Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Tuesday, 23 August 2022

When real crimes ‘spark’ novel ideas by Sherryl Clark

 

I often wonder how many crime writers, like me, turn to the pages of the newspaper first that deal with crime reports and investigative articles on real life murders. One of my longtime favourite crime reporters is John Silvester, at The Age in Melbourne, who has a weekly column called “The Naked City” (and a fascinating podcast as well).

It was from Silvester’s early books, co-written with fellow journalist Andrew Rule, that the first ideas and sparks came for my crime novel, Trust Me, I’m Dead. They wrote extensively about the Melbourne Gangland Wars in which over 20 people were murdered, but the ones that stuck with me the most were those where innocent women and children were killed or were witnesses.

One of these was Jane Thurgood-Dove, shot in her driveway in front of her kids – for no apparent reason. She had no gangland connections at all. It took a long time before police discovered the actual hit was supposed to be on another woman, wife of an underworld gangster, who lived up the street. And who in Melbourne could forget the brazen shotgun and pistol murders of Jason Moran and Pat Barbaro in a van in which five kids were sitting in the back seat? Two of them were Moran’s twin children.

Up until then, many people in Melbourne figured if crims were knocking each other off in a war, who really cared? But after these killings, things changed, not least the intensity of police actions to quell the war. In my novel, this idea that innocent women and children get caught up in violence through no fault of their own plays out through Judi Westerholme’s brother, who is murdered despite appearing to have changed his life and started again. Answering the question of why becomes vital so Judi can save her own life and that of her niece.

When it came to writing Mad, Bad and Dead, another crime against a woman and child was like a nagging tug at the back of my mind. Vicki Jacobs, who was living in country Victoria in 1999, was shot in the head and body while lying in her bed. Police said it was a cold-blooded execution. The most horrific part of this was that Ms Jacob’s six-year-old son was asleep next to her when it happened. As well, a young niece was sleeping in another room. That callous murder and trying to imagine what the children went through sparked the initial chapters of Mad, Bad and Dead.

It was believed that Ms Jacobs’ murder was in retaliation for her testifying against her ex-husband who had murdered two mechanics in South Australia. The court was told the murders were ordered on behalf of the Hells Angels motorbike club. Ms Jacobs had been offered police protection, but felt she didn’t want her young son to grow up away from family and friends.

For my novel, rather than follow the realities of this case, I used it as an inspiration. It meant I needed to come up with my own motive for the murder of my character, Kate, which of course included finding a credible villain and plenty of red herrings. I sometimes feel like a magpie, with a huge box of cuttings from newspapers and a number of true crime books to delve into for sparkers (I find the ones that are collections of newspaper articles the best. 

In looking for good villains this time, it was a saying that nagged at me – “mad, bad and dangerous to know”. I discovered a criminal, Christopher Binse, who called himself “Badness” (a nickname given to him in jail) and at one point, put a public notice to police in the newspaper saying, “Badness is back”. He also used to send Christmas cards to police signed Badness. Binse is an intriguing subject, seeming to have no qualms about enjoying himself while he robbed banks and carried out other armed robberies. He was put in a boys’ home when he was 14, deemed “uncontrollable”, and abused and beaten while there. Now 53, he’s been inside for 36 of the last 40 years, often in solitary confinement and at one point, in shackles.

Binse doesn’t feature in Mad, Bad and Dead at all, but he partly inspired my hitman, as have others who kill for money. That chilling ability to murder or commit crimes with no regret or compunction is something that sends a shudder through us all. One police officer said of Binse, “I would be genuinely frightened if I saw him on the street.”

As for “mad, bad and dangerous to know”? It’s believed to have first been said by Lady Caroline Lamb to describe Lord Byron. The mind works in mysterious ways!

