Today, I'm pleased to host a guest blog post by Charles Spencer, sometime Daily Telegraph theatre critic and occasional crime novelist. I was pleased to hear that the Will Benson books are to have a fresh life under the Bello imprint, partly because I enjoyed them when they first appeared, and partly because Charlie and I go back a long way. All the way to student days, in fact. We attended the same college, though he was reading English, whereas I was grappling with the law (academically speaking, I hasten to add.)
Charlie was in the year above me, and was the publicity manager for the Oxford Students' Arts Council, a post which I took over from him. Those distant days were a great deal of fun, and it's curious to think that we both later became published crime writers. The last time I saw Charlie was, in fact, at the Dead on Deansgate conference that he mentions very frankly below.. So I am all the more delighted that things have taken such a turn for the better in the intervening years, and I hope that one day we'll see a new Will Benson book. Over to Charlie...
Charlie was in the year above me, and was the publicity manager for the Oxford Students' Arts Council, a post which I took over from him. Those distant days were a great deal of fun, and it's curious to think that we both later became published crime writers. The last time I saw Charlie was, in fact, at the Dead on Deansgate conference that he mentions very frankly below.. So I am all the more delighted that things have taken such a turn for the better in the intervening years, and I hope that one day we'll see a new Will Benson book. Over to Charlie...
"I have been a fan of crime
fiction for much of my life, with a special fondness for thrillers that combine
a galloping plot with humour. Back in the 1990s I had a
shot at writing such novels myself, with Edmund Crispin ( the pen name of Bruce
Montgomery who was a close friend of Philip Larkin’s at Oxford) and Kyril
Bonfiglioli’s Mortdecai Trilogy among my influences. Like the books of Raymond
Chandler and Dick Francis, they are first person narratives - though I would
never dream of claiming a place in such august company
I was working as the Daily
Telegraph’s theatre critic when I wrote them, but the books were inspired by
the happy couple of years I spent on the theatrical trade paper The Stage in
the 1980s when I delightedly discovered a world of talent contests, strip shows
and filthy comedians. The books are, I hope, bawdy,
funny, fast paced and at times touching, and they received some good reviews
when first published though they never became the bestsellers I had fondly hoped
for.
The hero, Will Benson, is a
braver and more reckless version of myself, and there is a lot of booze and I
hope laughter in the books.
The drink caught up with me
in the end. When the third novel, Under
the Influence was about to come out in
2000 I attended the Dead on Deansgate crime
convention in Manchester
and spent three days in a reckless blur
of alcohol. If anyone reading this blog encountered me then, please accept my
apologies.
I didn’t quite make it home on the day the
convention ended, spending much of the night crashed out under a bush in a
neighbour’s garden in the pouring rain.
My poor wife was worried sick until I was discovered in the early hours
and drenched to the skin. With her help
and a fistful Valium I just about made it to the official book launch in London the following
night and the day after that I checked into rehab at The Priory,
Roehampton. With God’s grace, one day at a time, have not had a drink since
then.
2 comments:
Very interesting, and you've definitely tempted me to read one of these. A very honest account of the drinking....good for him for succeeding in giving up.
Thanks, Moira. It is good for a story to have a happy ending, and I'm looking forward to meeting up with Charlie once again before long.
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