Charlotte 101.3 - Greenville 97.3 - Boone 92.9 - WSIF Wilkesboro 90.9
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Mark Billingham Is A Fan Of The Dark Side Of London

LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST:

Three weeks from today, the 2012 London Summer Olympics begin. London will show off its cathedrals and castles, it's parliament and palaces, all that is splendid in one of the world's greatest cities. There is a seedy side of London, however, one that Olympic organizers presumably will not present. That is where we'll be going today with this encore presentation from our Crime in the City series.

Mystery writer Mark Billingham took reporter Vicki Barker to some of the places that inspired his dark twisted thrillers.

(SOUNDBITE OF SIREN)

VICKI BARKER, BYLINE: A murderer stalks the homeless through a London night that, in author Mark Billingham's words, stinks of desperation.

MARK BILLINGHAM: (Reading) He turned from Dean Street onto Old Compton Street, heading towards Piccadilly, past the cruisers and the coked-up media wankers, past a wild-haired wino breathing heavily and scowling at the world from the doorway of a fetish wear boutique. As he walked, he realized where that dull ache came from. It was the effort of staying self-contained that drains you, of keeping yourself impervious to the offers and the pleas, to the promises of pleasure of one sort or another.

BARKER: Mark Billingham, reading from his 2006 novel "Lifeless."

BILLINGHAM: Now, this is Leicester Square. Looks lovely now, doesn't it?

BARKER: On a bright weekday lunchtime, Billingham, a stand-up comic, children's writer and crime novelist, retraces a murderer's steps and describes his own restless quest for settings.

BILLINGHAM: You write a better scene if you've gone down to the place where it's set. I had to do some stuff right on the banks of the Thames, and I looked on my left and there's a huge blown-up dead dog, you know, stuck in the sludge. It's blown up like a kind of a (unintelligible), kind of snarling. And I look to my right and there's a beautiful heron perched on it. And I kind of think, you know what, I could have sat in my office for two or three hours and I'd never have made that stuff up.

BARKER: The result, novels in which beauty and horror, tragedy and black comedy, interlock. Characters drawn from society's margins collide with the law or with each other, in settings which, though familiar to most Londoners, have been rendered sinister or disturbing.

BILLINGHAM: It's fun to write about what's hidden, because it has this kind facade. It's touristy and wonderful and look, we've got the royal family and Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament, Tower of London, you know, but you don't have to look very far to find not only a fantastically dark present, but a bit of really evocative dark history.

BARKER: In one novel, "In the Dark," present and past collide when a gang of young black drug dealers falls foul of an old style East End gangster.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: This week's Big Issue please, issue please?

BARKER: In Billingham's book, "Lifeless" street people like this man selling the homeless magazine, The Big Issue are not backdrop color, but central players in a parallel society to ours, one Billingham discovered while researching the book.

BILLINGHAM: There's a homeless opera company, there are homeless football leagues, there's a homeless theater company. There's a whole world, a whole community which I kind of discovered, with its own hierarchy. The drinkers don't hang out with the drug addicts. The drug addicts are suspicious of the people with mental illness. They're all suspicious of the immigrants. There's a real kind of society going on just beneath the surface.

BARKER: As the tourists mill around Leicester Square, buying half-priced theater tickets and bumping into nothing more sinister than each other, Billingham watches from his own darker vantage point, drawn from his years playing the local comedy clubs.

BILLINGHAM: You come into Leicester Square at three or four o'clock in the morning, and it's like the seventh circle of hell. You're like, just don't look anybody in the eye, don't look anybody in the eye, if you're looking up. It's how I kind of always imagine New York used to be. I was never a fan of cozy mysteries of anything set in the countryside, you know.

Do you know what? I just don't care. I'm a city boy. I grew up in a big city, in Birmingham, and I want to write about a city. It's much richer tapestry for me than green fields. Fields and wild life make me feel ill. I don't like - I don't want to write about that stuff.

BARKER: Billingham has a lived-in face, a pierced ear. He speaks in quick staccato bursts, a raconteur's voice. Some readers may find his police inspector hero, Tom Thorne, less engaging. He seems more sketchily described than the criminals and the scenery. Billingham says he consciously chose to make Thorne a work in progress.

BILLINGHAM: I really genuinely don't - the reader knows as much about Tom Thorne as I do at any one time. Well, what that does mean is that sometimes he goes into areas that readers are uncomfortable with.

BARKER: One of the most uncomfortable moments in his novels is a scene where Thorne is tied up and subjected to a very graphic sexual attack. And now, Billingham reveals that he too was the victim of a violent attack a year before he started writing the Thorne novels. It happened at a hotel in the city of Manchester.

BILLINGHAM: I got room service in this room one night and there was a knock on the door about half an hour later and I thought they'd come to collect their tray, you know, the empty plate. And there were three guys in ski masks and they just burst in and said they were going to kill me and tied me up, put a bag over my head.

BARKER: The man took Billingham's credit cards and held him there for three hours. He says the experience marked him as a crime writer in two significant ways.

BILLINGHAM: For in that first book it was really important to me that the victim had a voice and was somebody that you cared about. And secondly, I think one thing I can write about pretty well is what it's like to be afraid. I'm pretty good on fear. I remember when I was tied up in the hotel room, I was bouncing off the carpet because my heart was thumping so much. I can remember literally bouncing on the floor. And so, yeah, I can write about what it's like to be afraid, I think.

BARKER: Did that, in any way, inform your decision to start writing crime fiction?

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Hello, hello, I say.

BARKER: An interruption - a twitchy, rail-thin guy with x-ray eyes right out of one of Billingham's novels.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: We're (unintelligible) one night. I said, (unintelligible) she said no go away. I said later.

BILLINGHAM: There you go.

BARKER: Yes.

(LAUGHTER)

BILLINGHAM: There's London, right there. That was very impressive. I mean, that guy, you know, I'm not being judgmental, but that guy's an addict. And there, you know, there are a lot of characters like that wandering around. I don't know how he's going to fill up his day, but I kind of know where he's going to finish up tonight.

BARKER: The police, by the way, never caught the guys who attacked Mark Billingham. He says they never came close. For NPR News, I'm Vicki Barker in London.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

WERTHEIMER: Monday, a visit to our nation's capital, Washington, D.C., which serves as the backdrop for crime in my city. We'll roam around Washington with thriller writer Mike Lawson.

MIKE LAWSON: The senator was going to walk through those doors right there, those double doors. At the bottom of those steps was this young kid. He fired a gun twice and he hit the senator's aide. And the senator of this book is a fairly charismatic, lucky guy and once again, he was lucky, even though he's the bad guy.

WERTHEIMER: This is MORNING EDITION from NPR News. I'm Linda Wertheimer.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

And I'm Steve Inskeep. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Vicki Barker was UPR's Moab correspondent from 2011 - 2012.