Mad, Bad and Dead by Sheryl Clark (published by Verve Books) Out Now

A dead employee. A missing child. Anonymous phone calls in the dead of night. Judi Westerholme's troubles aren't over yet...  Already struggling to juggle co-running the local pub along with her new childcare responsibilities for her orphaned niece, Judi does not need her life to become any more complicated. Yet, as usual, complications arrive in spades: she starts receiving threatening, late-night phone calls before discovering one of her employees, Kate, shot dead. Judi finds herself caught up in a murder investigation, as well as the hunt for the Kate's fourteen year-old daughter, who has been missing since the murder. Add in the uncertainty of her relationship with Melbourne-based D.S. Heath and the fact that her estranged mother's nursing home keeps urging her to visit, and Judi might finally be at breaking point.




Thursday, 29 July 2021

2021 Ned Kelly Awards shortlist

 

The Australian Crime Writers Association (ACWA) have announced the shortlist for the 2021 Ned Kelly Awards. 

Best Crime Fiction

Consolation by Garry Disher (Text)

Gathering Dark by Candice Fox, (Penguin)

A Testament of Character by Sulari Gentill, (Pantera)

The Survivors by Jane Harper, (Pan)

The Good Turn by Dervla McTiernan, (HarperCollins)

Tell Me Lies by J P Pomare, (Hachette)

When She Was Good by Michael Robotham, (Hachette)

White Throat by Sarah Thornton, (Text)

Best Debut Crime Fiction

The Good Mother by Rae Cairns, (Bandrui Publishing)

The Second Son by Lorraine Peck, (Text)

The Bluffs by Kyle Perry, (PRH)

The Night Whistler by Greg Woodlands, (Text)

Best True Crime

The Husband Poisoner by Tanya Bretherton, (Hachette)

Stalking Claremont: Inside the hunt for a serial killer by Bret Christian, (HarperCollins)

Public Enemies by Mark Dapin, (A&U)

Hazelwood by Tom Doig, (Viking)

Witness by Louise Milligan, (Hachette)

Best International Cime Fiction

The Guest List by Lucy Foley, (HarperCollins)

The Secrets of Strangers by Charity Norman, (A&U)

Take Me Apart by Sara Sligar, (Text)

We Begin at the End by Chris Whittaker, (A&U)

Broken by Don Winslow, (HarperCollins).

Congratulations to all!

Established in 1995, the Ned Kelly Awards are Australia’s oldest, most prestigious awards honoring crime fiction and true crime writing.

For more information about the 2021 shortlists, go to the ACWA website.


Wednesday, 26 August 2020

2020 Ned Kelly Awards Shortlists

This year’s Ned Kelly Crime Awards entries are testimony to the strong increase in crime reading and crime writing, despite a challenging year for book publishing and retailers due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Australian Crime Writers Association chair Robert Goodman said the large number of entries in this year’s awards demonstrates that Australian crime writing and reading has never been stronger.

This is not just evident in the number of submissions but the diversity and quality of the entries. Congratulations to all our entry authors.’

Fiction entries include page turning thrillers, police procedurals, lone detectives and dirty dealings with many fascinating characters across a range of vividly portrayed settings.’ Goodman said.

This year, for the first time, the Ned Kelly Awards also include a category for Best International Crime Fiction published in Australia, adding to the regular categories of Best Crime Fiction, Best Debut Crime Fiction and Best True Crime.

It is exciting to be able to recognize not only our incredible home grown talent but also some of the world’s top international crime authors,’ Goodman said.

BEST CRIME FICTION
The 2020 shortlist for the Ned Kelly Awards headline category, Best Crime Fiction features: Death of a Typographer, by Nick Gadd, a ‘quirky and original story which is funny and very Melbourne’; The Strangers We Know, by Pip Drysdale, a ‘conspiratorial well-paced read that keeps you glued to the page’; The Scholar, by Dervla McTiernan, ‘an elegant and tightly constructed read with depth and excellent characterisation’; The Wife and the Widow, by Christian White, is ‘cleverly plotted with a major plot twist threaded extremely well through the action’; River of Salt, by Dave Warner, is an ‘evocative tale about the Australian surf scene in the early 1960s with compelling characters’; and True West, by David Whish-Wilson, is a book with ‘a distinct sense of time and place where you can almost smell the outback’.

