A festival of crime
August 2, 2010 |17:13 | News By : Team X
If you ask the authors appearing at the Theakston’s Old Peculier Crime-Writing Festival in Harrogate for their definition of a crime writer, most of them don’t come up with much more than ”I’m here, so I must be one.” Most writers are crime writers, if you look at them the right way. When asked by one audience member to nominate a crime writer whose works he’d take to a desert island, Jeffery Deaver chose Shakespeare.
But many of those writers attending felt united by a belief that crime fiction is tackling subjects that matter to readers. Val McDermid suggested that where literary fiction has become lost to “theory and the academy”, crime fiction was “shining a light on society”.
When Jason Goodwin, the creator of the sleuthing eunuch Yashim, suggested that the pleasure of being a writer was that you could make things up, the Glasgow-based novelist Caro Ramsay retorted: “You might do”, and emphasised how important it was to her that she write about the unsalubrious goings-on she could see out of her own window.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy vowed Friday to crack down on foreign-born criminals, pushing his "war on crime" amid fear of violence between police and immigrant minorities.











