- James McGee (author)
Infobox Writer
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name = James McGee
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pseudonym =
birthdate = birth date and age|1950|8|11|df=y
birthplace =Chatham, Kent England
deathdate =
deathplace =
occupation = Writer
nationality = British
period =
genre =Historical fiction
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influences =
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James McGee (born
11 August ,1950 ) is the pseudonym of Glen Moy [ [http://books.guardian.co.uk/harpercollinscrime/story/0,,1924547,00.html When crime does pay | Advertisement feature | guardian.co.uk Books ] ] , an Englishnovelist , known for hishistorical novel s about a fictional Bow Street Runner Matthew Hawkwood. The books are set in RegencyLondon .James McGee was born in
Kent in 1950, but, as an army child, spent his childhood inGibraltar ,Germany andNorthern Ireland . He has worked in various trades and professions includingbanking ,newspapers andbookselling . He currently lives inRye, East Sussex . [ [http://www.waterstones.com/waterstonesweb/navigate.do?pPageID=200000316 Waterstone's Booksellers profile] ]Matthew Hawkwood novels
McGee's novels are set during the Regency period, when Britain was at war with
Napoleon . His hero, Matthew Hawkwood, is working as a Bow Street Runner, an early invesitagative officer working out of London'sBow Street Magistrates' Court . He is called upon to solve a number of civil crimes, including murder,body-snatching and highway robbery, but his previous military experience makes him ably suited to investigate issues ofnational security . Hawkwood has a complicatedback-story , which is touched upon at various stages of the novels. He once served as an officer in the 95th Rifles, but was cashiered after he killed a fellow officer in aduel . With Wellington's intervention he was spared acourt-martial , and instead joined the Spanish Guerrilleros, liaising with the Britishintelligence officer Colquhoun Grant . It is Grant's influence that enables Hawkwood to get a job at Bow Street on his return to England.McGee's creation of Hawkwood's past was deliberate, as he wanted a hero who was "at home in both the military and criminal worlds". [http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/Authors/Interview.aspx?id=632&aid=7081 Interview with author, Publisher's website] ] Many reviewers and readers have drawn similarities between Hawkwood and fellow author
Bernard Cornwell 's Sharpe, particularly as they both served in the rifles. McGee admits this similarity was a concern for him, but giving Hawkwood rifle experience was important to the plot.Much of the action within the novels is inspired by historical events. The plot of "Ratcatcher" centres around the secret development of the first submarines by American
Robert Fulton , then working for the French. "Resurrectionist" is darker, reflecting the underworld of "resurrectionists" who stole bodies to supply the anatomy schools of London, and the experimentation of early (and illegal)organ transplant andresuscitation . The as-yet unpublished "Rapscallion" is to focus on Frenchprisoners-of-war upon the prison hulks.List of titles
* (2006) "Ratcatcher", London:
HarperCollins , ISBN 9780007212668
* (2007) "Resurrectionist"
* (2008) "Rapscallion" [http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/books/default.aspx?id=33113 Publisher's website] ]Critical reception
McGee's novels have been generally well-received by the critics. The period detail, likeable hero and fast paced-action have commended the books to many reviewers. [ [http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_and_entertainment/books/article1082525.ece The Times, March 25, 2006] ] [ [http://www.abc.net.au/widebay/stories/s1604194.htm ABC, 30 March 2006 ] ] Fellow authors
Reginald Hill and Andrew Taylor have also praised the novels. [ [http://www.collins-crime.co.uk/books/default.aspx?id=37227 Publisher's website: reviews] ]Notes
External links
* [http://www.harpercollins.co.uk/authors/default.aspx?id=7081 Author's page, HarperCollins]
* [http://www.collins-crime.co.uk/features/?articleID=6791 "Tales of Thief Takers" - James McGee]
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