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Wednesday, 11 December 2024

‘Cold in The Earth’ by Thorne Moore

Published by Diamond Crime,
22 October 2024.
ISBN: 1-91564943-0 (PB)

Picking up a new book by Thorne Moore guarantees two things: a rattling good story, and a quality of writing which carries you along and ensures you don’t want to stop reading it till the last page. Add to that characters you warm to and want to know more about, locations that spring off the page, and an approach to crime fiction quite unlike any I’ve encountered elsewhere, and it’s one of those indefinable mysteries why her books aren’t top of the bestseller lists.

Cold in the Earth follows ex-policewoman Rosanna Quillan as she sets off to track down a woman who holds the key to the whereabouts of four, possibly five bodies of young girls murdered nearly twenty years ago by Timothy Gittings. The killer was caught, and sentenced to life in a secure hospital, but the families of the girls are broken, and want to bring their daughters home to be buried. 

Gittings’s mother has disappeared, but she was fiercely protective of her son at the time of the murders, and Rosanna is soon convinced that she knows more than she ever said. Her quest is to trace the woman and persuade her to talk before the mother of one of the girls dies of cancer. The search takes her to rural Lincolnshire and a tiny, remote Welsh village, close to where the girls were killed.  

Thorne Moore’s books are full of intriguing characters and Rosanna Quillan is one of the most fascinating yet. On the surface she is ordinary, but she reveals imagination, resourcefulness, tenacity... the list goes on and on. Despite a promising start to a career in the police, she abandoned the force because crime-solving and administering justice seemed to take second place to box-ticking. She isn’t above a bit of minor crime herself, when it serves a higher purpose. 

Then there’s Gethin Matthews, who has exchanged city life for sheep farming when his father develops Alzheimer’s; and retired detective Malcolm Cannell, who investigated the murders and put Gittings away, but has never forgiven himself for not finding the bodies. I especially enjoyed his feisty wife Barbara, who is quite willing to co-operate with Rosanna, and even to push Malcolm outside the boundaries of the Law. 

The places Thorne Moore creates are as fully realized as the people. The contrast between the dank cottage Rosanna rents and the warm, welcoming Matthews farmhouse sharpens the image of both; and I could almost trace Rosanna’s steps and feel her desperate frustration when she ventures out into a vicious storm, and finds herself thwarted by a flooded bridge.   

Happy endings are impossible in this kind of story, but you’ll be relieved to know that it finishes with a ray of hope. But how Rosanna arrives at that point, and where she might possibly go next? For that you’ll have to read the whole book. And believe me, at two in the morning because you couldn’t put it down till the last page, you’ll be glad you did.
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Reviewer: Lynne Patrick

Thorne Moore grew up in Luton, near London, but has lived in Pembrokeshire in West Wales for the last 35 years. She writes psychological crime, or domestic noir, with an historical twist, focusing on the cause and consequences of crimes rather than on the details of the crimes themselves. A Time For Silence, set in Pembrokeshire, was published by Honno in 2012. It was followed by Motherlove and The Unravelling, set partly in a fictional version of Luton. Shadows, published by Endeavour in 2017, is set in an old house in Pembrokeshire, and is paired with Long Shadows, which explained the history and mysteries of the same house from Medieval times to the late Victorian period. 

https://www.thornemoore.co.uk/  

Lynne Patrick has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction.

Monday, 9 December 2024

‘Playlist’ by Sebastian Fitzek

Published by Head of Zeus,
12 September 2024.
ISBN: 978-1-80454242-2 (PB)

Alexander Zorbach, ex-police officer and now a private investigator is contacted by a desperate Emilia Jagow. Her daughter Feline has disappeared, believed abducted on her way to school. She wants him to discover what happened and where she is, as there seems to be no trace of her. Emilia was given Zorbach’s name by Alina Gregoriev, a blind physiotherapist who used to treat Feline. A case some time ago involving the hunt for the “Eye Collector” had brought Alina and Zorbach together. This had been a traumatic time involving Julian, Zorbach’s son.

Because Feline’s father would not allow her to have access to music to listen to her favourite tracks, Alina had given her an MP3 player in the shape of a watch, which needed to be connected to a wireless network.

Out of the blue, a month after Feline’s disappearance, Alina realises the MP3 player is connecting and is able to track it. Zorbach and her trace it to a hotel, Ambrosia Resort. On investigation they discover it certainly is not all that it appears to be. Even more intriguing, Feline’s playlist of her favourite tracks has been changed in the last few days. Is it possible she is trying to send a clue as to her whereabouts?

The more Zorbach and Alina look into the abduction, the more it is evident that the perpetrator is playing a deadly game, leading to more than one horrifying death.

As Zorbach digs deeper he is dragged into an unbelievably disturbing nightmare, which is also connected to past horrors. He cannot possibly emerge from these latest terrifying events unscathed in body and mind.

The warped mind behind all the murder and mayhem is bent on setting all the people involved a “love test”, but why? Horrifyingly, not everyone passes the “test” leading to dire consequences.

A grippingly gruesome crime thriller telling of a manipulative genius leading to the brutal consequences of such a twisted mind. The author certainly knows how to grip the reader by the throat and squeeze! Highly recommended.
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Reviewer: Tricia Chappell

Sebastian Fitzek was born 13 October 1971 in Berlin Germany. He is a writer and journalist. His first book Therapy was a bestseller in Germany in 2006, toppling The Da Vinci Code from the #1 position.

