Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

Monday, 28 October 2024

Alison Bruce Interview

Ayo: - Your last book was a standalone I believe, so I wanted to know what made you want to write a standalone and now go back to writing a series.

Alison: - The last book was The Moment Before Impact and I wrote that expecting that to be the first in a new series. That was my plan. I absolutely loved the main character in it, the two main characters and I saw them as being the start of a new series. But both my agent and my publisher said no, we think it is a standalone by the way in which the story is told. It is still unfinished business, so that is something I would like to come back to later. But then I was left in a position where the publisher said that they would really like a new series, something related to the police rather than an amateur sleuth. So, I came at it from the point of view of thinking that well I did not want to do another version of the Goodhew books because that is its own thing and again, I do not feel that I am completely finished with that. So, I thought that as a starting point – do you remember Nancy Kominsky? She used to paint things and she would do a few daubs on the page and you didn't think that it is not going to turn into anything but she would gradually fill bits in and it was a bit like that so I thought that my starting sketch was to think that if I was going to go from somewhere which was the opposite to Goodhew I would be thinking of someone who doesn't love Cambridge the way in which he (Goodhew) loves Cambridge which implies somebody who has been forced to move to Cambridge for one reason or another. They do not naturally operate at the Cambridge pace or with the Cambridge mindset. So, it has a fish out of water element to some extent. Gary was new when he first joined in Cambridge Blue and that was his first murder investigation. So, I thought that I wanted it to be somebody a bit more experienced who had a bit of history in the police. I was coming from all these opposites really, a bit like a pendulum I was probably too far away at that point and so I rounded off some of those rough edges and I settled on this character Ronnie Blake, and she is new to Cambridge, she has family in Cambridge, she has reasons to stay without necessarily the enthusiasm to stay. 

Ayo: - When we were chatting earlier you were saying that there was a bit about the University It does have lots of university elements in them. What made you decide to incorporate those? I know that when everyone thinks of Cambridge they think of the university, but I would have thought that you would or might have wanted to avoid that.

Alison: - I do tend to avoid it because I write about Cambridge the way that I see Cambridge. I do work for not the University, but the other University in Cambridge and I tend to avoid that. I like to approach Cambridge from what I see and what are my experience in Cambridge is which I believe are just as valid as the University angle. It is the day-to-day Cambridge that I see. But I also have this storyline where Ronnie's sister had been living in Cambridge for a period and it was natural, and it worked very well that she had come as a student

Ayo:One of things, I mean over the years I know that you have a BSc in Science degree with honours in Crime and Investigation, how much did that help in writing this series because when you started the Goodhew series you did not have that. Things have clearly changed over the years. Did this help?

Alison: - I took my degree really because I wanted to write, I did not always want to be going to other people. I wanted to have a better base knowledge myself. So, when I first wrote the very first Goodhew book which came out third – The Calling now The Cambridge Calling I had the murder victims in quite exposed places where the bodies had been for quite a long time. So, I got away with there not being much forensic evidence. But what I did do always from the beginning was to seek out the right people from which to ask advice. There is no way that I had the same level of expertise than any of those. But I hope that I ask more informed and more plausible questions, and I can narrow down what’s viable and what is not more quickly. What I have found from doing my degree is that some people do really make things up, and I know it is fiction but it is interesting where the line is between fact and fiction and sometimes you can read a book where you think that ten minutes of research would have helped and that is really frustrating. When I wrote the last book there was a lot in there about seatbelt injuries and I had the idea originally whether it was plausible for the person to have been put in the driver’s seat after the crash. I quickly found out that there are so many reasons why not. Seatbelt injuries, the impact, the seatbelt locking, the airbags and so forth. And then part way through writing it I read somebody else's book and the big reveal at the end was that the people had switched places after she was unconscious. I felt for all those reasons, no. And I think that the research is massively important because everybody knows that you are reading fiction but, at the same time you have got to make them believe that it is viable. But if you stretch that too far then it doesn't make sense. I do try and do groundwork.

Ayo:- Groundwork is important and as an author one of the things I wanted to find out from you as a general point is on the one hand you have people that state that they really just want to be entertained and on the other hand both you and I know that if you are writing a crime novel then a lot of social policy will come in to it. So, how do you juggle that—as in wanting to entertain and wanting to make people realise what is actually going on. 

