Today’s guest post is by Chris Marnewick, who has just
completed a tour of southern hemisphere book conferences. Chris is a retired South African advocate (barrister)
who now lives in Auckland. His debut novel SHEPHERDS & BUTCHERS won the
Johannesburg University Prize and the K Sello Duiker Prize of the South African
Literary Awards and is due to be turned into a feature film this year. Chris' later novels – THE SOLDIER WHO SAID NO
and A SAILOR’S HONOUR feature an expat SA soldier turned policeman who lives in
Auckland but returns to South Africa every second year or so to settle old
scores and to solve crime. Hopefully
Chris will be back over here more frequently than that!
I coordinate a Newsletter from South Africa for The
Big Thrill e-magazine of ITW (International Thriller Writers) and Chris was
invited to write this piece for that.
But I thought it too good for MIE to miss, so here’s Chris’
literary journey from Auckland to Durban (and back again):
I recently did a round of literary festivals. I went
to the University of Stellenbosch’s Woordfees
– March 5 to 10 – and the University of Kwazulu-Natal’s Time of the Writer – March 19 to 24 in
South Africa and then returned to Auckland, New Zealand, for its Readers & Writers Festival – May 9 to
13. My career as a writer had started at the Auckland Readers & Writers Festival in 2003. Jeffery Deaver and
Jonathan Frantzen were the celebrity authors at that festival. My notes of the
Deaver’s session list his comments and advice as follows:
- I try very hard to tell a story.
- I took my philosophy of writing from another writer, Mickey
Spillane, who said that people don’t read books to get to the middle. They
read to get to the end, so you have to drag them along to the ending. (I have a true Mickey Spillane story of my own later
in this article.)
- Where do I get my ideas? I buy them from a farmer in Pennsylvania!
- I rely heavily on structure. I spend 6 months on structure and
first write an outline of 150 to 160 pages.
- Pace is absolutely vital.
- Then choreograph the ending. Bring all of the subplots and
characters to their natural ending.
- Then write the prose and rewrite, editing sentence by sentence,
eliminating tautology, excess words, the passive case and errors.
I left that session to write my own book. It took 5
years before SHEPHERDS & BUTCHERS (Umuzi
Random House 2008) was published. In SHEPHERDS & BUTCHERS I used the medium of a fictitious
criminal trial to tell the truth about the manner in which capital punishment
was administered during the apartheid years.
It seems to me that, in South Africa at least, crime
writing based on true crime has become very popular. The star of Woordfees was undoubtedly Hanlie Retief,
an investigative journalist. Her BYLEVELD: DOSSIER OF A SERIAL SLEUTH tells the
story of Brigadier Piet Byleveld, a hardened policeman once attached to the
notorious Brixton Murder & Robbery unit in Johannesburg. Byleveld’s forte
was – he is now in retirement – bringing serial killers to trial. According to
Retief, Byleveld had a 100% success record in closing his dockets – the dossiers
of the title – to arrest and conviction, and that by pure detective means. None
of the tactics of the old Brixton Murder & Robbery for this policeman – at
least one of the old guard, a Captain la Grange, ended up on Death Row for the
murder of a drug dealer. Byleveld used guile and a good grasp of psychology to
close his cases.
Back to the book: The publisher’s whole print-run of
27 000 was sold out in two weeks and sales have by now passed the 100 000 mark,
when a bestseller in South Africa usually sells about 5 000. When I met the
author in Stellenbosch, there was talk of film rights and a television series.
The hall where Retief and Byleveld discussed the book was filled to capacity.
Non-fiction crime writing has received a good shot in
the arm with the success of BYLEVELD. The success of Mandy Wiener’s KILLING
KEBBLE can only add to the
impetus. She tells the story of the killing of Brett Kebble, a crook of note,
who arranged his own killing after taking out a very large insurance policy on
his life. We have had a case like this before. In 1963 or thereabouts Baron
Dieter von Schauroth paid a young man, Marthinus Rossouw, to kill him. Rossouw
was hanged for that and Von Schauroth’s insurers successfully repudiated the
policies the latter had taken out on his own life. (It should come as no
surprise to the reader that someone then wrote a book about the case.)
