Susan Hill: Author Profile

Susan Hill

Susan Hill, born in 1942 and married to the Shakespeare scholar and author Stanley Wells, has written a wide variety of fiction and non-fiction – including I’m the King of the Castle, for which she received the Somerset Maugham Award, and The Woman in Black, which has been adapted as a stage play and running at the West End since 1989. With an ITV television series of her Simon Serrailler detective series in the making, however, her work is soon set to reach an even wider audience. Susan Hill has founded her own publishing company, Long Barn Books, which publishes one novel a year, and is a monthly columnist for The Daily Telegraph.

 

The Woman In Black
Susan Hill

 

This wonderfully crafted ghost story is short, simple and utterly terrifying. The uneasy atmosphere intensifies steadily throughout the book, from the family sitting around a fire and telling each other ghost stories to the windswept salt marshes that enclose Eel Marsh House. When young Arthur Kipps is summoned as a junior solicitor to the funeral of Mrs Alice Drablow, he finds himself irrevocably drawn into the tragic secrets of the house – and the intrigue surrounding a mysterious woman dressed all in black. Subtle and chilling, The Woman In Black is a story that will haunt you long after you switch off the light.

 

The Various Haunts Of Men (Simon Serrailler 1)
Susan Hill

 

Susan Hill turned her hand from literary to detective fiction for the first time with The Various Haunts Of Men. The result is the best of both genres; a beautifully-written, character-driven novel combined with a thrilling and suspenseful mystery. The detail of the writing evokes a rich and thoroughly believable community, making the characters all the more sympathetic and the storyline all the more engrossing. You’ll find yourself half way through before you even notice turning the pages, and the twist will leave you reeling…

 

The Man in the Picture: A Ghost Story
Susan Hill

 

A chilling, old-fashioned ghost story about a strange and beautiful painting of a Venetian street scene. When Theo, a Cambridge don, relates the curious history of the picture on his wall to his former student, Oliver, Oliver has no idea that the course of his future is now bound inevitably to that of the painting. Brimming with tension, The Man in the Picture tells the horrifying story of picture that has that has the power to influence the lives around it. Perfect to read by the fireside on a dark, solitary winter’s night.

 

Howards End is on the Landing: A year of reading from home
Susan Hill

 

When searching for her copy of Howard’s End, Susan Hill realises just how many of the books on her landing bookcase she has never actually read. She decides to embark on a literary journey for one year of her life, rediscovering the books that she already owns and acquiring no new books whatsoever.  It is a journey that reunites her with books she has loved all her life, that reawakens some fascinating past encounters with authors, and that leads her to books and authors she has never before read.  Howards End is on the Landing is a wonderful gift for booklovers of all ages.

Anthony Horowitz: Author Profile

Anthony Horowitz

Anthony Horowitz, born on 5th April 1956, is one of the UK’s most prolific authors – and is soon to become a household name with what promises to be the publishing event of the year.

For the very first time, the Conan Doyle estate has authorised a new Sherlock Holmes novel, and Anthony Horowitz’s The House of Silk will be published on 1.11.11.

 

House of Silk

 

Written by Dr Watson in a retirement home a year after the death of Sherlock Holmes, The House of Silk tells a tale that was, explains Watson, just too shocking and monstrous to reveal until now. “It is no exaggeration to say it could tear apart the very fabric of society”.

At a very healthy 85,000 words, The House of Silk will be published in a large hardback edition, and, following the success of the recent blockbuster film and the contemporary BBC series, seems set to become a publishing sensation.

It is already possible to preorder The House of Silk from Waterstone’s.

 

Anthony Horowitz’s previous works are many and varied. He is perhaps best known as a children’s author, and his action-adventure spy novels featuring the teenage Alex Rider have proved enormously successful in encouraging reluctant teenage boys to develop an interest in and a love of reading.

He has also written a number of short stories and adult novels, adapted many of Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot novels for the television, created and written the ITV series Foyle’s War, and written most of the early episodes of Midsomer Murders.

 

Alex Rider series

Stormbreaker

Point Blanc

Skeleton Key

Eagle Strike

Scorpia

Ark Angel 

Snakehead

Crocodile Tears

Scorpia Rising

The Diamond Brothers series

(humorous detective stories for 8-12 year olds)

 

The Power of Five series

(fantasy horror adventure novels for teenagers)

10 Great Agatha Christie novels

Agatha Christie

 

There aren’t many authors prolific enough to allow you to pick out 10 of their best works, and for each to be a classic. The fact is that Agatha Christie has written so many great murder mysteries that picking out only 10 was something of a challenge. Author of a staggering 80 novels that span through from 1920 to 1976, together with a number of successful West End theatre plays and various collections of short stories, Agatha Christie is (according to the Guinness Book of World Records) the best-selling writer of books of all time and, with William Shakespeare, the best-selling author of any kind. Her books have been translated into 103 languages and made into numerous films and television adaptations, and her stage play The Mousetrap is the longest running play on record, opening in 1952 and still going strong.

