Louise Minchin

A bloody good chat with Louise Minchin

A bloody good chat with Louise Minchin


A Bloody Good Chat with Louise Minchin

You are appearing at the festival this year, alongside Ruth Ware. What can Bloody Scotland fans expect from your event?

I think it’s going to be super exciting because we’ve both written books about reality TV shows on islands where storms disrupt things very dramatically. I’ve read Ruth’s book, which I think is utterly brilliant. The premises are the same, but actually our stories are very different and I think it’ll be really fun to hear about our different approaches to reality tv, why we both wanted to write about it, the different characters that you see on these shows, and also why we both thought that it would be such a great place to set a thriller.

Can you tell us a bit about Isolation Island and where the inspiration for the novel came from?

It’s my debut thriller and I’ve had a character that I’ve wanted to write about for ages. She’s called Lauren. She’s an investigative journalist and I’ve had her sort of living with me for about 12 years now! I thought I knew where I was going to send her, but then I went into the I’m a Celebrity… Get Me Out of Here castle in Wales (in 2021) and we got thrown out because of this once in a 100-year storm, and I knew exactly what I wanted to do. Isolation Island is absolutely inspired by Agatha Christie’s classic And Then There Were None. I lived in Scotland and went to St. Andrew’s University. I spent five of my happiest years in Scotland and traveled a lot to the West Coast and visited lots of beautiful islands like Skye. And I just thought it would be such a brilliant place to have an imaginary monastery and an imaginary island.

How did you find your first foray into novel writing?

I’ve written two nonfiction books, but I’ve always wanted to write fiction. I wrote nonfiction first as a way of honing my skills and learning my craft, but obviously nonfiction and fiction are hugely different. I had a very set idea of where I wanted to send my characters, who I wanted to go to the island and I knew who was going to die and why they were going to die. And I also knew, or thought I knew, who had killed them – but what I love about the fictional creative process is you set things in motion and then your characters start taking on a life of their own. They surprise you. They do things you’re not expecting. And that’s what I love about it. You set out your plot but then things change along the way.

What’s the best thing about being a good crime writer?

Being able to let your imagination go wild. Seeing people read Isolation Island and engage with the characters is fantastic. I love hearing readers talk about who they love and who they hate in the book. They see things in the book that even I, even myself, haven’t seen – so that’s really exciting for me. The book sort of takes on a life of its own once it’s out in the world.

Is this your first visit to Bloody Scotland? And if so, what are you most looking forward to about your visit?

It’s not my first visit to Stirling, but it is my first visit to Bloody Scotland. I absolutely love literary festivals number one, but crime writing festivals just have a whole atmosphere of their own. The crime writing community – they’re incredibly interesting. They’re incredibly informed. They really care, you know, about both readers and writers and about the genre. It is great to be in that environment. I’m really looking forward to it and meeting other writers too. I love going to see other writers and it’s a huge opportunity for all audiences to go and see their favourite writers and to meet new writers too. For me, it’s always about hearing where the inspiration comes from, how they create their characters and how they feel about their characters. It’s a great opportunity for readers to meet their heroes. And you know, I’ll get to meet my heroes too. Ruth Ware! I love her books and I’m so excited about sitting on a panel with her.

Louise will appear at Bloody Scotland alongside Ruth Ware on Sunday the 15th of September at 12pm. You can book tickets to this event here: https://bloodyscotland.com/event/louise-minchin-and-ruth-ware/

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Ruth Stairs

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Bloody Scotland wouldn’t run without the dedication of eager volunteers, keeping the crowds safe, the tech running and the authors guided. Every year we look for Front of House Assistants, Author Hospitality Assistants, Author Signing Assistants and Festival Marketing Assistants to help out our busy team.

2024 applications will open soon.

Support Us


Bloody Scotland, Scotland’s international crime writing festival is an independent, not for profit charity, established in 2011 to present the very best of Scottish and international crime writing. We rely on a combination of sponsorship, grants, box office and donations to support our activity.

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2024 Crime in the Spotlight Authors Announced

Our 2024 Crime in the Spotlight Authors

Presenting our 2024 Crime in the Spotlighters


We’re delighted to announce our 2024 Crime in the Spotlight authors!

This year’s cohort includes:

Simpson Grears, TY Garner, Morag Pringle, Jake Bowen-Bate, Brian Cook, Claire  Wilson, David Goodman, Isobel Shirlaw, Nina Bhadreshwar, Charlotte Stevenson, Donna Morfett, Jack O’Donnell, Susan Allott, LM Chilton, Jane McLoughlin and Rhiannon Barnsley.

