Thursday, May 14, 2009

And so to Bristol …

I had a ball last year at Ye Olde CrimeFeste (statue erected in my honour, right) and I’m looking forward to more of the same this year. What’s terrific about these conventions is that you get to stroll around for a couple of days pretending to be a bona fide writer and no small boy points his finger at you and says, “Oi, yon emperor-type ain’t wearing no clothes.” It’s a wonderful thing, pretending to be a writer … but then, pretending is what writers do best.
  The other great thing about conventions and festivals is meeting up with the people you only tend to see at such events. Writing being (in theory, at least) a solitary pursuit, and regarded by something of an anti-social affliction by those nearest and dearest who don’t write, it’s nice to chow down with like-minded folk. As always, it’ll be great to hook up with Irish scribes the likes of Declan Hughes, Brian McGilloway and Ruth ‘Cuddly’ Dudley Edwards, and also some people I’ve met on my travels over the last couple of years, including Paul Johnston, Martin Edwards, the uber-glam Donna Moore, Ruth Downie, Chris Ewan, and a few more. And then there’s my fellow members of the bloggoratti, being Maxine, Karen, Norm, Ali and – possibly – the Book Witch and Rhian, although I’m not sure they’re going to make it this year. And, of course, we’ll all be in awe of the award-winning blogger, Peter Rozovsky of Detectives Beyond Borders, who’ll be doing his Uncle Travelling Matt impression in Bristol.
  Anyway, it’ll be dry sherries all round, so here’s hoping the old liver holds out. For those of you interested, I’ll drop a line on Monday or Tuesday (depending on the volume of dry sherries) to let you know how the panels went. I’m on two: Friday at 1.30, for ‘I Was A Fugitive From A Chain Gang: Writing About The Bad Guys’ alongside Chris Ewan, Steve Mosby and Kevin Wignall, with Donna Moore moderating; and Saturday at 3.30, for Natural Born Killers: Maxim’s Picks, alongside Cara Black, Paul Johnston and – hurrah! – Donna Moore, with Maxim Jakubowski moderating.
  All in all, fun times ahead …

  UPDATE: The ‘Who Is The Sexiest Irish Crime Writer?’ poll is now open for business, people, in the top-left corner of the blog … The results will be skewed, naturally, given that Gene Kerrigan has removed himself from consideration, but what can you do?

8 comments:

  1. Ta, squire ... I do intend to. Pity you won't be there, but at least we'll be spared all that 'unpleasantness' from the last time ...

    Cheers, Dec

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  2. Have a glass of water and think of me.

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  3. I like your statue. It's not quite how I pictured you, but then, photos can be so deceiving. I'm not sure whether it's going to help you in the sexiest writer poll, though.

    Although you never know. One of my friends has a big thing for men in suits.

    Unfortunately, she's not voting.

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  4. Let's have none of this awe, sir. I'm highly approachable.

    In re the people one meets at crime-writing conventions, I chatted last night over dry sherries with a couple of folks who had been to crime conventions as well as those of writers and fans of other genres. The verdict was unanimous: Crime folks are the nicest.
    ==============
    Detectives Beyond Borders
    "Because Murder Is More Fun Away From Home"
    http://www.detectivesbeyondborders.blogspot.com

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  5. The verdict was unanimous: Crime folks are the nicest.You know, I do kind of get that feeling--not just writers, but even readers seem to be that way. I think it was P.D. James who said that crime fiction was a way of exorcising our darker impulses. Maybe it's true.

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  6. Is it just me, or does anyone else get the feeling Adrian McKinty's cheating on this 'sexiest writer' marlarkey? Not that he's not sexy, y'know, but ...

    Cheers, Dec

    V-word, funnily enough, is 'moncon'

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  7. Oh, he's definitely cheating. But just whisper a word or two around Bristol and you can cheat better.

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Declan Burke has published a number of novels, the most recent of which is ABSOLUTE ZERO COOL. As a journalist and critic, he writes and broadcasts on books and film for a variety of media outlets, including the Irish Times, RTE, the Irish Examiner and the Sunday Independent. He has an unfortunate habit of speaking about himself in the third person. All views expressed here are his own and are very likely to be contrary.