कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Richard Osman's first book opened the gate for lots of us
Birmingham Mail
|May 10, 2025
BBC Radio 2 host and Channel 5 presenter Jeremy Vine chats to ELLA WALKER about venturing into ‘cosy crime’, what really scares him, and the big 6-0
-
DO you like your crime true, cosy or would you rather go to bed without thoughts of murder rattling around your head?
“Crime divides the room,’ says journalist and BBC Radio 2 host Jeremy Vine.
“Friends will either have watched every single true crime thing, or they'll say, ‘I don’t watch it because it gives me nightmares.”
Jeremy personally loves the lot, from his “queen”, Agatha Christie (“Who was like The Beatles; the first, the band that was impossible to follow,’) to the true-crime docs Netflix is awash with.
Above all, he loves a good old-fashioned English whodunnit, the kind Richard Osman has revived in spectacularly popular fashion.
“Osman’s first book reopened it all, it's opened the gate for lots of us, which I'll always be grateful to him for” says Jeremy, who now, 49 years on from reading his first Christie - Hercule Poirot's Christmas, aged 11 - has written one himself.
Murder On Line One is the first in a cosy crime series in which a sacked and grieving local radio host discovers that someone has been off-ing his loyal listeners, and so, he begins to investigate.
Jeremy wants readers “to feel suspense, but to know that in the end, everybody in it is in safe hands”.
For him, cosy crime offers a way to consider murder and violence in a “safe and controlled way’. Encountering it in real life is very different.
Jeremy grew up in Cheam, Surrey, and remembers it was “a different time in the Eighties, you'd regularly see fights in pubs’.
He was beaten up twice as a young adult, “not badly, just knocked around. And it gave me quite a fear of physical violence, because I'm not very good at fighting. In fact, I'm useless”.
As a student in Durham, he was carrying king prawn balls back from a Chinese takeaway when he found himself surrounded.
यह कहानी Birmingham Mail के May 10, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Birmingham Mail से और कहानियाँ
Birmingham Mail
Celebs back a worthy cause
CLARE Balding, Adam Hills, Hannah Fry and Vicky Pattison kick off an unmissable night of comedy, entertainment and fundraising for Stand Up To Cancer.
1 min
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
Jones backs Addicks to arrest slump
NATHAN Jones believes Charlton can get a result against Blues tomorrow - even with the Addicks’ growing injury list.
1 min
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
Edwards hails Silva return as 'big coup'
ROB Edwards believes new assistant head coach Rui Pedro Silva will be a “huge addition” at Wolves as the club attempts to stop the rot in the Premier League.
2 mins
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
Car wash to demolish building put up without permission
A MIDLAND car wash will have to demolish a building which was put up without permission.
1 mins
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
EASY FEAST
The trick to entertaining is choosing dishes that look impressive but require minimal faff.
1 min
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
New waste recycling scheme introduced
DUDLEY council is planning on introducing a new waste and recycling service from April 6, which will see two new caddies for food waste.
1 min
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
Bulgaria leaders quit after demos
GLOBAL BRIEFING
1 min
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
I've set myself a very high bar
Comedian Jessica Fostekew chats to MARION MCMULLEN about Gladiators, podcasts and life as a soccer mum
4 mins
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
Major change called for at key planning meetings
OPPOSITION councillors are calling for a major change at a key meeting which regularly decides which planning applications are successful in Solihull.
1 min
December 12, 2025
Birmingham Mail
BOOTCAMP LEG UP FOR ARTISTS
THE art world is notoriously hard to get into, particularly for regional, working-class artists. But a new, fully-funded bootcamp at Solihull College & University Centre has been changing that story for local creatives.
1 min
December 12, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