Alison: - Okay, I compare it to a drum. You know when you have got a drum, those little screw things which must be tightened up, you must think about what all of those are for you. Obviously setting, character, plot, things like the timeline, facts. You must look for where the saggy bits are and tighten them up. But sometimes you must ditch an idea because it is a great dramatic idea, but it doesn't hold water. Obviously, it won't work and if you have seen that this is the case then you need to deal with it. I have had lovely ideas that have gone in the bin. If you are not 100 % certain that you can tighten that drum, then throw it away.

The link to the full interview on the Shots website can be found here.


Because she Looked Away by Alison Bruce (Little Brown) Out Now.

After the sudden death of her sister, devastated detective DS Ronnie Blake relocates to Cambridge to help her brother Alex raise their sister's young son, Noah. She reports for her first day but instead finds herself being questioned by a special investigations unit, nicknamed the DEAD Team. With a small group of six, led by DI Fenton, the once-successful DEAD team has a single outstanding case, Operation Byron, and the failure to resolve it threatens the unit's existence. Their most promising lead is an anonymous note linking three seemingly unconnected people: a convicted fraudster, a dead academic... and Ronnie's sister Jodie. When Ronnie is denied information about Operation Byron, she follows a lead slipped to her by Malachi, the youngest member of the team, and makes a discovery which links Operation Byron to a disturbing unsolved murder. She is rapidly drawn into an intricate web of deceit, buried secrets and tragedy and the discovery that her connection to Cambridge is far darker than she could ever have guessed.

More information about Alison Bruce and her books can be found on her website. She can also be found on X @Alison_Bruce. On Instagram @alisonbruce and on Facebook.

 


Wednesday, 23 February 2022

An interview with DS Max Craige


Neil Lancaster is the author of the DS Max Craigie series. The first novel in the series Dead Man's Grave was longlisted for the 2021 William McIlvanney Prize for Best Scottish Crime Book of the Year. The second book The Blood Tide is published on 23rd February 2022. 

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Neil- So, tell us all about Max Craigie then?

MC - What do you want to know?

Neil - Well, how about your childhood for a start. Where is “home” fox Max?

MC - We’ll I’m a Black Isler, by birth. I grew up in a tiny community in the centre of the Isle in a house surrounded by barley fields. It was nice and peaceful. I went to school in Fortrose, I did okay, but didn’t set the world on fire. I was a dreamer.

Neil - Oh wow, Island life must have been very different.

MC - It’s not actually an Island at all, it’s a peninsular surrounded on 3 sides by the Cromarty Firth, Moray Firth and Beauly firth. It’s only twenty minutes to Inverness, so it didn’t even feel remote to me. I had a great time. I was outside in all weathers, fishing, building camps or sorting wood for the fire.

Neil - A good childhood?

MC - It was great until I was fifteen. My parents were killed in a head on traffic accident.

Neil - Oh, my goodness, how dreadful. What happened to you after that?

MC - I went to live with my Aunt Elspeth who lives close by in Avoch, a small village by the sea, she took me in and was wonderful to me. I joined the Army shortly afterwards. I don’t want to be rude, but can we not talk about my parents, please?

Neil - So, what was the young Max like, then?’

MC - Very outdoorsy. I loved biking, hill walking, kayaking, and swimming in the sea I was rarely inside, I also was a keen amateur boxer. All this, probably pushed me towards the Army. Elspeth was wonderful and treated me like her own son, but I needed to get away from the remoteness and discover life for myself. I probably had a lot of pent-up anger in me, so I needed structure and discipline to stop me going off the rails. The army gave me that. 

Neil - How did you enjoy the Army?

MC - I enjoyed it a lot. I was very young, but I was physically very fit so it was much easier for me. It gave me a sense of belonging and purpose.

Neil - Did you see action?

MC - Yes. I went to Afghanistan twice. 

Neil - How was that?’

MC - It was interesting.

Neil - You must have seen some terrible things.

MC - Good times and bad. I was with a brilliant team of guys, and we did some good, I’d like to think. I also saw a good friend killed by a landmine. That was hard. It still lives with me today. Overall, I’d describe it as a huge adventure, to do the job you’d been trained to do. 

Neil - Has there been any impact to the things you witnessed?

MC - Can I just say yes, and leave it at that?’ I saw things I wish I hadn’t seen. It has affected me, but I manage it in my own way.

Neil - Can you share how you manage it?

MC - I don’t drink alcohol for a start, I stopped a few years ago. It made me feel dark when I drank, so I don’t drink anything other than cranberry juice any more. I also run a lot with my dog, Nutmeg, but the biggest thing is that I accept it. I saw bad things, and they still affect me. I just accept that they affect me and I’m not ashamed about it. Owning it is what keeps me happy. If I tried to block it I think I’d struggle more, but I think I’m a mostly happy bloke now, despite an occasional dream.

