Graham Hurley, born in 1946 at Clacton on Sea, is an English crime fiction writer.[1]

Graham Hurley
BornNovember 1946 (age 77–78)
Clacton-on-Sea, Essex
NationalityBritish
GenreCrime

Formerly based in Portsmouth but now relocated in the West Country, he is best known for creating the character of DI Joe Faraday, following several standalone novels. He contributed a column to The Portsmouth News. He received both a BA and an MA in English from the University of Cambridge.

He worked as a script-writer with Southern Television before becoming a researcher and later a director.[2] For TVS He filmed the discovery of the seabed wrecks of the Titanic and the Bismarck (with American oceanographer Robert Ballard) and produced ITV's account of Richard Branson's attempt to cross the Atlantic by balloon.[3]

Bibliography

edit

Standalone Novels

edit
  • Rules of Engagement
  • Reaper
  • The Devil's Breath
  • Thunder in the Blood
  • Sabbathman
  • The Perfect Soldier
  • Heaven's Light
  • Nocturne
  • Permissible Limits

DI Joe Faraday series

edit
  • Turnstone
  • The Take
  • Angels Passing
  • Deadlight
  • Cut To Black
  • Blood and Honey
  • One Under
  • The Price of Darkness
  • No Lovelier Death
  • Beyond Reach
  • Borrowed Light
  • Happy Days (2012)[4]
  • Backstory (2012) - A collection of stories filling the back story of the series

D/S Jimmy Suttle series

edit
  • Western Approaches (2012)[4][5]
  • Touching Distance (2013)[4]
  • Sins of the Father (2014)[4]
  • The Order of Things (2015)[4]

Wars Within series

edit
  • Finisterre (2016)
  • Aurore (2017)
  • Estocada (2018)
  • Raid 42 (2019)
  • Last Flight To Stalingrad (2020)
  • Kyiv (2021)

Enora Andressen series

edit
  • Curtain Call (2019)
  • Sight Unseen (2019)
  • Off Script (2020)
  • Limelight (2020)
  • Intermission (2021)

Adaptations

edit

Gétévé and France Télévisions started adapting Hurley's Faraday stories in 2011 through 90 minute television films under the title Deux Flics sur les Docks (lit. Two Cops on the Docks). Jean-Marc Barr and Bruno Solo headline the series, portraying Joe Faraday and Paul Winter respectively. By the end of 2013, six films have been produced and broadcast, adapting the novels Angels Passing, Cut To Black, One Under, Blood and Honey, Deadlight and The Take.

References

edit
  1. ^ "Graham Hurley". Goodreads. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  2. ^ A life of crime writing - Author Graham Hurley - Celebrity interviews - Hampshire
  3. ^ Biography | Graham Hurley
  4. ^ a b c d e Graham Hurley
  5. ^ Graham Hurley
edit