British Council Arts

Page Content   Tools   About Us   Art Forms   Publications and Resources   Working With Us   Contact Arts
CRIME ISSUE   

Rumour has it that crime doesn’t pay but judging by recent bestseller lists, film sale rights and even library loan figures, the fiction of crime really does seem pretty lucrative. To celebrate the diversity, quality, breadth and energy of British crime fiction, this issue of Literature Matters plays homage to the genre and features articles by a wide range of critics, novelists, booksellers and publishers, discussing the strengths, weaknesses and quirks within the genre. Issues around translation and crime fiction are huge right now, and Maxim Jakubowski and Christopher MacLehose discuss this with eloquence and passion. Denise Mina explores the complicated and emotive subject of the status of crime writing while Simon Brett and Nicholas Blincoe both offer insights into how crime fiction came to be both revered as serious literary fiction and dismissed as light genre fare. Carla Banks and Margaret Murphy offer a splendid overview of the current greats and the newbies of the crime fiction world. And as far as everything else goes, the regular features are with us too – Writers Talk Books, Writers Abroad and Plat du Jour.    

By Catriona Ferguson   

The European Influence   

The great Europeans    

The British Crime Writer’s Association has recently excluded novels published in translation from being included in their prestigious Golden Dagger award. Bookseller and critic Maxim Jakubowski and publisher Christopher MacElhose discuss this and other issues around translation and the influence of international writing on British crime writing.    

Maxim Jakubowski   

Crime Without Frontiers   

Christopher MacLehose   

Other Worlds   

The State We're In   

State We're In    

Carla Banks and Margaret Murphy are both highly respected writers of crime fiction. In Changing Crime Carla Banks explores where the genre is going, the influences that might dictate new developments and who the new queens and kings of the crime novel will be. Margaret Murphy offers a wonderful overview of the cream of the current crop of crime writing.

Carla Banks   

Changing Crime   

Margaret Murphy
Crème de la Crime   

Crime and Punishment   

Jeremy Bentham's Panopticon    

P. D. James is one of the most well known and enjoyed of British crime writers. Here, she discusses the moral universe in which her characters operate. Natasha Cooper’s novels feature a dynamic female barrister. Her plots are engaging and compulsive and the detail behind the legal knowledge formidable. Here she discusses the expertise required when writing a crime novel.   

P. D. James   

The Moral Dimension of the Crime Novel   

Natasha Cooper   

Setting Crime Fiction in the Legal World

Pushing It   

Last Tango in Aberystwyth    

Malcolm Pryce is an innovate and bold writer who writes humorous adventures featuring the private detective Louie Knight. Here he explores his own complicated feelings towards the genre. Lauren Henderson has enthralled readers with her cool heroine Sam Jones and discusses the meaning of tart noir and the sassy women who feature in contemporary crime fiction.

Malcolm Pryce   

Imposter Syndrome

Lauren Henderson   

Sexy, Sassy and Smart

Moving On   

Moving On    

Stella Duffy’s series of novels featuring the irrepressible Saz Martin are adventurous and bold. She also writes intriguing fiction, marketed as straight literary fiction. Here she discusses the differences between the forms she is working in. Meanwhile Denise Mina, a writer of extraordinary depth and insight, explores the politics of writing a British crime novel.

Stella Duffy   

Proper Books   

Denise Mina   

The Politics of Writing Crime   

Status   

Image by F Dorr Steele    

Simon Brett is one of the most familiar and loved names in crime writing. Here, he outlines the history of the British crime novel and discusses the forefathers of the genre that have influenced the current crop of writers. Nicholas Blincoe is a writer whose enjoyable romps often have serious political undertones. Here he looks at the position of crime writing within the tradition of British writing.    

Simon Brett   

The Long Shadow of Agatha Christie   

Nicholas Blincoe   

The Criminal Heart   

Writers Abroad    

Writer's Abroard    

Louise Doughty, who once wrote a sort of crime novel (Honey-Dew is a novel about a couple murdered in a small village) writes about her experiences on a British Council trip to the Walberberg seminar.   

Louise Doughty   

Walberberg Seminar   

Writers Talk Books   

Writer's Talk Books    

Diran Adebayo, Frances Fyfield and John Harvey discuss what’s currently on their bedside reading table.   

Literature Matters    

Plat Du Jour   

Bibliography   

Literature Matters Archive   

http://www.encompassculture.com/   www.encompassculture.com
New Writing Website
Writers Abroad   

The United Kingdom’s international organisation for cultural relations and educational opportunities.
A registered charity: 209131 (England and Wales) SC037733 (Scotland)
Our privacy and copyright statements.
Our Freedom of Information Publications Scheme. Double-click for pop-up dictionary.    Positive About Disabled People   Download Browsealoud    

Contact us   FAQs   Sitemap

© British Council
Text Only Options

Top of page


Text Only Options

Open the original version of this page.

Usablenet Assistive is a UsableNet product. Usablenet Assistive Main Page.