BEST DEBUT CRIME FICTION
The Debut Crime Fiction shortlist covers a diverse range including Eight Lives, by Susan Hurley, an ‘original medical thriller viewed through the lens of the migrant experience’; Where the Truth Lies, by Karina Kilmore, is ‘a great read with an interesting new setting and good twists’; Lapse, by Sarah Thornton, is ‘atmospheric rural crime with well-drawn characters’; The Nancys, by RWR McDonald, is ‘full of quirky characters and pays homage to Nancy Drew’; Six Minutes, by Petronella McGovern, considers ‘the nightmare scenario of a missing child’; and Present Tense, by Natalie Conyer, ‘has a great setting, complex taut plot and flawed characters’

BEST TRUE CRIME
This year’s True Crime shortlist includes Dead Man Walking: The murky world of Michael McGurk and Ron Medich by Kate McClymont which has a cast of true characters to rival any fiction novel; Bowraville, by Dan Box, addresses themes of endemic racism and justice as well as the ethics of true crime reporting; Shark Arm, by joint authors Phillip Rooper and Kevin Meagher, centres on an old but almost forgotten tale retold with great research and powerful writing; and Snakes and Ladders, by Angela Williams, about a young mother’s experience of addiction, recovery and serving time clean.

BEST INTERNATIONAL CRIME FICTION
The new Ned Kelly Award for international crime fiction included submissions from some of the world’s biggest-selling crime fiction authors and the shortlist has been narrowed down to: The Night Fire by US author Michael Connelly, The Last Widow by US author Karin Slaughter, The Chain by Irish author Adrian McKinty and Cruel Acts by Irish author Jane Casey.

ABOUT THE NED KELLY AWARDS
The Ned Kelly Awards are Australia’s oldest and most prestigious prizes for crime fiction and true crime writing. First established in 1995 and now in their twenty-fifth year, previous winners include: Peter Temple, Shane Maloney, Gabriel Lord, Candice Fox, Garry Disher, Helen Garner and Duncan McNab.

2020 Ned Kelly Awards Shortlists
BEST CRIME FICTION:
Death of a Typographer by Nick Gadd (Australian Scholarly Publishing)
The Strangers We Know by Pip Drysdale (Simon & Schuster Australia)
The Scholar by Dervla McTiernan (Harlequin Enterprises Australia)
The Wife and the Widow by Christian White (Affirm Press)
Rivers of Salt by Dave Warner (Fremantle Press)
True West by David Whish-Wilson (Fremantle Press)
BEST DEBUT CRIME FICTION:
Present Tense by Natalie Conyer (Clan Destine Press)
Eight Lives by Susan Hurley (Affirm Press)
Where the Truth Lies by Karina Kilmore (Simon & Schuster Australia)
The Nancys by RWR McDonald (Allen & Unwin)
Six Minutes by Petronella McGovern (Allen & Unwin)
Lapse by Sarah Thornton (Text Publishing)
BEST TRUE CRIME:
Bowraville by Dan Box (Penguin Random House Australia)
Dead Man Walking: The murky world of Michael McGurk and Ron Medich by Kate McClymont (Penguin Random House Australia)
Shark Arm by Phillip Rooper and Kevin Meagher (Allen & Unwin)
Snakes and Ladders by Angela Williams (Affirm Press)

BEST INTERNATIONAL CRIME FICTION:
Cruel Acts by Jane Casey (Harper Collins Australia)
The Night Fire by Michael Connelly (Allen & Unwin)
The Chain by Adrian McKinty (Hachette Australia)
The Last Widow by Karin Slaughter (Harper Collins Australia)

Thursday, 9 July 2020

Elle Croft on the Perfect Place to set a Crime Novel

©️Elle Croft
You might not think it when standing on the beach - white sand stretching endlessly in either direction, barely a soul in sight, and water so blue it’s hard to distinguish it from the sky - but the city of Adelaide, in South Australia, is the perfect place to set a crime novel. 

