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Michael Stanley’s Sunshine Noir

To the lovers of Nordic Noir, we can only say ‘The shadows are darkest where the sun shines the hottest.’ Welcome to the world of Sunshine Noir. Take off your parka and mukluks, toss aside your mittens and ushanka hat, and settle under a sun umbrella to enjoy hot stories from around the planet.

Sunny South Africa

Deon Meyer takes us to the scorching Karoo for Fever. This is more a post-apocalyptic coming of age story than a traditional mystery or thriller. The Times and Steven King both raved about it. The small community remaining after a deadly pandemic sets up their new home near the Gariep dam, hopeful that the water and hydroelectricity will help them keep the remnants of the old civilisation, but also build a better one.

For a traditional thriller, try his Thirteen Hours, but have plenty of time. You won’t stop reading until the last page.

 

 

Sweltering Greece

Put on your dark glasses and indulge in armchair travel with Jeff Siger’s Murder in Mykonos, the first of the Chief Inspector Andreas Kaldis mysteries, all set in Greece. Unpopular with the powers that be, Kaldis is sent to peaceful, tourist haven Mykonos. When two young women are murdered, the pressure is on, not only to solve the murders, but also to save the island’s tourist industry.

 

 

 

Nigeria

Femi Kayode’s Lightseekers is a stunning debut. The first line paints the scene: ‘The October sun is as hot as the blood of the angry mob.’ Three young men are mercilessly beaten before being set alight. The question is not who committed the crime, but why and who was behind it. One of the grieving fathers hires Philip Taiwo, an investigative psychologist who specialises in the motives behind crimes and mob violence. He soon finds he’s taken on far more than he bargained for.

 

 

 

Bombay, India

Step back a hundred years and meet Perveen Mistry, Bombay’s only female lawyer, as she makes her debut in Sujata Massey’s multiple-award-winning The Widows of Malabar Hill. When she raises questions about the validity of a will, Mistry is thrown into the complexity of religious and legal diversity in a country struggling to free itself of British rule.

 

 

 

 

Ghana

The Missing American is the first novel in Kwei Quartey’s new series featuring female private investigator, Emma Djan. The plot revolves around the activities of the young men who make fortunes scamming people on the internet with the assistance of witchcraft from traditional priests. Along the way, one of their targets goes missing. Emma has to find out how and why. It’s up for an Edgar award this year.

 

 

 

Istanbul, Turkey

Step back another hundred years, and watch Investigator Yashim become embroiled in a plot to overthrow the Ottoman Empire in Edgar-winning The Janissary Tree by Jason Goodwin, the first of five Investigator Yashim novels. You will be able to hear the sights and sounds of the city, smell the spices of the souk, as the wily inspector plies his trade.

 

 

 

 

Meanwhile, back in South Africa…

Mike Nicol’s crime fiction is a treat. Take Power Play. Staccato prose, tense plotting, intriguing characters. Don’t even think of crossing one of Nicol’s villains. The sun beats down on beautiful Cape Town, but this isn’t the city tourists see. Abalone smugglers. Secret agents with hidden agendas. Chinese smugglers. Rival gangs for whom murder is just part of the job. And a nod to Shakespeare thrown in.

 

 

 

Down Under, Australia

In Ned-Kelly-Award-winner Candice Fox’s first novel in her Crimson Lake series, itself titled Crimson Lake, ex-detective, Ted Conkaffey, teams up with private investigator and convicted murderer, Amanda Pharrell, to help her solve a case of deception and obsession. What a pair! Beware of crocodiles when you set out your deck chair on the beach to read the story.

 

 

 

 

Florida: the Sunshine State

Pick up Jonathon King’s Edgar-Award-winning The Blue Edge of Midnight, the first of the Max Freeman Mysteries. Ex-cop Freeman exiles himself to the steamy Florida Everglades, wracked with guilt over the death of a twelve-year-old. When he finds the body of a young girl in the swamp, he becomes the prime suspect and has to dig into his own past to prove his innocence.

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Katie Allen’s Inspiring Books

I’m Katie, debut author with Orenda, still in disbelief that my first novel Everything Happens for a Reason is coming out this June.

