance his new life, he agrees to spy for Mossad in Iran, working with a clandestine unit tasked with sowing chaos and sabotage inside the country. When he’s captured by Iranian security forces, Kamran is compelled to confess his experiences as a spy, in a testimonial dealing not only with the security of nations, but also with revenge, deceit, and the power of love and forgiveness in a world of lies. Mixing suspense with strikingly cinematic action, David McCloskey takes readers deep into the shadow war between Iran and Israel, delivering propulsive storytelling and riveting tradecraft.

David McCloskey's new novel The Persian is published as a £20 hardback on 29 January by Swift Press.

More information about David McCloskey and his books can be found on his website. He can also be found on Facebook, on X, Instagram and Tik Tok @mccloskeybooks, 

David is also co-hosts The Rest is Classified Podcast.

 

Friday, 30 January 2026

 


Call for Papers

True Crime and Ethics Symposium

University of Portsmouth

29th May 2026

True crime is a mercurial genre. It shifts, adapts and transforms with and to the popular mediums, motivations and social concerns of the day. From high-budget, horror-infused dramatisations to self-shot Mukbangs, to unmissable Netflix series and 3-minute TikToks, the genre continues to fill production schedules, streaming platforms and social media feeds. Yet, as true crime’s influence has grown, so too have questions about its ethical implications. How should the makers of true crime frame these tragedies, and how should audiences respond to these images of death, abuse and grief? Who has the right to tell true crime stories, and is their commodification worth the very real trauma they can cause? How are social inequities related to gender, race and disability represented in true crime narratives? 

As the genre continues to engage new audiences in innovative ways, its ethical questions become more complex. This one-day symposium, featuring a keynote lecture by Professor Tanya Horeck (author of Justice on Demand: True Crime in the Digital Streaming Era), will bring scholars together to consider these issues with the aim of developing an edited collection. 

Proposals are invited for 20-minute papers on topics that explore true crime and ethics. Topics can include but are by no means limited to:

  • Gender, ethics and true crime
  • Race, ethics and true crime
  • Disability, ethics and true crime
  • Class, ethics and true crime
  • The body in true crime
  • Fictionalising true crime (from dramatisations such as Netflix’s Monster series or The Staircase miniseries to amateur-created fan fiction)
  • Ethics of internet sleuthing
  • True crime on different platforms (streaming, podcasts, and social media)
  • Ethics and true crime fandom/audiences
  • Survivor/victim-centred true crime
  • True crime and social movements (#MeToo, Black Lives Matter, Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, etc.)
  • The ethics of true crime aesthetics (from text to paratexts) 
  • True crime narrative tropes 

Please send abstracts of 200-300 words along with a short biography by 2nd March 2026 to Dr Simon Hobbs and/or Dr Megan Hoffman at the University of Portsmouth. 

simon.hobbs2@port.ac.uk

megan.hoffman@port.ac.uk

Applicants will be informed on or before 20th March 2026.

This symposium is open to all academics and researchers who are interested in true crime and will be in person only. Registration will be free, and lunch will be provided. A number of £50 travel bursaries will be available for precariously employed academics/independent scholars/PhD students. Please indicate in your email if you would like to be considered for one of these travel bursaries. 

If you have any questions, please contact Dr Simon Hobbs and/or Dr Megan Hoffman on the above emails. 


Thursday, 29 January 2026

CWA Diamond Dagger recipient announced

 

Mark Billingham Awarded CWA Diamond Dagger

Mark Billingham receives highest accolade in crime writing

Mark Billingham is the 2026 recipient of the Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) Diamond Dagger, sponsored by Karen Baugh Menuhin.

The award recognises authors whose crime writing careers have been marked by sustained excellence, and who have made a significant contribution to the genre.

One of the UK’s most prominent societies, the CWA was founded in 1953 by John Creasey. The awards started in 1955 with its first award going to Winston Graham, best known for Poldark.

25 years ago, Mark Billingham’s debut novel Sleepyhead became an instant bestseller, launching a prolific career as a novelist.

Born in Birmingham, he worked as an actor and stand-up comedian before becoming a full-time author, best known for playing the role of Gary in the cult children’s TV show, Maid Marian and Her Merry Men. Mark continues to be a regular face and voice on TV and radio.

