As a reader (and reviewer) I am always on the search for an author that changes things up, goes away from the norm and introduces something new into a genre. In the past year, for me, that author is Alex Marwood and her novel The Killer Next Door. It was not your typical serial killer novel or police novel (actually very little police involvement), so how are the crimes solved you ask, well you better pick up the book to find out for yourself. Trust me it is worth the read :)
Please Welcome to Blood Rose Books Today:
Alex Marwood
You have a background in journalism; did some of the stories,
people or events inspire your more recent novels?
Yes and no. I
wasn’t that sort of journalist; I mostly worked for the Features and Arts desks
rather than News, so my involvement in crime reporting was as an informed
consumer, not a producer. But I think journalism taught me all sorts of things
that have made me a better novelist. I don’t just take the first account I come
across as being the whole story. Being around journalists far better than I
taught me all sorts of important things: the importance of listening to other
people, of paying attention to the ways in which they express themselves, of holding
off from arguing with viewpoints until I’ve heard what the viewpoint actually is, rather what I assume it to
be, of paying attention generally to the world around me, of connecting the
dots. Both The Wicked Girls and The Killer Next Door did have their
starting points with real-life events, but any normal person armed with a
computer, a library card and a curious mind would have been able to find out
all of the facts about both of them, honestly.
Alex Marwood is your pen name for your darker genre novels, why
did you decide that you needed to write under a different name? Were you
afraid that your books would not be taken as seriously under your real
name?
The publishing
industry is a labyrinth in which the unwary can be tripped up byall sorts of hazards
and disasters and bad decisions that people on the outside don’t realise about.
Retailers, meanwhile, have become very dependent on computerized systems for
their ordering, and those don’t show up circumstances, only bald figures, and
this has caused a lot of trouble for writers. Writers have always had career
ups and downs, but now the downs can literally destroy your career. There are a
number of horrific stories, for instance, of authors having their careers badly
damaged by having a book come out during the collapse in sales that immediately
followed 9/11. Books basically only get a six-week window in which to make
their mark after publication before the retailers move on, and people simply
stopped buying books for a few weeks, and they found retailers refusing to
stock their ensuing titles on the basis of the bald figures, no context.
Something similar happened to me, and after struggling on through two more
books as people told me they couldn’t find them in the shops, I did what many other
writers have done, and changed my name to get away from the curse of the
computer records. I wouldn’t hesitate to do it again.
But no, I’m
proud of the books I wrote before, and have no wish to distance myself from
them. There’s a huge amount of terrific writing in the genres – (rather dark,
in my case) romantic comedy, for my first three, then a supernatural thriller –
in which I used to write. As to people taking me seriously or not – honestly
all I want is for people to read my books and enjoy them, and I’m not bothered
by the snobbery in the literary world. Well, not much. Their loss, honestly.
What do you think are the essentials to make a great crime
thriller novel?
Oh, lord. One of the reasons I love being
under the Crime umbrella is what a wonderfully broad genre it is. There’s
something for pretty much everyone’s tastes under its umbrella, and Lee Child’s,
or Helen Smith’s, answers to this would be just as valid as my own, though
entirely different. For my own books: character, I think. I don’t think you
have to identify with, or even like, the characters in a novel, but you have to
be interested in them, and feel that the high stakes with which that they’re
threatened matter in some way. And my characters’ decisions are generally
driven by their personalities, once I’ve got to know them, just like in real
life. Actually, Lee Child would probably agree with most of that, except with
guns and stuff.
What do you think would be the hardest or most challenging
genre to write a novel in and why?
Um… they’re all challenging, if you’re
trying to do it well! But for me I guess it would be the Literary genre
(because it is a genre), because I’d
get so bored!
The Killer Next Door was a very refreshing read to me and was a
different take on the serial killer sub-genre. Why did you decide to have
a cast of misfits and their stories featured instead of the traditional
police based novel?
I’ve always been more interested in how
crime happens and the effect it has on not just the victims but on the
perpetrators and the wider world, than I have in how the perpetrators get
caught. All those bad decisions, the snowballing of misfortune, the tiny
incremental steps that lead to terrible consequences, that put us all in a
there-but-for-the-grace-of-God position, if we did but think about it. Detection
and punishment, and society getting its sense of justice, are only a tiny bit
of the whole picture.
