Roy Grace novels to be a specialist subject on TV quiz Mastermind

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Ken Owen, a huge Peter James fan, will be appearing on the popular TV programme, Mastermind, and he has chosen the Roy Grace novels as his specialist subject. The programme will be broadcast in the UK on March 23, 2012.
 
The series began with DEAD SIMPLE, and has been hugely successful.  DEAD MAN'S GRIP, the 7th was a no 1 bestseller last year and Peter is now writing the eighth in the series, NOT DEAD YET which will be published by Macmillan in June 2012.  The series is published in 35 languages.

Praise for Peter James:

'Peter James is one of the best British crime writers, and therefore one of the best in the world.' -- Lee Child

'Roy Grace ... is fast becoming one of the more memorable coppers in modern crime fiction ... A first class police procedural.'  -- The Times

'Peter James is one of those writers whose work has found such a passionate multitude of readers that these days his books are repeatedly at the top of the bestseller lists. It's a tribute that is well deserved because not only are his novels meticulously plotted, they are also very well written ... James is a serious crime writer and the work he puts into researching his stories always pays dividends for his readers ... Good quality writing, a plausible narrative and no punches pulled has placed this author near the top of the current generation of crime authors.' -- The Daily Express

DIVIDED LIVES: DREAMS OF A MOTHER AND DAUGHTER - new memoir from Lyndall Gordon to Virago

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Lyndall Gordon, the renowned and award-winning biographer of Emily Dickinson, T.S. Eliot, Charlotte Bronte and Mary Wollstonecraft among others, now turns to her own story with Divided Lives: Dreams of a Mother and Daughter. Lyndall Gordon grew up in South Africa and left her mother and her home to live in America and Britain. Yet the pull of their earlier intense years constantly drew her back.

Says Lyndall Gordon: 'A daughter, in childhood, is called on to be a secret sharer of her mother's illness and creativity. Here are kin who are alike as dreamers, whose dreams will take them different ways: the mother as visionary, the daughter exploring the question of how to be a woman. Though their lives divide, kinship endures.'

Lennie Goodings says 'It's a moving and  universal story, a wonderfully layered memoir about the expectations of love and duty between mother and daughter.' Virago will publish in 2014 and before that will reissue Lyndall's biographies of T.S. Eliot (AN IMPERFECT LIFE) and Henry James (A PRIVATE LIFE OF HENRY JAMES: TWO WOMEN AND HIS ART). Lyndall Gordon's new memoir follows her earlier memoir SHARED LIVES, about a circle of South African women friends.

See more in The Bookseller.

Praise for Lyndall Gordon:

'Literary bloodhound and superbly eloquent chronicler.' -- Booklist

'Gordon, a...superb literary biographer who has previously turned her level yet lyrical gaze to Virginia Woolf, Charlotte Brontë, Mary Wollstonecraft and others.' -- Seattle Times

'Lyndall Gordon is a rare phenomenon: a biographer whose preoccupations and authorial career reveal a flowering towards imaginative truth.' -- Candia McWilliam, Herald

'Gordon is one of the best biographers writing today.' -- Catherine Hollis, Sacramento Book Review

'A gifted storyteller.' -- Carmela Ciuraru, Miami Herald

'Lyndall Gordon is known for the thoroughness of her research and meticulous attention to detail … a fine researcher's eye … an exceptional and unusual mind.' -- Janet van Eeden, The Witness

Carol Lefevre on Barbara Hanrahan Fellowship shortlist for Adelaide Festival Literary Awards

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Carol Lefevre, author of IF YOU WERE MINE and NIGHTS IN THE ASYLUM, has had her unpublished novel A MAZE IN THE GARDEN shortlisted for the Barbara Hanrahan Fellowship at the Adelaide Festival Literary Awards 2012.

The winners will be announced Saturday 3 March, by South Australian Premier, the Hon Jay Weatherill, in a presentation at the Pioneer Women's Memorial Garden in Adelaide during Adelaide Writers' Week which is held as part of the Adelaide Festival.

Winning authors will also be invited to give a public reading during a Writers' Week session on Sunday 4 March at 5:30pm.

Introduced by the Government in 1986, the awards are managed by Arts SA, and offer a total $135,000 in prize money, shared between 10 awards, including six national awards, and two awards and two fellowships specifically for South Australian writers.

For full list of all shortlisted titles in each category, click here.

IF YOU WERE MINE and NIGHTS IN THE ASYLUM are published in Australia by Random House Century and NIGHTS IN THE ASYLUM is published by Picador in the UK.

