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  • Saima Mir talks to Paul Burke about the Khan trilogy, DELIVERANCE, Jia Khan, bringing up boys, patriarchy and toxicity in modern society, writing gangsters, optimism for the future.

    DELIVERANCE: She makes the rules, and God help anyone who dares to break them…

    Jia Khan has seized a power most only dare to dream of. In a world dominated by self-posturing men, she gave women a voice, and built a criminal empire that spans the globe. But now the time has come to legitimise her business. To protect the people she loves, she must escape the very chains her life was forged from.Freedom, however, is never easily won. Her blood runs too deep in the underworld, and powerful enemies have no intention of letting her walk away. When one of her own is murdered, the danger becomes more real than ever. Forced into uneasy alliances with those she once despised, Jia faces enemies pressing in from every side. Is her reign destined to end in blood? For Jia Khan, life has always been a fight, but this is the one battle she cannot afford to lose.

    Recommended: Honey - Imani Thompson

    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime. His first book Spies on Screen is published this year.
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  • GR HALLIDAY talks to Aspects of Crime about FROM THE SHADOWS, new ITV series THE DARK, the Highlands, psychological thrillers, ghosts and the supernatural.

    FROM THE SHADOWS: Seven days. Four deaths. One chance to catch a killer.

    Sixteen-year-old Robert arrives home late. Without a word to his dad, he goes up to his bedroom. Robert is never seen alive again. The discovery of a body on the coast of the Scottish Highlands plunges Detective Inspector Monica Kennedy into a murder investigation that won't begin and end with one death. Meanwhile, seventeen-year-old Nichol has been missing for seven days. His last message was to social worker Michael, who can't quite shake the suspicion that something is terribly wrong. As Monica is faced with catching a murderer who has been meticulously watching and waiting, Michael keeps searching for Nichol, desperate to find him before the killer claims another victim.

    G.R. Halliday was born in Edinburgh and grew up near Stirling in Scotland. He spent his childhood obsessing over the unexplained mysteries his father investigated, which has been a major inspiration for his writing. He now lives in the rural highlands outside Inverness, where he is able to pursue his favourite pastimes of mountain climbing and swimming in the sea, before returning home to his band of semi-feral cats.

    Recommended book - Happy Like Murderers Gordon Burns.

    Streaming - Should I Marry a Murderer?

    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime. His first book SPIES ON SCREEN will be published later this year.
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  • Aspects of Crime Summer Reads Special featuring Richard Foreman, Mark Ellis, Jane Thynne and Paul Burke. A selection of crime and spy reads, fact and fiction.

    Thomas Waugh Time to Kill

    Anthony Horowitz A Deadly Episode 

    Ragnar Jónasson 

    Simon Mason A Dangerous Stranger & The Finder series.

    John Nichol Blitz

    Richard Weston Daniel Defoe

    Marc Mierowsky A Traitor Amongst Us

    Daniel Defoe A Tour Through the Islands

    Antonia Senior Stalin's Apostles 

    Emmerich Pressburger The Glass Pearl

    Blunt: Master of Lies Piers Blofeld 

    Charles Beaumont A Spy at War

    Mark Ellis A Death in Mayfair

    Robert Verkaik The Writer and the Traitor

    Edith Daria Santini (Edith Tudor Hart)

    Alan Bennett An Englishman Abroad & A Question of Attribution

    Jane Thynne Appointment in Paris

    Trent Park Listening Station - new museum.

    Sönke Neitzel Soldaten

    Philip Kerr Metropolis (TV Berlin Noir)

    Peter Straughan screenwriter

    Charles Cumming Icarus 17

    David Jarvis Jan the Dutchman

    CJ Merritt Octagon

    Chris Lloyd The Art of Occupation  

    Paul Burke Spies on Screen: From Silent to Streaming - Sept '26






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  • Jordan Harper talks to Aspects of Crime about his new Art-Pulp thriller A VIOLENT MASTERPIECE, LA, America, Hollywood, She Rides Shotgun...

