Australia’s leading
crime writers reveal their secrets.
‘So far
I’ve killed around seventeen people. It’s hard to be completely sure without
digging them up and counting them all, but I’ve been at it for a while now.’ –
Shane Maloney
Crime fiction is the single most popular genre in
international publishing and Australia has some fine practitioners
when it comes to walking the mean streets and nailing the bad guys.
Shane Maloney, Marele Day, Peter Corris, Lenny
Bartulin, Liz Porter, Garry Disher, Malla Nunn, Kerry Greenwood, Geoffrey
McGeachin, Angela Savage, Leigh Redhead, Barry Maitland, Tara Moss, Adrian
Hyland, Leah Giarratano, Michael Robotham, Katherine Howell, Lindy Cameron,
Gabrielle Lord, as well as Michael Robotham who has edited the collection;
these author’s conclusions about their own work are fascinating, provocative,
often surprising, and all drawn from the hard school of personal experience.
Whether readers are fans of crime fiction or true
crime or are would-be-crime writers, this collection of essays provides
laughter, understanding, insight, ideas, advice and hopefully some inspiration.
There are stories of struggle and triumph, near
misses and murderous intent, as the writers bare their souls and reveal their
secrets as never before, along with their rules for writing and their personal
reading lists.
‘This isn’t a book about perfect crimes,’ says
Robotham. ‘It is about imperfect ones. A perfect murder, by its very
definition, is one committed by a complete stranger who has never met the
victim, has no criminal record, steals nothing and tells no one. For a crime to
be truly perfect it can never be detected, which doesn’t leave a lot of room
for a writer. We need our murders to be imperfect, with grander or baser
motives.’
ABOUT THE
EDITOR
Michael Robotham
lives in Sydney but is published all round the world. His tense psychological
thrillers include Lost, The Suspect, The Night Ferry, Shatter, Bleed For Me,
The Wreckage and Say You’re Sorry.
Previously a successful investigative reporter in the UK and Europe and later
a Sunday Times bestselling
ghost-writer, Michael’s novels have won many admirers including Val McDermid,
Peter James and Stephen King.
He has been shortlisted for the UK Steel Dagger and won the Ned Kelly for best crime novel twice. His latest, eagerly anticipated psychological thriller is called Watching You and was published by Little, Brown earlier this month. |
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Publisher- Allen & Unwin
NZRRP: $29.99
|
Former leading New Zealand publisher and bookseller, and widely experienced judge of both the Commonwealth Writers Prize and the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, talks about what he is currently reading, what impresses him and what doesn't, along with chat about the international English language book scene, and links to sites of interest to booklovers.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
IF I TELL YOU I’LL HAVE TO KILL YOU
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