Thursday, June 30, 2011

9mm interview with PA Brown

When I began the 9mm interviews on Crime Watch more than a year ago, my intention was to gradually build up an interesting series of author interviews. I thought it would be fun to see how different authors, from all across the world, and at different stages of their careers, would answer the same list of questions (at least some of which I hoped would be a little different to questions some of the more well-known authors would have been asked many times in interviews before).

I thought it would be good to have a mix of big-name bestselling international authors, New Zealand-based authors, and other overseas authors that were perhaps less widely known - so the series has continued to have that mix over the past fifteen months. I hope you have all been enjoying learning something more about authors you’ve heard of and read, and learning something about some authors that were new to you.

For the 53rd instalment in the series, today I’m sharing my recent 9mm interview with Canadian author Pat Brown, who writes under the name PA Brown. She grew up in western Canada, and has lived in southern California, Hawaii, and Bermuda, before returning to Canada a few years ago. Now she lives in London, Ontario. Brown is the author of several mystery novels, including ‘the LA series’ (LA HEAT, LA MISCHIEF, LA BONEYARD, etc), which blends police procedural with gay romance. Brown has also written several other crime novels starring gay protagonists.

Brown’s books have got plenty of very good reader reviews on websites like Amazon and Good Reads. On her website (click here), she says that she sets most of her books in LA because of the experiences she had during the years she spent there. “The time I spent in L.A, the land of dreams and lies, where illusion battled daily with reality, and reality rarely wins made an indelible impression on me and to this day almost all my writing is set there.”

Examiner.com said of LA BONEYARD that: “Brown's grasp of police procedure is awesome, you'd almost think she'd been there, done that, and she brings The City of the Angels so vividly to life it made this old Angeleno homesick for a burger at Tommy's. Both lend the story a terrific sense of believability, as does a fine ear for dialogue.”

I must admit that down here in New Zealand, Brown was an author I’d never heard about, until recently (and that was thanks to the Internet). However, I am intrigued by the sound of some of her books, and look forward to giving one a go in the near future. But for now, PA Brown stares down the barrel of 9mm.

9MM: AN INTERVIEW WITH PA BROWN

Who is your favourite recurring crime fiction hero/detective?
Harry Bosch from Michael Connelly's series.

What was the very first book you remember reading and really loving, and why?
It would have been THE BLACK STALLION. I was beyond horse crazy as a kid (well, I still am) and back then for the first few years, I wouldn't read anything that didn't have a horse in it.

Before your debut crime novel, what else had you written (if anything) unpublished manuscripts, short stories, articles?
I had written about 8 science fiction novels before I switched to crime and sold the first book I wrote. I didn't really switch for that reason - just to sell - but over the years I grew away from SF and found myself reading more and more mystery, so it seemed only logical to try my hand at writing one.

Outside of writing, and touring and promotional commitments, what do you really like to do, leisure and activity-wise?
I love baking and cooking and I guess it goes without saying, eating. I love travelling, though so far I confine my travels to places that relate to my writing. I also still love horses and still dream of spending a week on a working ranch, riding all the time. Even when I do travel for research purposes, I try to see places off the tourist lists. Last time I was in Los Angeles I stayed for 2 weeks in a youth hostel, sharing a room with 5 strangers, who changed constantly. It was a lot more fun than any chain hotel. I'm doing it again next year for a whole month.

What is one thing that visitors to your hometown should do, that isn't in the tourist brochures, or perhaps they wouldn’t initially consider?
Oh boy, that's a dangerous question. Off the top of my head I'd say the first thing you should do as a visitor is get on the first train out of town. LOL. Sorry, I'm not overly fond of where I live right now, but finances keep me here. If I had to suggest someplace to visit that wasn't in the tourist info, I guess it would be Wortley Village, one of the older areas of town that hasn't been rebuilt and is almost like a small village in the centre of town. It has a lot of unique shops in it, and lovely old homes to look at. If you're a bird watcher, come in the spring and walk along the Thames River from Blackfriars Bridge to Springbank Park, several miles of walking trail.

If your life was a movie, which actor could you see playing you?
Sigourney Weaver

Of your books, which is your favourite, and why?
I'd have to say L.A. BONEYARD, because I think it's one of the deepest I've written and it was a little bit daring, since I put one of the main, recurring characters in a bad light which I knew some of his fans wouldn't appreciate.

What was your initial reaction, and how did you celebrate, when you were first accepted for publication? Or when you first saw your debut story in book form on a bookseller’s shelf?
Mostly a numb, I can't believe this is happening. It was even funnier when I got my last agent. When I first opened the email, I thought it was about something else, then when the words "I want to represent you" soaked in I just stared at the email for several seconds, then shut it down, read some more emails, and opened the agent's one again. I did that 4 or 5 times before it really sank in. I even got up and walked around a bit before I went and opened it again, thinking there has to be a 'but' in there someplace that I was missing. It finally sank in, but it took a while. My first book didn't have quite the impact, but then from the time my agent got the deal to when the book came out was almost 2 years so I had a lot more time to absorb the idea. It was still neat to see my book on a book shelf though.

What is the strangest or most unusual experience you have had at a book signing, author event, or literary festival?
The worst had to be the night I asked 2 other writers to join me in an author's night at a local pub. It was local to me, but they both had to drive nearly 2 hours to get there - and no one showed up. All kinds of people had responded to the Facebook invite saying they were attending, but the pub was empty all night. I felt so bad that these 2 authors had come all that way for nothing.


Thank you PA Brown. We appreciate you taking the time to talk to Crime Watch

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Have you read any of PA Brown's mystery novels? If so, what do you think? Have you read much, or any, crime fiction with gay or lesbain protagonists? Comments welcome.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Balancing motherhood and crime writing: Cat Connor

On Friday, Kiwi crime writer Cat Connor was interviewed by US publication the Canton Daily News. It's great to see local authors getting some deserved publicity in overseas markets.

In the interview, the Wellington-based author shares what attracted her to the thriller genre, how she balances motherhood (of a "bunch of children" ranging from just starting school to married) with writing, and more about her heroine, FBI Special Agent Ellie Conway. You can read the interview at the Canton Daily News website, here.

Connor's first two Conway novels, KILLERBYTE and TERRORBYTE were originally published as e-books, and both have received some very good reviews and featured in the Top Ten bestsellers on the Mobipocket website, with KILLERBYTE making it to the #2 position (ahead of Lee Child's latest Jack Reacher thriller at the time). Her books are now available in digital form from a variety of websites, and also in paperback form from Amazon.com.

KILLERBYTE was a finalist in the 2010 EPIC Awards (electronic publishing awards), and also was voted No. 3 in eBookNewser's Top Ten eBooks. TERRORBYTE was rated one of the Top 10 thriller 'Best Reads for 2010' by the Preditors & Editors™ Readers' Poll.

You can read more about Connor's third and latest Ellie Conway thriller, EXACERBYTE, here.

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

V is for Vanda Symon's BOUND

I just realised that I missed a post or two for the Crime Fiction Alphabet in the past few weeks - one when I was just back from Turkey, and another that just slipped through the cracks a couple of weeks ago. Oops. As I've said before, for this version of the Crime Fiction Alphabet (a great series run by Kerrie of Mysteries in Paradise), I've given myself the added restriction of only covering New Zealand books and authors. Tricky.