Sleepyhead introduced Detective Inspector Tom Thorne, leading to a further 18 books in the series, which was adapted to screen by Sky 1 in 2010, starring David Morrissey as Thorne. The latest Thorne book, What the Night Brings, was published in June 2025 - Billingham’s 25th book.

Mark Billingham said: “Presuming this is not an administrative error, I could not be more thrilled or honoured. To be added to a list that features most of my literary heroes is fantastic. That so many are also friends is the icing on the cake and, for me, a mark of how very special the crime-writing community is.

Recent recipients of the Diamond Dagger include Mick Herron, Lynda La Plante, James Lee Burke, Peter James, Walter Mosley, Lee Child, Lawrence Block, Ian Rankin, Michael Connelly, Lindsey Davis, Andrew Taylor, Martina Cole, Ann Cleeves, Val McDermid, Robert Goddard, Martin Edwards, Catherine Aird and Simon Brett.

Past icons of the genre acknowledged with a Diamond Dagger include Ruth Rendell, PD James, Colin Dexter, Reginald Hill, and John le Carré.

In 2023, Billingham introduced a new series featuring DS Declan Miller with The Last Dance followed by The Wrong Hands (2024). The third book in the series, The Shadow Step, is due out this year. His stand-alone novels include In the DarkDie of Shame and Rabbit Hole. A series based on the novels In the Dark and Time of Death was screened on BBC1 in 2017.

Nadine Matheson, Chair of the CWA, said: “Across a remarkable body of work, Mark has consistently set the bar for contemporary crime fiction, while also being generous with his time and support to emerging writers. His influence on the genre extends far beyond his own novels, shaping the crime writing community as a whole. For his outstanding contribution to crime fiction, his lasting impact on readers and writers alike, and his commitment to the genre, Mark Billingham is a thoroughly deserving recipient of the Diamond Dagger.

In 2022, Billingham won the CWA’s Dagger in the Library, voted by librarians, for his body of work. He’s also been awarded the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year twice (Lazybones, 2005 and Death Message, 2009).

Sponsor of the CWA Diamond Dagger, Karen Baugh Menuhin, said: “As sponsor of the CWA Diamond Dagger, I am thrilled to congratulate Mark Billingham on being chosen as the 2026 recipient of crime fiction's highest honour. His place amongst crime writing royalty is hard won and richly deserved.

Mark is also a member of the rock band, The Fun Lovin’ Crime Writers, a combo of bestselling crime and thriller writers (Val McDermid, Luca Veste, Doug Johnstone, Stuart Neville, and Chris Brookmyre) who performed at Glastonbury in 2019 and 2024.

The CWA Daggers are now regarded by the publishing world as the foremost British awards for crime-writing. As the oldest awards in the genre, they have been synonymous with quality crime writing for over half a century.

Nominations for the CWA Diamond Dagger are recommended by CWA members. Industry experts then narrow these down to a shortlist. The winner is then voted for by a panel of past Diamond Dagger winners.


C E Hulse on writing Vivian Dies Again

Writing a novel means working in a world of simultaneous opposites. It means working with unbounded creativity, at the same time as absolute discipline. It means keeping the big picture in your head, while working on tiny details; it means both having the ego to believe you have something to say, with the humility to know your work isn’t good enough. it means knowing there are too many books in the world for anyone to ever read, yet deciding to add another. 

Vivian Dies Again started with a clear agenda in mind. I was a comedy writer, but I always knew, one day, I’d write a mystery – but only if I could find a way of making it feel fresh and different, and worthy of my heroes. I am a huge fan of Golden Age mysteries, to the extent I wore out two The Complete Poirot DVD boxsets, (it was my middle-of-the-night insomnia comfort TV for a long time). I am the proud owner of a crocheted Hercule Poirot figurine.

But I wanted to do the idea justice, so I set myself a logic challenge. How could I write a Serious Mystery Novel, with all the hallmarks of a golden age mystery, but in a fresh, contemporary setting? How could I give readers the same satisfying experience (red herrings, clues, twists, clever plotting, a rewarding ending) in this age of DNA profiling and CSI techniques and surveillance cameras?

I mulled, and mulled. I landed on the idea of having narrator in a time loop, one who kept dying so had no time to investigate before going back to the start: a neat way to dodge the tech elements that could scupper a murder mystery. I decided my main character would go to a funeral, where she would be killed again and again, and need to solve her own (repeated) murder. Sorted!

