Thursday, June 28, 2012

9mm interview: Zirk van den Berg

For the 64th instalment in the ongoing 9mm quickfire author interviews here in Crime Watch, I thought I'd feature an intriguing local author with international roots, Zirk van den Berg.

Namibian-born van den Berg moved to New Zealand in 1998. After having written screenplays and fiction in Afrikaans while living in South Africa, he published his first story in English in 2004, NOBODY DIES. At the time, van den Berg told Iain Sharp of the Sunday Star-Times that he moved his family from South Africa partially because of the violent crime there; an atmosphere and setting that was very well evoked in a novel  'about identity' that went on to receive great reviews and acclaim. The New Zealand Listener asked if van den Berg's impressive debut made him the 'best thriller writer in New Zealand', and the New Zealand Herald chose the book as one of the best five thrillers, worldwide, of that year.


More recently, in a large feature in the Sunday Star-Times about local crime and thriller fiction in late 2010, Book Awards judge Stephen Stratford said he was still eagerly awaiting another thriller from van den Berg. Last year, van den Berg established Say Books, an online publisher of eBooks. He re-released NOBODY DIES as an e-book with a new cover, and then later published his second thriller, NO-BRAINER, the first in a planned series of mystery romps featuring sculptor cum blackmailer Jules Dijkstra.


But for now, van den Berg faces down the barrel of 9mm.

9MM: AN INTERVIEW WITH ZIRK VAN DEN BERG

Who is your favourite recurring crime fiction hero/detective?

Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe, if I have to be honest. But since he’s been done to death, I’d give an honourable mention to two lesser acclaimed contenders – Charles Willeford’s Hoke Moseley and Luiz Alfredo Garcia Roza’s Inspector Espinosa. Check them out.

What was the very first book you remember reading and really loving, and why?
Exodus by Leon Uris when I had just turned 15. I was surprised and delighted to discover that I could read a book in English, a language I had only encountered at school and in movies up to then. Suddenly a massive new world opened for me. I went on to read 75 or so English books in the next six months. I know, because I wrote down all the titles. So if anyone asks me what I was doing in the latter half of 1975, the answer is easy: I was reading.

Before your debut crime novel, what else had you written (if anything) unpublished manuscripts, short stories, articles?
I had published some magazine stories in my youth, in my native Afrikaans. My first published book was a volume of short short stories (two pages on average) that was perceived to be quite literary. Many of the stories have been anthologised and one seems to have taken on a life of its own, popping up all over the place. Then I wrote a historical novel which had some good moments, before moving to New Zealand and switching to writing in English.

Outside of writing, and touring and promotional commitments, what do you really like to do, leisure and activity-wise?
I play designer board games. (Banish that image of Monopoly that had just popped into your head!) The games I enjoy are far more clever and demanding. Most are built around a theme, often business, politics or warfare. Predictably, I’m drawn to the narrative aspects of the games, which can function like story generating machines. The Europeans, significantly, call their game designers “authors”. My favourite game currently is De Vulgari Eloquentia. Player characters roam around Renaissance Italy to study early Italian texts. Your character can join the church and one of them can rise to become Pope. It’s terribly geeky... but then so is reading or playing chess.

I’ve also become a bit obsessed with the ATP tennis tour. Most of my days start with reading the overnight results. (When you live in New Zealand, much of what happens in the world happens when you’re asleep.)

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?
I was born in Walvis Bay, Namibia, a town whose greatest claim to fame is that Brad & Angelina went there to have a baby for unfathomable reasons. If you go there, head into the desert and sand-surf down a dune. Then leave before you fall in love with that barren place.

I’ve lived most of my life in Cape Town, which has no shortage of amazing tourist attractions. If you happen to be there on a full moon evening, go the the University of Cape Town campus on the mountainside or the neighbouring Rhodes Memorial and watch the moon rise over the distant Hottentots-Holland mountains. It moved my soul as a student. But then so did many things.

If your life was a movie, which actor could you see playing you?
I’d love to say Andy Garcia, who’s so dashing and brooding. But for the sake of realism probably Dan Aykroyd or John C. Reilly. I’d give Jim Caviezel a shot too if he’d crack a smile once in a while. (He’d be my choice to play Daniel from Nobody Dies, when someone sees the light and turns this book into a movie.)

Of your books, which is your favourite, and why?
It has to be Nobody Dies. The theme meant a lot to me at the time and I still think the basic premise is strong. My forthcoming historical novel Half of One Thing is close to my heart too. Both have significant, albeit masked, autobiographical elements.

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?
Hearing that the first book was accepted after ten years of rejection wasn’t as much of an event as seeing the printed book for the first time. But then the next morning life is back to normal. Publishing a book, unfortunately, doesn’t change your life.

My most memorable experience as a young writer actually came about ten years before that, when I had a slightly surreal love story published in a magazine at 19. I saw a girl reading it and ventured closer, “anonymously” asking what she was reading. “Your story,” came the answer. I’m not sure how she knew who I was, but was terribly embarrassed and got out of there pronto.

What is the strangest or most unusual experience you have had at a book signing, author event, or literary festival?
There’s this little old lady who accosted me after an author event to tell me a long story, followed by her idea of how to turn it into a novel, which she wants me to do. This kind of thing happens to every writer, I suppose. But over the course of eight years this one lady has now done it to me three times! I have to develop a better memory for faces.


Thank you Zirk van den Berg! We appreciate you taking the time to chat with Crime Watch.

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Have you read NOBODY DIES, either back in circa 2004, or more recently? What do you think of van den Berg's interview? Have you been to Cape Town? Do you like South African-set crime fiction?

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Want to try some Kiwi crime fiction for free?



READERS AROUND the world now have the chance to go into the draw to win a full set of all seven crime, mystery, and thriller novels longlisted for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel.

The longlisted titles that a lucky entrant will win are:
  • COLLECTING COOPER by Paul Cleave (Simon & Schuster)
  • LUTHER: THE CALLING by Neil Cross (Simon & Schuster)
  • FURT BENT FROM ALDAHEIT by Jack Eden (Pear Jam Books)
  • TRACES OF RED by Paddy Richardson (Penguin)
  • BY ANY MEANS by Ben Sanders (HarperCollins)
  • BOUND by Vanda Symon (Penguin)
  • THE CATASTROPHE by Ian Wedde (Victoria University Press)

The longlist reflects the growing depth and breadth of contemporary New Zealand crime and thriller writing, said Judging Convenor Craig Sisterson. “This year’s longlist features everything from dark serial killer tales to the latest books in popular detective series, ‘ripped from the headlines’ psychological suspense, and a prequel to one of the most compelling TV crime series of recent years. We have the mysterious tale of a narcissistic restaurant critic’s kidnapping, penned by New Zealand’s poet laureate, and an engaging debut thriller written under a nom de plume.”

The Ngaio Marsh Award is made for the best crime, mystery, or thriller novel written by a New Zealand citizen or resident. A panel of local and international judges are currently considering the best of locally written crime and thriller fiction. This year the judges are from the United Kingdom, the United States, Germany, and New Zealand. The three finalists for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award will be announced in July. Now readers have a chance to try for themselves the entire line-up that has been impressing the judging panel. Anyone can enter the prize draw simply by emailing a photo of themselves reading any New Zealand crime, mystery, or thriller title - contemporary or from days gone by - to ngaiomarshaward@gmail.com.