Tricia Chappell. I have a great love of books and reading, especially crime and thrillers. I play the occasional game of golf (when I am not reading). My great love is cruising especially to far flung places, when there are long days at sea for plenty more reading! I am really enjoying reviewing books and have found lots of great new new authors.

Saturday, 7 December 2024

Unsung Heroes of Crime Fiction by Lynne Patrick

An occasional series which looks at the work of authors whose books qualify as bestsellers,
but who still aren’t quite as famous as they deserve to be.
Aline Templeton

The challenge was to name six Scottish crime writers. Easy, came the reply. Ian Rankin, Val McDermid, Ann Cleeves, Denise Mina, Peter May, Lin Anderson... shall I go on?

Only if you include Aline Templeton, I replied.

She’s reviewed in the Times and the Guardian as well as the big Scottish papers. Val McDermid calls her the crime czar of the small Scottish town. So why isn’t she a shoo-in on a list of Scottish crime writers – or on any list of crime writers you care to name, come to that?

In the course of a writing career lasting four decades (and counting!) she’s written six standalones, and a successful nine book series which charts the career of Marjory Fleming, a DCI in rural Galloway, right through to retirement. Now there’s a second series, featuring the head of a fictional Serious Rural Crime Squad; the sixth title has just been published, and the protagonist Kelso Strang is still going strong. Aline’s may not be the first name that comes up in a discussion of Scottish crime writers, but she’s not going anywhere.

Aline Templeton was born close to St Andrews, and apart from a sojourn in Cambridge where she studied English literature, she lived most of her life in Scotland until a few years ago, when she decamped to Kent for family reasons. A voracious reader from the age of four, she wrote her first novel when she was six, on notepaper stitched together with yellow thread. At various times she has been CWA Booksellers’ Champion, a justice of the peace, chair of the Society of Authors in Scotland, and a member of the Scottish Parliament Cross-party group for Media and Culture. And she found time to get married and bring up two children. She says herself that there has to be more to life than writing, and that everything else she does, even a country walk with her grandchildren, feeds into her books one way or another.

Character and location are the mainstays of her work. Her protagonists always have a rich life outside crime fighting. Marjory Fleming is a farmer’s wife and is often seen feeding the chickens before heading off to a murder scene. Kelso Strang has had to sort out his sister’s problems, is a fond uncle to his small niece, and has now embarked on a serious relationship with Marjory Fleming’s daughter!

Kelso Strang’s remit sends him to rural communities all over Scotland, and his creator makes a point of visiting them all. ‘It’s a great treat to have a legitimate, tax-deductible reason to holiday in such wonderful places,’ she says.

https://www.alinetempleton.co.uk/ 

The Kelso Strang series:

Human Face
Carrion Comfort
Devil's Garden
Old Sins
Blind Eye 
Deadfall

The Marjory Fleming series: 

Cold In The Earth 
The Darkness and the Deep
Lying Dead
Lamb To The Slaughter
Dead In The Water
Cradle to Grave
Evil for Evil
Bad Blood 
The Third Sin

Standalones:

Death Is My Neighbour
Last Act of All
The Trumpet Shall Sound
Past Praying For
Night And Silence  

Lynne Patrick has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction.

  

Thursday, 5 December 2024

‘Litany of Lies’ by Sarah Hawkswood

Published by Allison & Busby,
5 December 2024.
ISBN:
978-0-7490-3108-4 (HB)

Despite the twelfth century setting Sarah Hawkswood’s Bradecote and Catchpoll series has all the hallmarks of a police procedural. Hugh Bradecote, undersheriff of Worcester, is the officer running the investigation, with perception, compassion and dignity. Serjeant Catchpoll is the experienced man on the ground, every bit as observant and quick-witted as his boss. Walkelin, Catchpoll’s apprentice, is shaping up to be a capable detective in his own right and is treated as one by his seniors.

The doughty trio are bidden to Evesham Abbey to look into the suspicious death of Walter the Steward, who has been found at the bottom of a newly dug well pit. In the absence of forensics, keen eyes suffice, and it becomes plain that he was hit on the head with a dressed stone and thrown into the pit.

There is no shortage of suspects. Not only has the steward been mistreating his young wife; he has been cheating both the abbey and the local residents by holding back some of rents it was his job to collect. In addition, there is considerable friction between the abbey and the nearby castle, which lies under the jurisdiction of Bradecote’s boss, William de Beauchamp, the local Sheriff, who cares more for his own comfort than the rule of law. It seems that almost everyone in town bore a grudge against the dead man. 

A second murder seems linked to the first, and a vicious assault on a ferryman a few miles away adds more tangles to an already knotty case.

Sarah Hawkswood’s meticulously researched series is never short of vivid characters. This time I especially enjoyed Cuthbert, the least popular man in the alehouse because of his aromatic employment; Alnoth the Handless, born with two deformed arms but the sharpest eyes and ears in the vicinity, Maerwynn, the steward’s teenage wife, who is quiet and downtrodden at first but  blossoms like an English rose once she is free from her coercive husband: warring neighbours Oswald and Wulfram; and de Cormolain. the lazy and languid commander of the castle across the bridge, and Bradecote’s sworn enemy.