Read more here: https://mailchi.mp/bloodyscotland.com/bloody-scotland-newsletter-crime-in-the-spotlight-2024

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Bloody Scotland, Scotland’s international crime writing festival is an independent, not for profit charity, established in 2011 to present the very best of Scottish and international crime writing. We rely on a combination of sponsorship, grants, box office and donations to support our activity.

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Liz Webb

A catch up with former Crime in the Spotlighter Liz Webb

A catch up with former Crime in the Spotlighter Liz Webb


If you’re eligible for Crime in the Spotlight – apply! What have you got to lose?

As we launch our Crime in the Spotlight slots – an annual initiative which sees new crime writers reading an extract of their work in front of a packed Bloody Scotland audience – we caught up with former participant Liz Webb. Liz, who read an extract of her debut novel The Daughter at the festival back in 2022, will return to the festival this year to discuss her second novel, The Saved at our Dark Islands event on Friday the 13th of September. The novelist will appear alongside fellow authors George Paterson and Claire McGowan.

Can you tell us about your Crime in the Spotlight experience?

“My Crime in the Spotlight experience was great. My publisher Allison & Busby encouraged me to apply and I thought: oh, I’ll never get in. But then, amazingly, I was given a slot, which was absolutely fantastic.

“It’s the most brilliant thing because it allows very new writers with no real presence to get up on stage in big venues with amazing people. Gordon J. Brown introduced me to the audience, and then I got to do my reading before Denzil Meyrick and Alex Gray were interviewed on stage. Both of the authors are absolutely fantastic. They were so nice and encouraging.

“I’d practiced my reading so many times that I knew it off by heart! I was so incredibly nervous, but it was a great experience. Everyone was so lovely.

“We did a little practice beforehand. I was a standup comedian many years ago, but nowadays I’m quite a nervous person. Thankfully, once I was up on stage, the old standup within me kicked in and I was able to really enjoy the experience. After you read you get to do a book signing alongside the authors who are headlining the event which was absolutely fantastic.”

How did the experience help you as an author?

“It really helped me because I hadn’t appeared at any of the big festivals at that point. It’s really good to get over the horror of reading your work and realising that actually, everyone gets a bit nervous. It’s very good for your profile too because Bloody Scotland send you social media assets to help promote the fact that you’re appearing at the festival – and that does make a difference. It ups your profile and gives your social media a boost, which helps attract the attention of the industry.”

Applications are now open for 2024. What would you say to anyone who was thinking about applying?

If you’re eligible then apply – 100%. What have you got to lose? It’s totally worth doing it and not just for the experience of reading. Bloody Scotland has got this slightly magical feel to it and everyone is so friendly. It’s worth going for the whole weekend and attending the panels and the Golden Lion Bar – that’s a great place to meet fellow authors and readers too.

You’ll be at the festival to talk about your latest novel, The Saved. Can you tell us about the book?

“The Saved centres around Nancy and Calder, a young couple who move from London to the fictional Scottish slate island of Langer. Within a week, Nancy sees Calder’s body floating in the bay outside. Nancy and the man who runs the church drag the body onto the ground but Calder cannot be resuscitated. The emergency services fly his body by helicopter to Glasgow and the doctor says – and this is a real thing in medicine – ‘you’re not dead until you are warm and dead’. Calder has had a heart attack when he’s freezing cold. It’s very rare, but under these circumstances you can actually be brought back to life up to six hours later.

“Nancy doesn’t believe that Calder can be revived, but the doctors take his blood out of his body and warm it up one degree at a time and feed it back in, before giving him an electric shock. They manage to bring him back and it feels like a miracle. They test his brainwaves, and Calder is fine, but when Nancy looks into his eyes, she doesn’t see her partner. There is something drastically wrong. They go back to the island together, but as far as Nancy is concerned, she’s going back there with a stranger.

Your panel at Bloody Scotland centres around ‘Dark Islands’. Why do they make such good settings for crime novels?

“I think islands have this extra intensity to them.  I visited the Scottish slate islands of Seil, Easdale and Luing during a writing retreat and took inspiration from them for the book. I live in London and I’m used to being able to get anywhere I want at any time of day or night, but on these small islands the ferries stop and you can’t leave. As a city dweller, I found that really amazing. They’re also very wind swept, distant and can be quite old fashioned – which is not to smear the people who live there at all – but they do have a more traditional feel about them that lends itself well to a novel setting.