    A VIOLENT MASTERPIECE Los Angeles, right now. America with its back up against the wall. This Frankenstein's monster of crimes and lurid dreams sewn together into something like a city.    A city ready to explode: A Hollywood pedophile is arrested, and is ready to tear down the city to get his freedom. A young woman goes missing—and men in black rubber gloves who look like cops clean out her apartment in the middle of the night. And the serial killer known as the LA Ripper is on the loose, leaving tragic/graphic/brutal crime scenes in his wake. Three people trying to keep their heads above the dirty water will find themselves coming together to unite these strands into one enormous, unspeakable crime ...   Jake Deal is a gonzo live-streaming nightcrawler, beaming the city's chaos straight to his audience of blood-hungry subscribers, giving them the view from the top of the mushroom cloud—until a job he can't refuse drags him back into his old life of Hollywood glamour, drugs, sex and sleaze. Armed with cameras and hidden mics, he'll infiltrate private clubs, gather high-class dirt—and stumble onto a conspiracy woven into the center of LA's most powerful men, who call themselves “The Kids in the Candy Store.”   Doug Gibson is a street lawyer, who fights for his clients against the army of cops, prosecutors and judges—he is the knife they bring to the gunfight. But when he's hired by a Hollywood pedophile ready to sell out his friends for a chance for freedom, he'll take on a fight bigger than he could have imagined. And when his client “commits suicide” in prison, Gibson will have to stop being a weapon—and become a warrior.    Kara Delgado works for an underground private concierge company—a make-a-wish foundation for the terminally rich. She scores drugs, makes connections, and plans multi-million dollar sex parties.She has learned the secret truth of this world: there are no rules, only prices. Her best friend Phoebe has gone missing, and Kara's the only person who knows that Phoebe's place was wiped clean of evidence by men in black rubber gloves. But when she begins to unravel the mystery of what happened to Phoebe, and its connection to the killer known as the LA Ripper, it will drag her into the dark heart of the city.   As Jake, Doug and Kara all investigate these crimes, they'll encounter ketamine-addled sitcom stars, bloody riots, homeless gangsters, a killer cop on death row, secret vaults in Beverly Hills, tech-bro orgies, medical cannibals, true crime junkies, private security wet-work teams, reality shows, street takeovers, car chases, coyotes, a sadistic Tarzan, and a three day, fifty million dollar wedding, before everything is revealed and they must each make their choice about how to fight back in this violent world before the bloody, blazing conclusion.

    Jordan Harper was born and educated in Missouri. He now lives in Los Angeles where he works as a writer and producer for television. See She Rides Shotgun on streaming.



    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime. His first book Spies on Screen will be published in September.
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  • CJ Merritt, Chris, talks to Paul Burke about his novel OCTAGON, right wing extremism, HOT, psychology in the novel.

    Octagon: A DYING RUSSIAN SCIENTISTconfesses to his children what he did as a young man.A MURDERED SPYshares vital intelligence before he’s ruthlessly assassinated in the English countryside.A RITUAL KILLINGhidden in a forest clearing in Sweden hints at something much worse.FORMER MI6 AGENT RUNNERStella McRae is the only person who can be trusted to investigate now her former employer has been compromised.EX-SAS OPERATORTommy Kane has always had Stella’s back, but as the threats against them escalate, will his formidable skills be enough this time?OCTAGONA devastating plot against the West is already in train. Only Stella and Tommy stand in its way. And time is running out...



    C. J. Merritt served as a British diplomat in Iraq and Jerusalem. Pursuing his interest in the psychological impact of armed conflict, he then retrained as a Clinical Psychologist and worked for the National Health Service in London, where he focused on treating Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. During this time, he began writing fiction, and his debut novel was published in 2018. Since then, he has authored several more thrillers (as Chris Merritt). Now, alongside his writing, he analyses espionage and insider risk for a cybersecurity consultancy. He lives in London.



    Recommended: Gods and Other Spies James Wolff.



    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime. His first book Spies on Screen: From Silent to Streaming will be published on 24th September.
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  • DAVID JARVIS talks to Paul Burke on Aspects of Crime, JAN THE DUTCHMAN, Mike, zeitgeist, comedy and globetrotting.

