Tuesday, August 31, 2010

September Recommendations


'charade' is the real deal for me this month. audrey hepburn, cary grant and paris on blu ray. stanley donen's hitcockian thriller is and will always rate A+ in my book. if you've seen it see it again: if you have not seen it treat yourself. it is simply the best.


the first season of 'glee' is released. if you haven't seen it rent it and get ready for season 2 which premieres on september 21. you owe it to yourself.


and then we have season one of 'the vampire diaries' one of last year's best new tv series. i love it and it scores higher with me than 'true blood'.
season 2 begins on september 9th and i'll be there.


it is shakespere, it has kate winslet and julie christie and it's on blu ray. i need no other reasons to own it. i grant it is primarily a kenneth branagh vanity production but what the hell it still has christie and winslet. enuf said!


you needed a subscribtion to starz to see 'spartacus'. this month you can rent or own it on dvd or blu ray. this was an ambitius project and turned out to be one of the best this past season. i say go for it.


'letters to juliet' is a charmer. it's an ice crean sundae on a summer afternoon. amanda seyfried continues to shine even as vanessa redgrave steals the cherry right off her sundae. what can i say i love this type of film as much as most others when done right. this was done right.


last but not least is the first dvd only release of 1964's 'where love has gone'. based on the king of 60's trash novelist harold robbins novel it is a piece of high camp. for fans of bette davis and or susan hayward it is a must. these were the days of older actresses having to do camp or horror films to work. thank the gods this in no longer true. but as both a hayward and davis fan i can't wait to see them go at it again in living color. as far as camp films go it is an A.


these releases will also be available in september:


'poltergiest' one of the best of it's genre on blu ray.

'tommy' the who's rock musical mainly notable for tina tiurner as the acid queen on blu ray.

'harlow' a carroll baker vehicle that is good 'trashy' fun. it was done better as a carol lynley vehicle at the same time which appears to have disappeared. dvd only.


and of course


the fifth season of 'supernatural' will be released on blu ray and dvd. but for your own sake start at season 1



Passed July/August 2010


patricia neal - actress
mitch miller - tv band leader
david wolper - producer


9mm: An interview with Cat Connor

Welcome to the latest instalment in Crime Watch's ongoing series of author interviews; 9mm - 9 Murder Mystery questions put to a variety of New Zealand and international crime, thriller, and mystery authors.

We've had a bit of a run of international authors in the 9mm series, so I thought that today I would share another New Zealand writer with you. So, for the the 33rd instalment in the 9mm series, Crime Watch is talking to Upper Hutt-based author Cat Connor, the creator of the FBI Special Agent Ellie Conway series of crime thrillers and short stories.

Cat has had short stories published in several international magazines. Her first two novels, KILLERBYTE and TERRORBYTE were originally published as e-books, and both have received good reviews and featured in the Top Ten bestsellers on the Mobipocket website, with KILLERBYTE making it to the #2 position. Both books are now also available in paperback form from Amazon.com. So for you international readers of Crime Watch, Cat Connor is one of the Kiwi authors whose books you can actually get hold of, reasonably easily.

You can read the first chapter of KILLERBYTE, which was a finalist in the 2010 EPIC Awards (electronic publishing awards), here.

But for now, Cat Connor stares down the barrel of 9mm.


The Crime Watch 9mm Author Interview: Cat Connor

Who is your favourite recurring crime fiction hero/detective?
Without hesitation I can say it is… Stephanie Plum from Janet Evanovich’s Plum series. I’ve been reading the series for 13 years, ever since best friend Chrissy and I read the first and second books on a beach in Fiji. We were hooked instantly. Stephanie isn’t so much a detective as a pretty crappy bounty hunter with a detective boy friend but it’s hard not to like her. I’ve just read the sixteenth in that series. Now that Jeffrey Deaver is writing the Kathryn Dance series I’ve got another favorite.

What was the very first book you remember reading and really loving, and why?
That’s actually not an easy question. Books have always played a large part in my life, from before I could read. I enjoyed the Trixie Beldon books when I was a kid, but I think Willard Price’s Adventure series would be the books I remember the most vividly and read over and over again. Along with the James Bond series by Ian Fleming. Guess I’ve always preferred boys books more than ones aimed at girls. Let’s go with Willard Price’s Adventure series. I was a big fan of Commando comics too.

Before your debut crime novel, what else had you written (if anything) unpublished manuscripts, short stories, articles?
Before KILLERBYTE – I’d written four novels, at least two of which will one day see daylight, I hope. One of them is a NZ thriller which, when I have time, I will polish and show to my hard working publisher. I’ve also had about 14 short stories published in the USA and UK, in various magazines and ezines. After KILLERBYTE – TERRORBYTE was released, and the 3rd in the Special Agent Ellie Conway series is due out late this year, EXACERBYTE. Currently writing the 4th Conway book, both five and six are waiting polishing and revising.

Outside of writing, and touring and promotional commitments, what do you really like to do, leisure and activity-wise?
Outside of writing? There is an outside? Say it isn’t so! Being a prolific writer means it takes up a lot of my time, if I’m not writing and promoting I’m thinking about both. It’s pretty rare for me to switch off. I do enjoy spending time with my family (how dreadfully corny) and I read a lot. Also enjoy movies and I never miss NCIS on telly. Those times when I need a break – I tend to sew or dye stuff. I love to dye things, anything. But that’s more of a summer thing. (Last time I ended up with bright pink tie-dyed jeans, they really make a statement, not sure what that statement is exactly– but they really make one!)

