The Scotsman

Alanna Knight

Versatile novelist best known for her historical crime stories

- SUSAN MANSFIELD

Alanna Knight, novelist. Born: 24 February 1923 in Jesmond, Newcastle Upon Tyne. Died: December 2 2020 in Edinburgh, aged 97

One of Scotland’s most prolific writers, Alanna Knight continued to write well into her 98 th year. Best known as the creator of Edinburgh’s Victorian detective, Inspector Jeremy Faro, she completed a new novel in spring which will be published posthumous­ly next May, and was working on a new Faro story when she died.

In a varied career spanning more than 50 years, Alanna wrote between 60 and 70 books, taking in romance, suspense, historical fiction, crime, nonfiction and writing guides. A popular guest at book festivals, she was among the most-borrowed writers in UK libraries. She was an active member of writers’ organisati­ons, and an authority on Robert Louis Stevenson.

Born Gladys Cleet in Jesmond, South Shields, of Scots-irish descent, she grew up in Newcastle. She loved to write as a child, penning short plays for classmates to perform, sending her poems to BBC Children’s Hour, and writing her first novel as a teenager. Her pen name (and preferred name) Alanna was derived from her mother’s maiden name, Allan.

After studying at a local commercial college, she got a job as a secretary at Newcastle University where she met her future husband Alistair Knight, a scientist, on a blind date to the theatre. They married in 1951 and were together for 57 years, until Alistair’s death in 2008.

The Knights began their married life in Aberdeen where Alistair worked at the Macaulay Research Institute. In 1964, while caring for their two young sons, Christophe­r and Kevin, Alanna was struck by polyneurit­is, a rare nervous disorder, which left her paralysed for five years. Knowing that she loved writing, Alistair bought her an electronic typewriter – she was just able to tap on the keys – on which she wrote her first short stories.

She learned her craft penning short stories for DC Thomson’s My Weekly magazine. Ear - ly novels were rejected but, in 1969, Legend of the Loch, a romance set on Deeside, was published and won the Romantic Novelists’ Associatio­n Netta Muskett Award. She continued

to write romances with an element of suspense, and a commission for a book set on the Isle of Lewis took her into historical fiction. However, it was not until the 1980s that she found her niche – historical crime.

Having loved Treasure Island as a child, she was reintro - duced to Robert Louis Stevenson when helping her son Chris with a school project. Re-reading his work as an adult was, she said, “like meeting an old friend”. She would describe Stevenson as her “grand passion”, writing a radio documentar­y, a play and several books about him, including the encyclo - paedic Robert Louis Stevenson Treasury, which has been described as “a comprehens­ive and entertaini­ng volume of Stevensoni­an scholarshi­p”.

While staying in a friend’s flat in Edinburgh during one period of Stevenson research, Alanna looked out of the window and saw a man wearing a deerstalke­r and an Inverness cape, looking up at the houses as if he was searching for something. He became the inspiratio­n for Inspector Faro, who would set about solving crimes in the Scotland of the 1870s – a world familiar to her through Stevenson. The Knights moved to Edinburgh when Alistair retired.

Alanna’s agent was concerned

at her shift into crime-writing, Scotland not yet having a reputation for “Tartan Noir”, and the sub-genre of historic crime being still in its infancy. However, publishers Macmillan snapped up Faro with a threebook deal and the first novel in the series, Enter Second Murderer, was published in 1988. Faro would go on to feature in 19 novels with the last, The Dower House Mystery, published in 2019. Alanna went on to write crime books with Faro’s daughter, Rose Mcquinn, as the protagonis­t, and in 2001 debuted time-travelling detective Tam Eildor. She wrote a new Eildor novel, Murder at the World’s Edge, during spring’s Covid-19 lockdown, saying that her characters helped keep her company during a time of isolation from her family. It will be published in May 2021.

Given to quoting the anecdote that Stevenson wrote Treasure Island in 14 days, Alanna had a rigorous writing schedule, always making sure she completed 1,000 words a day, and often finishing a novel in three months. While she enjoyed the solitary work of the writer, she was an entertaini­ng raconteur, in demand to give talks at libraries and writers’ groups, and a popular guest at book festivals.

She was honorary president of Edinburgh Writers Club, hon

orary president and a founder member of the Scottish Associatio­n of Writers, and an active member of the Society of Authors and the Crime Writers Associatio­n. In 1989, she organised a conference for crime writers in Edinburgh which included a visit to a rifle range and a talk by the Chief Inspector of the local police force, a forerunner to today’s Bloody Scotland Festival which she also supported enthusiast­ically.

She taught writing with the Workers Educationa­l Associatio­n, St Andrews University Summer School and the Arvon Foundation, and would encourage other writers and judge writing competitio­ns. She said: “I love working with writers. I feel that I was given that talent and it’s not for me to keep but to share, like the Greeks pouring some of the wine back into the ground.” In 2014, she was made MBE for services to literature.

Alanna died on December 2 in Edinburgh after suffering a stroke. She is survived by her two sons and two grand-daughters. Her son Kevin said: “She did what she loved, and carried on doing it for as long as she could.” Her legacy is all around us in bookshops and libraries, and she has left a final treat for her fans: a final novel, to be published next spring.

 ??  ?? 0 Alanna Knight pictured at the Hurricane restaurant in Edinburgh in 2012
0 Alanna Knight pictured at the Hurricane restaurant in Edinburgh in 2012

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