The book in your picture doesn't have to be set in New Zealand, as long as the author is associated with New Zealand (lives in New Zealand, was born or grew up in New Zealand, etc). So whether it's a well-loved copy of a Ngaio Marsh, Elizabeth Messenger, Laurie Mantell, Michael Wall, or Paul Thomas novel that's been sitting on your bookshelf for years, or a brand new New Zealand crime novel you've recently picked up from a bookstore or library, grab your camera, take a smiling photo of yourself with the book, and send it to ngaiomarshaward@gmail.com. If you need some inspiration when it comes to finding an eligible, mystery, or thriller novel to read and photograph, check out this list of more than 80 authors and more than 250 titles here.

Photos will be displayed on the Ngaio Marsh Award Facebook page, which you can visit and 'like' here.
The winner of the competition will be randomly drawn from the entered photos, and announced in the lead-up to the presentation of the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award at The Press Christchurch Writers’ Festival on 1 September.

Best of luck, and happy snapping.

F is for FRIENDLY FIRE (forgotten fiction)

Once again, in 2012, thanks to the fabulous Kerrie of Mysteries in Paradise, crime fiction afficianados around the world are sharing posts about a variety of crime fiction authors, books, themes, and more - in an alphabetical sort ot way.

The 2012 edition of the Crime Fiction Alphabet (CFA) kicked off a a few weeks ago (yes, I've slipped behind so far, only doing the "C" and "E" posts), and this week we are up to the letter 'F'. Generally I've avoided repeating old CFA posts in later editions, but this week I'm going to make an exception. In February 2011, I featured FRIENDLY FIRE by Michael Wall as my 'F' post of that edition of the CFA. At the time I hadn't read the book, so was just highlighting its existence. Since that time I've read (and really enjoyed) the New Zealand-set political thriller, so I thought for this week, I'd again feature FRIENDLY FIRE - which is also a fantastic piece of 'forgotten fiction' (five Fs - how could I resist?), but in an updated post that incorporates my thoughts about the book after reading it. So here we go:

FRIENDLY FIRE is a fast-paced political crime thriller by Kiwi author Michael Wall, who wrote several thrillers, which got good reviews, back in the mid-late 1990s and early 2000s. Wall is a former Chief Press Secretary for the New Zealand Government. He also worked in the Office of the Prime Minister, for Jim Bolger (New Zealand Prime Minister from 1990-1997). He had previously been offered a job by David Lange (New Zealand Prime Minister 1984-1989), but turned him down.

Wall later moved to Te Ore Ore in the Wairarapa where he wrote, and bred sports horses. He was also Deputy Chair of the Tourism Board. His thriller novels include Museum Street, Friendly Fire, The Cassino Legacy, The Temptations of Frederick Weld, and Cardinal Sins. He has also written other books, including the non-fiction book Wairarapa: A Place Apart. Although his books are no longer in print, they can be found online from secondhand dealers and auction websites.

FRIENDLY FIRE was his second political thriller - a type of book that although very popular overseas hasn't seen many exponents in New Zealand. For a time Wall was also rumoured to be the author of SPIN, a highly-politicised thriller written by 'Anonymous', although Wall denied this and had his own suspicions of who else within the New Zealand Parliamentary inner circle may have written that book.

Here's the blurb for FRIENDLY FIRE:

"Journalist Erin Florian returns home from Europe seeking silence and solitude, only to be sucked into a whirlwind of passion, political intrigue and sudden death on the windy streets. FRIENDLY FIRE is an incandescent novel.

In this stylish, fast-paced thriller the author of the best-selling MUSEUM STREET writes of teh dangerous world of MMP politics... fills his capital with a cast that is evil, brutal, ruthless, funny and lethal... and gives us a 'behind the bullet-proof doors' insight into the shadowy world of New Zealand's secret services and the sinister power they wield over our political mistresses and masters."

Before I'd even read it, I thought it sounded pretty intriguing. Particularly as a New Zealand-set political thriller: in a global sense our little country is a pretty benign democracy, but there are of course plenty of 'goings-on', well, going-on. Intrigue beneath the calm surface, perhaps?

As it turned out, FRIENDLY FIRE (Penguin, 1998) was one of the very best thrillers I read in 2011 (out of 88 crime novels, and 100 books total). Although it is set in the 1990s, a lot of what Wall addressed was still of issue nowadays. In fact, the Waihopai 'spy base' in Marlborough, which features in the novel, had at the time I read FRIENDLY FIRE been recently in the news, thanks to a group which broke in and vandalised the base as a protest action (Waihopai is reportedly part of ECHELON, the worldwide network of signals interception facilities run by a consortium of intelligence agencies which shares global electronic and signals intelligence among the Intelligence agencies of the US, UK, Canada, Australia and NZ).

FRIENDLY FIRE is a terrific locally-set political thriller well worth digging out. Returning home after discovering her French husband's affair, renowned expat journalist Erin Florian becomes Press Secretary for the new Prime Minister. She quickly finds herself caught up in the political world, including plenty of intrigue caused by the new MMP system, and the Government’s junior partner undergoing a leadership coup.

When the minor coalition party's new leader starts making outrageous demands, Erin has to dampen media speculation that the Government is coming apart at the seams. But why is the new leader so sure that Erin’s boss will eventually succumb to what seems like a poisoned chalice? Erin witnesses a killing, which is covered up, then finds herself under scrutiny from the secretive SIS, and the lesser-known but even more powerful and dangerous GSCB. More deaths, hidden conspiracies, and the country nears the brink of political and economic meltdown.

I imagine that FRIENDLY FIRE would be enjoyed by many readers around the world, not just New Zealanders. It has plenty of universal themes and issues beneath the specifics - government secrecy, manipulation of (and by) the media, what everyday people really know about what's going on, the importance of the economy, and much much more.

As I noted above, before he became a novelist, Wall was himself a Press Secretary for a New Zealand Prime Minister (Jim Bolger), and he certainly brings all that experience and inside knowledge to bear in what is a fantastic thriller, full of twists, intrigue, interesting characters, and more. Global economics, the Waihopai base and intelligence services, international relations, and the place of the media are all issues canvassed in FRIENDLY FIRE, woven into a cracking plot that keeps the pages whirring.

A top notch political thriller - such a shame it's currently out of print. Grab a copy if you can find one.

Monday, June 25, 2012

THE CLEANER named Best Thriller in France

In some exciting news for antipodean crime fiction, over the weekend Paul Cleave's debut thriller, UNEMPLOYE MODELE (THE CLEANER, in English), was named as the Best Thriller at the very popular 'Pocket Book Fair' in Saint Maur des Fosses (Paris, France). Cleave, of course, won the Ngaio Marsh Award last year for his fourth novel, BLOOD MEN. So now the author from Christchurch is an award-winner in both hemispheres.

It's great to see New Zealand-written crime fiction being recognised on the international stage. 140 authors and 22,000 visitors/readers attended the celebration of all things books in Saint Maur des Fosses. The popular and successful festival aims to put books into the everyday life of people, to bring books 'to the people on the street'.

Cleave was one of a number of 'international authors' to attend the French festival, including fellow crime writers RJ Ellory, SJ Watson, and Mons Kallentoft. The reports so far have been in French, but thanks to Google translate, I've been able to decipher that everyone seemed to have a cracking time - writers and readers. The festival focuses on and celebrates a variety of books, from children's books to crime and detective fiction to 'general literature'.

A French book blogger has posted the photo below of Paul Cleave at the 'Pocket Book Fair' - I'm not sure if this is when his award was announced, or at some other point of the weekend's festivities.