Agatha Christie’s success lies largely in her ability to structure the plots of her novels; her whodunits often leave readers guessing right to the very end, even though clues are scattered plentifully throughout the pages to give them a fair chance of solving the mystery themselves. She has created numerous ‘impossible’ locked-room crimes, and the murderer is almost always the last person you would expect it to be. And of course, her celebrated detectives, Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple, are amongst some of the world’s best-loved literary characters.

If you’ve never encountered Agatha Christie’s books before, then you’re in for a treat; they’re the ultimate in comfort reading. So you won’t be overwhelmed by the sheer quantity of novels to choose from, here are 10 of her most brilliant whodunits to start you off…

 

Murder on the Orient Express

 

Murder on the Orient Express (Hercule Poirot)
Agatha Christie

 

A snowdrift leaves Hercule Poirot stranded aboard the Orient Express with a dead body and a carriage full of suspects and clues. A connection between the victim and an unresolved crime in the past opens up a whole range of possibilities as Poirot tackles one of his most difficult and morally challenging cases.

 

 

A Murder is Announced

 

A Murder is Announced: (Miss Marple)
Agatha Christie

 

When a strange notice appears in the morning paper of a perfectly ordinary small English village inviting friends to a murder that will take place on Friday 29th October at Little Paddocks at 6.30pm, a number of villagers allow their curiosity to get the better of them. At 6.30pm precisely, the lights go out and a shot rings out, and the party guests discover that this is no game…

 

 

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd

 

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd (Poirot)
Agatha Christie

 

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd is one of Agatha Christie’s best known and most controversial novels, with an innovative and audacious twist that has shocked readers for generations. Poirot is called in to investigate the death of Roger Ackroyd, who was stabbed to death before he could reveal the truth about the deaths of the woman he loved and her first husband.

 

 

Hercule Poirot’s Christmas

 

Poirot – Hercule Poirot’s Christmas
Agatha Christie

 

A festive splattering of Christmas cheer sees Hercule Poirot offering to assist when a family reuinion is shattered by a deafening crash of furniture, a high-pitched wailing scream and a brutal, bloodthirsty murder. How was the tyrannical Simeon Lee killed inside a locked room? And are his house guests really who they claim to be?

 

 

And Then There Were None

 

And Then There Were None (Agatha Christie Collection)
Agatha Christie

 

And Then There Were None is Agatha Christie’s best-selling novel with 100 million sales to date, making it the world’s best-selling mystery ever. In a startling break from her traditional formula, Agatha Christie abandons Hercule Poirot and Miss Marple to tell the sinister and atmospheric story of 10 strangers, who are lured to and then stranded on an island. It soon becomes all too apparent that one of them is a murderer…

 

 

The Mirror Crack’d From Side to Side

 

Miss Marple – The Mirror Crack’d From Side to Side
Agatha Christie

 

The arrival of glamorous American film star Marina Gregg in Miss Marple’s home village of St Mary Mead spells tragedy for one of her adoring fans. Heather Badcock dies when she unwittingly drinks a poisoned cocktail – but was it really intended for her?

 

 

Cat Among the Pigeons

 

Poirot – Cat Among the Pigeons
Agatha Christie

 

Summer Term at Meadowbank School for Girls turns out to be not quite what the teachers or pupils had bargained for when diamonds, kidnapping, blackmail, espionage and murder find their way onto the curriculum. A refreshingly different setting for a thrilling whodunit.

 

 

The Seven Dials Mystery

 

The Seven Dials Mystery (Agatha Christie Signature Edition)
Agatha Christie

 

Adventure and romance lie at the heart of one of Agatha Christie’s more light-hearted and entertaining novels, as a group of young friends gather for a house party at a magnificent ancestral mansion, Chimneys. A practical joke takes on a unexpected significance when a murderer strikes, and it soon becomes clear that a sinister secret society lies at the heart of the mystery.

 

 

The ABC Murders

 

The ABC Murders (Hercule Poirot)
Agatha Christie

 

A serial killer is on the loose, working his way through victims and locations based on the alphabet and leaving a copy of the ABC Railway Guide open beside each body. A direct and personal challenge from the killer to Hercule Poirot sees the famous Belgian detective fighting for his professional reputation…

 

 

Death on the Nile

 

Death on the Nile (Hercule Poirot)
Agatha Christie

 

In this classic conflict of motive and opportunity, Agatha Christie has produced a flawless plot in one of her most exotic murder mysteries. With unforgettable characters and a gripping narrative, Death on the Nile is a masterpiece of detective fiction.

The J.K.Rowling effect: Magic or Madness?

 

J.K.Rowling

 

No other author in the history of literature has succeeded in casting a spell as strong as J.K.Rowling’s. From the humble beginnings of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone , which was rejected by 12 publishing houses and finally published in 1997 by Bloomsbury with an initial print-run of just 1000 copies, J.K.Rowling and Harry Potter have travelled a long way together.

