NEWS
Check out my new look website Leigh Russell thanks to the IT wizard at No Exit Press. You might be interested to read the final paragraph on the home page, above the 'Reviews' section.
Something to smile about!
Monday, 21 January 2013
Saturday, 19 January 2013
Shots Magazine
Thanks to Shots Magazine for posting this interview with me - we're talking about the art of writing crime fiction, the future of publishing, research, and lots more. Interview in SHOTS MAGAZINE
Thursday, 17 January 2013
In the Best Fiction 2012 Chart
I am thrilled that Dead End has been chosen as Number 8 of 16 Best Fiction Books of 2012 by the Miami Examiner.
Miami Examiner's Best Fiction Books of 2012
Labels:
Best Fiction 2012,
dead end,
Geraldine Steel,
Leigh Russell,
Miami,
Miami Examiner
Interview with Aline Templeton
In conversation with Aline Templeton
Aline Templeton is hailed as “the crime czar of the Scottish small town” for her Marjory Fleming series. She grew up in the fishing village of Anstruther, on the east coast of Scotland not far from St Andrews. She studied English at Cambridge University. Aline lives in Edinburgh. She is the author of seven books featuring DI Marjory Fleming, Cold in the Earth, The Darkness and the Deep, Lying Dead, Lamb to the Slaughter, Dead in the Water, Cradle to Grave and Evil for Evil, published in November 2012.
Q You have been described as “the crime czar of the Scottish small town!' Val McDermid, Ian Rankin, Stuart MacBride, Alan Guthrie - to name just a few. How do you account for the phenomenal number of top crime authors currently writing in Scotland?
A There are a lot of hugely successful Scandinavian writers too, so perhaps it’s the northern latitudes and the long dark winters that give us an insight into the darker side of life. Scotland’s also very supportive to its writers and it’s a small literary community where everyone knows everyone else, so a new writer can get a public profile quite quickly.
Q Your books have been translated into several languages. How did you feel the first time you held one of your own books, published in a language you don’t understand?
A It is enormously frustrating! When Cold in the Earth was published in German, I actually got a German-speaking friend to translate the first page for me since I don’t speak the language. On that small sample, I was very impressed – they seemed to have caught the tone and it was very accurate. The only language I can read fluently is French and so far they haven’t been published in France – but I keep hoping!
Q What influenced your decision to write about a female detective? Was her gender important, or would you have been equally comfortable with a male protagonist?
A I wrote half-a-dozen stand-alone novels before I started the Galloway series and I had male detectives in several of these so I didn’t set out to have a female protagonist. The brief I gave myself was that my DI wouldn’t be a loner with a drink problem, an attitude problem, a string of lovers and a very definite taste in music. I thought it would be refreshingly different if she was to be the policewoman you would meet if you went down the local nick. I was a JP for ten years so knew a lot of them – ordinary working wives and mothers with all the problems of teenage kids and aging parents that most women have to cope with. And I decided she would have – gasp – a strong, happy marriage. My editor thought that was very radical.
Q One reviewer said there is a ‘horribly looming sense of inevitability’ in your books. Are you aware of this when you are writing, and if so, do you build it deliberately?
A Yes, quite definitely. I was asked in an interview to define what makes a good crime novel and I described it as being ‘an absorbing plot that arises out of the nature of compelling characters. At the end, the reader should be able to see that the outcome was inevitable, but shouldn’t have been able to guess on the way through.’ My books are very much character based and I want the reader to understand as the book unfolds that the action develops from what each person is, that this is the only way they could behave in the circumstances. And yes, I try to build it by slowly shutting down the other possibilities so that there is the claustrophobic sense that they are being trapped by what they are.
Q Evil for Evil is the seventh of the Marjory Fleming series. Is it advisable to read them in order, or are they standalone investigations?
A You can read them in order for the back story – Marjory’s children, for instance, age in real time – but each novel is a standalone investigation. The only two I would suggest should be read in order are The Darkness and the Deep (2) and Lying Dead (3), but that’s not because each one isn’t complete in itself, just that it makes the dénouement more dramatic.
Q Tell us how Marjory Fleming first came about. Is she based on anyone you know and if not, where does her character come from?