When I was growing up in Adelaide, in a suburb called Happy Valley, where koalas would occasionally cling to the gum tree in our backyard and kangaroos could be spotted grazing in the fields near my school, fellow students would brag, bizarrely, that Adelaide was the ‘murder capital of the world.’

It’s a myth, but it’s a long-perpetuated one. So engrained is this fact in urban legend that the hit TV series Dexter, about a serial killer with a strict moral code, created a promo around it. In the commercial, the actor who plays Dexter sits in an airport waiting for a flight. When asked by a fellow traveller where he’s headed, Michael C. Hall replies, deadpan, that he’s off to Adelaide as it has more serial killers per capita than any other city in Australia. He grins devilishly at the camera while the passenger beside him shifts uncomfortably. 

It’s a pretty chilling accusation to level at an otherwise innocuous coastal city, especially considering it’s not true. So why is it still stated as fact?

Perhaps because in 2008 the Australian Bureau of Statistics reported that South Australia had 15 per cent of the nation's convicted killers, but only 8 per cent of the population.

Or perhaps it’s just because Adelaide has a history of extremely mysterious (and often quite brutal) crimes.  

The Somerton Man is one such case, having baffled police, decoders and armchair sleuths for decades. An unidentified man was found dead on Adelaide’s Somerton Beach in December 1948. Rolled up in one of his pockets was a piece of paper, torn from the pages of a book of poetry called the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyám, with the Persian phrase tamám shud (which means ended, or finished) written on it. Theories about spies and ciphers and poisons and stolen cars and a young nurse abound, but no one has ever answered the many questions this case poses (although we did our best when we covered it in the true crime podcast I co-host, called Crime Girl Gang)!

In January 1966, the Beaumont children, aged 9, 7, and 4, disappeared from a popular local beach and were never seen or heard from again. There were the ‘Family Murders’ in the 70s and 80s, the strange disappearance of Rhianna Barreau, and the stabbings of teenagers Fiona Burns and John Lee. Many of these cases remain unsolved to this day. 

And of course there were the infamous Snowtown murders, also known as the ‘bodies in barrels’ case - not quite in Adelaide, but still in the state of South Australia. The case made headlines across the world in the 90s, when the remains of eight murder victims were discovered in barrels stored inside an old bank vault.

That’s by no means an exhaustive list of strange and terrifying crimes that have been committed in Adelaide, but it does perhaps give an insight into how the city ended up with its macabre reputation.

When I began writing Like Mother, Like Daughter, I knew immediately that I wanted it to be set in Adelaide. Part of this was because I wanted to play into the city’s misguided reputation for producing dangerous killers. But there was more to it than that. 

Adelaide is a beautiful city. It boasts miles and miles of pristine sandy beaches, with dolphins frolicking close to shore on any given day. It has some of the most stunning wine regions in the world (producing mouth-wateringly delicious wines), amazing restaurants, wonderful wildlife, and it’s host to world-class cultural events every year (including what I maintain is the best book festival in the world because you sit outside under palm trees. Sorry, Harrogate, but you can’t beat that!).

In short, I wanted the chance to boast about the city I grew up in. If I had to add a bit of murder, kidnapping and general bad behaviour to make that happen, then so be it (although, rest assured, I set the worst crimes in Victoria, South Australia’s neighbouring state). 

Perhaps the ‘murder capital’ rumour isn’t going away any time soon, but there’s far more to Adelaide than just its darkest moments. And I hope that Like Mother, Like Daughter gives my readers a glimpse of all that it has to offer!

Like Mother Like Daughter by Elle Croft is published by Orion on 9th July.
If what they said was true, then the grotesque and the monstrous ran in her blood. It was imprinted within her very core, her DNA, a part of every cell in her body.  Kat's children are both smart and well-adjusted. On the outside.  Kat has always tried to treat Imogen and Jemima equally, but she struggles with one of her daughters more than the other.  Because Imogen's birth mother is a serial killer. And Imogen doesn't know.  They say you can't choose your family, but what if your family If what they said was true, then the grotesque and the monstrous ran in her blood. It was imprinted within her very core, her DNA, a part of every cell in her body.  Kat's children are both smart and well-adjusted. On the outside.  Kat has always tried to treat Imogen and Jemima equally, but she struggles with one of her daughters more than the other.  Because Imogen's birth mother is a serial killer. And Imogen doesn't know.  They say you can't choose your family, but what if your family chooses you?

