Russell James is the author of ten books, and is a former chair of the CWA. I've enjoyed many conversations with Russell in the years since I first came across him when I read his novel Underground. He is a varied and thoughtful writer who deserves to be better known. His non-fiction includes an excellent book about fictional detectives. When I last met Russell, I invited him to contribute a guest post to this blog at some point. Here it is:
'Art is fertile ground for crime writers. Huge sums are paid for a single item, a work
that can be relatively small and transportable.
In the first of my novels to revolve around the theft of an old master (Daylight,
now out of print and hard to find) part of the fun lay in how the stolen
masterpiece would be smuggled out of what was then the Soviet Union. The story included an art tutorial on the
differences between copies, fakes and restoration – distinctions not as clear
as you might hope. Great for
complicating the plot.
In my most successful novel, Painting
In The Dark, the art world underpinned the plot – yet it frightened some
potential publishers who saw it as politically dangerous. I guess it was controversial: set in 1997 but
looking back to the 1930s and 40s, it suggested that Tony Blair’s New Labour
Party had bewitched a nation and swept to power much as Hitler’s New Socialists
had in Germany. But the book’s main
theme was art and the mania of art collectors motivated by more than money,
more than sex, by an obsession to acquire and own a unique fetishistic
object. They’ll stop at nothing to
achieve their ends, making them ideal characters for a crime story. They are driven, they want ‘a brush with
genius’. We readers understand and
sympathise – even if we wouldn’t kill to gain our ends.
Plenty of crime novels allow
wrongdoers to achieve their ends, and we law-abiding readers sometimes cheer – though
when villains are motivated by cash alone the odds are they won’t get away. But an art fanatic? Why shouldn’t such a so-called villain keep
the prize?
Remember: these are crime novels, not moral tracts.'
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