Showing posts with label am reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label am reading. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 July 2018

BEST OF CRIME with Linwood Barclay

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 

LINWOOD BARCLAY


to share his BEST OF CRIME ...


 


... AUTHORS
Ross Macdonald. I discovered his novels at the age of 15 while perusing the twirling metal paperback rack at our local grocery store. This was usually where I found the latest Rex Stout/Nero Wolfe novel, or an Agatha Christie reprint. I picked up  Macdonald’s The Goodbye Look, by Ross Macdonald, because of the blurb at the top from William Goldman: “The finest series of detective novels ever written by an American.” That was good enough for me. Macdonald was the author who showed me the potential of the detective novel, how you could take the conventions of a mystery and use them to make a statement. 


... FILMS/MOVIES
My two favourite films just also happen to be Alfred Hitchcock’s two finest works: Rear Window and Vertigo. I go back and forth on which is number one and which is number two. They’re both brilliant, and for me, influential. The last five minutes of Vertigo are the best last five minutes of any movie ever made.

... TV DRAMAS
Wow, so many to choose from. Whatever the last series I binge-watched is usually the one I think is the best I’ve ever seen. But there are standouts. Happy Valley, The Night Manager, Ozark, Homeland, The Americans. What do they all have in common? Intriguing characters. Plot is important, but character is always the grabber.


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
The Joker, especially as portrayed by Heath Ledger. No one else even comes close in terms of pure evil. 


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES 
Columbo, hands down. The raincoat, the cigar, the “Oh, just one more question.” Best TV detective ever. In novels, Lew Archer, the private eye created by Ross Macdonald. He’s not quirky. There are no gimmicks. He asks questions, pursues leads, driven by an underlying sense of justice and a belief that exposing buried secrets to sunlight has a purifying effect. 


... MURDER WEAPONS
Speaking of Hitchcock, wasn’t there an episode of his old TV show where a woman killed her husband with a frozen cut of beef, then cooked it up and served it to the investigating officers? The cops ATE the murder weapon. Beat that. 

... DEATH SCENES
When the truck goes over the cliff at the end of Steven Spielberg’s Duel. 
  

... BLOGS/WEBSITES
Has there ever been a day when I did not go on IMDB, the Internet Movie Database? Every evening when we sit down to watch TV, we see something that prompts any number of the following questions: “What did we see her in before?” “Where do I know him from?” “What was that other movie with, you know, the guy? The one with the hair?” “Is this the season finale, or is there one more?” “Which episode was it where Diane first meets Frasier?” “Is the music for this movie done by the same guy who did the music for that other movie, because it sure sounds similar?” There’s nothing IMDB does not know.


... WRITING TIPS
Read. Also, read. And finally, read. Anyone who thinks they can write a novel without having read A LOT probably thinks someone can perform open heart surgery without having gone to medical school. If you’ve passed that hurdle, then write. Also, write. And finally, write. Be writing, even if the only person who is going to read this work is yourself. I’d written three or four novels by the time I was 25. My first was published when I was 49. Persist. 


... WRITING SNACKS
An occasional chocolate chip cookie can be very motivating. 

About LINWOOD BARCLAY
Linwood Barclay is one of the most successful thriller writers of the 21st Century.  His debut, NO TIME FOR GOODBYE, was a critically acclaimed No 1 bestseller and his novels have sold millions of copies around the world.  He is the author of, amongst others, NO SAFE HOUSE, A TAP ON THE WINDOW, TRUST YOUR EYES, BROKEN PROMISE and FAR FROM TRUE.  He lives near Toronto with his wife.

Find Linwood  on his website, on his Facebook page and on Twitter - @linwood_barclay


About A NOISE DOWNSTAIRS




Publisher's description
Paul Davies, a small-town college professor, has narrowly avoided death when he accidently disturbed a murder scene.  The killer, his colleague and friend, hit him over the head with a shovel and only a passing police car saved him from joining the other victims.
Eight months later, Paul’s colleague is in jail and Paul is attempting to rebuild his life.  He has not yet returned to work, he suffers flashbacks and memory loss and he is in therapy.  He decides to write the story of his experiences to make some sense of how the killer, a friend who took Paul under his wing when he first arrived at the college, could have carried out such cruel murders.  As a gift, his wife buys him an old-fashioned typewriter.
That night, as his wife and son lie asleep, Paul wakes to a noise downstairs: the clear, sharp tap of the typewriter keys.  But the house is empty, the door and windows locked.
Is Paul losing his grip on reality?  Is the trauma of the attempt on his life too great to endure?  Or is someone trying to make him think that he is going mad?