Tuesday, 21 April 2020

SHOTS MAGAZINE Q&A WITH CRAIG SISTERSON, AUTHOR OF SOUTHERN CROSS CRIME


In the foreword to Southern Cross Crime, published this week in ebook and audiobook (paperback publication delayed until 24 September due to COVID-19), CWA Gold Dagger winner Michael Robotham calls the book “a long overdue guide to the very best in Australian and New Zealand crime fiction, film and TV drama, put together by one of the world’s most knowledgeable and respected reviewers and interviewers, Craig Sisterson”.

 

Sisterson is a lawyer turned features writer and crime fiction expert from New Zealand who currently lives in London. He writes for newspapers and magazines in several countries. In recent years he’s interviewed hundreds of crime writers and talked about the genre on national radio, top podcasts, and onstage at festivals on three continents. He’s been a judge of the McIlvanney Prize and Ned Kelly Awards and is founder of the Ngaio Marsh Awards and co-founder of Rotorua Noir. Southern Cross Crime (Oldcastle Books) is his first book.

What inspired you to write Southern Cross Crime?
It’s one of those projects that came together from a lot of threads over time, to the point where the book now seems (and several friends have said this to me) an inevitable outcome of a few different things I’d been doing over the years.

I’ve always loved mystery fiction, since I was a wee kid growing up in a small-town at the top of the South Island of New Zealand, devouring the Hardy Boys, Agatha Christie, and Sherlock Holmes. As a reader I love discovering new-to-me authors to enjoy, alongside old favourites, and as a reviewer and features writer I love shining a light on a diverse array of crime storytellers. Alongside some other crime fiction reviewers spread across the world, I used to participate in some ‘Global Reading Challenges’, and it was always fun to showcase some antipodean crime writers who’d become new discoveries for my overseas peers.

Some of the first author interviews I did for magazines, more than a decade ago, were with Australian and New Zealand crime writers, so for quite a while I’ve been aware of some really terrific antipodean storytellers, even if their books weren’t readily available in the UK and US at the time. In more recent years I’ve really enjoyed Barry Forshaw’s ‘Noir’ series of Pocket Essential guides to European, Nordic, British, and American crime fiction, and as the likes of Jane Harper’s The Dry began making a big mark globally and more and more Australian and New Zealand crime writers got published in the UK, I began to wonder if there might be a place for a similar guide to Australian and New Zealand crime writing.

Barry was very generous when I ran the idea past him back in 2018, and he even introduced me to his publisher and recommended that I be the person to write such a book.

The result is Southern Cross Crime.

What will crime fans find in the pages of Southern Cross Crime?
Like Barry’s books, it’s designed as a ‘readers guide’ to the crime fiction from my part of the world – mainly books but also some television and films. There are separate entries for around 250 authors, plus a few dozen TV shows and films. Other authors and books are listed at the end of various sections.

I’ve tried to write it in an accessible, magazine style, rather than an academic or encyclopaedic style, and there are doses of my own personality or writing style sprinkled throughout. Hopefully it will be an engaging and fun read for keen crime fiction fans, where they can dip in and out of it at their leisure to learn more about some authors they may already know, and discover many new-to-them storytellers too.

Along with the 300 or so storyteller and screen stories entries, I’ve also included a section in the book, ‘The Unusual Suspects’, of extended interviews with some of the leading figures of ‘Southern Cross Crime’. Unfortunately, we lost two legendary and influential Australian crime writers, Peter Corris and Peter Temple, the year I began working on the book. However, I’d interviewed Peter Corris several years ago for Good Reading magazine, so that feature is included in Southern Cross Crime, and thanks to Michael Robotham and the recollections of others I’ve also put together a special chapter about Peter Temple.

