Thursday, August 14, 2025

Ann Cleeves' Jimmy Perez Returns!


 LUCY BURDETTE:  I am a huge fan of the Shetland series. In fact a huge fan of all Ann Cleeves’s books. You might remember that the Friends of the Key West Library was lucky enough to persuade Ann to appear last winter as our gala guest of honor. So I’m delighted to welcome her to the blog today! She has a brand-new addition to the Shetland series coming this fall and I can’t wait!

Ann, Jimmy Perez’s life changed so much over the course of his series. How much of that arc had you imagined when you were writing the first, Raven Black? Has his life surprised you?

ANN CLEEVES: Thanks so much! Raven Black was intended as a stand-alone novel. My editor loved the book, but said it would stretch credibility to have more than one murder in a community as small as Shetland.  But this was my breakthrough novel - it went on to win the CWA Dagger - and she decided that perhaps it would run to a small series... Since then, the BBC and I have killed off a good proportion of the islands' population.  Look out for more television, but after eight books, I've decided to move Jimmy and Willow to another setting.

LUCY: I was disappointed that there wouldn’t be a 9th book. In the past, you said that enough bodies had fallen on the poor Shetland Island. But now a new book is coming this fall! Please tell us a little about that, and also the decision to continue that beloved series.


ANN
: I thought the series would end after Wild Fire.  I'd said all I wanted about my beloved Shetland.  But more recently, I felt a longing to move north again, a homesickness for the islands. Wild Fire ends with Jimmy and Willow moving to Orkney - the group of islands that lie between Shetland and the Scottish mainland - to begin a new life together.  I first went to Orkney fifty years ago, so I know it, but before writing the new novel I spent a week there with a good Orcadian friend to get a more detailed, contemporary sense of the place.  The result is The Killing Stones.




 LUCY: Your major characters are police detectives. How much research does this take and how do you do it?

ANN: I don't do too much research.  The story is always more important to me than accurate detail, and usually I write the book first and check later if there are gaps in my knowledge.  I have three very good friends who help - an academic and former crime scene manager, a forensic soil scientist and a forensic pathologist. The latter is Dr James Grieve, who appears as himself in the Jimmy Perez books.

LUCY: You’re not afraid to kill off major characters. Without spoilers, how do you decide this must happen? Does it come to you as a possibility while you’re writing the book, or do you think about this ahead of time? Do you think about reader reactions as you write these scenes?

ANN: I don't do much planning before I start writing.  Perhaps because it took me such a long time to get any commercial success, the process doesn't feel like work - it's still fun.  Sometimes, though, I think it's good to show the real result of violence and the reaction to it within a tight community.

LUCY: You’ve been writing and publishing mystery novels since 1986, but were not, I think it’s fair to say, an overnight sensation. (This gives me hope.) would you say that your career really took off with the Duncan Lawrie Dagger award for Raven Black, and could you talk about the long arc of your career?

ANN: I was published for 20 years before my publisher contracted any books in advance, and even after the Dagger it took a while for the novels to gain any real popularity here in the UK.  The award did get me noticed overseas though and Raven Black was published to good reviews in Europe, Scandinavia and the US.  That allowed me to give up the day job.  I find it amusing that the recent reprint of Raven Black is selling so nicely - I see it in supermarkets and airport bookstores.  That never happened first time round!

 LUCY: All three of your latest series have been developed into TV shows. We’d love to hear a bit about how that happened—the wonderful story about your lucky break, how much input you’ve had into the characters and stories, and what it’s been like to see your people come alive on the screen.

ANN: The first of the Vera novels is called The Crow Trap. It didn't sell particularly well and books ended up in charity shops.  A woman picked up a copy in an Oxfam shop in North London to take on her holiday.  There's nothing unusual about that, but she was called Elaine Collins and was books executive for ITV studios.  They were looking for a series with a strong female detective to adapt for television and decided that Vera might work for them.  Elaine went on to produce both Vera and Shetland. I always think of her as my fairy godmother.  The same production team also made The Long Call, based on my Matthew Venn books. I decided from the beginning that the production team knew more about making good television than I did, so I let them get on with it.  I did show them around the places where the books are set, because geography is so important to each of the series.

 LUCY: At the beginning of each of my Key West chapters, I add a quote from an author who is especially good at writing about food and eating. Turns out I’ve used 9 of yours. Here are two from Raven Black:

"She tried to imagine Mr. Ross, sitting at their kitchen table while her mother hacked at the overcooked meat and picked away at him with her questions."

"Mr. Scott was a pale, thin man. A stick of forced rhubarb said Sally’s mother, who had seen him at a parents meeting."



I’m curious about how much you think about food when it comes to revealing character?

ANN: Food reveals character, but it also says a lot about place.  In The Killing Stones, there's a lot about fish - Westray, the small island where the first murder takes place is famous for its fishing - and look out for fatty-cutties, a very specific Orkney delicacy!


Thank you, Ann, for visiting! Reds, she’ll be stopping in to answer your questions so bring them on!