“That, coupled with weather that can be extreme and changeable – creates perfect conditions for a tensely plotted book. You’ve also got a fixed number of people living in a place like that – so in many ways it’s like an extended escape room setting – which suits the crime genre perfectly.”

Liz Webb will appear at Bloody Scotland at our Dark Islands event on Friday the 13th of September at the Holy Trinity Church.

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Join us for a special Launch Event...

Join us for this special standalone event with the brilliant Val McDermid, who’ll be helping us to launch the 2024 Bloody Scotland programme. Val will be in conversation with Craig Robertson about her dark and bloody latest novel, Queen MacBeth.

Shakespeare fed us the myth of the Macbeths as murderous conspirators. But now Val McDermid drags the truth out of the shadows, exposing the patriarchal prejudices of history. Expect the unexpected. A thousand years ago in an ancient Scottish landscape, a woman is on the run with her three companions – a healer, a weaver and a seer. The men hunting her will kill her – because she is the only one who stands between them and their violent ambition. She is no lady: she is the first queen of Scotland, married to a king called Macbeth. Thursday 20th June at 1.30pm in The Golden Lion Hotel, Stirling. Tickets £6/£5

Thursday 20 June 2024, 13:30


Buy Tickets

Apply to Volunteer


Bloody Scotland wouldn’t run without the dedication of eager volunteers, keeping the crowds safe, the tech running and the authors guided. Every year we look for Front of House Assistants, Author Hospitality Assistants, Author Signing Assistants and Festival Marketing Assistants to help out our busy team.

2024 applications will open soon.

Support Us


Bloody Scotland, Scotland’s international crime writing festival is an independent, not for profit charity, established in 2011 to present the very best of Scottish and international crime writing. We rely on a combination of sponsorship, grants, box office and donations to support our activity.

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McIlvanney prize covers

PRIZES 2026

PRIZE RULES 2026 AND ENTRY FORM


ENTRY RULES 

DEADLINE – 5pm on Friday 20th March 2026.

YOU MUST SUBMIT ONE ENTRY FORM FOR EACH INDIVIDUAL TITLE YOU ARE SUBMITTING.
·       Publishers may submit full length novels first published in the United Kingdom between 1st August 2025 and 31st July 2026 for The McIlvanney Prize and The Bloody Scotland Debut Prize.
·       For the purposes of both prizes, a crime novel is eligible if the author was born, raised, is a permanent resident in, or has a strong and enduring connection to Scotland.
·       Please indicate in your submission the criteria that the author meets, using the appropriate box to explain why you believe the book qualifies. Please also note on the form if the book is a debut.
·       Books published as hardback, paperback originals or exclusively as e-books are eligible, either published by publishers, or self-published.
·       The submission of an author’s work by the publisher will be taken as agreement by the author that he/she/they are willing for the submitted work to be considered and shared (in all formats) with those involved in the selection process.
·       It is a condition of entry that publishers will put the award logo and “Winner of The McIlvanney Prize for Scottish Crime Book of the Year 2026/Winner of The Bloody Scotland Debut Prize 2026” or “Shortlisted for The McIlvanney Prize for Scottish Crime Book of the Year 2026/Shortlisted for The Bloody Scotland Debut Prize 2026” including the name(s) of sponsor(s), on the cover of subsequent editions of winning/shortlisted books. We have designed roundels with this information on them if you’d like to use those.
·       Publishers will, on request, provide a cover image and author photograph with the necessary clearances for use by Bloody Scotland.
·       Publishers will make every effort to ensure that any shortlisted authors for either prize will attend the ceremony in Stirling on Friday 18th September 2026, and will be available for media interviews before, immediately afterwards and throughout the Bloody Scotland weekend.
·       There will be an entry fee of £40 + VAT for each title submitted, PLUS a charge of £500 + VAT per longlisted title for the McIlvanney Prize, and £400 + VAT per shortlisted title for the Debut Prize, to cover promotion and marketing of the prize. By entering, publishers agree to pay this contribution. If a book is longlisted/shortlisted for both prizes, only the £500 fee will apply.
·       The longlist for the McIlvanney Prize will comprise up to twelve books. The shortlist for the debut prize is usually 4 or 5 titles. Publishers will be notified immediately after the organisers meeting in June 2026 only if their book has been longlisted for the McIlvanney Prize or shortlisted for the Debut Prize.
·       Paper copies of all longlisted or shortlisted books should be made available upon request.
·       The judges’ decision is final. Neither discussion nor correspondence concerning any decision can be entered into.
·       A DRM-free digital copy of each entry (PDF and eBook if available) must be submitted to the Prize Administrators.
·       Please fill in a submission form HERE and submit your book to: [email protected] with ‘McIlvanney Prize/Bloody Scotland Debut Prize 2026 Submission_Book Title’ clearly stated in the subject line.

