There is all sorts
to talk about this week, some of it exciting, some of it rather sad. We’ll be discussing
book festivals, both past and future, and also, because we’re back on the crime
trail today, as oppose to the horror trail, where we were last week, I’ll be
reviewing Don Winslow’s epic gangster saga, THE CARTEL, which I think I can
safely say is one of the best crime novels I’ve ever read. If you’re keen to
get to that book review quickly, you’ll find it, as usual, at the lower end of
this blogpost.
A
quick word first about the literary festivals – in a nutshell, I’m very flattered to
have been invited as a guest to this year’s CHORLTON BOOK FESTIVAL, in
Manchester, but I’ll also be chatting today about MORD AM HELLWEG VIII, in
Germany, which I attended, also as a guest, last weekend; that was a truly
remarkable experience.
However,
before we get to all that, if you can spare me a minute and forgive a personal
indulgence, I’d like to pay tribute to a friend and colleague who passed away
quite recently after a difficult illness at the far-too-young age of 70.
On
October 25 this year, quite unexpectedly, we lost the lovely and astonishingly talented CAROLE BLAKE.
As
co-founder of the BLAKE FRIEDMANN LITERARY AGENCY in London, who have
represented me for most of my professional writing life, and have been hugely
involved in steering my professional career from its humble beginnings to the
bestseller status I’m fortunate enough to enjoy today, Carole was a very
significant person in my life, but she had a family too, and many, many close
friends, not least her colleagues down at the Agency, who are all understandably
devastated by this event.
A
legend in the publishing industry, Carole achieved an awful lot in her life.
She wasn’t just a powerhouse literary agent, representing such fine writers as
Barbara Erskine, Peter James, Julian Stockwin and Anne de Courcy, she was a
best-selling author in her own right, penning FROM PITCH TO PUBLICATION:
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO KNOW TO GET YOUR NOVEL PUBLISHED, which is regarded as a
seminal work and is now in its 19th reprinting. She was also
president of the Association of Authors’ Agents, second female chair of the
Society of Bookmen, and chairman of BTBS, the Book Trade Charity, on whose
board she served for 11 years.
An
arch-professional and a huge personality, Carole’s loss will be felt for a very
long time. I can only say that I am deeply honoured to have known her, and very
lucky to have been within her sphere of influence.
*
The
annual CHORLTON BOOK FESTIVAL, a celebration of reading and writing – not just
locally to Manchester, but from around the world – is a truly amazing event,
which is now in its 12th year. Chorlton is famously regarded as ‘Manchester’s
most literary suburb’, and many big-name authors have attended this festival since
its inception. So I was massively flattered to get the call for 2016.
The
festival will take place at Chorlton Library between 18-26 November. It won’t
just be about me, of course. Other authors due to attend – and this is quite a
line-up, I’m sure you’ll agree – include mega-selling crime writer, RACHEL
ABBOTT (pictured right), rising star and horror novelist ANDREW MICHAEL HURLEY, eclectic
performer ROSIE GARLAND (pictured above) and poet DAVID MORLEY.
I
myself will participate on Saturday November 19, from 7pm. Again this will be
at Chorlton Library. I’m not exactly sure what form it will take – either a
reading (from the next Heck novel perhaps?) and questions, or just a good old
chinwag with both the moderator and the audience – but put it this way, I’ll be
there for at least an hour and a half, more likely two (and there will be
drinks as well). So if you fancy popping in, please do.
For
full details of the week-long programme, check HERE.
Hoping
to see some of you there.
*
And
now for a literary festival that has already been and gone, but what an astonishing
experience it was.
A
few of you will probably know that my novels have been translated into German by
the top German publishing house, PIPER VERLAG. Sales have been great, and I’ve
periodically been the recipient of emailed photographs taken in bus shelters and
railway stations in cities as far apart as Munich, Frankfurt and Berlin, which
show my face adorning massive billboards. This is always a surreal experience because,
admirer though I am of German culture, up until this year it’s a country I’d
only ever visited once – fleetingly, during a backpacking holiday in 1984. As
such, when I received an invitation from Piper to travel over there this
autumn, and spend two nights in their company, attending two separate literary
festivals, firstly Mord am Hellweg VIII in Hagen, and secondly the Piper Crime
Night in Darmstadt, I was a little apprehensive.
