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Stay cold-blooded in the sun

We consider some recent (and imminent) contributions by Jewish thriller-writers to the annual ritual of scary summer reading.

June 25, 2009 12:40
‘Every cough, spit and swear-word’ —  actor Dominic West as James McNulty, the gritty cop hero of David Simon’s acclaimed HBO/BBC series, The Wire

ByJenni Frazer, Jenni Frazer

5 min read

Tyro novelists are always told: “Write what you know.” Sometimes — as in experienced non-fiction writer Adam LeBor’s thoroughly enjoyable debut, the political thriller, The Budapest Protocol — this means the reader benefits from a wealth of a particular author’s experience. And Lebor’s hero Alex Farkas is, funnily enough, a British journalist based in Hungary — just like LeBor himself.

Sometimes, crime and thriller writers push familiarity to its outer limits. In the repertory casts invented by many, even bit-part players from one book can emerge in similar roles in another. Lead characters, of course, will take a bow in each new book in their series.

The mega-selling Peter James’s slightly mournful cop, Roy Grace, duly features in James’s latest, Dead Tomorrow, as do his two background constants: James’s home city of Brighton and Grace’s never-ending search for his disappeared wife, Sandy.

James, whose mother Cordelia, the Queen’s glove-maker, was a Jewish refugee from Nazism, promised his faithful readers a twist in this, the fifth in the series, and he duly delivers: there is a quick, tantalising glimpse of Sandy, cinematically walking through the same airport as Roy. But the pair’s paths do not cross in this horribly realistic thriller, in which body parts are traded from Romania to Britain.