Tuesday, August 22, 2023

Ann Cleeves--The Raging Tide

DEBORAH CROMBIE: It is always the biggest treat to welcome Ann Cleeves--author of the Shetland novels, the VERA novels, and now the Two Rivers series featuring detective Matthew Venn, all three of which have been adapted as hugely popular television shows--to Jungle Red!! 

Ann's new Matthew Venn novel, THE RAGING STORM, is out in the US on September 5th, AND Ann will be the International Guest of Honor at Bouchercon in San Diego


Ann, welcome back to Jungle Red!

DEBS: Matthew Venn, your detective in the Two Rivers novels, seems quite a departure from your Vera Stanhope and Jimmy Perez. For one thing, he's gay, and for another, he's in a committed, loving relationship with his husband, Jonathan. Was there a particular inspiration for the character?

ANN: There was!  When my husband Tim died, the people who looked after me, who scooped me up from the hospital, and who helped me organize the funeral along with my daughters, were Martin and Paul, a gay couple who have since married.  They’d been Tim’s close friends and they were grieving too, but they’re still looking out for me.  I wanted to celebrate their relationship.


DEBS: Matthew's background is unusual, too, as he grew up in a strict fundamentalist religious cult, and that upbringing affects the way he processes the world and approaches his cases. It's unusual and so interesting. Were the Barun Brethren modeled on a real group?

ANN: Not exactly.  Barum was the Latin name for Barnstaple, so I created a fictitious group.  I didn’t want to offend real believers. There are small exclusive groups who have similar beliefs, though.  The same certainties.  It seemed to me that if someone lost their faith, suddenly and dramatically as Matthew Venn did, they might feel very chaotic and unanchored and turn to the police service to find the sense of belonging, honour and duty they were missing.


DEBS: You've hopscotched around the UK with the settings for your book--Shetland, Northumberland, and now Devon. What drew you to the West Country?

ANN:  It’s where I grew up!  My father was a village schoolteacher in the Taw Valley and then on the North Devon coast in Woolacombe. I live in Northumberland now and lived in Shetland when I was a young woman.


DEBS: In THE RAGING STORM, a body is found near the village of Greystone on the north Devon coast. It's a very forbidding place; gray, isolated, cold, claustrophobic--it's such a wonderful atmospheric setting for a mystery that it almost becomes a character in itself. Is Greystone based on a real place?

ANN: The inspiration came when I was watching the first Matthew Venn novel, The Long Call, being filmed.  The production company had chosen Hartland Quay as one of the locations.  It has gloomy grey cliffs, and the weather was horrendous.  I was looking for a different, less tourist-led place to set the book, and that was the jumping off point.


DEBS: This book has such a twisty-turny complicated plot. I wondered how much you plan ahead?

ANN: Not at all!  I don’t know anything about the book, except the setting, when I start.  Very quickly I decided that this would be more of an adventure story than anything else I’d written.  The victim, Jem Rosco, is rather piratical, there are rescues at sea, and superstition.  But I still didn’t know the plot details!


DEBS: Once your series has been adapted for TV, do you find yourself adjusting what you write to sync with the way things are portrayed in the show? Do you now see Ben Aldridge (who is terrific) when you're writing Matthew?

ANN:  No, I don’t.  Ben is very much more good-looking than Matthew, who is rather restrained!


DEBS: Now that the Shetland books are finished (sniff), is there anything else on your horizon? New settings? New characters?

ANN:  The next novel will be a Vera book – I’m working on that now – and I definitely want to write more Matthew Venn books.  But who knows?  As I said, I don’t plan anything…


DEBS: One last question--what do you read for fun?

ANN: Mostly crime fiction!  There’s such a range within the genre – I’m reading Irvine Welsh’s Long Knives at the moment, which is violent, and thought-provoking and gripping, but I love more traditional Golden Age novels too.


DEBS: And one more question! Tell us what you’ll be up to at Bouchercon!!

