Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 November 2024

Denzil Meyrick on the changing face of reading tastes

 It’s hard to say why literary tastes change over the years. Some might say that writers, deciding what they fancy committing to paper, are the prime movers behind this. I don’t think that’s true. The tectonic plates of what is popular and what’s not is far too seismic, too ubiquitous to be the product of a whim or a mass move of the collective.

It’s clear that external forces are at work, influencing readers and writers alike.

Take WWII, for example. The most popular genre was historical fiction, mainly with a theme depicting our gallant soldiers triumphing against allcomers. This is easy to understand. There are very few left who can remember the very real horror the population faced in that conflict. For the first time, this modern war placed every man, woman, and child on the front line, thoughts of violent death or invasion never far away. No longer, was war restricted to two lines of men facing off in a muddy field, ready to slash, slice and trample in the name of everyone else.

Of course, the unfortunates who found themselves in the midst of battle have suffered for centuries. Now though, one’s demise could arrive from a clear, blue sky. Who can blame those who found peace and reassurance through the pages of a book?

Fast-forward to our own era. Yes, since that war, there have been many hard times. I lived through the ‘three-day week’, when power cuts and food shortages became the norm in this country. Add to that, the visceral impact of terrorism, threat of nuclear inhalation, natural disasters, and man’s continued inhumanity to man; well, that tiny voice of fear refused to disappear. But on the whole, in this country at least, we’ve enjoyed a prolonged period of peace, relative safety.

Enter, SARS-CoV-2, better known now as Covid.

Once again, danger came from that blue, blue sky – any sky, to be accurate. An enemy we couldn’t see wreaked havoc across the globe, no respecter of borders, political and military power, race, religion, sex, age or creed. It created unimagined horror, with too many dying far from the love and embrace of their families and friends.

I think the true impact of this disease will take decades to properly understand. Though there is something we noticed almost immediately: our collective reading habits changed. We now have the term Romantasy. It might not be in the dictionary yet, but complex, grand love stories that now take place under the level gaze of warlocks, witches and dragons, fly off the bookshelves in huge numbers. In the USA particularly, the love life of cowboys and cowgirls is now a major literary draw – yeeha!

There can be no doubt that Covid, the Cost-of-Living Crisis, and wars and rumours of wars have found those who take to the written word for entertainment rushing for escapism.

So, how does this trend affect crime fiction and thrillers?

While it’s always dangerous to generalise, there appears to be a move to something much less visceral. The vicarious thrill of consuming murder and mayhem between the pages of a book, has suddenly become a gentler experience; perhaps replete with a little humour to ease our passage through a book. The success of Richard Osman and many, many others bear witness to this. Somehow, the stress and strain of contemporary life has turned reading to its earliest days, with a rise in novels that are much closer to the golden age of crime writing, than they are the slash-and-burn realism of a few years ago.

Yes, these stories are every bit as compelling, thrilling and unputdownable, but they offer escapism without sleepless nights. Unless, of course, one is up all night trying to work out devilishly clever plot twists and turns.

My Inspector Grasby Mysteries, feature a hapless Yorkshire detective, back in the 1950s. It’s no coincidence that the indomitable Frank and boss Superintendent Arthur Juggers find themselves in a time just after that other great tumult, the Second World War. It’s almost as though it’s all gone full-circle – well, as far as I’m concerned, anyway.

Then, we have the magic of Christmas. It’s a time for tall tales told in the dark and cold. I’ve often wondered why that is. But if you close your eyes really tightly, it’s not too hard to imagine a tiny group of people, huddled round a flickering flame, telling tall tales to banish the ice-age to the back of the mind.

Some things never change.

The Christmas Stocking Murders by Denzil Meyrick (Transworld|) Out Now

A case shrouded in secrets. It’s just before Christmas, 1953. Grasby and Juggers are investigating a puzzling murder in the remote village of Uthley’s Bay. A fisherman has been found dead on the beach, with a stocking wound tight round his throat. A festive mystery for one and all. Hundreds of pairs of stockings, in neat cellophane bags, soon wash up on the shore. A blizzard cuts off Grasby and Juggers from help, and the local innkeeper is murdered. Any remaining Christmas cheer goes up in smoke as the villagers refuse to talk, leaving the two detectives chasing false leads in the snow. A winter wonderland with no escape. To make matters worse, Grasby can’t stop thinking about stockings. Why does everyone seem to be enjoying strangely high standards of hosiery, even beneath their oilskins? Who is the sinister bespectacled man snooping around their hotel? And how can they solve the murder when everyone in the village is a suspect?

More information about Denzil Meyrick and his books can be found on his website.

You can also follow him on X @ Lochlomonden and on Facebook.


             

           

Thursday, 11 November 2021

Crime Thrillers for Winter and Christmas by B.P.Walter


Winter and Christmas has been a time for mysteries and thrillers for many years, with readers seeking warmth from both pulse-racing, tension-driven stories or cosier, more leisurely whodunnits. I’ve always been drawn to crime fiction at this time of year – I think it’s the sense of comfort driven from order being made out of chaos. Pandemics aside, this time of year can be very hectic, thanks to bustling shops and Christmas gatherings, so there’s something intrinsically soothing about finding order and method on the page even if it sometimes alludes us in real life. My novel The Woman on the Pier isn’t detective-focused, but it does feature a central character setting off to solve a particular mystery and make the guilty (or person she perceives to be guilty) face up to their alleged crime. I’ve always found this structure compelling on the page and I hope readers find the book similarly enthralling if they choose to curl up with it by the fire on a cold winter’s night. And on the subject of curling up with a book (perhaps by the Christmas tree with a few mince pies), I’ve brought together below five of my favourite winter-based thrillers, both new and old, that would make for perfect seasonal reading.