UN EMPLOYE MODELE has proved very, very popular in France, selling more than 120,000 copies. This follows the book's success in Germany a few years ago - where it was the #1 crime/thriller title on Amazon.de for 2007. The book has also been signed up for a film adaptation by a top European production house (the makers of Taken, starring Liam Neeson, etc). So it certainly seems that the continental Europeans can't get enough of Cleave.

On his Facebook page, Cleave described winning the award for Best Thriller as "a huge thrill", and had this to say of the festival: "The festival in Saint-Maur was excellent. It was two days of signing books. In fact I've never seen so many copies of my books in one place. It was brilliant to see so many readers turn out to buy lots of books and meet lots of authors."

You can check out a photo of RJ Ellory beside a very large stack of Cleave's books (the French versions of THE CLEANER, and BLOOD MEN, I think) at Cleave's Facebook page here.

Congratulations to Paul Cleave, who is leading the way for New Zealand writers in Europe.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Kiwi crime features on popular soap opera

Last night, while heading home after the very cool 'Midwinter Murderfest' event at the Takapuna Library (a crime fiction quiz, scavenger hunt, and panel discussion with local authors Yvonne E. Walus, Zirk van den Berg, and Bev Robitai), I got a very interesting text: apparently Vanda Symon's excellent new book THE FACELESS had made a cameo appearance on Shortland Street.

For readers not from New Zealand, Shortland Street is an extremely popular, long-running evening TV drama (soap) - kind of our equivalent of Coronation Street or Eastenders (for UK readers), or General Hospital (for US readers).

Heading online to tvnz.co.nz this morning, I found last night's episode (it can be watched 'On Demand' by those in New Zealand for the next week), and sure enough, at 1.05mins into the episode, Dr Chris Warner, who is currently incarcerated for a crime he may not have committed, was reading THE FACELESS in his cell. The book features for a few brief moments, and is even referred to in dialogue. So quite the coup for Vanda Symon - it's great to see Kiwi crime fiction making its way into pop culture too.

You can read more about THE FACELESS here, and those of you in New Zealand can watch last night's episode of Shortland Street here. For everyone else, the screenshot above will have to do, sorry.

Have you read THE FACELESS, or any of Vanda Symon's other books? What other crime novels have you seen featured on popular TV shows over the years? Have you ever decided to read a crime novel based on seeing it mentioned in a TV show, or by a celebrity mentioning they were reading it etc?

Thursday, June 21, 2012

MIDWINTER MURDERFEST in Takapuna tonight!

A quick reminder for those in the Auckland area that there is a terrific crime fiction event on at the Takapuna Library tonight.

The Midwinter Murderfest involves three local authors, a crime fiction scavenger hunt/quiz, a discussion about women in crime fiction, and much more. It should be a lot of fun.

Click here on on the image to the right for more details.

Hope to see some of you there!

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

9mm interview with Timothy Hallinan

Fans of the 9mm quickfire author interview series will hopefully be pleased to know that after a bit of a slowdown, bordering on a hiatus, in the first few months of 2012, I've now fully got back into regularly interviewing a wide variety of crime, mystery, and thriller writers from around the world - ranging from big-name bestsellers, to terrific authors who are perhaps lesser-known.

In the coming weeks and months 9mm will be a much more regular feature (again) here on Crime Watch. I'm always open to suggestions of which crime writers you would like to see participating, so if you have any suggestions, please feel free make them in the comments section.

Today, for the 63rd instalment in the growing series, I have the distinct pleasure of welcoming Timothy Hallinan, a US crime writer who reportedly splits his time between California and Southeast Asia. Lately, Hallinan is probably most well-known for his acclaimed Bangkok-set thriller series starring Poke Raffery. The fourth in the series, THE QUEEN OF PATPONG, was nominated for both the Edgar Award and the Macavity Award. Last year, Hallinan edited the special e-book SHAKEN: STORIES FOR JAPAN, gathering twenty mystery writers to each contribute a new original mystery story (for free), to help raise funds for the earthquake and tsunami recovery efforts in Japan.

Hallinan also contributed a story to the BANGKOK NOIR collection, and has written several other books outside of the Poke Rafferty series. His next novel (released next month) is the fifth Poke Raffery thriller, THE FEAR ARTIST. You can read more about Hallinan at his website here. But for now, this master storyteller faces down the barrel of 9mm.

9MM: AN INTERVIEW WITH TIMOTHY HALLINAN

Who is your favourite recurring crime fiction hero/detective, and why?

Rex Stout's classic pairing of Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin, which is odd because I don't read a lot of cozies and in some corner of my mind there's a chant going up: “Philip Marlowe! Philip Marlowe!” But Wolfe and Archie win because of the interplay between them and because of the imaginative richness of the entire setup: the brownstone, the floor plan, Wolfe's chair—specially designed to support his third of a ton—Fritz, Theodore, the orchid rooms upstairs. And primarily, I suppose, the fact that Wolfe's intelligence seems so real. I always get a little apprehensive when a writer introduces a character who's supposed to be “brilliant” because, well, you know, we can't write a character who's smarter than we are. But Wolfe is as brilliant as he is cranky.

There have been dozens of variations on Holmes and Watson, but Wolfe and Archie are the ones that work best for me, and the only ones I like better than Holmes and Watson themselves.

What was the very first book you remember reading and really loving, and why?
There are really two, and both were fantasies of a sort. The first was The Wizard of Oz, when I was maybe eight. I was a mildly unhappy, hypercritical child, and Oz seemed to me in all respects to be superior to the world I'd been dealt. I read, I think, ten of the books in the series before it palled on me.

And second—this always gets me into trouble—was Gone With the Wind. It was summer in California and I was eleven and bored, so I pulled down the fattest book on my mother's shelves and just sort of vanished into it. From the first line to the last, I preferred it to my own world (I wasn't particularly aware of the heritage of American slavery at the time) and wanted desperately to be Rhett Butler. This was a first for me. I'd willingly gone elsewhere in the Oz books but had never wanted to be a fictional character before. A major lesson for someone who didn't yet know he'd be a writer.

Before your debut crime novel, what else had you written (if anything) - unpublished manuscripts, short stories, articles?
No. I mean, I'd done the usual stuff as a kid. I wrote a love poem to my eighth-grade English teacher, the breathtaking Miss Reid (who dealt with it with a delicacy and compassion I still admire), and two or three perfunctorily awful short stories, but when the bug actually bit, I sat right down to write a novel. I wrote two stinkers and then one that seemed to work. Somewhat to my surprise, it was a private-eye story. I put it in a drawer for a month, read it again and changed everything, and then closed my eyes, crossed my fingers, and submitted it to an agent with whom I had a tenuous connection, and ten days later she got me a three-book deal with New American Library/William Morrow, and I was off to a life of being published to minor success by major houses.

Outside of writing, and touring and promotional commitments, what do you really like to do, leisure and activity-wise?
Nothing much. Read, travel, listen to music, eat. I'm a couch potato who occasionally trades the couch for an airline seat. I pretty much live to write. It's the happiest I ever am, even when it's going badly, which is quite a bit of the time. It's almost inconceivable to me that writing is pretty much all I have to do and that it pays my bills. I have no idea what I did to earn it.

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?
I'm going to answer this about Bangkok, my character Poke Rafferty's home town rather than my own. Poke is a “rough travel” writer whose books are an attempt to get travelers to venture outsiude the usual tourist topiary, which in Bangkok is temples, palaces, open-air markets, restaurants (I think it's currently the best “eating city” in the world) and the mandatory, horrified one-night dip into the red-light world of Patpong or Nana Plaza.

