Total Pageviews

Monday, 29 December 2014

A guid New Year tae ane an’ a’ and mony may ye see


That’s the traditional Scots welcome on New Year’s Eve, known as Hogmanay in Scotland. A time of celebration,drinking, and first footing to see out the old year and welcome in the new year.

Some say the name, Hogmanay, has French roots, others say it originated from the old Norse, and it seems the celebrations are a throwback to that of the winter solstice among the Norse, as well as customs from the Gaelic celebration of Samhain. However, I doubt that any of the revellers on Hogmanay will be worrying about where the name or customs come from when they welcome in the New Year.

Hogmanay has always been a big end of year celebration in Scotland, with Christmas coming a poor second, although that is now changing. However it wasn’t so long ago that Christmas was not a holiday in Scotland, the influence of the protestant reformation was to blame for that. I can’t recall exactly when Christmas became a holiday in Scotland but it was well into the 1950s. Before that many people exchanged their gifts and celebrated on the winter solstice – Hogmanay.

Customs

There are several customs associated with Hogmanay. The house has to be cleaned from top to bottom on Hogmany as it is considered unlucky to welcome the New Year into a dirty house. The act of cleaning the whole house was called the redding, because it was getting ready for the new year.

Debts had to be paid by New Year’s Eve, as it was bad luck to usher in a new year with an outstanding debt.

Any knitting has be completed before the old year passes, failing that all the stitches should be removed from the needles.

It is unlucky for visitors to be admitted to the house before midnight has struck on New Year’s Eve, and they are likely to be refused admittance.

At midnight the man of the house opens the back door to let the old year out, and then opens the front door to let the new year in.

It is common for people to gather in the town centre waiting for midnight to strike, and on the first stroke of the chimes, known as The Bells, people link arms and sing Auld Lang Syne.

First footing starts immediately after midnight, on the last stroke of the church bells, and signifies a celebration of the new year which has just arrived. A first foot is the first person to cross the threshold of a friend or neighbour, their first visitor of the year. He should be male, and tall and dark. The first foot should present symbolic gifts to bring luck to the householder. These gifts range from salt, coal, shortbread, whisky, and black bun (a type of rich fruit cake). The householder then gives food and drink to the guest and they may party on until early morning, or alternatively the first foot will take his or her leave and visit a procession of houses. At least that is the traditional way. Nowadays, first footing is done with a bottle, and the first footer offers a dram (drink) from it to the householder, and vice versa.

Many of these customs were prevalent for a long time, but progress has caught up and a lot of these old customs have fallen by the wayside. No longer is it possible to open your door to complete strangers and welcome them inside to give them their New Year dram. Television programmes ensure many people sit in comfort at their firesides instead of congregating at The Bells. In fact many people are reluctant to venture to the town centre for The Bells, as what used to be a good-natured, friendly gathering, has become significantly rowdier. At one time the drinking never started until midnight, in fact it was thought unlucky to open your bottle before The Bells started. Nowadays people start drinking much earlier in the day.

Official, organised celebrations have taken the place of these informal gatherings. Events like Edinburgh’s torchlight procession, or Stonehaven’s fireball swinging festival.

But however people celebrate the coming of the New Year, the Scots will always let their hair down on Hogmanay.

So, until I see you after the New Year, lang may your lum reek, and a guid New Year to ane an’ a’ and mony may ye see.

Monday, 22 December 2014

Ebooks – Time to Take Stock


Chris Longmuir at the launch of  Dead Wood
The International Book Prize winner, 2009
Every author who publishes eBooks is fascinated by sales figures.
 
It’s easy to check sales figures on Amazon’s Kindle publishing platform so the newly published author may be unable to resist the urge to keep checking, and may visit the reports section of the site several times a day, noting with glee every single download of their book. However, with the publication of more books, plus the development of a more blasé attitude, these visits lessen, tapering to once a day, then maybe once a week, finally ending up at once a month, in order to check the sales figures for that specific month. I don’t think I’ll ever get too blasé to omit the monthly check.
 