    JAN THE DUTCHMAN: When a deadly enemy from her past appears alive and well, can Michaela 'Mike' Kingdom finally face up to her demons?

    On holiday in The Gambia, Terry Bailey is enjoying his retirement from MI6 when he receives a shock. He spots a man in a car. It's a fleeting glimpse. But it's enough. He swears it is Jan the Dutchman, a drug overlord linked to a Colombian cartel. It can't be Jan, as Jan is dead. Terry should know, he killed him.

    Only one other person knows that Terry killed Jan - Michaela 'Mike' Kingdom, a CIA analyst based in London. Seven years ago, Jan had orchestrated the ambush in Holland that had killed Mike's husband Dylan leaving her severely injured.

    Was Terry tilting at windmills, Dutch windmills, or was Jan really alive seeking revenge? Terry tells Mike about the sighting and it re-opens wounds they both thought were long-healed.

    It is now the beginning of a race to find Mike's nemesis. But where to start? All Mike knew for certain is that he was not called Jan and he wasn't a Dutchman. Apart from that, the search should be straightforward, shouldn't it?



    Recommended: Kyril Bonfiglioli All the Tea in China, Carl Hiaasen.



    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime. His first book Spies on Screen: From Silent to Streaming will be published in September.
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  • Anthony Aberford talks to Paul Burke about his new cost crime novel The Conservatory, Aunt Lily, ancient myth, homeopathy, Malta, Yorkshire and owning a brewery. 

    The Conservatory: Some secrets are best left buried; others are better never planted!

    In a restored Victorian conservatory, four grieving women from the local wellness centre discover that their friend's mysterious death, amongst her toxic plants, was not an accident.

    When eccentric homoeopath Aunt Lily arrives on her tricycle, she seems just the person to help uncover answers. But who is she really, and why is she there?

    A sixteenth-century journal hidden in the conservatory holds dark secrets that could change everything. And an enigmatic stranger will stop at nothing to find it - making false promises and real threats.

    Can the friends resist his temptations and unlock the book's hidden secrets in time? Do they have the strength to make an impossible choice before it is too late?

    Anthony Aberford, is a businessman and writer with a strong bond to Yorkshire and Malta. His Detective Zammit series set on the island of Malta was published under the name AJ Aberford (also published by Hobeck Books). The Conservatory is set in Yorkshire and is a cross genre cosy/supernatural/murder mystery. The opener for a new series. 

    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime, a CWA Dagger judge and his first book is Spies on Screen: From Silent to Streaming will be published in September. 

       Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime.Spies on Screen: From Silent to Streaming - Sept '26   
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  • JULIE ANDERSON talks to Paul Burke about her new historical crime thriller FESTIVAL DAYS, Ellie and Faye, London crime, the Festival of Britain, cinema, Opera...

    FESTIVAL DAYS: May 1951. Celebration is in the air with the Festival of Britain and for the first time in years the mood is one of hope rather than hurt.

    For Detective Constable Faye Smith, London is not as safe as it seems. The criminal underworld is gaining strength, enjoying a lively existence below the surface. Then two bodies are found in the war-time shelters, a man and a woman. Who are they? What's their story? Why were they murdered and how did they end up in the shelters?

    Meanwhile, Ellie Peveril is busy with a celebration of a different kind. Ellie does all she can to support her friend but has her own worries, with ex-fiancé Patrick Havistock looming in the shadows. Faye, keen to unravel the mystery of the double murder, finds herself tangled up in crimes that stretch far beyond a simple killing.

    Faye and Ellie must face their toughest case yet as their lives change, irrevocably, for the future.