Like
so many complacent English folk, I’ve neglected a study of foreign languages –
in short, I have no German whatsoever – plus, I didn’t know the country.
What
I didn’t anticipate, though, was that when I finally got over there last weekend,
none of this would prove to be any kind of obstacle at all – courtesy of my
publishers.
Piper
are a major force in German publishing, and produce some truly gorgeous books,
mine included. On top of that, they treated me like royalty. Cathy, my wife,
and I were chaperoned the entire time we were there, from our arrival at
Frankfurt airport on the Saturday to our departure on the Monday, by Piper
Publicity and Events Manager, Jana Remus, who didn’t just steer us through the
complexities of the German railway and taxi systems, she also arranged and
re-arranged bookings, and was always available to provide a translation if it
was needed (though it rarely was, the Germans speaking English as well as they
do).
I
can’t express how grateful I am to Piper for taking care of all this.
Every single potential cause of stress was removed from the trip, leaving
nothing but a thoroughly enjoyable experience, which, unsurprisingly given that
it was made in Germany, ran like clockwork.
The
events themselves were as good as any I’ve ever been involved with.
Mord
am Hellweg, which is a huge celebration of modern crime-writing (apparently the
biggest in Europe), had a real international feel from the outset. I was on
stage the same evening as Swedish novelist and screenwriter FREDRIK T. OLSSON (left),
Israeli crime writer DROR MISHANI (below), and Irish novel-writing team, Karen Gillece and
Paul Perry, who work under the joint-name of KAREN PERRY (and what a very cool
bunch of people all these folk turned out to be).
There
were literally hundreds in the audience, so many in fact that the organisers had
to divide the punters at the Hagen Arts Centre into two different groups, one
upstairs and one down (we then alternated between the two).
For
my own part, I provided brief readings from HUNTED, recently published in
Germany as TOTENSPIELER, which were translated by the very able and rather delightful journalist and moderator, Margarete von Schwarzkopf, again not that I think any translation was really needed - the German audience responded in positive and lively fashion while I was on the microphone.
To make it slightly easier for them, however, a second and much longer reading from HUNTED was then performed by FRITZ ECKENGA, a German actor, author and poet of considerable renown.
To make it slightly easier for them, however, a second and much longer reading from HUNTED was then performed by FRITZ ECKENGA, a German actor, author and poet of considerable renown.
This
was pretty mesmerising. I reiterate that I don’t speak German, but Fritz (right) has the
most amazingly rich and resonant voice, and he read the passage beautifully, making
it sound magical. He later confided in me that he first determined to learn English
after hearing Ken Branagh read some of Shakespeare’s sonnets, which he didn’t
understand at the time but the sound of which completely entranced him. After
being so enthralled by Fritz’s own musical delivery, I knew exactly what he
meant.
The
second night was equally rewarding. This time, though it was officially the
Piper Crime Night, we were guests of The Bookstore in Darmstadt, a large
independent operation whose owner, Alfred Hofmann, regularly hosts literary
events in his hometown. As before, it was hugely well-attended, and once again,
when I read in English, I gauged very quickly from the audience that they
understood near-enough every word. During the Q&A, translations were
provided by local crime author and all-round top bloke, MICHAEL KIBLER, who
made a very entertaining dinner guest afterwards.
I
was also honoured in Darmstadt to share the stage with GISA KLONNE (left), who is
regarded as one of Germany’s leading crime-writers. Again, what a lovely lady
and, afterwards, a fabulous raconteur.
