Tuesday, May 14, 2013

DEATH ON DEMAND available to northern hemisphere readers!

In some great news for lovers of high quality, intriguing crime fiction, Paul Thomas's latest Detective Ihaka novel (and the first in 15 years), has recently been published in the northern hemisphere by Bitter Lemon Press, a terrific publisher which specialises in bringing quality crime writers from smaller countries to US and UK readers. Here's the blurb for the UK edition:
"Maori cop Tito Ihaka is a cop unable to play the police politics necessary for promotion, but a man who has a way with women, and he's a stubborn investigator with an uncanny instinct for the truth. Called back to follow up a strange twist in the unsolved case that got him into trouble in the first place, Ihaka finds himself hunting a shadowy hitman who could have several notches on his belt. His enemies want him off the case, but the bodies are piling up. Soon he becomes involved with an enigmatic female suspect who could hold the key to everything."

You can read a lot more about Thomas here on Crime Watch, including interviews, news, and reviews of DEATH ON DEMAND, which will be eligible for the 2013 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Crime Novel, from last year when it was first released here. You can check out the Bitter Lemon Press edition on Amazon here

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Lest We Forget (a special day for Australia, New Zealand, and Turkey)

Down here in New Zealand and Australia, and for others all around the world who have links to our two nations, the 25th of April is a very special, and sombre day; ANZAC Day. It is a day when we pause and remember the soldiers, sailors, and others who have served (and are still serving) our countries in wars and conflicts all over the world.

Ninety-eight years ago to this very day, our two nations first fought side by side under the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) banner – our soldiers landing together at dawn on a desolate beach on the Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey. It was a military bungle by the British commanders - but the attitudes, actions, and courage of the Australian and New Zealand soldiers both at Gallipoli and over the many battles and years since, stoked a burgeoning sense of independent identity and nationhood.

Despite being so far away from the conflict, and in no direct danger ourselves, more than 100,000 New Zealand troops and nurses served overseas during the First World War, from a population of just over one million. 42% of men of military age served. And over the past century, Australia and New Zealand have contributed greatly on the world stage in many ways and in many diverse areas, generally 'punching far above our weight' given our geographic isolation and small populations - and in some ways this can be traced back to the values associated with 'the ANZAC tradition'.

This time two years ago, I was huddled against the cold on the Gallipoli peninsula, awaiting the dawn, amongst thousands of New Zealanders and Australians who'd made the pilgrimage. It was a surreal and special experience, and it affected me far more, and differently, than I expected. Amongst many realisations on what was a very special trip to Turkey was this: ANZAC Day is really about three countries, not just two.

Every year the Turkish people open up their arms and hearts to the descendants and fellow countrymen of an invading force that landed on their shores with the express intent of over-running them, of beating them down and back (if, in our eyes, for a very good cause). How special a place is Turkey? How many countries would host, create, and maintain a memorial for people who came trying to kill their fellow countrymen? War is a horrible, horrible thing, for whatever reason it is fought. How many commanders would, years later, say this of the men who he fought against:
Heroes who shed their blood and lost their lives! You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours. You, the mothers, who sent their sons from far away countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well.
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk
Turkey is a very special place, for many, many reasons. It is full of history, from Greek and Roman times, Biblical times, the Ottoman Empire, and much more. Of course, it is a place many New Zealanders and Australians feel some connection to, too, for more recent history.

Outside of my writing about crime fiction and crime writers, I also write other articles for a number of publications. In the past few years I've been fortunate enough to get to write a couple of features about the Anzac tradition and Anzac Day, including one about my trip there last year. If you get a chance today, please click on the links below and give them a read (especially the second one):


Saturday, April 20, 2013

Barclay and Blunt among Arthur Ellis nominees

Previous winners Linwood Barclay and Giles Blunt are among the luminaries of Canadian crime writing in the running for this year's Arthur Ellis Awards (see below)

