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Showing posts with label Mike Ripley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Ripley. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 16, 2017

How British Thrillers Changed the World

By Michael Gregorio
Mike Ripley has a serious mission in life.

In his monthly column for Shots, “Getting Away with Murder,” he reports on the latest crime-fiction releases. But Ripley invariably reminds readers as well of at least one or two—sometimes half a dozen—thriller novels BERJAYAthat once took the world by storm.

Now, in Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang: The Boom in British Thrillers from “Casino Royale” to “The Eagle Has Landed” (HarperCollins UK), this author-critic’s lifelong love of the genre is laid out on the table ready for devouring. An entertaining history of popular literature, Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang charts the early flowering of the British adventure story in the 1950s, its evolution into the spy-fantasy novel (which culminated in Ian Fleming’s best-selling James Bond series), and its transition into the more measured espionage fiction which arrived with the Cold War. The book’s title comes from a letter that Fleming wrote to Raymond Chandler in 1956: “You write novels of suspense—if not sociological studies,” remarked Fleming, “whereas my books are straight pillow fantasies of the bang-bang, kiss-kiss variety.”

Fantasy versus sociology?

Things are not quite so simple, as Mr. Ripley indicates, laying out in these pages the grim history of post-war Britain, a time when the fighting had been won but the Empire was shrinking, and food rationing was a fact of life. He suggests that the evolution of thriller fiction followed the shifts of British social history more closely than any other popular literary genre. As anyone familiar with his Shots column (or with his Fitzroy Maclean Angel novels) would expect, wry humor is never in short supply here, as “The Ripster” recounts a host of fascinating tales behind the blockbuster novels and the best-selling authors who wrote them, noting in one instance: “When it came to villains, you couldn’t beat a good Nazi.”

This is an authoritative survey for readers who would like to learn more about the growth and development of thriller fiction, but might not know just where to start their research. I was amazed by how many titles Ripley references, and more surprised still to realize that I had already read quite a number of the books. Growing up in England during the 1950s and ’60s, it was inevitable, I suppose. The paperback was new, and the writers were many.

It’s inevitable, too, that a wide variety of these fine works have been all but forgotten over the years.

Thanks to Ripley’s efforts, however, history is being set straight and works long neglected—many of them out of print—will likely find new fans in the 21st century. Count me among them: I am currently reading and enjoying a host of classic thrillers mentioned in Ripley’s book. In addition, I asked the author to answer a few questions about his interest in the genre.

Michael Gregorio: Do you remember the first thriller you ever read?

Mike Ripley: I couldn’t swear to it, but the first adult thriller was possibly Hammond Innes’ The White South [1949], set in the (now) politically incorrect world of whale haunting in the Antarctic, followed quickly by Alistair MacLean’s HMS Ulysses [1955]. I was living in a small mining village in Yorkshire, would have been 10, and [was] about to leave primary school.

I do remember, at public school aged 12, reading [Fleming’s] Thunderball and Dr. No in quick succession, followed by [Len Deighton’s] The IPCRESS File, probably when the film came out. I was 13 BERJAYA when I read [John le Carré’s] The Spy Who Came in from the Cold—I still have the 1965 Pan paperback, priced five shillings (25p)!

MG: What makes a thriller memorable, in your opinion?

MR: What makes a thriller memorable? Any (or all) of the basic ingredients: jeopardy—both personal to the hero/heroine or to a larger entity such as a city, a military installation, an economy or a state; suspense—the idea of a deadline, or a ticking-clock; an exotic location, or somewhere where man is up against the natural elements; conflict—violent action scenes; a hero/heroine who is human and could get hurt, although at times displays almost superhuman qualities and could be just as cunning and ruthless as the villains.

MG: Who is the greatest thriller writer of all time?

MR: Impossible to say, so I’ll chicken out of picking one. But any decent short-list would include John Buchan (“old school”), Geoffrey Household (“the romantic and noble rogue male hero”), Eric Ambler (spies and shady goings-on with a left-wing slant), Ian Fleming (spy fantasy), Len Deighton (a stylistic mold-breaker), John le Carré (spies, betrayal and the English class system), and Alistair MacLean and Hammond Innes (of the “adventure thriller” school). I have stayed very much in my comfort zone here, ignoring other types of thriller and many excellent non-British writers.

MG: Who is the most accomplished writer of thrillers today?

MR: The most accomplished? Difficult question. In totally different fields and styles, I’d go for Alan Furst, Ben Pastor, and Philip Kerr, who all root their thrillers in the history of World War II; Martin Cruz Smith, who can range over history and different locations; and when it comes to the strong, silent hero who rides to the rescue, one has to include Lee Child, who writes “classical modern” thrillers (if that makes sense). And this brutally ignores the writers of some brilliant crime thrillers, police thrillers, psychological thrillers, etc.

MG: Would you describe your “Angel” novels as thrillers?

MR: Angel? Well, comedy-thrillers maybe. They are not “whodunits” so much as “how does he get out of this” stories, often “how the hell did he get into this.” I hope they have some suspense and believable action and heroics, and therefore provide a few thrills, but their main purpose is to tell jokes. I guess I am not so much a writer as a frustrated stand-up comedian.

(Editor’s note: Ripley’s Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang will go on sale in the United States this coming September.)

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Bullet Points: Myriad Morsels Edition

• Why am I not surprised by this? “Lisbeth Salander, the cult figure and title character of the acclaimed Millennium book series created by Stieg Larsson, will return to the screen in The Girl in the Spider’s Web, a first-time adaptation of the recent global bestseller written by David Lagercrantz,” reads a news alert from MacLehose Press. “Fede Alvarez, the director of 2016’s breakout thriller Don’t Breathe, will helm the project from a screenplay by Steven Knight and Fede Alvarez and Jay Basu. … The new film will feature an entirely new cast, and the announcement marks the kickoff of a global search for an actress to portray in the iconic role of Lisbeth Salander. The production will begin principal photography in September of this year with a release date scheduled for October 5, 2018.”

• Two months after the death of actor Mike Connors, TV Shows on DVD has announced that a complete series set of Mannix, the 1967-1975 private-eye drama with which he is best associated, will be released by CBS/Paramount on May 9. Reads a press release: “Here are all 194 episodes together, that bring the action, the music, and the style of an era back to life. Developed for television by executive producer Bruce Geller BERJAYA (TV’s Mission: Impossible), Mannix cruises the mean streets of Los Angeles, cracking cases that feature an array of ne’er-do-wells, from the most dangerous of criminals to the syndicates of high society.” The 48-disc set will retail for $129.98.

Via Eurocrime comes news that Booker Award-winning author Eleanor Catton’s third novel (following The Luminaries) will be Birnam Wood, “a psychological thriller, set in a remote area of New Zealand where scores of ultra-rich foreigners are building fortress-like homes, … following the guerilla gardening outfit Birnam Wood, a ragtag group of leftists who move about the country cultivating other people's land … [Their] chance encounter with an American billionaire sparks a tragic sequence of events which questions how far each of us would go to ensure our own survival—and at what cost.” The book has been sold “to Farrar, Straus (U.S.); McClelland & Stewart (Canada); Granta (UK/Australia); and Victoria University Press (NZ).”

And this from In Reference to Murder: “Mystery Fest Key West has announced a call for submissions for this year’s Whodunit Mystery Writing Competition. The winner will claim a book-publishing contract with Absolutely Amazing eBooks, free Mystery Fest Key West 2017 registration, airfare, hotel accommodations for two nights, meals, and a Whodunit Award trophy to be presented at the 4th Annual Mystery Fest Key West, set for June 16-18 in Key West, Florida. For more information and deadlines, follow this link.”

• I feel like I’m always behind in listening to Nancie Clare’s Speaking of Mysteries podcasts. That may be because they tend to come out irregularly, yet in bunches at a time. Since I last made note of Clare’s work here, she has added exchanges with Scott Reardon (The Prometheus Man), David Mark (Cruel Mercy), Suzanne Chazin (No Witness But the Moon), David Joy (Weight of this World), Rhys Bowen (In Farleigh Field), and Kate White (The Secrets You Keep). Clare’s count of podcast interviewees now exceeds 110, and the previous installments remain available for your listening pleasure.