A I don’t know where Marjory came from. She just appeared in my mind one day, a tall, athletic-looking woman at the breakfast table trying to get her children off to school before she went into work. I had her very clearly in mind and was trying to find out more about her when I was driving down to Wigtown, the Scottish Book Town, for an event. It was just at the time of the foot-and-mouth epidemic and it was quite harrowing – the empty fields, the hideous oily smell of the funeral pyres for cattle – and having come from a small community myself I was thinking how hard it must be to be in the police force at a time like this if you had grown up there. You would know everyone, perhaps have gone to school with some of the farmers, and yet you would have to go to them and say, ‘I don’t care if the stock book goes back to your great-great-great grandfather, or if you have a hefted flock of sheep which has learned over hundreds of years where their own territory is, I don’t care even if there’s nothing wrong with your beasts but they’re just in the wrong place, I’m going to force you to let the killing squads on to your land to wipe them out.’ And then, of course, with the splinter of ice that Graham Greene said lies in the heart of every writer, I thought how much worse it would be if you were a police officer and a farmer’s wife. I do know though, where Tam MacNee came from – now! Like Marjory, he appeared very clearly in my mind: a wee Glasgow hard man, always dressed in jeans, T-shirt, and black leather jacket. His personality quickly developed and I find myself looking forward to writing a scene which involves Tam, wondering what he’s going to say this time. All my own work, I thought, and then quite recently I was taken to watch police dogs working – and suddenly it all came back to me. Many, many years ago I was living in an institution where there had been a problem with people walking in and stealing. I came downstairs in our flat and was alarmed to see a small man in our hall, smoking a cigarette. I said, ‘Can I help you?’ in the most intimidating voice I could manage and he held up a warrant card and said, ‘Police.’ And yes, he was wearing jeans, a T-shirt and a black leather jacket. We ended up having a long and entertaining chat. He was telling me about vandals who had gone to earth in a school and wouldn’t come out when the police arrived. However, he said, ‘We just got a bullhorn and told them, “Five minutes or we put the dogs in,” so of course they appeared.’ I’m a bit starry-eyed about the talents ofpolice dogs and asked him, ‘What do they do? Round them up -?’ He looked at me as if I was really, reallystupid and said, ‘They bite them.’ I’d forgotten all about him for years, despite recreating him as Tam MacNee. So perhaps one day I’ll remember having met Marjory Fleming too somewhere. I’ll let you know!
Q Tell us about your experience of writing a series. How do you maintain your readers’ interest in your detective throughout the books?
A The lovely thing about a series is that your readers become really involved with the home life of your characters. Because Marjory has a family – husband, children and elderly parents – the crises that occur in any normal family provide a backdrop to the cases she deals with in her career. When I start a new book and return to Kirkluce I feel it’s a bit like going back to somewhere you visit regularly on holiday but which, while you are away, goes on with its own life. I have to catch up with what they have been doing and I think a lot of readers feel the same.
Q What inspired you to write ‘Evil for Evil’?
A There was a very sad case in the newspapers some years ago where a girl had been abducted from her own home and murdered. She had a younger sister who had heard nothing and I always wondered how she coped with the inevitable feelings of guilt and ‘it should have been me.’ That formed the framework from the plot. When I was on a research visit to Galloway I went to see the beautiful Isles of Fleet, a string of tiny inshore islands in Fleet Bay, just off the Solway Firth. I knew immediately there had to be a story set there and created my own extra island (very satisfying!) that would work with the ideas that were forming in my mind. It gave a very striking background for the story, that in its turn drove the action.
Q Do you plan your plot twists in advance, or are you struck by brainwaves during the process of writing your books? In other words, are you a planner or do you write by the seat of your pants - or are you, like me, a combination of the two?
A Yes, absolutely. I always start out with a sort of idea of where the book is going to end but on the way through, as the actions develop, the twists come up. I don’t think I could write a book where I knew exactly what would happen from the start – not that it’s likely to happen! I think I’d get bored, because to some extent I’mtelling myself the story too and I write to find out what will happen.
Q What is next for you, and for Marjory Fleming?
A I’m already well on with number eight in the series – just as well, with a March deadline! I’ve got a working title which I won’t tell you; I still have problems with a previous working title that was put up prematurely on Amazon: readers have emailed asking how they can get hold of this elusive book which doesn’t seem to be available anywhere. I’m hoping for a Christmas inspiration for exactly the right title for the new one!
