Chris Simms (author)
Encyclopedia
According to the Good Book Guide, Chris Simms "has never shown any reluctance to chill the blood of the reader." Born in 1969, Horsham
Horsham
Horsham is a market town with a population of 55,657 on the upper reaches of the River Arun in the centre of the Weald, West Sussex, in the historic County of Sussex, England. The town is south south-west of London, north-west of Brighton and north-east of the county town of Chichester...

, West Sussex. Chris graduated from Newcastle University then travelled round the world before moving to Manchester in 1994. Since then he’s worked as a freelance copywriter for advertising agencies throughout the city. The idea for his first novel, Outside the White Lines (2003) came to him one night when broken down on the hard shoulder of a motorway. Staccato chapters alternate between viewpoints of The Searcher, The Hunter and The Killer - each character roaming the roads of Britain in pursuit of his own obsessive agenda. (Jessica Mann
Jessica Mann
Jessica Mann is a British writer. As a novelist she specialises in the mystery and suspense genres, having published 20 crime novels since 1971.She has also written several non-fiction books, including Out Of Harm's Way, the story of the overseas evacuation of children during WW2.Mann was educated...

 in the Literary Review
Literary Review
Literary Review is a British literary magazine founded in 1979 by Anne Smith, then head of the Department of English at Edinburgh University. Its offices are currently on Lexington Street in Soho, London, and it has a circulation of 44,750. Britain's principal literary monthly, the magazine was...

said Simms was one to watch after this debut novel
Debut novel
A debut novel is the first novel an author publishes. Debut novels are the author's first opportunity to make an impact on the publishing industry, and thus the success or failure of a debut novel can affect the ability of the author to publish in the future...

.)
Simms followed this up with another stand alone, Pecking Order (2004). Largely set on a Cheshire battery farm, the plot follows the naïve but cruel Rubble who is duped into believing that he’s been enrolled as an agent on a sinister government project. Partly inspired by the 1960s experiments of Stanley Milgram
Stanley Milgram
Stanley Milgram was an American social psychologist most notable for his controversial study known as the Milgram Experiment. The study was conducted in the 1960s during Milgram's professorship at Yale...

 into man’s obedience to authority, the novel also touches on such diverse issues as euthanasia and the ethics of factory farming. It does so with ‘intelligence and subtlety’ according to The Bookseller and was selected as a ‘Best British Crime Novel’ for 2004 by Deadly Pleasures magazine. Simms then moved to the Orion Publishing Group

Killing the Beasts (2005) commences his series of thrillers set very firmly in Manchester. Lead character is Jon Spicer, a Detective Inspector in Greater Manchester Police’s Major Incident Team. Descended from the Irish immigrants who helped build the world’s first industrial city, DI Spicer never shies away from Manchester’s violent and lawless corners during his investigations.

Killing the Beasts is set during 2002 with the city’s hosting of that year’s Commonwealth Games providing a backdrop to the action. The plot revolves around a killer who sedates his victims before suffocating them by blocking their airways with a mysterious gel. The novel was chosen by Shots Magazine as a ‘Best Crime Book’ for 2005. Its sequel, Shifting Skin (2006), sees DI Spicer tracking ‘The Butcher of Belle Vue’, a murderer who uses surgical skills to remove large swathes of his victims’ flesh. The investigation ultimately leads Jon into the city’s shady escort scene and the unscrupulous end of the cosmetic surgery industry. Shifting Skin was nominated for the Theakston’s Crime Novel of the Year.

Third in the series is Savage Moon (2007). Containing multiple references to the horror classic, ‘An American Werewolf in London’, the novel is concerned with a brutal killing that takes place on the notorious Saddleworth Moor
Saddleworth Moor
Saddleworth Moor is an area of the South Pennines in northern England. It is a sparsely populated moorland and millstone grit divided between the metropolitan boroughs of Oldham and Kirklees, in Greater Manchester and West Yorkshire respectively....

, to the edge of the city. At first it’s assumed a mysterious black cat that’s been spotted prowling the wild terrain is responsible. But then more bodies start to appear, each one a little closer to the centre of the city itself. It was described by The Guardian. as ‘an atmospheric, psychologically astute and emotionally literate study of the nature of predator and prey’ and was shortlisted for the Theakston’s Crime Novel of the Year.

Next in the series is Hell’s Fire (2008), a thriller that looks at the role of religion in modern-day society. In it, Jon is charged with unravelling who is behind a spate of arson attacks on churches around Manchester. A city landmark that plays a part in the novel is the recently-renovated Gorton Monastery.
"...a persuasive, original plot...
Most recent release is The Edge (2009). According to The Bookseller it is ‘reputed to be his most powerful and personal novel yet’. The story follows Jon on a lonely quest to discover who murdered his younger brother and then dumped the dismembered body on top of a hill in the nearby Peak District National Park.

Manchester Confidential has described Chris’ writing as ‘thoughtful and exciting crime fiction at its best’. In May 2007, he was selected as a ‘Waterstone’s Author for the Future’, one of twenty five writers tipped by publishers, editors and agents, ‘to produce the most impressive body of work over the next quarter century’.
His web site can be found at www.chrissimms.info

Books

  • Outside the White Lines
  • Pecking Order
  • Killing the Beasts
  • Shifting Skin
  • Savage Moon
  • Hell’s Fire
  • The Edge
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK