Four of my backlist titles are lined up for launch, and the first of them is now up and available as an Amazon exclusive; Nightmare, with Angel will be followed over the coming weeks by ebook editions of White Bizango, The Spirit Box, and Red, Red Robin.
Nightmare, with Angel is the manhunt/Eurothriller that earned me the ‘finest British writer of bestselling popular fiction to emerge since John le Carre’ quote from John Williams in The Independent. It’s been used by my publishers ever since and no one’s ever heard me protesting. But I don’t think anyone’s ever sought out le Carre’s opinion on the matter, either.
It’s set in the months following German reunification. A while ago I posted an account of the research behind the book; if you weren’t around for that, here it is again (or you can skip straight to it and find the book here).
Just after the Berlin Wall came down, I threw a bag into the back of the Volvo and drove down to the Hamburg ferry. Not quite as spontaneously as that, of course. I had a plan. I’d lined up meetings with Hamburg’s Sex Crimes division and detectives in the Criminal Investigation department of the Dussseldorf police. I had places to look at, questions to ask, and a date with the Senior Pathologist in the morgue at Heinrich Heine University.
But in the most ambitious part of the trip, I headed East. Right across Germany, through the border, and into territory that had, only months before – weeks, even – been sealed off, self-contained, an enigma to the West.
For someone raised on spy fiction, this was no small deal. In Cold War mythology, East Germany was enemy territory. In reality the border was a zone of tension, and people died trying to cross it.
What I found was empty checkpoints, broken barriers, watchtowers with their windows stoned-in… there were concrete blocks that had been placed to prevent any vehicle from making a dash through, forcing the car into a zigzag path that no longer served any purpose. This once-fearsome locale now felt like a corner of an abandoned airfield, already becoming overgrown.
And what I found on the other side resembled the Britain of my earliest memories. It was as if time had stopped in the 1950s, which I suppose it pretty much had. Fields, farms, and villages were untouched. Where there was industry, it was like a concentrated dump of poison in an otherwise bucolic landscape. My most powerful visual memory is of the bright yellow hillsides of oilseed rape, unnatural in their intensity, a sight that always takes me back not only to the place, but to that precise time of the year.
I don’t know what they must have made of the Volvo. At least half of the cars I saw on the road were Trabants, those tiny two-stroke polluters with bodyshells made of cotton waste and resin. The Volvo was a red 480 ES, one of those sports coupés with which they sometimes surprise the market, pictured here as it appeared in Bryan Talbot’s The Tale of One Bad Rat. Driving around in it made me feel like Commander Straker in UFO.
I covered my checklist of sights and places, I gathered atmosphere and detail. It was all for a novel called Nightmare, with Angel.
I look back at some of the stuff I’ve done in the course of my career and wonder how I had the nerve. I had no one to guide me, I’d made no advance reservations. I didn’t even speak any German. I did have a map and a phrasebook. I wasn’t a complete idiot.
Here’s how I began my pitch for the novel:
Imagine this.
You’ve got a nine year old girl who lives alone with her father in a big old house by the sea. Every day she looks more like her mother, and her mother was a tramp. Because of this her father all but ignores her, the woman who keeps house in the daytime also keeps her distance, and the child has to face a solitary life with only a scavenged photograph of her mother for comfort and a wishful image of what it might be like to be loved again. Her father isn’t a hard man; but he’s a mess, he’s losing his grip, and he doesn’t seem to see how he’s losing his daughter as well. When he notices her, he’s impossibly strict. But most of the time he’s absorbed by his own bitterness, and he hardly notices her at all. Her days are long, and as bleak and empty as the coastal landscape around the house where she roams. With her father seemingly lost to her, she needs a father‑figure to take his place; and on the day that she falls into one of the big sea‑drains by the town dump and has to be rescued by a stranger, she thinks that she’s found one.His name is Ryan. He lives in a rented shack by the railway line and makes a living however he can; odd jobs, casual work, fixing up abandoned appliances, cleaning out aluminium cans and bagging them for scrap. He gets her out, he takes her home and, without waiting for thanks, he walks away.
But it isn’t going to be so easy for him.
So the story that swept all the way to the East began closer to home, on a part of the British seacoast that I knew quite well. Sunderland Point is one of those places that can only be reached by a causeway at low tide. Strange, desolate and charming, it’s one of the most atmospheric places I know. At the time I was experimenting with one of those panoramic cameras that took a picture like a school photo. It was a format that somehow suited the landscape.
A couple of years later I traded in the sports coupe for a sensible family wagon. Lots of legroom for the rear seats, plenty of luggage space, and room for the dogs.
This year, I traded back.