A Noise Downstairs is published by Orion Fiction on 12 July 2018.


Look out for more BEST OF CRIME features coming soon.

Click here to read more BEST OF CRIME features.

Friday, 2 March 2018

BEST OF CRIME with Rachel Abbott

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 

RACHEL ABBOTT

for her Come a Little Closer blog tour

to share her BEST OF CRIME ...




... AUTHORS
Where do I start? I love Harlan Coben, because I never have any idea of where the story will end. But equally I have just started reading Clare Mackintosh’s new book, and it’s just as good as all her others. And there are so many more brilliant authors…


... FILMS/MOVIES
I loved Presumed Innocent. I know it’s an old one, but it was very clever. A film that stayed with me for a long time was Sleeping with the Enemy. The scene in the kitchen when she finds all her cans organised and her towels lined up makes me shiver to think about it.


... TV DRAMAS
I recently got hooked on The Tunnel – terrific casting, and an end to each series that I would never have imagined. I’m also slightly obsessed with The Black List, and have just started with series 1, so I still have about a hundred episodes to watch.


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
Max de Winter. He is the first killer that I ever hoped would get away with his crime. Until I read Rebecca, it never occurred to me that I might have sympathy with a murderer, but now I like to consider carefully whether my killer is really bad – or


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES 
Morse is very high on my list – in the books, rather than on the TV. He is intelligent, but has an edge to him without being a complete no-hoper, as so many fictional detectives now seem to be.


... MURDER WEAPONS
I particularly like anything from nature such as venom or plant extracts. I used liquid nicotine in my first book, but there are so many options – ricin, deadly nightshade, oleander. Much more subtle than a gun or a knife.
    

... DEATH SCENES
The execution of Rinaldo Pazzi in the film Hannibal takes some beating. Anthony Hopkins is so amazing, and horrific as it is, he has a way of making it a bizarre mixture of truly shocking and sickeningly funny.
  

... BLOGS/WEBSITES
This sounds a bit gruesome, but I do use The Forensics Library quite a lot. I need to understand how my character may have died, and what the pathologist might be looking for. I also use the Crown Prosecution Service website regularly to check on the correct words to use in relation to crimes, and what the prison sentences might be.


... WRITING TIPS
Always read your book out loud at least once. You will be amazed at how much you pick up. Words that you don’t realise you have repeated will suddenly – quite literally – ring a bell when you hear them spoken.


... WRITING SNACKS
I know this is where I should say that it’s a bad habit to get into, but I’m full of bad habits, so that’s okay. I absolutely love Waitrose Belgian White Chocolate Cookies. I do my absolute best to save them for very special editing moments, but they are truly delicious.


About RACHEL ABBOTT

Rachel Abbott, born and raised in Manchester, founded her own interactive media company in the 1980s, before selling it and retiring in 2005. She then moved to Italy where she worked on the renovation of a 15th century Italian monastery, and it was here that, one day, she found herself snowed in and decided to begin writing for pleasure. This became her debut novel Only The Innocent, which she went on to publish via Kindle Direct Publishing, topping their chart for 4 weeks. A true self-publishing pioneer,  Come a Little Closer  is Abbott’s seventh novel. All of her previous thrillers have hit no.1 in the Kindle charts. She splits her time between Alderney in the Channel Islands and Italy.

