Thursday, April 13, 2017
Murder in the Library - Nelson - 1 June 2017
The Ngaio Marsh Awards, in association with the New Zealand Book Council and Nelson Libraries, invites Top of the South booklovers to a thrilling event featuring three talented New Zealand crime writers.
As crime writing has evolved from puzzle-like mysteries to novels delving deeply into people and places, it has continued to be the world’s most popular form of storytelling. But just what makes the genre so fascinating?
Auckland writer Fiona Sussman and Ruby Bay author David Briggs, whose latest novels are in the running for the 2017 Ngaio Marsh Awards, will be joined by Havelock-based crime writer Alan Carter to discuss how they craft great stories and blend page-turning crime plots with fascinating characters and real-life themes. Karen Stade will will cross-examine the authors and keep the peace.
WHEN: Thursday, 1 June 2017
WHERE: Elma Turner Library, 27 Halifax Street, Nelson
WHEN: 6pm for a 6.15pm panel discussion
David Briggs is a published poet who immigrated from the UK in 2009. He lives in Ruby Bay with his wife and three dogs. His novel THE DIRECTION OF OUR FEAR centres on the lives of four everyday people in Wellington while a potential terrorist threat looms.
Alan Carter won a Ned Kelly Award for his debut crime novel PRIME CUT, starring an Asian-Australian detective in Perth. His newest novel, THE MARLBOROUGH MAN, is a mystery set in the Top of the South, where he now lives.
Sussman's THE LAST TIME WE SPOKE delves into the aftermath of a brutal home invasion, and "shows the freshness and daring of Alan Duff's ONCE WERE WARRIORS" (Takahe magazine) while being "a gripping story of grief and redemption" (Sunday Mirror)
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