About The Killing Stones


Coming in October, this is a new standalone novel featuring Detective Jimmy Perez, last seen in Wild Fire, the final book in Ann Cleeves’ bestselling Shetland series. When a violent storm descends upon Orkney, the body of Archie Stout is left in its wake. An unusual murder weapon, a Neolithic stone bearing ancient inscriptions, is found discarded nearby. Detective Jimmy Perez, no stranger to the complexity of human nature and the darkness it can harbour, is soon on the scene. He counted Archie as a childhood friend, so this case is more personal than most. Here, in these ancient lands where history runs deep, Perez must discern the truth from legend before a desperate killer strikes again . . .

55 comments:

  1. Congratulations, Ann, on your new book . . . it's wonderful to have Jimmy back again!

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    1. Thanks! I very much enjoyed writing him. I hope you like the book.

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  2. Congratulations and thanks for bringing Jimmy back! I very much enjoyed your interview at Bouchercon in San Diego. Will there be more Matthew Venn books and/or television shows? — Pat S

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    1. That was a great Bouchercon, wasn't it? Yes, there will certainly be more Matthew Venn books. I've just finished a new one and it'll be out in autumn 2026.

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    2. Yes, it was! And yay for more Matthew. Thanks! — Pat S

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  3. ANN: congratulations on your new novel and thank you for bringing back Jimmy Perez. Did you pick the actor who plays Jimmy Perez ?

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    1. Thanks Diana. No, I have no influence over the TV show - and I wouldn't want any. I don't know what makes good television. Dougie Henshall was great, even though he didn't look much like the Jimmy Perez in the book. I'm enjoying the most recent series with Ashley Jensen too.

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  4. ANN: Congratulations on your newest Jimmy Perez book!
    Most readers don''t mind there will be more deaths on Shetland.

    I think we can be pretty forgiving when we want an author to extend a mystery series. So many of us suspended disbelief to watch Jessica Fletcher solve crimes in tiny Cabot Cove for over a decade on TV & in now in books, right?

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    1. Hi Grace! Well, the new book is set in a different island group - Orkney not Shetland, so Shetland gets a bit of a reprieve, from me at least.

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  5. Ann, congratulations on your new book/series.

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    1. Ah, thanks Dru Ann and lovely to hear from you again! I think the last time we met was in San Diego.

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  6. Congratulations! Can't wait to read your latest.

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    1. Thanks Margaret. I do hope people enjoy it.

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  7. Congratulations on your new book, Ann! Thank you for sharing a bit of your writing history with us today. The atmosphere in your books is unique. It totally sets them apart. Would you share a little of your personal history with the islands/locations with us?

    I am behind in all of your series, which means I have a lot of good stories in my future.

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    1. Hi Judy. I first went to Fair Isle, the most remote of the Shetland Isles, 50 years ago. I'd dropped out of university and through a crazy chance meeting in a pub, got a job as assistant cook in the bird observatory there. I wasn't even sure where it was when I agreed to the job. They must have been desperate! I met my husband there later that year - he came as a visiting birdwatcher. I've been visiting Shetland ever since. I don't know Orkney quite as well, but I have got great friends there and I visited again to research this new book. It's a little different from Shetland and I hope you enjoy this new setting.

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  8. I agree with Grace. Readers don’t care if a place is crime ridden beyond belief if it means they get to have their favorite sleuth back on the job to solve them. Jimmy Perez will be welcomed with open arms. Congrats.

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    1. Thanks Brenda! I hope you come to love Orkney too.

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  9. My husband and I have watched all the VERA shows and it has been our all time favorite tv show!
    Congrats on your new book Ann!

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    1. Thanks! I'm working on the very last Vera book now...

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    2. Ok Ann, enough is enough. Can’t you just move Vera to Orkney and let her work with Jimmy? I can’t bear the thought of a world with no more Vera.
      (Pouting)

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  10. I'm so excited for another Jimmy Perez book! I was lucky enough to spend a week in Orkney with my UK overseas study group in 1978, so I will be really interested in this one. I'm making my way through the Vera series now and enjoying them as well. I haven't seen any of the TV adaptations, more of a reader than a watcher. Thank you for all your great books.

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    1. Thanks Gillian. Orkney is fascinating. I've tried to include some of the history and pre-history that makes it so famous.

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  11. Congratulations on your new book, Ann! I’m looking forward to reading Jimmy Perez again! And on Orkney-yay! (W.w.Norton published Amy Liptrot’s “The Outrun” when I worked for them, which mostly takes place on Orkney and it seems such a special and wonderful island. (Aren’t they all?)

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    1. It is a very special book. Do look out for it. Amy was employed by the RSPB (the conservation body my husband worked for) on Papa Westray, a tiny island in the group.

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  12. I love this group! I get to meet my heroes, like Ann Cleeves. Thank you for sharing your writer's story, Ann. Long live the folks in the outer islands, and may the Orkney's bring new thrills to Jimmy and his crew.