Fortunately, 'V' is quite an easy letter when it comes to New Zealand crime writing lately, as anyone familiar with this blog will realise. So for my 'V' post, I am of course highlighting one of the books from excellent Dunedin-based crime writer Vanda Symon; BOUND, her fourth and latest crime novel to star spark-plug Dunedin CID detective Sam Shephard. One release, BOUND hit #1 on the NZ Adult Fiction bestseller charts earlier this year, which was great to see. In my opinion Symon is a world-class crime writer, and hopefully more and more readers, here and overseas, will give her books a go in the future.

Here's the backcover blurb:

"A brutal home invasion shocks the nation. A man is murdered, his wife bound, gagged and left to watch.

But when Detective Sam Shephard scratches the surface, the victim, a successful businessman, is not all he seems to be. And when the evidence points to two of Dunedin's most hated criminals, the case seems cut and dried... until the body count starts to rise.

Meanwhile, Sam is in big trouble again…"

You can read an extract of BOUND at the Penguin NZ website, click here.


I thought the first three books in the Sam Shephard series were good to great, but for me, BOUND surpasses them all and is the best in the series. Symon really seems to have found her groove as a high-quality crime writer. And it's a great groove too. Here's what I had to say in a mini-review for the Herald on Sunday:

"A leading light amongst the recent surge in quality Kiwi crime fiction, Vanda Symon kick-starts her latest thrilling tale with a brutal home invasion; a dodgy businessman is shot gunned, his wife nearly chokes to death on a gag. Feisty heroine Sam Shephard’s Dunedin CID colleagues zero in on two lowlifes suspected of an earlier cop killing, but she’s uneasy, and keeps investigating. Excellent storytelling with real verve and energy, starring one of the most enjoyably readable heroines on the crime fiction scene."

You can read some other reviews of BOUND at the following websites:
Have you read BOUND? Or any of Vanda Symon's other Sam Shephard tales? Are you taking part in the Crime Fiction Alphabet? Comments welcome.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Tess Gerritsen and John Hart to appear at the 2011 Ngaio Marsh Award event

 


The organisers of the 2011 Ngaio Marsh Award are pleased to announce that New York Times bestselling authors Tess Gerritsen and John Hart will be appearing at the 'Setting the Stage for Murder' event in Christchurch on Sunday 21 August 2011, where the 2011 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel will also be presented. More details to follow.

Janet Evanovich shares her love of books

As some of you will know, this year I have been contributing a monthly series of crime fiction mini-reviews to the books pages of the Herald on Sunday, one of the most well-known weekend newspapers in New Zealand (read my fifth and latest round-up here).

Another regular feature of those book pages is the 'Book Lover' column, where authors share their personal thoughts on books that have impacted their lives and 'stuck out' in their personal reading histories, for one reason or another. Yesterday, the author sharing her love for books was popular US crime writer Janet Evanovich, creator of the bestselling Stephanie Plum series. The piece is now available online. Click here to see which books Evanovich loves the most, is reading right now, would like to read next, her favourite bookshop, and which books changed her, and she wishes she'd never read.

X is for (IN) XTREMIS by David McGill

Well, we are now quickly zeroing in on the final letters as we come to the close of our latest alphabetically-inspired crime fiction sojourn, and this week we’ve arrived at the moment that always proves the trickiest for anyone making any sort of alphabetical list: the letter ‘X’. It's not like there are many x-related crime fiction topics out there to begin with, so the fact I've given myself the added restriction this year of only covering New Zealand books for the 2011 Crime Fiction Alphabet just adds to the degree of difficulty.
 
But never fear, because I have sifted through the Kiwi crime fiction backlog and come up holding a X-related gold nugget. This week, I’ve decided to focus on IN XTREMIS by David McGill, a “contemporary Auckland crime mystery” published in 2004 by Silver Owl Press. McGill is a prolific and wide-ranging writer, with a penchant for “Kiwi social history, sometimes fictional”. He’s written 45 books. Some of his fictional works fall within the thriller category, including IN XTREMIS, which is the sequel to his earlier novel THE MONSTRANCE, which was about the effects the theft of an ancient religious artefact had on a 1960s New Zealand family. IN XTREMIS is set in contemporary Auckland, where another generation must cope with the reappearance of the precious object, while dealing with environmental threat, obsessive religious art collectors, drug running, and the corruption of youth and murder. Here’s the back cover blurb:

“Extreme opposition to the marine adventure park of Auckland entrepreneur Gabriel Milicich is led by his estranged wife. Milicich wants ex-rugby league star Chris McCann aboard, but when Miranda Milicich drowns in suspicious circumstances, McCann’s daughter joins the violent protests.


McCann is drawn into a conflict dangerously complicated by the hunt on Milicich land for a priceless religious vessel, a monstrance, pursuit of which cost his parents their lives and now threatens his daughter. McCann is plunged into the city’s underworld of drug-fuelled extreme nightlife in a desperate race against drug runners and obsessive religious art collectors who stop at nothing to acquire the monstrance, including murder.”

McGill was a prolific journalist and author of lively, popular Kiwi social histories before becoming a thriller writer. He has also written WHAKAARI, THE MONSTRANCE, and FROM MY COLD DEAD HANDS, in terms of thriller or crime-centric novels. George Moore in the Sunday Star-Times in 1996 called WHAKAARI “a real ripper” of a thriller.

I have occasionally seen new copies of FROM MY COLD DEAD HANDS kicking around in the odd bookstore, but McGill’s older novels like IN XTREMIS are generally harder to find - you’ll need to hit the libraries or second-hand bookstores (actual or online). McGill has also has a website and a blog, which you can check out here. I believe you may still be able to get new copies (signed by the author) from the website, of many of the books.

Do you like the sound of IN EXTREMIS? Have you read any of David McGill’s stories, crime fiction or otherwise? Thoughts welcome.

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Upcoming Kiwi crime fiction: BY ANY MEANS by Ben Sanders

As I said earlier this month, the Kiwi crime fiction tap in 2011 continues to pleasantly flow; along with the books that have already hit shelves (and e-readers) so far, there are also several welcome new releases on the near horizon from local authors whose previous work has been both popular and highly praised.

One book that I am really looking forward to (and curious to see how the New Zealand media and public will respond to) is BY ANY MEANS by young Auckland university student and crime writer Ben Sanders. I enjoyed THE FALLEN, Sanders's debut last year, and I wasn't alone. The book got some good reviews, and quickly jumped to, then maintained, the #1 spot on the NZ Adult Fiction bestseller list (a spot it held for several weeks - which is unheard of for a New Zealand crime novel in recent memory).

BY ANY MEANS sees the return of DS Sean Devereaux and his ex-cop sidekick John Hale. The book comes out in early August, but for now I can share the cover (above right) and the following blurb with you:

"Friday rush hour, Auckland city. A lone shooter fires across a packed street and kills a man. Detective Sergeant Sean Devereaux is assigned the case. He's not complaining - his Friday nights are seldom better spent. But the inquiry is not straightforward. Witness accounts are conflicting. The dead man appears to be an unintended victim, with the true target unknown.

That’s the least of Devereaux’s worries, though. His current case load includes an investigation into the deaths of the wife and daughter of a wealthy finance company director. His examination has revealed the situation is far more complex than anticipated, casting real doubt upon the division of innocence and guilt. Devereaux's former colleague, John Hale, is in no position to help. Hale is occupied with his own pursuit of darkness, made all the more sinister by a dogged senior police officer determined to engineer his ruin.