Neil - What type of dreams?

MC - I’d rather keep that to myself, if I’m honest. I have people I can talk to about it, and my wife understands, so we just manage it. 

Neil - Tell me about joining the police.

MC - I wanted to leave the Army and it just seemed like a good idea. A decent career, part of a team and a desire to do something worthwhile was about the extent of it, I think. I didn’t over-think it, to be honest, which is fairly typical. It’s a good career, and I still maintain that we are the good-guys, despite everything you hear in the media. The vast majority of cops want to do what’s right, and they mostly do. Some bad news stories don’t change that. There are cops out there right now, in the eye of the storm, putting themselves in harms way for no other reason than to do the right thing. I did some time in uniform, then moved to the CID. I wanted to be a squad man, chasing the real criminals. The career villains who do it out of choice, so I ended up on the Flying Squad.

Neil - Like The Sweeney?

MC - Almost, although with less drinking, less swearing, casual racism and sexism. It was a good job, but it took my life over. I’d met Katie, my wife by this point, and I was always at work, following armed criminals around London and beyond. It was tremendous fun, but just so hard on relationships. That was part of the reason I moved north, back to Scotland. A new life. Leastways, that was the idea, but I’m still always busy. It took a bit of time to settle, but I think we’re both happy in Scotland. We like the clean air.

Neil - What do you do outside of work?

MC - Nutmeg, my dog takes up a lot of time, she’s my best pal. We walk and run miles together. I also train a lot in my gym. Hard exercise is a big part of my healing. I also spar with my work partner, Janie. She’s a real tough cookie, and is definitely better than me at most martial arts.

Neil - I heard that you came to own Nutmeg by an unusual method.

MC -  *laughs* I’d moved up and found the house I wanted to buy It’s a lovely place                                             in Culross, with views over the Firth of Forth, and I fell in love with it. Lots of other people were keen to buy it and there was likely to be a bidding war. The old lady who lived there was moving into sheltered accommodation and couldn’t take Nutmeg with her. When she saw me and Nutmeg playing together in the garden, she said that I could have the place at the guide price if I took on Nutmeg and promised to bring her to the sheltered home for visits regularly. Well, I bit her hand off, and we’re still friends to this day. Either me or Katie take Nutmeg to visit her at least once a week. We have a cuppa with her and Nutty curls up on her lap for an hour. 

Neil - You’re a big tough guy, Max. I just love that you have this cute little cockapoo dog.

MC - Ach I’m a big softy, really. 

Neil - So, what are you doing at work, right now?’

MC - I could tell you, but then I’d have to kill you afterwards, sorry.

Neil - What, not anything?

MC - Sorry, but ask me anything about boxing, or Nutmeg , but let’s stay away from my job.

The Blood Tide by Neil Lancaster (HarperCollins) Out Now

You get away with murder. In a remote sea loch on the west coast of Scotland, a fisherman vanishes without trace. His remains are never found. You make people disappear. A young man jumps from a bridge in Glasgow and falls to his death in the water below. DS Max Craigie uncovers evidence that links both victims. But if he can’t find out what cost them their lives, it won’t be long before more bodies turn up at the morgue… You come back for revenge. Soon cracks start to appear in the investigation, and Max’s past hurtles back to haunt him. When his loved ones are threatened, he faces a terrifying choice: let the only man he ever feared walk free, or watch his closest friend die…

More information about Neil Lancaster can be found on his website. You can also find him on Facebook and he tweets @neillancaster66


Saturday, 18 July 2009

Colin Cotterill interviewed In The Times

Colin Cotterill the winner of the Dagger in the Library is interviewed by Barry Forshaw the Vice-Chairman of the CWA in The Times on Saturday 18 July 2009. The interview can be found here.

Thursday, 18 June 2009

James Ellroy and Colin Harrison interviewed by Sarah Weinman

Sarah Weinman has an excellent interview that took place between herself, Colin Harrison and James Ellroy on her website. The interview was done during Book Expo American on May 29. It can be found here. I am not sure how long it is going to be up for but I would certainly urge fans of both James Ellroy and Colin Harrison to have a look at it. Sarah does a wonderful job in the interview.

Friday, 29 May 2009

Rick Mofina Interview


Further to my earlier post about Rick Mofina which can be found here, my interview with Rick can be found on the Shots website here.