The starting point for The Killer Next Door was a case that has always had huge resonance
for Londoners: the case of Dennis Nilsen, who killed and dismembered a dozen
young men in the 1980s while living in similar circumstances to the people in
my novel. The thing that has always echoed for me and other Londoners is this:
living in our crowded, always-on city, we all have to do a certain amount of
blind-eye-turning in order to retain our own sanity and that of our neighbours.
I’m sure if the last girl who lived upstairs from me knew how much we all know
about her sex life she would have been beyond mortified. And so, though we all
play lip-service to wondering how on earth Nilsen’s housemates managed not to
notice what he was up to, the grim truth is that we all know only too well. And it’s stuff like that that really
interests me.
You introduced mummification and body breakdown techniques in
regard to your serial killer The Lover (who is nice and creepy by the way).
What type of research did you do to make sure that it was accurate?
An interesting little side-fact: it’s one
of the few subjects that are remarkably difficult to find much out about on the
internet. Fortunately I’ve amassed a huge collection of non-fiction books about
all sorts, and between my ancient civilization texts and my forensics and
pathology books and my cultural studies of death rituals and the British
Museum, I was pretty much covered. And no, I didn’t have a go at doing it
myself, not having a fresh cadaver to hand. Though I did do a little experiment
in the freezing of individual sausages, to address my copy editor’s doubts
about something, and cooked them up afterwards and ate them for dinner.
The Killer Next Door is a very dark themed novel. What appeals
to you about the dark and disturbing aspects of human nature? Are some of
the tenants in the building based upon your own experience of living in an
apartment building?
Not directly. Though everyone’s known
someone like all of these people, haven’t they? Apart, perhaps from the serial
killer. But you know, even serial killers mingle with the rest of the world
when they’re not at their hobby. I did my time living the itinerant life of the
struggling writer in my youth, but we mostly clubbed together and shared flats
and houses rather than living in bedsits. But not everyone has the good fortune
to have a wide friendship base when they come to a new city, or a new country,
and No23 is often the sort of place those people end up. And honestly, that
house is a big step up from quite a lot of the circumstances a lot of people
end up living in. I had an Iranian boyfriend years ago – not like Hossein at
all, though some of the detail of Iranianness I soaked up through him – whose
first ‘home’ was the cupboard under the stairs in someone’s house. So really,
these guys were a lot better off than some, even the ones who don’t officially
qualify as homeless.
The Killer Next Door is going to be adapted for film. What
scares you most about this process? Are you worried that your work will be
changed too much for the big screen?
I suppose the whole business of being more
visible scares me a bit. I’m a typical writer, best suited to staying in bed
with my imaginary friends, so this whole ride as Alex Marwood has seen me
constantly pushed outside my comfort zone. But I’ve gradually adjusted, and I’m
sure I’ll carry on adjusting. And boy, it’s better than the life I was living
before!
As to the adaptation, I don’t think one
should be too precious about one’s work, once you choose to allow other people
get involved. The book’s mine. It’s done, it’s published, it’s been shortlisted
for the prizes, it’s in the British Library; nothing bar nuclear war can make
it go away now, or change the way it is. And film is a completely different
discipline. If anything, I’m quite excited to sit down and study how the
screenwriter does their magic with a text I know so well, and have the
opportunity to understand their logic, because the whole discipline’s a
wonderful mystery to me, and one I’d love to learn how to do.
Do you have any information on upcoming works or events that
you are able to share?
My new novel, The Darkest Secret, comes out in January in the UK, summer in the
States. When three-year-old Coco goes missing during a birthday weekend, the
adults in the party close ranks and lie through their teeth about what
happened. Twelve years later, the little girl’s surviving sisters start to
unravel the truth when the same group gathers for the funeral of their
much-married father. I’m pretty pleased with it, I think.
What is one book on your shelf that you cannot wait to read
(can either be a new or old favorite).
Oh! I think I’m
being sent a copy of Alison Gaylin’s new one, What Remains Of Me, soon. She’s one of those writers who’s on my
automatic pre-order list. We’re up against each other at the Anthony awards in
October, for The Killer Next Door and
Stay With Me, which is the very definition of being on a cleft stick, really.
I want to thank Alex once again for participating in my Blogoversary and her insight into the literary world and soon film world that she is experiencing. Her novel The Killer Next Door, was one of my favourite thriller reads of the past year as it explored a different side of serial killer books and I look forward to picking up her other works as well. Alex has very kindly supplied a Giveaway (US) to go along with her interview, so make sure you enter the rafflecopter giveaway below.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
No comments:
Post a Comment