Try GOLD - Free
ANTHONY HOROWITZ
SFX
|April 2020
How the British author rebooted teenage secret agent Alex Rider

HOW, AS A WRITER, DO YOU RETURN TO A character over multiple books without writing yourself into a corner? This was a problem that confronted Anthony Horowitz a few years back with one of his most famous creations: teenage secret agent Alex Rider. With some fanfare, he announced in 2012 that Russian Roulette would be the last Rider novel.
Looking back, Horowitz suggests, Alex Rider had matured – as anyone would after saving the world on multiple occasions – but in this process had lost some of his “old élan”, his zest for life. “I wanted him to be happy again, that’s the most important thing,” says Horowitz. “He is a role model and you cannot have a depressive role model in a children’s book or a book for young adults – whatever you want to call it.”
Rider being too downbeat is not a problem in Nightshade, the second novel to star the agent since he came out of premature retirement in Never Say Die (2017). With a fast-paced plot built around around the rise of a new criminal organisation, it’s huge fun and infused with an energy that, says Horowitz, he rediscovered in putting together a collection of Rider short stories, Secret Weapon.
TEENAGE KICKS
This story is from the April 2020 edition of SFX.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM SFX

SFX UK
OBJECT Z
Brace for impact
2 mins
October 2025

SFX UK
THE LONG WALK
Sole survivors
2 mins
October 2025

SFX UK
DEVIL'S BARGAIN
DIRECTOR JUSTIN TIPPING REVEALS HOW HIS PERSONAL EXPERIENCES MADE HIM THE RIGHT PERSON TO TELL HIM
7 mins
October 2025

SFX UK
STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS Season Three
Where someone has gone before
2 mins
October 2025

SFX UK
TROUBLE EVERY DAY
Love bites
1 mins
October 2025

SFX UK
PLAYING GRACIE DARLING
The Kids Are Not Alright
1 mins
October 2025

SFX UK
STRANGE JOURNEY THE STORY OF ROCKY HORROR
“I loved every minute of it,” says Tim Curry of filming The Rocky Horror Picture Show in 1974. Barry Bostwick has another take: “I was wet and miserable most of the time.” The one thing they do agree on, however, is that the result was a milestone in cinema history.
1 min
October 2025

SFX UK
DON'T NEED NO EDUCATION
SUPER-POWERED IT'S SOPHOMORE YEAR FOR THE STUDENTS OF GEN VAND THE BOYS' UNIVERSE OVERSEER ERIC KRIPKE PROMISES SFX TENTACLED ANUSES, HIGHER STAKES AND A NEW DEAN DESTINED TO BREAK THE INTERNET
5 mins
October 2025

SFX UK
GAME CHANGER
SFX HEADS TO VANCOUVER TO VISIT THE TRON: ARES GRID AND TALK ALL THINGS TRON WITH THE FILMMAKERS BEHIND THE LONG-AWAITED SEQUEL
13 mins
October 2025

SFX UK
Circular Thinking
2 AUGUST 2002 In 1996, Independence Day made a global spectacle of alien invasion, unleashing widescreen violence on the world's famous landmarks. Six years later, M Night Shyamalan's Signs offered an altogether more focused take.
1 mins
October 2025
Translate
Change font size