Of course, many authors juggle their prices and offer promotions, and it’s a good idea to keep checking whether these have resulted in additional sales. For me, it’s too much effort to go down this route, and although I did try it a couple of times, I discovered it made no difference at all to my sales figures. So I reckon I won’t be doing any more juggling, or going down the promotional road again. I am wondering, however, whether the VAT (Value Added Tax) increase from 3% to 20% will have an effect on sales because it will push up the price of all eBooks.
 
It is of value, though, to run an annual check to see which of your eBooks has performed best. So, given it’s December, the last month of the year, I thought I would have a quick tally to see how my eBooks were doing. So here are the results:-
 
My top best-selling eBooks
 
1.  Night Watcher

2.  Dead Wood (rounded up because it’s only been on sale for 7 months)

3.  Missing Believed Dead

4.  The Death Game

5.  Ghost Train (short stories)

6.  Crime Fiction and the Indie Contribution
 
7. A Salt Splashed Cradle

8.  Obsession (short stories)
 
In terms of author earnings the list would look the same with the exception of 5, 6 and 7. Number 6, my non fiction book Crime Fiction and the Indie Contribution, which sold less than half the number of copies compared to Ghost Train, earned approximately four times more than Ghost Train, and A Salt Splashed Cradle, my historical saga earned three times more. Therefore my two lowest earners are my two cheapest books, no wonder I refer to them as loss leaders. In fact, when I think about it, the profit from the sale of either of these books wouldn't even be enough to cover the cost of getting into the toilets at Edinburgh Station.
 
Compiling these figures was interesting for me, from the point of view that my Dundee Crime Series is selling better than the other books, which indicates to me that series are popular. The first book of the series, Night Watcher, is consistently selling far more than the others, even my International Dundee Prize winning book, Dead Wood. But I suppose that only indicates that readers like to read book one of a series first.
 
The other interesting thing is that my two loss leaders, selling at 0.99c/77p, are at the bottom of the leader board, and the $4.99/£3.00 books are doing far better (NB: the UK price will rise after 1st Jan due to VAT increases)
 
The Winner is

 



 

Note: From 1st January 2015 the VAT (Value Added Tax) charged on ebooks will increase from 3% to 20%. I won’t get anything extra, but the government will!
 
Chris Longmuir

Monday, 15 December 2014

Ooh! I Feel Wicked



Wicked - The Musical
The reason I feel wicked is because I’ve just had a fabulous afternoon at the Edinburgh Playhouse Theatre, watching Wicked. The musical was one of the most entertaining I’ve seen for some time, and the storyline was ingenious, revealing a different take on the Wicked Witch of the West featured in L. Frank Baum’s Wizard of Oz. Oh, and I really connected with the Wicked Witch of the West, more than I did with Glinda. So, after watching the show, if you had a choice of being wicked or good, what would you choose?


My granddaughter loved the show

To take it further, if I gave you the choice of which character you would want to play in one of my books, what would you choose? When I left my last job to concentrate on being a full time writer, I did a survey of everyone in the department. And, because I worked in a senior position in a Local Authority, that was a lot of people. Without fail, everyone said they would rather be the villain than the hero. And I must admit that in most visual shows, such as films or television, the baddies do seem to have the roles with more depth to them.

But how easy is it to write from the villain’s point of view? And how many villains are truly bad? In fact, if you go to see Wicked, you’ll find out that the heroine is the Wicked Witch of the West, and Glinda, the Good Witch, is far from being perfect.

As a crime writer, who writes in a multi-viewpoint style, I often have to get inside the villain’s head, and into their skin. It’s the only way characters come alive. So, it can be quite an uncomfortable experience. However, no character is totally bad, and even good characters have their flaws.

Let me tell you about Tony, a really bad guy who has a large role in Dead Wood, Book 2 of the Dundee Crime Series. He’s a Mr Big, who runs his own little crime empire in the Scottish city of Dundee. You wouldn’t want to get on the wrong side of Tony, and he does some vicious things. One of his operations is the night club, Teasers, and he is not averse to taking advantage of the pole dancers who work there (that’s putting it politely). I won’t go into all the the things he gets up to because I wouldn’t want to spoil the book for you.
 