One
of the nicest things any author can experience, I think, is to attend a literary
event and feel appreciated. That may sound like an obvious thing to say; it may
even sound conceited, but when you’re invited
to one of these things, and find only a handful of people there or detect an
air of indifference when you’re making your address, it can be very dispiriting. That doesn’t happen often,
but just happening once, it can be a huge blow to your morale. I must stress,
by the way, that wanting a positive reaction at one of these festivals is not about
some desire to be worshipped or idolised. It just means that you’re facing a
bunch of people who have connected with your writing, and that’s really all you
can ever hope for if you write to be published.
I
felt this connection strongly last weekend in Germany. I spoke to so many people
who were not just friendly and welcoming, but who were intimately familiar with my work;
I must have signed dozens of books on both nights.
It’s
easily the farthest I’ve ever travelled on a book-tour, and yet it is probably
the most gratifying one I’ve done to date. I owe a huge debt of thanks to Jana and
all the staff at Piper who made it possible, and of course to the organisers of
Mord am Hellweg, who included Astrid Knoche and Antje Deistler as well as those
I’ve already mentioned (please forgive me, guys, if any name has slipped my
memory), and to Herr Hofmann and his wife for making us feel equally welcome at
their event in Darmstadt (and for afterwards giving me an exceptional present,
a bottle of locally-made malt whiskey, which – believed it or not – is named
FINCH).
The two images depicting racks of my books on sale in Germany, while taken in Frankfurt, do not come to us from last weekend,
but were taken at the Frankfurt Book Fair earlier last month. Thanks to Helen
Hurthwaite from Avon Books at HarperCollins, for sending these through to me.
THRILLERS, CHILLERS, SHOCKERS AND KILLERS …
An ongoing series of reviews of dark fiction (crime, thriller and horror novels)
– both old and new – that I have recently read and enjoyed. I’ll endeavour to
keep the SPOILERS to a minimum; there will certainly be no given-away
denouements or exposed twists-in-the-tail, but by the definition of the word
‘review’, I’m going to be talking about these books in more than just thumbnail
detail, extolling the aspects that I particularly enjoyed … so I guess if you’d
rather not know anything at all about these pieces of work in advance of
reading them yourself, then these particular posts will not be your thing.
THE CARTEL by Don Winslow (2015)
Outline
In
2004, former DEA man Art Keller is a burnt-out wreck after decades of war with
the Mexican drugs cartels. Having survived to middle age, and having lost his
wife on the way and witnessed the torture and murder of his partner, he now
lives in self-imposed exile, working as a bee-keeper at a remote monastery. His
days of conflict are over. He’s had enough of the rest of the world.
But
then disaster strikes.
His
former enemy and leading drugs lord, Adan Barrera, after serving a short prison
sentence that was more like a holiday, secures his freedom and commences where
he left off with the aid of Magda, his intelligent ex-beauty queen wife,
expanding and strengthening El Federacion,
a huge but brittle alliance of Mexico’s most powerful and merciless dope gangs.
Keller
knows his retirement is over.
Initially
it’s a matter of being realistic. Barrera has put a huge bounty on Keller’s
head. If the former agent doesn’t strike first, his life won’t be worth living.
But the moment he gets back into the saddle, it all comes boiling to the
surface: the hatred, the fury, the desire for revenge. Within no time, it’s as
though Keller has never been out of the service – and the game is back on.
What
follows is a ten-year cat and mouse game between two wily, determined
individuals who detest each other. On paper, Barrera is far the stronger. He
has El Federacion behind him, and a
virtual army of gun-toting narcos and sicarios.
Keller, by contrast, has a less-than-reliable network of nervous informers and
untrustworthy US and Mexican bureaucrats. But Keller also has his skills and
his wits, not to mention good contacts among rival syndicates. It isn’t
difficult for him to create in-fighting and factionalism. Not that he needs to
do this on his own. Because in response to Barrera’s return, the so-called
Zetas have emerged under Heriberto Ochoa: a chillingly ruthless paramilitary
mob which, while Barrera mainly peoples his organisation with gunmen drawn from
the barrios and backstreets, is itself composed of former spec ops soldiers,
who will wage a campaign of total annihilation to achieve their ends.