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?
Having never seen a tourist brochure for Upper Hutt, because I live here, I’m at a loss really. Everything I can think of would be in such a brochure. Upper Hutt is more a small town than a city, even though it’s officially a city. As much as I hate to say it, it’s not exactly a tourist destination. We do have a lot of lovely parks and some of The Lord of the Rings was filmed in Harcourt Park and some of Without A Paddle a 2004 comedy (with a hint of Burt Reynolds) was filmed in Trentham Memorial Park. I fondly recall a graveyard that sprang up there during the making of the movie. A visitor should spend time in our parks or maybe doing some of the fabulous walking tracks around the hills. (Locals should too.)

If your life was a movie, which actor could you see playing you?
Sandra Bullock. When everyone stops laughing I shall explain. I just think that if any actress could cope with my life which is often crowded with a million kids and the typically interesting people I attract, it's her. The real trick is to do it while confining deaths to the plot of novels… I think she has the versatility required.


Of your books, which is your favourite, and why?
That’s a really hard question. But I have to say - TERRORBYTE, because it’s the second book and it feels a little like the red-headed step child. The world hasn’t discovered it yet and that’s just a little sad. I feel it’s a slightly different book to KILLEBYTE even though it is the second in a series and has the same protagonist – or maybe I just see if differently – it’s darker but not so dark that it makes you cringe and want to hide. It’s a fabulous book and as much as I hate to play favorites… it is mine, so far.

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?
How did I celebrate? When my first short story was accepted I spent a week grinning like an idiot, I don’t actually remember celebrating as such, but I am sure I would have. I do however remember vividly the day KILLERBYTE was accepted by Rebel E Publishers. I sent a blanket text to everyone, and called my neighbor – which was more of a scream followed by a woot than a call! A few friends gathered with bottles of wine, and we sat on the deck drinking red wine and watching the stars. It felt very much like the beginning of an amazing journey with limitless possibilities. I still feel that, probably more so now I have two more novels homed with Rebel. Each acceptance and subsequent contract is cause for much celebration. (Any excuse for a party!) The day the boxes arrived from my publisher containing my copies of both books, there was much celebrating and delight. I think over the last 18 months my Admin’s and I have kept at least one vineyard ticking over nicely.

What is the strangest or most unusual experience you have had at a book signing, author event, or literary festival?
Being terribly new to the whole game, I’ve not yet been to a book signing, author event or literary festival. I am however going to the CHCH Writer’s Festival in September – so my answer might well change! I have signed books, and sent signed bookplates overseas to people who have asked for them. I’ve given a talk at a book club. Which was terrifying, it was back when KILLERBYTE first came out, it was an eBook and trying to explain eBooks to older kiwi women who barely used email – let’s say it was interesting, in a frustrating kind of way… and I knew not one of them would read it, because none could grasp the notion of reading from a PC, laptop, iPod or iPhone. No excuse now we have paperbacks!


Thank you Cat Connor. We really appreciate you taking the time to talk with Crime Watch.

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So what do you think of this 9mm interview? Have you read any of Cat Connor's books? Do you like the sound of the Ellie Conway series? I'd love to read your comments. Please share your thoughts.

Dancing With an Unwed Christian Teenage Mom

ain't america grand

her wacko mother calls hollywood evil. the root of all things socially liberal. elite. and here goes her daughter to dance across the tv screens of america this fall live from hollywood


IDIOTS


i've never watched 'dancing with the stars' my record will not be broken


Happy Birthday Richard

Monday, August 30, 2010

'Vampire Diaries' on Blu Ray and DVD Today

one of the best shows of the 2009-2010 tv season. if you haven't seen it sink your teeth into it and rent it.









 and here's a peak at season 2 beginning thursday september 9.

 













Reminder: #1 UK bestseller Peter James at Takapuna tonight

Just a quick reminder that Peter James, the award-winning author of the Brighton-set bestselling Roy Grace series, is appearing at an event at Takapuna Library on Auckland's North Shore tonight.
Peter James will be appearing at Takapuna Library at 6:30pm (drinks at 6pm).
Entry: $5, $2 for Friends of the Library.
Contact Helen Woodhouse on (09) 486 8469 or
helenw@shorelibraries.govt.nz

You can read my feature article on Peter James (and Peter Robinson) that was in Saturday's Weekend Herald, here. In an interesting aside, when DEAD LIKE YOU (the latest Roy Grace novel) shot straight to the top of the UK Sunday Times bestseller list on its British release earlier this year, it was reportedly the first time in several years that that master of mystery writing marketing, James Patterson, was prevented from going straight to #1 with his latest book.

In DEAD LIKE YOU, the sixth in the award-winning Detective Superintendant Roy Grace series set in James's hometown of Brighton, a woman is brutally raped as she returns to her room at the Metropole Hotel after a New Years' Eve ball. A week later, another woman is attacked. Both victims’ shoes are taken by the offender . . .

Roy Grace soon realises that these new cases bear remarkable similarities to an unsolved series of crimes in the city back in 1997. The perpetrator had been dubbed ‘Shoe Man’ and was believed to have raped five women before murdering his sixth victim and vanishing. Could this be a copycat, or has Shoe Man resurfaced?

When more women are assaulted, Grace becomes increasingly certain that they are dealing with the same man. And that by delving back into the past - a time in which we see Grace and his missing wife Sandy still apparently happy together - he may find the key to unlocking the current mystery. Soon Grace and his team will find themselves in a desperate race against the clock to identify and save the life of the new sixth victim . .