• Speaking of Nancie Clare, she sent me an e-mail note not too long ago, posing a question that I have so far been unable to answer on my own, so let me seek assistance from The Rap Sheet’s extraordinarily well-read audience. Her note reads: “A friend of mine is trying to recall a series of mysteries set in Boston. The detective/fixer works for a bank executive (who has something over him) and looks into things that the bank’s clients wouldn’t, or couldn’t, go to the authorities for. He describes them as funny and a bit quirky, Joe Lansdale-esque (that’s my interpretation anyway). Any, ahem, clue?” If you think you know which mystery series Clare is describing here, please drop me a message in the Comments section at the end of this post.

• In advance of marketing its paperback edition of Patrick E. McLean’s The Soak in May, publisher Brash Books has released its very first audiobook: an adaptation of McLean’s novella prequel, The Lucky Dime, read by none other than the author himself.

• Here’s a work I look forward to reading: Mike Ripley’s Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang: The Boom in British Thrillers from Casino Royale to The Eagle Has Landed (HarperCollins). In a preview for Shots, Ripley explains that “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang—or KK-BB as it is known in certain circles in honor of Len Deighton—has been many years in its gestation, you might say about 50 years since, as a callow youth, I realized that I was reading my way through a purple path of British thriller writing. Was it a ‘Golden Age’? Well, that is, as with all ‘Golden Ages’ a matter for debate, but it was undeniably a boom time for British thriller writers, who dominated international bestseller lists.” Ripley’s volume seems destined to find a choice spot on my overcrowded bookshelves beside Martin Edwards’ The Golden Age of Murder.

• The third episode of Writer Types, a podcast hosted by S.W. Lauden and Eric Beetner, is now ready for your inspection. Lauden touts the contents thusly: “Check out interviews with Johnny Shaw and Sue Ann Jaffarian. Spend a night at Noir at the Bar—L.A. with Glen Erik Hamilton, Nolan Knight, Sarah M. Chen, Travis Richardson, John Lansing, and Stephen Blackmoore. Go to rock school with Alex Segura, Joe Clifford, and Corey Lynn Fayman. And listen to a haunting short story from Jen Conley. Plus, reviews from Kate Hackbarth Malmon and Dan Malmon.” Lots to keep you interested.

• I’ve added a couple more vintage TV show intros to The Rap Sheet’s YouTube page—from the Elmore Leonard-inspired Maximum Bob (1998) and Stephen J. Cannell’s Broken Badges (1990-1991).

Foreword Reviews has broadcast its lists of finalists for the annual INDIES Book of the Year Awards, including contenders in both the Mystery and Thriller categories. The winners in each category will be declared on June 24 during the 2017 American Library Association Annual Conference in Chicago.

• Say good-bye to Blasted Heath. That small press, spearheaded by Al Guthrie and Kyle MacRae, is closing up shop. Which is a damn shame, because ever since it was launched in November 2011, it’s been turning out intriguing crime fiction by the likes of Anthony Neil Smith, Elaine Ash (aka Anonymous-9), Nigel Bird, Gerard Brennan, Ray Banks, and others. As Brennan notes in his blog, “the books are going to be available for a few more days, I think. You can’t keep good talent down, so they won’t be unavailable forever, but if you want the Blasted Heath version of any of their great titles, you need to move your hole.” Oh so quaintly put.

• While Crimespree Magazine celebrates the 30th anniversary of the release of Ian Rankin’s Knots and Crosses, the novel that introduced maverick Detective Inspector John Rebus, the author himself brings us new details about the program for the inaugural RebusFest, to be held in Edinburgh, Scotland, from June 30 to July 2.

• Also online now is the schedule of events being put in place for this year’s Newcastle Noir (April 29-30), “a festival dedicated to promoting crime fiction under all its guises from all over the world.” Authors taking part include William Ryan, Erik Axl Sund, Quentin Bates, Sarah Ward, and Michael J. Malone.

• I did something last week that was fairly unusual for me: I registered early for this year’s Bouchercon, which is set to take place in Toronto, Canada, from October 12 to 15. If memory serves, I finally signed up for Bouchercon 2015 sometime late in the summer preceding that Raleigh event, and for Bouchercon 2016 only two months prior to festivities beginning in New Orleans. This could well be the last Bouchercon I attend for a while (subsequent conventions in St. Petersburg, Florida, Dallas, Texas, and Sacramento, California, aren’t big draws for me), so I wanted to make sure I had all of my ducks in a row as soon as possible. See who else will be at Bouchercon 2017 by clicking here. And if you’d like to register yourself, you can do so here.

• From Kevin Burton Smith of The Thrilling Detective Web Site:
Adam Lerner and Bill Boyle have launched a fund-raising IndieGoGo campaign to get Raymond Chandler a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, with the approval of the Chandler Estate and the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce. This would make Chandler the first writer (who is not also a director, producer, or animator) to get a star.

They argue that “If there were no Raymond Chandler there would certainly be no Philip Marlowe. and if there were no Philip Marlowe there would arguably be no Hollywood Noir or Hollywood Walk of Fame.”

I’m not sure if I buy all that argument, but if there’s a writer who deserves that star, it’s definitely Chandler. Let’s help give him his due.
• As part of a piece in The Guardian about the 21st-century relevance of fictional private eyes, author Christa Faust argues that the hard-boiled essence of such protagonists remains vital. That is, she says, “if you mean a complex, conflicted loner with a generally cynical worldview who gets mixed up in criminal endeavors but maintains a strong, though often unconventional, moral code. A wise-cracking, ruggedly handsome middle-aged white guy in a fedora and trenchcoat who slaps women and then kisses them? Maybe not so much.”

• Hooray for the return of Dan Wagner’s The Hungry Detective!

• A few author interviews worth reading: In Criminal Element, Ardi Alspach questions Lyndsay Faye about her new Sherlock Holmes short-story collection, The Whole Art of Detection; Melissa Scrivner Love chats with Mystery Tribune about her debut thriller, Lola; Crime Fiction Lover quizzes Iceland’s Arnaldur Indridason on the subject of his new novel, The Shadow District, which is the opening entry in a new series; an Australian Web site called Daily Review does a quickie interview with Peter Robinson, whose next Alan Banks yarn, Sleeping in the Ground, is due out in the States come August; and Do Some Damage’s Steve Weddle talks briefly with Kieran Shea about his soon- forthcoming “space heist” yarn, Off Rock.

R.I.P., Robert Day, the UK director behind four Tarzan flicks, who devoted a majority of his efforts during the mid-20th-century to TV projects. According to Deadline Hollywood, he helmed “multiple episodes of The Adventures of Robin Hood, The Avengers, The F.B.I., The Name of the Game, Cade’s County and earn[ed] a DGA [Directors Guild of America] nom for 1970’s The Bold Ones: The Senator. He continued to direct TV dramas throughout the ’70s, including episodes of such classics as Police Story, The Streets of San Francisco, McCloud, Kojak, and Dallas.” Day was 94 years old.

Talk about depressing charts!

• And this news, reported last year, reminds me of another, older TV series of the same name. According to Deadline Hollywood, “The Mark Gordon Company has put together big TV series package The Barbary Coast. The series will be directed and co-written by Mel Gibson, with Kurt Russell and Kate Hudson set to star. Gibson also will have a recurring role on the series. The project is inspired by Gangs of New York author Herbert Asbury’s book The Barbary Coast, about the birth of San Francisco. … The Barbary Coast begins with the [California] Gold Rush in 1849 which saw the biggest influx of gold-seekers, gamblers, thieves, harlots, politicians. and other felonious parasites to the infant city. Thus arose a unique criminal district that for almost 70 years was the scene of more viciousness and depravity—yet at the same time possessed more glamour and intrigue—than any other area of vice and iniquity on the American continent.” I wonder whatever happened to this project. I’ve seen only one small update since.

Monday, March 21, 2016

The Talented Mr. Callan

BERJAYA
Edward Woodward as David Callan.

By Ali Karim
I recently bumped into my old friend, the reviewer, raconteur, and Shots columnist Mike Ripley. Over glasses of gin, we got to talking about British Golden Age thrillers, a topic in which he is most well-versed. (You will, no doubt, recall that he moderated a CrimeFest panel on that very subject just a couple of years ago.)