However, Tony has his good side as well. Despite his activities with his pole dancers, he regards these as simply diversions, and in his mind is loyal to his wife. He has a strong sense of family, and has a strong protective streak as far as they are concerned, therefore the anguish he feels when his daughter is murdered, is palpable.
 
I must admit I have a soft spot for Tony. But that’s maybe because I’m wicked!
 

Chris Longmuir

 

 

 
Amazon
Amazon Author Page
 
Amazon UK

Amazon.com


Apple iBooks
ITunes Book Page UK
 


 

Sunday, 23 November 2014

10 Curious Facts About WW1


WW1 poster featuring how dachshunds (Weiner dogs) were victimised and regarded as a symbol of Germany. Here we have the British bulldog savaging the German dachshund. Viewed from our own perspective today this seems horrific.
 
During my research for my next Kirsty Campbell, historical crime fiction book, I’m going back a couple of years to 1917, which is bang in the middle of the First World War, known at the time as The Great War. During the course of this research I’ve come across various curious facts, and here are ten of them.

 
1.  Explosions on the battlefield in France could be heard in London.
 
2.  Dachshunds (Weiner dogs) were considered a symbol of Germany and political cartoonists used images of them to ridicule Germany, resulting in the loss of popularity of these dogs, and their possible victimisation by kicking and stoning. 217 dachshunds registered in Britain in 1913 – no dachshunds were registered in 1919.
 
3.  Chalk was added to bread to provide bulk.
 
4.  British summertime was introduced for the first time, to extend daylight hours.
 
5.  Paper money was introduced. In preparation for the war, the first £1 and 10 shilling notes were issued on 7 May 1914.
 
6.  The speed limit for cars was 20 mph, and no driving test was required.
 
7.  National railways passed into state control on 4 August 1914 – the eve of WW1.

8.  “Treating” someone to a drink was outlawed. It was made a criminal offence to buy someone else a drink under DORA regulations (Defence of the Realm Act).
 
9.  Women started to smoke in public.
 
10.  The novels of Jane Austen were prescribed to shell-shocked soldiers because of their soothing effect.
 

Researching for a novel can be a fascinating business, and I’m always amazed at what turns up. For example, when I was researching the first Kirsty Campbell novel, The Death Game, set in 1919, and I planned for Kirsty to be Dundee’s first policewoman, I was completely caught up by the origins of the Britain’s first women police services because they originated from the suffragette movements. Something an early editor simply refused to believe, but you can’t change history, so I parted company with that editor and the publisher he represented.
 
But for now, it’s time to turn away from all the interesting facts I’m finding out about WW1, and get back to my work in progress or the book will never be finished.
 
Chris Longmuir

Thursday, 6 November 2014

Have a Look at my November Sale Bargains


In my last post I told you about Awesome Indies new website http://awesomeindies.net/ and the sale they were running to launch it. Well the bad news is that their sale is now finished. But the good news is that I have decided to keep my two sale books available for the rest of November.

These books have never been discounted before – ever. So, they are genuine bargains. Let me tell you about them.

The two books I decided to reduce are Night Watcher and A Salt Splashed Cradle, and they’ve both been reduced from $4.99/£3.03 down to $2.99/£1.92.


Night Watcher is the first book in my Dundee Crime Series, featuring DS Bill Murphy. The whole series is very popular, and DS Murphy has quite a following. Night Watcher is a story of two stalkers, both with the same target, Nicole, who is rather partial to male company and is not too concerned about whose husband she steals. I’ve already said there were two stalkers – there is the woman with revenge on her mind playing mind games, and then there is the deranged and dangerous Night Watcher. But who kills Nicole? Read it and find out. Link for Night Watcher.