    Julie Anderson: Julie Anderson writes historical crime fiction, although she has also written a series of Whitehall thrillers, the third of which, Opera, was listed for the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger 2023. She lives in south London where her latest crime fiction series is set. The Clapham Trilogy comprises 'The Midnight Man' (2024), 'A Death in the Afternoon' (2025) and 'Festival Days' (coming 2026) all published by Hobeck Books. Before becoming a crime fiction writer she was a senior civil servant, working across a variety of departments and agencies, including the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister. Unlike her protagonists, however, she doesn't know where all the bodies are buried. She began writing with a short series of historical adventure tales for young people of all ages, the first of which, 'Reconquista', was listed for the Children's Book Award 2016. Julie also writes crime fiction reviews (and the occasional arts column) for Time and Leisure Magazine and is a co-founder and Chair of Trustees of the Clapham Book Festival, south London's annual celebration of books and writing. She has been working recently with St Pauls Opera Company as an historical advisor on their production of 'L'Elisir d'Amore'.



    Recommended: Elizabeth Buchan Woodspring Heidi Amsinck The Woman in the Wall, Andrew Miller The Land in Winter.



    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime
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  • Publisher, author, translator Quentin Bates talks to Paul Burke about his Gunnhilder mysteries, Icelandic crime fiction, Stella Blómkvist, The Murder Pool, translating, publishing, and fantasy fiction.



    The Murder Pool : Sometimes murder runs in the family. Or does it?

    When a well-known artist is found in Snorri's Pool with an axe buried deep in his chest, Stella Blómkvist is immediately thrown in at the deep end, brought in to defend the apparently harmless young man the police have in their sights as the killer.

    The man's mother had spent time prison, convicted of the killing of a personal trainer, despite her protestations of innocence. Stella can't help being drawn into both the cold case and this fresh murder, with a trail of guilt that stretches half-way around the world.

    As if she doesn't have enough to keep her busy, Stella's pursuing a political high-flyer suspected of being a serial rapist, and defending a senior police officer on corruption charges that have all the hallmarks of a vendetta. But the toughest challenges Stella faces are among her own loved ones…

    With a razor-sharp tongue and a moral compass all of her own, Stella Blómkvist has a talent for attracting trouble. Her trademark explosive mix of murder, intrigue and surprise has made this of Iceland's best-loved crime series.


    Mentions:

    Little Rebel - Jerome LeRoy, Arnaldur Indridason, Solveig Palsdottir - Icebears, Elsa Drucoff Rodolfo Walsh's Last Case, Jon Atli Jonasson - Broken, Toxic, Teresa Solano

    Corylus Books

    Stella Blómkvist Reviews



    Paul Burke is editor of Aspects of Crime. His first book Spies on Screen: From Silent to Streaming will be published on September 24th.
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  • Guy Hale talks to Matthew Parkhill about the new Amazon Prime Original series YOUNG SHERLOCK, Twist, Guy Ritchie, dysfunctional family dynamics, starting with Sherlock in prison, why Sherlock has a pipe, watching with your children, shooting in Seville.

    Matthew Parkhill, showrunner, is the creator and writer of Young Sherlock, directed by Guy Ritchie. His other work includes Deep State, Rogue and The Caller. (photo credit social media imbd.com)

    Guy Hale is the author of the Comeback Trail and the Shakespeare Mysteries. His latest novel is Sleep No More

    Young Sherlock is available now on Amazon Prime Video.
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  • James wolff talks to Aspects of Crime about his new spy thriller Spies and Other Gods, files that read like Finnegan's Wake, Martin Amis and cultivating obsessions, no beginning and no end....



    Spies and Other Gods: The Head of British Intelligence is having a bad day. Only six months off retirement and Sir William Rentoul is wondering if he'll make it that far, what with the sudden descent of a brain fog dense enough to turn every day into a series of small humiliations.To make matters worse, Parliament's Intelligence and Security Committee - the body that oversees Sir William - has received an anonymous complaint from one of his officers. Sir William dimly recalls accepting that there should be a channel for whistleblowers, but he never expected that they would pick his most sensitive case, one involving an Iranian assassin and a trail of dead bodies, or that the person who turned up to poke their nose into his files should be a lowly parliamentary researcher named Aphra McQueen, who displays smarts, tenacity and rebelliousness in unsettling measures.Aphra seems to know more about the operation than she is letting on. What will she uncover? What is she really up to? And can she survive the unexpected events that will bounce her from London to Birmingham to Paris to Lausanne?James Wolff grew up in Beirut and has lived in Damascus, Cairo and Istanbul. He worked as a British intelligence officer for over ten years. He lives in England.