The
resulting civil war in the Mexican underworld is almost too horrifying to
believe, the Zetas in particular stopping at nothing to terrorise their
opponents, not just shooting them, but decapitating, burning, dismembering and
burying them alive – and on an industrial scale. Strings of the most incredibly
heinous murders occur right in front of our eyes, the victims including men,
women and children. While Keller watches, helpless, the appalling violence
spreads all across Mexico, engulfing the ordinary population, wiping out entire
districts, shocking the country to its core, paralysing it with fear.
Many
events in The Cartel are based on real historical incidents, which in the
mid-2000s transformed Mexico from a Spring Break paradise to a no-go war zone.
But for the most part this is a fictionalised account. Most of the characters
Keller encounters come from Winslow’s imagination, but they also serve a valid
purpose. Among the villains, ‘Crazy’ Eddie Ruiz began life as the all-American
boy, but got drawn into trafficking while still young, naïve and ambitious
enough to think he could make it pay – and once in, of course, he found there
was no way out. While Chuy, better known as ‘Jesus the Kid’, is a hollowed-out
shell of a human being, a slum child so horribly abused that he makes the
perfect killer for the crime bosses (and is a genuinely frightening presence,
so coldly does he obey their monstrous orders). On the goodies’
side meanwhile, the journalist, Pablo – an everyday family man, who bravely
reports on the horrors of the dope war, is representative of the many real life
Mexican journalists who were murdered (131 of whom are referenced in the book
in a sobering dedication list). Likewise, the moralistic Doctor Marisol
Cisneros is much more here than Keller’s love-interest; she is the female face
of Mexico’s innocent population, the wife/mother figure we’ve seen in so many
conflicts of this type, who fearlessly expresses outrage at the atrocities and
contempt for the madmen raping her homeland.
All
of these heroes risk the most terrible reprisals, but ultimately, as Keller
knows, the sad truth is that good people standing up for their right to live
safe lives, will not be enough to win this war. His feud with Adan Barrera has
become personal, and Keller is determined to take him down, no matter what it
costs …
Review
Where
to start with The Cartel, except to say that it’s far more than a mere crime
novel.
I
mean, it is a crime novel. It’s
probably one of the best crime novels I’ve ever read; an epic, awe-inspiring
tale of one man’s non-stop war against a criminal organisation who, despite the
colossal resources thrown at it, remains virtually unassailable, and how, in
the process and because he’s already lost everything he values in life, he is
brutalised beyond recognition, changing from a well-intentioned, justice-driven
lawman into a remorseless, rule-breaking avenger.
But
it’s also much, much more even than this.
Though
it’s officially a sequel to Winslow’s previous gangster masterpiece, Power
of the Dog, it won’t spoil your enjoyment to start here, because The
Cartel is really the big brother of the two novels. It casts an
enormous wide-angle lens on the entire tragedy that is Mexico in the era of the
drugs wars, not just depicting the syndicates in all their gaudy, gory,
soulless, nihilistic, wicked-beyond-belief glory, but also holding to account
those government officials and business czars in both Mexico and the US who
have kowtowed to them through fear or greed, and slamming the US in particular
for a schizophrenic approach to hard drugs, which sees it on one hand spending
billions of dollars to try and halt the flow of narcotics across the border,
and on the other, through its everyday citizens, spending at least the same
amount in efforts to acquire these substances and with no apparent awareness of the
ghastly human cost.
Don’t
for one minute assume the ‘Cartel’ the book’s title is referring to is El Federacion. Not a bit of it; in this
novel, and clearly in the reality Don Winslow has so carefully and
painstakingly researched, the blame for this ceaseless whirlwind of atrocities
goes way, way further than that.