Best First Novel


Best Novel



Best Novella



Best Nonfiction



Best Juvenile/YA



Best Crime Writing in French




Best Short Story
  • Melodie Campbell for Life Without George in Over My Dead Body Mystery Magazine
  • Sandy Conrad for Sins of the Fathers in Daughters and Other Strangers
  • Scott MacKay for Cruel Coast in Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine
  • Jas R. Petrin for Mad Dog in Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine
  • Yasuko Thanh for Spring-Blade Knife in Floating Like the Dead


Friday, April 5, 2013

Keeping away from the courtroom: feature article on John Hart

Keeping away from the courtroom
Attorney turned award-winning author John Hart talks to Craig Sisterson about why he’s eschewed legal thrillers for character-centric rural noir

Legal thrillers are hugely popular. But when North Carolina attorney turned author John Hart’s publishers suggested he write more lawyer-centric tales, following his critically acclaimed debut, 2006’s The King of Lies, he balked. “Because the book worked they wanted another lawyer book, and I really had to fight it because I was getting all these John Grisham comparisons, and you’re never going to out-Grisham John Grisham, period,” says Hart. Along with Scott Turow (Presumed Innocent), Grisham built the entire legal thriller genre, says Hart. “It doesn’t matter how good you are, you’re always going to be second fiddle to those guys, and that seemed intolerable to me.”

If you don’t scratch below the surface, it’s easy to see why some made the Grisham references early on in Hart’s career: both were Southern lawyers turned novelists who penned page-turning tales with intriguing characters set in the rural South. With Hart centring his debut on a disgruntled lawyer, the lazy marketing comparison became near-automatic. But read a few pages of a Hart novel, and you know you’ve got something completely different, and quite special, in your hands. Call them literary thrillers, rural noir, or whatever; bottom line is there’s a reason that Hart made history by scooping the coveted Edgar Award for Best Novel for consecutive books.

Hart creates the kind of hauntingly real, complex characters that literary fiction aspires to, balanced with lush evocations of place, and engrossing storylines that lure you in. After two failed novels that he admits were “much shallower books”, it was the creation of Work Pickens in The King of Lies that helped things click into place.

Hart had been looking to leave the law: the final straw was an incident where he was assigned to defend a child molester, who’d confessed to Hart but wanted help to get out on a technicality. The man’s mention of his four-year-old stepdaughter, when Hart had recently become a new father himself, crystallised things. “I was just so unhappy in my law practice, and the main character in The King of Lies is this very disenchanted attorney that was looking for a way out and was in the law for all the wrong reasons,” he recalls. “So I wrote this opening sequence for my wife to read, about this lawyer meeting with a client in jail who’d just been sentenced to life without parole for murder, and just these feelings of icky-ness mixed with disgust coursing through the lawyer in that scene.”

Hart realised after writing that scene that Pickens could never be a strong, super-charged typical legal thriller hero. “He was just this broken down, unhappy man. And if he was that unhappy in his career, he can’t be happy in his life. There’s got to be more to him. I just realised this character was so real that I didn’t need grandiose plot drivers to make the story work. That if I could build a character so real that the readers felt his anguish, then you could buy an emotional commitment without change-the-world stakes.”

The damaged, authentic characters in Hart’s novels aren’t searching for bombs in the Vatican or hidden terrorist cells, but each in their own way is facing something just as dangerous. Change-their-life stakes, if not change-the-world. The running-on-empty Pickens is suspected in the murder of his father. Down River follows a troubled young man facing long-held grudges when he returns to his hometown. Hart’s 2009 Southern Gothic masterpiece, The Last Child, sees 13-year-old Johnny Merrimon desperately scouring the dark underbelly of his town for any sign of his twin sister, who disappeared a year ago. Mob enforcer Michael tries to break away and make a fresh start in Iron House, while protecting those he loves from his violent life, past and present.

Character isn’t everything to John Hart, but it is key. Credible characters and credible stories. “The books I remember ten years after I read them, what I remember are the characters, period,” says Hart. “I might remember little bits of the plot, but if a character is really well done and compelling, they tend to stick. I don’t aspire to write what would be considered classics in fifty years – I think that would be the height of conceit, but I do aspire to write characters that people will remember after they close the book… you absolutely have to care about the people you’re reading, or there’s no point.”

