I’m
an award-winning British crime novelist. Major authors have compared my writing
with the work of Graham Greene, John Le Carre, Georges Simenon and Henning
Mankell. The French magazine L’Express called me “the Dashiell Hammett of Palestine.”
WHERE:
I live in Jerusalem. I came here in 1996. For love. Then we
divorced. But the place took hold. Not for the violence and the excitement that
sometimes surrounds it, but because I saw people in extreme situations. Through
the emotions they experienced, I came to understand myself.
BEFORE
THE WRITING: There was never really a time before I wrote. I’ve been at it
since I was seven (a poem about a tree, on the classroom wall with a gold star
beside it.) But I arrived in the Middle East as a journalist with only a
couple of published short stories to my name. First I wrote for The Scotsman,
then Newsweek, and from 2000 until 2006 as Time Magazine’s Jerusalem bureau chief. I won some
awards for covering the intifada. Yasser Arafat once tried to have me arrested,
but I eluded him and decided to focus on fiction. I’d learned so much about the
Palestinians – and about life – that didn’t fit into the limited world of
journalism. So I wrote my Palestinian crime novels.
BEFORE
JERUSALEM: I was born in Newport, Wales, in 1967. That’s my
mother’s hometown; my father’s from Maesteg in the Llynfi valley. We moved
around, to Cardiff and Croydon, then I studied
English at WadhamCollege, OxfordUniversity with Terry Eagleton as my
tutor. Contemporaries may remember me as the fellow with bleached blonde hair
at the bar of the King’s Arms in the company of the Irish porters from AllSoulsCollege. I did an MA at the
University of Maryland and lived in New York for five years before I hit the
Middle East.
WHERE
THE BOOKS CAME FROM: I wrote a nonfiction account of Israeli and Palestinian
society called Cain's Field: Faith, Fratricide, and Fear in the Middle East in 2004 (Free Press). I’m
proud of it, because it really gets to the heart of the conflict here – it
isn’t one of those notebook-dump foreign correspondent books.
I was looking for my next project and came
up with the idea for Omar Yussef, my Palestinian sleuth, while chatting with my
wife in our favorite hotel, the Ponte Sisto in the Campo de’Fiori in Rome. I realized I had become
friends with many colorful Palestinians who’d given me insights into the dark
side of their society. Like the former Mister Palestine (he dead-lifts 900 pounds),
a one-time bodyguard to Yasser Arafat (skilled in torture), and a delightful
fellow who was a hitman for Arafat during the 1980s. To tell the true-life
stories I’d amassed over a decade, I decided to channel the reporting into a crime
series. After all, Palestine’s reality is no romance
novel.
THE
NOVELS: The first novel, The Collaborator of Bethlehem (UK title The Bethlehem
Murders), was published in February 2007 by Soho Press. In the UK it won the prestigious
Crime Writers Association John Creasey Dagger in 2008, and was nominated in the
US for the Barry First Novel
Award, the Macavity First Mystery Award, and the Quill Best Mystery Award. In France it’s been shortlisted for
the Prix des Lecteurs. New York Times reviewer Marilyn Stasio called it “an
astonishing first novel.” It was named one of the Top 10 Mysteries of the Year
by Booklist and, in the UK Sir David Hare made it his
Book of the Year in The Guardian.
Colin Dexter, author of the Inspector Morse novels,
called Omar Yussef “a splendid creation.” Omar was called “Philip Marlowe fed
on hummus” by one reviewer and “Yasser Arafat meets Miss Marple” by another.
The second book in the series, A Grave
in Gaza, appeared in February 2008 (and at the same time under the title The
Saladin Murders in the UK). The Bookseller calls it
“a cracking, atmospheric read.” I put in elements of the plot relating to
British military cemeteries in Gaza in homage to my two great
uncles, who rode through there with the Imperial Camel Corps in 1917. One of
them, Uncle Dai Beynon, was still around when I was a boy, and I was named
after him.
The third book in the series, The Samaritan’s
Secret, was published in February 2009. The New York Times said it was
“provocative” and it had great reviews in places I’d not have expected – The
Sowetan, the newspaper of that S. African township, for example.
AROUND
THE WORLD: My Omar Yussef Mystery series has been sold to leading publishers in
22 countries: the U.S., France, Italy, Britain, Poland, Spain, Germany,
Holland, Israel, Portugal, Brazil, Norway, Denmark, the Czech Republic, Romania,
Sweden, Iceland, Chile, Venezuela, Japan, Indonesia and Greece.
OMAR’S
NEXT TRAVELS: THE FOURTH ASSASSIN,
the fourth novel in my series, will be published in February 2010. In it, Omar
visits the famous Palestinian town of Brooklyn, New York (there really is a growing
community there in Bay Ridge), and finds a dead body in his son’s bed…