Monday, March 19, 2012

Scene of the Crime with Author Simon Levack!


Perhaps if a few more readers were interested in history, this week's featured author would see a well-deserved jump in his book sales. Simon Levack may have trained as a solicitor (that's "lawyer" to us Americans), but he's written an excellent historical mystery series set in sixteenth-century Mexico when Montezuma is the ruler of the Aztec Empire... and the conquistadors have landed on the coast. This is the perfect setting for the wily slave, Yaotl, to teach us about the world in which he lives while he's solving his latest crime. Levack's books are a skillful blend of setting, culture, characterization, humor and complex plotting-- and I recommend them highly!

Simon Levack
Here are some links so you can learn more about the author and his books:


I really hope that you take the time to visit Simon's website. I enjoyed reading about what inspired him to write his books, what it's like writing about the Aztecs, and how to pronounce Aztec names. He does an incredible job in bringing the Aztecs and their culture to life!

Time for the interview!




What was the very first book you remember reading and loving? What makes that book so special?

Biggles Flies North by Captain W.E. Johns. I was given it as a Christmas present at the age of, I should think, around seven. It would seem terribly dated now but I loved the bleak setting and the straight-from-the-shoulder heroics. It gave me a taste for adventure stories set in exotic and unfamiliar environments which I've never really lost although these days I like a bit more moral ambiguity about my characters.


Outside of your writing and all associated commitments, what do you like to do in your free time?

I play the piano rather badly. I only took it up seriously three or four years ago and it has been a steep learning curve, but I love music and it relaxes me and gives me a sense of achievement at the same time.


If I were to visit your hometown, where would you recommend that I go? (I like seeing and doing things that aren't in all the guide books.)

Sittingbourne in the 1930s
There's nothing much to recommend about my hometown, which is a nondescript place called Sittingbourne. Chaucer's pilgrims may have passed through here but that was a very long time ago! I'd recommend you skip the town itself and tour the villages and countryside around it.



You have total control over casting a movie based on your life. Which actor would you cast as you?

Gary Oldman
After seeing his performance in the movie of "Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy", Gary Oldman.




Who is your favorite recurring character in crime fiction?

Philip Marlowe. Not for the wisecracks so much as for his ability to see the world as it really is.



Name one book that you've read that you wish you had written. What is it about that book that made it come to mind?

It probably wouldn't be a detective story. The book that comes to mind right now is Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve - or any of the other Hungry Cities books. I wish I had half his ability to make an imagined world believable, and the moral courage to put his characters through the ringer the way he does.


How did you celebrate when you first heard you were to be published? What did you do the first time you saw one of your books on a shelf in a bookstore?

I took my wife out to dinner, twice. Oddly I can't remember the first time I saw one of my books in a bookstore but I probably offered to sign it.



I don't know if you've seen it, but I love Parnell Hall's video about book signings. What is the most unusual experience you've had at a book signing or author event?

The oddest experience I've had at an author event, and certainly the most uncomfortable, was finding myself on a panel moderated by someone who clearly didn't like my books and took great care to make sure everyone in the audience knew it. I'm afraid it rather put me off doing that sort of event again.


What's the best thing about eBooks? What's the worst?

The best thing is their portability. I can carry a thousand or more books around on my Kindle and slip it in my coat pocket. The worst thing is that many ebooks are appallingly badly formatted, but that will change as ebooks take over from print as the predominant medium - as I don't doubt they will.


Available Now!
Thank you for letting us get to know you a bit better, Simon. May your book sales do nothing but increase!

I hope everyone stops by tomorrow to read my review of the third book in Simon Levack's Aztec Mysteries series, City of Spies!

2 comments:

  1. Oh, thanks for this post! I read Levack's Demon of the Air a few years ago and loved it. I definitely hadn't seen any Aztec mystery fiction before coming across it!

    Stephanie @ RIASS

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I haven't seen any before or since, and he does a wonderful job with the period!

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