Showing posts with label Avon Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Avon Books. Show all posts

Thursday, 4 July 2019

BEST OF CRIME with Katerina Diamond

Welcome to my latest BEST OF CRIME feature, looking at crime writers' top picks, from their favourite author and fictional detective to their best writing tip. 




Today I'm delighted to welcome 

KATERINA DIAMOND


to share her BEST OF CRIME ...




... AUTHORS
Too many great authors around at the moment and crime fiction is really experiencing a boom of talent. For my top author of the moment, I'm going to say Sarah Pinborough. 


... FILMS/MOVIES
Anyone who knows me knows that I practically mainline Movies and TV – I even watch TV while I am writing. I have so many favourite thrillers: Taken, Murder by numbers, Copycat, Manhunter and so many more but if I had to pick one, and its one that I watch a couple of times every year because of its brilliant cast and acting its got to be Internal Affairs.


... TV DRAMAS
Oh dear, where to even start? There are so many amazing TV dramas these days. I do gravitate towards crime based shows anyway – some of my favourites include The Wire, Justified, Hannibal, The Shield, Southland, Deadwood ~ really far too many to even list but if I had to pick one, and again, I watch this entire series at least once a year because of its hard-hitting and gripping storylines, excellent characterisation and tragically complex relationships  – I pick Oz


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
This is a pretty easy one for me, my life-long obsession with Batman started before I can actually remember. There is something horribly chilling about the unpredictability, hedonism and sadism of The Joker.


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES 
Following on from my previous answer, it’s most definitely Batman. I have several graphic novels that I have collected over the years. What I like most is how he plans for every eventuality, he always thinks five steps ahead of the person he is investigating and for that reason he always wins. I know its probably not considered classic crime but created in 1939 for DC (Detective Comics), he’s passed the test of time, With two television series, countless animation and TV spin offs.  He’s the only man for me. 


... MURDER WEAPONS
I imagine this has come up before but in the Tales of the Unexpected story, there's the woman who kills her husband with the frozen leg of lamb, cooks it and then serves it to the police officers, genius.


... DEATH SCENE
I have recently re-read Red Dragon and I did really enjoy the Dolarhyde passages, he was so completely messed up and the way he killed was awful but the backstory gave it a certain poetry. A truly sinister individual. Killing whole families and putting mirrors in their eyes so that he can watch himself transform into The Red Dragon.  


... BLOGS/WEBSITES
This is a tricky one – but I always look up houses and base my characters homes on ones I find on rightmove.co.uk.


... WRITING TIPS
Power through your first draft to the end, edit afterwards. Getting those words down and a basic story is a major hurdle and you can then take your time making it brilliant. No one’s first draft is brilliant. 


... WRITING SNACKS
I am a sucker for halloumi, I tend to write most in the mornings and grilled halloumi is quick to make and filling.  


About KATERINA DIAMOND
Katerina is the author of the Sunday Times Best Selling Exeter-based crime thriller series - starting with The Teacher and followed by The SecretThe AngelThe Promise and Truth or Die. Katerina is currently working on her seventh novel, which is a standalone.
Katerina also runs the Facebook book group CRIME SUSPECT with several other crime authors. 
Katerina currently lives in East Kent. Katerina was born in Weston-super-Mare and has lived in various places since including Greece, Cyprus, Derby, East London and Exeter. Katerina watches way too much TV.

Find Katerina Diamond on her website and on Twitter - @TheVenomousPen


About TRUTH OR DIE




Publisher's description
When Professor Hugh Norris is found brutally murdered at Exeter university, DS Imogen Grey and DS Adrian Miles turn to the students for answers. Who would target a seemingly innocent man – and why? Someone knows more than they’re letting on – and they’re playing a very sinister game. A game so dark, it will shake the university to its core…
As another professor is found butchered and the death toll begins to rise, the police have to examine their own pasts to uncover the person behind the killings – before it’s too late. But are they brave enough to face up to the truth?

Truth or Die is being published by Avon on 11 July 2019.


Look out for more BEST OF CRIME features coming soon.