Together the two men hunt for the truth from those who pursue self-gain by any means."

It sounds interesting, and I am looking forward to see how Sanders' writing has developed since his debut novel, which was very good in of itself. Just as a heads-up for those who like good crime fiction, some of the other locally authored books I'm really looking forward to over the coming months include Paddy Richardson's TRACES OF RED (her third thriller and first since last year's #1 bestseller HUNTING BLIND), Neil Cross's LUTHER: THE CALLING (a novel featuring the divisive TV detective), the long-awaited return of Paul Thomas (Ned Kelly Award-winning author of THE IHAKA TRILOGY), and COLLECTING COOPER, the fifth dark thriller from the current king of Kiwi crime, in an internationally bestselling sense, Paul Cleave.

From the list above (plus several other novels I understand are on the way), it certainly looks like the pleasant growth in quality New Zealand crime fiction lately is set to continue in the near future.

Have you read THE FALLEN? Are you looking forward to BY ANY MEANS? Any of the other upcoming Kiwi crime novels? Who is your favourite New Zealand crime writer?

Goodbye Columbo

A sad day in the mystery community, with news acclaimed actor Peter Falk, most famous for playing the lead role as dishevelled detective Columbo in the classic television series, has passed away. Falk first played Columbo in a made-for-TV movie, Prescription: Murder, back in 1968, and continued playing the much-smarter-than-he-appears cop until 2003 (the series originally ran from 1971 to 1978 on NBC, but then the character was revived in a series of sporadic TV movies between 1989 and 2003), winning several awards, including four Emmys.

As the news of Falk's death broke overnight (NZT), and because the series' heydey was before my television-viewing time, rather than me writing a eulogy-style post here about Falk (who I do remember watching in movies such as The Princess Bride - Falk played the grandfather reading the story), I thought I would simply link here to a variety of posts and articles about the actor's passing, from people far more versed in Columbo-lore than me. I will just say that from all I have read and heard about the classic cop show, I really appreciate its significance on the TV landscape, and can see that many modern detective shows I enjoy were influenced by some of the things Columbo and Falk brought to the small screen - for example, the 'whydunnit' or 'howdunnit' focus rather than 'whodunnit' - where the audience knows the killer early on, rather than finding out at the end (ala Law & Order: Criminal Intent).

Here are some articles and blog posts to browse:
  • Entertainment Weekly: "One of the most accomplished television, movie, and stage actors to ever create a pop-culture icon, Peter Falk was Columbo, and he was also a helluva a lot more than that, too..."
  • Wall Street Journal Blog: "we watched… no, we adored… Peter Falk’s Columbo because he was us: an everyman, working class, messy, and imperfect, dealing with the physical and domestic woes we know so well, and constantly underestimated by wealthier, better-educated people as a result."
  • Los Angeles Times:  Television historian Tim Brooks called Falk "one of the most iconic characters on television. He created the kind of person that was unique to TV, a very relatable person that viewers could feel close to. He was shambling and seemingly absent-minded, but not really. He wasn't just a character but someone you could really like."
Later today, keep an eye out on the The Rap Sheet blog, which does a terrific job covering crime fiction both in books, but also TV crime. Editor Jeff Pierce has promised to share his thoughts on Falk later today, and judging by how well The Rap Sheet usually addresses and analyses TV cop shows, Pierce's post should be well worth a read.

3pm Edit: Jeff Pierce has now uploaded his blog post about Columbo, and as expected, it's a cracker. Read it here.

Were you a fan of Columbo? Feel free to share your thoughts about the passing of a classic TV detective.

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Amazon Publishing Acquires 47 Books from Ed McBain

Amazon.com has announced that Amazon Publishing has acquired the publication rights of 35 titles in the 87th Precinct Series—including THE CON MAN and THE MUGGER by author Ed McBain. These books will be published by the Thomas & Mercer imprint in print, digital and audio formats starting in Fall 2011. In addition to the 87th Precinct titles, Thomas & Mercer will publish 12 titles in McBain’s Matthew Hope series starting in Spring 2012. These 12 books will be published in digital and audio format, with most of the 12 available in print format. This is the first time any of these books have been available digitally for readers. Jane Gelfman of Gelfman Schneider Literary Agents, Inc. represented the estate of Ed McBain in this deal.

“One of the things we think Amazon Publishing can do is offer signature authors a new life for great backlist titles. Our agreement with the McBain estate is a perfect example of this approach.”

Ed McBain was a pseudonym of Evan Hunter, who passed away in 2005. McBain won the Grand Master Award for lifetime achievement from the Mystery Writers of America in 1986, and he was the first American to receive the Crime Writers Association of Great Britain’s Cartier Diamond Dagger award. He is the author of the popular 87th Precinct and Matthew Hope series. With more than 100 million books sold worldwide, McBain was praised by critics and fellow writers. “The wit, the pacing, his relish for the drama of human diversity [are] what you remember about the McBain novels,” the Philadelphia Inquirer once said of his writing. People Magazine simply observed that “Ed McBain is, by far, the best at what he does. Case closed.”

“McBain is a master of the mystery genre and we are thrilled to be able to repackage, publish and promote his unrivalled body of work,” said Philip Patrick, Head of Rights & Licensing, Amazon Publishing. “One of the things we think Amazon Publishing can do is offer signature authors a new life for great backlist titles. Our agreement with the McBain estate is a perfect example of this approach.”

“Evan was always an innovator and I am thrilled that these books will be available again for his countless fans as well as a new generation of readers,” said Dina Hunter, widow of Evan Hunter.

Announced in May 2011, Thomas & Mercer—named for streets that flank the Amazon headquarters in Seattle—is the mystery and thriller imprint of Amazon Publishing. Thomas & Mercer books are available to English readers in Kindle, print and audio formats at www.amazon.com, as well as at national and independent booksellers. For more information on Thomas & Mercer and upcoming titles, visit www.amazon.com/thomasandmercer. For more information about all imprints of Amazon Publishing, visit www.amazon.com/amazonpublishing. Thomas & Mercer is a brand used by Amazon Content Services, LLC.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Tess Gerritsen to headline NZ writers' festival

Tess Gerritsen, a physician who gave up medicine for crime writing and is now one of the world?s bestselling thriller authors, will teach a workshop on thrillers, and give a talk on how to build emotion into one?s writing at the Romance Writers of New Zealand (RWNZ) Annual Conference, Love & Other Crimes.

Bob Mayer, an ex special forces agent (Green Beret A-team commander) and now a bestselling suspense author and digital publishing expert, will present a one-day novel writing seminar, designed to take a writer from first page to last. Over the course of the weekend he will also present workshops on special operations and on digital publishing. Meteorologist Maria V. Snyder, a New York Times best-selling author of fantasy and paranormal fiction for adults and teens, will teach workshops on writing fantasy and paranormal fiction, and will give a talk on dystopian fiction, arguably the hottest genre of the moment.

Aspiring authors will have the chance to pitch their novels to Sue Grimshaw, editor-at-large for New York Publisher Ballantine Bantam Dell, a division of Random House and also to USA literary agent Jessica Faust of Bookends Literary Agency, along with New York editor Angela James of Carina Press and Lucy Gilmour of romance giant Harlequin Mills and Boon. There will also be opportunity to pitch to editors from Penguin and Random House, New Zealand. Jenny Hellen from Random House will also be taking young adult fiction pitches.