You can watch a great little video interview with Peter James about writing DEAD LIKE YOU, below.



Are you a Peter James fan? Have you read any of his Roy Grace books, or his earlier spy thrillers and paranormal work (that saw him called the 'British Stephen King' at one point)? Will you be heading along to Takapuna tonight? Thoughts and comments welcome.

Meet UK crime writing sensation RJ Ellory on his NZ tour

Six years. Twenty two rejected novels. More than four hundred ‘thanks, but no thanks’ letters from over a hundred publishers. It would be easy to forgive UK crime author R.J. Ellory if he’d given up on a writing career long before getting to that point, but Ellory, who describes himself as bloody-minded, wasn’t one to let ‘a few’ rejections sway him from his course.

Finally, his persistence paid off when his first published novel, CANDLEMOTH, hit the shelves in 2004. This lead the way for another seven novels, including his bestseller, A QUIET BELIEF IN ANGELS, which won a number of prestigious prizes.

This tenacity to succeed could be attributed to the turmoil of his childhood. Abandoned by his father at birth, Ellory was sent to boarding school at seven years of age, after the death of his mother left him and his brother orphaned and alone. By seventeen, Ellory was experiencing life on the wrong side of the law, after he was caught poaching chickens.

Ellory’s story promises to be as compelling as his writing and audiences will have the opportunity to hear him speak at events in Auckland, Wellington, Nelson and Dunedin next week as part of the New Zealand tour to promote his new book SAINTS OF NEW YORK (Orion, $38.99 RRP).

Event details
  • Wednesday September 8: 6pm, Takapuna Library, Auckland
  • Thursday September 9: 12pm-1pm, Nelson Library
  • Thursday September 9: 5.30pm Marsden Books, Karori, Wellington
  • Friday September 10: 3.30pm Mosgiel Library
  • Friday September 10: 5.30pm Dunedin City Library, Dunedin

Click here: http://www.hachette.co.nz/wawcs0131017/ln-author-tours.html for ticketing details.

For more information or to request please contact:

Gemma Finlay
Orion Publicist, Hachette NZ
Ph: 09 478 1033 / 027 628 9695
gemmaf@hachette.co.nz

My Emmy Score Card






i got aaron paul, byran cranston, edie falco, archie panjabi and jane lynch.


after 5 noms kyra sedgwick finally won for her brilliant brenda lee johnson on 'the closer' so i had no problems losing that one. julianna will be up there soon enough.

hate that 'glee' didn't win but another show with good gay characters, modern family' winning is a plus.


but why doesn't the academy see that matthew morrison can do EVERYTHING!

congrats to all.


aaron and bryan

Sandra Bullock Marks Fifth Anniversary of Katrina



NEW ORLEANS — Oscar-winning actress Sandra Bullock has returned to a New Orleans high school she adopted after Hurricane Katrina to help open a health clinic there.
Bullock's appearance Sunday coincided with the fifth anniversary of the storm that devastated coastal Louisiana and Mississippi. She joined a host of politicians, educators and school supporters for the clinic's ribbon-cutting ceremony.
The free, full-service medical and dental clinic is scheduled to open in the fall. It is yet another place Bullock has left her mark at Warren Easton Charter High School. She's previously donated money to help restore Easton, which is the city's oldest public high school.
The school was swamped when Katrina and the subsequent flooding swept up to nine feet of water into its buildings.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Happy Birthday Elizabeth

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Win one of 40 double-passed to an exclusive pre-party and Setting the Stage for Murder

Those who subscribe to The Press, the major sponsor of the upcoming 2010 The Press Christchurch Writers' Festival, , now have a fantastic opportunity to win one of 40 double-passes to an exclusive pre-function with Andrew Holden, editor of The Press, and the Christchurch Book Festival Trust. Winners will also receive tickets to the marquee Setting the Stage for Murder event on Friday 10 September 2010.

As many readers will be aware, Setting the Stage for Murder is the Festival event where the presentation of the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel will take place.

If you subscribe to The Press (the major newspaper in the South Island of New Zealand), you can go into the draw for one of the 40 double passes by either:
  • TEXT the winning code to 3444. Texts cost 20c. One entry per mobile phone.
  • POST the winning code with your name and contact details to Setting the Stage, The Press, Response Bag 500054, Christchurch 8140.
  • EMAIL the winning code and contact details to win@press.co.nz

The WINNING CODE is CRIME

Competition closes Tuesday August 31. For full terms and conditions visit www.press.co.nz

'Army Wives Season 4 Scorecard gets an A Because the Season Finale Gets A+

this show is about life. army life. life has it's ups and downs. no one's life is an A. army life probably even less so. the show itself almost got a B+ for this past season but the finale lifted it higher as they say.


the show always shares the time equally between the wives. and it did so in the finale.
yet the night belonged to kim delaney and katelyn pippy playing mother and daughter respectively. they went beyond the norm acting the hell out of the script with raw emotion. brava to the both of them!
they are the best actress and supporting actress of summer 2010


'Royal Pains': Second Season Score Card: A


 'royal pains' rates an A with it's season finale. it lost it's A status awile back with the casting of anastasia griifith as emily peck who we were spared from in the seasonal finale but was talked about. so is she gone? we'll see. 

but all of the following lead to it's regaining it's A status.

the missing ms. griffith.

the season finale brought christine ebersole back and that's worth a thousand points.