The locations, too, are richly wrought. The dank, uninviting castle contrasts with the warm, welcoming abbey. The abandoned cell of Mother Placida, late anchoress, yields up a wealth of clues to the attentive Walkelin. The river which loops round Evesham is the domain of Kenelm the ferryman, a key witness.

There’s a little of everything here, all wrapped up in dialogue which brings the characters to life and a wealth of historical background that draws the reader effortlessly back into the time of King Stephen. Fans of both crime and historical fiction will find plenty to entertain them in Bradecote and Catchpoll’s latest case. Long may they continue
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Reviewer: Lynne Patrick

Sarah Hawkswood read Modern History at Oxford University and specialised in Military History and Theory of War. She turned from writing military history to mediaeval murder mysteries set in the turmoil of The Anarchy in the mid 12thC, all set in Worcestershire, where she now lives. The Bradecote & Catchpoll series began with Servant of Death (previously published as The Lord Bishop's Clerk) set in Pershore Abbey. The second, Ordeal by Fire, is set in Worcester itself, and there are already another five written. Writing is intrinsic to who she is, and she claims she gets 'grumpy' when there is not another manuscript on the go. Her aim is to create a 'world', one in which the reader can become immersed, and with an accurate historical context, not 'dressing up'. Sarah Hawkswood is a pen name. 

Lynne Patrick
has been a writer ever since she could pick up a pen, and has enjoyed success with short stories, reviews and feature journalism, but never, alas, with a novel. She crossed to the dark side to become a publisher for a few years and is proud to have launched several careers which are now burgeoning. She lives in Oxfordshire in a house groaning with books, about half of them crime fiction

CrimeFest to End After 16 Years

 

CrimeFest, one of the UK’s leading crime fiction events hosted in Bristol each year, has announced 2025 will be its final convention.

In a statement announcing the closure, Adrian Muller, co-founder, co-host and director of CrimeFest, said: “It is with sadness – but great pride - that we announce that our sixteenth CrimeFest, which takes place from 15-18 May 2025, will be the final one.”

Inspired by a visit to Bristol in 2006 of the American Left Coast Crime convention, the first CrimeFest was held in June 2008. CrimeFest is a convention run by fans of the genre, initially organised by Myles Allfrey, Liz Hatherell, Adrian Muller, and Donna Moore, and more recently hosted by the latter two.

Whereas most crime fiction events are invite-only, with a fixed programme of authors, CrimeFest offers a more democratic model. As a convention, any commercially published author can sign up to appear on a panel.

Adrian Muller said: “CrimeFest provides many authors with a platform they would not have been offered elsewhere in the UK. And, subsequently, readers discover and meet writers they otherwise may never have heard of. During CrimeFest, all delegates – be they authors or readers – come together as equals to celebrate the genre they love.”

Taking place across four days, each year CrimeFest showcases around 150 authors across more than 50 panels; over the years, 1,100 authors will have appeared at the event.

CrimeFest also invites Featured and Highlighted guests, securing major authors including Cathy Ace, Lee Child, Ann Cleeves, Martina Cole, Michael Connelly, Jeffrey Deaver, Sue Grafton, Anthony Horowitz, P.D. James, Lynda La Plante, and Ian Rankin.

Lee Child attended the very first convention, and was a Featured Guest at the fifth and tenth anniversaries of CrimeFest.

Lee Child said: "Sadly all good things come to an end - and Adrian Muller's Bristol CrimeFest was one of the very best things ever. It was a warm, friendly, relaxed and inclusive festival, hugely enjoyable for authors and readers alike. Myles, Liz, Donna and Adrian, their team of volunteers - and Dame Mary from Specsavers - have my sincere thanks for many delightful weekends over the years."

The event is sponsored by Specsavers.

Adrian Muller, Dame Mary Perkins, Donna Moore

Co-founder of Specsavers, Dame Mary Perkins, who will be attending again next year, praised the event: “I am an avid reader and fan of the genre, and I always look forward to CrimeFest. It is so friendly, and it feels like all who go are welcomed as part of a big family, connected by a love of books, and reading. We are proud sponsors and I will miss CrimeFest and the camaraderie very much.”

Adrian added: “Thanks to the support of Specsavers, our highly valued sponsor, we introduced reduced cost Community Passes for UK school and public librarians, students and for people on benefits. In 2021 we also created an annual bursary for crime fiction authors of colour. We’ve run community projects at local schools in the community; donated books to many schools and libraries across Bristol and the UK; our anthology Ten Year Stretch and our raffles each year have raised thousands of pounds for the Royal National Institute of Blind People, and the seven awards we present each year celebrate crime fiction, non-fiction, TV and crime fiction for children and young adults – the latter two being the first in the UK. We are immensely proud of these initiatives.”

Author and co-host of CrimeFest, Donna Moore, said: “CrimeFest is a labour of love for us and our volunteers. We are immensely grateful to the authors, readers, publishers, booksellers, sponsors, volunteers, and a whole host of other people who have supported us over the years.”

The organisers promise to say goodbye “in style” with the attendance of some big-name authors to celebrate its 16 years.