The RWNZ Conference runs August 19-21 at Crowne Plaza Hotel in Auckland. Earlybird Registration closes July the 11th. The conference will also offer talks and workshops applicable to mystery and young adult writers, plus a discussion and demonstration of carriage driving. For a full programme and registration information please visit http://www.romancewriters.co.nz/.

Self-published writer joins Kindle Million Club - what does it mean?

Crime and thriller writers continue to dominate the select but growing membership of the Kindle Million Club - authors who have sold more than one million e-books on Amazon Kindle - but the latest entrant is noteworthy for another reason; John Locke is a self-published thriller writer, and the first self-published author to join the likes of big-name print and e-book bestsellers Lee Child, James Patterson, Stieg Larsson and Michael Connelly in the Kindle Million Club. Is this a momentous day in publishing? Does it underline the opportunities provided to modern-day authors via online publication?

Amazon.com announced yesterday (NZT) that thriller writer Locke, whose books are released through the online retailer's Kindle Direct Publishing, has sold just over 1 million e-books, many of them priced at 99 cents. The 60-year-old Louisville businessman-turned-thriller writer's novels include VEGAS MOON, WISH LIST, and A GIRL LIKE YOU. Perhaps unsurprisingly, given his online success, his latest book is a non-fiction one, HOW I SOLD 1 MILLION EBOOKS IN  5 MONTHS. I would be curious to see what Locke has learned from his experiences, and how they could be applied by other writers.

To me, online and e-book publishing brings both opportunities and challenges for budding and established authors. Just like the traditional publishing world, some authors will make it big, and many won't - and this distinction won't always be a pure meritocracy. Good and great authors will be relatively overlooked, and other lesser authors will seem to have 'undeserved' levels of success, in the eyes of some. Although the better the book you write, the better your chances will be, writing a good book in of itself won't guarantee big sales - if readers aren't aware of your writing, or aren't enticed to give it a go, it will be difficult to build a strong and growing readership. Online publishing allows authors to make their books more widely available (eg Kiwi authors who aren't published in print in the US or UK can be available for readers in those countries if they have e-book versions of their Australasian-published titles), but at the same time this very trait of the technology makes it very easy to 'get lost in the flood'. There are literally millions of books out there - so how will readers come across yours?

Plenty to think about, and Locke's success will certainly inspire many. I'd love to read your thoughts on the evolution of e-publishing, and what it might mean for writers of all stripes.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Is Zirk van den Berg the best thriller writer in New Zealand?

That was the question the New Zealand Listener asked, several years ago, in a review of van den Berg's debut thriller NOBODY DIES. It was before the likes of Paul Cleave, Vanda Symon, Paddy Richardson, Ben Sanders, and others amongst the recent wave of New Zealand crime and thriller writing had been published - so the Listener was comparing Van Den Berg to the likes of Ned Kelly Award-winning Paul Thomas, acclaimed noir writer Chad Taylor, Simon Snow, Michael Laws, Nigel Latta, Michael Wall (who I discovered earlier this year was a heck of a good thriller writer - see my review of the sadly-out-of-print FRIENDLY FIRE here) and others of the late 1990s to early-mid 2000s era.

The reason I revisit the question now, is that van den Berg's acclaimed novel NOBODY DIES (which was also rated one of the top 5 thrillers of 2004, globally, by the New Zealand Herald), is now readily available to international readers for the first time; you can now download NOBODY DIES for the 'why the hell wouldn't you?' price of US$1.99 from Smashwords (click here).

I understand that van den Berg will publishing a second novel in the near future, also in e-book format, which is great news. Just last year Stephen Stratford, the head of judges for the literary-fiction focused NZ Post Book Awards (our Kiwi equivalent of the Booker Prize or Australia's Miles Franklin Award), said in an article by Mark Broatch in the Sunday Star-Times that he was "still waiting for a new novel from Zirk van den Berg whose outstanding Nobody Dies came out in 2004".

Originally published by Black Swan Crime (a division of Random House), NOBODY DIES is a gripping thriller that opens with a bang; a renegade female detective executes a man in her custody.

Here’s the backcover blurb:

“Erica van der Linde has found the perfect way to make sure the witnesses in her police protection programme in Cape Town stay hidden. She kills them. As the criminals turned state witnesses have exited one life and not yet started another, there’s nobody to look for them.


But she hasn’t encountered anyone like Daniel Enslin before.


You’d hardly call him a criminal. An apathetic loner in a nothing job, Daniel gets his kicks by associating with Frank Redelinghuys, a dealer in all kinds of merchandise, unfettered by the normal rules of morality. But when Daniel witnesses Frank commit a murder, he feels compelled to do something about it.


He betrays Frank to his arch enemy, policeman Nic Acker, even though this puts his own life in danger. When the case against Frank collapses, Acker has no option but to put Daniel into the witness protection programme. With Erica to set up a new life for him, Daniel will be safe, at least...”

Until recently, the book was unavailable other than from libraries and secondhand stores (you might have stumbled across a copy or two squirrelled away in a bookstore somewhere, if you were incredibly lucky). However, van den Berg has now made the book available online, at Smashwords. Complete with a new cover image (see right).

So now we can all find out what the reviewers were raving about seven years ago. I'm certainly looking forward to reading NOBODY DIES, and seeing whether I agree with Herald reviewer Michele Hewitson, who back in 2004 called the book "Edgy and truly frightening" and van den Berg's writing "superb".

Have you read NOBODY DIES? Who do you think is New Zealand's best thriller writer - back then, or now? Do you like crime fiction set in South Africa? Comments welcome.

Money, Politics, and Power: Nicky Pellegrino interviews Michael Robotham

"It’s difficult to like Australian thriller writer Michael Robotham when he starts talking about how easily he became a bestselling novelist. Actually Robotham’s entire career is covetable. After a stellar stint as a journalist he turned to ghost-writing celebrity autobiographies and for a while life was all about dinner with Meg Ryan, hanging out at Elton John’s place or roller-blading with Geri Halliwell round her West London mansion. And then, in between working with Rolf Harris and Lulu, he knocked out 117 pages of a psychological thriller called The Suspect that publishers went crazy for and there was a fierce bidding war at the London Book Fair."

Read Herald on Sunday Books Editor Nicky Pellegrino's full interview-based feature on Michael Robotham, who recently visited New Zealand (see my author event photo here) at Beattie's Book Blog here.
 
Scroll down the article for a 'Booklover' interview with Alexander McCall Smith too, where the No 1 Ladies Detective Agency author shares his thoughts on his own reading experiences.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Ngaio judge reissues more thrillers

Last year I shared how British crime writer and renowned crime commentator Mike Ripley was part of a project to reissue classic British thriller fiction that had fallen from print and remembrance due not to its quality, but other vagaries of the world of publishing. Ripley is the author of the award-winning ‘Angel’ comic thrillers, co-editor of three Fresh Blood anthologies promoting new British crime writing and, for ten years, was the crime fiction critic of the Daily Telegraph. He is now well known for his great “Getting Away with Murder column” in Shots Ezine. He has also given his time to help recognise quality crime fiction from down this part of the world, as part of the judging panel for the Ngaio Marsh Awards for Best Crime Novel.