Except … no, not sorted. Like a true logic puzzle, every solution created a new problem. 

Because if someone kept murdering Viv, how would she not be able to immediately identify who had killed her before?

(I got it. Her memory would reset each time she died.) 

But then how did I stop the book being repetitive? 

(By starting the book towards the end, after multiple loops had already happened.)

But then how would Viv and the reader know what had happened in previous loops?

(By bringing another character into the time loop, one who remembered and was able to bring Viv and the reader up to speed. The two would work together to piece together the clues.)

The logic of the book came together piece by piece, over several years, as I solved one problem by creating another. I planned meticulously on spreadsheets. Only when I was happy with the plot mechanics did I think about character, and only then did Viv grow from a cypher to a larger-than-life person: an infuriating antihero who is her own worst enemy, one who takes dodgy internet prescription drugs and family events, and sleeps with married men at funerals. Only then did I create Jamie, the long-suffering, sleep-deprived waiter who has been pulled into the time loop and has to help Viv.

And only then did I start writing – and I wrote the book wrong. And wrote it wrong in the next draft too. I find writing books a protracted exercise of ‘not that. How about this?’ 

Eventually I got happy enough with the book that I sent a draft to my agent. Who told me I hadn’t written a Serious Crime Novel, I’d written a comedy. 

Turns out you can’t control *every* element of writing with a spreadsheet. 

So I leaned into my fate, embracing the comedy, stuffing the book with one-liners and having fun with the kind of complex relationship dynamics that may be wryly relatable if you don’t come from a John Lewis advert family. 

I set out to write a Serious Crime Novel. It took me a long time. I failed. 

And, along the way, I created something I’m really proud of. 

And – trust me – Vivian Dies Again is much easier to read than it was to write.

Vivian Dies Again by C E Hulse (Viper Books) Out Now

Time heals all wounds. Except blunt force trauma. Vivian Slade is a cautionary tale. The wrong side of thirty, she's no longer the life and soul of the party - she's a party of one. But she's determined to turn over a new leaf, even if that means going to a family gathering where everyone hates her. Turns out, someone really hates her - enough to push her off a balcony to a very messy end. But then Vivian wakes up! Only to be murdered again. And again. Stuck in a baffling time loop, Vivian's only ally is a sleep-deprived waiter who just wants to finish his shift. Will Vivian be able to solve her own murder? Only time will tell...

More information about the author can be found on her website. She can also be found on Instagram @carolinehulse1









Photo © Nathan Cox











 

Wednesday, 28 January 2026

Dean Koontz talks to Shots Magazine

 

Thomas and Mercer publishing have released two remarkable novels this January that are difficult to pigeon-hole. These two novels were not crime fiction per se, nor horror fiction per se but they were page turners that combined elements of both genres that kept me up way past my bedtime. They also provoked deep introspection.

So what were these two books?

We had Paul Finch with his harrowing THE LODGE and now hot of the presses comes Dean Koontz with his extraordinary THE FRIEND OF THE FAMILY, which is a treat for the bibliophile …..

…….Koontz’s tale commences in 1930 with a teenage girl Alida, one of the attractions of the ‘Ten-in-One’ show at McKinsey’s Travelling Carnival. The girl has a beautiful face, but beneath her shoulders lies hideous body deformations akin to the British human exhibit John Merrick [aka The Elephant Man]. Alida is exploited by being paraded nearly naked by the odious Forest ‘Captain’ Farnham for the amusement of the curious and the uncouth. Alida escapes the indignities she is forced to endure by her voracious appetite for books, especially Dickens……

Read More HERE

Following our review, I had a few questions for this prolific author.

Last time I had a chance to chat to Dean Koontz was close to two decades ago, at the London Book Fair on a video screen via Margaret Atwood’s Long Pen.

Our short exchange is archived at Jeff Peirce’s The Rap Sheet HERE

So with the release of THE FRIEND OF THE FAMILY, we present Dean Koontz in conversation with Shots Magazine, recorded on Wednesday January 28th 2026.

To indicate the scale of Dean Koontz’s as an author – his books are published in 38 languages and he has sold over 500 million copies to date.

Let that sink in.