What Poke would say, and what I say, is get a cab driver to take you off the main streets until the buildings are 2-4 stories high and the sidewalks are relatively empty. Then get out and walk. Walk for several hours (dress for the heat). People will smile at you. Smile back at them and say hello. Get something to eat in some little restaurant. Return your waiter's or waitress's smile. Bangkok is one of the biggest, highest-energy cities on earth, but at heart it's still a bunch of small villages smooshed together by urban sprawl. Find yourself a Bangkok village in the middle of the city and spend a few unhurried hours there. You won't believe how sweet the people are.

If your life was a movie, which actor could you see playing you?
No one I'd want would take the part. What's to do? I look at a computer for hours and laugh out loud occasionally. I know whom I'd like to play Poke, though: Johnny Depp. And for Junior Bender, my Los Angeles burglar who works as a private eye for crooks, Robert Downey, Jr. But for me? I don't know. Someone who doesn't look stupid when his mouth is open.

Of your books, which is your favourite, and why?
The last one, always the last one. At the moment, that's Poke Rafferty Thriller #5, The Fear Artist, which comes out on July 17 of this year. I like it because it almost killed me to write it and for months I thought it was junk and it turns out it wasn't. I like it because it's about something I care about: the imprecision and sloppiness of the War on Terror and its appalling effect on America as she devotes her energies to it. I like it because it's got a whole bunch of stories in it, and almost all of them work, at least to some extent. And I like it because, without my knowing it while I was writing it, one of the most important threads in the book is the difficult and potentially magical relationship between fathers and daughters. It always knocks me out when I see a strong theme emerge in a book and it's something I had no idea I was writing. It suggests to me that my imagination was fully engaged all along, no matter how little fun it was at times.

Also, the book just got starred reviews from both Publisher's Weekly and Booklist, so that disposes me kindly toward it.

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?
The first book I ever saw in a bookstore was the first of my books to be published, the initial Simeon Grist Mystery, The Four Last Things, and it was in big bookstore, possibly a Barnes & Noble. I saw it and stopped cold, my heart absolutely pounding in my ears. Then my sense of entitlement kicked in and I saw why having a last name that falls in the middle of the alphabet is such a bad idea: the book was on the bottom shelf, where the only person who would spot it was someone who had just dropped a quarter. It took me fifteen minutes to rearrange the shelves, preserving the alphabetical arrangement, until I was on top, and when I went back several days later it was still on top, which was good and bad: good because they hadn't moved it back and bad because it hadn't sold. And it never did.

What is the strangest or most unusual experience you have had at a book signing, author event, or literary festival?
At the last Bouchercon, I got confronted repeatedly by readers who were upset at the endings of my Poke Rafferty books. Not all stories end well in that series, although the main plot line is always resolved satisfactorily, at least from Poke's perspective. But in the first book, A Nail Through the Heart, a character whom I had thought would be a one-book cast member comes to an equivocal end, and in another book a minor continuing character dies. I knew people were upset about the character in Nail because I got about 600 emails complaining about it—to the point where I brought the character back in the third book just to wave him around and show everyone he was doing fine. But after the character died I found myself confronted over and over again by readers who say they're afraid to buy the series online because the first thing they do when they see a new one is go to the end and make sure nothing bad happens to Rose and Miaow, Rafferty's wife and the former street child who's now their adopted daughter.

It was flattering to see how deeply people care about these characters, but I have to say that I was taken aback by the vehemence of their reactions. I'm expecting more of the same this October when I go back to Bouchercon, because in The Fear Artist, not one but two relatively sympathetic characters do not get the usual happy ending.


Thank you for taking the time to chat to Crime Watch Timothy Hallinan. We really appreciate it!

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Have you read any of the Poke Rafferty books? What do you think of the Bangkok setting? Do you enjoy crime fiction set in Asia? Have you ever visited Bangkok yourself (what do you think of Tim's recommendations)? Comments appreciated.

Ned Kelly Award nominations

Our cousins 'across the ditch' (as we say down this way) have released the list of nominees for the Ned Kelly Awards (the Australian crime writing awards) this week. Hat tip to Karen at AustCrimeFiction for the heads-up about the nominees.

From the Awards website, the Ned Kelly Award for Best Fiction is touted as reflecting:
the importance and popularity of the genre. The award reflects the diversity of crime fiction, its appeal  to audiences on many and varied levels, and in particular draws attention to the calibre of Australian crime fiction on national and international stages

Over the years I've read some very good Australian crime fiction, and it's great to see Australian writers being recognised in this way in their home country. I have to say that the Ned Kelly Awards (what they've done well, what they've learned over the years, how they run their events, what publicity they get, etc) were something of an inspiration and model for how we have established the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel here in New Zealand. In future, we may look to add further awards categories too, as the genre (hopefully) continues to strengthen and grow here.

The nominees for the 2012 Ned Kelly Awards Best Fiction Award, which will be presented at an event as part of the Melbourne Writers Festival later this year, are:

Best Fiction

  • Lenny Bartulin De Luxe
  • A.A. Bell Hindsight
  • Honey Brown After The Darkness
  • J.C. Burke Pig Boy
  • Peter Corris Comeback
  • Miranda Darling Siren’s Sting
  • Garry Disher Whispering Death
  • Jaye Ford Scared Yet?
  • Kerry Greenwood Cooking the Books
  • Brett Hoffmann The Race
  • Katherine Howell Silent Fear
  • Stephen M Irwin The Broken One
  • Malcolm Knox The Life
  • Adriana Koulias The Sixth Key
  • Nansi Kunze Dangerously Placed
  • Tobsha Learner The Map
  • Stuart Littlemore Harry Curry: Counsel of Choice
  • Colleen McCullough The Prodigal Son
  • Barry Maitland Chelsea Mansions
  • Kel Robertson Rip Off
  • Michael Robotham The Wreckage
  • Jennifer Rowe Love, Honour & O’Brien
  • Kirsten Tranter A Common Loss
  • Peter Twohig The Cartographer
  • Kim Westwood The Courier's New Bicycle
  • Felicity Young A Dissection of Murder

Of these, I've read Corris's COMEBACK (enjoyable), Robotham's THE WRECKAGE (excellent) and Rowe's LOVE, HONOUR, AND O'BRIEN (enjoyable). I also have the (or some) books by Greenwood, Disher, Howell, and Maitland on my shelf at home, and have heard good things about Kel Robertson.
It will be interesting to see which books make the shortlist.
You can read the full list of Best First Fiction and Best True Crime here.
Have you read any of the longlisted books? Which is your favourite? Do you like Australian crime fiction?

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Review: EDGE by Jeffery Deaver

EDGE by Jeffery Deaver (Hodder & Stoughton, 2010)

Reviewed by Craig Sisterson

Bestselling American thriller writer Jeffery Deaver is most well-known for his psychological thriller series starring quadriplegic criminalist Lincoln Rhyme (such as THE BONE COLLECTOR, adapted into a film starring Denzel Washington and Angelina Jolie), a spin-off series starring interrogation expert Kathryn Dance, and recently for taking up the baton by penning the latest James Bond novel, CARTE BLANCHE, but he has also written some very good standalone thrillers over the years.

EDGE introduces Corte, a stoic, enigmatic and highly driven ‘shepherd’ assigned to protect those in the gravest danger – witnesses, whistleblowers, and other vulnerable people. A lover of strategic board games, Corte is often pitted against ‘hitters’ and ‘lifters’ – the former want to kill, the latter are even more dangerous: they want to extract information, by any means necessary. When Washington DC police detective Ryan Kessler is surprisingly targeted by notorious lifter Henry Loving – who will torture, threaten and kill family members, and more, to achieve his goals (anything to find the necessary ‘edge’ on the real target) – Kessler and his family are immediately put under the protection of a shadowy government agency, with Corte assigned to keep them alive.