Ripley edits the Top Notch Thrillers series for Ostara Publishing, which re-issues titles that "have unjustifiably become unavailable either through the ravages of time or the forces of publishing economics". Ostara specialise in Crime and Thriller fiction titles and their range goes from the 1920s through to the 21st century. They publish thematically under several series, such as 'Cambridge Crime', 'Clerical Crime', and 'Medieval Mysteries'. Top Notch Thrillers was established in 2009 to revive Great British thrillers “which do not deserve to be forgotten”, using the latest print-on-demand technology and offering many titles as eBooks for the first time.

Next month, Top Notch Thrillers will reissue two great British thrillers from the early 1980’s, "both of which are fine examples of ‘flight and pursuit’ novels in the John Buchan tradition": ROGUE JUSTICE by Geoffrey Household and FUNERAL SITES by Jessica Mann. Here's what Ripley and Ostara have to say about their new releases:


"Geoffrey Household (1900-88), often seen as the natural successor to John Buchan, is rightly famous for his 1939 classic ROGUE MALE about an aristocratic English big game hunter’s failed attempt to assassinate Hitler and his subsequent fight for survival as the hunter becomes the hunted.

More than 40 years after that ground-breaking thriller, Geoffrey Household gave us the sequel, ROGUE JUSTICE, where the background to the previously anonymous ‘Rogue Male’ is revealed as he declares his own private war on Nazi Germany, blazing a blood-stained trail from Poland to Greece to dispense his own type of justice on the brutal ideology which has destroyed the Europe – and the woman – that he loved.

Not only is ROGUE JUSTICE a sustained, fast-moving action thriller, told with all Household’s usual skill when it comes to a pursuit over wild terrain and his self-depreciating humour, it is at heart a dark, nobly romantic but fatalistic love story. For the rogue hero this time, it is not a question of whether he will survive, but how he will choose to meet his death....

Jessica Mann is well-known as a broadcaster, journalist and crime-writer and is currently the crime fiction critic for the Literary Review. Her 1981 novel FUNERAL SITES is nothing less than an updated, feminist take on John Buchan’s famous tale of flight and pursuit, THE 39 STEPS, as the main character finds herself on the run from her politically ambitious (and murderous) brother-in-law. In a frenzied escape from a Swiss alp via London’s club land to a Cambridge hospital, she finds a lone ally in feisty archaeologist Tamara Hoyland, who was to become Jessica Mann’s series heroine, and the chase comes full circle in a dramatic showdown back in the Swiss mountains.

FUNERAL SITES is a frantic, breathlessly-paced chase thriller which puts a female stamp on what had seemed until then a very male preserve and whilst staying true to the form, the novel cheekily references the work of John Buchan – and indeed Geoffrey Household, another master of the genre.

Jessica Mann is the first woman to join the ranks of British authors reissued under the Top Notch Thriller imprint, who include: John Gardner, Victor Canning, Brian Callison, Duncan Kyle, Francis Clifford and Adam Hall."

Both books certainly sound quite interesting, and worthy additions to the Top Notch Thrillers canon that Ripley and Ostara are steadily building. By September 2011, there will be 20 Top Notch Thrillers available in print and (in many cases) electronic formats. They can be purchased through good bookshops or Amazon and via the Ostara website (http://www.ostarapublishing.co.uk/) which contains much additional information of TNT books and authors.


Do you like reading crime and thriller novels from another era? What good and great out-of-print crime novels have you stumbled across in libraries, secondhand bookstores and elsewhere? What are some of your favourite out-of-print books that you think would still stand up well today? Comments welcome.

W is for WINDSOR CONSPIRACY

We’re almost in the final straight now of the grand alphabetically-inspired crime fiction sojourn our intrepid band of book-loving bloggers, hailing from around the globe, have been on for the past few months. This week, for the letter ‘W’, I’ve decided to feature another lesser-known thriller published in the past decade (as will have become apparent via not only the Crime Fiction Alphabet, but Crime Watch in general, there has actually been a lot more Kiwi-written crime and thriller fiction published in recent times than most people realised): THE WINDSOR CONSPIRACY by Mike Ponder (Bantam, 2007).

I understand Ponder now resides in Queensland, Australia, but he was born, raised, and lived most of his life in New Zealand. THE WINDSOR CONSPIRACY is his first novel, but he’d previously produced three books of his art, and a non-fiction book about olive oil (he has been recognised as a pioneer of the New Zealand olive oil industry). According to his bio, Ponder has also “developed an international reputation for his art and his wine” prior to becoming a writer. He owned a vineyard in Marlborough (where he also grew olives) from 1987 to 2002, when he sold Ponder Estates to Fosters for a hefty sum. He was also a part-owner of Australian coat company Driza-Bone, making him quite the successful businessman.

In THE WINDSOR CONSPIRACY, the severed finger of a kidnapped man is mailed to newspaper journalist Joanna Doyle, with a note claiming the victim is none other than His Royal Highness, Prince Charles. As she has just watched an interview with him live on television, Joanna refuses to take the note seriously.

Why then the interest of the Secret Service? Why do they demand she relinquish the finger and note to them? Why, only hours later, is she brutally murdered? And why does the Royal Air Force dispatch a Harrier jet fighter to intercept the trawler in which the kidnap victim is being held captive?

Security expert Simon Dwyer is hired to uncover the truth in this “fast-paced thriller full of intrigue and suspense”. From the vastness and hostility of the Australian outback, to a medieval castle protected by 1000 feet of sheet rock and the crack troops of the 12th Scottish Regiment, “every page brings another twist”.

It certainly sounds intriguing. I’ve bought myself a copy from a second-hand store, and I’ve also seen it elsewhere in second-hand stores, physical and online.

In an interview with David King of The Press in March 2007, Ponder said he centred THE WINDSOR CONSPIRACY on the Royal Family because his aim was to write a novel with international appeal that would not be limited to New Zealand sales. He said he did not see the point in writing something that not many people would read. His 33 years as a full-time artist had taught him that “At the end of the day, if you are going to be successful as an artist, you have to be successful as a businessman.”

Interesting comments there from Ponder.

Do you think crime writers from smaller countries need to write about larger global things (eg the Royal Family) to attract international sales and attention? Or has this pressure eased with the success of Scottish and Scandinavian crime writer who’ve set their books in their own localities, and trusted the readers to adapt to them? Should writers consider what might sell when they determine what to write? How does commerce/business and art/creativity intertwine? Comments welcome.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Writers Lounge events coming up in Auckland

As I said last week, the Auckland branch of the New Zealand Society of Authors is running free weekly Writers Lounge events during June and July, with an interesting array of authors and people involved in the books industry 'in conversation' each Monday lunchtime at the Auckland Art Gallery in the central city (near the Auckland central library).

It would be great to see some Auckland-based crime fiction fans at the next two Monday events, as there are some crime fiction links and focus with those events. Next Monday, 20 June, myself and fellow Ngaio Marsh Award judge and book blogger Graham Beattie will be in conversation with Metro magazine editor Simon Wilson about 'The Blogosphere'. And then the following week, on Monday 27 June, the topic is 'Crime Central', featuring Auckland-based crime writers Andrea Jutson (THE DARKNESS LOOKING BACK) and Ben Sanders (#1 bestseller THE FALLEN) in conversation with John Reynolds.

The events are held from 12-1pm in the Art Lounge at the Auckland Art Gallery, on the corner of Lorne and Wellesley Streets, and entry is free! So I hope plenty of crime fiction readers in Auckland will head along to both these events. Click here for the full line-up, and more information.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Meet your silver screen Jack Reacher, possibly....