I live in South London with my husband, two children, cat, dog and stick insects. I used to be a reporter at the Guardian and now I like to make things up instead. Having said that, the starting point for Everything Happens for a Reason is autobiographical. As happens to my main character, my son Finn died just before he was born. When I was at home on maternity leave without him, I wrote to him, imagining what we might be doing if things had gone differently. That later sparked the idea of writing my novel as emails from a grieving mother.

While trying to write in that form, I sought out other epistolary novels – ones written as letters or diary entries. I’m sharing my favourites here, as well as other books that inspired me thanks to their humour, voice and great characters. And I’ve snuck in a new one from a fellow #TeamOrenda writer because it’s giving me lots of food for thought for my next book.

The Trick of It by Michael Frayn

Writing letters to an old friend in Australia, a British academic tells the story of how he meets and falls for the woman novelist he has studied and taught on throughout his career. The academic and his subject become closer and a toxic mix of idolisation, envy and distrust develops. Our narrator also longs to write fiction, wishes he could crack “the trick of it”. The letters are natural, hilarious, touching and, at times, dark. Wonderfully done.

The Art of Fiction by David Lodge

I found my way to Frayn’s The Trick of It via this book by novelist David Lodge. A collection of essays on topics such as Surrealism, the Unreliable Narrator and Ending, the book is packed with examples from writers including Orwell, Ishiguro and Austen. It’s less a how-to guide and more an entertaining eye-opener to the tricks of the greats. For readers and writers alike.

 

Incendiary by Chris Cleave

This story of a fictional terror attack on London is told by a grieving wife and mother in letters to Osama bin Laden. The plot is twisty and intriguing and the feel is apocalyptic given the scale of the attack that launches the story. But it’s the voice that made this book so superb for me. The letters are packed with turns of phrase that are simultaneously unique, funny and devastating, and everything is told with such directness that I have rarely felt so close to a narrator.

Where’d You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple

This funny, moving novel is written as a mix of emails, articles, first-person accounts and other documents. Semple gives us just enough of each character’s perspective and weaves everything together into a great page turner. The eponymous Bernadette is a wonderfully cynical character with a heart and her story is a clever reflection on missed opportunities and our conflicted feelings about fitting in.

 

Adrian Mole: The Cappuccino Years by Sue Townsend

I re-read this part of the Adrian Mole series while writing my book because I wanted to pick apart how Adrian sounds and feel in his thirties – a similar age to my narrator Rachel. I love the way returning to Adrian Mole is like meeting an old friend whose jokes I already know or anticipate, but I laugh at them just as hard anyway.

 

Moominpappa at Sea by Tove Jansson

A book for children and adults alike, this is the darkest tale in the Moomin series. It’s effectively the account of a father’s existential crisis – though children probably see it as an adventure story. Moominpappa’s family have grown up, worse still, they have grown independent. His realisation that he is no longer the chief protector is beautifully shown in a scene where the rest of the family put out a fire without his knowing. His response? To move the entire family to a remote, rocky island, where once again he is needed. My book is largely about our search for purpose – aren’t so many books? – and Moominpappa’s quest to make his life make sense was an unexpected source of inspiration.

May We Be Forgiven by A. M. Holmes

Full of dark humour and big themes of family tensions, this is one of my favourite books. It was on my desk throughout writing Everything Happens for a Reason. If I felt stuck, I would pick it up and read a few pages as a break and as inspiration. Holmes has a way of paring back and saying just what’s needed and of saying the unexpected, in dialogue particularly. Her characters can be brutally honest but are also vulnerable and kind.

I met her at an event in London when I had just started writing my book and told her she had inspired me to try writing a novel. She made me promise I would see it through to the end.

There’s Only One Danny Garvey by David F. Ross

I just love everything about this book. The writing is a beautiful mix of poetic and blunt, the characters are flawed but loveable, the setting is vivid, the backstories are so complex. The book I am working on now is also about someone returning to where they grew up so I had mixed feelings when I started David’s brilliant book – so much there to inspire me but it’s also mightily intimidating! I tell everyone to read this book – consider yourself told too.