In addition to his other responsibilities, Ripley works as a consultant for UK-based Ostara Publishing. So he was delighted to share with me the information that Ostara, under its Top Notch Thrillers imprint, has finally completed its republication of James Mitchell’s Callan series.

Callan, of course, was created as a one-off TV drama in 1967, written by Mitchell. The character of David Callan, a surly but vulnerable and ferociously downbeat professional hit man working for a very dirty section of British Intelligence, struck an instant chord with the viewing public. As portrayed by actor Edward Woodward (later to star in The Equalizer), Callan went on to feature in a four-season ITV series (1967-1972), plus a 1974 theatrical film and a 1981 TV reunion movie, some 40 short stories syndicated worldwide in newspapers, and five novels. The opening sequence from Callan is embedded below.

video

Top Notch editions of the Callan novels began to appear in 2013, and now the fourth and fifth volumes—Smear Job and Bonfire Night—are available in trade-paperback and e-book formats.

First published in 1975, Smear Job is the longest and most densely plotted of the Callan yarns, featuring all the characters Mitchell created for “The Section,” his fictional (one can only hope!) government agency dealing in surveillance, blackmail, and even the assassination of anyone deemed to be a threat to national security. Callan’s sidekick Lonely, the cowardly and often pungent professional burglar, plays a key role here, as do Spencer Purceval FitzMaurice and Toby Meres. Even Section chief “Colonel Hunter” finds himself “in the field” as the story moves along at Mitchell’s typically lightning pace, transporting readers from Sicily to the London ganglands, Las Vegas to Mexico, and Cold War West Germany to England’s deserted Suffolk coast.

Bonfire Night, the fifth and final entry in Mitchell’s series, was written more than 25 years later and published in 2002, the year of the author’s death. It has been out of print for the last 13 years and, with no previous paperback edition, rapidly became the most sought-after of the Callan yarns. The new Top Notch edition comes with a specially composed Introduction by the author’s son, Peter Mitchell, BERJAYABERJAYAthat describes the extraordinary circumstances under which Bonfire Night was written.

To quote series editor Ripley: “Since the Top Notch Thrillers imprint was established in 2009 to revive and republish great British thrillers, we have had many requests from readers to reissue Bonfire Night—the ‘lost Callan’—far more than for any other title, and we are now proud to so. After long consultation with the author’s son, Peter, I have kept editing to the bare minimum so that dedicated Callan fans can read this … coda to the Callan saga as the author intended. It is something of a ‘difficult’ book as Mitchell tried to merge a typically serpentine plot with major developments in the lives of his main characters. Callan is now rich, in danger of falling in love, and living in retirement in his own personal castle in Spain, and the new Hunter heading the Section is a woman. The seismic character change, though, is for Lonely, who has (thanks to a prison education course) become a computer genius and software millionaire!

“But if the world of Callan seems to have turned upside down, he still finds himself having to deal with old enemies (including a vicious ex-Stasi villain who tortured Callan in East Berlin back in the day) and treacherous former allies. But he does so with all the ruthless efficiency of the Callan of old.”

Other Callan titles by James Mitchell from Ostara Publishing are:
A Magnum for Schneider, (aka A Red File for Callan, 1969)
Russian Roulette (1973)
Death and Bright Water (1974)
Callan Uncovered and Callan Uncovered 2, featuring short stories as well as scripts

Monday, May 04, 2015

Campion’s Humorous New Champion

(Editor’s note: The following short review comes from “Michael Gregorio,” a byline behind which hides the husband-and-wife writing team of Daniela De Gregorio and Michael G. Jacob. After penning four historical mysteries featuring early 19th-century Prussian magistrate-cum-detective Hanno Stiffeniis, including 2010’s Unholy Awakening, the pair most recently published Cry Wolf, the opening entry in a new crime series set in Italy’s Umbria region.)

Margery Allingham, one of the queens of the “Golden Age” of British detective stories, died in 1966. Her husband of almost four decades, Philip Youngman Carter, took up the baton for a few years after that, composing fiction starring his wife’s “gentleman sleuth,” Albert Campion, and writing under her name, but then he, too, passed away in 1969. Allingham fans were left in the lurch, so to speak, until author author-critic Mike Ripley stepped bravely into the breach more than 40 years later, BERJAYAhaving been invited to compose Mr. Campion’s Farewell from notes that Youngman Carter left to the Margery Allingham Society, the members of which were desperate to read more.

No one could have been better suited for the job.

Ripley, better known to his fans as “The Ripster” (the nickname with which he signs each edition of “Getting Away with Murder,” his monthly Shots column), is a truly entertaining writer. Rap Sheet contributor Jim Napier included Mr. Campion’s Farewell among his favorite mystery novels of 2014, describing it as “a delightful, timeless tale.” The new Mr. Campion’s Fox (Severn House), the latest installment in what promises to be a sparkling continuation of Margery Allingham’s series, takes the Ripster one step further into her bygone literary world, producing a classic-style detective yarn that’s exquisitely faithful to the original design, but also great fun to read.

Set for the most part in a tiny village on the Suffolk coast of England, with occasional trips into London’s sometimes seedy Soho district, this novel is peopled by a rich and varied cast of characters straight out of the 1960s. There’s the Misses Mister, for example, two eccentric spinster sisters who own the local brewery, and the lugubrious Mr. Lugg, the beadle, who plunges readers into the mystery involving the disappearance of Vibeke, a Danish au pair girl, and the death of her boyfriend, Frank Tate. Murders there are in these pages, and they can be violent. However, they never overstep the limits of taste established by Margery Allingham and her fellow Golden Age authors--Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh, Dorothy L. Sayers, and their like.

A tight and lively plot is generously seasoned with sardonic quips and humor, as those who have read any of Ripley’s 15 novels about musician-gumshoe Fitzroy Maclean Angel (Angels Unaware, etc.) have come to expect. At the same time, Ripley has to cope in this story with the fact that Allingham’s hero, Albert Campion, has become an old man, and he does so quite cleverly by employing Campion’s (younger) wife, Lady Amanda, and his son, Rupert, to do all the footwork, while the senior Campion’s brain remains as lively as ever. The same goes for his sense of the absurd. What does Mr. Campion wish to have inscribed on his tombstone, for example? “‘Albert Campion. Permanently in the Dark.’ How’s that for an epitaph?”

Mr. Campion’s Fox will delight both longtime Margery Allingham enthusiasts and a generation of younger readers who may not yet be familiar with her work.

Hats off to Mike Ripley!

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Step Up to Mike

UK critic Mike Ripley keeps threatening that he’s going to give up composing his monthly “Getting Away with Murder” column for Shots after the March installment, No. 100. If true, we really need to appreciate the final wo entries in his entertaining series.

February’s lighthearted mix of news and gossip includes notes about S.D. Sykes’ medieval mystery, Plague Land; the new Johnny Depp film Mortdecai, “which as any true mystery fan knows, is based on the books by the improbably named Kyril Bonfiglioli”; the soon-forthcoming novel The Whites, by Richard Price writing as Harry Brandt; the second Chianti Crime Festival, to take place in Italy during the first week in May, and at which Ripley will officiate; plus a great deal more.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Hello to “Farewell”

Well, this is certainly an unexpected development. Les Blatt, who writes the fine blog Classic Mysteries, has filed a post mentioning a new project completed by UK novelist, critic, and Friend of The Rap Sheet Mike Ripley. His post reads, in part:
By coincidence, I also received an e-mail today from Mike Ripley, who writes the monthly “Getting Away with Murder” column for Britain’s Shots eZine, telling me that we are about to get a new mystery featuring Albert Campion, the character originally created by Margery Allingham. Ripley has “completed” the book, called Mr. Campion’s Farewell. Based on a conversation in the Golden Age of Detection group on Facebook, the new book is actually the completion of a book begun by Philip Youngman Carter, Allingham’s husband, but never completed. (Carter did complete an earlier manuscript left unfinished by Allingham, Cargo of Eagles. Curtis Evans reminds us in his blog, The Passing Tramp, that Carter also wrote two Campion books of his own, Mr. Campion’s Farthing and Mr. Campion’s Falcon. (To confuse matters further, the latter may also appear as Mr. Campion’s Quarry.) In any case, Severn House plans to release Mr. Campion’s Farewell in the UK on March 27th, with an e-book and U.S. edition due in June.
I always enjoy Ripley’s writing, so I look forward to seeing Mr. Campion’s Farewell in print sometime soon. Click here to find that novel for sale on the Amazon UK site.