Unfortunately, Corte knows just how brutal Loving can be – six years ago the lifter tortured and killed his mentor, after getting the information he needed. But there are many problems with this case, right from the start. Kessler has no idea why he’s been targeted. He works financial cases, not gangs or organised crime. Could the forged cheque of a Pentagon employee or an uncovered mini-Ponzi scheme really have spurred someone to set Henry Loving on his trail? The cop in Kessler resents the passive nature of his protection, but his instincts for action and involvement could put him in even more danger. As time ticks by, Loving learns more and more, and becomes even more dangerous. Corte needs to find the principal, Loving’s employer, while still protecting the Kesslers. But he has no idea why someone is after Kessler, making it very hard to get a lead on the ‘who’. He is also torn between his role as protector, and his desire to catch Loving. Could he use the Kesslers as bait – or will that put them in too much danger? What risks should he take, if any?

In essence, EDGE is a one-on-one battle between two great rivals; Corte and Loving. Each is playing a strategic game against the other, moving around the pieces on a real-life board to try to get an advantage and checkmate the other. Deaver keeps the tension high, and the twists come thick and fast. But they don’t seem forced or contrived, there solely for shock value or effect; rather, they are well-constructed and natural to the gripping storyline.

The trademark Deaver touches – a fast-paced, tense plotline filled with twists and reversals – are there, but are only part of what makes EDGE so enjoyable.

The story is largely told in first person perspective, through Corte’s eyes. The hero’s musings on game theory, strategy, and leverage thematically echo what is going on in the story, adding to the reader experience. I enjoyed learning more about game theory and strategy, in addition to the part it played in the story. Corte recognises that “people will do anything to anybody – if the edge is right”, a fundamental truth that applies to him too. What will he do to catch Loving? To protect his charges?

Corte is a very interesting character. He holds a lot in, revealing little of himself – to the reader or the people around him. But hints are dropped here and there, and over the course of the book we get a picture of a layered, fascinating man with ‘hidden depths’ (to use a cliché). Still waters run deep, to use another. Like Loving, Corte will use any means necessary to do his job – misleading people, manipulating them, and more. Revelations later in the book cast him in a new light. By the end, many readers will be disappointed that EDGE was touted as a standalone, and hopeful that Deaver may bring Corte back in future.

Deaver has excelled with EDGE, a truly terrific thriller packed with excitement, intriguing characters, and more. It’s the type of book where you really ‘feel’ the tension, and are fully engaged at all times. You’re not just reading as a semi-interested observer, you’re fully caught up in everything that is going on. In the cat-and-mouse game between Loving and Corte, in the dangers faced by the Kesslers, in the intrigue about the reason they’re being targeted. Deaver has set the bar pretty high with some of his previous books, but EDGE is still a stand-out. Unexpectedly, one of my very favourite reads of the year so far.

This book will represent 'Virginia' state in my USA Fiction Challenge

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Further reading about Jeffery Deaver and/or EDGE
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Have you read EDGE, or any of Deaver's other thrillers? What do you think, of this book, or his writing in general? Do you like his twist-filled tales of psychological suspense?

Monday, June 18, 2012

A Midwinter Murderfest

This Thursday, 21 June, at the Takapuna Library on Auckland's North Shore there will be a panel discussion about "Bloodthirsty Women in Crime Fiction", as part of a special crime fiction event entitled "A Midwinter Murderfest".

North Shore-based crime writers Yvonne E. Walus, Zirk Van Den Berg and Bev Robitai will discuss deadly females in crime fiction - writers and characters, from Lady MacBeth to modern forensically focused investigators and authors.

Are women more ruthless? Come along and see.

The event, which includes the panel discussion, light refreshments, and the opportunity to win prizes in a crime fiction scavenger hunt, kicks off at 6pm, with the panel discussion starting at 6.30pm. I will be introducing the authors, and asking some questions. It should be a lot of fun!

Please RSVP by email to Helen Woodhouse, or phone 09 486 8469.

You can read more about Yvonne here (plus here at author website), Zirk here and here, and Bev here and here.

Hope to see some local crime enthusiasts joining us on Thursday! Thanks to the Takapuna Library for continuing to support crime and thriller writing and writers - both international guest and local authors.

HOS reviews: Eden, Hamilton, Symon

Crime picks

Craig Sisterson


Furt Bent from Aldaheit
By Jack Eden (Pear Jam Books, $19.99 print, $3.99 ebook)

This debut thriller from local writer Jack Eden was apparently inspired by the actions of some police officers during the Crewe murder inquiry and subsequent campaign to free Arthur Alan Thomas. A young Kiwi shaped by delinquency and imprisonment in Australia finds himself trying to unpick the cause célèbre conviction made by his childhood tormenter, an overly determined cop. Furt Bent from Aldaheit is packed with intriguing characters, and nicely mixes moments of darkness and humour as it hums along. A solid first effort that would entertain and delight many readers.

Misery Bay
By Steve Hamilton (Orion, $39.99)

For the first time in years, Edgar Award-winning author Hamilton returns to his series starring troubled ex-cop Alex McKnight. Still haunted by his own bloodstained past, McKnight finds himself investigating the suicide of a young student in the frozen wilderness of Michigan. What seems a simple quest to find answers for a grieving father turns into something far more sinister when the body count begins to rise. Misery Bay starts with a slow burn, but then builds into a gripping tale that intrigues as much with its characters as the events and twists that power the storyline and keep you turning the page.

The Faceless
By Vanda Symon (Penguin, $29.99)

Symon’s first standalone thriller sees the acclaimed Dunedin crime writer take a decidedly darker turn, delving into Auckland’s gritty underbelly. Bradley is an over-worked, under-appreciated office worker. A spontaneous tryst with Billy, a young hooker, turns ugly, and panicked, he imprisons her in an abandoned warehouse. Homeless Max is a disheveled shell of his former self. When Billy, his only friend, goes missing, he’s forced to reopen past wounds in an effort to save her. Symon balances the multiple perspectives and narratives adroitly, building tension, while touching on issues of homelessness, middle-class drudgery, loyalty, grief and loss, and how we’re surrounded by people we don’t really ‘see’. Tense and thought-provoking; highly recommended.


Craig Sisterson helped establish the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel. He writes about crime and thriller fiction for several publications here and overseas, and blogs at http://kiwicrime.blogspot.com.

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This crime and thriller round-up was published in the Sunday, 17 June 2012 issue of the Herald on Sunday newspaper, and is republished here online with the kind permission of Books Editor Nicky Pellegrino.
 
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Thursday, June 14, 2012

Graham Beattie discusses Ngaio Marsh longlist

Earlier this week, the longlist for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel was released, with seven books currently being considered by the expert panel of New Zealand and international (UK, USA, Germany) judges. The finalists will be announced next month, with the winner named following a crime fiction debate and event at the Christchurch Writers' Festival later this year. The festival programme hasn't yet been released, but I understand there will be at least a couple of crime fiction sessions or events, with New Zealand and international crime writers, at this year's festival. It's great to see the Christchurch Writers' Festival return, after the 2010 festival was cancelled due to the first major Christchurch earthquake.