This interview first appeared in Mystery People
Aline Templeton is hailed as “the crime czar of the Scottish small town” for her Marjory Fleming series. She grew up in the fishing village of Anstruther, on the east coast of Scotland not far from St Andrews. She studied English at Cambridge University. Aline lives in Edinburgh. She is the author of seven books featuring DI Marjory Fleming, Cold in the Earth, The Darkness and the Deep, Lying Dead, Lamb to the Slaughter, Dead in the Water, Cradle to Grave and Evil for Evil, published in November 2012.
Q You have been described as “the crime czar of the Scottish small town!' Val McDermid, Ian Rankin, Stuart MacBride, Alan Guthrie - to name just a few. How do you account for the phenomenal number of top crime authors currently writing in Scotland?
A There are a lot of hugely successful Scandinavian writers too, so perhaps it’s the northern latitudes and the long dark winters that give us an insight into the darker side of life. Scotland’s also very supportive to its writers and it’s a small literary community where everyone knows everyone else, so a new writer can get a public profile quite quickly.
Q Your books have been translated into several languages. How did you feel the first time you held one of your own books, published in a language you don’t understand?
A It is enormously frustrating! When Cold in the Earth was published in German, I actually got a German-speaking friend to translate the first page for me since I don’t speak the language. On that small sample, I was very impressed – they seemed to have caught the tone and it was very accurate. The only language I can read fluently is French and so far they haven’t been published in France – but I keep hoping!
Q What influenced your decision to write about a female detective? Was her gender important, or would you have been equally comfortable with a male protagonist?
A I wrote half-a-dozen stand-alone novels before I started the Galloway series and I had male detectives in several of these so I didn’t set out to have a female protagonist. The brief I gave myself was that my DI wouldn’t be a loner with a drink problem, an attitude problem, a string of lovers and a very definite taste in music. I thought it would be refreshingly different if she was to be the policewoman you would meet if you went down the local nick. I was a JP for ten years so knew a lot of them – ordinary working wives and mothers with all the problems of teenage kids and aging parents that most women have to cope with. And I decided she would have – gasp – a strong, happy marriage. My editor thought that was very radical.
Q One reviewer said there is a ‘horribly looming sense of inevitability’ in your books. Are you aware of this when you are writing, and if so, do you build it deliberately?
A Yes, quite definitely. I was asked in an interview to define what makes a good crime novel and I described it as being ‘an absorbing plot that arises out of the nature of compelling characters. At the end, the reader should be able to see that the outcome was inevitable, but shouldn’t have been able to guess on the way through.’ My books are very much character based and I want the reader to understand as the book unfolds that the action develops from what each person is, that this is the only way they could behave in the circumstances. And yes, I try to build it by slowly shutting down the other possibilities so that there is the claustrophobic sense that they are being trapped by what they are.
Q Evil for Evil is the seventh of the Marjory Fleming series. Is it advisable to read them in order, or are they standalone investigations?
A You can read them in order for the back story – Marjory’s children, for instance, age in real time – but each novel is a standalone investigation. The only two I would suggest should be read in order are The Darkness and the Deep (2) and Lying Dead (3), but that’s not because each one isn’t complete in itself, just that it makes the dénouement more dramatic.
Q Tell us how Marjory Fleming first came about. Is she based on anyone you know and if not, where does her character come from?