It wouldn’t have felt right to write this book and not highlight those two gentlemen.

What was a fun fact you uncovered during the research process for Southern Cross Crime?
Hmm… before writing the book I was already aware that the history of antipodean crime writing dated back to the earliest days of the detective fiction genre (in terms of novels and short stories). The bestselling detective novel of the 19th century wasn’t written by Wilkie Collins or Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, as many might think, but by a New Zealand lawyer who’d moved to Melbourne to further his dreams of becoming a playwright (Fergus Hume, The Mystery of a Hansom Cab). One of the earliest writers of police tales was Mary Fortune, who wrote dozens from the Australian goldfields in the 1860s. Thanks to the research of the likes of Lucy Sussex, I was already aware of these historic figures.

But what I didn’t know was that the very first Edgar Award given out by the Mystery Writers of America back in 1954, actually went to an Australian. Charlotte Jay (pen name of Adelaide writer Geraldine Halls) won for Beat Not the Bones, a psychological thriller about an Australian woman who travels to New Guinea to uncover the truth behind her husband’s death. Talking to award-winning crime writer Alan Carter recently about that book (he’d come across it during his PhD studies), he described it as “fantastic, radical and well ahead of its time… A vivid, often hallucinatory, gut-punching beautifully written book".

So, while we’re experiencing an antipodean crime wave in recent years, the currents certainly run long and deep back through the decades and centuries.

What were the most enjoyable things, and the most challenging things, about writing this type of ‘readers guide’ book
The most enjoyable thing was to get to swim in the waters of Australian and New Zealand crime for an extended period of time. By the time I began writing Southern Cross Crime I’d already reviewed a couple of hundred antipodean crime novels for various outlets, and interviewed dozens of authors, but there was still so much more to explore and enjoy.

While the likes of Ngaio Marsh, Jane Harper, Emma Viskic, Paul Cleave, Michael Robotham, Peter Temple, Vanda Symon, Adrian McKinty, Candice Fox, Liam McIlvanney, Stella Duffy, Garry Disher and others may be familiar to some British or American readers (having each been international bestsellers or won or been shortlisted for CWA Daggers, Edgars, and other prestigious writing prizes in the northern hemisphere), they’re merely the crest of our antipodean crime wave. So, I really loved reading and writing about a huge range of other Australian and New Zealand crime writers. It was like a trip back home, between the pages.

I also really enjoyed interviewing the likes of Garry Disher and Candice Fox, and Lindy Cameron of Sisters in Crime Australia, for ‘The Unusual Suspects’ section of Southern Cross Crime, adding to the authors I’d already interviewed over the years for various features.

The most challenging thing? Apart from the slog that is writing, re-writing and editing a project of this size (enjoyable and frustrating in equal measure), the toughest thing was probably settling on who got included and who didn’t. You might think that 300 entries would be plenty, but the health of modern Australian and New Zealand crime writing is such that dozens of interesting authors have still been left out. That was tough, drawing the line while trying to showcase a wide variety of styles, settings, and storytellers. We simply couldn’t mention everyone. Early on I  decided to focus on the ‘modern era’, from the mid-1990s (the last quarter century, give or take) when the Australian Crime Writers Association was established and the likes of Peter Temple and Paul Thomas began breaking through

Even so, I’m bracing myself for the inevitable ‘where’s so and so’? response.

What books do you have on your bedside table (or eReader) right now?
Well, I’m currently helping out with the longlisting for the 2020 Ngaio Marsh Awards – the international judging panel will consider the longlist and choose the finalists and winners later this year, so there are several New Zealand crime novels sitting there. Outside of those, I’ve just finished Fair Warning, the new one from Michael Connelly out next month, and The Thursday Murder Club, the debut from British TV host Richard Osman (both are excellent, in different ways). The hardcover I’ve just started is Walleye Junction, the third in Karin Salvalaggio’s terrific series about Montana investigator Macy Greeley, and the e-books I have on the go are Exit by Belinda Bauer and The Monsters We Make by Kali White.

