Showing posts with label Chris Ewan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chris Ewan. Show all posts

Sunday, 31 July 2016

The Question of Genre - 23rd St Hilda's Mystery & Crime Weekend


The Question of Genre: What is Crime Fiction?

23rd Mystery & Crime Weekend at St Hilda’s College Oxford
19th – 21st August 2016

Lee Child is the conference Guest of Honour

Natasha Cooper will be the chairing the conference

Friday 19th August

6:45pm                     Reception

7:30pm                    The Conference Dinner
                                    Speaker: Ted Childs, the creator of ITV’s Inspector Morse

Saturday 20th August

08:00 – 9:00                      Breakfast

09:15 -                      Welcome: Kate Charles

09:30 – 11:00am         Elly Griffiths
A Gimlet Hole bore in a Chair Leg: How Crowed Rooms Led to Murder
Jane Finnis
Once Upon a Crime

11:00 – 11:30              Coffee Break

11:40 - 12:40pm        Conference speech by Lee Child - Seven Million Years of  Thriller Fiction

12:50pm - 13:50pm   Lunch

2:00pm - 3:30pm       Martin Edwards 
                                  Trending: Why is Golden Age Fiction fashionable again?
                                  Carol Westron
                                  No Servants Need Apply

3:30pm - 4:00pm       Tea Break

4:10pm - 5:40pm      Andrew Taylor
                                      Pistols at Dawn: How Crime Fiction Waylaid the Historical Novel
                                      Shona Maclean
                        You Couldn't Make it Up: Rules and compromises in   Historical Crime                                      Fiction

5:45pm – 6:30pm Signing Session for all Authors

7:15pm                     Drinks followed by Conference dinner
                                    Speaker: Val McDermid

Sunday 21st August

08:30 – 09:30       Breakfast

09:30 – 11:00        Kate Charles
                                 From Father Brown to Stanley Chambers: The Clerical Detectiv
                                Chris Ewan
                               What’s So Funny? Humour in Crime Fiction

11:00 -11:30        Coffee

11:30 – 1:00pm     Sarah Weinman
                                The Originator’s of Domestic Suspense
                                Marcia Talley
                               Murder Least Foul: Teapots and Crafts Shops and Cats. Oh My!

1:00pm                     Closing remarks

1:15pm                     Lunch

Thursday, 15 October 2015

Books to Look Forward to from Faber and Faber

Black Water is by Louise Doughty and is due to be published in June 2016.  John Harper is in hiding in a remote hut on a tropical Island.  As he lies awake at night, listening to the rain on the roof, he believes his life may be in danger.  But he is less afraid of what is going to happen than of what he’s already done.  In a local town, he meets Rita, a woman with her own tragichistory.  They begin an affair, but can offer each other redemption? Or do the ghosts of the past always catch up with us in the end? Moving between Europe during the Cold War, Civil Rights-era California, and Indonesia during the massacres of 1965 and the subsequent military dictatorship, Black Water explores some of the darkest events of recent history through the story of one troubled man.

Long Time Lost is by Chris Ewan and is due to be published in May 2016.  Nick Miller and his team provide a unique and highly illegal service, relocating at-risk individuals across Europe with new identities and new lives. Nick excels at what he does for a reason: he's spent years living in the shadows under an assumed name. But when Nick steps in to prevent the attempted murder of witness-in-hiding Kate Sutherland on the Isle of Man, he triggers a chain of events with devastating consequences for everyone he protects - because Nick and Kate share a common enemy in Connor Lane, a man who will stop at nothing to get what he wants, even if it means tearing Nick's entire network apart.

Nick Alston, a Los Angeles private investigator, is hired to find the kidnapped son of America's richest and most hated man. Hastings, a mob hitman in search of redemption, is also on the trail. But both men soon become ensnared by a sinister cabal that spreads from the White House all the way to Dealey Plaza. Decades later in Dallas, Alston's son stumbles across evidence from JFK conspiracy buffs that just might link his father to the shot heard round the world. Violent, vivid, visceral: Fever City is a high-octane, nightmare journey through a Mad Men-era America of dark powers, corruption and conspiracy.  Fever City is by Tim Baker and is due to be published in January 2016. 