In news that is sure to get hardcore crime fiction fans up in arms even more than Hollywood's decision to make its own version of THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO, internet rumours are swirling that Tom Cruise might play Jack Reacher in a film version of Lee Child's ONE SHOT.

Quite frankly, I'm flabbergasted. Not because Cruise isn't a good actor - he is far better than many people give him credit for. Just check out Born on the Fourth of July, amongst several very good dramatic roles, or his self-deprecating cameo in Tropic Thunder. The man might have built a career on good looks, but like Brad Pitt, he can also act when given the right roles.

But as everyone knows, Cruise is at the shorter end of the height spectrum, while Child's Reacher is, well, clearly not. At 6 foot 5 and weighing a muscled 230 (105kgs or so for metric system readers), Reacher is quite the physical specimen in Child's bestselling series. Cruise has 'muscled up' for several roles, and is undoubtedly a fit and active actor, but he's not a Reacher-type. And surely there must be plenty of great actors out there, big names or up-and-comers, who might suit the role better.

If the rumours are true, and Cruise is interested in or considering the role, it seems to me like one of those 'big star wants to play a popular character, potential franchise of films' type deal, rather than because he is suited to the role. What do you think? Could Cruise pull off Jack Reacher? If not, who would you like to see in the role? What have been some of your most and least favourite castings for crime fiction adaptations (Clint Eastwood as Terry McCaleb in Blood Work? Alec Baldwin (Heaven's Prisoners) or Tommy Lee Jones (In the Electiric Mist) as Dave Robicheaux? Humphrey Bogart as Philip Marlowe in The Big Sleep?). Would love to get your thoughts on the matter.

Hat tip to Crimespree magazine for the heads-up re: the Cruise rumours.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

9mm interview: Ben Sanders

Last week Crime Watch's popular 9mm interview series returned after a short hiatus for its 51st instalment; an interview with forensic anthropologist and bestselling mystery writer Kathy Reichs.

Now that we're back in the swing of things (several 9mm interviews are scheduled for the coming weeks), I thought I should return to my original premise of featuring both high-profile bestsellers and lesser-known authors, and a nice mix of Kiwi and international crime writers.

So today I am pleased to share with you my recent 9mm interview with up-and-coming local crime writer Ben Sanders, a young university student in Auckland who burst onto the antipodean crime writing scene late last year with his debut thriller THE FALLEN, which got some very good reviews and scooped the #1 spot for several weeks on the NZ Adult Fiction bestseller charts last year.

On a local scale, it was a dream start for Sanders, who featured by several of New Zealand's biggest media players (eg the Weekend Herald, the Sunday Star-Times, TVNZ), and mentioned in several others as well. You can watch a short 5mins long clip of Sanders being interviewed by Paul Henry and Pippa Wetzell on Breakfast, the popular TVNZ morning show here. And just this week I had an email from a US reader, who won a copy of THE FALLEN last year on Crime Watch. She said: "THE FALLEN which you very kindly sent to me a few months ago, was a book I couldn't put down. I lent it to a very well-read friend who had the same reaction. She is an English professor in NYC."

In August Sanders' second crime novel, once again featuring Detective Sergeant Sean Devereaux and his former police colleague John Hale, will be released; BY ANY MEANS. I will share more information about that upcoming book with you soon. It will be interesting to see how media, readers, and reviewers, respond to Sanders' sophmore effort - it would be good to see some more Kiwi recurring crime fiction heroes, so hopefully BY ANY MEANS will be as good a read (or even better) than THE FALLEN, which was a very strong debut. But for now Ben Sanders faces down the barrel of 9mm.

9MM: AN INTERVIEW WITH BEN SANDERS

1. Who is your favourite recurring crime fiction hero/detective?
James Lee Burke’s Dave Robicheaux. I love his imperfection: he has his battles with alcohol, he has a history of violence, but despite these tarnishes he’s a moral and relentless guy, and ultimately very intriguing. He’s a great mix of contradictory qualities; he’s a compassionate Catholic, but at the same time has this immense capacity for sudden violence. The books quite often involve some element of his past, so that you have a detailed depiction of the man in the here-and-now, but you also gradually develop a sense of the experiences that got him to where he is.

2. What was the very first book you remember reading and really loving, and why?
I was into Enid Blyton when I was a kid, so the Famous Five and Secret Seven series would have been the first novels I read, but I can’t recall the titles. I can remember reading the first Harry Potter book, not long after it had been published [for all you Harry Potter fans who claim you read the books before they were world famous, I reckon I probably beat you], and loving it. It had all the right ingredients for a great story: good writing, characters you could engage with, and an interesting setting. They’re the sorts of qualities that make for a good read, irrespective of genre.

3. Before your debut crime novel, what else had you written (if anything) unpublished manuscripts, short stories, articles?
I’ve written two unpublished novels. I wrote my first while I was at high school in the sixth-form (16 years old), but I never submitted it for publication. It was a P.I. novel set in L.A. It was swamped with trivial, descriptive detail. It was a good learning curve in that it helped to calibrate my style, pointing out that a lot of what I wrote wasn’t needed. So that effort was a nice self-teaching exercise, but other than that it was a waste of tree. It lives in a shoebox under my bed.

I wrote a second novel the following year; another crime story, this time about an Auckland cop called Sean Devereaux. I submitted it to a publisher but it was rejected. I wrote another novel called THE FALLEN the following year, and retained Devereaux as the lead character. I submitted the novel to a different publisher (HarperCollins NZ), and fortunately it was accepted.

4. Outside of writing, and touring and promotional commitments, what do you really like to do, leisure and activity-wise?
try and have a game of tennis once a week. I can sometimes be persuaded to go for a surf, as long as the sun is shining and the wind is off-shore, and the swell is clean and right-breaking [strict, I know]. I love listening to music and walking my dog. The bulk of my plot development is schemed while dog-walking. At one stage while writing BY ANY MEANS (my new novel due out in August), I hit a story snag that I didn’t know how to fix, and the poor dog was getting four walks a day.

5. What is one thing that visitors to your hometown should do, that isn't in the tourist brochures, or perhaps they wouldn’t initially consider?
Wait for a nice day, and drive up to Long Bay Regional Park and go for a wander up the cliff-top walkway at the southern end. There’s a seat up there which faces north across the park and Long Bay beach, and it’s an ideal place to sit and read a Ben Sanders novel.

6. If your life was a movie, which actor could you see playing you?
Cate Blanchett did a great Bob Dylan, maybe she could do a great Ben Sanders? Otherwise, keeping with the Harry Potter theme, maybe Daniel Radcliffe. He’d have to dye is hair blond.

7. Of your books, which is your favourite, and why?
My second published novel, BY ANY MEANS, comes out early August, and I think it’s definitely my best work so far. There’s more character development, and I think the plot is pacier and more engaging. I’m very proud of THE FALLEN, but I think BY ANY MEANS is a definite step up; it’s tighter, more refined, and I’m excited about the release.

8. What was your initial reaction, and how did you celebrate, when you were first accepted for publication? Or when you first saw your debut story in book form on a bookseller’s shelf?
I was sort of eased into the idea of publication. The first hint I got that my work was any good was a phone call from the Publishing Manager at HarperCollins telling me she’d really enjoyed THE FALLEN. I got an email a week later informing me it had been accepted for publication, and that a contract was coming my way. It was an amazing feeling. It was relief mostly: I’d been writing for four or five years at that point, and if THE FALLEN was rejected, I didn’t know whether I’d have the energy to write a fourth novel. So to have my work accepted for publication, and be told by someone that they actually enjoyed reading it was fantastic. The celebrations were low-key: I had a cup of coffee, listened to Nick Cave’s ‘Let the Bells Ring,’ and then I rang my mum.

