The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fife crime writer Hania Allen features in our Weekend supplement.

Forget Rebus and Taggart – Dundee has its very own detective now. Meet DS Dania Gorska, the creation of Fife author Hania Allen. Caroline Lindsay finds out more.

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You might want to think twice before you go on holiday with crime writer Hania Allen. It was a break to the Icehotel in Swedish Lapland that inspired the idea for the retired scientist and IT consultant’s first book and got her pondering ways to commit the perfect murder.

“During the day, this hotel is a museum housing ice sculptures but at night the tourists leave and it becomes a hotel,” Hania explains.

“As I was lying in my thermal sleeping bag, I realised there were no doors, only thick red velvet curtains. It struck me that anyone could come in and murder me.

“Not only that, a detective would find it difficult to solve the case as everyone looks the same in hooded parkas, the footprints left by snow boots are all the same, and gloves make leaving fingerprin­ts behind impossible,” she continues.

“Plus, the Icehotel melts every year and is rebuilt from ice blocks taken from the nearby river. It made the location ideal for a murder-mystery novel.”

When Hania got home she bought some books on creative writing, attended a couple of courses and started to write.

“I eventually published Icehotel myself on Amazon’s Kindle platform,” she says.

“By that time, I’d found an agent – Jenny Brown – who secured a publishing contract for a series featuring detective Von Valenti.”

Hania went on to publish two books, Jack in the Box and Double Tap, and then her agent secured her a contract for a new series featuring a Polish detective.

“As my parents were both Polish, having come to the UK after the war as political refugees, and I was brought up in a Polish community in England, Jenny thought I would be well placed to take this on,” she says.

Living in Crail, Hania was keen to set her new book, The Polish Detective (out next Thursday), in Courier Country.

“I was looking for a location other than Edinburgh and Glasgow, where so many Tartan Noir books are set,” she says.

“I hit on the idea of setting the novel in Dundee for many reasons: it has a rich history with its whaling and shipbuildi­ng industries, and textiles and jute.

“Then there’s DC Thomson’s publishing firm and two universiti­es, one of which is home to CAHID (the awardwinni­ng Centre for Anatomy and Human Identifica­tion).

“And of course, Dundee is the

UK’s first UNESCO city of design and the waterfront regenerati­on has contribute­d to putting the city

...the layout of the city with its lanes and alleys is a gift for any crime writer, as is the hinterland of villages...

firmly on the map, both in the UK and internatio­nally,” she explains.

“As if all that weren’t enough, the layout of the city with its lanes and alleys is a gift for a crime writer, as is the hinterland of villages with their absence of CCTV cameras. The huge number of cameras that have sprung up in shops and on the roads and pedestrian areas

provide a real challenge for today’s crime writers!

“But Dundee’s geography, with hills to the north and the River Tay to the south, provides opportunit­ies, as does the recent street art that has appeared in the city. There is also a significan­t number of Poles living and working in and around Dundee, which is great for a novel featuring a Polish detective.”

Hania’s latest book is the first of a series featuring Detective Sergeant Dania Gorska. Born in Poland and transferre­d from London to Dundee’s specialist crime division, Dania is called upon to investigat­e a series of grotesque killings where the victims are first brutally murdered and then displayed in a bizarre manner.

Although seemingly unrelated, clues point to the victims having been members of a local druidic cult.

While solving these murders is Dania’s priority, she finds herself increasing­ly drawn to the case of two runaway teenage girls. But when she learns they were also members of the same druid group, she becomes convinced their disappeara­nce is linked to the murders.

And, despite what the evidence suggests, Dania starts to fear that the girls have not run away but are actually the newest, undiscover­ed victims of the killer.

“Dania is a conscienti­ous detective who is totally committed to solving her case,” says Hania.

“She has just come up to Scotland from the Met and finds herself in a wellestabl­ished group in West Bell Street police station. Although her boss is keen for her to fit in, and she makes friends easily amongst her new colleagues, she is aware of a rival DS who might make things difficult for her.

“Promotions are hard to come by and this DS sees her competence as a threat. She therefore has to tread carefully while working with him.

“Her spare time – such as it is – is spent either with her brother, Marek, with whom she is lodging, or playing the piano.”

The book took Hania the best part of a year to write and she reveals that having a scientific background was a great help.

“As this is not my first detective novel, there wasn’t as much research into police procedures as before, as I now know where to look for answers,” she says.

“What I don’t know I can sometimes find by making a freedom of informatio­n request to Police Scotland.

“I’m also a stickler for getting the forensics right – readers of crime novels are becoming increasing­ly crime-savvy. They know about cause of death, rigor mortis, forensic techniques and so on. Fortunatel­y, there are many research papers on the internet as well as books on the subject.”

The second book in the series, Clearing the Dark, is well under way and Hania gives us a peek into what we can expect.

“DS Gorska is now a DI, having been promoted at the end of The Polish Detective. Her brother, Marek, is still working in Dundee and features prominentl­y in the next book. He is an investigat­ive journalist, and is a sort of Watson to Dania’s Holmes. It means they often help each other out, directly or indirectly,” she says.

When Hania isn’t writing she loves to travel and catch up on her reading. She has also been working on a project close to her heart for the last 10 years.

“I’ve been searching for informatio­n on what became of my parents’ Polish families,” she says.

“After writing to many organisati­ons, I finally found my father’s relatives by leaving messages on websites and my mother’s by sending my DNA to a genealogic­al organisati­on in the US. I have now found cousins all over the world and through them I’ve discovered the wartime fate of my parents’ brothers and sisters.

“None of my relatives in France, Poland and Belarus speak English, so I’ve had to learn Polish and brush up my schoolgirl French,” she continues.

Hania’s father was stationed in St Andrews during the war and it was his experience­s there that inspired her to study at the university.

“He spoke many times about the warmth and wonderful hospitalit­y shown by the Scottish people towards the Polish soldiers,” she recalls.

“The university even allowed the soldiers to study for free, and many, including my father, took the opportunit­y. After my parents died and I cleared their house, I came across my father’s army rucksack. At the bottom were lots of tiny silver tokens he was given by people when he visited their houses during Hogmanay.”

Hania’s advice to anyone who wants to start writing is to give it a go.

“If you find yourself dreaming up stories, then writing is for you. You just need to find a way to make it happen.” The Polish Detective by Hania Allen is published on August 9 by Constable, priced £8.99.

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 ?? And Caroline Trotter. Pictures: Dougie Nicolson ?? CCloacpkti­w on isi e n frhoe m re.t.o.p: Hania on Broughty Ferry beach; the writer in Backmuir Wood, one of the settings for the book; the book cover; Hania’s official author photo.
And Caroline Trotter. Pictures: Dougie Nicolson CCloacpkti­w on isi e n frhoe m re.t.o.p: Hania on Broughty Ferry beach; the writer in Backmuir Wood, one of the settings for the book; the book cover; Hania’s official author photo.
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