The final CrimeFest takes place 15-18 May at the Mercure Bristol Grand Hotel.

CrimeFest - Bristol's Annual Crime Fiction Convention


Wednesday, 4 December 2024

‘Mr Campion’s Christmas’ by Mike Ripley

Published by Severn House,
5 November 2024.
ISBN: 978-1-4483-1471-3 (HB)

It is 27th December 1962, and an unwilling driver, Graham Fisk, is counting his passengers as they board his coach at Victoria coach station. As he does so, Fisk takes stock of his passengers and thinks how he’d prefer to stay in London and take his family to the Christmas pantomime. However, his bosses insist that the tickets have been purchased and Fisk is the person scheduled to transport the passengers to rural Norfolk, despite the winter chill and the adverse weather forecast. The coach is far from full, with just seven passengers. Four of them seem to Fisk to be probable travellers to the religious site of Walsingham, a popular destination for pilgrims. They include a vicar; a middle-aged, plainly dressed woman; an annoying man who will not stop talking and is determined to show off all he knows; and a strange man who continually clutches a worn leather briefcase, which he refuses to let go of. The three other passengers are young American servicemen and Fisk wonders if they are stationed at one of the American military bases situated in Norfolk. As the coach continues on its journey, the weather deteriorates still further, and the exhausted driver allows one of the Americans to take over the driving. They skid and crash into an immense stone that marks the entrance to the drive of a country house, which brings their journey to a premature end.

Albert and Amanda Campion have enjoyed a quiet Christmas at their country house, Carterers. Their only excitement was the danger of Campion’s long-time henchman, Lugg, bursting out of his red suit while playing Father Christmas for the children of the staff at the company where Amanda is a senior engineer; and their only visitors had been Amanda’s sister, Mary, and her husband, Guffy Randall, one of Campion’s dearest friends. However, Lugg did his father Christmas duties without disaster and Mary, Guffy and their young son have now left. The house contains only Albert, Amanda, their student son, Rupert, and Lugg, although they are planning to have a large firework party to celebrate the New Year. When the weather becomes threatening, the Campions persuade their housekeeper to stay at the house and go to collect her ancient, and very deaf, father-in-law from their cottage, to ensure his safety. This is the status when the coach crashes into one of the ancient stones outside Carterets and the Campions take in the stranded driver and passengers.

Although the unexpected visitors are an eccentric and mixed group, the family tries to make them welcome. The ever-inventive Mr Campion suggests a private game between Amanda, Rupert, Lugg and himself in which they all talk to one or two of the newcomers and draw out their stories, the person who unearths the most interesting story wins the competition. As they probe their visitors’ backstories and reasons for making the journey, they discover that all of the passengers have different motives, and many have secrets. However, even Mr Campion cannot foresee the events that begin to unfold, which results in the murder of an innocent person. The threat grows and engulfs Campion, his home and his family and friends. With the telephone lines down, they are cut off from getting help by the appalling weather, Mr Campion and his team have to fight for their survival against a cruel and ruthless enemy.

Mr Campion’s Christmas is the twelfth book written by Mike Ripley in the Albert Campion series, and feature the core characters created by the late, great Margery Allingham. It is a lively, cleverly plotted story that brings Campion and his colleagues into the political world of the early 1960s. Campion and Lugg are older and a bit slower, but they are still a formidable team. Campion is wiser and more experienced but recognisable as the flippant young adventurer that Margery Allingham first introduced to the world in 1929. Mr Campion’s Christmas is an excellent read which I highly recommend.
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Reviewer: Carol Westron

Mike Ripley is the author of 34 novels including the award-winning 'Angel' series of comedy thrillers, and is one of the few authors to win the Crime Writers' Last Laugh Award twice. From 1989 to 2008 he was crime fiction critic for the Daily Telegraph and then the Birmingham Post, reviewing over 950 crime novels and co-edited three volumes of 'Fresh Blood' stories by new British writers, including Ian Rankin, Lee Child, Ken Bruen, Charlie Higson and Christopher Brookmyre. He was also a scriptwriter on the BBC's series "Lovejoy".
Professionally, he read history at university, trained as a journalist and went into public relations, working for the Brewers Society in London, promoting British beer and pubs, for 21 years. As part of his obligatory mid-life crisis, he gave up life in the big city and retrained as an archaeologist, working mostly on Romano-British sites in East Anglia.
At the age of 50 he had a stroke. He survived, recovered, wrote a book about it and served on the government's Stroke Strategy Committee which reported in 2009. He has produced festival performances with crime writers Colin Dexter and Minette Walters, as well as devising a Creative Crime Writing course for Cambridge University and the comedy panel game "I'm Sorry I Haven't A Cluedo" which was performed as the finale to the 2016 CrimeFest convention in Bristol.  He completed the third Albert Campion novel left unfinished on the death of Pip Youngman Carter (husband of Margery Allingham) in 1969. 
Since then he has written eleven further novels.

He has also edited "Tales on the Off-Beat" - a collection of short stories by Youngman Carter and two volumes of "Callan Uncovered" by James Mitchell, creator of the legendary television series starring Edward Woodward.


