Andy for Michael - Thursday
Andy Muir is a successful television screenwriter in Australia. He says that while he was a writer for the hit Australian true-crime franchise Underbelly, crime stole his heart. As he explains in his guest blog, he wanted to write about somewhere different and someone different, and he's done just that in his debut novel Something for Nothing released a couple of months ago by Affirm Press. I really enjoyed it, and I'm glad to hear that there will be more crime fiction novels from Andy's computer between the scripts.
I grew up in Melbourne. I now live in Sydney. So why did I
set my debut crime fiction novel Something
for Nothing in the New South Wales town of Newcastle? It’s a question a
number of people have asked me and one that I needed to dig a little deeper to
answer.
The simple reason is I fell in love with the place after a
visit. But that isn’t a satisfactory answer. I love many parts of the world.
That doesn’t make me want to write about them.
It was only after a fellow screenwriter asked me a question,
that I worked out my reasons why. He was flummoxed because he’d been asked what
sort of stories he liked to tell. And he didn’t have an immediate answer. Like
him, I’d never thought about it until then either. But a clear pattern in my
work emerged when I took a moment to think about it. What became apparent was
that I liked to tell stories about outsiders.
For me, outsiders, the ones who don’t fit in, the ones
having to work outside a system, living on the fringe; these are the stories and
characters that have always been far more interesting for me as a reader and a
writer than the insiders. It just feels a more relatable position.
|
Coals from Newcastle |
For those that don’t know, Newcastle is about two hours’
drive north of Sydney. It’s a coastal city, a port that exports Australia’s
mineral resources to the world, with an industrial history stretching back to its
genesis as yet another Australian penal colony that saw a use for its convicts to
dig the rich coal deposits from the ground and carve an ocean swimming pool
from the rocky shore for the governor.
|
Bogey Hole carved by convicts to keep the governor cool |
Usefully for me, as a city, most Australians know Newcastle
only as a point on the map and nothing more.
Geographically, it’s an outsider to the debatably more
glamorous cities of Sydney and Melbourne. But for me, Newcastle offers all the
benefits of those places while providing a new location. Newcastle has
spectacular beaches, wilderness areas, industry, a deep water port, mining, a
long blue collar history, landed gentry, speculators and the working poor. It’s
a perfect cross section of Australia offering the ability to represent the
macro in the specific, a microcosm of Australia as a whole. Not that I thought
about any of that while writing Something
for Nothing. I just thought it was a pretty cool place I hadn’t seen or
read about before.
Knowing that I didn’t want to add to the Australian crime
fiction landscape by writing another tale set in Melbourne or Sydney, the Outback
or join the booming crime fiction scene of Western Australia, Newcastle landed
in my lap. Not being a resident there, the more I saw, explored and discovered,
the more interesting it became. It wasn’t apparent at the time, but I’d found
another outsider that had captured my interest.
|
Nobby's beach |
If you ask an Australian what they know about Newcastle and
they’ll mention the 2007 stranding of the Pasha Bulker cargo ship on Nobby’s
Beach, or if you’re lucky, the 1989 Earthquake. If they know a little more then
they might make mention of the murder of the schoolgirl Leigh Leigh that became
the inspiration for a successful play and then the feature film Blackrock. They probably won’t be able
to remember that the murder and the earthquake took place within about a month
of each other, a piece of coincidence a writer loves to give causality to.
Except life is random, unlike a story. Things happen because they do, not
because they are part of a wider plan. Maybe this is why we love crime fiction
as much as we all do; because we can give order and meaning to things unlike
life.
Crime fiction is often the story of justice; justice being
done, served or executed as evil is thwarted, stopped, and or overcome. Having
spent the past few years working on the hit Australian true crime television drama
franchise Underbelly, I was a little
tired of telling stories of dogged cops, investigations and court cases. I
didn’t feel I had it in me to write another story about cops and robbers. There
are better writers than me out there who tell those tales better than I could. What
I did want to explore was the crooked. From my television work, I had a theory
that there were two sorts of criminals – those that were raised in a crime
family that provided them with no doubts as to what they would do with their
lives, and those that made a silly mistake that got them in over their head
before they worked out they were trapped.
|
Lachie gets a bit too friendly with these... |
This is where my house painting anti-hero Lachie Munro came
from. Poor Lachie though suffers from both. His father is a violent armed
robber and Lachie makes a couple of stupid mistakes that sees him way in over
his head. Again – outsider on every level.
Writing the story, I gave myself a rule. As much as I love
Scandi-noir and the other darker crime fictions out there, I didn’t want to
write something that used those crimes as a plot point. I wasn’t interested in
telling a story where violent or sexual assault against women or girls was a
feature. No women were to be hurt in the plotting, writing and or construction
of Something for Nothing. It is a fun
exercise to do, giving yourself rules to work creatively.
So now you are probably working out that Something for Nothing is not your
regular crime story. It is an outsider in a field of Detective Inspectors,
Private Eyes and vigilantes. It harks back to the books I love to read, the
stories of Elmore Leonard, and Donald Westlake that told the stories of the
crooked, the dodgy and criminal. It is set in a city that provides a unique and
unusual backdrop representative of the Australia I know told from the view
point of an everyman trying to escape his past as he stays one step ahead of
the law and other crooks in a situation of his own making.
If that wasn’t enough, the book itself is an outsider.
Unlike a lot of other crime fiction out there, Something for Nothing is funny.
_____________________________________________
Murder Is Everywhere
Author
Recognitions and Events
ANNAMARIA ALFIERI
April 28-30
Malice Domestic
Hyatt Regency
Bethesda, Maryland
Panel: The British Empire
(FYI- Sujata and I will be on the same panel!!!)
Thursday May 25, 6PM
Orinda Books
Orinda, California.
Wednesday May 31
Janet Rudolph Literary Salon:
"The History of Hot Places: Clashes between Colonialism and
Local Cultures”
Joint appearance with Michael Cooper
CARA BLACK
Murder in Saint Germain, Aimée Leduc’s
next investigation, comes out June 6, 2017.
CARO RAMSEY
Paper back of Rat Run published 28th March.
JEFF SIGER
"The Olive Growers,” appears in BOUND BY MYSTERY, an
anthology edited by Diane DiBiasi celebrating the 20th Anniversary of Poisoned
Pen Press, out in March.
MICHAEL STANLEY
Dying
to Live
(Kubu #6) to be released in May in UK & South Africa and in October in USA
May
17
18:00 – 20:00
Orenda Road Show (Stanley)
Waterstones Piccadilly
(London)
May
18-21
Crimefest in Bristol UK (Stanley)
Thursday,
May 18
Panel 14:40 - 15:30:
What Are You Hiding? - The Dark Side of Human
Nature
Friday, May 19
Panel 12:30 - 13:20
Panel: Power Corrupts - Who Can You Turn To?
May
19-21
Franschhoek Literary Festival
(Michael).
Saturday May 20
Panel 11:30 – 12:30:
One Voice, Two
Authors with Alex Latimer and Diane Awerbuck
Sunday May 21
Panel 11:30 – 12:30:
The Author as
Chemist with Joanne Harris and Ekow Duker