Click here to read more BEST OF CRIME features.

Wednesday, 24 October 2018

BEST OF CRIME with Mel Sherratt

Welcome to my latest BEST OF CRIME feature, looking at crime writers' top picks, from their favourite author and fictional detective to their best writing tip. 




Today I'm delighted to welcome 

MEL SHERRATT

for her Hush Hush blog tour

to share her BEST OF CRIME ...




... AUTHORS
At the moment, it’s Cara Hunter. She has two books out in a series, and a third on its way that I have read too, as an early copy. She writes police procedurals. I find her style so energetic, raw and her storylines and plots so fast and furious that I can’t turn the pages quick enough. Her main character, DI Adam Fawley, reminds me so much of David Tennant in Broadchurch that I almost imagine it is him as I read.


... FILMS/MOVIES
Seven is one of my all-time favourites as I find it so cleverly plotted, dark and disgusting and yet compelling at the same time. Morgan Freeman is one of my favourite actors too. 

The first time I watched it, I had no idea what was going on, and then when it all became clear, I thought it was so clever. So much so that I used the same method for one of my novels – can’t tell you which one though!


... TV DRAMAS
Line of Duty. Although there is a huge amount of poetic license in the procedural element of the plot that has me shouting at the TV a fair amount of times, this is a show that is built on fantastic recurring characters, and a sense of being right there in the room in the investigation with them. I remember one scene being in the interview room for the whole hour and it was so tense. I was sitting on the edge of my seat. Vicky McClure is one of my favourite actresses too.


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
Bonnie and Clyde. A love story within with the violence. 


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES 
I thoroughly enjoy the lead detectives in the series Unforgotten. Nicola Walker is a terrific actress and with her DI, I just love their ‘ordinariness.’ I pride myself in keeping my characters as ordinary as possible. They may have colourful backgrounds but they are nice to their colleagues and families. I like that sense of normality. As well, the emotion they bring to each show and then the ability to flip that to a one line of humour is great writing.  


... MURDER WEAPONS
That would have to be death by chocolate…
    

... DEATH SCENES
It has to be the shoot out at the end of Enemy of the State, where Will Smith is playing one crime family against another. The way he plays them both is just genius, and I love how he comes out of it after climbing under the table to hide. 
  

... BLOGS/WEBSITES
Research for my novels is so varied that there is never the one, and always a few new ones with each subject I tackle. I tend to buy a lot of non-fiction books on each subject I write about too. 


... WRITING TIPS
I use a Twitter hashtag #keeponkeepingon so I guess that would be my writing tip. It’s so easy to get carried away in the first few happy chapters as we get to know our characters. Then comes the middle muddle and often that’s where writers stop because they have lost the momentum, and the faith to see it through to the end. My advice would be to carry on – write a ‘dirty’ first draft that no one will see. Once the words are down, they can always be edited. No one can edit a blank page. 


... WRITING SNACKS
Coffee and a biscuit. Any biscuit will do, but cake is much better. 


About MEL SHERRATT
Mel Sherratt is the author of ten novels, all of which have become bestsellers. In 2017, she was named as one of her home town of Stoke-on-Trent’s top 100 influential people.
She lives in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, with her husband and terrier, Dexter.

Find Mel Sherratt on her website, on her Facebook page and on Twitter - @writermels


About HUSH HUSH



Publisher's description
A killer is on the loose, attacking people in places they feel most safe: their workplaces, their homes. It’s up to DS Grace Allendale to stop the murders, and prove herself to her new team.
All clues lead to local crime family the Steeles, but that’s where things get complicated. Because the Steeles aren’t just any family, they’re Grace’s family. Two brothers and two sisters, connected by the violent father only Grace and her mother escaped.
To catch the killer, Grace will have to choose between her team and her blood. But who do you trust, when both sides are out to get you?


Hush Hush was published by Avon in paperback on 18 October 2018.


Look out for more BEST OF CRIME features coming soon.

Click here to read more BEST OF CRIME features.