brooke d'orsay as evans gf seems to be becoming recurring. worth at least 750 points.

and then surprise surprise in walks the wonderful, talented and beautiful rena sofer. it looks like she could be recurring. worth 1500 points. she is always welcome into my living room. nonono i have not switched. i'm still happily and proudly gay.

the four series regulars mark feuerstein,  paolo costanzo, jill flint and reshma shetty continue to brighten a summer night.

rena


brooke


christine


the series regulars


A tale of two Peters: my feature on Peter James and Peter Robinson in the Weekend Herald


As I mentioned earlier, the Weekend Herald (New Zealand's biggest newspaper) have now kindly allowed me to republish any articles I have or will write for them, online. So today I am sharing my 1000-word feature on two fantastic British crime writers - Peter James and Peter Robinson. The feature was in the books section of the Canvas magazine (the glossy lifestyle supplement) over the weekend, as both writers are in New Zealand this week.


A tale of two Peters
Two big names in British thriller writing visit New Zealand next week. Craig Sisterson talks to Peter James and Peter Robinson

WHEN PUBLISHER Macmillan approached Peter James in 2001 and asked whether the bestselling British author had ever considered writing a crime novel, the answer was simple. “It was what I’d always wanted to do,” says James, his voice reverberating down the phone line from Nevada, where he’s doing research for his next Roy Grace book before heading downunder to promote his latest, Dead Like You.

James already had twenty years as a published author, and 16 novels - a mixture of spy thrillers and supernatural suspense and horror - under his belt at the time, so switching genres may have seemed an unusual move. But James had “several years of developing relationships with the police”, thanks to research for minor characters in his earlier novels.

“And when I went out to create a new detective, I thought, right, the first thing I have to do is immerse myself utterly in police culture,” adds James, noting that those who work in law enforcement have a different outlook on the everyday world than most people. “I call it a healthy culture of suspicion. But it permeates all their lives.”

In contrast, Peter Robinson dove straight into police procedurals with his debut novel in 1987, introducing the now-beloved Detective Chief Inspector Alan Banks to the world in Gallows View. But like James, Robinson too had concentrated on other types of writing before turning to crime; he had penned poetry and short stories.

In fact Robinson studied poetry, completing an MA at the University of Windsor in Canada under Joyce Carol Oates and a PhD at York University. “I found myself getting more interested in form and structure, tightening it up, and going into rhyme, meter, and writing poems that made sense, and even told stories.” At the time “nobody wanted that” from poets, preferring unstructured free verse, and so Robinson turned to prose because he “was telling stories anyway”.

“I’d enjoyed reading crime fiction, so that’s what took me to crime writing,” he says. “I’d read Chandler, Simenon, Macdonald, just about everybody. And it was so great, I thought ‘I want to do this’. Sjöwall and Wahlöö, the Martin Beck books, they were a tremendous influence.” Almost 25 years later Robinson is still writing about Inspector Banks, and this month Bad Boy, the 19th novel in the award-winning Yorkshire-set series, was published in New Zealand.

Both Robinson and James say they first fell in love with mystery stories thanks to Enid Blyton’s Famous Five novels, and each says that Sherlock Holmes is their favourite recurring detective of all time. “He is still the most enduring to me of all the fictional characters ever created,” says James. “He was sort of the pioneer of forensics, and I just think he is such a wonderful character, despite the fact he was completely eccentric.”

Neither James’s Roy Grace nor Robinson’s Alan Banks have anywhere near Holmes’s level of eccentricity, but each has become a popular character in crime fiction, beloved by fans and with a few touches that reflect their creator’s own interests; Banks is a big music fan, while Grace has an interest in the paranormal.

James and Robinson each also show a wonderful touch for setting in their crime novels, with their detectives solving crimes in the authors own childhood backyards - Brighton and Yorkshire respectively. “Setting is really important because if you want to make a crime novel believable, then it needs to be in a context where people who read it can visualise it, they can completely feel it from the way you describe it,” says James. “Then you set the crime against that backdrop and it’s much more real and brings the book alive.”

For James, his hometown of Brighton is perfect for crime novels. “It’s been called the crime capital of England since 1944,” he says with a chuckle. “It started off as a smuggling village in the Middle Ages, and it’s always had this kind of dark criminal undertow.” A combination of easy access and escape routes, with sea ports, Channel Tunnel, rail, and motorway hubs nearby, a conflagration of diverse communities, and the fact it’s “a really nice place to live and work” provides fertile ground for crime - real and fictional.

In Dead Like You a series of rapes in Brighton reactivate a cold case, and readers are given more insight into the character of Roy Grace, as the narrative switches between the present and the past - a time before Grace’s wife Sandy went missing.


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When I went out to create a new detective, I thought, right, first thing I have to do is immerse myself utterly in police culture.
Peter James

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For Robinson, who now lives in Toronto but still sets his crime novels ‘back home’, Yorkshire is likewise an ideal backdrop. The largest county in England combines pristine countryside with industrial areas (coal, steel, textiles), big cities like Leeds and Bradford with historic towns from Roman times, and a gorgeous coastline. “I think I wanted the best of both worlds,” says Robinson. “I wanted to do things that used the sense of isolation you can get in North Yorkshire, where you can roam the dales for a day without seeing another soul, but I also wanted to be able to bring kind of urban-based crime writing to it.”