Apply to Volunteer


Bloody Scotland wouldn’t run without the dedication of eager volunteers, keeping the crowds safe, the tech running and the authors guided. Every year we look for Front of House Assistants, Author Hospitality Assistants, Author Signing Assistants and Festival Marketing Assistants to help out our busy team.

2024 applications will open soon.

Support Us


Bloody Scotland, Scotland’s international crime writing festival is an independent, not for profit charity, established in 2011 to present the very best of Scottish and international crime writing. We rely on a combination of sponsorship, grants, box office and donations to support our activity.

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Ruth Stairs

A bloody good chat with Ruth Ware

A bloody good chat with Ruth Ware


A Bloody Good Chat with Ruth Ware

After revealing crime writer Ruth Ware as one of our Bloody Scotland ‘sneaky peeks’ last week, we thought it would be nice to get to know her a little better! The author of In a Dark, Dark Wood and Zero Days, who will appear at the Albert Halls alongside Louise Minchin on Sunday the 15th of September, says she’s thrilled to be part of this year’s programme.

“I love Bloody Scotland. Crime festivals are always just the best fun because crime readers are the nicest readers and crime writers are the nicest writers. And I’m not just saying that – it’s been scientifically proven!

“The nice thing about Bloody Scotland is that Stirling is such a small city, so everyone who is part of the festival stays within a stone’s throw of each other. It gives it a really lovely communal feel. Everybody’s hanging out at the Golden Lion. It just feels like an incredibly friendly festival – it has this ‘come as you are’ atmosphere. Everybody there is a reader and everyone has come along to enjoy themselves.

This year, you’ll be appearing alongside Louise Minchin. What can Bloody Scotland fans expect from your event?

“I haven’t had the chance to read Louise’s book, Isolation Island, yet, but it sounds brilliant. Both Louise and I have written reality tv thrillers, so we’ll be talking about that. Mine is One Perfect Couple and it’s set on a kind of desert island. It’s a Lord of the Flies type story. Things go horribly wrong. The fresh water supply starts to run down, so there’s an awful lot of cracked lips and people slowly becoming dehydrated. Whereas Louise’s novel sounds like it’s sort of climatically the polar opposite. It’s set on a windswept island.

“I think it’s going to be really interesting to look at how two writers have taken what, on paper, sounds like a pretty similar idea and have gone off in completely different directions. We’ll also be discussing how an island setting can play into some of the best loved tropes of the genre. You know, stuff like locked room mysteries, isolated locations and a closed cast of suspects. I’m really looking forward to it. I think it’s going be a really fun event.”

Where did the inspiration for One Perfect Couple come from?

Well, the funny thing is, I’m actually not a huge reality TV fan, which makes me feel like a bit of an imposter. I watched and really enjoyed the first couple of series of Big Brother. All of my friends were addicted to it, so we all watched it and gossiped about it. And then I just kind of drifted away from reality tv. I had kids and a really demanding job, and there were so many of those types of shows popping up. It was really hard to keep up. But then The Traitors came out in the UK and I absolutely adored it.

“I think as a crime writer, what I loved was the crime adjacent format. You know, the fact that it’s all about figuring out who’s lying, who’s telling the truth, who’s deceiving other people for their own gain and how far contestants will you go to win.

“Then I was at an author event with the writer Gillian McAllister, and we were talking about reality TV. I think I said something like, it’s a miracle more people on those shows don’t end up murdering each other because the stakes are so high. You can see the producers winding the contestants up to such a pitch where sometimes it really does feel like it wouldn’t take much for them to come to blows. And Gillian said, as a kind of joke, oh that sounds like a Ruth Ware novel! I didn’t really think anything of it at the time, but then when I sat down to write what became One Perfect Couple, her words kind of came back to me!”

What compels you to write crime thrillers?

“I love books that have a really strong cerebral element to them. I like a really strong puzzle. As a reader, I love reading books where you are kind of in a battle of wits almost with the author. You can see that they’re laying out the clues. You can see they’re giving you information and it feels like you’re in a race to solve the puzzle, before the characters in the book solve it.