READ MORE: More About Mr. Campion and Friends,” by Les Blatt (Classic Mysteries); “Philip Youngman Carter: Mr. Campion’s Falcon,” by Rich Westwood (Past Offences).

Wednesday, December 04, 2013

Sure Shots

In addition to this morning’s news about Grand Master Award winners, British critic and columnist Mike Ripley has also released the list of his 2013 Shots of the Year Award recipients, in seven categories. He’s made some excellent selections, honoring fiction by Martin Cruz Smith, Robert Ryan, M.D. Villiers, and others. But of course, I would expect no less from an authority in this field such as Ripley.

If you’re looking for gifts to present to crime-fiction fans in your family this Christmas, start with Ripley’s list.

Sunday, December 02, 2012

Season’s Scrollings

It’s not often that you will see British author and critic Mike Ripley sporting a jaunty scarlet Santa cap, but that’s exactly what he’s doing in the photograph at the top of his December “Getting Away with Murder” column for the e-zine Shots.

From there, the piece talks about “the welcome return of the Headline Crime Party”; Colin Bateman’s The Prisoner of Brenda, which Ripley dubs “the funniest novel of the year”; possible holiday gifts for crime-fiction fans; new novels from Paul Doherty, Robert Littell, Kerry Wilkinson, and Robert Wilson; and Ripley’s Shots of the Year awards.

Click here for the full download.

Monday, January 02, 2012

Those Lucky Brits

Sometime contributor Mike Ripley sends along this note:
Happy New Year to The Rap Sheet from England.

We saw the new year in with style yesterday with the first showing of “A Scandal in Belgravia,” one of three new
Sherlock films for the BBC. This high-tech, very clever (and often very funny) take on the Holmes/Watson dynamic duo has been well worth the year’s wait since the airing of the first, award-winning series created by Steven Moffat (the current Dr. Who supremo) and Mark Gatiss (who also plays Mycroft Holmes). Watch out for the early toe-curling scenes in Buckingham Palace, how Holmes deals with a rogue CIA agent who has roughed up Mrs. Hudson, and on no account miss Lara Pulver’s interpretation of Irene Adler as an up-market dominatrix with royal clients!

It’s great fun and the lead actors, Benedict Cumberbatch (Holmes) and Martin Freeman (Watson), are to team up again--though not necessarily on the same side--in Peter Jackson’s forthcoming film,
The Hobbit.

Next week,
Sherlock will offer “The Hounds of Baskerville,” but before then (tonight in fact) comes the premiere of the TV film Endeavour, a prequel to the Inspector Morse series. Set in 1965, the film portrays Colin Dexter’s famous detective, Endeavour Morse, as a young, teetotal Oxford drop-out just beginning his police career as a humble detective constable. This two-hour pilot film also features a cameo appearance from the late John Thaw’s daughter Abigail, and given the Oxford setting and the production values of the highly successful Inspector Morse and Lewis shows, a series is surely in the offing.
My fellow American TV viewers will surely be pleased to learn that the three-episode second season of Sherlock is set to be broadcast as part of PBS-TV’s Masterpiece Mystery! series, beginning on May 6. PBS reportedly intends to show Endeavour sometime later this year, though a specific date has not yet been announced.

One more thing: If you would like to read more from UK critic Ripley, his latest “Getting Away with Murder” column has been posted in Shots. It’s filled with notes about recent book parties, word of development on the Scandinavian crime-fiction front, and coming releases from Elmore Leonard, Gillian Flynn, and Alex Scarrow.

READ MORE:Endeavour: Review,” by Martin Edwards (‘Do You Write Under Your Own Name?’); “Endeavour, Pilot: TV Review,” by Puzzle Doctor (In Search of the Classic Mystery Novel).

Friday, September 02, 2011

Mike Ripley on Track

Mike Ripley’s September “Getting Away with Murder” column is up and running at the Webzine Shots. As always, Ripley’s coverage is so complete, I don’t even know where to start in recounting it: festivals and BERJAYAnew series and old series and general comments about the crime corner of the book industry we all love.

Ripley’s observations tend to be spot-on and--quite often--are stated with great wit. Take, for example, this quick look at a new novel from Deon Meyer:
I am steeling myself for this month’s inevitable hysteria as publishers and booksellers trumpet that “South Africa is the new Scandinavia” when it comes to crime writing and that Deon Meyer is “South Africa’s Answer to Stieg Larsson”. He’s not; he’s far better.
As it happens, Trackers showed up in my office just today and I’d already decided to sneak it to the top of my TBR pile when I read Meyer’s sharp--and positive--assessment. Meyer writes in Afrikaans, which he explains in a touching comment in an interview that arrived with the book. “If I write in English, it takes me longer,” Meyer explains. “I have to translate my thoughts. ... Afrikaans is my mother tongue. It’s a small language, an endangered language. The one thing I can do for the language is to write in it.”

In the same interview, Meyer reports that he’s a big fan of Michael Connelly and insists that 2002’s “City of Bones is the most perfect crime novel I’ve ever read.”

Ironically enough, Connelly blurbs the North American editions of this book, which will be out next week from Atlantic Monthly Press in the States and Random House Canada north of the border. “With Deon Meyer, you can’t go wrong,” Connelly enthuses. I guess I’m going to trust in Ripley and Connelly and plan on spending a few hours with Meyer in the near future. Thanks, guys!

Thursday, March 31, 2011

It Was the Best of Crimes: Critics’ Choice

In the summer of 2000, British critics H.R.F. “Harry” Keating and Mike Ripley were commissioned by the London Times newspaper to conduct a survey of the best crime novels (mysteries/spy stories/thrillers) of the 20th century, choosing one per year, 1900-1999. This, said the two critics, couldn’t be done so neatly, but what they BERJAYAwould do was select 100 books to represent a century which began with the recall of Sherlock Holmes and ended with the death of Inspector Morse.

In the end, Ripley cheated a bit by nominating 101 titles to include Keating’s own The Perfect Murder from 1964, which modesty had forbidden its author from suggesting.

The survey, with a brief justification for each title, was published in a 16-page supplement to The Times on Saturday, September 30, 2000. The basic list of titles selected is republished here for the first time as a tribute to author and scholar Harry Keating, who died earlier this week at age 84. (Titles and years are as when published in the UK.)