Robinson has thrown a lot of tricky situations at Banks over the course of the series, but in Bad Boy he faces his biggest dilemma yet - his daughter Tracy is on the run with a very dangerous man. Although the Chief Inspector’s family life has featured in several of the novels, Robinson says he felt he “hadn’t really said much about his relationship with his daughter for quite a while”, and that inspired Bad Boy.

The first in what could become a series of Banks TV adaptations, Aftermath, is due to screen in Britain next month, with Stephen Tompkinson of Wild at Heart fame in the lead role. “I read the scripts and went to the read-through, and I was on-set about three times while they were filming it,” says Robinson, sounding a little like a proud father. James is also involved in the screen world, having been a film producer for many years. His credits include The Merchant of Venice with Al Pacino and Jeremy Irons, and the New Zealand-filmed vampire tale Perfect Creature.

Both authors have visited New Zealand before (James has family in Hamilton), and say they are really looking forward to returning to our shores this coming week. James will be making some public appearances, while Robinson is holidaying around the North Island with his wife.


Bad Boy (Hodder & Stoughton, $38.99)

Dead Like You (Macmillan, $38.99)

Peter James will be appearing at the Takapuna Library at 6:30pm (drinks at 6pm) on Tuesday 31 August. Entry: $5, $2 for Friends of the Library.
Contact Helen Woodhouse on (09) 486 8469 or helenw@shorelibraries.govt.nz


This feature article was first published in the Canvas magazine of the Weekend Herald on Saturday 28 August 2010, and is reprinted here with permission.

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So what do you think of my feature article ? Of the Weekend Herald allowing me to share my past and future features for them, with you all here on Crime Watch? Have you read any of the Roy Grace or Alan Banks novels? How important is setting in crime writing? Thoughts and comments welcome.

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Forgotten Kiwi crime writer: V. Merle Grayland

As I noted last month, and some of you would no doubt have already been aware of, for some time now I have been gradually searching out lesser-known Kiwi crime, mystery and thriller writers from both modern times and days gone by (and where possible, acquiring some of their books).

It has been quite a surprising journey, especially as I have come across several lesser-known or otherwise forgotten Kiwi writers who produced several crime novels in their time. Many were even quite popular, but have now been largely (completely?) forgotten

Regular readers may recall the completely unexpected comments and happenings that eventuated after I stumbled across the works of Wellington writer Laurie Mantell (five Steve Arrow murder mysteries, 1978-1984, plus a standalone in the lates 1990s) earlier this year.

I have also previously touched on the likes of Freda Bream (who while retired published 13 murder mysteries starring the Rev Jabal Jarrett between 1982-1997), Edmund Bohan (who wrote five historic Inspector O'Rorke novels between 1996-2003), Carol Dawber (who wrote three Top of the South-set mysteries around the same period), and Elizabeth Messenger (who wrote at least nine crime thrillers that I know of, in the 1950s-1960s).

Another such forgotten Kiwi crime writer I recently 'discovered' thanks to the back cover of an old circa 1960s Elizabeth Messenger hardcover, is V. Merle Grayland. According to the sleeve of the copy of THE GRAVE-DIGGER'S APPRENTICE that I've managed to acquire:

"Valerie Merle Grayland was born in the old New Zealand gold-mining town of Thames. She has been writing since she was seven, when her first short story was published in the children's page of a newspaper. She had had numerous short stories and articles published and for a time concentrated on humourous writing. She is married to a New Zealand journalist and author, Eugene C. Grayland and together they run a small private press as a hobby; the Colenso Press, named after one of New Zealand's pioneer printers, William Colenso. She also enjoys reading, gardening and cats, but most of all seeing New Zealand."

It seems that as well as writing other books under her name Valerie Grayland, Valerie also collaborated with her husband Eugene on some New Zealand non fiction geography/history style books focused on the region where she live das well, eg TARAWERA, HISTORIC COROMANDEL, and COROMANDEL COAST.

In terms of her crime fiction, the 'blurb' for THE GRAVE-DIGGER'S APPRENTICE, which was published by London's Robert Hale and New Zealand's Whitcombe & Tombs in 1964, says:

"What was wrong with the lanky Benny Meer? What was he frightened of and why was he so interested in death? Why did he haunt cemeteries asking questions about a grave that did not seem to exist? And who put the poison in the pie - and why? Maori Detective Hoani Mata and his old friend, Inspector Plimsoll, seek the answers to these and other puzzling questions in a crime investigation with an unusual angle to it. Although The Grave-Digger's Apprentice was a name given in jest it proved to have a sinister double meaning in this New Zealand double murder case."

According to the inside flap, V. Merle Grayland wrote at least two other crime thrillers:
  • THE DEAD MEN OF EDEN
  • NIGHT OF THE REAPER

I've also seen mentioned elsewhere on the Internet a book called JEST OF DARKNESS by V. Merle Grayland, so it seems Valerie Grayland wrote at least four crime thrillers under this semi-pseudonym.

Have any of you heard of V (Valerie) Merle Grayland? Read any of her work, crime fiction or otherwise? Do you like stumbling over long-forgotten crime writers? Seeing the difference between crime writing then and now? And what is it about the smell of old books? Thoughts and comments welcome.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Crime Fiction in the news and on the 'Net: Weekly Round-up

There's been some more great crime fiction stories on the Web this past week - from newspapers, magazines, and fellow bloggers. Hopefully you will all like finding an interesting article or two linked here, that you enjoy reading.