The longlisted titles for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award are:
  • COLLECTING COOPER by Paul Cleave (Simon & Schuster)
  • LUTHER: THE CALLING by Neil Cross (Simon & Schuster)
  • FURT BENT FROM ALDAHEIT by Jack Eden (Pear Jam Books)
  • TRACES OF RED by Paddy Richardson (Penguin)
  • BY ANY MEANS by Ben Sanders (HarperCollins)
  • BOUND by Vanda Symon (Penguin)
  • THE CATASTROPHE by Ian Wedde (Victoria University Press)

On Tuesday, Finlay MacDonald (filling in for Jim Mora) chatted to Ngaio Marsh Award judge Graham Beattie (pictured above right) about the diverse array of books on this year's longlist. You can listen to Graham's initial thoughts about the longlist by clicking below.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Who should win the Ngaio Marsh Award?

I came into work this morning, and as usual did a little internet searching about various topics - crime fiction and otherwise - and what did I stumble upon? Someone on the Good Reads website (not myself, or any of the judges etc), has set up a list of the seven books longlisted for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel. Very cool!

The particularly cool thing is that the list has been set up for people to vote on - so anyone on Good Reads who cares to share their opinions, can 'vote' for which books they think should be in the finals, or which book should win, etc, just by clicking the vote buttons and putting the books in their own preferred order.

I think it would be really cool to see what a section of the reading public thinks about the books on the longlist - so if you are on Good Reads, and have a particular favourite or favourites amongst the longlisted books - please do click here and share your thoughts. Or if you haven't yet read any or many of the books, why not get your hands on some now, read them, and then share your thoughts in a review, by voting, or by sending me a comment to ngaiomarshaward@gmail.com.

Oh, and for those of you on Facebook, it would be create if you could 'like' the Ngaio Marsh Award page, if you feel so inclined. We'd really appreciate it. Click here to see the page.

Have you read any of the longlisted titles or authors? Which book would you like to see win, and why?

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Jeffery Deaver radio interview

Yesterday, Jim Mora interviewed bestselling US novelist Jeffery Deaver on his popular Radio New Zealand programme "Afternoons". I haven't had a chance to listen to the entire interview yet (it's 25 minutes long), but from what I've heard already, it's an interesting interview - covering song writing, Deaver's latest novel, XO (a Kathryn Dance novel that also brings quadriplegic criminalist Lincoln Rhyme, of BONE COLLECTOR fame - played by Denzel Washington in the Hollywood film adaptation), his writing of the latest James Bond novel, CARTE BLANCHE, creating a new James Bond cocktail, getting into writing, and honing and improving the skill and craft of intricate plotting and tension-building, amongst other topics.

Click on the below link to listen to Jim Mora's intriguing interview with Deaver, who is a very interesting man, as well as a talented storyteller.

Last year, I was fortunate enough to get the exclusive New Zealand interview with Jeffery Deaver in the lead-up to the release of CARTE BLANCHE. You can read the eventual feature article, for the Sunday Star-Times, here, and Deaver's 9mm interview, which I conducted when I met Deaver during his later New Zealand visit, here (see photo above right).

Are you a fan of Jeffery Deaver? What did you think of CARTE BLANCHE? Of the Kathryn Dance series?

Review: TAKEN by Robert Crais

TAKEN by Robert Crais (Atlantic Books, 2012)

Reviewed by Craig Sisterson

For many years, Robert Crais has been a consistently top quality exponent of crime fiction, one of those ‘go to’ writers for legions of fans around the world. The former Hollywood screenwriter’s hugely popular Elvis Cole and Joe Pike series mixes gripping plotlines with intriguing characters, with the main characters and their interpersonal relationships evolving over the course of the series.

In recent years, however, Crais’s novels have started to feature more and more of the enigmatic, action-orientated Pike, and less of the wisecracking, layered Cole. The lead and supporting roles have often been switched, with private eye Cole playing back-up to Pike, rather than vice versa. TAKEN provides a new twist, with the pair separated and alternating as the main player in a storyline about human trafficking told from multiple viewpoints.

Businesswoman Nita Morales wants Cole – “the World’s Greatest Detective” - to find her wayward daughter Krista, a college student who disappears after a weekend away with her boyfriend Jack. Unbeknownst to Nita, Krista had taken Jack out into the desert to see the wreck of an old plane, which had ties to her own family history, and the pair had crossed paths with a dangerous group who bring illegal immigrants across the border. A dangerous scheme for all involved, filled with uncertainty, disappearances, and violence. When Nita receives a tiny ransom demand from the ‘kidnappers’, she suspects Krista and the untrustworthy Jack might be behind the whole thing, and are just setting her up.

But as Cole digs further, he uncovers something far more sinister, and finds himself entwined with drug cartels, Asian gangs, and much worse. A plan to infiltrate a human trafficking ring tied to a Korean gang and a Syrian mastermind backfires badly, and Cole ends up ‘taken’ himself. It’s up to Pike, and effervescent mercenary Jon Stone, to navigate the murky underground world of human trafficking to find their friend, Krista, and Jack, and the clock is ticking. Fast.

Crais is deservedly a favourite of many crime fans, but I found the constant chopping in time and perspective in TAKEN more distracting than tension-building. There is some of the snappy repartee, and plenty of the action, that fans have come to love from the series, but I found myself less engaged than usual. The storyline, while exciting at times, seems thin and unfolds rather predictably and in a somewhat linear fashion overall (despite the switches in time and perspective in the multiple narratives). TAKEN is far more ‘breezy airport thriller’ than Crais’s usual standards – and compares unfavourably to its immediate predecessor, the previous Pike-centric THE SENTRY, which combined increased action with depth of story and character. In contrast, I almost got the feeling that Crais rushed TAKEN to print; it just feels like there were some really terrific pieces there, but it hasn’t really come together. Less than the sum of its parts.

Having said that, there is still something to enjoy in TAKEN. The terrifying realities of human trafficking are nicely explored, and Jon Stone steals the show in several scenes. Diehard fans of Crais may still be relatively pleased – as they would with any new instalment – but those being truthful will admit that it’s one of the master’s lesser efforts. I’m still a fan, but for me personally TAKEN is an okay, not great, crime novel from an author who usually sets the bar much higher.

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Further reading and reviews about Crais and/or TAKEN:
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Have you read TAKEN? What did you think? Have I missed the boat on this one, and it really is a great thriller? Please feel free to share your thoughts, comments, and criticisms...

Three in a row for Louise Penny at Anthony Awards?


It will be interesting to see whether Louise Penny takes home her third Anthony Award in a row (she won for THE BRUTUAL TELLING in 2010 and BURY YOUR DEAD in 2011), with the Canadian crime queen once again nominated for this year's Anthony Award for Best Novel (hat tip to Ngaio Marsh Award judge and Mystery Readers International founder Janet Rudolph for the nominations news).

The Anthony Awards, which have been in existence since 1986, are named for Anthony Boucher (1911–1968), one of the founders of the Mystery Writers of America, and are presented at the Bouchercon World Mystery Convention in September-November each year. The Awards are voted on by members attending the convention - which has seemed to develop some interesting 'current favourite' trends in recent years. In fact, when looking back, the past nine 'Best Novel' awards have been shared by only four writers - with Penny, Michael Connelly, and William Kent Krueger each winning twice, and Laura Lippman three times, since 2003.

With Penny and Connelly both on the shortlist for Best Novel this year, I am curious to see if that trend could continue (Connelly's THE DROP is a very good book).

