The Discreet Charm of Murder – why the ‘country house’ whodunnit retains its power to enthrall…
On 15 April 2014 by AdminIn his review (Guardian 12.04.14) of a 1946 novel by Gladys Mitchell (Here Comes a Chopper, published by Vintage’s new crime fiction imprint), Nicholas Lezard considers the enduring – and, to some readers, baffling – appeal of the English country house murder mystery. Alluding to Chandler’s celebrated distinction, in The Simple Art of Murder,
The Curse of The Dark Tower – or Why You Should Avoid Literary Allusion and Choose a Descriptive Title
On 28 January 2014 by AdminA recent article on the BBC website brought it all back: what I’ve come to think of as ‘the curse of the Dark Tower’. The allusion is to my fourth novel of that name, which was published by Arbuthnot Books in 2010. The Dark Tower deals with that particularly bloody episode in British colonial history known
Getting the past in your sights – why I’ve turned to detective fiction
On 11 December 2013 by AdminIt’s nine months since I wrote this blog – a long enough period of gestation for any work of fiction… which indeed it has proved to be. After a year in which I moved to a different city, and started a new job, I finished my novel, Line of Sight, and delivered it to its
Revisiting your life in fiction
On 13 March 2012 by AdminIt’s twenty years since my first novel, A Mild Suicide, was published – years which have seen the most radical changes in publishing since the invention of the printing press. The rise – and fall – of the bookstore chains, the decline of mainstream publishing, the massive expansion of digital media, and the invention of
The irresistible charm of the English murder
On 20 December 2011 by Admin‘Extraordinary how potent cheap music is,’ says Amanda in Private Lives. The same might be said of fiction – at least of a certain sort of ‘cheap’ fiction, variously known as the thriller, the murder mystery, the detective story, and the whodunit. To this genre – or rather to a particular sub-genre, disparagingly referred to
The Great Silence
On 11 November 2011 by AdminToday, at the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of the eleventh year of the twenty-first century, people across the globe fell silent, in commemoration of the dead of two world wars. It’s a custom that, in the decades since it was instigated, has become almost a commonplace of public mourning.
Having a fabulous time
On 20 September 2011 by AdminOne of the joys of publishing with an independent online publisher is being able to re-publish one’s out of print work – hitherto doomed to a half-life in the ‘used’ section of the Amazon store, or to second-hand bookshops -– themselves fast disappearing. It’s a wonderfully liberating feeling, to know that one’s characters are no
Living in the past – the joys of historical research
On 18 July 2011 by AdminI’ve been living in the past a lot lately. In 1927, to be precise – which is when the novel I’m currently writing is set. Every day, I get on the Jubilee Line and travel back in time, to an era when there were no computers, no mobile phones, no televisions and not very many
Writing in a changing universe
On 19 June 2011 by AdminThe beautiful pictures taken by the Hubble Space Telescope of the giant galaxy Centaurus A which appeared on the front page of the Guardian a few days ago are a reminder that – as William Herschel discovered 230 years ago – our universe is not static, but changing all the time. Supernovae explode, and new
More Bright Stars
On 3 May 2011 by AdminThere are some subjects in literature which seem inexhaustible: birth, childhood, first love, marriage, adultery, revenge – and death. What makes these topics of such enduring fascination is their universality, since all of us have experienced at least the first of them, although – if one concurs with Wittgenstein – none of us will experience