Aussie Authors Month

April has been designated by someone as Aussie Authors Month, a fact I have been neglectful of here at Reactions to Reading. But over at Fair Dinkum Crime, the blog I host with fellow Aussie crime fiction fan Kerrie to focus only on Australian crime, mysteries and thrillers, we have been celebrating in style.

Firstly, we introduced a new feature to the blog, our version of an author interview which we call the Fair Dinkum Baker’s Dozen.  We provide the authors with 13 beginnings and, like the creative geniuses they are, they turn them into sentences (or paragraphs, or full blown essays should the urge arise). We’ve been very fortunate to have a wonderful selection of five Aussie crime writers share their thoughts with us so far. Do head over and learn about their worst jobs, biggest fears and the truly terrible things one of them has done to chickens:

We’re also running a quiz, offering your choice of several recent Aussie crime titles as prizes. The quiz is open worldwide so you’re all welcome to participate. We did go to some effort not to make all the answers entirely ‘googlable’ but we hope you’ll have a go anyway. We’ll give away the prizes even if no one gets all the questions right so you’ve got a decent shot at winning.

Both Kerrie and I are trying to fit in some reading of new (to us) Aussie crime fiction too. So far Kerrie has reviewed Katherine Howell’s Cold Justice and I’ll be reviewing Michael Duffy’s The Tower later this weekend. I think we both hope to finish and review at least one more book by an Aussie Author before the end of the month.

Have you done anything to celebrate Aussie Authors Month? 

Crime Fiction Alphabet: M is for Movies

There are a few settings that feature more regularly in crime fiction than they do in most people’s reality, but perhaps none is more glamorous than the movie set. Loads of authors have set mysteries in or around the movies, some even have whole series set in the film industry. I suppose the authors are cashing in on society’s fascination with celebrities and the film world.

Anthony Boucher’s 1941 novel The Case of the Solid Key is his third novel featuring private eye Fergus O’Breen. Although the first body in this dramatic tale is discovered in a theatre it’s a theater in Hollywood and the motley collection of actors and crew hanging out there also have (or deeply wish to have) film careers and a movie studio does play an important role in the novel.

I only recently got around to reading Patricia Moyes‘ 1964 novel which takes place on the set of an independent film being shot in London, Falling Star. When the financially troubled film receives an injection of cash due to the slightly too well time death of someone Inspector Henry Tibbett of Scotland Yard steps in to solve this murder (and those which inevitably follow it).

In the 1980′s and 90′s George Baxt wrote a historical and mostly satirical series featuring a 1940′s private detective who worked in and around Hollywood. Each book would see a screen icon of the 40′s involved in some intrigue or other, often with countless other high profile names scattered throughout the stories as bit players. Agatha Christie even featured in The Bette Davis Murder Case which was a pretty far-fetched tale in which Ms Davis was doing a stage play in London and somehow got involved in helping Ms Christie solve the poisoning murder of her neighbour. Books like these make me wonder if an author can do just anything they like with a famous person’s name?

In 1994′s Dead Pan by Jane Dentinger, out of work New York stage actress Jocelyn ‘Josh’ O’Roarke is invited to Hollywood to work on a movie with a former out child star (who is also a recovering drug addict and recently orphaned). It’s not long before the director of photography turns up dead and Ginger (the aforementioned child star) is the main suspect. O’Roarke and the set’s hairstylist Jack Breedlove decide to solve the crime. This is part of a fun cosy series.

Australian crime writer Brian Kavanagh set the third of his Belinda Lawrence mysteries, Bloody Ham (2007), on the set of a period drama being filmed at historic Ham House in Surrey. Ostensibly on set to watch over some valuable props that her friend Hazel has hired to the film, Belinda soon finds herself a stand-in for one of the actresses and a suspect in the first (of several) murders that befall the shooting.

Perhaps Agatha Christie‘s The Mirror Crack’d From Side to Side would also qualify for this category given that it does feature an actress/film director husband and wife team? Or perhaps there is another Christie book that is more definitely placed in the film world?

Do you have a favourite work of crime fiction set on a movie set or somehow related to the world of cinema?


Kerrie at Mysteries in Paradise is hosting the crime fiction alphabet meme which requires the posting of an article relating to the letter of the week. Do join in the fun by reading the posts and/or contributing one of your own. You don’t have to write every week.

Review: A Canterbury Crime by Brian Kavanagh

The fourth novel in this series sees antiques dealer Hazel Whitby and her young friend and colleague Belinda Lawrence head to Canterbury to catalogue the valuable contents of the stately home of Professor de Gray who died six months previously. Although his death was assumed to be of natural causes Belinda and Hazel soon realise that there were several people who might have benefited from the Professor’s death, especially as he was reported to be writing a book that would expose new information about the 12th century murder of Thomas Becket in Canterbury Cathedral. Along with Belinda’s boyfriend Mark they embark on an investigation which looks like it might get a bit dangerous.

As always with this series there’s a good mix of contemporary action and historical detail in A Canterbury Crime and I enjoyed learning a thing or two about centuries-old religious squabbles (some things never change). Kavanagh is a dab hand at weaving the historical information into his modern stories, using Hazel’s professional knowledge and a variety of local experts to provide just the right amount of background to make the story interesting.