West Virginia: A church congregation vanishes in mysterious circumstances, only to be found dead some miles away. The evidence on the ground appears to indicate a ritual killing and the work of demonic forces.  Enter Jessica Blackwood, the FBI's specialist in all things unusual. A former illusionist, Jessica's talent and experience enable her to see what others cannot, as she proved in the infamous 'Warlock' case. Maybe now, once again, the devil will be in the details.  Following the trail from West Virginia to Mexico and Miami, Jessica uncovers a deadly conspiracy that might lead all the way to the Vatican itself. Only with her unique understanding of the powers of deception can they hope to stop a ruthless killer from exacting a revenge that's been thirty years in the planning . . . Name of the Devil is by Andrew Mayne and is due to be published in June 2016.

Sunset City is by Melissa Ginsburg and is due to be published in April 2016. Twenty-two-year-old Charlotte Ford reconnects with Danielle, her best friend from high school, a few days before Danielle is found bludgeoned to death in a motel room. In the wake of the murder, Charlotte's life unravels and she descends into the city's underbelly, where she meets the strippers, pornographers and drug dealers who surrounded Danielle in the years they were estranged. Ginsburg's Houston is part of a lesser known south, where the urban and rural collide gracelessly. In this shadowy world, culpability and sympathy blur in a debut novel which thrillingly brings its three female protagonists to the fore. Scary, funny and almost unbearably sad, Sunset City is written with rare grace and empathy holding you transfixed, praying for some kind of escape for Charlotte.

The Travelers is by Chris Pavone and is due to be published in March 2016. Will Rhodes is an award-winning correspondent for The Travelers, on assignment at a luxury Argentinian resort - fine wines and gourmet food, polo fields and the looming Andes. But Will's life is about to be turned upside down when a new flirtation turns into something far more dangerous, and he only realises too late. Turns out he's been targeted, he just doesn't know why. He doesn't know what these people truly want and how far into his life they will reach, to his friends and his colleagues, to his boss and his wife. He doesn't know that they will stop at nothing in their pursuit, and he doesn't know about the secrets he has already been keeping... The Travelers is an ingenious, compulsive thriller - taking us from New York to Washington, Mendoza to Capri, London to Paris, Edinburgh to Dublin, Stockholm to the wilds of Iceland - about marriage, deceit, betrayal, and the secrets we should watch out for.

The Ex is by Alafair Burke and is due to be published in February 2016.  A lawyer agrees to help an old boyfriend who has been accused of murder - but begins to suspect that she is the one being manipulated. Widower Jack Harris has resisted the dating scene since the shooting of his wife by a fifteen-year-old boy three years ago. An early morning run along the Hudson River changes that when he spots a woman who eerily but thrillingly echoes his past. Eager to help Jack find love again, his best friend posts a "Missed Moment" item online and days later, a woman responds...Olivia Randall is one of New York City's best criminal defence lawyers. When she gets the phone call informing her that her former fiancee, Jack Harris, has been arrested for a triple homicide there is no doubt in her mind as to his innocence. The only question is who would go to such great lengths to frame him - and why? For Olivia, representing Jack is a way to make up for past regrets, and the hurt she caused him, but as the evidence against him mounts, she is forced to confront her doubts. The man she knew could not have done this. But what if she never really knew him?

So far, twenty-three thousand and ninety six people have seen me online. They include my
mother, my father, my little sister, my grandmother, my other grandmother, my grandfather, my boss, my sixth year Biology teacher and my boyfriend James. When Leah Oliphant-Brotheridge and her adopted sister Su go on holiday together to Magaluf to celebrate their A-levels, only Leah returns home. Her successful, swotty sister remains abroad, humiliated and afraid: there is an online video of her, drunkenly performing a sex act in a nightclub. And everyone has seen it. Ruth Oliphant-Brotheridge, mother of the girls, successful court judge, is furious. How could this have happened? How can she bring justice to these men who took advantage of her dutiful, virginal daughter? What role has Leah played in all this? And can Ruth find Su and bring her back home when Su doesn't want to be found?  Viral is by Helen FitzGerald and is due to be published in February 2016.