ANN: Catching up with friends!  That’s what crime conventions are all about!



DEBS: Ann's Guest of Honor interview will be on Thursday, the 31st, at 4:30, and she'll be interviewed by Catriona McPherson and Lori Rader-Day. I'm sure it will be a highlight of the conference!

Here's more about THE RAGING STORM--

When Jem Rosco—sailor, adventurer, and legend—blows into town in the middle of an autumn gale, the residents of Greystone, Devon, are delighted to have a celebrity in their midst. But just as abruptly as he arrived, Rosco disappears again, and soon his lifeless body is discovered in a dinghy, anchored off Scully Cove, a place with legends of its own.

This is an uncomfortable case for Detective Inspector Matthew Venn. Greystone is a place he visited as a child, a community he parted ways with. Superstition and rumor mix with fact as another body is found, and Venn finds his judgment clouded.

As the winds howl, and Venn and his team investigate, he realizes that no one, including himself, is safe from Scully Cove’s storm of dark secrets.

DEBS: Ann will be stopping by to visit, so do add any questions I've missed in the comments!

 

 

60 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Ann, on your newest book . . . .

    With three of your series being adapted for television, I wondered how you feel about the shows and if you had any input into their development . . . .

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  2. Ann, congratulations on your upcoming release. Have you been on the sets of the TV programs and have you made a cameo on them?

    Looking forward to seeing you in San Diego.

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  3. I'm so excited for this new book, Ann. It's very cool you got the inspiration for the setting from the location where they were filming The Long Call.

    I can't tell you how happy it makes me when I hear that hugely successful authors like yourself do NOT plot ahead, because that's also how I write. See you in San Diego!

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  4. I'm also looking forward to seeing you at Bouchercon, Ann. Much as I've enjoyed the books in your other series, Matthew Venn is the detective I care most about. My parents were both brought up strict Christian Scientists and left the religion behind them when they grew up; in fact, giving it up is part of what brought them together in college. But, as Matthew makes clear to us, abandoning the values and ways of thinking you were raised with is not so easy. I saw this with my parents, and I think that's part of what makes me feel so close to Matthew.

    Here's a question: do you have a favorite writer of police procedurals? If this question puts you on the spot, just ignore it! But I'd love to know.

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    1. Kim this is so interesting! I wonder if this history has influenced your writing?

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    2. Wondered the same thing, Lucy! Diana

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    3. Kim, that is fascinating. I can see how you could relate to Matthew, and like Lucy, I wonder how this has influenced your own writing.

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  5. ANN: I am looking forward to seeing your GOH interview in San Diego.

    Horrendous weather and sea rescues sound ominous. Have you ever been on a scary boat trip?

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  6. Perfect timing! I'm taking a long plane flight and Matthew will be the perfect travel companion.

    How do you "fill your creative well"? Walks, travel, visits to new places?
    Safe travels to San Diego.

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  7. Congratulations, Ann, on your latest book!

    re. San Diego and Bouchercon: I have been seeing the news about the tropical storm Hilary raging across southern California and am wondering about its effect on the conference. Anyone know?

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    1. Hi Amanda! Here in San Diego things are pretty normal. We had a couple inches of rain and it was windy but nothing serious. A few trees blew down and some un-housed groups living along the San Diego River were rescued. All in all the storm hit the desert & mountains east of San Diego the hardest including Palm Springs and the areas east of LA. We've been having gloomy, overcast, grey skies most of the summer - hopefully will have sunshine this weekend.

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    2. Dear Anon: Many thanks for this on-the-spot report. Much appreciated! It sounds like Bouchercon will go on as planned, which is great.

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    3. Thanks so much for the update, Anon. I've been checking the news, too.

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    4. Bring a jacket and plan on cool temps Hopefully some sun, but likely a lot of fog and clouds.