A I don’t know where Marjory came from. She just appeared in my mind one day, a tall, athletic-looking woman at the breakfast table trying to get her children off to school before she went into work. I had her very clearly in mind and was trying to find out more about her when I was driving down to Wigtown, the Scottish Book Town, for an event. It was just at the time of the foot-and-mouth epidemic and it was quite harrowing – the empty fields, the hideous oily smell of the funeral pyres for cattle – and having come from a small community myself I was thinking how hard it must be to be in the police force at a time like this if you had grown up there. You would know everyone, perhaps have gone to school with some of the farmers, and yet you would have to go to them and say, ‘I don’t care if the stock book goes back to your great-great-great grandfather, or if you have a hefted flock of sheep which has learned over hundreds of years where their own territory is, I don’t care even if there’s nothing wrong with your beasts but they’re just in the wrong place, I’m going to force you to let the killing squads on to your land to wipe them out.’ And then, of course, with the splinter of ice that Graham Greene said lies in the heart of every writer, I thought how much worse it would be if you were a police officer and a farmer’s wife. I do know though, where Tam MacNee came from – now! Like Marjory, he appeared very clearly in my mind: a wee Glasgow hard man, always dressed in jeans, T-shirt, and black leather jacket. His personality quickly developed and I find myself looking forward to writing a scene which involves Tam, wondering what he’s going to say this time. All my own work, I thought, and then quite recently I was taken to watch police dogs working – and suddenly it all came back to me. Many, many years ago I was living in an institution where there had been a problem with people walking in and stealing. I came downstairs in our flat and was alarmed to see a small man in our hall, smoking a cigarette. I said, ‘Can I help you?’ in the most intimidating voice I could manage and he held up a warrant card and said, ‘Police.’ And yes, he was wearing jeans, a T-shirt and a black leather jacket. We ended up having a long and entertaining chat. He was telling me about vandals who had gone to earth in a school and wouldn’t come out when the police arrived. However, he said, ‘We just got a bullhorn and told them, “Five minutes or we put the dogs in,” so of course they appeared.’ I’m a bit starry-eyed about the talents ofpolice dogs and asked him, ‘What do they do? Round them up -?’ He looked at me as if I was really, reallystupid and said, ‘They bite them.’ I’d forgotten all about him for years, despite recreating him as Tam MacNee. So perhaps one day I’ll remember having met Marjory Fleming too somewhere. I’ll let you know!
Q Tell us about your experience of writing a series. How do you maintain your readers’ interest in your detective throughout the books?
A The lovely thing about a series is that your readers become really involved with the home life of your characters. Because Marjory has a family – husband, children and elderly parents – the crises that occur in any normal family provide a backdrop to the cases she deals with in her career. When I start a new book and return to Kirkluce I feel it’s a bit like going back to somewhere you visit regularly on holiday but which, while you are away, goes on with its own life. I have to catch up with what they have been doing and I think a lot of readers feel the same.
Q What inspired you to write ‘Evil for Evil’?
A There was a very sad case in the newspapers some years ago where a girl had been abducted from her own home and murdered. She had a younger sister who had heard nothing and I always wondered how she coped with the inevitable feelings of guilt and ‘it should have been me.’ That formed the framework from the plot. When I was on a research visit to Galloway I went to see the beautiful Isles of Fleet, a string of tiny inshore islands in Fleet Bay, just off the Solway Firth. I knew immediately there had to be a story set there and created my own extra island (very satisfying!) that would work with the ideas that were forming in my mind. It gave a very striking background for the story, that in its turn drove the action.
Q Do you plan your plot twists in advance, or are you struck by brainwaves during the process of writing your books? In other words, are you a planner or do you write by the seat of your pants - or are you, like me, a combination of the two?
A Yes, absolutely. I always start out with a sort of idea of where the book is going to end but on the way through, as the actions develop, the twists come up. I don’t think I could write a book where I knew exactly what would happen from the start – not that it’s likely to happen! I think I’d get bored, because to some extent I’mtelling myself the story too and I write to find out what will happen.
Q What is next for you, and for Marjory Fleming?
A I’m already well on with number eight in the series – just as well, with a March deadline! I’ve got a working title which I won’t tell you; I still have problems with a previous working title that was put up prematurely on Amazon: readers have emailed asking how they can get hold of this elusive book which doesn’t seem to be available anywhere. I’m hoping for a Christmas inspiration for exactly the right title for the new one!
This interview first appeared in Mystery People
Thursday, 10 January 2013
My Whistle Stop Journey to Publication
Thanks to Your Pinner News for publishing this article See page 10 Honestly, I didn't sign a contract for 3 books just 8 weeks after starting to write, but my publisher did phone me 2 weeks after I sent out the manuscript for Cut Short - which I wrote in 6 weeks. Needless to say, I had to work quite hard on the editor's notes before the book was published!
Monday, 7 January 2013
Nowhere to Hide
Blog Tour – ‘Nowhere
To Hide’ by Alex Walters
I was delighted to be
invited to host the first post in Alex Walters’ blog tour in which you’ll get to read
exclusive interviews with the characters from the book. How exciting is that! Of course I said yes straight away, so here goes with an interview with the heroine, Marie Donovan.