Praise for IF YOU WERE MINE:
'Haunting and beautifully written; themes of love and loss are vividly explored.' -- Jane Rogers, author of MR WROE'S VIRGINS and THE VOYAGE HOME

'Lefevre is a great stylist and her landscapes are imposing…Lefevre's technique in IF YOU WERE MINE is fluid, the imagery is fine and well balanced (night skies described as the "felt lining of a mandolin case, scattered with silver coins", for example)…The empathetic dualities operating in the novel, the juxtaposition of maternal instincts with desire for the mother, propel this tale of loss and longing…Lefevre measures lyricism with poignancy and IF YOU WERE MINE is a tender, resonant achievement.' -- Rebecca Starford, Australian Book Review

'Lefevre…paints the area in vivid elegiac prose, and gives us wonderful word pictures of Semaphore and the burgeoning valley. The passages that stop the heart, however, are the frozen moments of tragedy, poignant in their restraint, their silent, visual power.'    -- Katherine England, Adelaide Advertiser

Praise for NIGHTS IN THE ASYLUM:
'A very atmospheric novel, deftly exploring relationships within families and beyond them, touching on aspects of race and discrimination as they have played out in small-town Australia.' -- www.bookbag.co.uk

'Haunting tale' -- Dorset Echo

'Emotionally intense novel of broken hearts and lives gone astray' -- The Guardian

3 Book UK Deal for Kishwar Desai

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Simon & Schuster is to publish two new novels by Kishwar Desai, along with a re-release of her 2010 Costa Award-winning début Witness the Night.

Simon & Schuster's newly appointed senior commissioning editor for fiction Clare Hey bought the rights following the demise of Beautiful Books and will republish in June.

Desai's second novel ORIGINS OF LOVE, also due to be published in June, will be a simultaneous publication with the S&S India office in Delhi and the Australia office in Sydney.

Hey said she was excited about the "global opportunities" that Desai-who divides her time between the UK and India-offers. "Kishwar's first novel was a real sensation, both here in the UK and in India, and I am delighted to be taking her career to the next level with S&S and our sister offices overseas," she said.

Praise for WITNESS THE NIGHT:

'No 'next-best-thing' novel has been as literary, bold and compelling as WITNESS THE NIGHT... it is a taught, gripping and complex thriller with two enigmatic heroines at its core...if you liked Stieg Larsson's 'Girl With The Dragon Tattoo', this is the book for your summer/autumn 2011. I dare you - woman, man, neither or both - not to love WITNESS THE NIGHT.' -- Abigail Tarttelin, Huffington Post

'It is a talent for an author to be able to fictionalise a social issue; intertwined with fact whilst all the time rendering the reader captivated and moved; Desai does just this - splendidly.' -- Sima Barmania, The Independent

'A gripping read' -- The Indiaphile

'The novel that gets to the heart of tradition-bound India' -- The Pioneer

'It is with no surprise that we heard about Kishwar Desai winning the Costa First Novel Award 2010 earlier this week. Her novel, WITNESS THE NIGHT is a poignant and harrowing story set in a small town in India…' -- DSC South Asian Literary Festival

'Powerful' -- Hazel Larkin, Women's View on News

'Terrific' -- Toby Clements, The Telegraph

 'A powerfully-felt, shocking and moving indictment of cruelty and oppression' -- Maggie Gee, author of THE WHITE FAMILY

'...this sad and thought-provoking tale is certainly worth the read.' -- Laura Wilson, The Guardian

'Very important themes [and a] very appealing central character.' -- Jane Garvey, BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour

'Essential reading.' -- Nihal, BBC Asian Network

'Kishwar Desai pulls off a remarkable trick, transplanting a country house murder to modern day India in a book that's not afraid to tackle serious themes.' -- 2010 Costa First Novel Award

Joseph O’Connor’s stage version of MY COUSIN RACHEL to be performed at the Gate Theatre, Dublin

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Joseph O'Connor's theatrical adaptation of Daphne Du Maurier's gothic tale will hit the stage on 12th April at Dublin's prestigious Gate Theatre and should run for eight weeks.

MY COUSIN RACHEL, a story of secrets, deceptions and petty jealousies, enthralled readers on its publication in 1951 and went on to become an international bestseller. It has previously been filmed, with Richard Burton starring in one of his earliest performances. Joe's new theatrical version promises to hold audiences in an unforgettable atmosphere of foreboding, suspicion and mistrust.

The production will be directed by Toby Frow, whose previous work for the stage includes versions of Christopher Marlowe's Dr. Faustus and Edward II for the Manchester Royal Exchange and Tom Stoppard's The Real Thing for Salisbury Playhouse.

Joe is also currently scripting a film drama about Bram Stoker and his relationship with the actor Sir Henry Irving - one of the main prototypes for the character of Dracula - for the BBC.