1902: The Hound of the Baskervilles – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
1903: The Riddle of the Sands – Erskine Childers
1905: The Four Just Men – Edgar Wallace
1907: The Thinking Machine – Jacques Futrelle
1908: The Circular Staircase – Mary Roberts Rinehart
1911: The Innocence of Father Brown – G.K. Chesterton
1912: Trent’s Last Case – E.C. Bentley
1915: The Thirty-Nine Steps – John Buchan
1918: Uncle Abner – Melville Davisson Post
1926: The Murder of Roger Ackroyd – Agatha Christie
1928: Ashenden (The British Agent) – W. Somerset Maugham
1929: Little Caesar – W.R. Burnett
1929: Red Harvest – Dashiell Hammett
1930: The Maltese Falcon – Dashiell Hammett
1930: The Documents in the Case – Dorothy L. Sayers, Robert Eustace
1931: Malice Aforethought – Francis Iles
1932: Before the Fact – Francis Iles
1933: The Nine Tailors – Dorothy L. Sayers
1934: Murder on the Orient Express – Agatha Christie
1934: The Postman Always Rings Twice – James M. Cain
1934: Death of a Ghost – Margery Allingham
1935: They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? – Horace McCoy
1935: The Hollow Man – John Dickson Carr
1935: The League of Frightened Men – Rex Stout
1936: The Wheel Spins – Ethel Lina White
1938: Lament for a Maker – Michael Innes
1938: The Beast Must Die – Nicholas Blake
1939: The Mask of Dimitrios – Eric Ambler
1939: Ten Little Niggers (And Then There Were None) –
Agatha Christie
1939: Rogue Male – Geoffrey Household
1940: A Surfeit of Lampreys (Death of a Peer) – Ngaio Marsh
BERJAYA1940: The Bride Wore Black – Cornell Woolrich
1942: Calamity Town – Ellery Queen
1943: The High Window – Raymond Chandler
1944: Green for Danger – Christianna Brand
1946: The Big Clock – Kenneth Fearing
1947: The Moving Toyshop – Edmund Crispin
1948: Devil Take the Blue-Tail Fly
John Franklin Bardin
1949: My Friend Maigret – Georges Simenon
1949: The Asphalt Jungle – W.R. Burnett
1950: Strangers on a Train – Patricia Highsmith
1950: Smallbone Deceased – Michael Gilbert
1950: The Stain on the Snow – Georges Simenon
1951: The Daughter of Time – Josephine Tey
1952: The Tiger in the Smoke – Margery Allingham
1952: Last Seen Wearing – Hilary Waugh
1953: Five Roundabouts to Heaven – John Bingham
1953: The Long Goodbye – Raymond Chandler
1953: The Burglar – David Goodis
1956: The Talented Mr. Ripley – Patricia Highsmith
1956: Mystery Stories – Stanley Ellin
1957: From Russia with Love – Ian Fleming
1959: The Manchurian Candidate – Richard Condon
1962: The IPCRESS File – Len Deighton
1963: Gun Before Butter – Nicolas Freeling
1963: The Spy Who Came in from the Cold – John Le Carré
1964: The Deep Blue Good-by – John D. MacDonald
1964: Pop. 1280 – Jim Thompson
1964: The Expendable Man – Dorothy B. Hughes
1965: Black Money – Ross Macdonald
1967: Roseanna – Maj Sjöwall, Per Wahlöö
1968: Making Good Again – Lionel Davidson
1968: The Glass-Sided Ants Nest – Peter Dickinson
1969: Blind Man with a Pistol – Chester Himes
1970: Jack’s Return Home – Ted Lewis
1971: The Day of the Jackal – Frederick Forsyth
1972: The Friends of Eddie Coyle – George V. Higgins
1972: Sadie When She Died – Ed McBain
1972: The Players and the Game – Julian Symons
1974: Other Paths to Glory – Anthony Price
1976: The Wrong Case – James Crumley
1976: A Demon in My View – Ruth Rendell
1976: A Morbid Taste for Bones – Ellis Peters
1977: A Judgement in Stone – Ruth Rendell
1977: LaidlawWilliam McIlvanney
1978: SS-GB – Len Deighton
1979: Whip Hand – Dick Francis
1979: Skinflick – Joseph Hansen
1979: Kill Claudio – P.M. Hubbard
1981: Red Dragon – Thomas Harris
1981: Thus Was Adonis Murdered – Sarah Caudwell
1982: The False Inspector DewPeter Lovesey
BERJAYA1982: Indemnity Only – Sara Paretsky
1982: The Artful EggJames McClure
1984: Stick – Elmore Leonard
1984: Miami Blues – Charles Willeford
1986: A Perfect Spy – John Le Carré
1986: A Taste for Death – P.D. James
1987: The Black Dahlia – James Ellroy
1988: Double Whammy – Carl Hiaasen
1989: Lonely Hearts – John Harvey
1990: Postmortem – Patricia Cornwell
1991: Devil in a Blue Dress – Walter Mosley
1991: Dirty Tricks – Michael Dibdin
1993: The Sculptress – Minette Walters
1993: In the Electric Mist with Confederate Dead – James Lee Burke
1995: The Mermaids Singing – Val McDermid
1998: On Beulah Height – Reginald Hill
1998: The Hanging Garden – Ian Rankin
1999: The Remorseful Day – Colin Dexter

Now, what do you think? Are there other books from the 20th century that you believe belong on this rundown, or some mentioned here that you think ought not be included? And how many of these works have you actually read? Sound off by clicking on “Comments” below.

Tuesday, March 29, 2011

A Grateful Association

After I heard yesterday that distinguished British novelist H.R.F. “Harry” Keating had died, I dashed off an e-note to critic and author Mike Ripley, a friend of Keating’s. Ripley had already penned a fine obituary of the author BERJAYAfor The Guardian, but I wondered whether there was anything else he’d like to add. He replied by sending me the photograph of Keating featured on the left, along with this note:
I first met Harry Keating 21 years ago at a publisher’s party. I had published two novels and become crime-fiction critic for The Daily Telegraph. There was Harry, who’d written dozens of prize-winning novels, was chairman of the Detection Club, and had been crime critic for The Times. To say I was in awe was putting it mildly.

I had no need to be. Harry was polite, gentle, and kind, and I was to discover he was always so.

On many occasions we appeared on public platforms together--as critics and as members of the Dorothy L. Sayers Society--and in 2000 we were asked jointly to produce a list of the Top 100 Mysteries and Thrillers of the 20th Century for a special supplement in
The Times. We did so without argument and only minor disagreements over a couple of titles, and the whole exercise was conducted over two weeks by exchange of letters--Harry’s notes being delicately written using a fountain pen given to him by Len Deighton. (He was never one for computers.)

I think he was genuinely pleased when I described his best-known fictional character, Inspector Ghote, as “the Maigret of Mumbai” and I was delighted to hear that four of his earlier novels were to be reissued by Penguin in stylish new covers. Typically, Harry made sure I was sent an advanced set straight from the publishers, but sadly died only days before they appeared in bookshops.

I will keep them next to my copy of
The Murder of the Maharajah, which won Harry his second Gold Dagger in 1980 and which is inscribed: H.R.F. Keating signs, with gratitude over the years, for Mike Ripley.
Ripley adds that he’s “still slightly in shock about Harry--I was with Peter Lovesey on Wednesday and we were talking about him and the history of the Detection Club.”

READ MORE:Fond Farewells: H.R.F. Keating (1926-2011),” by J.F. Norris (Pretty Sinister Books); “H.R.F. Keating, R.I.P.,” by Martin Edwards (‘Do You Write Under Your Own Name?’); “H.R.F. Keating, 1926-2011,” by Chris Routledge (The Venetian Vase).

Monday, March 14, 2011

Rip and Read

Reading Mike Ripley’s Shots column, “Getting Away with Murder,” is like standing beside a psychiatrist’s couch while the doctor stretches out and tells you a little about what’s been keeping him busy recently. BERJAYAThen again, if you don’t read Ripley’s monthly round-up of news and crime-fiction reviews, you should start looking seriously for a psychiatrist.

The talented Mister Ripley has written 18 novels and reviewed more than 980 mysteries and thrillers (“having read some of them all the way through,” he adds) over the last 20 years. We’d already enjoyed a few of his books and were eager visitors to his regular slot in the Shots e-zine when we met him for the first time last summer at the Heffers store in Cambridge during the invigorating annual “Bodies in the Book­shop” jamboree. Ripley stands out in a distinguished crowd for three very good reasons: he knows everything, and he knows everybody. The third reason? He’s an affable guy with a great sense of humor.

The problem, when interviewing him, is where to begin. Over the course of our recent discussion, we covered every subject from his fiction writing to the source of his column’s “voice,” his defense of forgotten authors, his recovery from a stroke, his opinions on the current wave of Scandinavian crime fiction, and his notorious name-dropping.

Michael Gregorio: Mike, it feels like I’ve been reading “Getting Away with Murder” (GAWM) ever since I was in short pants. How long has the column been running? When and how did the idea come to you?

Mike Ripley: The fact that you are now actually wearing pants is a good sign, Michael. Still, the column hasn’t been going that long. The inspiration for “Getting Away with Murder” came after a particularly savage night in the [original] Academy Club in London with my fellow boulevardiers Auberon Waugh and Gore Vidal, tasting a consign­ment of fire-damaged gin.

MG: [What does “fire-damaged gin” taste like, you dearly wish to ask. Which fire did it come from? And how did Waugh and Gore react to it? But that way madness lies. The fact is that Mike Ripley has met more writers than you or I could probably name. So instead, one tries the question again.] Mike, how did GAWM originate?

MR: Version 2 for the serious? Well, back in the 1990s I was the crime-fiction critic for The Daily Telegraph, but that meant writing about books after they’d been published. I wanted to tell readers about interesting books that were coming up and try my hand at talent-spotting new writers, so I began a “preview” column for the trade newspaper Publishing News (now defunct). Around 1998, PN decided that such things would be better (cheaper) covered in-house, and they dispensed with my four-times-a-year column. I happened to be speaking at a Sherlock Holmes convention with Harry [H.R.F.] Keating (who knows a lot about Holmes, whilst I know nothing) in Sussex at the home of [Arthur] Conan Doyle and I must have mentioned the fact in passing. Afterwards, I was approached by David Stuart Davies, editor of the quarterly Sherlock Holmes: The Detective Magazine, who asked if I would like to transfer the column there. I agreed and I came up with a new title: “Getting Away with Murder.”

MG: A happy ending, then?

MR: Well, GAWM ran in Sherlock for about six years--and we launched the Sherlock Awards (for mystery characters, not their authors!)--until the magazine changed proprietors and (disastrously) editors, and the column became homeless. It was Mike Stotter, the editor of Shots, who suggested an online home in 2006, though my connections with Shots had been infrequent since the printed version ended. My “Angel” books featured on the cover of the proto­type edition, which was launched at a Shot in the Dark convention in 1994. Despite that fact, the magazine was still going strong ...

MG: Better than strong, I’d say. Shots is now the UK’s biggest Internet site for crime fiction, BERJAYAand GAWM is one of its major attractions. But let me ask you about your Angel books. Mike Ripley, crime novelist, life number two.

MR: Were it only two lives! The voices in my head tell me it is so many more. I was probably the last big-game hunter to bag a white rhino in Hampshire.

MG: I read a bio saying that you are “the author of 18 novels, co-editor (with Maxim Jakubowski) of three anthologies featuring new UK crime-writing, a former scriptwriter for the Lovejoy series on the BBC, one of the presenters of the Super Sleuths series on ITV3, and a consultant for BBC2’s Murder Most Famous.” I’ve left out all the stuff about teaching and lecturing on the subject.

MR: I was also an air-ace with 134 confirmed kills (though I have since dropped the “von” from my family name); and the archaeologist who discovered the site of Queen Boudica’s royal mint (even if the dispute still rumbles on in academic circles) ...

MG: By which you mean that you were working until recently as an archaeologist in England’s East Anglia region, and that you have actually written historical thrillers: Boudica and the Last Roman (2005) and The Legend of Hereward the Wake (2007).

MR: Wasn’t that what I was just saying?

MG: Regarding your novels ... Angel Touch (1989), the second installment in your Angel series, won The Last Laugh Award for “best humorous crime novel first published in the British Isles.” Angels in Arms (1991), your fourth entry, picked up that very same commendation. That’s an amazing run of successes.

MR: Angel Hunt also won something called the Angel Award for Fiction--though no one believes that--and one of [the books] was voted “Shot of the Year” (at least I think that’s what they said) by readers of Shots magazine. I was very lucky in the early days. Readers and reviewers were very kind.

MG: The series features Fitzroy Maclean Angel, who has been described as “one of the best creations in modern crime fiction.” Would you care to tell us something about the character and that series?

MR: Angel was always meant to be an outsider, so that he could better observe the lunacies of life, particularly life in London in the late 1980s, when Thatcherism ruled, greed was good, and all people worried about was where the next BMW was coming from. He didn’t get a back-story and a family history until book number seven, and he is never physically described. The early books are being reissued by Telos Publishing--in fact, two came out this month--and they’re also doing e-books of them, whatever those are.

MG: Let’s return to the subject of your monthly column. What I find particularly fascinating about “Getting Away with Murder” is the voice of Mike Ripley, columnist, better known as “Duke Ripster of Ripster Hall.” Where did that amazing persona come from?

MR: From me, obviously. All I have done is turn the truth up to 11 and exaggerate like mad. I’ve been lucky enough to meet some talented and very interesting people in my life, so I played on that. I was born in a coal-mining village in the West Riding of Yorkshire (my father was a miner) and I was lucky enough to win a scholarship to a very minor public school, whose most famous old boy was John Haigh, the “Acid Bath Murderer.”

MG: Is that true or false?

MR: It’s true. Well, most of it’s true (apart from the bit about Gore Vidal being my darts-playing partner). As a teenager, I moved to Cambridge, where I was taught Russian History for a while by Tom Sharpe, who had only just been published. He was the first author I ever knew. I managed to talk my way on to Varsity, the university newspaper, where the editor was Charles Clarke (later to be Home Secretary), and I became their jazz critic. Not clever enough to get into Cambridge, I went to the University of East Anglia to read Economic History, and there I met Malcolm Bradbury, the second “proper” novelist I got to know, though I was less interested in his Creative Writing program (in fact, not interested at all) than I was in persuading the local newspaper, the Eastern Evening News (famous old boy: Frederick Forsyth) to give me a monthly humorous column on student life.

Journalism seemed a natural career on graduating--it was easier than working--and I did my apprenticeship on local papers in Yorkshire, before defecting into public relations, first for the University of Essex, then in London for The Brewers Society, where I promoted, defended, and drank British beer for 21 years until downsizing BERJAYAand the offer of redundancy led to a mid-life career change and I became an archaeologist, which seemed a perfectly logical thing to do at the time. Had it not been for my stroke, I would probably be one still.

MG: You wrote a book about that experience, too, didn’t you?

MR: Surviving a Stroke (ISIS Publishing, 2007) was written from my personal experience to give stroke survivors hope. It’s possible to get some, if not all, of your old life back. I did what worked for me. It won’t work for everyone, but the principle’s the same: find something you really want to do again and go for it. With me it was writing novels, and in particular finishing off the book I was writing when so rudely interrupted. Using an old typewriter to get my hand and arm working seemed perfectly natural to me, because I have always used typewriters. For other survivors it may be something completely different, but it’s important to find something to hang onto and use it as a lever to get back to normality.

MG: And where does the voice of “The Ripster” come from, Mike?

MR: I’m proud of the fact that a “scholarship boy” from a family of Yorkshire miners, with no connections and precious little talent, can find himself discussing the merits of Carlsberg Lager with the Duke of Edinburgh (twice!); have lunch in the House of Lords with Lord Willis, the creator of [the long-running TV series] Dixon of Dock Green; be invited onto the set of a James Bond movie by Pierce Brosnan; be introduced to Bergerac Blanc by Auberon Waugh; personally work with some of the great names in British brewing (Mr. Whitbread, Mr. Boddington, Mr. Adnams, and so on); be published by the legendary Elizabeth Walter (Agatha Christie’s last editor); meet one’s schoolboy heroes (Michael Caine, Len Deighton); and become good friends with writers who are really talented, such as Colin Dexter, Reginald Hill, and Minette Walters.

MG: You are a first-rate name-dropper, Mike, I’ll give you that.

MR: I know I am, so when searching for a “voice” for The Ripster, I decided to take this personal pride and expand it for comic effect. Thus, the writer of “Getting Away with Murder” has been everywhere, done everything, met everyone, and name-dropping is second nature to him. Because of my irritation at the short-term memory of many in the publishing industry, I gave the columnist great age and wisdom, and because I have always lived in the country (although many thought I lived in London), he naturally had to have a massive estate covering most, if not all, of East Anglia.

MG: Ah, the idea of an evening spent sipping sherry at Ripster Hall ...

MR: Sherry? Sherry’s for wimps!

I can’t remember who first called me The Ripster, but it was thriller writer Nick Stone who christened me “Duke,” when he discovered to his jealous fury and sneaking admiration that I had once met [pianist and band leader] Duke Ellington. Did I mention that? Thus, Duke Ripster of Ripster Hall emerged to fight the good fight, take to task unfeeling publishers, prick the inflated egos of writers who have written more books than they have read, and keep the flag flying for writers who do not deserve to be forgotten. And to have a few laughs along the way.

MG: About Duke Ellington ...?

MR: Myself and three friends had been to his concert in the north of England. It was 2 a.m. when it finished and the mini-cab we called for never turned up. It was snowing like fury. We were put out onto the street as the club closed, and we stood there shivering. A Rolls Royce emerged from the car park and pulled up. The rear door opened and there was Ellington telling us to get in out of the cold, so we did. I got his autograph, but I don’t think I said much, I was so tongue-tied. What a gentleman! Incidentally, so was BERJAYA[film director-screenwriter] Quentin Tarantino, though the first time I met him I hadn’t seen Reservoir Dogs [1992] and I had to bluff it. Did I mention meeting Quentin?