Here are a couple of reviews of Night Watcher:

Night watcher is the sort of novel that keeps the reader glued to its pages, frantically guessing as the plot takes numerous twists and turns. – Alex Gray, Crime Writer

This is a complex and very well crafted tale, beautifully put together -full of a sense of foreboding, and full of menace. – Catherine Czerkawska


A Salt Splashed Cradle is different. It is not my usual crime story. It is a historical saga set in 1830s Scotland in an east coast fishing village which does not welcome newcomers in their midst. This story reflects the living conditions and the morals of the ordinary fishing folk of that time. It starts when Jimmie Watt brings his new bride home to his horrified parents. This is because fishermen are expected to marry within their own community, and Belle is an incomer from the town across the water. Belle, an emotionally damaged and beautiful girl, struggles to find acceptance in the village but she is fighting a losing battle, and when Jimmie leaves the fishing village to sail to the Arctic with a whaling ship, she becomes increasingly isolated. With Jimmie gone, Belle falls for the charms of Lachlan, the Laird’s son and embarks on a tempestuous affair with him. When Jimmie returns she struggles with her feelings for him and for Lachlan. The women in the village now regard Belle as a Jezebel who will tempt their men away. A mood of hysteria engulfs them and they turn against Belle, in an attempt to force her out of the village. What will Belle do? And will she survive? Read it to find out.

Here are some reviews of A Salt Splashed Cradle:

There is some beautiful poetic writing and the complex life of the heroine, Belle, had me gripped from the beginning. Some of the loveliest writing is in the whaling sequences -one can feel the cold - and among the whalers she creates some outstanding charactersEileen Ramsay, novelist

Chris Longmuir's books so far have been mysterious, suspenseful stories concerned with some of the darker depths of human nature. So it's surprising to learn that this latest is a romance. But fans won't be disappointed. Yes, it's a romance but the murkier motives and actions are still in evidenceBill Kirton, crime writer

A Salt-Splashed Cradle drips with historical accuracy, and even the scenes aboard a whaling ship seem to have been recounted directly from an 1800's whaler, almost as if Chris Longmuir boarded those ships and chopped them free from the arctic ice herselfTim Greaton

Why did I decide to keep these two books on offer? Well, that’s easy, I wanted to reward my faithful followers and readers, as well as trying to tempt some new readers into my gang. Why not try one or other of the books, or both if you feel so inclined. And don’t forget to tell me what you think of them.

 Chris Longmuir









Saturday, 1 November 2014

Anchors Away – Awesome Indies Website is Live


In my last post I told you all about the brand new website that has been designed for Awesome Indies, but of course the links only took you to the original site because the new one was scheduled for today, Saturday 1st November. Scroll down if you want to read my previous post.Here is the link for the new website http://awesomeindies.net/

Well, today is the day, the website is live, and all those delicious book bargains are on offer. There are 74 books in the sale, I know because I counted them. And there are loads to choose from, in a variety of different genres. Oh, and before I forget, there is a competition for you with the prize being a Kindle Paperwhite ereader. Here is the link to the competition page – Awesome Indies Welcome Page.



However, don’t miss my books. I have two in the sale. And these books have never been discounted before – ever. So, they are genuine bargains. Let me tell you about them.

I decided to put Night Watcher and A Salt Splashed Cradle in the sale to celebrate the launch of the new website. They’ve both been reduced from $4.99/£3.03 down to $2.99/£1.92.



Night Watcher is the first book in my Dundee Crime Series, featuring DS Bill Murphy, and it’s been very popular, as well as the rest of the series. It’s a story of two stalkers, both with the same target, Nicole, who is rather partial to male company and is not too concerned about whose husband she steals. I’ve already said there were two stalkers – there is the woman with revenge on her mind playing mind games, and then there is the deranged and dangerous Night Watcher. But who kills Nicole? Read it and find out. Link for Night Watcher.

