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Val McDermidVal McDermid
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BiographyCrime writer Val McDermid grew up in Kirkcaldy, Scotland, and studied English at Oxford University. She trained as a journalist and worked on various national newspapers for 14 years before becoming a writer. Her first published book was Report for Murder (1987), and since then, she has written a large number of crime novels. These include three different series of books: The Lindsay Gordon Mystery series which comprises Report for Murder (1987), Common Murder (1989), Final Edition (1991), Union Jack (1993), Booked for Murder (1996) and Hostage to Murder (2003); The Kate Branningan Mystery series which comprises Dead Beat (1992), Kick Back (1993), Crack Down (1994), Clean Break (1995), Blue Genes (1996) and Star Struck (1998); and the Dr. Tony Hill and Carol Jordan Mystery series which includes The Mermaids Singing (1995), The Wire in the Blood (1997), The Last Temptation (2002), The Torment of Others (2004), which won the 2006 Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award, Beneath the Bleeding (2007) and Fever of the Bone (2009).
Her latest crime novel is A Darker Domain (2008).
The Wire in the Blood has been made into a successful television series. Her book Stranded (2005), is her second collection of short stories. The first collection, The Writing on the Wall and other stories was published in 1997. She is also the author of a book of non-fiction, A Suitable Job for a Woman: Inside the World of Women Private Eyes (1995).
Val McDermid was a crime reviewer for the Manchester Evening News for four years, still writes occasional journalism, and broadcasts regularly on BBC Radio 4 and Radio Scotland. Her work has been translated into over 30 languages.
In 2010 she won the Crime Writers' Association Cartier Diamond Dagger Award for outstanding achievement in the field of crime writing.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Crime, Non-fiction     BibliographyReport for Murder Women's Press, 1987 Common Murder Women's Press, 1989 Final Edition Women's Press, 1991 Dead Beat Gollancz, 1992 Kick Back Gollancz, 1993 Union Jack Women's Press, 1993 Crack Down HarperCollins, 1994 A Suitable Job for a Woman: Inside the World of Women Private Eyes HarperCollins, 1995 Clean Break HarperCollins, 1995 The Mermaids Singing HarperCollins, 1995 Blue Genes HarperCollins, 1996 Booked for Murder HarperCollins, 1996 The Wire in the Blood HarperCollins, 1997 The Writing on the Wall and other stories Revolver, 1997 Star Struck HarperCollins, 1998 A Place of Execution HarperCollins, 1999 Killing the Shadows HarperCollins, 2000 The Last Temptation HarperCollins, 2002 Hostage to Murder HarperCollins, 2003 The Distant Echo HarperCollins, 2003 The Torment of Others HarperCollins, 2004 Stranded HarperCollins, 2005 Cleanskin HarperCollins, 2006 The Grave Tattoo HarperCollins, 2006 Beneath the Bleeding HarperCollins, 2007 A Darker Domain HarperCollins, 2008 Fever of the Bone Little, Brown, 2009  
  Prizes and awards1994 Crime Writers' Association Macallan Gold Dagger for Fiction (shortlist) Crack Down 1994 Crime Writers' Association Macallan Short Story Dagger (shortlist) The Writing on the Wall and other stories 1995 Anthony Award for Best Novel (shortlist) Crack Down 1995 Crime Writers' Association Macallan Gold Dagger for Fiction The Mermaids Singing 1998 Grand Prix des Romans d'Adventure (France) Star Struck 1998 WH Smith Thumping Good Read Award (shortlist) The Wire in the Blood 1999 Crime Writers' Association Macallan Gold Dagger for Fiction (shortlist) A Place of Execution 2000 Barry Award for Best British Mystery A Place of Execution 2000 Edgar Award for Best Critical Work (shortlist) A Suitable Job for a Woman: Inside the World of Women Private Eyes 2000 New York Times Notable Book of the Year A Place of Execution 2001 Anthony Award for Best Novel A Place of Execution 2001 Dilys Award A Place of Execution 2001 Edgar Award for Best Novel (shortlist) A Place of Execution 2001 Lambda Literary Award for Fiction (shortlist) Booked for Murder 2001 Los Angeles Times Book Prize (Mystery/Thriller) A Place of Execution 2001 Mystery Readers of America Macavity Award A Place of Execution 2001 Svenska Deckarakademiens Prize (shortlist) A Place of Execution 2001 WH Smith Thumping Good Read Award (shortlist) Killing The Shadows 2004 Barry Award for Best British Crime Novel The Distant Echo 2004 Crime Writers' Association Macallan Gold Dagger for Fiction (shortlist) The Torment of Others 2004 GLBTQ Saints and Sinners Hall of Fame 2004 Mystery and Thriller Book Club People's Choice Award (shortlist) The Torment of Others 2004 Scotland Magazine Icon of Scotland 2004 Sherlock Award for Best Crime Novel The Distant Echo 2004 Spoken Word Publishing Association Awards (Best Crime Novel) The Distant Echo 2005 Crime Writers' Association Dagger of Daggers Award (shortlist) 2005 Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year (shortlist) The Distant Echo 2006 Portico Prize The Grave Tattoo 2006 Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year The Torment of Others 2008 British Book Awards Crime Thriller of the Year (shortlist) The Grave Tattoo 2009 Los Angeles Times Book Prize (Mystery/Thriller) A Darker Domain 2009 Theakston's Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year (shortlist) Beneath the Bleeding 2010 Crime Writers' Association Cartier Diamond Dagger Award    
  Critical PerspectiveHaving worked as a trainee journalist for two years in Devon and 14 years on national newspapers in Glasgow and Manchester, Val McDermid’s career as a crime writer began with the publication of Report for Murder (1987). This became the first in the series of Lindsay Gordon Mysteries, which also includes her next two novels, Common Murder (1989) and Final Edition (1991), as well as Union Jack (1993), Booked for Murder (1996) and Hostage to Murder (2003). She has since created two more series (featuring Kate Brannigan, and Tony Hill and Carol Jordan) as well as four stand-alone novels.