Just before I dive into the latest stories however, I thought I'd note that despite my previous comments about the Weekend Herald rarely putting its books features or reviews online (one of the reasons they have allowed me to republish my stories for them here on Crime Watch), that my feature on Val McDermid from last weekend's edition was also uploaded to the main NZ Herald website early this past week.

You can read that article in full here. I'm not sure if this recent inclusion of such crime fiction reviews and features on the main Herald website will continue (I have a feature on Peter James and Peter Robinson in today's Canvas magazine in the Weekend Herald, so I will keep an eye out for if or when they place that online), but I will let you know. You can also read my recent James Lee Burke feature, "Philosopher of Crime", and my feature/review of Ben Sanders and his (now #1 bestselling) debut THE FALLEN, online on the Herald website.

If you've read and liked my stories, whether here on Crime Watch, in the print version, or online on the Herald website, it would be cool if you went to the Herald website (click on the links above) and hit the 'like' button and/or leave a comment - it might encourage them to put more crime fiction stories online in future. I have upcoming features on Michael Robotham and Michael Connelly as well, in the coming weeks.

Crime Watch Weekly Round-Up: In the News and on the 'Net

What do you think of the round-up? Which articles do you find interesting? Is there a place for magic and the supernatural in crime fiction? What do you think of crime that leans heavily to the literary, like Temple's TRUTH or McNeish's THE CRIME OF HUEY DUNSTAN? Have you tried Adrian Hyland's Outback crime tales? Did you ever watch Twin Peaks? Have you read BLACKLANDS by Belinda Bauer? Please share your thoughts. I'd love to read what you think.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Dream debut continues for #1 bestseller Ben Sanders

What a month it's been for young North Shore crime writer Ben Sanders.

Over the past few weeks he and his debut novel, THE FALLEN, have been featured by several of New Zealand's biggest media players (eg the Weekend Herald, the Sunday Star-Times, TVNZ), and mentioned in several others as well, and now for the third week in a row THE FALLEN sits atop the New Zealand Adult Fiction bestseller list!

You can watch a short 5mins long clip of Ben Sanders being interviewed by Paul Henry and Pippa Wetzell on Breakfast, the popular TVNZ morning show here. For those of you outside of Australia and New Zealand, I understand a Kindle edition of THE FALLEN is due to be released on Amazon.com in September.

Paul Thomas's IHAKA TRILOGY (Old School Tie, Inside Dope and Guerilla Season) also holds its place at #3 in its third week on the charts. With Alix Bosco's SLAUGHTER FALLS also out now, Donna Malane's SURRENDER coming out in September, and the publicity being generated about New Zealand crime fiction in the lead-up to the presentation of the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel, at The Press Christchurch Writers' Festival, in just two weeks' time, hopefully Kiwi readers will continue to give our locally-written crime novels a go.

Have you read THE FALLEN? Are you intending to? Do you think it's a contender for the 2011 Ngaio Marsh Award? What other great Kiwi crime have you read this year? What are your thoughts on the increasing publicity and prominence (relatively speaking) of Kiwi crime fiction lately? Long overdue? A cause for optimism? A false dawn? Thoughts and comments welcome.

CWA to run crime writing initiatives again in 2011


The Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) has announced that it will again run two highly successful initiatives introduced in the past year.

National Crime Writing Week, formerly National Crime Fiction Week, will run between June 13 and 19, 2011. The name change is designed to increase the emphasis on non-fiction as well as fiction. A nationwide celebration of crime writing, the week will also see the culmination of the successful CWA Young Crime Writers’ Competition, which was run by libraries and the CWA this year and attracted 600 entries nationwide.

Both the week and competition ran for the first time this year and CWA Chair Tom Harper said: “We were delighted with the way both initiatives went. Our idea was to raise the profile of crime writing with all age groups and the success of both the dedicated crime writing week and the competition achieved just that. Crime Writing Week is an opportunity for writers to arrange events under the umbrella of a week dedicated to celebrating crime books in all their forms. It is an excellent showcase for writers.”

During the week, members of the CWA will take part in readings, discussions, readers’ group events and workshops all over the country. If you have a Crime Writing Week event in mind, you will be able to log the details on a national map of events at http://www.nationalcrimewritingweek.co.uk/

National Crime Writing Week will be coordinated by CWA press officer John Dean at media.enquiries@thecwa.co.uk

The Young Crime Writers' Competition, which will run from January 10 - 18 Feb, 2011, will again be organised in association with library authorities. Stories will again be judged by members of the CWA. More information will be released later in the year.

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

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Review of DEATH IN THE LATIN QUARTER

In the latest of what will become a much more frequent occurrence in the coming weeks and months, today we have another great 'guest review' on Crime Watch. Moving forward, as well as my own reviews, and links to my own or others' relevant reviews published elsewhere, Crime Watch will also include guest reviewers writing crime and thriller fiction reviews specifically for this site. If you would like to contribute such a review, please let me know.

Sarah Gumbley (pictured above right) is an Auckland based book reviewer, who reads a lot of literary fiction, biographies, and other non-fiction works, as well as enjoying some crime and thriler fiction. She has also reviewed for Good Reading, NZLawyer, and Scoop Review of Books in the past.

Sarah has also set up her own excellent and growing books-related website, Literatlas, which aims to encourage readers around the globe to value books and their impact on the world. You can visit her site here and its Facebook page here.

Today, Sarah reviews DEATH IN THE LATIN QUARTER by Raphael Cardetti - "in Paris the magnificent tranquillity of the Sorbonne university is shattered by a death".