Here are a couple of reviews of Night Watcher:

Night watcher is the sort of novel that keeps the reader glued to its pages, frantically guessing as the plot takes numerous twists and turns. – Alex Gray, Crime Writer

This is a complex and very well crafted tale, beautifully put together -full of a sense of foreboding, and full of menace. – Catherine Czerkawska



A Salt Splashed Cradle is different. It is not my usual crime story. It is a historical saga set in 1830s Scotland in an east coast fishing village which does not welcome newcomers in their midst. This story reflects the living conditions and the morals of the ordinary fishing folk of that time. It starts when Jimmie Watt brings his new bride home to his horrified parents. This is because fishermen are expected to marry within their own community, and Belle is an incomer from the town across the water. Belle, an emotionally damaged and beautiful girl, struggles to find acceptance in the village but she is fighting a losing battle, and when Jimmie leaves the fishing village to sail to the Arctic with a whaling ship, she becomes increasingly isolated. With Jimmie gone, Belle falls for the charms of Lachlan, the Laird’s son and embarks on a tempestuous affair with him. When Jimmie returns she struggles with her feelings for him and for Lachlan. The women in the village now regard Belle as a Jezebel who will tempt their men away. A mood of hysteria engulfs them and they turn against Belle, in an attempt to force her out of the village. What will Belle do? And will she survive? Read it to find out. Link for A Salt Splashed Cradle

Here are some reviews of A Salt Splashed Cradle:

There is some beautiful poetic writing and the complex life of the heroine, Belle, had me gripped from the beginning. Some of the loveliest writing is in the whaling sequences -one can feel the cold - and among the whalers she creates some outstanding charactersEileen Ramsay, novelist

Chris Longmuir's books so far have been mysterious, suspenseful stories concerned with some of the darker depths of human nature. So it's surprising to learn that this latest is a romance. But fans won't be disappointed. Yes, it's a romance but the murkier motives and actions are still in evidenceBill Kirton, crime writer

A Salt-Splashed Cradle drips with historical accuracy, and even the scenes aboard a whaling ship seem to have been recounted directly from an 1800's whaler, almost as if Chris Longmuir boarded those ships and chopped them free from the arctic ice herselfTim Greaton

There are many more books in the sale and I hope you’ll visit the sale page to sample some of them. Have fun reading.

Here is the link to the sale page http://awesomeindies.net/bookstore/on-sale/


Chris Longmuir









Monday, 27 October 2014

Awesome New Website for Awesome Indies


Advance News

The clock is ticking towards the launch of the new Awesome Indies Website, but I thought I’d give you advance warning so you can look out for it and you don’t miss out on the bargains on offer to celebrate the launch.



Who or what is Awesome Indies?

Awesome Indies is a site for readers that showcases the best fiction written by independent authors and/or published by independent publishers. The criteria for acceptance by AI is fairly demanding and requires books to be appraised by publishing professionals such as experienced editors or others with qualifications in creative writing and English literature before acceptance for the site. This is to ensure that any book featured on Awesome Indies is the best it can be. You won’t find badly edited or badly formatted books here, and provided you choose a book from a genre you know you will enjoy it is unlikely you’ll be disappointed.

Awesome Indies website

The website has been in existence for quite a long time now and there was a feeling that it could do with a makeover, to make it more modern and up-to-date. So, the co-ordinators of the site have been beavering away and the upgrade is now complete. For those of you who already know Awesome Indies, I hope you’ll like the changes, and for those of you who haven’t visited before, all the Awesome Indies members and contributors welcome you with open arms.

Click Awesome Indies to go to the website, but if you visit before 1st November it will be the original site, the new one will be there on 1st November

Good news for readers.

The brand new website will be launched on Saturday 1st November, and in order to celebrate, AI is running a ‘Win a Kindle’ competition, as well as having a huge sale with over 70 books priced at less than $3.00 / £1.90. All of these are genuine reductions. But you have to hurry because the sale only lasts for 2 days, the 1st and 2nd November.



Awesome Indies Readers Club

However, the bargains don’t need to stop after the launch. Awesome Indies has a reader’s club which gives you freebies when you join and sends you a regular newsletter to let you know about discounts and bargains when they occur. Click here, Reader’s Club, to find out more



Diary date

So, put the date in your diary, set the alarm on your clock or mobile phone, put a cross on the calendar, and definitely don’t miss out on the bargains.