9. What is the strangest or most unusual experience you have had at a book signing, author event, or literary festival?
I aven’t been in the writing business long enough to have done any of those things yet. But I suppose the most unusual book-related event was actually at a signing for Michael Connelly when he was in Auckland recently. I started reading Connelly’s work when I was thirteen, and was totally hooked. From the ages of thirteen to fifteen, I slowly devoured his complete back-catalogue. His work has been a major influence on my writing, and it was an unusual feeling (and a privilege) to meet the guy who’d helped inspire me to be a writer.
 
 
Thank you Ben Sanders. We appreciate you taking the time to talk with Crime Watch.
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Have you read THE FALLEN? If so, what did you think? Do you enjoy New Zealand-set crime fiction? Do you think Auckland could be a good crime fiction city, like LA, London, Edinburgh, Aberdeen, New York, Sydney, and many others? Does the fact that we have an author now remembering Harry Potter as his favourite childhood book make you feel old (it sure does for me!)? Comments welcome.

Success for young crime writer in national competition

A 16-year-old writer from London has been named as the winner of this year’s Crime Writers' Association short story competition for young people age 18 and under.

Claudia Hyde won the Young Crime Writers’ Competition with 'A Cushion Out of Place'. She wins the chance to meet authors at the annual Crimefest event, which sponsored the competition, as well as an engraved pen and selection of signed novels from various members of the CWA. She was presented with her prize at the National Portrait Gallery in London over afternoon tea with authors Diane Janes and Meg Gardiner, representing the CWA.

The final stage of the competition was judged by Tom Harper, the 2010-11 Chair of the CWA, and multi-award winning crime writer Martin Edwards, and the competition’s conclusion coincides with National Crime Writing Week, which is organised by the CWA and runs this week (June 13-19).

Current CWA Chair Peter James said: “Yet again this country’s young writers have illustrated that the future of the genre is in safe hands.”

The shortlisted regional winners were:

  • ‘The Photograph’ by George Neame age 15 of Bognor Regis
  • ‘Reasons’ by Caroline Angus age 14 of Carlisle
  • ‘A Girl I Once Knew’ by Beth Tucker age 15 of Newton Abbot
  • ‘Reaction’ by Laura Aldworth-Beswick age 16 of Manchester
  • ‘She’s a Rebel, She’s a Saint’ by Laura Waters age 14 of Isle of Man
  • ‘Severing Ties’ by Jessica Cooper age 17 of Nantwich
  • ‘The End’ by Lily Scanlan age 17 of Invergordon
  • ‘The Witness’ by Emily Lumbard age 11 of Bristol
  • ‘Button’ by Aileigh MacGregor age 13 of Buckie
  • ‘Anarchy’ by Connor Sterling age 13 of Darlington
  • ‘A Dreamer’s Nightmare’ by Rachael Wallis age 17 of Frome
The competition is sponsored by CRIMEFEST, Britain’s international crime fiction convention. For more information visit www.crimefest.com.

More information on National Crime Writing Week is available at http://www.nationalcrimewritingweek.co.uk/.

For press enquiries or more information on the CWA, please visit the website, http://www.thecwa.co.uk/.

Monday, June 13, 2011

My Herald on Sunday reviews: Hurwitz and Mofina

This year I've been asked to provide a monthly crime fiction round-up for the Herald on Sunday, one of New Zealand's most well-known newspapers. I'm very pleased to be able to contribute in my small way to getting crime fiction into the books sections of some local media.

My fifth 'column' was published yesterday, in the new 'Living' magazine supplement to the newspaper. Moving forward I will usually be doing four reviews (up from three) each month, however a last-minute design change meant they only used two of my reviews this month. Here is my latest (abbreviated) column.

Crime picks

Book blogger Craig Sisterson reveals his top picks from his recent reading

You’re Next

By Gregg Hurwitz (Sphere, $29.99)
Former Shakespearean scholar Hurwitz has become a true master of the ‘suburban thriller’, where ordinary people find themselves in extraordinary peril. Developer Mike Wingate has a nice life and family. He’s come a long way since being abandoned at a playground as a child. But things start going wrong: a stranger seems to recognise him, then threats, then attacks. How can he protect his family when he doesn’t even know what his unknown enemies want? A gripping page-turner, full of real emotional tension.

The Dying Hour
By Rick Mofina (Mira, $32.99)
Canadian thriller maestro Rick Mofina has been popular overseas for years, but his books have only recently become more available downunder. Rookie Seattle crime reporter Jason Wade is part of a cut-throat competitive internship, and finds himself investigating the puzzling disappearance of a college student whose car was found abandoned. When another woman is found murdered in a ritualistic fashion, no-one thinks the cases are connected, except Jason, who embarks on a terrifying journey that causes him to examine himself as much as the ‘case’. A throttle-open thriller with an engaging hero, compelling characters, and enough tension to keep you up late at night.

 
Craig Sisterson was one of the judges of the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel last year. He blogs about crime and thriller fiction at http://kiwicrime.blogspot.com.
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This column was first published in the Herald on Sunday on 12 June 2011, and is reprinted here with permission.
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What do you think of my mini-reviews? Of having such a regular column in one of New Zealand's major newspapers? Have you read (or do you intend to) any of these titles? What are some of the upcoming titles I should definitely include in future columns? Comments welcome.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Ngaio Marsh Award on Facebook!



As of today, New Zealand crime fiction and the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel now has an official Facebook presence, with the creation of a new 'fan page' that Facebook users can 'like' and use to comment on the award, potential finalists, discuss New Zealand and other crime fiction, and much more.

The page is just in its infancy, and photos from the 2010 presentation, along with links to news stories, and announcements pertaining to the upcoming 2011 award, will all be added in the coming days. Click here to see the page.

In the meantime it would be terrific if any Facebook-using crime fiction fans, particularly those who are interested in New Zealand crime fiction (as hopefully all of you Crime Watch readers are, at least a little bit) would head over to Facebook and 'like' the new Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel page.

The judging panel for the 2011 award has been confirmed, and a longlist of the books in the running for the 2011 Ngaio Marsh Award will soon be released. You will also be able to keep track of other New Zealand and related crime, mystery and thriller fiction announcements and happenings at the Facebook page (eg author visits, New Zealand authors events, Award announcements, etc). I look forward to seeing some of you on the Facebook page in future!

Comments welcome.

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Michael Connelly becomes seventh member of Kindle Million Club


While more and more e-books are being sold all the time, the group of authors that have sold one million books on Kindle remains a select one. This past week crime writing maestro Michael Connelly (pictured above with me and Kiwi author Ben Sanders at Connelly's recent Auckland event) became the seventh member of the 'Million Club'.

Interestingly, five of the seven authors who've passed the million mark on Kindle are crime writers (six, if you include Nora Roberts crime-writing persona, JD Robb). The club, so far:
  • Stieg Larsson;
  • James Patterson;
  • Nora Roberts;
  • Charlaine Harris;
  • Lee Child;
  • Suzanne Collins (popular children's author); and
  • Michael Connelly.
It's interesting that the likes of JK Rowling, Stephanie Meyer, and Dan Brown haven't yet joined the club - but perhaps that is more to do with their readers not yet embracing e-books to quite the same extent (and that Brown and Rowling's phenomenal sales peaks were a couple or more years ago).