DEATH IN THE LATIN QUARTER
By Raphael Cardetti (Abacus, July 2010)
Reviewed by Sarah Gumbley
They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. Love it or hate it, Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code spurred a flurry of crime fiction books based in the art world, all hoping to emulate its success. Cardetti, a French author, was no different with his debut novel, Death in the Latin Quarter. Like Brown’s bestseller, it wanders between the present day and events in ancient times, reveals sins of leaders in the Catholic Church and focuses on crimes involving precious artworks. Originally written in French, the English version has recently been released.

Set in Paris, Death in the Latin Quarter revolves around a mysterious book that would confirm the existence of Vasalis, a (fictional) monk from the time of (the real) Pope Clement IV. Vasalis was considered a heretic for his publishing of De forma mundi but had since faded into oblivion and become merely a myth. The hunt for evidence of Vasalis had taken place for decades, but four people in particular find their search comes with deadly consequences.

First there is the Professor, Albert Cadas at Sorbonne University in Paris. He had been there as long as anyone could remember, so it comes as a shock when one day he supposedly commits suicide by jumping out the window of his office. It is especially shocking to his student, David Scotto, under his guidance for his PHD, which was focused around Vasalis at his Professor’s insistence. But if he didn’t commit suicide, what happened to him? Scotto is determined to find out.

Then there’s Valentine Savi, once the Lourve’s top art restorer, she had since faded into oblivion since a scandal at her former workplace in 2007. At the time, she had been working on a Da Vinci sketch when she accidentally destroyed it, leaving not only the painting, but also her career in ruins. Since then she had worked in a tiny workshop restoring insignificant family paintings. Until one day, Elias Stern, the biggest name in the art world comes knocking on her workshop door asking her to come and work for him. He still believes she’s the best restorer around despite the scandal, and needs her help on an important project: he’s found a book that may just prove this mysterious Vasalis is real after all.

The author, Raphael Cardetti, knows his setting well. He is currently a Professor of Italian History at the Sorbonne University. Perhaps this is what has allowed him to write the setting and its characters with such ease. It is a reasonably enjoyable read and the translator has done an impressive job of maintaining the feel and piece of the story, which can so easily be lost. Towards the end of the story it does becomes somewhat of an unexpected and unrealistic blood bath. But personally, while overdone, I do find murders in the art world make a particularly interesting type of criminal activity.

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So, what do you think of Sarah's review? Do you like the Guest Reviews addition to Crime Watch? Do you like the sound of DEATH IN THE LATIN QUARTER? Does crime and thriller fiction set in the art or university worlds appeal? Thoughts and comments welcome.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Win a full set of the Ngaio Marsh Award finalists!



In celebration of the fact that they publish or distribute all three of the finalists for the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel, Penguin Group (NZ) are "giving you the chance to win a set of these three chilling titles . . ."

Unfortunately for Crime Watch's international readers, the Penguin competition is only open to New Zealand residents - but never fear, I will have a new giveaway for you to enter soon! In the meantime, New Zealand readers should get their names into the draw to win a full set of these cracking crime novels, and international readers should head along to Amazon etc to pick up their own copies.

TO ENTER THE PRIZE DRAW:

  • Step 1: Sign-up to Penguin NZ's online newsletter, Penguin Post, so they can keep you up to date with their latest books, news and chances to win even more great prizes.
  • Step 2: Email your name, address and phone number to web@penguin.co.nz with the subject line 'CRIME' and you're in the draw!

Entries close 5pm 31st August. Winner drawn 1st September. Terms & conditions.

As I noted earlier, the three finalists for the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel are:

The winner of the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel will be announced at a ceremony at the conclusion of the “Setting the Stage for Murder” event at the Festival on the evening of Friday 10 September 2010.

The international judges said CUT & RUN was “complex and suspenseful” and had “scenes and incidents which are jaw-droppingly good”, that BURIAL “maintained the tension and the atmosphere from beginning to end, keeping the atmosphere creepy”, and that CONTAINMENT had “an attractive series heroine (feisty but vulnerable)” while starting with a “superb” opening scene that by itself would make the judge “want to read more Vanda Symon”.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Murder in the blood: my feature on Val McDermid in the Weekend Herald



Click on the picture above to read my feature article on 2010 Cartier Diamond Dagger recipient Val McDermid, from Saturday's Weekend Herald (they have put this article online at their own website, which is cool). Val spoke to me about the contaminating effect of violence, the evolution of crime fiction since the 'Golden Age', and several other topics. Read the full article here.

Thoughts and comments welcome.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

9mm: An interview with Sophie Hannah

Welcome to the latest instalment in Crime Watch's ongoing series of author interviews; 9mm - 9 Murder Mystery questions put to a variety of New Zealand and international crime, thriller, and mystery authors.

For the 33rd instalment in the 9mm series, Crime Watch is talking to the multi-talented Sophie Hannah, who along with being a bestselling crime writer, is also an acclaimed poet, short story writer, and children's author. Her poetry has been shortlisted for the TS Eliot Award, and is studied at British high schools. From a crime writing perspective, Hannah has penned five acclaimed psychological suspense novels - her latest being A ROOM SWEPT WHITE, which was released in harback earlier this year and came in paperback this month.

