Wednesday, 11 June 2025

In The St Hilda's Spotlight - Catherine Ryan Howard

Name:- Catherine Ryan Howard

Job:- Author

Website:- https://catherineryanhoward.com

Instagram:- @cathryanhoward

Introduction:-

Catherine Ryan Howard is an award wining author who has been shortlisted for the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award for Best Novel, the UK Crime Writers Association John Creasey/New Blood and Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Awards, and the An Post Irish Crime Fiction Book of the Year multiple times. 

Her novels have been included in the New York Times Best Thrillers of the Year, the Washington Post’s Best Mysteries and Thrillers of the Year and the Sunday Times Best Thrillers of the Year. A screen adaptation of her fifth novel 56 Days is due to debut exclusively on Amazon Prime in early 2026. 

Current book? (This can either be the current book that you are reading or writing or both)

I’m currently reading Author Unknown: Tales of a Literary Detective by Don Foster and writing what will be my ninth thriller. It’s about ‘stigmatized properties’, i.e. houses with horrible pasts. 

Has any gothic book spooked you and if so which one and why

Despite writing about serial killers for a living, I am a complete coward and so they all do. But I remember very clearly being genuinely disturbed by Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson. To quote Joey from Friends, I had to put the book in the freezer. 

Which two gothic writers would you invite to dinner and why?

Shirley Jackson and Mary Shelley, because I think they’d have a fascinating conversation with each other and I could just sit there and listen. 

How do you relax?

Like many of my crime-writing colleagues, I watch, listen to or read a bit of true crime.

Which gothic book do you wish you had written and why?

I wish I had the brains and imagination to produce something like House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski. 

If you were to write a gothic book where would you set it and why?

Full disclosure: I had a great answer to this question. I started typing it. I went online to check a few details – and fell down a rabbit hole and discovered loads of new things about the place I had in mind that made me think, hmm, maybe I should set a thriller there. So now I can’t tell you about it, sorry! But it’s amazing place… (I tease, I know.) Let’s say instead a big house out in the middle of nowhere that seems to be made completely of glass. I don’t understand how people live in those kinds of houses. Great during the day, yes, but I wouldn’t be able to stand it at night. 

How would you describe your latest published book?

 It’s a thriller about an inexperienced ghostwriter who’s tasked with helping a man accused of murder tell his story of the story, which according to him is that he’s innocent.

With Detecting the Gothic: tales from the Dark Heart of Crime Fiction the theme at St Hilda's this year, which are you three favourite gothic authors or books

Flowers in the Attic by Virginia Andrews, The Shining by Stephen King and Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier aka the classic trio of age-inappropriate childhood reads. 

Which 3 gothic films would you rewatch and why.

The Others (loosely inspired by The Turn of the Screw) and Shutter Island (adapted from Dennis Lehane’s novel) because they both have truly superb twists, and then something lighter like Beetlejuice to calm me down after the trauma of the first two.

What are you looking forward to at St Hilda's?

Me reading the last sentence of my paper, because I’m so nervous about it! But honestly, the whole thing. So many crime writers have told me about their incredible experiences at past weekends and the programme looks absolutely fascinating. I just know it’s going to be a joy. 

Burn After Reading by Catherine Ryan Howard (Transworld Publication) 

A ghostwriter is tasked with capturing the memoirs of a man who might be a murderer and he's ready to confess...The night Jack Smyth ran into flames in a desperate attempt to save his wife from their burning home, he was, tragically, too late - but hailed a hero. Until it emerged that Kate was dead long before the fire began. Suspicion has stalked him ever since. After all, there's no smoke without fire. A year on, he's signed a book deal. He wants to tell his side of the story, to prove his own innocence in print. He just needs someone to help him write it.Emily has never ghostwritten anything before, but she knows what it’s like to live with a guilty secret. And she's about to learn that some stories should never be told .



Information on how to buy online tickets can be found here. The programme can be found here.


#HCFW25






Photograph ©BrĂ­d O’Donovan

 

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