crime time
Home Latest News Reviews Features Interviews Profiles Web News, Features & Reviews Magazine Links Contact Us
  
Follow Crime Time on Twitter
  



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


More Interviews

Up To Date With Jerry Raine
Buy Missing in Acton from amazon

Cold Remains: Sally Spedding
www.crimetime.co.uk

David Dickinson: Reviving Mycroft Holmes
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Mycroft-Holmes-Adventure-Birches-ebook/dp/B006JXUSBS/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1325675058&sr=1-1

WEB NEWS, FEATURES & REVIEWS

feature: Ten Great Crime Novels That You Should Have Read
www.sabotagetimes.com

There's a kind of novel that can only be a crime novel. They are short. They are sharp – ostentatiously so - they are cool and the people are cold.

news: Modern Day Cold War Thriller To Harvill Secker
www.booktrade.info

Alison Hennessey, Senior Crime Editor at Harvill Secker, has acquired World English Language rights to thriller Plan D by Simon Urban

feature: The Year of Translated TV Dramas
eurocrime.blogspot.com

The announcements have been coming thick and fast over the last few days regarding new to the UK dramas from mainland Europe

review: Vanished By Liza Marklund
www.amazon.co.uk

This is a strange mix

feature: The Blaggers Guide To George Pelecanos
www.independent.co.uk

The man Obama likes to take on holiday

feature: Altar Of Bones: A Literary Sensation But Who Dunnit?
www.amazon.co.uk

The publication of a crime thriller whose plot rests on a global conspiracy is fast inspiring its own, real-life literary conspiracy

Blindman's Bluff: Faye Kellerman On Her New Novel

It is always a tragedy when anyone dies untimely and expectedly. But when the ultra wealthy die under unusual circumstances, their untimely demises often do not evoke pathos. Rather, their deaths elicit shock – how could that happen to someone so rich - followed by much speculation and gossip. Thrown into the mix is always a little Shadenfroid, the little something in the back of one's mind that says that the rich had it coming.

I had these various themes in mind when I penned the novel, Blindman's Bluff. When real estate developer Guy Kaffey and his beautiful wife, Gilliam, are brutally slaughtered in their own multi-acre ranchero in the valley of Southern California, the press and street talk imply that the billionaire had it coming. To amass such a gargantuan fortune, Guy had to have amassed a slew of enemies and one of them took revenge in the most ghastly of ways.

But my main protagonists, LAPD lieutenant Peter Decker and his wife, Rina, know that as often as not, vicious homicides are not perpetrated by the embittered, murderous outsiders, but rather, the killings are the outcome of someone closer to the victim, someone who has been sitting on top of years and years of suppressed rage. Decker knows that while it is true that Guy Kaffey had plenty of business detractors, he had also failed his family. Through his intensive investigations, Decker discovered that Guy, not surprisingly, had bad temper problems, ranting and exploding on a daily basis. He pushed his weight around, bullied those that surrounded him, cheated routinely and regularly took out his frustrations on his hundreds of employees, his brother/business partner, Mace and his two loyal sons – Gil and Grant. Could it be that one of those who knew Guy most intimately suddenly became enraged, unglued and murderous?

Blindman's Bluff is a novel that explicates how little things can often affect irreparable changes. Through Decker's meticulous eye, it is the details as opposed to the big picture, that tell the story.

Blindman's Bluff is publshed by HarperCollins

Posted at 9:52AM Saturday 22 Aug 2009

Search the News Archive