Denise Mina on the Crime & Mystery Genre

Published: Sept. 3, 2009, 5:01 p.m.

Crime novelist Denise Mina is the author of a trilogy of novels set in Glasgow: Garnethill (1998), which won the Crime Writers\u2019 Association John Creasey Memorial Dagger; Exile (2000); and Resolution (2001).\xa0\xa0 \xa0 Sanctum (2002), is the story of a forensic psychiatrist, convicted of killing a serial killer. The Field of Blood (2005) is the first in a new series, the second in the series, The Dead Hour, was published in 2006, and the third, Slip of the Knife, in 2007. \xa0 Denise also writes short stories, one of which, \u2018Helena and the Babies\u2019 from Fresh Blood 3 (1999), won the Crime Writers\u2019 Association Macallan Short Story Dagger. Two short stories and a play, Hurtle (2003), have been broadcast on BBC Radio 4. Her latest play is Ida Tamson. Her lastest\xa0novel is Still Midnight (2009).

We met in Ottawa where Denise was the international guest of honour at Bloody Words, Canada\u2019s national mystery conference. Our conversation cuts a wide swath across the socio-political\xa0 (alcoholism, the accurate depiction of mental illness, the courage of the mentally ill) the psychoanalytic (detective stories as re-enactments of the primal act) and the technical (cozy endings, realistic puzzles)