Carol Westron
is a successful author and a Creative Writing teacher.  Her crime novels re set both in contemporary and Victorian times.  Her first book The Terminal Velocity of Cats was published in 2013. Since then, she has since written 8 further mysteries. Carol recently gave an interview to Mystery People. interview

www.carolwestron.com

Good Fascists? by Jason Monaghan

So here is the challenge. Blackshirt Rebellion is set in an alternative 1937 where Britain has a fascist government led by Sir Oswald Mosley’s British Union. In my alt-history thriller Blackshirt Masquerade, Hugh Clifton was persuaded to infiltrate Mosley’s Blackshirts but has become trapped in his role as their leading

confidential investigation officer. Although he was recruited to fight the fascists, he must now live and work beside them. Some become his friends, and Sissy has become his lover. Almost all the characters are one flavour of fascist or another, but I have the task as a writer to make the reader care about them.

At least the reader must hope that Hugh is not seduced by the darkness and can pull some of his colleagues into the light.

Although the background is alternative history, much of the detail within the story is true to historical fact. This includes the existence of a fascist intelligence unit operating from Room Z at their national headquarters, known as Black House. When researching the series I was surprised by the large number of far-right groups that existed in Britain in the 1930s. These vied for prominence with British Union and vocally criticised it for being not extreme enough. Pro-Nazi and

extreme antisemitic and white supremacist groups were particularly critical, deploying insults such as ‘kosher fascists’. This provides fertile ground for the plot of Blackshirt Rebellion and gives Hugh and his comrades an ample number of unpleasant opponents to fight. The agents of Room Z become the good guys.

As Room Z moves against dangerous extremists the agents come up against a shadowy group within the British establishment who have been manipulating events for their own end. Hugh and Sissy are forced to go on the run to save their own lives and prevent the country from slipping into civil war.

I’ve resisted the temptation to fill the book with cliché Gestapo stereotypes, and the agents are not left unscathed by their experiences. Some wake up to the truth of dictatorship, some become determined to oppose the slide towards a Nazi state, but some are seduced by the power and fall into darkness. Weak characters find strength,

directionless ones find new purpose. Some simply react to the new reality with passive compliance, just as many Germans adapted to the Nazi regime.

Britain under fascism would quickly have become unrecognisable, and in the words of my American editor ‘scary’. With a rollercoaster resolution riffing on the country house mystery, this story rounds off the storyline developed in Blackshirt Conspiracy. Amid deaths and betrayals, the survival of Hugh, Sissy and the agents is not guaranteed. 

Blackshirt Rebellion

Published by Level Best Books
 10 September 2024

Available in paperback and eBook from Amazon and other outlets worldwide.

To read a review, click on the title.


Jason Monaghan’s life has provided plenty of inspiration for writing historical thrillers.  He trained as an archaeologist studying Roman pottery, but his career took unexpected twists, including investigating shipwrecks, a spell in offshore banking, working as an anti-money laundering specialist, and ultimately becoming a museum director. Now a full-time writer living in his native Yorkshire, he travels as often and as far as he can.friends excavating in Alderney, investigating what looks to be Britains finest small Roman fort. He lives in Guernsey in the Channel Islands.

https://monaghanfoss.com

Monday, 2 December 2024

A Poisoned Chalice : The New Sister Agnes Story by Alison Joseph


Sister Agnes, for those that don’t know her, is a nun; contemporary, in an open order, based in South London.  She is a detective. And, in the archetypal mode of the amateur detective, she finds herself on the outside of things, privy to people’s secrets. In the words of a lovely police officer who has helped me on and off with my research, ‘There’s always someone who knows more than we do.’

In the time of Sherlock Holmes, it was easier for an amateur sleuth to know more than the police.  But now, with CCTV, mobile phone tracking, and highly developed forensic science, the expertise of the amateur detective is distilled into that one central point: being the repository of other people’s secrets.  And, as Sister Agnes works in a hostel for homeless young people, that is exactly what she is.

The new novel starts with a young woman appearing on the hostel doorstep asking if they’ve seen her husband, a young man on the wrong side of the law who has now gone missing. This one simple event widens out into a much bigger mystery, concerning a medieval silver cup known as the Judas chalice, a priceless, possibly stolen, artefact belonging to one of the old catholic families. It is extremely rare due to its depiction of the betrayal of Jesus by Judas Iscariot, the thirteenth apostle – so rare, in fact, that someone is prepared to kill for it.

I’ve always liked the classic detective structure – an all-knowing central character through which the story is told, with a Marple or a Maigret or a Marlowe at the heart of it. It allows a three-way relationship between author, reader and detective, all sharing the fun of engaging with the story together. The challenge is to make sure the reveal comes as a surprise while at the same time allowing the reader to walk hand in hand with the detective in solving the mystery.

But I also try, in my work, to bear witness to the harm that humans do.  People look at Golden Age crime fiction and make the mistake of seeing it as lightweight, as a historical romp in the company of Sayers, Allingham,
Christie
et al.  But as far as she was concerned, Agatha Christie was writing The Modern Novel. And, having lived through a world war, she needed to talk about human pain, human damage, in a very particular way.   For some time, I have circled the idea that as a nun, Sister Agnes will at some point have to tackle the harm of which the church itself is capable, where its huge and powerful influence collides with its dangerous obsession with sex, shame and sin.