Chris Longmuir








Monday, 22 September 2014

Bloody Scotland Photo Gallery

I had a brilliant time at Bloody Scotland so I thought I'd share some pics with you.
A lively event with Christopher Brookmyre and Denise Mina


Happy chappies waiting to go on stage - Mark Billingham and Stuart Macbride


Stuart Macbride successfully turned Mark Billingham, as well as the audience, into zombies as he read from Skeleton Bob


The Digital Detectives - Ed James, Allan Guthrie, and Alexandra Sokoloff



A bit of light relief. The Elvis Cleaning Team sprucing up Stirling on Saturday


Favourite authors Caro Ramsay, and Alex Gray, being interviewed by Gordon Brown


Entertaining Event - Alanna Knight interviewing Peter May

Ian Rankin and Kathy Reichs in conversation

The rapt audience listening to Ian and Kathy Reichs

Peter Mays speaking at the gala dinner where he was awarded with the Deanston Scottish Crime Book of the Year Award for Entry Island

Lin Anderson with her forensic team - brilliant presentation involving volunteers from the audience

The forensic volunteers suited up and ready to try out their fingerprinting skills

There was lots more but insufficient time to attend everything or post all the pics I took. If you're a crime writer or reader, and within travelling distance of Stirling, this is one event that's unmissable.

Chris Longmuir










Tuesday, 9 September 2014

Scottish Referendum -Tax Implications for Writers


As I write this post we are only 9 days away from the vote which will decide whether Scotland becomes an independent country, or whether it stays within the United Kingdom with a higher degree of Home Rule. And no, I don’t intend to tell you which way I will vote, as both sides have ardent members who are quite capable of forming a lynch mob!

There have been many discussions on the pros and cons of either vote, but there has been nothing that I can see on the outcome of the tax situation for independent writers who publish their books through the Amazon KDP, or Createspace services, or Smashwords, or any other publisher/distributor.

The simple answer is, of course, that in the event of a ‘No’ vote, things will stay as they are, and that in the event of a ‘Yes’ vote we will pay our taxes to an independent Scotland. Simples.

However, ebooks and paperbacks sell worldwide, therefore we are liable for tax in other countries, mainly the US. At present, if writers pay tax in the UK they can apply for exemption of US tax, which is set at 30%, by filling in the relevant forms to apply for an ITIN (Individual Taxpayer Identification Number), which is similar to the British National Insurance Number, or an EIN (Employer Identification Number) if you are registered as a small business. Once these tax numbers are allocated the US withholds any tax due on sales so UK writers’ earnings are not subject to US tax.

It would be foolish to think that this situation would continue if Scotland were no longer part of the UK, because in order to acquire a US tax number, the person applying has to be paying tax in a country with which the US has a tax treaty. Now, the current tax treaty is with the UK, therefore where would that leave an independent Scotland?

If Scotland becomes an independent country it would no longer be part of the UK, and would therefore have no tax treaty with US. No doubt a tax treaty could be set up, provided both parties were willing! But how long would that take? The wheels of political change can turn exceedingly slowly, and I am sure there will be more pressing issues that have to take priority.

Another issue that has been plaguing my mind, is the situation where the UK tax authorities will remove tax from source on all UK sales, which means paying tax to the UK and to Scotland, and don’t think that’s not a possibility. A friend of mine who sells in Europe (Germany, Spain etc) goes through agonies trying to sort out tax issues that arise. I don’t know the details but I think she pays tax in the country where sales are made and then has to claim it back from UK tax – I may be wrong in the detail, but I do know it is always an agonising time for her.

My head hurts with all this thinking about tax implications, so I’m going to leave you now, and if you have any insights on how it is all going to work, maybe you could leave a note in the comments.

Chris Longmuir









Sunday, 3 August 2014

First World War, Ghosts, and Aeroplanes

John Binnie and Betty Doe

Montrose Air Station is commemorating the centennial of the First World War with an open day, and the launch of a new play, Falls the Shadow, by Betty Doe. When I say it is a new play, that is because it has been expanded from the one act play she wrote last year, and which was performed at the air station in front of Prince Edward, the Earl of Wessex, who was in the audience.
 