 

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Sarah Sultoon’s Inspiring Reads

Hi, I’m Sarah, debut-hoping-to-become-repeatedly-successful novelist with Orenda.

I’ve got 3 small kids and a previous career in hard news. Writing is my catnip. I maintain sanity by escaping reality.

These are the five books that never fail to guide me.

 

A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry

A peerless exercise in every single ingredient that makes an unforgettable novel.

 

 

 

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry by Mildred D Taylor

I read this when I was 10 or 11 and it never left me. The single most impactful piece of writing in my life.

 

 

 

The Beach by Alex Garland

A cult classic for excellent reason. A story that grabs the escapist inside everyone and never lets go.

 

 

 

100 years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez

Want to go on a journey to the ends of your imagination? This book pushed me past the limits of mine.

 

 

 

The Grass is Singing by Doris Lessing

One story, a hundred different lessons. The definitive instruction in emotional engagement.

 

 

 

 

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A message from our Publisher, Karen Sullivan

Welcome!

We are absolutely thrilled to unveil our new website and to offer you a host of new and better ways to get to know our authors and their books. We’ve filled this new site with everything you need to keep up with all of our inspiring new publications, to find out what our brilliant authors are up to, plus information about our exciting events and all the latest news from Team Orenda.

A new online bookshop

The first thing you’ll notice is that you now have the opportunity to buy physical copies of our wonderful titles directly from Orenda Books. Having our own online bookshop means we and our wonderful authors benefit from a better profit margin on every book we sell. But you, the reader, benefit, too, as selling you books directly means we’re able to offer you special deals, signed copies and book bundles that will allow you to immerse yourself in some truly wonderful international reads, whatever your budget.

We continue to support ethical retailers, of course, and we’re hugely grateful for the passion and enthusiasm with which they sell our books. You’ll find a list of links to our preferred and much-valued stockists here.

Audiobooks

Almost all of our books are available in audiobook format, and we’ll be selling audio CDs, where available, in the coming months. Downloads are available from all of the usual retailers, including Audible, Amazon, The Reading House, Storytel, Bookbeat, Apple and Google.

Newsletter

The very best way to keep abreast of our latest news, deals and publications is to subscribe to our newsletter. It provides loads of exclusive subscriber-only content, plus special offers and giveaways. By signing up, you’ll not only become an important and invested part of #TeamOrenda, you’ll receive a free ebook of Agnes Ravatn’s breathtaking, award-winning psychological thriller The Bird Tribunal, translated by Rosie Hedger. Go to the home page for details on how to sign up.

Subscription boxes

We now have a subscription box!

We’ve teamed up with our friends, Bert’s Books, to put together a variety of subscription packages to fit all budgets, and every month Bert and his team will send out our exclusive signed copies with special treats! Click HERE to find out more.

Merch!

We’ve put together a (very) small collection of #TeamOrenda merchandise, which we’ll be adding to across the next couple of months. If there’s something you’d like to see in the collection, don’t hesitate to let us know.

Author content and online events

Over time, our authors will be contributing stories, insights and their own recommended reads to the site. We’ll also showcase the latest book trailers (at the bottom of the home page) and we’ll alert you to upcoming events and deals. If you miss one of our online events, you’ll find the recording on our YouTube channel.

Get in touch

We are committed to bold, imaginative publishing, and aim to bring you the finest, unforgettable international fiction in the most beautiful way we can. You, our readers, are the reason why we publish books, and when you buy an Orenda book, or sign up for our subscription box or newsletter, you are becoming part of #TeamOrenda, and you’ll be investing in our wonderful authors and making it possible for us to do what we do.

Any other questions? Check our handy FAQs.

If you think there’s something missing from the site, or you want to see more of something, we’ll be more than happy to hear your ideas! Get in touch with us via our contact page.

Thank you so much for visiting, and for becoming part of the team. We love what we do, and we are absolutely thrilled to have this opportunity to share our fabulous books with you.