Follow the Blog Tour


Thursday, 19 April 2018

The Fear by Cally Taylor

I am delighted to be today's stop on the blog tour for The Fear by CL Taylor. The Fear was published by Avon on 22 March 2018.

The Fear
By Cally Taylor
Published by Avon (22 March 2018)
I received an Advance Reader Copy from the publisher



Publisher's description
Sometimes your first love won’t let you go…
When Lou Wandsworth ran away to France with her teacher Mike Hughes, she thought he was the love of her life. But Mike wasn’t what he seemed and he left her life in pieces.
Now 32, Lou discovers that he is involved with teenager Chloe Meadows. Determined to make sure history doesn’t repeat itself, she returns home to confront him for the damage he’s caused.
But Mike is a predator of the worst kind, and as Lou tries to bring him to justice, it’s clear that she could once again become his prey…

My verdict
The Fear is a very dark read, covering strong themes such as grooming, child abuse and revenge. It's definitely CL Taylor's darkest book yet and the well-drawn characters certainly got under my skin.

This is the story of Mike Hughes, a martial arts instructor, who groomed a young teenager, Lou, and then ran away with her to France. Eighteen years on, Lou has finally returned to her childhood home, planning to confront her past so that she can finally put it behind her. She's hoping that after his spell in prison, Mike has changed. But instead, she discovers he is up to his old tricks again, this time with a young teenage girl called Chloe. Lou tries to steer clear but realises she needs to protect Chloe and stop Mike destroying another young girl's life.

The story is narrated by Lou, Chloe and a mysterious woman called Wendy. I guessed some twists early on, but they didn't detract from my enjoyment, and I certainly didn't predict some of the later events (see below). I assume the book was originally set in the present day and then the whole timeline was shifted back 10 years, without changing some of the factual content, such as references to modern social media. But again, this didn't detract from the plot and, after a while, I stopped 'Googling' everything to make sure I wasn't going mad.

The Fear is a fast-paced thriller and very easy to gobble up in one sitting. It features some graphic scenes and disturbing content, but these are handled with sensitivity. I'm reluctant to call the book 'entertaining' due to the topics it covers - 'compelling' and 'addictive' may be more appropriate words to use - but there were certainly some highly memorable, totally crazy and perhaps a little far-fetched scenes towards the end.

If you like twisty psychological thrillers, with strong characters and an unpredictable plot, and don't mind difficult subject matter, then add The Fear to your shopping list.

Follow the Blog Tour


Thursday, 15 February 2018

BEST OF CRIME with James Nally

Welcome to my latest BEST OF CRIME feature, looking at crime writers' top picks, from their favourite author and fictional detective to their best writing tip. 




Today I'm delighted to welcome 

JAMES NALLY


to share his BEST OF CRIME ...



... AUTHORS
Tana French, such relatable characters and a mistress of suspense. (Oh and she’s Irish and I’m biased!) 
Roger Hobbs, completely reinvented the genre, puts my research efforts to shame.
Raymond Chandler, for wanting me to be Marlowe.
Patrick McCabe, not crime per se but so many bad things happen. Dark, twisted yet hilarious. 


... FILMS/MOVIES
The Guard, hilarious, chilling and surreal. I love the combination of humour and gore.
Down by Law, beautifully-crafted, acted but forget all that, it’s got Tom Waits!
The Long Good Friday, Bob Hoskins proving that small men are indeed scarier. 


... TV DRAMAS
Unforgiven, what a cast, and a lesson in how to interweave disparate stories while keeping the viewer hooked.
River, a series that had the balls to feature a detective interacting with a dead former partner. The finale is one of the TV moments of the decade.
Born to Kill, shows what a brilliant documentary maker like Bruce Goodison can bring to drama. 


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
Fowler in Graham Greene’s The Quiet American. There is something really appealing to me about a person who murders someone else for the greater good.
Patrick Bateman in American Psycho.
Lou Ford, the original and baddest ‘bad lieutenant’ in Jim Thompson’s ‘Killer Inside Me’.  


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES 
Philip Marlowe, of course.  


... MURDER WEAPONS
I’ve always liked a blade fashioned out of ice, so that you can melt the evidence! 
    