 

 

J.K.Rowling’s star began to rise when Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone was awarded the Nestlé Smarties Book Prize. When Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban were also awarded the prize (making J.K.Rowling the first person to win the award three times in a row), she actually removed her fourth novel from contention to allow other authors a chance. With the publication of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire in 2000, every subsequent book smashed its previous publishing record as the fastest-selling book of all time, culminating in the much-anticipated release of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows on 21st July 2007, which sold a phenomenal 11 million copies on the first day alone.

 

 

 

With the assistance of the extraordinarily successful films, Harry Potter is now a global brand worth approximately £7 billion, and J.K.Rowling herself has became the first person to become a US dollar billionaire by writing books. The Harry Potter books have been translated into 65 different languages. Credited with igniting the interest of a whole generation of young readers, with inventing the crossover novel (a book published simultaneously with different covers for adults and for children), and with being the most influential woman in Britain in 2010, J.K.Rowling is probably the best known living author in the world today. Not bad for somebody who started their literary career as a single mother living on benefits.

 

So what’s all the fuss about? If you’re the sort of person who is immediately put off by hype or blockbusting success, are you missing out? Is the runaway success of Harry Potter down to magic or madness?

 

 

Well, it’s refreshing to say it, but J.K.Rowling is a woman who has well and truly earned her money and her fame. Whether you’re returning to the books as old favourites, whether you’re an adult curious to see what all the fuss is about, or whether you’re introducing them to your children for the first time, there’s a very special kind of magic trapped between every single page of the Harry Potter series. And its a magic built up through two very fundamental building bricks: plot and character.

 

The Harry Potter books work so well because J.K.Rowling has invested so much of herself in them. Each individual novel is meticulously planned and structured around a mystery that develops throughout the story, culminating in a final showdown in which everything becomes clear. They are in effect magical whodunits, packed to the brim with incident and adventure. But what becomes apparent as you work your way through the Harry Potter books is that each individual novel plays a key role in an overall plot, spanning the entire series. Early incidents, objects and characters take on a new significance as the story progresses. The very last chapter of the very last book, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, was actually one of the first things that J.K.Rowling wrote. She knew more or less exactly what was going to happen to each of her characters right from the beginning of book one. This exceptional narrative foresight results in a watertight structure; each book is bound together through a seamless and utterly convincing plotline.

 

Harry Potter

 

The intelligence and rationalisation of J.K.Rowling’s storytelling is perfectly balanced by her characters, who provide the heart and soul of the Harry Potter novels. What’s amazing about J.K.Rowling’s novels is the sheer quantity of characters that inhabit their pages. It’s a cast of epic proportions. There are obvious lead characters who play pivotal roles in the plot and become old friends over the course of the series, and secondary characters who fill the books with humour, warmth and controversy. But there’s also a whole host of characters who maybe only have a tiny role in one of the books; continual reminders of their existence throughout the series makes them every bit as real as Harry, Ron and Hermione. Each book introduces new characters, so that by the time we reach the ultimate showdown in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the reader is in the company of an entire army of friends built up by Harry over his seven years at Hogwarts.

 

Reading J.K.Rowling’s novels plunges you so completely into the world of Harry Potter and takes you on such a momentous journey, that, once you finally reach the end, the temptation is to reach straight out for Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone and relive the adventure all over again. There’s no denying that there’s a certain amount of madness to be found here amongst the hype, the obsession, the fortune and the record-breaking – but the magic that lies at the heart of Harry Potter is irresistible.

 

C. J. Sansom – Author Profile

 

Christopher John Sansom, born in Edinburgh in 1952, is the author of the much-loved and enormously popular Shardlake novels. He has also written a thriller set in post-Civil War Spain called Winter in Madrid. Sansom, who studied History at the University of Birmingham, later retrained as a solicitor, and practised law for the disadvantaged in Sussex. Reminiscent of both The Name Of The Rose (Vintage Classics) and the Cadfael series (The First Cadfael Omnibus:)his Shardlake novels are historical crime stories set during the reign of Henry VIII. Their protagonist, Matthew Shardlake, is a hunchbacked lawyer, who works on commission for Thomas Cromwell, Thomas Cranmer and Catherine Parr through the course of the series.

Shardlake Series:

 

Matthew Shardlake himself is a refreshingly flawed character, whose reason and compassion cut through the cruel and gritty reality of Tudor England. Sansom’s detailed narration brings history vividly to life; the reader can practically smell the streets of 16th century England. With gripping plots that twist and turn their way through monasteries, country homes, bedlam and battle, Shardlake’s reluctant journeys of discovery and enlightenment never fail to entertain and enthrall. Dark Fire (Shardlake) was awarded the 2005 Ellis Peters Historical Dagger by the Crime Writers’ Association, and it isn’t difficult to see why; Sansom’s novels are of the highest quality as works of literature, as historical novels, and as good old-fashioned whodunits.