Berlin Red is by Sam Eastland and is due to be published in June 2016.  April, 1945. East of Berlin, the Red Army stands poised to unleash its final assault upon the ruined capital of Hitler's Thousand Year Reich. To the north, at a lonely outpost near the Baltic Sea, German scientists perfect a guidance system for the mighty V2 rocket, which has already caused massive damage to the cities of London and Antwerp. This device, known only by the codename Diamond stream, will allow the rocket to arrive at its target with pin-point accuracy. So devastating is the potential of this newly-mastered technology that Hitler's promise to the German people of a 'miracle weapon' that will turn the tide of the war might actually come true. When a radio message sent to Hitler's Headquarters, heralding the success of Diamond stream, is intercepted by an English listening station, British Intelligence orders one of its last agents operating in Berlin to acquire the plans for the device, desperate to evacuate their agent from the doomed city before the Red Army swarms through its streets, British Special Operations turns to the Kremlin for help. They ask for one man in particular - Inspector Pekkala. Anxious to acquire the plans for himself, Stalin readily agrees to risk his finest investigator on what appears to be a suicide mission. But when Pekkala learns the reason that the British have singled him out, he knows that he must make the journey, no matter what the outcome might be. The agent he must rescue is the woman he had planned to marry, before the Revolution tore them apart, sending her to Paris as a refugee and Pekkala to a gulag in Siberia. This time, for Pekkala, it is personal.

In The Long Count, the first book of JM Gulvin's masterful new crime series, we meet Ranger John Quarrie as he is called to the scene of an apparent suicide by a fellow war veteran. Although the local police want the case shut down, John Q is convinced that events aren't quite so straightforward. When his hunch is backed up by the man's son, Isaac - just back from Vietnam, and convinced his father was murdered - they start to look into a series of other violent incidents in the area, including a recent fire at the local Trinity Asylum and the disappearance of Isaac's twin brother, Ishmael. In a desperate race against time, John Q has to try and unravel the dark secrets at the heart of this family and get to the truth before the count is up...Dripping with atmosphere and a sense of time and place, The Long Count is a page-turner and a psychological puzzle and is due to be published in May 2016.

Hard Cold Winter is by Glen Erik Hamilton and is due to be published in April 2016.  When an old crony of Van Shaw's late grandfather calls in a favour, he embarks on a journey deep into the remote forest of the Olympic Mountains in search of a missing girl tied to his own criminal past. Discovering a brutal murder scene, Van finds himself caught between a billionaire businessman on the one side and vicious gangsters on the other. In an attempt to survive Van will have to face some of the toughest questions of his life, not least over his relationship with his iron willed girlfriend, Luce. But with the clock ticking, a desperate Van may just need every ally he can get, especially as someone prepares to unleash a firestorm on Seattle that could burn them all to ashes.

After a stint as a private contractor in Afghanistan, Danny Lynch is back in New York. But nothing's easy. Work is hard to find and his girlfriend owes more than $30,000 in student loans. Danny is also haunted by something he witnessed at the base - a fact that could ultimately destroy him. Then he spots Teddy Trager, tech visionary and billionaire. These two men couldn't be more different - except for one thing: in appearance, they're identical. Danny becomes obsessed with Trager, and before long this member of the ninety-nine per cent is passing undetected into the gilded realm of the one per cent. But what does Danny find there? Who does he become? And is there a route home? From the prize winning author of Limitless, Paradime is by Alan Glynn and is a novel for fans of the great '70s conspiracy thrillers, rebooted for today's ever-globalising world.  It is due to be published in June 2016.



Tuesday, 28 October 2014

Dark Tides Competition

In celebration of Manx Halloween publishers Faber and Faber have given us five copies of Chris Ewan's brand new thriller Dark Tides to give away in a competition.   To win a copy read the blog post and answer the question below -

When Claire Cooper was eight years old her mother mysteriously vanished during Hop-tu-naa, the Manx Halloween. At fourteen, Claire is still struggling to come to terms with her disappearance when she’s befriended by a group of five teenagers who mark every Hop-tu-naa by performing dares. But Claire’s arrival begins to alter the group’s dynamic until one year a prank goes terribly wrong, changing all their futures and tearing the friends apart.

Six years later, one of the friends is killed on Hop-tu-naa in an apparent accident. But Claire, now a police officer, has her doubts. Is a single footprint found near the body a deliberate taunt?

As another Hop-tu-naa dawns, bringing with it another death and another footprint, Claire becomes convinced that somebody is seeking vengeance. But who? And which of the friends might be next? If she’s to stop a killer and unlock the dark secrets of her past, Claire must confront her deepest fears, before it’s too late.

For a chance to win one of five copies of Chris Ewan's new novel Dark Tides answer this easy question.  What is the name of Manx Halloween?  