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    5. Anon, I, too, am from San Diego and would say that visitors to Bouchercon should consider layers. The “official” forecast for SD is referring to the airport location. That’s not far from where the convention will take place so should be a pretty good guess re temperatures. But if you travel away from downtown, it’s going to be warmer. And the hotel convention rooms will probably be air conditioned so definitely a light sweater or jacket layer, just in case. Excited to see you all there! — Pat S.

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    6. Yay, Pat!! So excited to see you, too!

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  8. Welcome Ann! I have my book on order, and also looking forward to seeing you at Bouchercon!

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  9. Congratulations on your latest book, Ann. I find it fascinating that an author can sit down with the bare seed of an idea and create stories that are complex, interesting and most of all, bring all the strains together in the end. Just, WOW.

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  10. Welcome to JRW, Ann! Congratulations on your latest novel! I read your first Matthew Venn novel before it was published.

    Quite a coincidence that the actor is exactly how I imagined Matthew when I was reading the novel - the same serious face.

    Look forward to meeting you at Bouchercon.

    Diana

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  11. Congratulations on your new book!

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  12. Congratulations on your newest book! It fascinates me the people can sit down with the barest of ideas, other than setting in your case, and the details come almost like magic. No, no, I do understand there is a lot of work in turning those details into what we love to read!

    Great questions here but I can't think of anything to ask! I know I'll be kicking myself some time in the near future when a really good one comes to mind.

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  13. The cover is awesome! Looking forward to reading your book.

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    1. It is a fabulous cover, so brooding and atmospheric.

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  14. Congratulations on this latest book. I enjoyed learning about the connection between the book characters in the series and the friends who were there for you when your husband passed. That's very special.

    How I wish I could attend your interview with Catriona McPherson. Unfortunately I can't go to Boucheron, but I'll be thinking about it.

    I also take heart from your writing process, being much more a panster than a plotter.

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  15. Congratulations, Ann! Can't wait to see you at Bouchercon.

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  16. Ann, I have enjoyed all your books and my particular favorite series is Vera, so while I am looking forward to this new book, I am very excited that you are adding to the Vera series. I think the series gets better and better with every book. I had it on my calendar to order Raging Storm today.

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    1. As fabulous as Brenda Blethyn is in the TV series, I much prefer the books and always have a new VERA on pre-order.

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  17. Hank Phillippi RyanAugust 22, 2023 at 9:35 AM

    Standing ovation! You are so fabulous, and congratulations on yet another guest of honor, um, honor. Can you tell us more about the new Vera? Or… Will you find out as you write it?
    See you soon!

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  18. Just letting everyone know that Ann is trying to comment. We're working on it!

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  19. Great questions, everyone. Personally I am gobsmacked that Ann doesn't plot out her very complicated stories!

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  20. I really love the Matthew Venn novels, and can't wait to get my hands on The Raging Storm. I grew up in the Missouri Ozarks, home to many splinter sects like the one where Matthew was raised, so I understand the jolt people can experience as they move from the sheltered world of a fundamentalist group into the wider world of diversity, science, and horizons that stretch beyond your tiny mountain hollow home. I enjoy the respect and sensitivity with which you handle your depictions of Matthew's mother and others of her sect. I'm off to pre-order now!

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  21. Darling Ann! What a treat to see you here. I’ve been reading your books, all of them, since before Shetland was a trilogy. We met first in Phoenix at LCC, when I was sitting in the lobby recovering from losing my wallet. I looked up and there you were! Wish I were going to Bouchercon even more.

    If any of you haven’t met Ann, she is, as my grandmother would say, all wool and a yard wide — the real deal

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    1. what a great saying from your Grandmother. I'm going to tuck that away for future use! -cheers, Melanie

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  22. Congratulations on the new Matthew Venn novel! I am looking forward to it. I have to admit that I have never seen any of the televised versions of the three series. Here's a question, not for Ann, but others. Should I stop my don't-want-to-trade-in-my-mental-pictures-for-a director's-vision attitude and stream past ones and, if so, which? (I've got Brit Box)

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    1. Oh, that's very hard. I remember being so shocked at the first Shetland adaptation when Doug Henshal looked NOTHING like Jimmy Perez is described in the books. But he became a wonderful Perez and now I can't imagine anyone else having played the part. I think I'd just look at the books and the TV as different beasts, and enjoy them in their own right.

