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Death
In A Cold Climate
A Guide to Scandinavian
Crime Fiction

by Barry Forshaw

Published Jan 2012
Available
from Amazon

Crime Time is edited
by Barry Forshaw


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WEB NEWS, FEATURES & REVIEWS

feature: Thrillers Including Simon Khoury And Simon Kernick
www.amazon.co.uk

Jeremy Jehu gets all het up about the latest batch of thrillers

news: A Night Of Crime In Belgravia
www.amazon.co.uk

On Wednesday February 8th, come and hear three of the UK's finest crime writers discussing their work at Belgravia Books in the heart of London.

review: Bereft By Chris Womersley
www.amazon.co.uk

Just once in a while, a thriller comes along that is so good it takes your breath away

news: John Hawkes Takes The Lead In Jackie Brown Prequel The Switch
www.amazon.co.uk

Now, before anybody gets too excited it needs to be stated right up front that, no, Quentin Tarantino has no hand in this

feature: Mark Billingham And Paul Johnston In Conversation
www.amazon.co.uk

So what nudged you towards the genre?

news: Century Buys Chatterton Crime Debut
www.amazon.co.uk

Century has acquired two novels in a new procedural crime series by author Ed Chatterton, billing it as "gritty, dark, visceral and utterly gripping".

Stevenson under the Palm Trees
Mark Thwaite

Alberto Manguel’s highly regarded novella (105 amply-spaced pages) can be read in an hour or so but is well worth savouring. Whilst it is as much about ‘what lies beneath’ as the actual writing itself, it is easy to overplay the profundity of what is, unarguably, a fine work. In the last years of his life the unwell Robert Louis Stevenson travelled to Samoa. Called tusitala by the Islanders (teller of tales), he is an honoured guest. One evening, walking alone, he comes across a Scottish missionary, Mr Baker, wearing a hat very similar to his own. He is astonished that word of this man hasn’t reached him but gladdened to hear again the familiar twang of a robust Edinburgh accent. Soon, a number of violent crimes are committed, a white man is seen running away, and suspicions fall on Stevenson. Playfully referencing the iconic and brilliant Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (so beloved of the Argentinian fantasist Borges), and skewed events from his real life (Stevenson burns a manuscript in the face of his wife’s disapproval, as he had done with the first draft of Dr Jekyll), Manguel has fused biography and fantasy in a treat of a book.

Posted at 12:00AM Monday 01 Jan 2007

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