I'm very pleased to see a quality crime writer the likes of Connelly having this kind of e-book success, and the way in which crime fiction readers have embraced e-book technology. With quality New Zealand crime writers who get good reviews of their books by local and international reviewers, readers, and award judges, still struggling to get published in print in the bigger US and UK markets, e-book sales may be one key way in future for Kiwi crime writers to reach a wider audience of readers, who would enjoy their books once they gave them a change (and knew about them in the first place).

What do you think of the growth in e-book sales? Do you have a Kindle, iPad, Kobo or other e-reading device? Do you buy many e-books? If so, do you still buy print books? What do you think of the crime writer dominance in the 'million club'? Thoughts welcomed.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Death by olive press? Ordeal by euphonium?

A survey carried out to mark the start of National Crime Writing Week, which runs between June 13 and 19, has cast light on some of the original ways that crime writers murder their victims.

The Bloodthirsty Britain research was carried out by the Crime Writers’ Association (CWA),which is organising the week. Members across the UK took part.

The CWA asked how many people they had killed off over the past year (2010). The average body count was 8.38 and the most people ‘killed’ by one author was 150.

The most inventive means of killing included:

  • Taxidermied alive
  • Sliced to death in an olive machine
  • Poisoned with soluble aspirin and ribena
  • Rigged a euphonium to land on victim's head
  • Super glue in mouth & nostrils to suffocate.
  • Bees in a wicket-keeper's inner glove leading to anaphylactic shock
  • Decapitation by glider cable
  • Trapped inside Damien Hurst style art installation
  • Dragged behind horse
  • Tied up and drowned by rising tide
  • Stabbed through the heart with a spangly stilleto
  • Drinking blood
  • Gored on the horns of a goat
Answers to why people like crime so much included:

People like to crack puzzles. They also love strong but deeply fallible or troubled main characters they can empathise with, and crime writers dish this up in spades.”


“Crime Writing is a fantastic genre to examine big moral questions about society, the State of Man as much as any so-called "literary" novel.”


“Crime stories can illuminate and celebrate the human condition, not just tell grim stories.”

“Creates suspense and allows you to explore the wicked/bad side of your own character that you don't actually want to act upon in real life...allows you a window into that world without you having to participate.”

More than 30% of those surveyed read crime fiction or watched crime drama every day of the year, and more than 50% read it weekly or several times a week.

CWA Chair, the best-selling author Peter James, said: “This survey has thrown up some fascinating findings and underlines why readers so love crime writing.

“One of the big campaigns undertaken by the CWA at the moment is to support libraries and we know that crime forms the most popular genre when it comes to borrowings. This research emphasises the reason why it remains so popular.”

National Crime Writing Week will run between June 13 and 19 and members of the CWA will take part in readings, discussions, readers’ group events and workshops in bookshops, libraries, arts centres and other venues. More information about events can be found at www.nationalcrimewritingweek.co.uk National Crime Writing Week is coordinated by CWA press officer John Dean at media.enquiries@thecwa.co.uk

Ngaio Marsh doco-drama to screen this Sunday!


Several months ago (last year), I shared a scoop about an upcoming documentary on the life of Ngaio Marsh. Then in February I shared more details about Ngaio Marsh - Crime Queen, which was due to screen on TV ONE as part of its Artsville series, that month. Fortunately or unfortunately, depending on how you look at it, that screening was postponed (the doco-drama was scheduled for a midnight timeslot - viewer feedback/outrage resulted in a delay in screening until later in 2011, at a more suitable timeslot).

Now those of us in New Zealand can finally get to see the documentary this weekend, with Ngaio Marsh - Crime Queen due to be broadcast on TV ONE this Sunday, 12 June, at the somewhat more reasonable time of 10.20pm. It should also be available 'On Demand' from the TVNZ website following the screening (I'm not sure whether overseas Internet users can watch or not, given regional licensing etc).

I'm looking forward to seeing this, as it seems like a fascinating production that has been put together - acclaimed actor Peter Elliott (Until Proven Innocent, Heavenly Creatures, Shortland Street) plays Inspector Alleyn, the urbane English gentleman police detective who stars in all thirty two of Marsh's internationally renowned best selling detective novels, who comes to life to go in search of his creator, Ngaio Marsh. Elliott (pictured above, as Alleyn) says of his role, "I found playing Detective Inspector Roderick Alleyn one of the most peculiar experiences of my life. It was like shipping coals to Newcastle, interviewing Eton and Oxford educated personalities in England as a private school, University educated, upper class character. It was a phenomenon both very odd and most enjoyable, this process of sleuthing around."
Elliott concludes, "Ngaio Marsh has joined the company of people to whom I am very grateful. She came to feel like a compatriot, a parent, a friend. I came to feel like one of Ngaio's Boys."

Producer/director Aileen O'Sullivan says of making the show and learning more about Marsh: "It is a documentary I have wanted to make for several years and found the figure we discovered even more complex, more extraordinary and more engaging than I'd originally suspected." Sullivan discovered Marsh fans exist in all corners of the globe, she says "we shot in Christchurch, New Zealand and in England, and in both countries were given tremendous support by crime aficionados and the friends and colleagues who treasure and respect Ngaio Marsh's work. It was strange to realise that while Dame Ngaio Marsh has been well celebrated here as a theatre director, the huge reputation she enjoys internationally as one of the all time Queens of Crime Fiction, has never been fully appreciated in New Zealand."

Amen to that, Aileen. It's amazing how much Ngaio is overlooked and under-appreciated amongst our literary heritage, although hopefully that is changing with the likes of Dr Jo Drayton's excellent recent biography, this doco-drama, and the creation of the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel.

Artsville: Ngaio Marsh - Crime Queen takes us behind the scenes and behind the public persona of this most private woman. We meet the people who were intimate and important in her life. There are her acting protégés from her days directing student theatre at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch. It is like a cast party after one of her Shakespearian productions: Elric Hooper, Jonathan Elsom, David Hindon, Gerald Lascelles, Brian Bell and Annette Facer are all interviewed. These, were her student ‘players’ whom she referred to as ‘sons and daughters of the house’, because they were not just actors, they were her family. They share both their reverent and irreverent memories of Ngaio – and in so doing bring her alive for a new audience. Their stories are compelling reminders that there is a fascinating history here at risk of being lost.

You can read some more information about the involvement of people in Canterbury, who knew Ngaio Marsh from her theatre days in Canterbury, here.

Elliott as Chief Inspector Roderick Alleyn and biographer Jo Drayton walk the streets of Knightsbridge in England, Ngaio stayed with actor Jonathan Elsom and the Rhodes family that she adored, and we see the flat where she wrote her first crime detective novel A Man Lay Dead (1934). Alleyn is teased by 'glimpses' of 'Ngaio' during his investigation as she walks down a London street, sits reflecting in a café or slips into a radio studio for a recording. 'Ngaio' is adept at luring her Detective on, only to evade and escape revelation. This is a cat and mouse game played by two professionals. Who is stalking who and why? Does Ngaio want to be discovered, to finally reveal who she is behind her masks?

Artsville: Ngaio Marsh - Crime Queen, TV ONE, 10.20pm, Sunday 12 June 2011.