Here is the full list of nominees for the 2012 Anthony Awards, which will be voted on then presented at Bouchercon XLIII in Cleveland, Ohio, in October:

BEST NOVEL
  • The End of Everything - Megan Abbott
  •  Hurt Machine - Reed Farrel Coleman
  • The Drop - Michael Connelly
  • A Trick of the Light - Louise Penny
  • One Was a Soldier - Julia Spencer-Fleming

BEST FIRST NOVEL
  • Learning to Swim - Sara J. Henry
  • Nazareth Child - Darrell James
  • All Cry Chaos - Leonard Rosen
  • Who Do, Voodoo? - Rochelle Staab
  • The Informationist - Taylor Stevens
  • Purgatory Chasm - Steve Ulfelder
  • Before I Go to Sleep - S.J. Watson
BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
  • The Company Man - Robert Jackson Bennett
  • Choke Hold - Christa Faust
  • Buffalo West Wing - Julie Hyzy
  • Death of the Mantis - Michael Stanley
  • Fun & Games - Duane Swierczynski
  • Vienna Twilight - Frank Tallis

BEST SHORT STORY
  • "Disarming" - Dana Cameron, EQMM June 2011
  • "The Case of Death and Honey" - Neil Gaiman, A Study In Sherlock
  • "Palace by the Lake" - Daryl Wood Gerber, Fish Tales: The Guppy Anthology
  • "Truth and Consequences" - Barb Goffman, Mystery Times Ten
  • "The Itinerary" - Roberta Isleib, MWA Presents The Rich and The Dead
  • "Happine$$" - Twist Phelan, MWA Presents The Rich and The Dead

BEST CRITICAL NONFICTION WORK
  • Books, Crooks and Counselors: How to Write Accurately About Criminal Law and Courtroom Procedure - Leslie Budewitz
  • Agatha Christie: Murder in the Making: More Stories and Secrets from Her Notebooks - John Curran
  • On Conan Doyle: or, The Whole Art of Storytelling - Michael Dirda
  • Detecting Women: Gender and the Hollywood Detective Film - Philippa Gates
  • The Sookie Stackhouse Companion - Charlaine Harris, ed

Congratulations to all the nominees!
Have you read any of the listed titles? If so, which ones have impressed you? 

Monday, June 11, 2012

Tough decision looms as Ngaio longlist revealed

THE LONGLIST for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel, which will be presented at a ceremony at the upcoming The Press Christchurch Writers’ Festival in September, have today been revealed. The award is made for the best crime, mystery, or thriller novel written by a New Zealand citizen or resident, published in New Zealand or overseas during the past year.

A panel of seven local and international judges is currently considering the longlisted titles. This year the judges are from the United Kingdom, the United States, Germany, and New Zealand. The three finalists for the 2012 Ngaio Marsh Award will be announced in July.

The longlisted titles are:
  • COLLECTING COOPER by Paul Cleave (Simon & Schuster)
  • LUTHER: THE CALLING by Neil Cross (Simon & Schuster)
  • FURT BENT FROM ALDAHEIT by Jack Eden (Pear Jam Books)
  • TRACES OF RED by Paddy Richardson (Penguin)
  • BY ANY MEANS by Ben Sanders (HarperCollins)
  • BOUND by Vanda Symon (Penguin)
  • THE CATASTROPHE by Ian Wedde (Victoria University Press)

The longlist reflects the growing depth and breadth of contemporary New Zealand crime and thriller writing, said Judging Convenor Craig Sisterson. “This year’s longlist features everything from dark serial killer tales to the latest books in popular detective series, ‘ripped from the headlines’ psychological suspense, and a prequel to one of the most compelling TV crime series of recent years. We have the mysterious tale of a narcissistic restaurant critic’s kidnapping, penned by New Zealand’s poet laureate, and an engaging debut thriller written under a nom de plume.”

It will be a tough decision for the judging panel to narrow the field to three finalists and pick a winner, said Sisterson. “There was some exceptional crime, mystery, and thriller fiction penned by New Zealanders last year. It is great to see one of the world’s most popular forms of writing starting to flourish a little more on our own shores, though it makes our job harder.”

The Award, established in 2010, is named for Dame Ngaio Marsh, who is renowned worldwide as one of the four Queens of Crime of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction. Dame Ngaio published 32 novels featuring Inspector Roderick Alleyn between 1934 and her death in 1982. With sales in the millions, and her books still in print to this day, Dame Ngaio is one of New Zealand’s most successful authors in history.

For more information, please contact:
Craig Sisterson, Judging Convenor: craigsisterson@hotmail.com.

Listener reviews: Symon, James, Kallentoft and more

At a time when many newspapers and magazines are unfortunately (and in my opinion, short-sightedly) cutting back on their arts and books coverage - filling their pages with guff instead - it is great to see some publications continuing to step forward, set the bar higher, and include great articles and reviews about books of all kinds. Last year, the New Zealand Listener (our preeminent current affairs magazine), which has had a great Arts & Books section for as long as I can remember, added a monthly crime and thriller fiction review round-up. The magazine has also included large features on crime writers amongst its wider books and literature coverage, including some written by myself.

But back to the reviews: each month Bernard Carpinter, one of my fellow Ngaio Marsh Award judges, casts his critical eye over a handful of the latest crime and thriller titles. His latest reviews, published on 26 May (and now available to read in full online) include the latest books from New Zealand's own Vanda Symon, along with international authors Peter James, Mons Kallentoft, James Runcie and Nora Roberts.

Carpinter says of THE FACELESS, Symon's first standalone thriller, "More serious and ambitious than the Shephard books, and better written, this is a real step forward for Symon". Carpinter is also impressed by SUMMERTIME DEATH by Mons Kallentoft - a "complex and excellent novel" - while seeming to have more mixed feelings about the other books he reviews this month. You can read his latest reviews in full at the New Zealand Listener website here, and his early reviews as part of his regular monthly round-up here.

It's great to see crime fiction being covered by the 'big' newspapers and magazines in New Zealand - well, some of them, at least - and to see New Zealand crime writers also getting big raps from local reviewers, who have in the past (and I include myself here) tended to be much harder on and more critical of our own writers than those from overseas, for whatever reasons.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

C is for COLLECTING COOPER by Paul Cleave

Once again, in 2012, thanks to the fabulous Kerrie of Mysteries in Paradise, crime fiction afficianados around the world are sharing posts about a variety of crime fiction authors, books, themes, and more - in an alphabetical sort ot way.

The 2012 edition of the Crime Fiction Alphabet kicked off a couple of weeks ago (yes, I've slipped behind so far), and this week we are up to the letter 'C'. Tempting as it is to do a post about myself - just kidding - I think it's only appropriate that I feature COLLECTING COOPER by Paul Cleave, which has recently been released in New Zealand after getting good reviews overseas. Three C's in all, so Mr Cleave beats me there.

COLLECTING COOPER is the fifth of Cleave's dark Christchurch-set thrillers, and follows BLOOD MEN, which won the 2011 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel. Well, follows in sequence, if not in protagonist. In fact, COLLECTING COOPER sees - for the first time - Cleave bringing back one of his four protagonists for an encore. Perhaps the start of a series character?

Here's my review:

COLLECTING COOPER by Paul Cleave

There’s a significant change in Cantabrian Paul Cleave’s latest dark thriller... For those who’ve read and enjoyed Cleave’s internationally bestselling crime novels, don’t worry – Collecting Cooper is still packed with his usual crackling prose, taut pacing, compelling characters, moments of brutal violence, dashes of black humour, and undercurrents of unease. It’s just that this, his fifth novel, sees the return of troubled ex-cop turned private investigator Theo Tate (from Cemetery Lake); the first time Cleave has had a recurring ‘hero’, as such.

