12 September, 2013


Anthony Horowitz (right) is a man on the go - not just because the author has a new series of his ITV drama Foyle's War on the horizon, or is in the midst of his second Sherlock Holmes novel, but Horowitz is sprinting around his London home as we chat on the phone.


The creator of the Alex Rider book series speaks excitedly about his latest novel as he gets ready to meet his agent, fearing he might be late. Even a superstar writer who has sat betwixt Peter Jackson and Steven Spielberg to discuss his screenplay for the next Tintin Hollywood sequel, is fastidious about being politely punctual.


Fresh from a summer spent writing in Crete, complete with inspirational sea view, Horowitz has stepped away from penning the follow-up to The House of Silk to return to London for the promotion of his 14th children's novel: Russian Roulette, the latest of his internationally successful Alex Rider series.


The child spy has been entertaining children and young adults for the last 12 years, leading to a film adaptation of the first book, Operation Stormbreaker, starring Alex Pettyfer and Homeland's Damien Lewis as Russian Roulette's deadly assassin Yassen.


But the Alex Rider readers from the early naughties have become adults in their twenties - it's time for the series to grow up.


alex rider stormbreaker


Alex Pettyfer in Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker, 2006

Having previously declared to step away from the Alex Rider series, Russian Roulette takes a different tact to the previous ten books. We find out the background story of Yassen, Rider's nemesis, discovering what caused a child to grow up into a deadly assassin. This time, the baddy is our protagonist.


Is Horowitz carving out a new path, deviating from the traditional spy thriller form?


"This is the most psychological book I've written," Horowitz admits, "No one, to my knowledge, has written a children's book with a real villain.


"I wondered if it was possible to explore what turns a person into a cold-blooded killer with no real redeeming features. Can I make Yassen sympathetic? Will we want to read about him?"


What turns a child into a hero, saving the day like Alex Rider, or into a wrong 'un, like the ruthless nemesis Yassen? Is it nature or nurture? "If you're going to write children's books, you have to start with the believe that all kids have the potential to be good and that all young people are effectively good. It's interesting to look at what happens to make it go wrong."


But Alex Rider fans shouldn't be disappointed with excess psycho-analysis: "My readers don't want 400 pages about the debate of 'nature or nurture', they want an adventure."


Will those readers who discovered the boy-spy in 2001 stick with Alex Rider as they drift into their late 20s and beyond? Citing Ian Fleming's thrillers as his childhood favourites, Horowitz might be allowing Rider to grow up into a man-spy; 'Bond, The Next Generation'. "It's something I've considered doing," muses Horowitz, "but I'm very busy at the moment…"


A new Sherlock Holmes novel is sitting on Horowitz's literary plate right now, following The House of Silk in 2012, written with full backing from the Conan Doyle estate. But what would a Sherlock Holmes adventure be like without, well, Sherlock?


"Sherlock Holmes doesn't appear [in my new book]. I have a reservation about reinventing other people's work. Although I loved writing The House of Silk, I decided not to do a classic Sherlock Holmes and Watson investigation this time.


"Although the book is still heavily based on Conan Doyle's inspiration and very much in his world, I'm trying to do something a little bit different this time."


Sherlock is currently hot property, with alternative takes on the detective in the UK and across the pond; Benedict Cumberbatch's wraith-like performances in the BBC series and the Doyle-inspired CBS show Elementary featuring Lucy Lui as sidekick Watson. Reinvention through experimentation seems to be the way forward.


Sherlock is not Horowitz's first venture into developing the characters of murder mystery greats, having written screenplays for several episodes of the Poirot ITV series. The Belgium detective has recently hit the headlines, with news that crime writer Sophie Hannah has been commissioned to write the first Poirot story in nearly 40 years.


"Agatha Christie is such a brilliant constructor of murder mysteries and yet at the same time her writing is so particular to her self, getting it right is tricky. Writing the new Poirot will be a difficult job. Sophie is a very good writer, I'm sure she'll do an excellent job."


With fresh breath being breathed into Poirot and Sherlock Holmes, along with Britain's insatiable craving for Nordic Noir, such as Wallander, The Killing, Borgen and The Bridge it seems our appetite for murder most foul is as sharp as ever.


"Murder mystery is one of the very few genres where the audience and the central character are working side by side; a detective solving a murder, finding clues - doing exactly the same as the audience. A woman is dead - who hated her? Who loved her? How rich or poor was she? Why is she lying there in that pool of blood?


"I think that's part of the attraction; being so proactive."


Speaking of murder, Horowitz is responsible for the demise of dozens of deaths in the gentile world of Midsomer Murders, having adapted Caroline Graham's books for the screen when it launched in 1997.


In a reverse of the exportation of Nordic Noir, the show is heading to Denmark to film its 100th episode this year, but is there enough life (or death) in Midsomer to continue its marathon run? "There seems to be a huge fondness for Midsomer Murders around the world, so I don't see why not," says Horowitz, "as long as there's someone left in the village to be killed, I suppose they can keep going."


Lets hope the Danes can provide fresh victims and cunning killers for an audience hungry for death and justice.


Russian Roulette by Anthony Horowitz is published by Walker Books on September 12th in hardcover, e-book and audio formats. Watch the book trailer below:


Book trailer for Russian Roulette




  • Vita Sackville-West's Writing Tower


    This writing room is located in the Elizabethan Tower at Sissinghurst Castle in Kent. It's surrounded by the world-famous, romantic garden and was where Vita Sackville-West (close friend of Virginia Woolf) did most of her writing.


    IMAGE: National Trust John Hammond




  • George Bernard Shaw's 'London' Hut


    Hidden at the bottom of Irish playwright Shaw's garden was a rotating hut, which he built himself and wrote in. The story goes he called it 'London', so that if somebody called for him, they could be told he was in London and it would be true!