The answer can be found in this post. Send  the answer along with your name, email address and your postal address to shotscomp@yahoo.co.uk.  Don't forget to put Dark Tides in the subject line.  The closing date is 7 November 2014. Best of luck!

Dark Tides by Chris Ewan is out now £14.99 (Faber & Faber)

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Chris Ewan is the Award-winning author of The Good Thief’s Guide to ….. series of mystery novels, described by the Sydney Morning Herald as ‘Crime writing at its best’. His debut, The Good Thief’s Guide to Amsterdam, won the Long Barn Books First Novel Award and is published in 10 countries.  Amsterdam, Paris, Vegas and Venice, have all been shortlisted for Crimefest’s Last Laugh Award. More information about Chris Ewan and his writing can be found on his website and you can also follow him on Twitter @Chrisewan

Monday, 27 October 2014

Dark Tides with Chris Ewan

Q: - Dark Tides is the second of your standalone thrillers to be set on the Isle of Man, following on from the bestselling Safe House.  Why did you choose to go back to the island again? 

Chris: - When I finished writing Safe House, I thought I was done with telling stories set on the Isle of Man.  For one thing, it’s a relatively small place with a low crime rate and I wasn’t sure it could sustain me for more than one thriller.  More than that, I’d seen Safe House as my ‘Isle of Man book’.  The plot of Safe House grew out of an idea that had been bugging me for some time, the island seemed like the only place to set it, and the novel became a kind of love letter (albeit a bit warped) to the place I’d come to call home.  So I moved on to Dead Line, set in Marseilles, and then a funny thing happened.  I found I had another story I really wanted to tell that could only be set on the island.  That story became Dark Tides and it’s a novel about Hop-tu-naa, the Manx Halloween, but it’s also a story about family, about friendship, and about the particular intensity of growing up in an island environment.  Since finishing the book, I’ve gone on to write a short story set on the island, and my new thriller begins in Laxey, on the island’s east coast.  So it turns out I was wrong.  I have plenty of stories to tell about the Isle of Man.  More, probably, then I’ll ever find the time to write.

Q: - Many readers might not be familiar with the Isle of Man.  Although it's part of the Crown, it’s self-governing and, geographically, very separate.  Although you're not Manx yourself, you've lived there for eleven years, so what do you normally tell people about it when they ask? 

Chris: - I usually start by telling them where it is – in the middle of the Irish Sea, between Liverpool and Dublin – because nine times out of ten, people automatically assume I’m talking about the Isle of Wight.  It’s strange really, but it’s often seemed to me that the Isle of Man is a forgotten place (which is one reason why I tend to believe some of the rumours I’ve heard over the years about the island being used to relocate people enrolled in UK witness protection schemes).

I’m not sure why it’s so often overlooked, and I usually go on to tell people that it’s a fascinating place to visit.  For starters, it’s absolutely stunning, with an enormously varied landscape packed into such a small place – there are beaches and coves, glens and plantations, even a mountain (though only by ten metres according to the UK definition…).  It has a rich and very distinct cultural history, one part of which is Hop-tu-naa.  It’s also absolutely full of strange customs and quirks.  Manx people believe it’s bad luck, for instance, to refer to rodents as r*ts (hence why I’ve snuck in that asterisk).  But if none of that works, I usually go on to tell them that the Bee Gees grew up on the island, as did Mark Cavendish, that the island has a space industry and has been voted the fifth most likely nation to send a man to the moon, that it was the first country in the world to give women the vote, that it’s where they first put letters through seaside rock, and that there are wild wallabies in the north (no, really).

Q: - How much research did you have to do into the Manx Festival of Hop-Tu-Naa, and how does it differ from the better-known Halloween? 

Chris: - As with all my books, I did enough research to enable me to tell the story I wanted to tell and then I made everything else up.  I did most of my research online although I spoke with lots of friends who grew up with the traditions and I also spoke with experts from Manx National Heritage.

Like Halloween, Hop-tu-naa is celebrated on 31st October, and in its modern form, the two festivals share many similarities – for example, people dress up in scary costumes, and kids call from door-to-door.  That said, there are significant differences, too.  For example, Manx people carve turnip lanterns instead of pumpkins and kids don’t go trick or treating because they sing nonsense songs instead (which are kind of like sinister Christmas carols).  The nonsense songs vary across different areas of the island but perhaps the best known song is Jinny the Witch, which begins, ‘Hop-tu-naa/My mother’s gone away/and she won’t be back until the morning’.  As a thriller writer, I could immediately see some dark potential in those lyrics!