“But as a reader, I also really love books that have a huge amount of heart in them and a really strong emotional storyline.  As a reader, you really feel what the characters are feeling – you’re terrified when they’re terrified. The thing about psychological thrillers, and particularly the kind that I write, is that you don’t have to choose. You can have both of those things. You can have that puzzly aspect where there’s a great twist and you’re sort of like, oh! I should have guessed that. But you can also have characters that you’re really, really invested in and a strong emotional thread to pull you through the story.”

What’s the best thing about being a crime thriller writer?

“The community. The readers and the other writers are genuinely lovely. And crime festivals are always such fun because, you know, the crowds are just so good. The readers are so good, they’re so generous, they’re so intelligent, they’re so well read. And, you know, likewise for my fellow writers, they’re just an incredibly generous bunch. I think there’s often a feeling that writers are in competition with each other – and on some level we are in that we’re all going for, you know, the same Richard and Judy slots or the same supermarket promotions. But actually, we’re not in the sense that what’s good for the genre, is good for all of us. If a really, really good crime thriller comes out and the author really nails it, it makes readers go back to that section and look for other authors who might be doing something similar. And that’s really great for all of us.”

You can find out more about Ruth Ware and her work over her website: https://ruthware.com/

Ruth will appear at Bloody Scotland alongside Louise Minchin, on Sunday the 15th of September from 12pm – 1pm. You can book tickets to this event and all of our ‘sneaky peeks’, here: https://bloodyscotland.com/whats-on/

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Event

Join us for a special Launch Event...

Join us for this special standalone event with the brilliant Val McDermid, who’ll be helping us to launch the 2024 Bloody Scotland programme. Val will be in conversation with Craig Robertson about her dark and bloody latest novel, Queen MacBeth.

Shakespeare fed us the myth of the Macbeths as murderous conspirators. But now Val McDermid drags the truth out of the shadows, exposing the patriarchal prejudices of history. Expect the unexpected. A thousand years ago in an ancient Scottish landscape, a woman is on the run with her three companions – a healer, a weaver and a seer. The men hunting her will kill her – because she is the only one who stands between them and their violent ambition. She is no lady: she is the first queen of Scotland, married to a king called Macbeth. Thursday 20th June at 1.30pm in The Golden Lion Hotel, Stirling. Tickets £6/£5

Thursday 20 June 2024, 13:30


Buy Tickets
Ruth Stairs

Apply to Volunteer


Bloody Scotland wouldn’t run without the dedication of eager volunteers, keeping the crowds safe, the tech running and the authors guided. Every year we look for Front of House Assistants, Author Hospitality Assistants, Author Signing Assistants and Festival Marketing Assistants to help out our busy team.

2024 applications will open soon.

Support Us


Bloody Scotland, Scotland’s international crime writing festival is an independent, not for profit charity, established in 2011 to present the very best of Scottish and international crime writing. We rely on a combination of sponsorship, grants, box office and donations to support our activity.

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WINNER REVEALED FOR THE BLOODY SCOTLAND DEBUT PRIZE 2024

WINNER REVEALED FOR THE BLOODY SCOTLAND

DEBUT PRIZE 2024


The Bloody Scotland Debut Prize celebrates its 5th Anniversary this year. Previous winners include Claire Askew (2019), Deborah Masson (2020), Robbie Morrison (2021), Tariq Ashkanani (2022) and Kate Foster (2023) who has gone on to be longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2024 and shortlisted for the CWA New Blood Dagger 2024.

The winner of the 2024 Bloody Scotland Debut Prize is:

Allan Gaw with The Silent House of Sleep (SA Press).

Shortlist:

Suzy Aspley with Crow Moon (Orenda).

Daniel Aubrey with Dark Island (Harper North).

Doug Sinclair with Blood Runs Deep (Storm Publishing).

Martin Stewart with Double Proof (Polygon).

Sponsored by

Event

Join us for a special Launch Event...

Join us for this special standalone event with the brilliant Val McDermid, who’ll be helping us to launch the 2024 Bloody Scotland programme. Val will be in conversation with Craig Robertson about her dark and bloody latest novel, Queen MacBeth.