Sister Agnes, like many fictional detectives, is a person of contradictions. She has religious faith and yet is constantly beset by doubt; she accepts the unsolvable mystery of a God, and yet the mystery of a killing on her doorstep is there to be solved with careful attention to evidence, to science, to reason.

 

This new novel,
A Poisoned Chalice,
is the first of two new Sister Agnes novels

Published by Joffe Books,
31 October 2024.
In Paperback and e-book
.

A Poisoned Chalice is the eighth in the new series published by Joffe, (with seven of the earlier novels republished under new names).  It has been a delight to be back with her, and also with her two best friends, Athena and Father Julius, who accompany her through the story in their own particular ways, Athena with
shopping, clothes, cake and fizzy wine – and Julius with his own
particular and difficult challenge.

The problem of evil may be preached from a pulpit, but what
happens if that evil is within the church, rather than something
external to be fought by the might of the faithful? And how does someone of faith continue within a structure that is so warped, so potentially malign?

Sister Agnes, walking the streets of South London, will find herself wrestling with all these questions.

Alison Joseph is a London-based crime writer and radio dramatist. She started her career in local radio, and then in television as a documentary director. She is the author of a series of novels featuring Sister Agnes, a
contemporary detective nun based in South London. Alison has written about twenty works for radio, including
The True Story and also dramatisations of Georges Simenon's Maigret novels.

www.alisonjoseph.com  

Sunday, 1 December 2024

Interview: Jill Amadio in Conversation with Carl Vonderau

 

Carl Vonderau grew up in Cleveland in a religious family that believed God could heal all illness. Maybe that’s why he went to college in California. After majoring in economics and dabbling in classical guitar, he ended up with a career in banking.

Carl has lived and worked internationally and has managed to put his foot in his mouth in several languages. He brought his banking expertise to his debut thriller, Murderabilia, as well as to his recently published novel, Saving Myles.
He has won first place awards from Left Coast Crime, San Diego, American Book Fest, Pencraft, and National Indie Excellence.
Carl is president of the San Diego chapter of Sisters in Crime, a member of Blackbird Writers, and also helps nonprofits through San Diego Social Venture Partners.

Author Carl Vonderau

Jill: Describe your literary background. Did you take classes?
Carl: As a kid, I enjoyed making up stories but did not take literature or creative writing classes in college. I majored in economics. After several years in banking, I enrolled in my first writing courses. I’ve continued with those courses, joined writing groups, and submitted sample pages to agents and editors. Slowly but surely, I’ve become a competent writer.

Jill: Have you written books all your life?
Carl: I used to write poetry and music for guitar and voice. But it wasn’t until my thirties that I took classes and began to write short stories and fictional pieces.

Jill: How have your books and writing evolved after writing the first one?
Carl: Crime fiction has always fascinated me by the way it amplifies family and the relationships of my  characters. I also love a good plot. Each book has had a different challenge, and each one has stretched me as a writer. My first book, Murderabilia, took many years to write. It was entirely in first person and used some parts of my life—private banking, growing up in a Christian Science family, and my familiarity with some foreign locals like Colombia and Algeria. My second book, Saving Myles, was in third person and contained three points of view—a mother, father, and teenage son. Getting those voices right and individualized was a major challenge. But writing them really helped me grow. My third book is in submission and only contains one voice in third person but contains some unique writing challenges I hadn’t tried before. All three books involve the banking industry. But the book I’ve just started has nothing to do with banking and is set in 1969.

Jill: When did you begin writing mysteries; what inspired you?
Carl: I would say that my books are combinations of thriller and domestic suspense with mystery elements in them. When I first started writing I thought the easiest way to get published would be to write a mystery or thriller. Little did I know. Still, in choosing that type of genre I grew to love what I could do with them. And mystery is really so broad. Much of literary fiction has mystery in it. What I like about it is that mystery combines character development and analytical reasoning.

Jill: Why did you write in first person for your first mystery?
Carl: I thought it was the easiest way to write my first book because it was closest to my own thoughts and emotions. Again, little did I know. I now think it is one of the hardest forms of writing. To be successful you have to have a unique voice, which took a while to develop. In cultivating that voice, going on for pages of description about thoughts, feelings, and technical knowledge is a very big danger. It can be self-indulgent and cause the book to sag. The biggest challenge in first person is Then there is the unreliable narrator. That is very hard. The master of it is Kazuo Ishiguro.

Jill: How do you decide on your characters and killers?
Carl:
Each book is different. In Murderabilia I started with a premise. What kind of secret would a banker for the very wealthy hide? What if his father was an infamous serial killer as famous as Ted Bundy or Charlie Manson? I thought the most interesting aspect of that family history was how carrying that secret affected the banker’s life and family. The killer in that book was more difficult. I decided to make him a copycat of the protagonist’s father. Then I had to do research to get into the mind of a serial killer. It was definitely not something I could talk to my wife about at dinner. I also wanted my protagonist’s mother to be a fanatical Christian Scientist, someone who believed that evil would cease to exist if she stopped believing in it.  In Saving Myles, I took on a different problem What effect did a deeply troubled son have on a family and a crime? In this novel the son went so far off the rails the parents had to send him to a residential treatment centre. The trauma of doing that tore the marriage apart. Then, when the son returned, he sneaked off to Mexico to do a drug deal and got kidnapped. The only way the parents could save him was to become involve in money laundering. In this book I wanted to explore how the family had to come together and learn to cherish one another again in order to survive. The killers in Saving Myles were Mexican cartel families. They too were deeply driven by family, which made them more redeemable in the reader’s eyes.

