• Looking forward to an excellent 2026 in our libraries

    I have always been a huge fan of libraries – my father was a chief librarian, my first summer job was in my local library and many years later, as a volunteer, I played a role in the successful campaign to save that library, and one other in the same town, which had been under

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  • “Have you been shooting people in our new kitchen again?’

    This is another of my posts reminding visitors to my website about one of my older crime novels that they may have forgotten, on this occasion Death List. (The Book Folks, a Joffe Books imprint) one of the DCI John Blizzard series – and it comes with an example of the many elements that go

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  • Accolade for author’s debut novel

    The debut novel by crime writer May Rinaldi, from South West Scotland, has been published – and it’s already an award-winner. Liar Thief, which won the Black Spring Press Crime Novel 2024, is a psychological thriller with a protagonist, whose voice buries itself into your subconscious and refuses to leave. An emotional, darkly propulsive plot,

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  • Blizzard’s big day ruined by murder

    It should be Detective Chief Inspector John Blizzard’s big day – the relaunch of an old railway station as part of efforts by the heritage group of which he is a member to restore a steam railway to the northern city of Hafton. Instead, he finds himself investigating the death of a notorious ex-boxer, whose

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  • Novel reveals the story of a terrible crime

    It was a tragedy that shocked people in the North Pennines, a passenger aircraft that tried to cross the uplands but was flying far too low due due a technical fault, aviation investigators later concluded. The plane clipped one of the summits and ploughed into a hillside, killing all aboard.Despite an intensive search of the

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  • Lifetime achievement award has new sponsor

    One of the most prestigious awards in crime writing has a new sponsor. Run by the Crime Writers’ Association (CWA), the annual Diamond Dagger Award was introduced in 1986 and recognises a lifetime’s achievement. Part of the CWA’s annual Daggers, which having first been staged in 1965, are the genre’s oldest awards, the Diamond Dagger’s

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  • Bursaries on offer to help authors to develop their careers

    Authors in the early stages of their careers are being offered the chance to bid for four £5,000 bursaries to further develop their work. The Charlotte Aitken Trust has awarded New Writing North £30,000 to support the development of four published writers living in the North of England. Known as the Charlotte Aitken Trust Awards,

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  • All change at book festival

    All change at book festival

    Exciting things are happening as Kirkcudbright Book Week becomes Kirkcudbright Book Festival with a new website, a new programme and a new Facebook page. The 2026 event in the town in Dumfries and Galloway will run from March 5-8 and details will be announced on January 1. The old Book Week website will no longer

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  • Trust seeks support for books initiative

    The excellent Scottish Book Trust (SBT) is seeking donations for its ongoing campaign to provide books for disadvantaged families who do not own them. According to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, more than a million people in Scotland are living in poverty and a quarter of them are children. The most disadvantaged children are 50% more

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  • A small touch of reality

    A small touch of reality

    Sometimes it’s the smallest things that sustain an author and I have just read the latest review on Amazon of my ebook boxset of Jack Harris crime novels (nine novels for 99p, published by The Book Folks, a Joffe Books company). The review (thank you, Angela) included the line ‘I can imagine meeting Jack ‘Hawk’

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