Ali: Welcome to Great Britain’s Shots Magazine and thanks for speaking with our readers.

Dean: Thanks for inviting me. I’ll try to be on my best behaviour.

AK: So let me ask you firstly, after so many years publishing, do you still remain excited when a new book is released?

DK: I’ve always been more excited by writing than by having written. Undeniably, however, I still get a thrill when I hold the first finished copy in my hands. In a curious way, it’s never real to me until it’s a finished book. I’m a creature for whom tactility is the most confirming of our senses. If the day came when novels were available only as eBooks or audiobooks, I’d probably stop writing. I have over 8,000 editions of my own books in 39 languages, and there are days when walking into the room that holds them is what motivates me to go on.

AK: Right off the bat, where did THE FRIEND OF THE FAMILY originate as an idea?

DK: Three things. 1) Growing up, I lived across the highway from the county fairgrounds. The best part of the year was when the carnival came to town. I was fascinated with carnies, their culture and the rules by which they worked and lived in a community of their kind. I’ve made a sort of study of them my whole life. 2) I grew up feeling like an outsider because we were poor and my father was a notorious alcoholic and gambler and womanizer, which in a small town meant constant humiliation for my mother and me. And so I tend to like writing about outsiders——Odd Thomas, Leilani Klonk in One Door Away from Heaven, both Addison and Gwyneth in Innocence, and so many others. 3)  I love Art Deco, big band music, movies, and the literature of the 1930s and ‘40s.  This was a novel that began with a character, Alida, perhaps the ultimate outsider. She arrived suddenly in my head, complete in all details. I don’t know why or from where. So much of inspiration is mysterious, which is one thing I love about this work——the sense of being connected to some mysterious source of creativity that is beyond oneself. Because freak shows were pretty much outlawed in the 1970s, the story needed to have a historical setting——and I chose my favourite historical period. With that much having fallen together, it was time to start writing.

AK: And did you just follow the muse [as is your method these days], or was there heavy plotting ahead of the writing?

DK: No plotting. I stopped writing outlines with Strangers and have never gone back to that tedious approach. I begin with a premise and a couple characters——and set them loose to do what they want. At some point in most novels, I experience a brief period of raw terror that I won’t be able to pull all the strings together and tie them in a nice knot. But after a glass of good cabernet sauvignon (perhaps two) and a chunk of dark chocolate, I recover from panic and go on. It always works out.

AK: If memory serves, the carnival backdrop features in your novelisation of The Funhouse [a film by Tobe Hooper and screenplay by Lawrence ‘Larry’ Block] as well as your novel Twilight Eyes and now The Friend of the Family – so what is the allure of greasepaint and candy floss for the novelist? 

DK: Growing up as an outsider, as the class clown in school, with a sense that I would never belong anywhere, it is not surprising that I fantasized about running away with the carnival, where every member of the troupe was an outsider by the standards of the rest of the world but not within the world of the midway. I wouldn’t have been able to run a 10-in-one (a freak show), but I think I’d have been able to put together a funhouse like no other.

AK: I thought the opening was reminiscent thematically [though much less grimy] of William Lindsay Gresham’s Nightmare Alley

DK: I know the novel. I am not a fan of it. In spite of growing up in a family that never knew where next week’s food would come from or whether we’d have a roof over our heads, or whether my father’s frequent talk of suicide (and of taking us with him) would suddenly prove more than idle talk, I have always been an optimist. I’ve never wasted time on despair or anger. I don’t know why. Maybe because I’ve always had a sense of time running out, of the preciousness of our days, and haven’t wanted to waste any.

AK: Unlike William Lindsay Gresham, your work [of which The Friend of the Family is no exception] is always upbeat, optimistic despite the darkness of the world. Would you care to comment?

DK: I know there’s evil in the world, but I see no reason to submit to it by taking it too seriously. One thing I saw from the example of my father’s life was that every time he did the wrong thing——the wicked thing, if you will——it worked for a while, it profited him for a time, but too soon it led to one catastrophe or another, often an amusing catastrophe. I learned early that evil is self-defeating. Likewise, so is negativism in all its forms. It sounds very Beatles-in-India, but the world is to a large extent what we make it, and attitude shapes results. At least in part, the world becomes for us what we think it is, which is why I’ve tried to steer clear of all the competing ideologies that try to pack all of existence into one small box or another.