MG: Gawm blimey! OK, Mike, so you had an editor, a voice, and the column ...

MR: ... just seemed to slide naturally into a monthly timetable, though that was never planned. Some people refer to it as a “blog,” though I’m not really sure what a “blog” is. People who work in publishing have started to refer to it as my monthly “newsletter”; I don’t mind and have been astonished at the reach of my ramblings. Thanks to the jolly old Interweb (sic!), I now have readers in the USA (where my novels were rejected by publishers for being “full of slang” which the Americans wouldn’t understand!), Canada, Australia, Japan, South Africa, Spain, Denmark, Sweden, Portugal, Holland, even Italy.

MG: And you keep on dropping names every month in GAWM.

MR: When it comes to dropping “famous names” of crime writers, The Ripster does it in spades. But there is a reason for this. Although my crime-writing career, such as it was, is behind me now, I was very proud to have been an extremely small part of a long and noble tradition, and I regard ignorance of that tradition as a sin. Not recognizing good writing when it’s under your nose really gets my goat. I have no time for writers who refuse to accept that another writer can be as good as, or better than they are. I remember shocking an audience into silence when I described “my generation” of crime writers, and said that Ian Rankin may be the best plotter, but Michael Dibdin was “the best writer of us all.” My audience had never heard a writer say someone else was a better writer before. (Please note: I said that he was a better writer than me; I didn’t say he was funnier.)

MG: You do make a point of recommending names from the past.

MR: There are so many unjustly forgotten crime writers--and there’ll be many more as publishing becomes even more ruthless in its pursuit of the next Stieg Larsson or Dan Brown--that it makes me weep.

MG: Can you recommend one forgotten author in particular?

MR: Just one? If I had to pick, I’d say P.M. Hubbard, who wrote slow, atmospheric, and very spooky novels from 1963 up to his death in 1980. He dropped off the radar with frightening ease within two or three years and is now only remembered by die-hards like myself, or in histories of the genre. I defy anyone who has read Hubbard to dispute that he was a totally unique stylist who could conjure up a feeling of unease like few others before or since.

MG: While fighting for the “forgotten” generation and promoting new writers, you don’t seem to be particularly impressed by the Scandinavians.

MR: It may be thought that I have a natural resistance to Scandinavian crime writing, but I’d dispute that. I bow to no man in my appreciation of the Swedish duo Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö, whose 10-book series of Inspector Martin Beck books was written between 1965 and 1975. Theirs was an achievement which will never be matched, let alone surpassed. They were not only good crime novels, they also provided a comprehensive Marxist critique of Swedish society.

What really irritates me is the publisher, publicity assistant, bookseller, or even the reviewer, who seems to think that the Scandinavian crime novel was invented by Henning Mankell. They probably think that Whitney Houston invented jazz.

I’m not saying that there aren’t many laughs in Scandinavian crime fiction--there aren’t any--but that’s OK, if you prefer doom and gloom. What irks me is the sheer lack of heart and generosity of spirit in them.

Now, this is not to knock Henning Mankell, per se. The early [Kurt] Wallander books were well written and probably well-enough translated; they’re just not to my taste. I even quite liked one of the Swedish TV adaptations, but I could not suppress a chuckle when The Daily Telegraph’s crime critic said: “Looking for a light-hearted, comic crime novel? Read a Henning Mankell, and then anything else you read will cheer you up.” I didn’t write that, but I would have done.

To be fair, Mankell’s books have been successful in English for 20 years now, but it was the posthumous phenomenon that was/is Steig Larsson BERJAYAwhich sent UK publishers scurrying for their checkbooks in the hope of signing up every Scandinavian who could leave a coherent note for the milkman.

I have met people who have told me that [Larsson’s] Millennium Trilogy was “a life-changing experience,” though admittedly some of the same people can’t understand why The Da Vinci Code didn’t win the Booker Prize. I have to admit that I never finished the first book and have not been tempted to try the other two, or see any of the films, which just seem to keep on coming. It seemed to me that the book screamed out for an editor (one of the old school who actually edits) and that the female heroine (“the hacker chick,” as an American friend calls her) was far from the original character many were claiming that she was. Call me old-fashioned and patriotic (or just old), but I reckon Lisbeth Salander owes an awful lot to feisty, kick-ass, computer-literate, sexy heroines of British crime fiction of the late 1980s/early 1990s created by writers such as Val McDermid, Sarah Dunant, Denise Danks, Lesley Grant-Adamson, and Stella Duffy.

MG: I didn’t manage to finish the first volume of the Millennium Trilogy, either. Nor did I bother with books two and three. It’s one of those things that you don’t really want to confess for lots of reasons.

MR: To suggest in public that the Larsson trilogy might in any way be overblown and derivative is akin to smoking in church, and the legions of Larsson fans (as in “fanatics”) turn on you like-- as Gore Vidal would have said--members of the Donner Party at an all-you-can-eat-buffet. I suspect it is because the books were published posthumously. Any hint of criticism is dismissed with the charge “you’re jealous of his sales figures.” Well, honestly, I am not jealous of the late Mr. Larsson. What is there to be jealous of? I’m still alive.

The beatification of Larsson led Scandinavian crime fiction to become the Holy Grail of British publishing. Anything with a Nordic twist seems to get published and heavily promoted--I am anxiously awaiting the first crime-writing sensation from the Faroe Islands; it’s bound to come. All I try to do is prick the huge Scandinavian bubble with a very small, blunt pin--because, let’s face it, all artificial bubbles need pricking, and that goes for the egos of writers, myself included.

Still, whenever I subject Scandinavian crime fiction to one of my flea bites, you’d be surprised at my mail bag. There’s hate mail from readers and publishers, of course, but also an awful lot of messages from writers worldwide saying “you’re dead right, but I would never dare say that.”

MG: Any other pet aversions, Mike?

MR: Lots! Established writers too arrogant to help or encourage debutante authors; debutante authors so full of themselves that they think they don’t need advice ...

[At this point in our exchange, the magnetic tape unwound creakily from its plastic spool. Fans will be happy to know that Mike Ripley will be “spooling” and “spieling” again in “Getting Away with Murder” next month on the Shots Web site.]

Friday, July 02, 2010

Trainspotting with the Nazis

In January Magazine today, British author and critic Mike Ripley reviews Potsdam Station, the fourth World War II-era thriller by David Downing. Like the previous books, this one stars Anglo-American journalist John Russell, his actress girlfriend, Effi Koenen, and his son, Paul. Of Postdam’s captivating plot, Ripley writes:
BERJAYA
Russell has not seen or been able to contact his beloved Effi or his estranged son for more than three years, but both are alive and still in Berlin, though far from safe: the teenage Paul serving in an anti-aircraft battery, Effi living under a false identity and now actively involved in the anti-Nazi resistance.

Once he learns that the Americans and British will leave the taking of Berlin to the Russians, Russell is frantic with worry, having no illusions about the treatment awaiting German prisoners and female civilians at the hands of their vengeful conquerors. He flies to Moscow in an attempt to have himself “embedded” (as we would now say) as a journalist with the advancing Soviet war machine, knowing that his request is something of a long shot. It is, but by striding into the offices of the NKVD and demanding to see his former Soviet “handler,” Russell wins his chance.

He will be allowed to enter Berlin, not with the Red Army but actually ahead of it, and to search for Effi and Paul, but only after he has helped a Soviet team secure scientific papers from a Nazi research center--highly secret documents which will help Russia’s atomic research. Therein lies another balancing act of conscience for Russell--providing, that is, he survives the parachute drop into enemy territory, Allied bombing, Russian shelling and the NKVD hit man with orders to leave no loose ends.
You’ll find the full review here.

Friday, September 11, 2009

The Book You Have to Read:
“Solomon’s Vineyard,” by Jonathan Latimer

(Editor’s note: This is the 62nd installment of our ongoing Friday blog series highlighting great but forgotten books. Today’s selection comes from Mike Ripley, BERJAYAnoted British critic, Shots columnist, and award-winning author of the Fitzroy Maclean Angel series of comedy thrillers.)

A bit like Fergus Hume’s trail-blazing The Mystery of a Hansom Cab from 1886, Jonathan Latimer’s most notorious novel is cited in all the best reference books and critical works, yet hardly anyone seems to have read it.