... DEATH SCENES
In the late 1990s, the IRA developed a ‘flashgun’ detonation system whereby the flash of a camera would set off a semtex bomb. An IRA unit abducted a milkman, murdered him and left his body in the dim, unlit hallway of a house alongside what looked like six cartons of milk.  Except the cartons had been stuffed full of semtex. The hallway and house was full of police officers and forensics when the scenes-of-crime officer arrived and took out his camera… 
  

... BLOGS/WEBSITES
The frankly amazing murderuk.com website listing every murder for decades. Clipshare provides newspaper cuttings going back to 2006.  Bridey-by-the-Sea, my partner’s blog, which contains uplifting copy and some of the best photos I’ve ever seen of the south coast and Brighton. 


... WRITING TIPS
Don’t be fussy about the first draft; get it down! Writing is re-writing. Use everything you can from your own life and experiences. You don’t know how amazing you are! 


... WRITING SNACKS
Water, Tunnock caramel bars (I consume a good portion of the 6 million bars they claim to sell every week!), pistachios, post 6pm Peroni, post 9pm Shiraz. 


About JAMES NALLY


James Nally is an ex-crime reporter and award-winning film-maker whose crime fiction books ‘Alone with the Dead’ and ‘Dance with the Dead’ have been described as ‘intoxicating’, ‘hilarious’ and ‘gripping’ by the Sun and Mirror newspapers.
His third book, ‘Games with the Dead’ sees rookie Irish cop Donal Lynch stumble across a nexus of crime involving bent cops, notorious villains and a morally-bankrupt reporter. When his personal life falls apart, Donal agrees to take on a Kamikaze undercover caper in an attempt to smash the ring, only to find himself being set up to get whacked.  

Find James Nally on his Facebook page and on Twitter - @jimnally


About GAMES WITH THE DEAD



Publisher's description
Life is about to get complicated for DC Donal Lynch.
When a young woman is kidnapped, Donal is brought in to deliver the ransom money. But the tightly-planned drop off goes wrong, Julie Draper is discovered dead, and Donal finds his job on the line – a scapegoat for the officers in charge.
But when Donal is delivered a cryptic message in the night, he learns that Julie was killed long before the botched rescue mission. As he digs further into the murder in a bid to clear his own name, dark revelations make one thing certain: the police are chasing the wrong man, and the killer has far more blood on his hands than they could even imagine.

Games with the Dead was published by Avon on 28 December 2017.


Look out for more BEST OF CRIME features coming soon.

Click here to read more BEST OF CRIME features.

Wednesday, 7 February 2018

BEST OF CRIME with Helen Fields

Welcome to my latest BEST OF CRIME feature, looking at crime writers' top picks, from their favourite author and fictional detective to their best writing tip. 




Today I'm delighted to welcome 

HELEN FIELDS

for her Perfect Death blog tour

to share her BEST OF CRIME ...




... AUTHORS

Jeff Lindsay who wrote the Dexter books. A tour de force in terms of plotting, originality and character writing, Lindsay is a one off. The Dexter character is captivating and thrilling. More than that, the books are beautifully written, quite lyrical and intense. I can’t think of another author writing such unique crime as this. Even if you’ve watched the TV series, it’s worth going back to the source material. Pretty much a master class in crime writing. 


... FILMS/MOVIES
Most recently, Get Out, which has just been the surprise nomination in the Best Motion Picture - Musical or Comedy category for a Golden Globe. It’s not a comedy, although it contains moments of proper belly-laugh funniness. In fact, it’s about a town of white folks who kidnap younger black people to utilise their bodies with extreme criminal intent (no more spoilers - you should watch it). It’s scary, freakish, beautifully animated in parts and bizarrely believable in spite of the ridiculous plot. (Oh, and it stars Bradley Whitford who I kind of love).