AK: Like the character Alida [aka Adiel] in your new book; how important are novels and reading fiction to you, and wider society?

DK: Growing up, novels were my salvation. They provided desperately needed escape. But they also taught me that all families were not like mine (which is what a kid in a dysfunctional family often thinks——that behind closed doors, every family is dysfunctional).  When Gerda and I were married with $150, a used car, and our clothes, we couldn’t afford a TV, so we read novels in the evenings. After a while, we came to feel that, being as happy as we were, we might find that a TV made us less so. Therefore, we lived without one for ten years. During that period, each of us read about 200 novels a year. That was a far, far better education than I received during my four years of college.


AK: I read some of your Science Fiction Novels in my youth and enjoyed them, and your later work often has a little of the ‘weird’ striating the narrative, so can you tell us a little about what it is about SF [and ‘the weird’] that interests you?

DK: I’ve always felt that the world is something more than we are able to perceive, that our five sense are inadequate to the challenge of fully knowing reality. As an adult, both Gerda and I have had experiences that seem to confirm a depth, a complexity, beyond what we know in our daily lives. And we’ve never done drugs! One day I might write about those experiences/events, for they have confirmed my perception that the world is mysterious (quantum mechanics further confirms it), and that perception has affected what I write.

AK: Your Leigh Nichols books are favourites of mine, so can you tell us a little about this pen name, and why it came about?

DK: When I wrote the first Nichols, my agent at the time and the publisher felt it was too different from what I’d written previously, would destroy my budding career, and thus required a pen name. I was naive enough to believe that the “publishing wisdom” they cited was in fact wise. Years later, I recovered the rights to the 5 Nichols novels. When we published The Servants of Twilight under my name, it was #1 for 6 weeks and sold two million paperbacks in its first six months. It didn’t destroy my career. Neither did the other four. Lesson learned——if you don’t have belief in yourself and what you’re writing, neither will anyone else.

AK: I read you’re an enthusiast of the Richard Stark Parker Novels by Donald Westlake [even penning the Brian Coffey novels]. What other crime-fiction did/do you enjoy?

DK: Westlake was a genius. He could go from ice-water-in-your-face crime fiction to hilarious comic novels as easily as changing his hat. I also read everything by Ed McBain (Evan Hunter), Rex Stout, The magnificent John D. MacDonald, Len Deighton, Patricia Highsmith, on and on.

AK: You have a huge body of work, of which WHISPERSWATCHERS, STRANGERS, LIGHTNING, PHANTOMS, INTENSITY and the Leigh Nichols series rank as favourites of mine – so what are your own favourites and why?

DK: I have a fondness for those that were suspenseful but also made room for humour: Life Expectancy, The Odd Thomas series, The Bad Weather FriendOne Door Away From Heaven. But I also like the go-for-the-throat books like Intensity, the 5 Jane Hawk novels, The House at the End of the World. And if I find a book indefinable, I’m especially fond of it——From the Corner of His Eye, The Friend of the Family . . .

AK: A huge thank you for your time, so in closing what are your plans for 2026 and beyond?

DK: I’ve got a forthcoming novel, A Storm So Bright and Beautiful that was a challenge unlike any I’d taken on before. This time, in spite of my optimism, I wondered if I had at last destroyed my career, just 50 years after an agent had predicted as much. Happily, everyone in my publishing life loves it. Now I’m working on a novel set in 1961, a meaningful year historically. I hope I never have to retire. I’d rather just fall dead at the keyboard——but not with a manuscript unfinished.

Shots Magazine would like to Thank Dean Koontz and Katrina Power of FMcM for organising this interview in-conjunction with Thomas and Mercer Publishing.

More information CLICK HERE

Bibliography CLICK HERE and HERE

Movie Adaptations CLICK HERE

If you are suffering from a ‘reading slump’ or hooked on an addictive ‘doom scrolling’ cycle on your Smartphone – The Friend of the Family is the antidote, because as a novel it is a hell of a thing.

The full Shots Magazine review is HERE

Text © 2026 Dean Koontz and Ali Karim

Images © respective publishers



 

Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival 2026 Special Guests revealed

Crime writing superstars’ and ‘new faces’ headline Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival

as 2026 special guests revealed



Festival Dates: 23-26 July 2026

www.harrogateinternationalfestivals.com

#TheakstonsCrime

Harrogate International Festivals have announced the full line up of Special Guest headliners for the 2026 Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, the world’s largest and most prestigious celebration of crime fiction, taking place 23-26 July 2026.