    The hut was built to rotate so Shaw could move it from inside to be in the sunshine constantly while he worked. Sounds pretty good to us. Here he is pictured sitting in it in 1944.

    IMAGE: PA




  • George Bernard Shaw's Rotating Writing Hut


    Here is another view of the Rotating Writing Shed in the garden at Shaw's Corner.

    IMAGE: National Trust, Matthew Antrobus




  • Dylan Thomas's Boat House


    Dylan Thomas worked in a wooden hut or boat house in the remote Welsh town of Laugharne.

    IMAGE: David Jones/PA




  • Dylan Thomas's Boat House


    Here is the inside of the poet's hut.

    IMAGE: Flickr.com/steeljam




  • Mark Twain


    Here is Mark Twain's cabin, looking a little more wonky than in the days when he wrote <em>Jumping Frog of Calaveras County</em>.

    It wasn't the only space used by Twain, and indeed is the least impressive in comparison to his grand 19-roomed Victorian home, now a museum, and an octagonal gazebo which he used in the summer.

    IMAGE: <a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AMark+Twain+Cabin+Exterior+MVC-082X.jpg">Mark Twain Cabin Exterior MVC-082X.jpg</a> by Will Murray (&quot;<a href="http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Willscrlt">Willscrlt</a>&quot;) at <a href="http://willmurray.name/">http://willmurray.name/</a>




  • Ted Hughes' Pennines Retreat


    Ted Hughes didn't move far away from his northern upbringing to this idyllic house in the middle of the Pennines, known as Lumb Bank. He bought the house, near Hebden Bridge, in 1970 - the same year that <em>Crow</em> was published. It is now a foundation for writing.

    IMAGE: <a href="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c1/Lumb_Bank_-_The_Ted_Hughes_Arvon_Centre_-_geograph.org.uk_-_970898.jpg" target="_hplink">Wikimedia</a>




  • Keats' Heath-side Home


    This grand house, Wentworth Place, was new when Keats moved into it. Owned by his friend Charles Armitage Brown, the poet experienced a dark time here, but one productive for poetry, as he wrote Ode to Psyche here as well as, according to Brown, Ode to a Nightingale, inspired by a bird sitting in the house's garden.

    IMAGE: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Keats_House.jpg" target="_hplink">Wikipedia</a>




  • Beatrix Potter's Hilltop Home


    It's hardly surprising Potter wrote such scenic children's tales situated in an idyll like this. Based up in Cumbria, Potter bought Hilltop Home with the royalties from her first books, inspired by the holidays she spent in the Lake District. Here characters like Tom Kitten, Samuel Whiskers and Jemima Puddleduck were all created.

    IMAGE: NTPL, Stephen Robson




  • Beatrix Potter's Hilltop Home


    Another view of Potter's Cumbrian home.

    IMAGE: NTPL, Stephen Robson




  • Henry David Thoreau's Woodland Hut


    This hut at Walden Pond, Massachusetts, was not so much a refuge for Henry David Thoreau as an inspiration. Thoreau built the hut himself before living in it for two years in order to think about, and write, his philosophical book, <em>Walden</em>.

    IMAGE: Flickr.com/jthetzel




  • Jim Harrison's Motel


    Not exactly a private hideaway, nor a glamourous one, but for American author Jim Harrison writing in a motel room struck a chord. As he told writer Nancy Bunge, "For years, I couldn't write anywhere except at my cabin and my house and then my office in the granary, but two years ago I got liberated and wrote a novella in a motel in Montana. I felt splendid because then I wasn't locked into those places."

    IMAGE: Flickr/ J. Stephen Conn




  • Roald Dahl's Gypsy House


    One of the most famous of writing huts, Roald Dahl worked in his elaborate garden shed daily for 30 years. Here it is pictured with the theatre stars of the Matilda!, the musical production of his children's book.

    IMAGE: Dominic Lipinski/PA Archive/Press Association Images




  • Charles Darwin's Down House


    In this cosy room in Down House, in South East England, Charles Darwin wrote <em>The Origin of Species</em>.

    IMAGE: © English Heritage




  • Virginia Woolf's Writing Hut


    This little hut (known as the Lodge Writing Shed) in the garden of Monk's House, Sussex, was where modernist author Virginia Woolf penned her novels. The house itself was a key location for the Bloomsbury Group and its famous faces, T.S Eliot, and E.M Forster.

    IMAGE: National Trust Eric Crichton




  • J.K Rowling's Cosy Cafe


    The Harry Potter famously penned the start of the series in this Edinburgh cafe, called The Elephant House. Sitting in the back room of the cafe and looking over the city's castle clearly proved inspirational for Rowling.

    IMAGE: <a href="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5a/The_elephant_house.jpg" target="_hplink">Wikimedia</a>




  • Robert Stephen Hawker's Hut


    Arguably the huttiest of huts, and the National Trust's smallest property, this shack housed poet Robert Stephen Hawker and his opium habit in the 19th century.

    The hut was built by Hawker into the Cornish hillside from timber and driftwood from shipwrecks, allowing him to be inspired by the spectacular view across the Atlantic Ocean, and definitely not at all by the opium...

    IMAGE: <a href="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0f/Hawker's_Hut%2C_Vicarage_Cliff%2C_Morwenstow_-_geograph.org.uk_-_1369016.jpg" target="_hplink">Wikimedia</a>




  • George Orwell's Island Retreat


    Orwell lived in this remote house on the tiny Scottish isle of Jura when writing <em>Nineteen-Eighty-Four</em>.

    IMAGE: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Barnhill.jpg" target="_hplink">Wikipedia</a>






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