    Recommended: The Untouchable John Banville

    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime

    Produced by Junkyarddog
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  • Roger Morris talks to Tim Stretton about his new novel Cover Story, Col Newton, writer's voice, Amazon ratings, Hitchcock, non-erotic fiction.



    Cover Story: Things aren’t going well for writer Col Newton. It’s ten years since he published his only novel, a critically acclaimed commercial flop.Then out of the blue, he hears from his old university friend, Chris Lazenby. There had always been rumours Lazenby was a spy. Turns out the rumours were true.Lazenby has a tempting proposal for Col. He’ll pay him fifty grand to write a novel. There’s just one catch. The book will never be published and Col can’t tell anyone he’s written it.It’s all part of a cover story Lazenby is constructing for an agent in the field posing as a novelist.With his literary career in the doldrums, Col agrees. But things quickly spiral out of control when Col witnesses Lazenby use his unarmed combat skills in a shockingly violent outburst.But when the money starts to flow into his bank account, Col puts his qualms behind him.He soon finds that without the prospect of publication to distract him he is producing the best thing he has ever written.He now wants the book for himself, but will Lazenby agree? And when Col finds out what happened to the last writer who helped Lazenby, he realises that, like Scheherazade in A Thousand and One Nights, his life depends on the tale he tells.



    R.N. Morris is the author of the Porfiry Petrovich series of historical crime novels, featuring the investigating magistrate from Dostoevsky’s masterpiece Crime and Punishment. He has also written six novels set in London in 1914: Summon Up The Blood, The Mannequin House, A Dark Palace, The White Feather Killer, The Music Box Enigma and Fortune’s Hand.

    Tim Stretton is the author of the Barcelona Trilogy. Diamond Boulevard.

    Produced by Junkyarddog



    Recommended: Graham Greene - Our Man in Havana, Alan Furst, Stella Rimington, Charles Cumming, Julian Fisher - How to Think Like a Spy
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  • Lesley Kara talks to Paul Burke about her new psychological thriller Troublemaker, inspirations, domestic noir, The Rumour on tv and getting a bit part in it.

    Troublemaker : Storm used to be just like her name. Wild and strong. A force to be reckoned with.But ever since her younger brother was killed in a violent mugging, she has led a very different life: quiet and cautious, seeing danger everywhere. Storm’s tendency to panic has resulted in several false alarms, so when she witnesses a murder with uncanny similarities to the way her brother was killed, and yet no body is found and no one is reported missing, the police don’t take her seriously.But Storm knows what she saw. And the murder is only the start – the killer will stop at nothing to keep Storm quiet. But how can she solve the murder and stay out of danger when no one believes her?



    Lesley Kara: is a Sunday Times bestselling author of psychological thrillers known for twisty stories about secrets, jealousy and betrayal. Her debut novel, The Rumour, became a global bestseller and has been adapted for television by Channel 5.

    She writes compelling crime fiction and domestic suspense set in seemingly safe communities — coastal towns, commuter suburbs and tight-knit neighbourhoods where danger hides in plain sight. Readers describe her books as “addictive”, “unputdownable” and “full of jaw-dropping twists”.

    Lesley’s thrillers are perfect for fans of Gillian McAllister, Lisa Jewell, C.L. Taylor and Louise Candlish. Her novels explore obsession, grief, revenge and the lies we tell to survive.

    She lives in the UK and writes full-time.



    Recommendations: Trevor Wood The Silent Killer, Emma Curtis The Psychiatrist, The Ice Angels Caroline Mitchell, Stuart Neville The House of Ashes, Clare Mackintosh It's Not What You Think.



    Paul Burke is editor of Aspects of Crime

    produced by Junkyarddog
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  • The Aspects of Crime - Crime Novels of the Year with Julie Anderson (DEATH IN THE AFTERNOON), Tony Fisher (GOOD GONE BAD) & Paul Burke.