Ann Cleeves and Brenda Blethyn, Anthony Horowitz, Holly Jackson, Chris Brookmyre, Chris Whitaker, Jane Harper and LJ Ross join previously announced headliners Nadine Matheson, Gillian McAllister, Steve Cavanagh, Alice Feeney and David Baldacci on a thrilling line-up of crime writing legends and international bestsellers from the UK, Australia, Ireland and the US, curated by 2026 Festival Programming Chair, Lisa Jewell.

Now in its twenty-third year, the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival (23–26 July 2026) is the jewel in the crown of the global crime fiction community, offering readers from around the world a unique opportunity to hear from literary superstars and discover stunning new talent. Taking place at the Old Swan Hotel, Harrogate, a packed programme of fascinating panels, talks and inspiring creative workshops showcases the very best of the world’s most popular genre.

Headline events include:

An unmissable event for Vera fans as writer Ann Cleeves and actor Brenda Blethyn, who played DCI Vera Stanhope for fourteen years, take an exclusive behind-the-scenes look at the much-loved TV series, and Cleeves unveils her latest Vera Stanhope novel.

Hugely successful author and TV writer Anthony Horowitz returns to the Festival hot on the heels of smash-hit BBC TV dramas Magpie Murders and Moonflower Murders to showcase his latest novel.

Making her Festival debut Holly Jackson, mega bestselling author of A Good Girl's Guide to Murder, introduces her new unputdownable thriller, Not Quite Dead Yet.

‘Queen of the psychological thriller’ and 2026 Festival Chair Lisa Jewell in conversation with Lee Child, iconic creator of the Jack Reacher novels.

Two of the most original voices in crime fiction, and previous winners of the Theakston Old Peculier Novel of the Year, Chris Whitaker and Chris Brookmyre make a welcome return to the Festival to discuss their latest novels, as Chris Brookmyre celebrates his 30th year as a published author.

Homegrown phenomenon LJ Ross and internationally celebrated Australian author Jane Harper, both multi-million-copy sensations, showcase their much-anticipated new novels.

Lisa Jewell, 2026 Programming Chair of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival says:

I came to my role as this year's Chair of programming for the Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival with a golden wish-list of crime writing superstars, and I can barely believe how many of them we have now confirmed as headliners. It's a brilliant mix of new faces, perennial favourites and a surprise or two and I think readers are going to be blown away by this year's line-up. I am so excited to be there, in the moment, sharing this programme in all its glory with our attendees; so many incredible headliners, so many fascinating conversations, so much to look forward to. Roll on Harrogate 2026!

The Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival is delivered by the north of England’s leading arts Festival organisation, Harrogate International Festivals, and forms part of their diverse year-round portfolio of events, which aims to bring immersive cultural experiences to as many people as possible. Harrogate International Festivals celebrates six decades of arts Festivals in 2026, marking the milestone with more headline names than ever and exciting developments, set to make it the biggest Festival yet.

Simon Theakston, Chairman of T&R Theakston Ltd, said:

It is a huge honour to support the world’s biggest and best crime writing Festival for an incredible twenty-third year. After our most successful year ever in 2025, we are delighted to welcome a bumper crop of exceptional Special Guests who include icons of the genre, chart topping authors and writers behind some of the most watched TV adaptations in recent years to our one-of-a-kind Festival this summer.  

Sharon Canavar, Chief Executive of Harrogate International Festivals, said:

I’m so proud of the incredible roster of Special Guest headliners curated by Lisa Jewell and the team. Readers have always been at the heart of the Festival and in the National Year of Reading, the 2026 programme is unapologetically reader-led, celebrating some of the most-read authors in the world whose books showcase the enduring appeal of crime fiction. Watch out for some more big reveals when we share the full programme in April and we hope you’ll join us at the Festival in July!

Weekend Break Packages are on sale now. To book, please call the Festivals team on +44(0)1423 562 303 or email info@harrogate-festival.org.uk. Rover tickets and individual event tickets go on sale in Spring 2026. More information about tickets and packages can be found here.