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  13. Judi, this is your comment but without the spoiler. Hope that's ok!

    So happy to have Ann here with us and extremely happy for a new book! I had stopped reading the series when a certain character was killed - that was so hard for me to deal with. But now, just this past year I have started reading the Shetland books again and I am now able to watch the series on TV which I wasn't able to before. So I have one book yet to read before the new one. I plan to savor it and get ready for the newest book. This is the true excitement in my life! I would so love to visit the islands but realistically I don't see that happening. Although. You never know!

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    1. Judi, I too had a hard time with the death of that character.

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    2. Of course, Lucy! That was incredibly thoughtless of me.

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    3. Hi Judi and everyone. Sometimes characters have to die. We 'kill our darlings' so we can continue to write and develop.

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  14. I could see why you thought the last Jimmy Perez book was a good place to go out on--but I felt the character still had legs! So glad to see him back, Ann! And thanks for sharing your journey to such great success!

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    1. Thanks. I think this new book has a rather different atmosphere and a different dynamic. For instance, we see Jimmy as a dad!

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  15. I'm so pleased to hear you have a new book set in a new location, Ann--and it will be nice to be reunited with Jimmy Perez. I came late to the Vera books, so I've been busy listening to all of them in order for the past couple of years, alternating with Mick Herron's Slow Horses novels and Peter Grainger's DC Smith series. Quite a contrast between these different sets of mysteries and their main characters, but they seemed to complement each other, somehow. Thanks for the pleasure your different police procedurals have given me over the years.

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    1. Thanks! I'm glad you're enjoying the Mick Herron. He comes from the city of Newcastle, which is close to home for me. He's a lovely man and the books are terrific. Look out for the new one - Clown Town.

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  16. Hi, Ann, so lovely to see you here!! And great interview, Lucy!! I love the Oxfam shop story--it's so funny how ordinarily life-changing breaks can happen! I will be so thrilled to read a new Jimmy Perez novel. I'll be counting the days until October!

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    1. The Oxfam shop story is remarkable. I have seen authors use the device of something occurring unbeknownst and unsuspected while the protagonist is busily going about her day. And here is a real life example. Lovely!

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  17. Thanks Deb! I hope to catch up soon.

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  18. OHHHHHH standing ovation! You are such an inspiration, and your story is so wonderfully reassuring. "The very last Vera," you say. Which is such a moment! But you've created characters that are so real we think we know them--that must be so gratifying. And I love how your imagination and passion are still as intense as ever. xxx

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  19. I'm so glad Jimmy Perez is back with his handsome Spanish looks! He deserved some happiness after all he's been through. I look forward to reading The Killing Stones. And the next Matthew Venn!

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    1. Yes, this is a fresh start for Jimmy, with a new partner and new family!

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  20. Ann, I am looking forward to seeing Jimmy Perez in this new environment. I treasure the time you take to immerse the reader in the environment. I may never physically travel to these wonderfully drawn places, but I very much enjoy experiencing it through your words. -- Victoria

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    1. Isn't it great how reading can help us travel without all the hassle of airport queues and jetlag?

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  21. When I last saw you in Toronto, in the before Covid times, you told me you were retiring Jimmy Perez. I was so sad but knew you would be leaving us wanting more, and that’s the way to go. Now he’s coming back but on a different island! Thank you thank you thank you!

    Xo Ann

    PS. Loved how Wild Fire ended with that young 19 year old on her way to work at the bird conservatory, she and Jimmy barely passing each other. That was splendid

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  22. Lovely to hear from you again Ann. I hope you enjoy Jimmy and Willow in their new home. Of course that young woman on the Fair Isle mail boat was me... And I'm heading back there next week...

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  23. Oooh, can't wait to get my hands on this new book. And bravo to Ann for writing it. We were actually in the Orkneys on a never-to-be-forgotten vacation and I know Ann will do it justice.

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    1. I’ll be launching the book in Orkney and can’t wait to get back.

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  24. Congratulations, Ann! How fun to be able to revisit old characters and familiar places.

    And re: the TV origin, just goes to show you only need the right person to pick up the book at the right time, huh? (Side note: my dad loves "Vera" on TV).

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    1. Yes, I have been very, very lucky in my career. Perhaps the luckiest thing was not being an overnight success. It gave me time and space to learn the craft.

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  25. Well, goodness. I commented this morning but it seemed to have disappeared. Congratulations on the new book, and I truly can't wait to read it!

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    1. I think that I saw your comment. That makes it even stranger. The most frustrating disappearancefor me was a list with about 20 books and audiobooks on a "what we're reading" day. It had taken me a half hour to type it into my phone and then POOF.

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    2. Judy, most of these go into spam on blogger. The host needs to go in and unspam them.

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    3. Glad to see you here now Edith. I still remember your kindness at Crimebake.

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  26. A new Jimmy Perez is definitely a cause for celebration. This book sounds like a stunner. Can't wait to read it!

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