Find Rachel Abbott on her website, on her Facebook page and on Twitter - @RachelAbbott


About COME A LITTLE CLOSER


Publisher's description
They will be coming soon. They come every night. 
Snow is falling softly as a young woman takes her last breath. 
Fifteen miles away, two women sit silently in a dark kitchen. They don't speak, because there is nothing left to be said. 
Another woman boards a plane to escape the man who is trying to steal her life. But she will have to return, sooner or later. 
These strangers have one thing in common. They each made one bad choice - and now they have no choices left. Soon they won't be strangers, they'll be family...
When DCI Tom Douglas is called to the cold, lonely scene of a suspicious death, he is baffled. Who is she? Where did she come from? How did she get there? How many more must die? 
Who is controlling them, and how can they be stopped? 

Read a snippet of my review
'Rachel Abbott has created an intricate web of lies and deceit, and I loved how all of the strands came together by the end. The book is chilling, with sinister undertones, and plenty of suspense and tension.'

To read the rest of my review, click here.

Come a Little Closer was published 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





Tuesday, 27 February 2018

BEST OF CRIME with Rebecca Bradley

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 

REBECCA BRADLEY

for her Fighting Monsters blog tour

to share her BEST OF CRIME ...




... AUTHORS
Argh, you want me to narrow it down to just one? Okay, David Jackson. Not only is his characterisation fantastic and makes you want to keep reading to find out what happens to the characters, the stories he weaves are utterly brilliant. His ability to see the nuances of human nature just completely draws you in. 


... FILMS/MOVIES

The psychological thriller, Unthinkable, with Samuel L Jackson, which looks at whether someone would commit the act of torture in order to save hundreds of thousands of people as a large US city faces the prospect of 3 nuclear bombs going off. And they have someone in their custody who knows the whereabouts of those devices. It’s pretty tense stuff and a film I don’t think I will ever forget. Hard watching. 


... TV DRAMAS
I do like watching US based drama so I’m going to go with something I watched recently which was Ozark. A Netflix drama. (Am I allowed to go with Netflix?) I adored the main character played by Jason Bateman, I mean, who doesn’t want to watch him in a straight (non-comedic) role? Plus, it had some great writing and you never knew what was going to happen next. 


... FICTIONAL KILLERS
Robert Naysmith from Fergus McNeill’s book Eye Contact. It’s told from the point of view of Naysmith and I particularly loved the unique way in which he chooses his victims and I was particularly absorbed by the fact that the book was told from the point of view of the killer. It made for a fabulous read. 


... FICTIONAL DETECTIVES 
DCI Harry Nelson from Elly Griffiths’ Ruth Galloway novels. I love this series and I love cranky old Nelson and the very human mess he makes of his life as he does his job. 


... MURDER WEAPONS
There was a fantastically simple murder weapon of sticky tape in Random by Craig Robertson. Just brilliant. 
    

... DEATH SCENES
There’s a scene in Cry Baby by David Jackson that just takes your breath away. In fact, you could probably pick up any of his books and have your breath taken away by a death scene. 
  

... BLOGS/WEBSITES
Google maps and Google earth for locations and the College of Policing website if you have policing research to do. It’s a comprehensive site. 


... WRITING TIPS
Routine. Write something every day, even if only 200 words on a bad day, because it will become hardwired into you and the story will keep working its way through your head. Then on a good day, it will feel great. 


... WRITING SNACKS
Tea. Lots and lots of tea. White, no sugar. 


About REBECCA BRADLEY

Rebecca is an ex-police detective and lives in Nottinghamshire with her family and two cockapoo's Alfie and Lola, who keep her company while she writes. Rebecca needs to drink copious amounts of tea to function throughout the day and if she could, she would survive on a diet of tea and cake.

Find Rebecca Bradley on her website, on her Facebook page and on Twitter - @RebeccaJBradley


About FIGHTING MONSTERS


Publisher's description
24 hours after he walked away from court a free man, cop killer and gang leader Simon Talbot is found murdered. In his possession; the name of a protected witness from his trial. 

For DI Hannah Robbins, it's a race against time to find Talbot's killer, and locate the bystander before it's too late.


But as Hannah delves deeper into the past, she begins to question the integrity of the whole operation. 

Where do you turn when you can’t trust the police?

Fighting Monsters was published on 15 February 2018.


Look out for more BEST OF CRIME features coming soon.

Click here to read more BEST OF CRIME features.