Hart boldly quit his legal practice after his wife read the first few pages of The King of Lies. He’d written his first unpublished novel while studying for a Masters, and his second while at law school. He knew he could never make it work while practising. He was “ridiculed roundly” by many in his town, including colleagues. But he and his wife knew he had to try. “What people regret at the end of the road is what they didn’t do, the risks they didn’t take,” he explains. “I’ve never heard someone say ‘I’m so sorry I tried for that brass ring’. So it really was such an imperative. I could not be a half-baked lawyer and a half-baked writer. I needed to make a decision, I was at that point. That if I didn’t do it then, then when our second baby came it would be impossible; expenses would double, time would disappear. This was one last little window where we had enough money to live, meagrely, for a year, and my wife was supportive.”

So Hart and his wife rolled the dice, and he spent his time in the local library and “just did it”. Success didn’t come straight away – it still took a couple of years for The King of Lies to be published, but once he broke through, the faith and effort all paid off. He’s now published four bestselling, critically acclaimed novels, that have scooped several awards and been published in dozens of countries.

More importantly, however, Hart is doing what he loves; disenchanted no more.

This article was first published in the print issue of NZLawyer, 5 April 2013, and is reprinted here online with permission

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Getting away with it: an interview with the author of GHOSTMAN

Two years ago, upon graduating from Reed College, 22-year-old Roger Hobbs sent a manuscript he'd written while a student to an agent. Interest was piqued, a rewrite of the first 50 pages requested... and on the basis of those 50 pages, the agent managed to sell the novel in the US and to international publishers! The eventual book has recently been released in New Zealand and overseas.

Quite the rapid rise for Roger Hobbs. I have a copy of GHOST MAN on my shelf, and am looking forward to seeing what all the fuss was about. In the meantime however, here is an interview with the young debutant author, courtesy of his publishers.

Q: What exactly is a GHOSTMAN?
A: When a crew of criminals plans a heist, each person has a different role to play. There are probably a couple of roles you know already. The wheelman is the guy who drives the getaway car. The boxman knows how to open locks and safes. The bagman carries the cash and takes transportation risks. There are a couple you probably don’t know, either. The guy who plans the heist is called the jugmarker. The thug who carries the guns is called the buttonman.

A ghostman can be useful in a myriad of criminal enterprises—identity theft, corporate espionage, armed robberies, bank fraud, drug distribution—and is responsible for anything that requires a disappearing act. In short, he’s an expert in the subtle and challenging art of getting away with it. His job is to make sure nobody gets caught.

Q: When and how did you first get the idea for this novel?
A: I first got this idea the summer between my sophomore and junior years of college. I was walking home late one night after a movie when I stumbled across an armoured car depot. Now, this doesn’t look like you think it should—it doesn’t have thick brick walls, rows of security cameras or a bunch of security guards sitting around playing poker. No, it looks like an office building with a bunch of armoured cars parked out front.

Being naturally curious, I thought I’d have a look. I walked around for a bit and after a while, finally worked up the nerve to touch one. As soon as I did, I felt like I was struck by lightning. Instantly my brain was full of different ideas about how I could rob it. I must have spent an hour out there in the dark, examining every part of that car. I noted all the features and considered all the weaknesses. That night I went home and wrote the first chapter of GHOSTMAN.

Q: Tell us a little about Jack Delton and how you developed his character?
A: Jack is a man with an extraordinary, one-in-a-million talent: he is completely unmemorable. You could walk by him on the street every day for a year and never remember his face. He doesn’t have a name anyone knows, he doesn’t have a look, he doesn’t have a bank account. No credit card, no social-security number, no web profile. He’s nobody, and he’s anybody. If he needs to drive, he can be a driver. If he needs to fight, he can be a fighter. He can become anyone he needs to be in the blink of an eye.

This talent—his unremarkablity—is the very first thing I ever knew about his character. I developed him as a person around this idea. What sort of things does a man with no identity do? What does he like? How does he go about his day? Jack is a tough guy and a hardened criminal, but I wanted my readers to sympathize with his unusual, and somewhat melancholy, existence.

