Saturday, January 19, 2013

Funny Ha Ha

I got pretty surprising news this week that my first Duffy novel, The Cold Cold Ground has been longlisted for The Last Laugh Award at CrimeFest. It was Colin Bateman who told me about this, who, of course has been longlisted himself. The Last Laugh Award is for the Best Humourous Crime Novel published in the British Isles in the last year. I don't know if you've read The Cold Cold Ground, but if you have you'll know that it isn't exactly a laugh riot, indeed its a pretty serious noir set against the background of the Hunger Strikes in 1981. However there are quite a few jokes in the novel and one of the things I did try to do with the book was capture Belfast's famous propensity for black humour. In Ireland's literary tradition moral seriousness has always been modulated by wit, black humour and irony - and I feel that in Ulster this has been taken to an even darker and more interesting degree by a population who frequently use humour as a coping mechanism. (Perhaps one of the reasons my books don't do particularly well in America is that their sarcasm and irony is accepted at face value?) Anyway much of The Cold Cold Ground was funny to me and I'm delighted that the judges of CrimeFest seem to have gotten the joke. 
Here's that longlist in full:


Colin Bateman  The Prisoner of Brenda
Agatha Raisin  Hiss and Hers
Simon Brett  Blotto, Twinks and the Bootleggers 
Hannah Dennison  A Vicky Hill Exclusive!
Ruth Dudley  Edwards Killing The Emperors
Hesh Kestin  The Iron Will of Shoeshine Cats 
Adrian McKinty  The Cold Cold Ground 
Catriona McPherson  Dandy Gilver and a Bothersome Number of Corpses
Eileen Robertson  Blackmail for Beginners
James Runcie  Sidney Chambers and the Shadow of Death
Anne Zouroudi  The Bull of Mithros


26 comments:

Paul D Brazill said...

Your response?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E84VqqCPI7w

adrian mckinty said...

Paul

Perfect.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Ha! Tell your humor-hating editors to stick it up their stolid, jokeless kazoos.

That's an interesting list. I don't think of Anne Zouroudi as a humor writer, either. And how could you neglect to mention that last year's winner was Declan Burke?

Dana King said...

Finally, my chance to be on the inside. The Beloved Spouse bought me a copy of THE COLD COLD GROUND for my birthday and I bumped it straight to the top of the queue.

Congratulations on the nomination.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

No, my present editors, Rebecca, at Serpents Tail and Dan at 7th St. are fine with my humour. But there was an editor at a different house who hated my "jokes" and cut every single one of them! Yikes.

And yes nice that you pointed it out that last year winner was Dec Burke for the amazing AZC.

3 micks up for this year's prize: me Bateman and RD Edwards. I havent read RDE's but I enjoyed the latest Bateman as usual.

adrian mckinty said...

Dana

Awesome.

Well, awesome if you like it.

Pretty shitty if you dont...

seana graham said...

The book certainly deserves to be on the list. But it could be misleading if people were under the impression that they were going to settle down and read a nice comic novel, a la Janet Evanovich.

My often cash strapped friend still manages to send one crime novel or mystery to his friend in Holland. He was very happy to show me that this year it was The Cold, Cold Ground. Talk about your honors...

Alan said...

Dear Adrian,Congratulations re: Last Laugh Award but the most precious comment is from your daughter.She sounds like a real charmer.Perhaps in America due to our very recent history as a nation with strivings towards a successful bourgeois lifestyle and desperately trying to not give offense to any ethnic or religious group,wit,irony and sarcasm are often lost.In our state we have license plates which add USA and packages misdirected because they were deemed foreign mail.Best Alan New Mexico USA

Deb Klemperer said...

Congratulations! What happens next (apart from chuckling, entertained readers)?

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

Exactly! Although Evanovich doesnt make me laugh....the opposite in fact.

adrian mckinty said...

Alan

There is definitely a different dialectic in the US where British Isles sarcasm is often not picked up. The Daily Show is supposed to be the prime example of ironic American humour but even that feels pretty broad to me.

The Onion is better at it.

adrian mckinty said...

Deb

What happens next is waiting a couple of months until I lose to a much more popular writer.

Peter Rozovsky said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Peter Rozovsky said...

The Daily Show, it seems to me, is more late-night talk show than anything else, with all that such an association implies. The Onion, on the other hand, is the one convincing rejoinder I can think of to the proposition that everything in our culture is worse than it one was.

seana graham said...

Theh Stefanie Plum novels remind me of Portlandia a bit, in that the whole idea and some of the premises are funnier than the actual execution.

I think sometimes people think John Stewart is more ironic than he is simply because he's smart. Colbert is actually a more ironic personality.

I don't find dry British and Irish humor incomprehensible. But sometimes the broader British humor that I've seen on sitcoms and such is not very funny to me at all. I think it's partly because we don't have the same stock characters and cultural references. Or maybe we do and I just don't find ours that funny either.

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Indeed. And very overpraised for what is essentially a man chatting to celebrities.

The Onion however is smart and dry and frequently tasteless, which is what you want in your satire.

adrian mckinty said...

Seana

You're not wrong, there are so many terrible Britcoms. The vast majority in fact are unwatchably unfunny. I think Americans wouldnt think Brits were so smart if they moved to London and watched British TV for a month.

Peter Rozovsky said...

Well, I think he's better than Bill Maher. But the Onion, I think, is up there with the best humor this country has produced. (The U.S., I mean. I'm not sure what country you're in now.) The Onion is the Man Without Qualities of 21st-century ephemeral American satire.

Matt said...

On a side note, Adrian, any thoughts on this?

http://viewtv.co.uk/belfast/

adrian mckinty said...

Peter

Transitioning back to Oz.

adrian mckinty said...

Matt

I think its a step in the right direction as are integrated schools (which still only represent 5% of N. Ireland's school population!)

Cinabear Cinnamon said...

Congrats!!! Sometimes the humor isn't understood. I've had to have my English friend explain a lot to me about the comedy.

auto extreme inc said...

wow! congratulations. where is this book available?

Kate said...

Just finished this book. Loved it! Laughed out loud in some places. I'm recommending it to all my friends. Can't wait for the next Sean Duffy book.
Kathryn in California.

adrian mckinty said...

Kathryn

Thank you, I appreciate the kind words...

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