In an interview with Shots magazine, McDermid explains how reading Indemnity Only (1982) by Sara Paretsky was a ‘defining moment’ for her as she realised this work shaped new boundaries for a crime writer to explore (Issue 12, March 2002). Paretsky’s novel gave her an insight into the available possibilities for writing about a plausible female detective in an urban setting whilst also exercising a concern for legal and social justice. McDermid’s interest in political engagement and the influence of a feminist perspective are apparent from her earliest novels onwards. Lindsay Gordon is an amateur detective or, rather, a journalist-sleuth and is also a vehicle for questioning government policies. Common Murder, for example, is set in Thatcher’s Britain at a women’s peace camp that bears a strong resemblance to Greenham Common. When a peace protester explains to Lindsay why the police do not protect the women on the camp from attacks by the locals, McDermid uses the opportunity to register a criticism of defence measures taken by the United States and Britain: ‘Start accepting that we’ve got any rights and you end up by giving validity to the nightmares that have brought us here. Do that and you’re half-way to accepting that our views on disarmament are a logical position.’ Sexual politics is also on the agenda as Lindsay’s female friendships and lesbianism are central to her characterisation.
Julie Bindel’s article, ‘Murder She Wrote’, offers a feminist interpretation of the recent wave of female crime writers (Guardian, 31 January 2007). She points out how popular crime fiction is with its female readership and adds that women now write over half of the novels in this genre. Bindel interviewed authors such as McDermid, Martina Cole and Mo Hayder for an overview of the use of violence in their books. McDermid makes the point that she draws a ‘particular distinction between violence that is gratuitous, and violence that is meaningful’, and avoids having ‘one-dimensional victims’. Bindel agrees that her novels explore the reasons for, and impact of, violence: ‘McDermid writes to entertain, but also hopes that her books will, in some way, open the readers’ eyes as to how and why the atrocities she describes have occurred.’
Her second stand-alone novel, Killing the Shadows (2000), is similarly praised by Charles Taylor when he compliments her ability to maintain a humanitarian outlook as she describes the violence of a serial killer: ‘There is no one in contemporary crime fiction who has managed to combine the visceral and the humane (without making either seem a contradiction of the other) as well as Val McDermid’ (The New York Times 21 October 2001). Although there is an element of responsibility in her depictions of violence, she strenuously avoids preaching to her audience. Killing the Shadows has several inter-connected plot lines that separate and converge, and always manage to thrill. The slick dialogue, dry wit and taut plotting of this novel echo the typical style of the crime genre.
The Kate Brannigan novels, which star the eponymous Manchester PI, also marry these traits with the author’s originality. Star Struck (1998), the sixth in this series, is a useful example of Brannigan in action and was awarded the Grand Prix des Romans d’Aventure in 1998. In this novel, the popular culture of soap operas is used as a backdrop for her investigations.
The third on-going McDermid series, of Tony Hill and Carol Jordan, is concerned with the respective work of the criminal profiler and detective. This has been successfully adapted for television as Wire in the Blood (which is the title of the second novel in the series). The first novel, entitled The Mermaids Singing (1995), was awarded the prestigious Crime Writers’ Association Macallan Gold Dagger for Fiction in 1995. It is also worth nothing that these novels take their titles from poetry by T.S. Eliot. This use of literary allusions is furthered in her fourth stand-alone work, the psychological thriller The Grave Tattoo (2006), as this draws on the Lake District and William Wordsworth for its scenery and plot.
As well as being a prolific novelist, McDermid has also written two collections of short stories. Fellow ‘Tartan noir’ author, Ian Rankin, wrote the Foreword to her second collection, Stranded (2005), and here he explains the effectiveness of her use of different central protagonists: ‘Val has always been a restless writer – the journey through her fictional universe could never have been made by a single consistent hero or heroine – and the short-story form suits her, allowing her to pick apart relationships with a furious skill, highlighting flaws and jealousies.’ This collection is also of interest for the inclusion of the autobiographical story, ‘The Road and the Miles to Dundee’. As Rankin argues, this moving piece offers the reader a glimpse of her range as she captures her relationship with her father through a song he used to sing.
The esteem for McDermid’s work is shared amongst critics and readers. She has written over 20 books in 20 years and the majority of these have been bestselling novels. She has also been either shortlisted or the recipient of awards on numerous occasions since 1994. The Grave Tattoo was awarded the Portico Prize in 2006 and demonstrates her continuing ability to convince and excite.
Julie Ellam, 2007  
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