Jill: Have your life experiences crept into your stories?
Carl: Yes. My banking and my travel experiences have greatly influenced my writing. I was a banker for more than 30 years and lived in Chicago, Montreal, and San Diego. I travelled extensively in Latin America and North Africa, and worked in four languages. I set my first three books in the banking world I knew, just different areas of banking. In Murderabilia, the world was private banking for the wealthy. In Saving Myles, it was commercial real estate banking. In the book I’ve just submitted it is in the branch of a large bank. I’ve based my characters on composites of the people I knew and know. Because of my languages, I injected a foreign way of speaking into some of the characters. Even so, I had to research some aspects of each book. I had to learn about photography in Murderabilia. I may be a banker but didn’t know much about money laundering, which is part of Saving Myles. So, I enrolled in an anti-money laundering organization and took courses and went to seminars. Much of laundering uses international trade, which I already knew a great deal about. I also had never worked in the retail branch side of banking. To learn about their daily challenges, I talked with several branch bankers.

Jill: Where does your inspiration for settings come from? 
Carl: I love international locales and have tried to put in details that evoke those different worlds. I’ve used settings in San Diego, Algeria, Colombia, Mexico, and Montreal. The best way to absorb the feel of a setting is to go there with a notebook and take lots of pictures. In Tijuana I had friends in the YMCA who helped me find the right locations for Saving Myles. I travelled back to Montreal for the book I just wrote to make sure I got it right. Part of Saving Myles was set in Mexico’s wine country, where I’ve never been. I couldn’t travel there because of the pandemic, so I had to use whatever visual images and knowledge I could glean from TV and the internet. Then I made things up. I’m sure I got some of it wrong…but it’s fiction!

Jill: Have you studied forensics?
Carl: I’ve read some books and talked with a few experts, but forensics is not my strength. I try to limit that aspect as much as I can in any mysteries I write. However, I am knowledgeable about finance, so I do put financial forensics into my books.

Jill: What is the greatest writing challenge?
Carl: Writing the next books fast enough. I am somewhat of a perfectionist, and my books are stand-alones, so I don’t write a book a year. I work very hard on getting the ‘write’ emotions down and coming up with decent prose. My first book I wrote more than 20 times. The second was 10-15, and the third less than 10. So I guess I’m getting better.

Jill: Any pitfalls along the way?
Carl: Sometimes I have a problem with a premise. I wrote 30K words for each of two books that I dropped because they didn’t work. The ending can also be a problem. I write a whole book with an ending in mind, and then it doesn’t work, so I have to change it. But the changes make the books better.

I’ve found that my writing group both makes my books better and slows them down. The people in the group really helped me improve—especially with the interior life of my characters. They also helped me see what scenes worked and didn’t work. But there are drawbacks. It’s very hard to get a lot of pages quickly through a writing group—typically only about 10 pages at a time. The other problem is that the other members can’t see the whole arc of the book because they’ve only seen pieces of it over several months.

Jill: Typical writing schedule?
Carl: I write every day. On weekdays I begin at about 7:15 in the morning. It is not all writing the manuscript. I also write a newsletter and do social media. Plus I‘m currently president of the San Diego chapter of Sisters in Crime and must do work for that organization. I’ve also been active in Social Venture Partners, a nonprofit that consults with other nonprofits. I will usually watch news or read at lunch and then work in the afternoon. I finish on at about 4:30 on the days that I exercise, and at 6:00 for other days. Night time is pure relaxation with my wife. On weekends I usually work 4-6 hours each day.

When I was a banker the hours were long, and in those days, I wrote whenever I had a few minutes, Now I’m a full-time writer and the hours are even longer.

Jill:
     How do you beat writer’s block, if any?
Carl:   I always know the characters and the premise I’m writing about. I usually have a clear idea of the scene I want to write. Plot points are what block me. This is when I’ve written my character into a corner they can’t escape from, or when the book has begun to drag. I can rack my brain and go in circles, but usually the best ideas don’t occur to me then. Sometimes I’ll get a solution when I talk to someone. But often the best way to solve a problem is to let it go. Wash the dishes, exercise, or take a shower. And if it’s really a difficult problem, put it off for the next day. I won’t think of a solution in my sleep, but the next morning it often comes to me. This past week an idea occurred to me on something I’d worried about for weeks when I was in my spin class at the Y. I’m disciplined and focused, but the key to the unusual idea is to just let your mind go free and not force yourself to grind out a solution.

Jill: What keeps you in the chair?
Carl: I like to go to coffee houses to work. Then there is no distraction from TV or what’s going on at home. Just the work in front of me and the noise of people I don’t talk to. The hardest part is starting the day. That’s when I worry that my writing will be lousy. Often it starts out that way and then goes somewhere unexpected. When I follow a good trail, I lose track of the time.

