Later Bloomer

Sam Spade and Richard III Walk into a Pub…

I interview Jeri Westerson at Write It Sideways about teleporting detective fiction to the mean streets of medieval London. It took Jeri fourteen years to get published, so she's an inspiring late bloomer, too.
sam-spade-crispin-guest

Last week (in case you missed it), archaeologists confirmed that a skeleton found under a Leicester parking lot belongs to King Richard III, killed in battle in 1485.

In an egregious case of victors writing history, both William Shakespeare and the not-so-saintly Thomas More have portrayed Richard as an evil, hunchbacked usurper and child killer.

Skeletal analysis now proves that Richard had scoliosis, but no hunch on his back. Facial reconstruction shows a young, handsome man.

And we can thank Richard for some famous legal reforms—including the bail system and, ironically, the presumption of innocence before guilt.

Contradictions like these keep me intrigued with England’s tumultuous middle ages. I’m a closet reader of medieval mysteries, so I was ecstatic to discover the Crispin Guest medieval noir series written by Jeri Westerson.

What, exactly, is medieval noir? It’s a subgenre Jeri invented that plays on the “hardboiled” novels of authors like Raymond Chandler and Dashiell Hammett (whose world-weary, tough-talking detective is named Sam Spade).

Blood Lance by Jeri Westerson
Blood Lance by Jeri Westerson

Unlike that other medieval detective, Brother Cadfael, Crispin Guest is a deeply flawed secular hero who doesn’t mind getting his hands dirty. (He actually lives during the reign of King Richard II, who had his own problems.)

Today I interview Jeri at Write It Sideways about teleporting detective noir to the mean streets of medieval London. It took Jeri fourteen years to get published, so she’s an inspiring late bloomer, too!

Please check out the interview with Jeri Westerson here.

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