The Red Baron's plane


Nowadays, Montrose Air Station is a museum which features many exhibits from the first and Second World Wars, including several vintage aeroplanes, and it even has one which was originally flown by the Red Baron. Now, don’t tell me you don’t know who the Red Baron was? Well, just in case you don’t know, and apologies to those who do, the Red Baron was the German ace pilot, Manfred von Richthofen, who shot down more aircraft than any other pilot during the course of the war. Oh, and let’s not forget the ghost! Over the years many ghostly happenings have occurred at Montrose Air Station, and it is thought the ghost is LT Desmond Arthur who was killed in 1913, when his biplane crashed on a training flight.
 
The ghost, Lt Desmond Arthur, played by Stephen Docherty

Betty Doe’s play, Falls the Shadow, was performed in one of the large hangers on the site. It was directed by John Binnie, a well known writer/director whose productions have won three Edinburgh Fringe First awards, and was performed by professional actors. The result was a professional, polished play which was enjoyed by a multi-national audience.
 
Cast of the play with World War 2 pilots to the left and World War 1 pilots with Major Burke to the right.

The actors performed scenes set during both the first and second world wars, overseen by the ghost of Desmond Arthur, who was joined at the end by the ghost of Major Burke who led the Montrose based No 2 Squadron of the Flying Corps to France in 1914. He was killed in action in 1917. There were some highly emotional scenes, and the play really brought it home to the audience what conditions were like, particularly during the First World War, when the life expectancy of pilots was six weeks.

I can only congratulate Betty Doe on writing such an emotive play, the actors for their superb performance, and John Binnie for a professional production.

Scenes from the play:
First World War pilots playing chess before flying into battle, with the ghost of Desmond Arthur looking on.
Second World War pilots playing cards prior to flying into battle
The ghosts of Lt Desmond Arthur and Major Charles Burke
The ghosts again
Playwright Betty Doe with the ghosts of Lt Desmond Arthur and Major Charles Burke


Chris Longmuir






Monday, 28 July 2014

Highlights of Harrogate

The Old Swan Hotel, home of the Harrogate Crime Festival

The Harrogate Crime Festival is the highlight of many crime writers’ lives. It’s held once every year in July at Harrogate, and crime writers congregate there to let their hair down, as well as meeting their readers. Have a look at a video about the festival which you can access through this link. Video – Theakstons Crime Writing Festival a winner!

The festival seems to get bigger every year with thousands attending, and Simon Theakston in his welcome speech claimed it was the largest crime festival in the world. I was already aware that it was the largest crime festival in Europe, but I did wonder whether it would be the largest in the world. One thing is sure, it is certainly big, and there are certainly thousands of people who attend it.

Over the years many famous writers have graced Harrogate’s stage, and this year was no exception. There is insufficient space to mention every author who was there, or all the writers who were on panels, or who were interviewed on the stage, so I will just mention the ones that were the highlight of my weekend.

Lynda la Plante has to take first place. Her boundless energy and interesting anecdotes, plus her stage presence, held the audience's attention. Lynda had flown from America specifically for the Harrogate Festival and was returning the next day. I, for one, appreciated her dedication to her fans. I also felt she truly deserved the special award made to her as the winner of the fifth Theakston’s Old Peculier Outstanding Contribution to Crime Fiction Award.



Another frontliner who was there was JK Rowling who writes her crime novels as Robert Galbraith. The interviewer was Val McDermid, another well-known crime writer and a favourite of mine. The interview was interesting and I enjoyed it, although there were restrictions in place. For example, no photographs were allowed, and book signing was regimented with only one row of people at a time allowed to join the queue, while the next row had to wait until they were allowed to join in. Thank goodness I was fairly near the front, I hate to think how long the people in the back rows had to wait.
 
No photographs allowed, so you'll have to make do with the empty chairs

Last but not least, there was a special panel for Broadchurch, which was recently televised. On the panel were two of the actors, Olivia Colman, and Jodie Whittaker, as well as the producer and writer. Interestingly, the actors were not aware of the ending until the final episode was filmed.


I had a brilliant time at Harrogate and hope to go again next year.

Chris Longmuir