As
such, it’s a true nightmare scenario, a gargantuan genocidal mess, which the
author examines in unstinting and forensic detail. There is little-to-nothing
that will uplift you in these 640 corpse-strewn, gunfire-riddled pages. It’s
often heartbreakingly sad, and not just because of the endless massacres and
executions of the innocent, harrowing stuff though these scenes are – one
appalling and pointless slaughter of a bus-load of itinerant workers who have
simply strayed into the wrong place is enough to freeze the blood – but it’s
the whole calamity of a country once not just famous for its beautiful
landscapes and wonderful climate, but also for its vibrant culture and
artistry, its architecture and literary tradition, being utterly consumed by a
crime-wave which explodes in all directions and without limit, by bloody wars
that never end, and by what in truth amounts to wholesale, home-grown, fully
militarised ultra-terrorism rather than traditional organised crime.
In
the midst of this maelstrom, the ordinary Mexican people, and all the fictional
characters who figurehead them, are dragged from pillar to post, battered,
beaten and broken down, and yet everyman figures like Marisol the country
doctor and Pablo the weary journalist remain defiant, exemplifying courage and
common decency, doing everything they can to oppose the banditos and at the same time remain alive. Such is the skill of
Winslow’s detailed and emotional story-telling that you get totally sucked in,
becoming progressively more terrified for them (not to mention for everyone
else – literally, no-one is safe in this book).
If
you think this sounds like a glimpse of Hell, you’re basically right. However,
there is some light to be had. Art Keller is the embittered focal point of the
story, but he makes for an excellent central character. He’s not a young man.
He’s tired and careworn, but he’s an expert in his field and a wheeler-dealer
from way back, and his fatalistic obsession now is to spend whatever remains of
his life hunting down Adan Barrera. This makes him a formidable foe for a crime
syndicate who are not used to being nervous about anything, and each time he’s
on the page you feel more than a pang of hope that, if anyone can pull this
impossible task off, it’s Keller. But he’s a flawed hero for sure, using every
trick in the book, both legal and otherwise: making and breaking alliances as
it suits him; infiltrating the mob; undermining and double-crossing them;
bribing the corruptible; turning former friends into enemies; indulging, if
necessary, in the most murderous violence.
By
comparison, his nemesis, Barrera, is not the demented monster you might expect.
In fact, in contrast to the uber-vicious Ochoa, he’s remarkably restrained,
running his world with a rod of iron, but a diplomat as well as a general,
clever and ruthless but a suave fellow who values family life when he’s allowed
to have it. He’s like the CEO of a large company rather than a gang boss,
though again such is the skill with which he is drawn by Winslow, such are the
subtle undercurrents of menace in Barrera’s urbane persona, that you’ve no
doubt he’ll pull the trigger on anyone and everyone if the situation demands
it.
Overall,
The
Cartel is more of an experience than a novel. For such a massive book,
the pace rattles along – I read it in about three days – and that isn’t just
down to the intensity of the shoot-outs or the horror of the murders and
massacres; the complex judicial and political scene is also handled deftly, the
labyrinthine dealings of all those involved in the dope game, even those not on
the frontline of violence, are analysed from every angle, and yet it’s all done
quickly and accessibly. There are literally dozens of characters, and yet every
one remains vivid in the reader’s eye, proving easily and immediately
recognisable.
The
most negative comment I’ve read from any reviewer on the subject of The
Cartel is that it’s ‘sprawling’. Well … it is. But that’s because it’s
a genuine, bona fide epic. James Ellroy described it as “the ‘War and Peace’ of
the dope wars”. I can’t argue with that. It’s grim, dark-hearted stuff, but at
the same time it remains an amazing feat of crime/thriller literature.
At the end of
these reviews, just for the fun of it, I usually name the cast I would pick
if this book was ever to hit our screens. Apparently, a TV version of The Cartel has been in development for
some time now, but I’ve seen nothing solid yet, so here, as always, are my
picks for who should play the lead characters:
Art Keller –
Leonardo DiCaprio
Adan Barrera –
Benicio del Toro
Marisol – Sophia
Vergara
Magda – Eiza
Gonzalez
Pablo – Jesse
Garcia
‘Crazy’ Eddie Ruiz
– James Marsden
Heriberto Ochoa –
Joaquin Cosio
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