Q: - What was the inspiration behind the story?  It's definitely creepier than your previous thrillers.  Was that a deliberate move, or did it just fit your narrative better? 

Chris: - Part of the inspiration behind Dark Tides was the idea of telling a mystery story over a number of years, while only ever narrating the story from one recurring date (in this case, the 31st October).  But the main inspiration stemmed from my research, when I discovered a particularly fascinating divination custom linked to Hop-tu-naa.  Traditionally, on the night of Hop-tu-naa a Manx family might put out the fire in their hearth and spread the ashes out to cool.  The following morning, they’d hope that when they woke they’d find a footprint in the ashes.  If the footprint pointed out towards a doorway, custom suggested that there would be a birth in the family.  If, however, a footprint appeared that pointed in towards the hearth, it meant that somebody in the family would die.  I think it would have been almost impossible for me not to see the potential for a thriller story in that.

And yes, it’s a darker, creepier story than I’ve ever told before, but I figured that if I was going to tell a Hop-tu-naa tale, it had to be a real chiller.

Chris: - Dark Tides is the first thriller you've written almost entirely from the perspective of a woman.  Where did the idea for Claire come from and did you find it challenging to write from her perspective? 

Chris: - One thing I learned from Safe House that surprised me was how many readers were
desperate to read more stories about Rebecca Lewis, the female PI character I’d created for the novel.  Rebecca started out as a secondary character, but readers seemed to connect with her in a very strong way.  My idea in Dark Tides was to explore how a single date could haunt a character from their childhood through to their late twenties, and since Rebecca didn’t grow up on the Isle of Man, I had to find someone else.  Enter Claire Cooper, whose mother mysteriously disappeared on Hop-tu-naa when Claire was eight years old and who has been plagued by a sense of guilt and culpability ever since.  Claire shares some DNA with Rebecca – they’re both very tough, very capable women – but I’d say that Claire is also more vulnerable, and perhaps the most complex character I’ve ever created.

And yes, I found writing the majority of the novel from the perspective of a female character challenging, but that’s exactly why I did it.  I try to set myself new challenges in every book I write in that hope that it will make me a better writer.  I probably underestimated how tough I’d find it, though I hope that readers will connect with Claire just as much as they did with Rebecca, and that ultimately, they’ll feel the risk was worth it.

Q: - Dark Tides is essentially a thriller with family secrets at its heart.  Is that a subject that particularly fascinates you and, if so, why? 

Chris: - It seems to be, because in all my thrillers I keep circling back to the theme of dysfunctional families and, as you say, family secrets.  I don’t think that’s because of the theme itself, necessarily.  It has more to do with the fact that I like to write stories that are relatable – either by writing about ordinary people caught up in situations that are much bigger than them, or by telling stories about professionals in such a way that the focus is placed on their personal lives and fears.  For most of us, family is very important, and it's where most of our hopes and fears stem from.  I like to play with that.

Q: - Who are some of your favourite writers?

Chris: - Any list would be incomplete, and this one certainly is, but some of my favourite writers over the years have included Jack Kerouac, Raymond Chandler, James Lee Burke, Margaret Atwood, Paul Auster, Lawrence Block, Donald Westlake, and Megan Abbott.

Q: - What are you working on next? 

Chris: - I’m about halfway through writing my new thriller, which opens on the Isle of Man before taking in multiple destinations throughout the UK and Europe.  It’s about a character called Nick Miller, who provides a highly discreet, highly bespoke service, relocating at-risk individuals across Europe with new identities and new lives.  And that’s about all I can really tell you for now, except to add that I’m very excited about where the story might take me next.


DARK TIDES by Chris Ewan is out now, £14.99 (Faber & Faber)

Look out tomorrow (28 October 2014) over on the Shotsblog where there will be an opportunity to win one of five copies of Dark Tides by answering a simple question.


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Chris Ewan is the Award-winning author of The Good Thief’s Guide to ….. series of mystery novels, described by the Sydney Morning Herald as ‘Crime writing at its best’. His debut, The Good Thief’s Guide to Amsterdam, won the Long Barn Books First Novel Award and is published in 10 countries.  Amsterdam, Paris, Vegas and Venice, have all been shortlisted for Crimefest’s Last Laugh Award. More information about Chris Ewan and his writing can be found on his website and you can also follow him on Twitter @Chrisewan