 

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Defying Genre, by Matt Wesolowski

I’m asked a lot of questions about genre, mainly about how I would classify my own writing, and whether I actively decided to straddle several genres or I’m intentionally genre-nonspecific.

My stories are a sort of mish-mash of true crime and horror, written in the style of a podcast. My apologies go out to the booksellers and libraries who have to place them somewhere…

To be honest, as a writer, I never really give genre much thought. Genre for me is simply a sign in a bookshop or library, pointing me usually into a basement or obscure corner where I can find my favourite types of books. (That’s not me parading as some kind of literary hipster – it’s the fact that horror, my favourite genre, is always shoved onto the end of a shelf, or else inexplicably made part of sci-fi/fantasy, as if those books might taint all the lovely hardback fiction written by wholesome celebrities, sitting in bright piles at the front of the shop.)

I think I’ve always liked reading books that defy genre. Not as a rule though – I never actively search out such books. It’s just that I’ve always felt that books that so ardently adhere to a single genre are therefore constrained by it, and as a reader, I want to be surprised.

This is by no means a slight on anyone writing genre fiction, but I suspect that if I go into the crime section of a bookshop or a library, I’m unlikely to find a cryptid. Perhaps that says more about me than about genre.

I’m going to give a few of examples of genre-defiant books that have helped shape me into the writer I am today. In other words, the blame lies at the feet of the following authors.

 

Patrick McCabe – The Butcher Boy (1992)

Patrick McCabe is one of the authors whose work galvanised me to write. His books are usually found in general fiction as there’s no clear place for them anywhere else. He writes like a deranged Roddy Doyle: rich, Irish stream-of-consciousness prose that sucks you into the dark corners of damaged minds in small towns.

The Butcher Boyis set in small-town Ireland in the sixties and details the inner workings of Francie Brady, a young boy whose sanity is crumbling as quickly as his home life. I don’t want to say too much more about the plot as you should read it, then try and classify it yourself.

What on earth is this book? Is it crime? Not really, but also sort of. The atmosphere is thick, the setting bleak. McCabe is often (and horribly lazily) classed as ‘Irish fiction’, which I suppose he is, but there’s a hell of a lot more to his books than that.

 

Antti Tuomainen – The Man Who Died (2016)

Who said that crime couldn’t be funny? I don’t think anyone actually did, but even so, the effortless blend of humour, crime and oddness makes this one a square peg in the grizzled-detective-with-an-alcohol-problem-shaped hole. Swap the bottle of whisky and the one that got away for a dying, Finnish mushroom entrepreneur, and you already have a stand-out protagonist. That’s before this story’s even started. Reading this book is a little like watching a Cohen brothers’ film. You’re not quite sure exactly how to classify what you’ve just experienced, but you love it and you want more.

 

Lauren Beukes – Broken Monsters (2014)

First, a caveat: Lauren Beukes is one of my all-time literary heroes. Everything she writes is amazing. This book was the first of hers I picked up and is a cornerstone for me in terms of influence. A serial killer, possession, Reddit threads; written from the points of view of two characters: a detective and her teenage daughter – maybe this should be crime, but is it really? A purist looking for a cosy whodunit wouldn’t have much fun here.

Broken Monstershas a large enough fantasy element, and I guess enough horror, to be classed as such. The defiant spirit that Lauren Beukes’ work invokes felt almost like permission for me to begin exploring new ways to construct a narrative.

 

Janice Hallett – The Appeal (2021)

This book, while perhaps not as genre-defiant as the others, is nonetheless a significant step towards a new way of telling crime stories. If we think of what a crime novel is at its base level – a story that we, as readers, are drawn into as we try and deduce who committed a crime and why – this book seems to be exactly that. But it takes a beautifully original form.

Rather than a novel in the traditional sense, this book is a dossier about a murder. What we read is correspondence – emails, texts and letters – and from that we have to deduce whether the imprisoned person is guilty or innocent.

But this is no gimmick. The way Hallett constructs voice and character is nothing short of phenomenal. The real kicker, though, is the occasional break when two law students, given this same dossier by their boss, discuss their own theories.