Along with our intrepid three investigators, of whom the gin-drinking and younger man bonking Hazel is my favourite, there are some memorable characters specific to this novel. The Professor’s former assistant, who has hired Hazel and reminds Belinda of Mrs Danvers, plays a major role in the story as does a rather odd housekeeper and a man who is desperate to work at the Canterbury archives. Although there are ‘developments’ in Belinda and Mark’s relationship in this outing it’s still not totally resolved (which of course means I can still hope that she hooks up with her former Australian boyfriend instead of Mark).

A Canterbury Crime is a refreshingly short, traditional mystery with a great sense of humour and a light touch.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

A Canterbury Crime has also been reviewed at Mysteries in Paradise

I have reviewed two of the previous three books in this series, The Embroidered Corpse and Bloody Ham

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

My rating 3.5/5
Publisher BeWrite Books [2010]
ISBN 9781906609429
Length 145 pages
Format eBook (ePub)
Source I bought it

Aussie Authors Aced

I know the title doesn’t mean much but I had a yen for alliteration. What it means is that I have finished the highest possible level of the Aussie Author Challenge (8 books by Aussie Authors during 2010). And it’s only July.

These are the titles I read counted for the challenge

I have a swag more books by Aussies sitting very close to the top of the TBR pile so this is by no means the end of my aussie reading for the year. Stay tuned.

Review: Bloody Ham by Brian Kavanagh

For my fifth book in the 2010 Aussie authors challenge I went for a cosy mystery set in England but with an Australian protagonist.

In her third adventure ex pat Australian Belinda Lawrence and her antique dealer friend Hazel Whitby are working on a period drama being filmed at historic Ham House in Surrey. Hazel is keeping an eye on some antique silverware that she has hired out as props for the film and Belinda goes along for the ride. As the egos get bigger and personality squabbles get nastier on set one of the film’s stars dies and Belinda finds herself both a stand-in for the replacement star and a suspect.

I’m not sure why it is so but film sets, at least in fiction, do seem to have a murder rate higher than the average workplace. This one is beset by egotistical behaviour, dummy spits from all the stars and multiple potential murder motives. What fun. Kavanagh does a nice job of intertwining the very modern setting of movie making with the historical setting of the house and both aspects felt realistic to me which is not entirely surprising as Kavanagh is a well-credentialed film producer, director and editor as well as being an accomplished mystery writer.

Although these are known as Belinda Lawrence mysteries my personal favourite character in the series is Hazel who has the kind of sarcastic wit I enjoy so I was pleased to see her driving much of the action in this tale. Belinda, who I also like for being independent and more than a bit daring, has a few personal problems to contend with here as well as being suspected of murder. She has to choose between her English boyfriend of some years (who is frankly a bit soppy for my liking) and an old friend from Australia who she has recently reconnected with. This brings a nice bit of tension to the book without making it too schmaltzy.

Bloody Ham offers an entertaining combination of an old-fashioned whodunit with characters who are fun to meet. It seems everyone on the film set has something to hide and the side threads are as entertaining as the main, twist-filled plot. In short, the book is delightful and recommended to fans of cosies and traditional mysteries.

♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦

My rating 3.5/5

Publisher BeWrite Books [2007]; ISBN 9781905202539 Length 174 pages

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I have also reviewed The Embroidered Corpse, the second book in this series

Review: The Embroidered Corpse by Brian Kavanagh

TITLE: The Embroidered Corpseembroidered-corpse1

AUTHOR: Brian Kavanagh

ISBN: 1-905202-36-9

PUBLISHER: BeWrite Books (2006)

In the second Belinda Lawrence mystery our heroine and her friend Hazel visit Kidbrooke House, a Tudor mansion full of glorious antiques and a mysterious piece of tapestry. Soon after their visit the House’s owner is killed in a grizzly manner and when Hazel buys some furniture from the estate sale she discovers the tapestry in a drawer. She gives the tapestry to Belinda who in her quest to find out more about its origins becomes embroiled in a thousand-year-old conspiracy and a modern-day religious cult.

The characters in this series are developing nicely. Belinda seems much more assertive than she was in her first outing (Capable of Murder) and is more of an instigator of events in the story than in the first book where she seemed to react only to the things that happened around her. I also found her boyfriend Mark more agreeable this time around and my only quibble with the characters is that I’d like to see more of the bloke-mad, gin-drinking Hazel Whitby as she adds a nice humorous element to the stories.

The plot is complex although not difficult to follow although I did struggle in a couple of spots because so much of the story relates to the intricate details of the piece of tapestry which we readers never see. There is a partial picture on the front cover of the edition of the book I read but it doesn’t contain the all-important borders and I couldn’t always visualise what the characters were talking about.

I’m not terribly familiar with this period of history but my inner conspiracy theorist was thoroughly engaged by the well-researched details and intriguing speculations about the Bayeux Tapestry, the historical events it portrays and the royal lineage of England. The resolution to the story was very much in keeping with the events that preceded it (not always a given in crime fiction these days) although far more gruesome than the average ‘cosy’ reader might like.

All in all this is a thoroughly entertaining read and especially recommended to those who enjoy stories with a historical twist.

My rating 3.5/5