The other thing I do is write first drafts by hand. I have an idea for a scene and the conflict between the characters and let it flow without worrying if there are enough setting detail, gestures, reactions, etc. Sometimes the scene is going so fast my hand can’t keep up with what the characters are saying or doing. That’s a great feeling. If there is a word I can’t think of or something doesn’t work, I ignore the problem and keep moving. Then I try to type it into the computer within 24 hours. That is my first real draft, and I will cut out and fill in pieces. Maybe the scene doesn’t really begin until the second page. Or it ends a page earlier than I’d written. I try not to polish it too much in this first-draft stage. After all, when the book is done, I might have to cut or revise the whole scene.

Jill: How do you organize your plotting – pantster or plotter?
Carl: I do both. My first book was heavily plotted. I had a half page of notes for every scene before I wrote it. I changed it so many times that many of those plotting points were a waste of time. Now I try to have some basic points in my outline but not be wed to them. I’m currently using Plotter to map out scenes and points of view.

Overall, I at least need some concepts of basic points: an inciting scene to launch the narrative, a big change in the middle, subplots that can stop the book from dragging, and a hopeless situation that the protagonist must resolve at the end. Plus some plot twists, of course. Steven James, a best-selling author, said the best twists are not the ones you think of first, but the ones you think of second or third.

I'm mostly being a pantser for the book I’m working on now. It is the first time I’ve written so much this way. Being a pantser frees me from having to get the characters to particular plot points I’ve got my heart set on. I also don’t have to bash my head against a stone to come up with a twist that will make the book more interesting. Just let the characters react in the way that any normal person would. Of course, this carries the risk of pulling me down a rabbit hole.

Jill: Do you have theme goals?
Carl: My general theme for all my books is that a crime forces dysfunctional families to unite to survive. My mantra is: Behind every crime is a family.  As I write the book, other themes emerge, particularly if I see an object or an action repeated. That might indicate a problem or a solution that could be worked up into a theme.

Jill: Publishing history?
Carl: It takes a long time to get published. I started 30 years ago. When I moved to San Diego I met Jacquelyn Mitchard at a writers’ conference. She helped me develop and edit the book that became Murderabilia. Jackie recommended me to her agent. We went through revisions for a year and then he told me I should find another agent. That was tough! So, I went to a conference on how to pitch a book to an acquisitions editor or agent. I used that advice in a conference in San Francisco and got an agent with a one-sentence pitch—Michelle Richter. But then there was the problem of finding a publisher. She sent it out to at least 20 of them. Murderabilia was a dark book, so only one was interested—Midnight Ink. They were a good publisher, so we went with them. Three months after we signed the contract, Midnight Ink’s parent company decided to stop publishing mysteries. We stuck with them, and they published the book, but did not give it a lot of support. My next book, Saving Myles, took me three years to write. Again, Michelle pitched to a number of publishers and Oceanview took it. They are considering my third book right now. Will they accept it? Nothing is certain in the publishing world. But I hope they do. They have been excellent to work with.

I’m glad to have the ongoing support of Michelle, my agent. Someone once told me, “A publisher buys a book, and an agent buys an author.”

Jill: How do you promote your books?
Carl: I have a website and am active with Facebook and Instagram. Plus a monthly newsletter in which I describe my writing activities, as well as a financial scandal that occurred somewhere in the world. I am the president of the San Diego chapter of Sisters in Crime, a writing organization with more than 4K members in 60 cities, including a chapter in the UK.  I’m also a member of Blackbird Writers, a group of writers who cross-promote their books. I attend and teach at writers’ conferences. And, finally, I love to talk virtually or in person to book clubs! No charge.

Contact me at CarlVonderauAuthor@gmail.com
or through my website,
www.carlvonderau.com 
if you are interested in me talking to your group.

 Jill: Have you attended book tours or writers’ conferences in the UK and other countries? 
Carl: I did attend a Left Coast Crime conference in Vancouver a few years ago, but nothing else international. But would love to do more. I’m putting the UK on my bucket list.

Jill: Which genres do you read for pleasure? 
Carl: I read extensively both crime books as well as literary ones. I prefer books with plot and a traditional narrative. I don’t read science fiction or fantasy. Those are just too long, and I’m not a fast reader.

Jill: Your most exciting book news this year?
Carl: Saving Myles has won several awards. These include: American Book Fest for Best Mystery/Suspense, PenCraft for best Suspense, and National Indie Excellence for Best Thriller. The Local Author Showcase of San Diego Central Library spotlighted it in March.

Jill: Tips/advice for budding authors?
Carl: The two key talents you need in order to get published have nothing to do with your writing ability. Those are patience and tenacity. You have to keep at it and keep getting better as a writer. The saying is that you get your whole life to publish your first book, and a year to publish your second one. Most beginning writers, including me, have thought their book was ready before it really was. You only get one chance for an editor or publisher to look at it, so make sure it is at its best before you submit. That means, not only writing it, but vetting it through a writer’s group, maybe beta readers, and through a developmental editor. A writer’s critique group will make sure your scenes and characters work. Beta readers and a developmental editor will make sure that the overall structure of your book holds together.

 


Jill Amadio hails from Cornwall, U.K, like the character in her crime series, Jill was a reporter in Spain, Colombia,  Thailand, and the U.S. She is a true crime author, ghosted a thriller, writes a column for Mystery People ezine, and freelances for My Cornwall magazine. She lives in Connecticut USA.  Her most recent book is