How is Australian and New Zealand crime writing similar or different to British crime writing?
Well, Australia and New Zealand share many links to the United Kingdom: historically as part of the British Empire and now still being part of the Commonwealth, through language and various institutions (parliamentary and legal systems), trade, and sporting ties etc.

So there are strong links between our cultures, even though we’re on complete opposite sides of the globe. At the same time, as I realised more and more as I travelled abroad as an adult, Australia and New Zealand aren’t simply just little slices of Britain in the South Pacific. We have very different landscapes, different wildlife, different senses of humour. We’ve grown up with a mixture of cultural influences: British, American, and our own. Even though we have historic ties to Europe, we’re actually part of the South Pacific and closer to Asia.

All those differences, and others, play a part in the crime fiction we produce.

‘Southern Cross Crime’ (a collective term for Australian and New Zealand crime writing that was coined by Emma Viskic a couple of years ago), offers overseas mystery readers an exciting dive into an array of physical and social landscapes that blend familiar and exotic.

Australia and New Zealand are sibling nations in some ways, vastly different neighbours in others. There’s a kind of shared frontier spirit and connectiveness to the land somewhat akin to the American Southwest. In a relative sense, many Aussies and Kiwis have an adventurous nature and more laidback attitude. Both are sparsely populated island nations, but in very different ways. Australia spreads a population about half of England’s across a country the size of the continental United States, whereas New Zealand is slightly larger than all of Great Britain while having a population similar to Scotland. Australia is an arid nation with most of its populace living in coastal cities; New Zealand has a cooler climate full of mountains, forests, lakes, and lush countryside. Australia has several of the deadliest critters on the planet, New Zealand an abundance of unusual birdlife.

So both are very different to the UK, in several ways.

But while the stark landscapes of the Outback in books like The Dry or Scrublands may seem particularly exotic to British readers, there can be subtler differences in terms of sensibilities and sense of humour. In the way everyday Aussies and New Zealanders view the world and interact with it. “People talk about our landscapes, but I think it’s the humour that sets us apart a bit,” said Glasgow-based Australian author Helen Fitzgerald (The Cry, Ash Mountain) at a raucous session on antipodean crime I chaired at last year’s Newcastle Noir festival.

Last question. You have a dinner party for yourself and five antipodean crime writers, dead or alive. Who would the five be and why?

Bloody hell, that’s a tough choice! Okay, okay, I’ll play. Hmm… I’ve had such a great time with many Aussie and Kiwi crime writers at various festivals and events (and in the bar) at home and overseas, but rather than picking a great crew from past adventures, I’m going to put together a dinner party full of people I’ve never met in person.

Let’s start with the Grande Dame herself, Ngaio Marsh. From all accounts she was a fascinating person, and I’d love to chat to her about Shakespeare, crime writing, and splitting life between New Zealand and the UK. Let’s add the late great Peter Temple, who I’m sure could bring plenty to the party. A little swerve here, but I’m going to invite Aaron Pedersen, an Aboriginal actor who features heavily in the screen section of Southern Cross Crime. He’s a tremendous actor (Mystery Road, Jack Irish, The Circuit, City Homicide, etc) who grew up in the Outback and has led a fascinating life (he cares for his brother, who has cerebral palsy). I’d love to meet him. Let’s add Kerry Greenwood, the creator of Phryne Fisher and one of the only active Australian women crime writers when Sisters in Crime Australia got started almost thirty years ago. And finally, Garry Disher. Masterful storyteller who’s one of the giants on whose shoulders the new generation have stood.

That’d be a great dinner party. We’d have a backyard barbeque. I’d cook scallops and other seafood for an entrée, some lamb and great cuts of fish for the main with some nice salads, and we can argue over the origins of Pavlova for dessert, with some boysenberry ice cream.

Damn, now I’m hungry.

SOUTHERN CROSS CRIME: THE POCKET ESSENTIAL GUIDE TO THE CRIME FICTION, FILM & TV OF AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND (Oldcastle Books, 23 April 2020) is available in ebook and audio download this week, with the paperback edition now available from 24 September.