Solomon’s Vineyard (aka The Fifth Grave) was, I believe, originally banned in the United States and had to be published in the much more liberal UK in 1941, despite there being a war on. Although a “bowdlerized” version (presumably that means censored) did appear in America some years later, it seems that British fans were responsible for keeping the Latimer flame alive (albeit fluttering weakly) with paperback versions in the early 1960s and then reprints of most of his titles in the late 1980s and 1990s.

It was, and is, a flame worth nourishing for Jonathan Wyatt Latimer (1906-83) was a key player in the field of hard-boiled fiction, film, and television. He made his name with novels featuring New York private eye Bill Crane in the mid-1930s, books which (British) critics rated as well above the average hard-boiled pulp. Julian Symons (in Bloody Murder, published in the States as Mortal Consequences) picked out “an irresponsible gaiety” in Latimer’s work, while Tim Binyon (Murder Will Out) noted “a pleasingly cynical, slightly bawdy tone ... [where the] ... prevailing mood is one of slightly drunken irresponsibility.” H.R.F. “Harry” Keating (Whodunnit) noted wryly that Latimer’s alcoholic detective, Bill Crane, “is unusual (among hard-boiled heroes) in that drink makes him drunk.”

It seemed entirely logical that Latimer would end up in Hollywood, which he swiftly did, racking up scriptwriting credits on The Glass Key in 1942, from the novel by Dashiell Hammett (a bound shooting script of which would now cost you around $3,000), and then The Big Clock, from the book by Kenneth Fearing, as well as many other non-crime movies. In the 1950s Latimer slipped smoothly into television, writing for the shows Checkmate (created by Eric Ambler) and Hong Kong, before putting in a decent shift on Perry Mason (26 episodes) and, finally, writing an early episode of Columbo.

A notable career in anybody’s book, it would seem. Yet Latimer is best known for writing a one-off, non-series, banned novel which could only easily be read by Americans if they were GIs serving in Britain during World War II!

So what makes Solomon’s Vineyard so notorious? By 1940/41, the school of hard-boiled writing was well established, and Raymond Chandler was in the process of buffing it up into high art. Latimer was in there alongside Hammett, James M. Cain, and Horace McCoy, and the tough-talking, hard-drinking, streetwise hoodlums and heroes he portrayed should have surprised no one; though the above-average quality of his prose may have. There is certainly a lot of tough-talking and thuggish violence in Vineyard, and perhaps more than the expected amount of hard drinking.

The hero and narrator, ex-football player-turned-private eye Karl Craven, certainly can put it away. Within an hour of arriving from St. Louis, Missouri, in the rather vague town of Paulton, Craven discovers his partner has been assassinated by a sniper while going to the bathroom and his BERJAYAmethod of dealing with the shock is to send out for a quart of bourbon and some magazines (“Film Fun and some of those others with photographs of half-naked babes, and Black Mask.”).

After a busy afternoon of reading and drinking, Craven hits the town, meets a redhead (the first of several femmes fatales) for whiskey sours and a bar fight, then moves on to a steak dinner accompanied by a bottle of champagne and a bottle of brandy (mixed), which pretty much sets the tone. At one point, as a hangover cure, our hero quaffs six raw eggs stirred into a half-bottle of brandy for breakfast, for as Craven himself says at the end of the book, “being a detective toughens a fellow up.”

Craven and his partner were ostensibly in town to investigate a mysterious cult named after a self-styled, but now dead, prophet called Solomon, which has ensnared several young girls and has a reputation for strange rituals that might or might not include human sacrifice. (Shades of Hammett’s The Dain Curse?) But avenging the death of his partner soon takes precedence over being hired by Penelope Grayson’s rich uncle to find and rescue her from the clutches of the cult, and Craven tangles with the local police chief, shady lawyers, and a vicious hood named Pug Banta, who has an army of Tommy-gun-toting heavies at his command.

And even when outnumbered and outgunned, our hero retains
his sense of humor:
My mind went to all the times I’d seen it done in the movies. They did it fine there, and in books. The hero was always knocking hell out of three or four armed men. I even saw one movie where he took on eight at once. Franchot Tone, I think it was. I could lick hell out of eight Franchot Tones, armed or otherwise, but I couldn’t do anything about the two toughs. Not without getting shot. I wanted to put off getting shot as long as possible.
However, it wasn’t the drinking or the violence which made Solomon’s Vineyard notorious: it was the sex. Right from the start, it was going to be the sex.
From the way her buttocks looked under the black silk dress, I knew she’d be good in bed. The silk was tight and under it the muscles worked slow and easy. I saw weight there, and control, and, brother, those are things I like in a woman. I put down my bags and went after her along the station platform.

She walked towards the waiting-room. She had gold-blonde hair, and curves, and breasts the size of Cuban pine-apples. Every now and then, walking, she’d swing a hip until it looked like it was going out of joint and then she’d throw it back in place with a snap, making the buttocks quiver under this dress that was like black skin. I guess she knew I was following her. ... She had been looking straight ahead, but suddenly she turned ... and smiled at me. Her smile said: We could have fun together, big boy.
And, of course, they do, but the blonde’s idea of “fun” isn’t exactly Craven’s--at least not at first, though he soon gets into the
swing of things:
She slapped me. She was strong; my cheek stung. She moved in, swinging both arms. Now she had her fists closed. She hit my arms and my chest. I tried to hold her.

“Hit me!” she said.

It was goddam queer. I held her arms, but she got loose. She struck my chest.

She said: “Hit me.”

I hit her easy on the ribs.” That’s right! That’s right!” She hit me a couple of hard blows. Her eyes were wild. She hit me a hard punch on the neck. I hit her in the belly. I heard the breath go out:
ouf! It didn’t stop her. She kept coming in, punching hard.

I gave her one over the kidneys. She grunted and clinched with me. She bit my arm until the blood came. I slapped her. She put her knee in my groin. It hurt. I lost my balance, grabbed for her, and we both went down. ... My hand caught in the scarlet shirt. The silk tore to her navel.

“Yes,” she said.

I got the idea. I ripped the shirt off her, she fighting all the time and liking it. I ripped at her clothes, not caring how much I hurt her.
Masochistic sex scenes (there are more) were obviously a step too far for American publishers (though not British!) in those pre-Spillane days of 1941 (although if memory serves, there were numerous references to masochistic violence in the script of The Glass Key). Julian Symons was probably not the first reviewer to note that Solomon’s Vineyard was “a savage and for its time a sexually outspoken book,” and in the main reviewers much prefer Latimer’s earlier Bill Crane stories or his 1955 non-series novel, Sinners and Shrouds, which some regard as his masterpiece.

Yet for all its outrageous, almost reverential toughness, Solomon’s Vineyard does not deserve to be forgotten as it can be seen as a pivotal point in the mystery writers’ treatment of sex and the historical bridge between Hammett and Cain before the war, and Spillane and Ian Fleming after it. (I’ll bet anything Fleming read Vineyard in wartime London.)

Today’s readers might not even blink at the sex scenes, though even the least politically correct among us might blanch at the casual treatment of every single female character or “babe,” not to mention Greeks and Negroes. Serious mystery readers might despair at a plot which eventually spirals out of control and of a detective whose methods strain credibility even by the cheapest pulp standards.

Yet there is no denying the sheer bravura of the writing here, which is spattered with knowing one-liners. It was almost as if Latimer, who knew and respected the form, and had a good track record in it, had said to himself: Let’s see how far we can push this.

There is no doubt in my mind that he knew full well what he was doing, and the preface to this book comes in the form of a note to the reader from its narrator, Karl Craven himself:
Listen. This is a wild one. Maybe the wildest yet. It’s got everything but an abortion and a tornado. I ain’t saying it’s true. Neither of us, brother, is asking you to believe it. You can lug it across to the rental library right now and tell the dame you want your goddam nickel back. We don’t care. All HE done was write it down like I told it and I don’t
guarantee nothing.
READ MORE:Thriller Writers #2: Jonathan Latimer,” by John Fraser (Mystery*File); “Forgotten Book: Murder in the Madhouse, by Jonathan Latimer,” by Evan Lewis (Davy Crockett’s Almanack).