Name:
Marie Donovan
Rank/Job
title/Occupation: Undercover officer
Why are you so
important to the story of ‘Nowhere To Hide’?
I’m
at the centre of it, though I’m not always sure how or why! I’ve been assigned to an undercover case in
dubious circumstances by a boss who may himself be corrupt. I’m working alone with no idea who to trust,
while forced to live apart from my partner who has a serious progressive
illness. My only contact is DI Jack
Brennan, a well-regarded detective with a history of his own. We’re faced with a series of murders which
suggest growing gangland tensions, and we both have the feeling that we’re
somehow being used...
What’s the
biggest challenge of undercover work?
It’s
dangerous, of course, when things go wrong.
But you don’t think too much about that on a day to day basis. The biggest day-to-day challenge is keeping
your story straight. You have to think
your way into the character you’re playing, and try to make sure you’re being
consistent, thinking about every word you say.
It’s like being an actor but with no script and no opportunity to leave
the stage.
Emotionally,
the biggest challenge is the loneliness.
You have to leave your ‘real’ life behind, but you can’t afford to build
meaningful relationships with the people you’re now living and working
with. And, if you’re not careful, that’s
when you can start to lose touch with reality.
I know from experience just how dangerous that can be.
What’s your
biggest fear about your job?
My
biggest fear is being found out! I’m conscious that at any time the mission
could be compromised - perhaps deliberately, perhaps by a mistake on my part,
or perhaps just by some twist of fate.
Initially, I was worried that I’d trip myself up in some way - maybe
something as simple as answering to the wrong name or talking about the wrong
parts of my life. Now, I’m more concerned about who might be setting me
up.
If you had to
spend time on a desert island with another character from the book, who would
it be and why?
To
be honest, I’m not sure that there are many I’d trust to spend any time with
anywhere! My partner, Liam, of course,
though that becomes increasingly unlikely as the book proceeds. My former boss,
Keith Welsby, would probably be fun if I could manage to spring him out of
prison. And then, well, there’s Jack Brennan...
Who would you
like to play you in the screen adaptation of ‘Nowhere To Hide’?
Oh,
gosh. I don’t know. The young Michelle
Collins? Or maybe the slightly older Jaime
Winstone? In my own head, anyway.
What music do
you like to listen to when you’re not on duty/at work?
Either
Finnish Black Metal or Dire Straits. I’m
lying, of course. I can’t stand Dire
Straits.
What do you
enjoy reading?
I
don’t get a lot of time for reading.
Non-fiction, mainly. Such as the
new Alex Walters.
About
the book:
‘On the North Wales coast
two people traffickers are brutally murdered; a drug dealer is mown down in
inner-city Stockport and in a remote Pennine cottage a police informant is shot
dead. Seemingly random, these murders are the work of one professional hitman.
Reluctantly, Marie Donovan
takes on another undercover role and finds herself working with DI Jack
Brennan, a high-flying detective with a tarnished career. Soon, mistrustful of
each other and their superiors, both begin to suspect that they are mere pawns
in a complex game of criminal rivalry and police corruption.
As Marie struggles to
uncover the truth, she realises that nothing is as it seems. With every move,
she draws the threat ever closer until ultimately the killer is watching Marie
herself. Out on her own, she finds herself with no friends, no-one to trust and
nowhere to hide.’
‘Nowhere To Hide’ is published
by Avon HarperCollins, and you can buy it here. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Nowhere-To-Hide-ebook/dp/B007UK9KPE
Sunday, 6 January 2013
London Bookshop
Amazon is still out of stock of CUT SHORT despite my publisher's best efforts. Fortunately the wonderful London Bookshop has leapt to the rescue, selling print copies of CUT SHORT for just £2.99! If you would like to introduce a friend to the Geraldine Steel series, this might be the ideal opportunity. Here's the link
CUT SHORT physical book for £2.99
Please help support The London Bookshop - amazon may be the biggest kid on the block but it's not the only one!
CUT SHORT physical book for £2.99
Please help support The London Bookshop - amazon may be the biggest kid on the block but it's not the only one!
Labels:
cut short,
Geraldine Steel,
London Bookshop,
physical books,
print books
Thursday, 3 January 2013
Geraldine Steel to continue
I am delighted to share the news that my publisher has offered me a contract for another 3 books in the Geraldine Steel series.
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