... TV DRAMAS
Definitely Deadwood. Set in South Dakota in the 1870s the series incorporates a mixture of historical fact and fiction, along with some very well known Wild West characters. It’s a gory, crazy, action packed, funny, terrifying series featuring that stunning combination of the best dialogue I’ve heard with the most brilliant acting. Not to mention the sets (I could go on…). Really. Watch it. I was in awe. (And some of the best screen deaths ever).


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
Dr. Hannibal Lecter, of course. Silence of The Lambs will never grow old. Harris struck a note of genius in creating the antagonist who was also the protagonist. Lecter is creepy but we like him. He’s a psychopathic murderer but we want him to escape. He’s likeable and awful. Perhaps the most well-rounded fictional killer ever created. I dream of the day I discover the Hannibal in my imagination and commit him to paper.


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES 
Jack Parlabane from Christopher Brookmyre’s novels. Parlabane is funny, dry witted, long-suffering, and finds trouble everywhere he goes. And yet…and yet, he also manages (albeit in the guise of journalism) to say the day and solve the crime. I know I cheated - not a detective - but as good as. Go back to the old books first if you want to catch up with Jack Parlabane’s story. I have never laughed so hard at material that’s so dark. If I could go on a fictional date with any character, Parlabane would be my man.


... MURDER WEAPONS
Spiders. Used more in films than in books, but I long to write something bizarre enough that I can release a jar of black widows under the bed covers of a sleeping character. Creepy and painful! Perfect combination.
    

... DEATH SCENES
I love the body made up of parts from six different people in Daniel Cole’s Ragdoll. What a brilliant idea. Just occasionally you read someone else’s book and throw it across the room with jealousy at a concept (*turns green thinking about it all over again*). Stitching bits of different bodies together to make one complete corpse - what’s not to love?
  

... BLOGS/WEBSITES
Googlemaps, naturally. The world suddenly became a much easier place to write about after this feature became available. And TripAdvisor for more specific locations. The detail these sites offer can add real colour and texture to descriptions. Also, I love the Trip Advisor bad reviews. Endless sources of comedy.


... WRITING TIPS
Rip up the rule book and write the way you want to. Your editor will give you a hefty red pen session if they hate it, but don’t do what everyone else tells you. I read recently that one agent advises you to remove every single adjective and adverb from your manuscript before sending it to him. Poppycock. Everything in moderation and with purpose. Choose good words. Use them wisely. But be yourself, listen to your own voice, create your own unique narrative. Who wants to sound the same as everybody else?


... WRITING SNACKS
Biscuits. Then, when I’ve eaten too many biscuits and I have carb/sugar guilt, I get through whole packs of pea shoots. The only salad I never get bored of.


About HELEN FIELDS
Helen Fields studied law at the University of East Anglia, then went on to the Inns of Court School of Law in London. After completing her pupillage, she joined chambers in Middle Temple where she practised criminal and family law for thirteen years. 
After her second child was born, Helen left the Bar. Together with her husband David, she runs a film production company, acting as script writer and producer. Perfect Remains is set in Scotland, where Helen feels most at one with the world. Helen and her husband now live in Hampshire with their three children and two dogs.

Find Helen Fields on her website, on her Facebook page and on Twitter - @Helen_Fields


About PERFECT DEATH




Publisher's description
There’s no easy way to die…
Unknown to DI Luc Callanach and the newly promoted DCI Ava Turner, a serial killer has Edinburgh firmly in his grip. The killer is taking his victims in the coldest, most calculating way possible – engineering slow and painful deaths by poison, with his victims entirely unaware of the drugs flooding their bloodstream until it’s too late.
But how do you catch a killer who hides in the shadows? A killer whose pleasure comes from watching pain from afar? Faced with their most difficult case yet, Callanach and Turner soon realise they face a seemingly impossible task…

Read a snippet of my review
'I can't really say much more, other than Perfect Death is brilliant and I recommend it highly to crime fiction fans. Oh, and finally, I must add that I can't wait for another Callanach/Turner book!.'

To read the rest of my review, click here.

Perfect Death is being published by Avon Books on 10 October 2017.


Look out for more BEST OF CRIME features coming soon.

Click here to read more BEST OF CRIME features.

Follow the Blog Tour