While supporting characters and storylines have overlapped and intertwined, each of Cleave’s previous books have been told through the eyes of a different troubled character, with troubled being a huge euphemism in many cases: serial killer Joe masquerades as a developmentally-challenged police janitor in The Cleaner; Charlie tries to uncover whether he witnessed or perpetrated a brutal double-murder in The Killing Hour; Tate spirals into alcoholism and worse in Cemetery Lake; and accountant Edward fears he’s inherited his imprisoned father’s violent streak as he chases his wife’s killers in Blood Men.

Cleave has become an absolute master at getting readers inside the head of someone with a view well and truly askew, of getting us to care enough about such people (or at least be fascinated by them), despite their failings and faults, to keep us engaged and the pages whirring as we follow their viewpoint throughout his helter-skelter storylines.

Collecting Cooper opens with Tate walking free from Christchurch Prison, where he found himself thanks to bad choices made in Cemetery Lake, into a sweltering heatwave on the outside. Broke and directionless, his plans of avoiding his past life come to nought when first an ex-colleague, Detective Schroder, then the father of the girl a drunken Tate hurt in a car crash, come to him for help finding people who’ve disappeared. Schroder wants Tate to help track a murderer known as Melissa X, an associate of the Christchurch Carver (Joe in The Cleaner). Lawyer Donovan Green wants Tate to find Emma, the girl Tate went to prison for almost killing. Emma’s disappeared, as has her university psychology professor, Cooper Riley. As Tate takes up the trail, he discovers a link to an abandoned mental institution on the outskirts of the city; a place where very bad things happened, years ago.

Cleave’s work definitely sits at the darker end of the crime fiction spectrum, far away from the cosy country house killings of fellow Cantabrian Dame Ngaio Marsh, whose name and likeness adorns the New Zealand crime writing award that Cleave won for Blood Men last year.
Despite the darkness, Cleave is no schlock-meister; the blood and brutality amongst his pages is merely one part of a compelling tale (although it may be too much for some). He even raises important issues such as violence against women, the lack of support for those with mental difficulties, and the public’s fascination with serial killers – but rather than screaming such issues from the rooftops, they’re just woven through a tale that fizzes with ferocity. They’re texture, not message, in an exciting book where characterisation, such as Tate’s stumble vaguely towards some sort of redemption, shines brightest of all.

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You can read more about Paul Cleave and Collecting Cooper here:
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Monday, June 4, 2012

A birthday 9mm: Val McDermid

In celebration and honour of Val McDermid's birthday today, I thought I would republish my 9mm interview with the legendary crime writer, from when she visited New Zealand in late 2010. McDermid is not only a top notch author, but also a heck of a smart, interesting, and fun person. I am very much looking forward to catching up with her again at Harrogate in July. But for now, here's her 9mm interview:

The Crime Watch 9mm Author Interview: Val McDermid


Who is your favourite recurring crime fiction hero/detective?
Oh, that’s a tough one. Um, oh God... probably VI Warshawski... I like the way that she doesn’t stay still over the years, she’s kind of developed. She’s changed with the times, but she also carries the weight of her past with her. It’s not like she has a case and then walks away from it like nothing happened. Her core personality, her tenacity I suppose, and her bloody-mindedness, appealed to me a lot because I kind of see a lot of that in myself.

What was the very first book you remember reading and really loving, and why?
I think probably the Wind in the Willows. I can remember my Mum reading it to me when I was very little, but I also remember when I was about six I had measles, and they do that thing when you’ve got measles that you’ve got to stay in a darkened room, so I couldn’t read by myself, and I remember my Mum reading it to me again when I was about six, and I had measles. And it was like my lifeline to sanity I think, having something to occupy my mind because I couldn’t read myself.

Before your debut crime novel, what else had you written (if anything) unpublished manuscripts, short stories, articles?
The first thing I properly tried to write when I was a teenager, was song lyrics. Trying to write songs, then I graduated on to poetry, and I realised that poetry was far too much like hard work. Singer-songwriter-y [songs]... my heroes at the time were Joni Mitchell and Leonard Cohen, so you can guess the kind of things that I was trying to write. Cheerful (laughing). Anthems to doomed youth.

Outside of writing, and touring and promotional commitments, what do you really like to do, leisure and activity-wise?
Well, I’ve got a nine-year-old, so a certain amount of my life is spent running around watching him, watching golf and watching music performances. What I like to do is just hang with my family, and I love to walk on the beach where I live in Northumberland. I just love to walk on the beach with the dog. And that I think is just the most fantastic activity, because the beach is different every day. Our beach is an estuary where the river comes onto the beach, and every day the shape of the beach is different, the sea is different, there are no two days the same on that beach, and I just love the constant variety of it, I love the feel of walking by water. So I do that with the dog, and I play computer games - I play World of Warcraft online, I like ‘god’ games like Civilisation and things like that, and I read.

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?
If you’re up here in Northumberland the one thing you should do is definitely walk on the beach first thing in the morning. You should probably go to a pub quiz. Our village has five pubs and three of them have a pub quiz, so you can actually pub quiz three nights a week, and they’re great fun, they’re really social occasions.

If your life was a movie, which actor could you see playing you?
Well I’ve always said that obviously it should be Sigourney Weaver, because of the close physical resemblance. We’re like twins separated at birth.

Of your books, which is your favourite, and why?
It’s a hard question, because it’s a bit like asking which is your favourite kid, if you have a big family. But probably I would have to say THE MERMAID SINGING, because it was so different to anything I’d ever written before, and because it was so successful it gave me a bedrock confidence that I would be able to find a way to tell whatever story was banging at the door of my head. I’d never written a book like that before - but it was the fact that I found the way to tell that story that gave me a confidence, so now when I’m struggling with a book I kind of cast my mind back to that and say to myself, ‘you can do it, you can find the way back to this book from somewhere, you can find the voice, you can find the structure’. So that kind of became a touchstone for me.

I think a lot of people miss out on it, because they think because of the TV series being called Wire in the Blood, they think WIRE IN THE BLOOD is the first book.

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 just excited. I remember I couldn’t quite believe it when I got the letter from the Women’s Press saying they wanted to publish it, you know. I remember that just being extraordinary. And it took a long time from there to publication, because for various reasons I worked with five different editors, because people kept going off on maternity leave, or on long-term sick leave, and things like this. So I went through five different editorial hands, and every time it was like I had to start from ground zero.

So there were times in the process when I thought it was never going to happen. And I have to say, and this is a bit weird really, but for me the publication of the book is actually a very sad memory because my Dad actually died 10 days before the book came out, so he never actually held the finished book in his hands. He knew it was coming, and he’d seen the jacket and all that, but he never actually saw the book. And so, for me my memories of the book coming out are just these terrible memories of my Dad dying very suddenly. So there was no joy ultimately when the book came out. It was later that I suppose I celebrated, but at the time I felt numb, I felt nothing.

What is the strangest or most unusual experience you have had at a book signing, author event, or literary festival?
Oh God, there’ve been so many. That’s a hard one. I had my first primary school teacher turn up to one of my events, and the bizarre thing about it was that it turned out she was living in a flat in an estate owned by the friend that I was actually staying with. She was my friend’s tenant, just bizarre.

Thank you Val McDermid. We really appreciate you taking the time to talk with Crime Watch.
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More about Val McDermid:
So what do you think of this 9mm interview? Have you read any of Val McDermid’s books? The Tony Hill/Carol Jordan series? Her acclaimed standalones like PLACE OF EXECUTION, A DARKER DOMAIN, and TRICK OF THE DARK? Could you imagine yourself going up against her in a pub quiz? Thoughts and comments welcome.