I was utterly consumed and could think of little else while reading The Appeal.

 

Mark Z Danielewski – House of Leaves (2000)

This a suburban, Lovecraftian, non-Euclidean narrative that envelopes you completely. On the surface it’s about a troubled tattooist who discovers academic-style notes in the apartment of a dead man. These notes concern a family who move to a new house and find a room that leads seemingly to nowhere.

This book does not simply exist; it lives. This book is a journey into madness and you’re going with it. But what is it?

Pages upon pages of fake academic references; single words to a page, or else constructed graphologically in a loop, or at an oblique angle; endless footnotes. It’s like a PHD thesis written by Azathoth.

There are thousands of active book groups still discussing and trying to dissect this story. I read it every year or so and it still troubles me. When I finish it, I need to start again, I need to be lost in the labyrinth of this book.

If ‘fake-academic, non-Euclidean, graphological insanity’ is the only way we can classify this one and a new sub-section of the scifi/fantasy shelf must therefore be constructed, I’m in.

 

Andrew Michael Hurley – The Loney (2015)

Just like the best kind of folk-horror films, such as The Wicker Manor The VVitch, the scares in this novel are not overt; they creep in like a draught and are all too real, like a distant memory we thought we had. Quiet rituals, such as burning marzipan, stand toe to toe with entrenched faith, and the slow-burn poetry holds the story in a strange otherland that is neither completely real nor really a dream.

Does this make it horror? It’s been described as ‘gothic’, and that might be as far as anyone can go when trying to fit it into a genre. We start with a dead body in the lonely bay of Coldbarrow in the North-West. This is a haunted place. This is a truly haunted story; the narrator being haunted by the past, by the memories of what happened to his mute brother, Hanny. We swing between the present and the past, Hurley’s eldritch poetry drawing us along as it describes the narrator’s ritualistic devotion to his memories, his pious mother and her cult-like companions, and the journey to the shrine above the ‘wild and useless length’ of coast known as ‘The Loney’ to cure Hanny of his affliction.

This is more of a mood than a story. But when the mood is so expertly crafted, it’s a pleasure to wallow.

 

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Avoiding Plane Crashes, in Slow Motion, by Eve Smith

18thNovember marks the start of World Antimicrobial Awareness Week. Health workers, scientists and global institutions like the World Health Organisation will be doing their best to increase awareness of global antimicrobial resistance (AMR), and urging policy makers to take swift and firm action to avoid the ongoing emergence and spread of drug-resistant infections.

I have similar calls for action in my novel, The Waiting Rooms, in the decades leading up to the antibiotic crisis. Calls that, despite the very real evidence of an impending disaster, fall on deaf ears. As one of my characters, Mary, says: ‘It’s like watching a plane crash, in slow motion.’

Of course, the misery that coronavirus has inflicted on so many people over the past year has highlighted the cataclysmic impacts of health emergencies, that even our advanced technologies and sophisticated minds cannot overcome. And those impacts will continue, long after the virus has gone. Which gives me hope that governments worldwide may be a little more receptive to calls for action on other health emergencies, like AMR, as opposed to focusing on the next short-term vote-winner or burying their respective heads in the sand.

Because we do need action. Now.

As I have said in previous blogs, the coronavirus pandemic is unfortunately accelerating the rise of antimicrobial resistance. The huge volumes of antibiotics and other drugs being prescribed to treat primary and secondary infections in COVID-19 patients are giving bacteria and viruses the opportunity to develop resistance, spread further and leach into our waste water systems, rivers and oceans.

What’s more, the disruption to health services caused by the pandemic, and delays in the diagnosis and treatment of other infectious diseases are allowing those diseases to spread too, including that age-old foe that triggers a pandemic in my novel: Tuberculosis.

Before COVID-19, over 4,000 people were dying from TB every day. According to new estimates published in the European Respiratory Journal, that number could rise significantly if there is substantial health care disruption and social distancing measures aren’t adequate. Models predict between 100,000 and 200,000 additional TB deaths over the next five years in India, China and South Africa alone, undoing the good work that has been painstakingly achieved to stem the growth of this increasingly drug-resistant disease.