The blurb for A ROOM SWEPT WHITE says: "TV producer Fliss Benson receives an anonymous card at work. The card has sixteen numbers on it, arranged in four rows of four - numbers that mean nothing to her. On the same day, Fliss finds out she's going to be working on a documentary about miscarriages of justice involving cot death mothers wrongly accused of murder. The documentary will focus on three women: Helen Yardley, Sarah Jaggard and Rachel Hind. All three women are now free, and the doctor who did her best to send them to prison for life, child protection zealot Dr Judith Duffy, is under investigation for misconduct.

For reasons she has shared with nobody, this is the last project Fliss wants to be working on. And then Helen Yardley is found dead at her home, and in her pocket is a card with sixteen numbers on it, arranged in four rows of four..."

"Hannah seems almost unable to put a foot wrong in the arena of the psychological thriller," said Barry Forshaw (who knows a thing or two about quality British crime and thriller writing) in a review. It certainly sounds like an intriguing premise to me, and is a thriller I'm very much looking forward to enjoying over the next couple of days (I just started it yesterday).

Last month I posted about Hannah, who has been a fellow at both Oxford and Cambridge, admitting in an interview that she doesn't mind being called a crime writer, while at the same time rejecting the value judgments others sometimes place on the label. You can read more about her thoughts on such subjects here.

But for now Sophie Hannah stares down the barrel of 9mm.


THE CRIME WATCH 9MM INTERVIEW: SOPHIE HANNAH


Who is your favourite recurring crime fiction hero/detective?
I have lots of favourites: Val McDermid's Tony Hill, Ruth Rendell's Inspectors Wexford and Burden, Colin Dexter's Inspector Morse and Sergeant Lewis. Miss Marple, of course - I marginally prefer her to Hercule Poirot, but I'm a fan of his too!

What was the very first book you remember reading and really loving, and why?
As a child, I loved Enid Blyton's Secret Seven mysteries and E W Hildick's McGurk mystery series. In both cases, what I loved was the mysteries - I can remember thinking, even aged about six or seven, that a story with a mystery in it was infinitely superior to one without.

Before your debut crime novel, what else had you written (if anything) unpublished manuscripts, short stories, articles?
I had published two children's books, four poetry books and three novels that were not in the crime/suspense genre. They did contain mysteries, but were mainly darkly comic novels, if I had to try and define their genre. Those novels were 'Gripless', 'Cordial and Corrosive', and 'The Superpower of Love'. They're out of print now, which I'm quite pleased about, because I don't think they're fully mature - though of course I thought they were when I wrote them!

Outside of writing, and touring and promotional commitments, what do you really like to do, leisure and activity-wise?
I am an obsessive swimmer, and ideally like to swim seventy or eighty lengths a day. I'm also an obsessive surfer of property websites, and occasionally I go and view houses even when I'm not in the market for a house, purely because I love looking round houses.

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 live in Cambridge. I lived here twelve years ago, then had to leave because of my husband's job. When he gave up his job last year to be a man of leisure, we immediately moved back to Cambridge because we both honestly believe it can't be beaten, as a place. So I suppose the one thing I think tourists in Cambridge should do is move here!

If your life was a movie, which actor could you see playing you?
Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio - we both have curly hair!

Of your books, which is your favourite, and why?
I don't have a favourite. They're all my favourites in different ways.


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 in Bath, on my way to an appearance at a literature festival, when I heard that my first crime novel, Little Face, had been accepted for publication by Hodder. I drifted around in an ecstatic haze for about two days. As a result, I now adore Bath, because I associate it with that moment of perfect happiness.

What is the strangest or most unusual experience you have had at a book signing, author event, or literary festival?
Before I became a crime writer, when I mainly did poetry readings, a man from one of my audiences came up to me after the reading and said, 'Do you know, I've never slept with a poet before.' It was the word 'before' that particularly alarmed me!


Thank you Sophie Hannah. We really appreciate you taking the time to talk with Crime Watch.

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So what do you think of this 9mm interview? Have you read any of Sophie Hannah's psychological thrillers? Her poetry or other writing? If so, what did you think? I'd love to read your comments. Please share your thoughts.

Saturday, August 21, 2010

On the case: Ngaio Marsh Award and Kiwi crime fiction highlighted by major New Zealand newspapers


In the lead-up to the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel, the growth and quality of New Zealand crime and thriller fiction is pleasantly getting itself in the mainstream news a little more. Following on from last weekend's excellent "Fiction: It's a Crime Wave" overview by Mark Broatch in the Sunday Star-Times (read here), this weekend there is a three-page feature by Philip Matthews in the glossy 'Your Weekend' lifestyle magazine supplement, which is included in the weekend editions of the Dominion Post and The Press (and, I understand, possibly the Waikato Times as well).

In an article entitled "On the case", Matthews notes "There's a spree of crimewriting going on in New Zealand, culminating in the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel at the Christchurch Writers Festival next month" before getting comments from the likes of Graham Beattie, Chad Taylor, Vanda Symon, and yours truly (talk about your donkey running with thoroughbreds) about the state of the Kiwi crime novel, and the gradual move towards a greater appreciation for the mystery, crime and thriller genre in this country.

It's an interesting read. So if you're anywhere we you can get your hands on the weekend editions of the Dominion Post, The Press, or the Waikato Times, grab a copy and turn to page 12 of 'Your Weekend'., and then let me know what you think. For everyone overseas, if the article isn't placed online on the Fairfax website in the coming days (http://www.stuff.co.nz/), I will see whether I can get permission to republish it online, here on Crime Watch.

Who are your favourite Kiwi crime writers? Which authors have you heard of and would like to try? Who should win the inaugural Ngaio Marsh Award? Thoughts and comments welcome.