Q: You wrote this novel while in college and in fact sent it to your (now) agent on the day you graduated. When did you start writing and were you always drawn to crime stories?
A: I’ve been writing since I was twelve. Since then I’ve written seven full-length novels, two plays, a few screenplays and a pack of spec scripts for television. I have been writing four hours a day, every day, for ten years. I feel like I have to write or I’ll go crazy. It’s in my blood. I didn’t start thinking about crime fiction, however, until I read Robert Crais’s The Monkey's Raincoat when I was sixteen years old. The voice in that book was so wonderful that I immediately started writing my own private investigator novel. After that I moved on to other authors that I thought had strong, dark writing styles. I ate up everything from Dashiell Hamett to James Ellroy to Lee Child. I was most attracted to novels where the main characters were criminals themselves, like Donald Westlake’s Parker novels. I loved the idea of getting away with it, so I thought I’d try to write a book that could share that incredible sense of fear and excitement I’d come to love

Q: Okay, you obviously know an awful lot about staging a heist—starting with how the Fed prints money and transports and safe-guards it in armoured trucks, to guns and explosives and how the person driving the getaway car plots the best escape route. How did you learn about these things?
A: First things first, I should say that most of the things you need to know to become a world class criminal mastermind are on the Internet. It isn’t stuff you can just put into Google, but it’s there if you know where to look. There are hidden sites on the deep web with forums on every criminal topic you can imagine. Blow up a car? You got it. Bloodstain pattern analysis? A whole course. Disable a silent alarm? Absolutely. Most of the research I did for GHOSTMAN happened while I was sitting right here in front of this pale blue glowing computer screen.

But not all of it. The Internet could only get me so far, so I went on a lot of field trips. In order to study the monetary process, I toured the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, where I was allowed to walk around and observe hundreds of millions in new bills get ready for circulation. I went to dive bars all around the country where I interviewed active criminals and traded secrets for cigarettes. I did a two-week training course with the NRA out in the mountains to learn the inner workings of firearms. I taught myself to pick locks and hotwire cars in the parking lot of my dorm block. I exchanged emails with a professional forger in the UK who specialized in passports and Eastern European driver’s licenses. I talked online with a working hitman. Of course not everything in GHOSTMAN is accurate, but I did my best to make it all feel real.

Q: What did you learn in your research that surprised you the most?
A: The most surprising thing I learned in the course of my research was just how rare intelligently committed crimes really are. A world-class crook might pull off two large-scale jobs in his or her entire life, because anybody with the brains to plan a complicated, successful heist could make twice as much money in half the time by dealing drugs instead. Also, bank robberies have an astoundingly high chance of getting solved by the police second in fact, only to murder.

Q: Are you really 24 or are you a really good ghostman yourself?
A: Part of me wants to be a ghostman. I think everyone, at one point or another, has wanted to do what Jack does. Everyone has fantasized about getting up and leaving and never coming back. A ghostman is a living incarnation of that fantasy. His identity is fluid, so he can change himself to fit any situation. Whenever things get too hairy, or a little boring, he can sever all ties, pack a few things in an overnight bag and fly off to another part of the world. He can start over again as many times as he wants without any consequences. Of course there is a high price for this lifestyle. A ghostman can’t celebrate Christmas at home with his family, or make friends, or fall in love. The ghostman wakes up every morning and chooses who he wants to be, but as a result he can never become anything more than what he already is.

Q: So what’s next for you? Without giving away the ending of the book can you tell us if we’ll see any of the characters from GHOSTMAN again?
A: I’m already hard at work on a sequel to GHOSTMAN. This adventure finds Jack at odds with his old mentor, with the biggest payday of their lives on the line. I can’t say much about it, but I will say that the events of GHOSTMAN have big repercussions on Jack’s world. He'll have to use every ounce of his wits to avoid getting caught this time, especially when he has to choose between safety and loyalty


ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Roger Hobbs is 24 years old and completed the first draft of this novel while still a senior at Reed College. He has worked as a radio host, a rifle range instructor, a note-taker and a security guard. He is a recent graduate of Reed College. He lives in Portland, Oregon.