TB has always been an opportunist, taking advantage of compromised immune systems, and natural disasters since the Ancient Egyptians. As Mary says, in The Waiting Rooms: ‘Let’s face it, anything that can flourish for three million years must be pretty adept at survival.’

Current thinking is that having pulmonary TB does not make you more likely to contract COVID-19, but if you do fall ill, the severity of the infection is likely to be worse because of existing damage in the lungs. And if your treatment for TB is disrupted, especially if it’s a drug-resistant strain, then the predicted outcomes are not good.

I appreciate this isn’t very cheery. But then, if you have read The Waiting Rooms, you wouldn’t expect it to be. After all, the realm I inhabit is dystopian thrillers. But at least this one hasn’t happened. Yet.

By illustrating the very real horrors of a world where antibiotics no longer work, the hard choices inflicted on society when infections run rampant, and showing just how easily that could happen, I am hoping that, in its own small way, The Waiting Rooms will contribute to awareness about antimicrobial resistance, and may even nudge a few of those actions further along. Because this story needs to remain fictional. We’ve got more than enough dystopia to cope with in our lives.

Eve Smith is author of The Waiting Rooms.

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Louise Beech’s Favourite Spooky Reads

OoooOooooh, it’s that time of year. Witches. Warlocks. Wizards. Wizened old hags. Ghost. Ghouls. Maybe goblins? To be fair, this sounds like first thing in a morning at my house, but yes, Halloween is upon us. I never thought I’d write a ghost story. But I did. Last year. And this year I Am Dust hit the shelves. But what are my favourite spooky reads? Do I enjoy being scared? Well, yes I do. But only if I’m not alone in the house. If my husband is away, I won’t even think about a scary book, let alone open one. So, here are my top five spooky, scary reads…

Matt Wesolowski – Hydra

I made the abject mistake of reading this while staying alone in an apartment for the night. I kept trying to put down this dark and chilling book, but I couldn’t; I was dragged kicking and screaming into a world of deadly forbidden ‘games’, online trolls, and these mysterious black-eyed kids, whose presence seems to extend far beyond the delusions of a murderess. If these children come knocking on your door, you mustn’t let them in. So when someone knocked on the apartment door at midnight, and there was no-one there, I didn’t sleep for the rest of the night.

The Shining – Stephen King

I also made the mistake of reading this one alone, back when I was fifteen. My family were away and I was hooked. But then I had to sleep with the light on for weeks. It was the weird woman in the hotel room. It was the menacing sense of claustrophobia at the Overlook Hotel where Jack and his family are isolated one long winter, and where a man previously butchered his entire family. It was the description of a slow descent into madness. This one is a classic.

Rosemary’s Baby – Ira Levin

I got this one for Christmas when I was a thirteen. What a dark child I must have been. It was part of an anthology of three well-known horror stories. Anyway, I devoured it under the covers with a torch when I was supposed to be sleeping. In the book Rosemary and her husband Guy move into a historic, Gothic building in New York. The neighbours are odd to say the least. It turns out they are devil worshippers. And they want someone to give birth to a living, breathing Satan. You can well imagine the rest. Somehow, I still wanted kids when I grew up….

The Chalk Man – CJ Tudor

This was Tudor’s debut – and what a debut it was. There’s a real feeling of nostalgia in this one. It’s old school, proper chills and thrills horror. Main character Ed receives a stick of chalk  and a drawing of a figure, in the post one day, and is dragged back in time, to a body, to the Chalk Man. I had learned my lesson well with this one and read it with my husband very close to me. I might still have needed the lights on though.

The Entity by Frank De Felitta

This is the super-scary tale of a young single mum, Carlotta, who is violated in her bed each night by a spectral rapist. It sounds pretty sordid but it’s cleverly written, smart, tense, and it’s more about when no one believes you – the true horror of that. In many ways, it’s a great and terrifying metaphor for when real-life assault victims aren’t believed. This is particularly disturbing because it’s inspired by real-life events. It’s an occult classic and will satisfy anyone who enjoys the paranormal.