    BOOKS:

    Chris Lloyd Banquet of Beggars

    Mark Ellis Death of an Officer

    Jim Kelly The Cambridge Siren

    Scott Turow Presumed Guilty

    Mark Billingham What the Night Brings

    Liam McIlvanney The Good Father

    Simon Mason The Woman Who Laughed

    SA Cosby King of Ashes

    Roger Morris Cover Story

    honourable mention for (a slightly older book) Martin Edwards The Life of Crime.



    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime.


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  • THE SPYMASTERS - ASPECTS OF CRIME Best Thriller Books of the Year - 2025. Antonia Senior, Mark Ellis, Thomas Waugh & Paul Burke chat about about their favourite spy novels, non-fiction and thrillers of the year.

    Featuring books by Mick Herron. Jason Burke, Jane Thynne + nine others.


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  • Simon Dinsdale talks to Paul Burke and Aspects of Crime about Christian Dane, Justice Served, police service and cruise talks with Martin Edwards.



    Justice Served Detective Superintendent Christian Dane is a veteran Senior Investigating Officer who specialises in solving murders.He is approached by Sue Wright, an archaeologist, to re-investigate the case of her cousin.Ned Harrison was locked up for the horrific killings of two young girls thirty years ago and remains in prison. Sue is convinced that Ned is the victim of a dreadful miscarriage of justice.Dane agrees to help but powerful forces quickly move to obstruct him and threaten his career and family. Undeterred, he exposes the police corruption and lies that convicted Ned and secures his release.With a hand-picked team including his best officer Hayley Cross working with him Dane must now find the real murderer.As the investigation unfolds more victims are identified revealing the terrifying work of a prolific serial killer.With little physical evidence and no suspect Dane is under pressure to bring them to justice before they can strike again.Simon Dinsdale served in the British Army in the 1970s. He joined the police in 1980 and spent twenty seven years as a detective. He now writes, travels and speaks about his experiences. He lives in Essex.



    Recommends Martin Edwards, Michael Connelly, Roger A Price and Agatha Christie



    Paul Burke is editor of Aspects of Crime.



    Produced by Junkyarddog
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  • Peter Tonkin talks to Paul Burke about his new historical spy thriller SHADOW OF A QUEEN, can syphilis cure the plague? Mary Queen of Scots, the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, the household brewery, Robert Poley and Hornblower.



    SHADOW OF A QUEEN: Saint Bartholomew's Day. Sunday, August 24 1572. Paris.Robert Poley, fresh from graduating from Cambridge, rescues Sir Francis Walsingham and his household from the Catholic mobs led by the Duke of Guise who are slaughtering every Protestant they can find.Poley becomes one of Walsingham's most trusted intelligencers. Despite his Catholic upbringing, he infiltrates one Catholic plot after another, all designed to overthrow Queen Elizabeth.The agent soon realises that the most dangerous conspiracies centre around the Duke of Guise's Catholic cousin, Mary, Queen of Scots.The plots to install Mary on the English throne become more ambitious and substantive. Walsingham decides on a pre-emptive strike.The spymaster tasks Poley with infiltrating the enemy's inner circle and compromising Mary, so she becomes the author of her own demise.A kingdom - and the life of a queen - hang in the balance.



    PETER TONKIN: was born in 1950 in Ulster, Northern Ireland and was raised in the UK, Holland, Germany, and the Persian Gulf. The son of an RAF officer, Tonkin spent much of his youth travelling the world from one posting to another. He is also the author of the Richard Mariner thriller series.



    Mentions: Garet Rogers - Brother Surgeons, Garrett Mattingly - The Defeat of the Spanish Armada, Park Honan - Christopher Marlowe, Charles Nichols - The Reckoning.

    Recommended: Slow Horses Mick Herron, Roman series Richard Foreman, and CJ Sansom.



    Paul Burke is the editor of Aspects of Crime.



    Produced both Junkyarddog
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