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Val McDermid

The City Reads - Deckchair Interview
Photo: Illustrative image for the 'Val McDermid' page

Interrogation room
Turning its hand to the art of interrogation, City Reads (for The Deckchair) put Val McDermid under the spotlight. She said she wouldn't break, but with a little good cop, bad cop action, she soon spilled the beans...

On the spark of a new crime novel:
All my books have more or less the same sort of genesis. Something intrigues me - a detail in a news story, an item on the radio, a throwaway line in a conversation. I go away and put the writer's secret weapon into action. The secret weapon? The two magic words: "What if?".

On series versus stand-alone novels:
Obviously a series novel takes less time in the planning phase because I already have a nexus of off-the-shelf characters. With stand-alone novels like A Place of Execution, I have to start right from square one, getting to know everybody from scratch.

On structure, form and narrative shape:
The shape of the books and the way the story unfolds [is] largely dictated by the stories themselves. I do like to try different kinds of books, partly to keep myself interested and partly to push myself harder as a writer.

What makes a good read:
What I look for in a book is interesting character development, a well told story and an atmospheric setting. Like a three-legged stool, I think a great novel needs all of those to be properly balanced.

On letting a finished book out into the public domain:
What I mostly feel is a sense of failure - I haven't managed to write the perfect book I'd dreamed of at the outset!

On what keeps a crime writer awake at night:
When you're writing, you're concentrating on technical stuff - does this sentence work? Is that the right adjective? - that does put a certain distance between you and the effect. It's not my books that give me nightmares - it's other people's!

Some material from this Q&A was taken from an interview on the HarperCollins web site (www.HarperCollins.co.uk) and from The Good Fiction Guide, ed. Jane Rogers, OUP, 2005.

Audio transcripts

This page was added on 20/02/2008.

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