Sunday, July 10, 2022

SUSIE STEINER: R.I.P.

British Crime Writer Susie Steiner: R.I.P. 


From the NYT: 

Susie Steiner, the author of the critically acclaimed Manon Bradshaw detective novels, who was declared legally blind from a rare disease months before she sold her first book, died on July 2 in London. She was 51.

Her death, in a hospital, was caused by sepsis and a brain tumor, her husband, Tom Happold, said.

While Ms. Steiner’s run as a detective writer lasted only four years and three books, starting with Missing, Presumed in 2016, her impact was substantial, Sarah Ballard, her London-based agent, said. The book became a best seller in her native Britain and sold some 700,000 copies worldwide.

“Susie had an incredible instinct for people, both on the page and in person,” Ms. Ballard wrote in an email. “I’ve lost track of the number of jackets designed to look like hers, and the number of publishers, scouts and film companies who’ve used her name to describe a genre of writing they want: They mean literary crime, with a compelling plot, an elegance and wit in the writing, combined with a depth of perception about human nature which leaves you feeling deeply satisfied.”

Missing, Presumed was the first of three novels centered on Manon Bradshaw, a police detective in Cambridge “whose personal life was almost as much of a mess as the cases she was investigating, but who you couldn’t help rooting for and falling in love with,” Andrea Walker, who published the book in the United States for Random House, wrote in an email.

The New York Times Book Review listed the novel, which told the story of Manon’s search for a missing Cambridge postgraduate student, as an Editors’ Choice book. The Wall Street Journal anointed it one of the best mysteries of 2016.

Reviewing the book in The Times, Alida Becker praised Ms. Steiner’s nuanced portrayal of her lead character: “Manon is portrayed with an irresistible blend of sympathy and snark. By the time she hits bottom, professionally and privately, we’re entirely caught up in her story.”

When one online reviewer dismissed the book as a cross between Bridget Jones and Agatha Christie, Ms. Steiner took it as a compliment.“What if she has gone to a publisher with that as a pitch?” Mr. Happold asked. “How could it not have succeeded?

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I just read her last book. Loved all three of them. What a loss for her family and her fans.

Betty T said...

This is so sad! I loved her books and have been eagerly awaiting the continuation of the story. She really made you care about her characters because she truly brought them to life.

Anonymous said...

Very sad to hear such a talented writer is gone.