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    2. Guess I have a lot of watching to do! (Hand quilting bookmarks for Christmas gifts ...I will need more friends!)

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  23. I didn't realize the new Matthew Venn novel was out - thank goodness I'm running errands this afternoon and can stop by the little bookstore in the next town over! Dang it, now I'm going to be missing Bouchercon even more than I was before...

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    1. You'll have to pre-order, Julia. It's not out until Sept. 5th.

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    2. I’m very bummed you won’t be there, too, Julia! You and Jenn were my introduction to JRW and I would have loved to meet you. — Pat S.

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    3. What, Julia? You won't be in SD? I'm disappointed.

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    4. Bummed that you will not be there, Julia. Hope to meet you some day. Diana

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  24. I’m looking forward to meeting you for the first time at the Poisoned Pen in Scottsdale on September 4th!!!

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  25. Congratulations, Ann! I really enjoy the Matthew Venn stories. He is such an interesting character with that background. How fortunate he is to find the support he needs in his partner Jonathan.

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  26. Congratulations on the latest Matthew Venn!!! I'm delighted and can't wait to see your GOH interview at Bouchercon!

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  27. Ann, did I read somewhere that Ashley Jensen will be taking the lead in the Shetland series? She is so terrific.

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    1. According to IMDB, yes, Ashley Jensen is joining the cast in the so far unaired season sometime in’23, Debs! I love her, too! — Pat S.

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    2. I hope this doesn't mean she's not doing any more Agatha Raisin, but Acorn is aparently struggling a bit and they haven't confirmed a 5th season...

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    3. Debs: I loved Ashley Jensen as Agatha Raisin. You mentioned a 5th season. I don't remember the 4th season I will have to check that out. I thought she was the perfect Agatha Raisin from the wonderful book series by the late M.C. Beaton.

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  28. Debs, great interview questions. So glad to learn more about each series.

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  29. Thrilled to see you here Ann! And wishing more than ever that I was going to Bouchercon. Going now to pre-order your new book.

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  30. Wonderful interview, Deb and Ann. I loved hearing about your new book and the process. Congrats!

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  31. A new Ann Cleeves book is always cause for great joy. I can't wait to read this one--and I'm in awe of the fact that you don't plan ahead, Ann. I'd love to meet you one day.

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  32. My daughter just returned from Scotland and brought me a book titled Bloody Scotland, which has a terrific, but terrifying, Shetland story. I so enjoyed reading it and seeing Jimmy Perez mentioned.

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  33. Hi all! I have a message from Ann, who never could conquer Blogger yesterday. She says:
    Hi everyone! Sorry, I’ve been struggling to reply to individual questions, but thanks so much for your lovely comments, and thanks so much to Debs. My only input into the tv is to bring the team to the locations before they start. It’s important that they understand the place. I do try to get on set for each block of filming but I’ve never wanted a cameo role - filming is quite time-consuming! Hope to see some of you in Bouchercon. Find me and I’ll answer your questions then…

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  34. Good to see you like Iain Pears's work. He's an interesting example of a writer who can write a magnificent long work like An Instance of the Fingerpost, and then turn around and write and write a short, very tight book like The Portrait (which seemed like an ambitious failure, but I respect it). I guess having a critical and popular hit like Fingerpost lets you get away with writing at whatever length pleases you. The early Jonathan Argyll books are also delightful.

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    1. Sorry, this was intended for the Allison Maitland thread. Not sure how I ended up here. A happy accident, as I've been reading Ann since her early books. Big fan of Vera, especially.

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