My own non-fiction book, CLARENCE VAN BUUREN: DIE MAN
AGTER DIE DONKERBRIL, (The man behind the mask) was released during Woordfees. It tells the story of
Clarence van Buuren, who was hanged in 1957 for the murder of Joy Aken, an
18-year old secretary. The case has intrigued me from my early childhood when I
first read about it in the newspapers. There are so many unanswered questions.
Was Van Buuren really guilty? He never confessed. Was he responsible for the
sexual disfigurement of the body? His lawyer blamed wild animals. And how did a
psychic manage to find the body when the police had been unsuccessful? Yes,
indeed. A psychic found the body first.
Hanlie Retief was the star of the show at Woordfees and there is not much more I
can report about that event.
The next event was an animal of a different character
altogether. Time of the Writer in
Durban was a delightful experience for me. I met some wonderful foreign
writers; each in his or her own way had a connection with Africa. I played the
shepherd when a bunch of guys wanted to find something to eat late one night
and took them to the casino near our hotel. We tucked into chicken and corn
while the two Jamaicans – Kwame Dawes and Colin Channer - entertained us with
their stories and egged each other on. My namesake Chris Abani could write
about true crime too, if he were so inclined. He had started writing at age 16
in Nigeria, was locked up and suffered political persecution for it.
Not that we don’t have our own. Ronnie Kasrils is a
crime writer’s dream. Here is a man who has actually done the crime. He
sabotaged, amongst other things, some electricity transmission pylons and was
hunted by the police for that. He could have got the death penalty, had he been
caught. Actually, now that I think about it: he would have got the death
penalty. The apartheid police and courts were not playing around in those days.
Ronnie’s book, THE UNLIKELY SECRET AGENT,
is a moving tribute to his late wife Eleanor, who was a co-conspirator in
his fight against the apartheid regime. The book reads like a thriller, but it
is based on true crime. And Kasrils is great company at the dinner table.
I shared a platform with Jassie Mackenzie, one of the
queens of SA crime fiction. Her Jade de Jongh character is so, well, so South
African; Jade is a woman who knows how to handle a gun.
After all the excitement of the two South African
events, the Auckland Readers &
Writers Festival was a bit subdued and far more serious in its pursuit of
literary art as opposed to entertainment of the casual reader. Crime writing
nevertheless featured in various sessions, including The Future of the Novel, A
Mind for Murder, Creative Non-Fiction
and most notably, An Hour with Peter
James. James is a crime writer whose Inspector
Roy Grace novels have sold many millions. Although not featured at the
festival, the true crime story of the prosecution, conviction and ultimate
acquittal – after he had served his sentence – of David Bain continues to
attract sales for author Joe Karam and an ongoing debate in newspapers and
magazines. Kiwis are fanatical readers of true crime, especially when the
author suggests the man or woman behind bars has been wrongly convicted. The Weekend Herald of May 19, 2012 has a
full page article on the murder of Susan Burdett in 1992. The report suggests that
the wrong man – aged 16 years at the time - has been convicted of her murder. The
conviction was based, so it appears, on his own contradictory confessions and
on a jailhouse snitch’s evidence while another man – a serial rapist - was
convicted of her rape but not her murder. There is a plot for a crime novel in
the story.
I promised a true Mickey Spillane story. In late 1956
when Clarence van Buuren was being held in prison pending his trial, he tried
in various ways to establish an alibi. One of them was to pin the blame on a
specific person, one Morris who was in custody on unrelated charges. Morris, Van
Buuren told the police, had made a full confession to the murder of Joy Aken
and had done so in the prison yard. The investigating officer was obliged to
take statements from the other men who had overheard the so-called confession.
The man to whom they attributed the confession was Morris, whom they knew as
Mike Hammer, the name of the private detective hero of Mickey Spillane’s novels
I THE JURY (1947), MY GUN IS QUICK
(1950), VENGENCE IS MINE! (1950), THE
BIG KILL (1951) and KISS ME DEADLY
(1951). When Morris was questioned about the incident he laughed and said, ‘It
was a hell of a joke!’
True crime is no joke, of course, but it appears to me
that it does provide authors with ideas. We don’t have to buy our ideas from a
farmer in Pennsylvania!
Chris for Michael - Thursday
I read all the way to the end, Chris, hoping you'd name that farmer:(( Oh well, back to the entrails I go for inspiration.
ReplyDeleteGreat piece!