Hercule Poirot’s Christmas by Agatha Christie

Fans of 2019 movie Knives Out should certainly turn to this Christie gem from 1938. That terrifically enjoyable film features a lot of nods to Hercule Poirot’s Christmas, with bickering families, mysterious outsiders, a bloody death of the family patriarch and an ingenious solution. Christie apparently wrote this because her brother-in-law complained that the murders in her books were ‘getting too refined’ and apparently wanted to read a story with ‘a good violent murder with lots of blood’. Well that’s certainly what she delivered here, with the bloody throat-cutting and nightmarish sounds happening at the top of an old manor house. Once you’ve finished the book, 1994 ITV adaptation of the novel starring David Suchet is also definitely worth a watch, especially for the superb casting, helping it skilfully handle certain tricky aspects of the plot that are hard to pull-off well onscreen. 

The Dark by Emma Haughton

Now moving to something bang up-to-date, Emma Haughton’s thriller The Dark is one of the most impressive books I’ve read all year. It’s an autumn tradition of mine to take myself off on a reading retreat (not an established one, I just book myself into a hotel and just read book after book after book). When you’re doing really sustained amounts of reading, it’s common to want breaks and do something else for a bit – however this did not occur with this utterly gripping novel of arctic-based murder. Playing out in a confined environment, this is essential reading for those who enjoy Agatha Christie’s more single-setting based novels (And Then There Were None of course comes to mind) and the recent (and similarly enthralling) hit BBC drama Vigil. 

Silent Night by Nell Pattison 

This is a novel so covered in a cold, chilly atmosphere (thanks to its superb scene-setting) the pages themselves practically crack with frost as you turn them. Following the investigation that unfolds after a death at a school trip for deaf students, Nell Pattison’s characters are very vividly drawn and the haunting terrain of the snowy woods is eerily evoked. 

Shiver by Allie Reynolds

One of those books you can’t help but fly through, Allie Reynold’s debut thriller Shiver is an excellent whodunnit that at times borders on suspense-horror. Like The Dark, it’s also a well-pitched examination of what happens when you group people together for a tense period in an extreme situation, with the secrets in their past steadily coming to the surface. 

The Lighthouse by P.D. James

This is the only of my five not specifically set in winter, but it still makes of absorbing reading on dark, chilly evenings. I think I also have a lot of associations with this book and Christmas, since it was the first of P.D. James’s novels I read, back when I was 13 years old and suffering from flu in December. It was the perfect medicine: James’s mysteries are so well-thought-through, and this one takes place within the confines of a wonderfully atmospheric location: a restful retreat for the rich on an island just off the Cornish coast. Expect brutal killings, pleasingly methodical crime-solving and a very tense final act. 

The Woman on the Pier by B P Walter (Published by Harper Collins) Out Now

Two strangers meet on the pier Only one walks away... Screenwriter Caroline Byrne is desperate to know why her daughter Jessica died, murdered in Stratford when she was supposed to be at a friend's in Somerset. When Caroline discovers the messages Jessica had been sending a boy named Michael, she realises it's because of him. Because he failed to meet her that day. He's the reason why her daughter is dead. And so she makes a choice. He's the one who's going to pay. That is her promise. Her price.

More information about B P Walter can be found on his website. You can also find him on Facebook, follow him on Twitter @BarnabyWalter and on Instagram @bpwalterauthor. 


Sunday, 25 November 2018

Murder Under the Mistletoe

If your blood isn't cold enough this Christmas, we've got a cracker of an evening for you. This is Murder Under the Mistletoe 2018!

Join Heffers Bookshop for a convivial evening of festive drinks, readings by a selection of hand-picked crime authors and lots of book buying. It's also the perfect opportunity to browse our shelves and find Christmas presents for the book lovers in your life! Authors taking part include Quentin Bates, Rachael Blok, Alison Bruce, Dominick Donald, Stephen Done, Mick Finlay, Elizabeth Haynes, Susi Holliday, Christina Koning, Anna Mazzola, JS Monroe, WC Ryan, William Shaw and MB Vincent.


Date:- 6 December 2019
Time:- 18:30 to 20:00
Place:- Heffers Bookshop, 20 Trinity Street, Cambridge, CB2 1TY

For more information about tickets see here.

Monday, 7 December 2015

Murder at the Chronicle

There’s an early Christmas present this year for crime fans who like to read cozy mysteries on their Kindle.

Murder at the Chronicle - with five Crampton of the Chronicle short stories - is free to download from 11 to 15 December.

The stories include a seasonal special - The Mystery of the Phantom Santa - with a real Yuletide feel-good ending. Colin Crampton discovers more than he bargained for when he investigates a small boy’s claim to have seen Father Christmas from his bedroom window.

One of the series’ most popular characters, Colin’s girlfriend Shirley Goldsmith, makes an appearance in The Mystery of the Two Suitcases. Colin interrupts a romantic Valentine’s date with Shirley to unravel a puzzle with a surprising twist.

In The Mystery of the Precious Princess, Colin finds that it’s not only a dog’s life for the canines up at Hove Greyhound Racing stadium.

The Mystery of the Single Red Sock, takes Colin on a hunt for one of the most dangerous crooks he’s ever confronted.

And in The Mystery of the Clothes on the Beach, a local fisherman helps Colin land a surprising catch.

Murder at the Chronicle also contains two bonus chapters from Headline Murder, the first full-length Crampton of the Chronicle novel, also available as an e-book. Headline Murder is on special offer for Kindle readers - just 99p, saving £4 on the normal price - during December.

More information about the Colin Crampton series can be found on http://www.colincrampton.com/