Shakespeare fed us the myth of the Macbeths as murderous conspirators. But now Val McDermid drags the truth out of the shadows, exposing the patriarchal prejudices of history. Expect the unexpected. A thousand years ago in an ancient Scottish landscape, a woman is on the run with her three companions – a healer, a weaver and a seer. The men hunting her will kill her – because she is the only one who stands between them and their violent ambition. She is no lady: she is the first queen of Scotland, married to a king called Macbeth. Thursday 20th June at 1.30pm in The Golden Lion Hotel, Stirling. Tickets £6/£5

Thursday 20 June 2024, 13:30


Buy Tickets

Apply to Volunteer


Bloody Scotland wouldn’t run without the dedication of eager volunteers, keeping the crowds safe, the tech running and the authors guided. Every year we look for Front of House Assistants, Author Hospitality Assistants, Author Signing Assistants and Festival Marketing Assistants to help out our busy team.

2024 applications will open soon.

Support Us


Bloody Scotland, Scotland’s international crime writing festival is an independent, not for profit charity, established in 2011 to present the very best of Scottish and international crime writing. We rely on a combination of sponsorship, grants, box office and donations to support our activity.

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Bob McDevitt

Bloody Scotland Newsletter - May 2024

Bloody Scotland Newsletter - May 2024

Bloody Scotland Newsletter - May 2024

Bloody Scotland Newsletter - April 2024


Hello, and welcome to our May issue. This latest edition is jam packed with news! We’re bringing you our programme launch date, information about our brand new website and an exclusive interview with our Festival Director Bob McDevitt, who’s giving us some fascinating insights into this year’s programme. So, without further ado, let’s crack on with this month’s issue.

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Event

Join us for a special Launch Event...

Join us for this special standalone event with the brilliant Val McDermid, who’ll be helping us to launch the 2024 Bloody Scotland programme. Val will be in conversation with Craig Robertson about her dark and bloody latest novel, Queen MacBeth.

Shakespeare fed us the myth of the Macbeths as murderous conspirators. But now Val McDermid drags the truth out of the shadows, exposing the patriarchal prejudices of history. Expect the unexpected. A thousand years ago in an ancient Scottish landscape, a woman is on the run with her three companions – a healer, a weaver and a seer. The men hunting her will kill her – because she is the only one who stands between them and their violent ambition. She is no lady: she is the first queen of Scotland, married to a king called Macbeth. Thursday 20th June at 1.30pm in The Golden Lion Hotel, Stirling. Tickets £6/£5

Thursday 20 June 2024, 13:30


Buy Tickets

Apply to Volunteer


Bloody Scotland wouldn’t run without the dedication of eager volunteers, keeping the crowds safe, the tech running and the authors guided. Every year we look for Front of House Assistants, Author Hospitality Assistants, Author Signing Assistants and Festival Marketing Assistants to help out our busy team.

2024 applications will open soon.

Support Us


Bloody Scotland, Scotland’s international crime writing festival is an independent, not for profit charity, established in 2011 to present the very best of Scottish and international crime writing. We rely on a combination of sponsorship, grants, box office and donations to support our activity.

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Linwood Barclay - Whistle

Special Launch Event | 12th June

Linwood Barclay - Whistle

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Join us for a special Launch Event...

Join us for this special standalone event with Linwood Barclay, who’ll be helping us to launch the 2025 Bloody Scotland programme. Linwood will be in conversation with Nicola Meighan about his sinister suspense novel, Whistle.

Evil has a one track mind…

Celebrated children’s author and illustrator Annie Blunt has had a dreadful year. Her husband was killed in a tragic accident, then one of her children’s books ignited a major scandal. Desperate for a fresh start, she moves with her young son Charlie to a charming small town in upstate New York where they can begin to heal.

But Annie’s year is about to get worse.

Bored and lonely in their isolated new surroundings, Charlie is thrilled when he finds a forgotten train set in a locked shed in the grounds of their new house. While Annie is pleased to see Charlie happy, there’s something unsettling about his new toy. Strange sounds wake Annie in the night – she’s sure she can hear a train in the middle of the night, although there isn’t an active line for miles. And then bizarre things start happening in the neighbourhood. But even stranger, Annie can’t seem to stop drawing a disturbing new character that has no place in a children’s book…

Grief plays tricks on the mind, but Annie is beginning to think she’s walked out of one nightmare straight into another, only this one is far more terrifying…

Thursday 12th June at 1pm in The Golden Lion Hotel, Stirling. Tickets £6/£5

Thursday 12 June 2025, 13:00


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Bloody Scotland Newsletter April 2024

Bloody Scotland Newsletter - April 2024

April 2024

Bloody Scotland Newsletter

Bloody Scotland Newsletter - April 2024


Hello, and welcome to the April issue of our newsletter! In this edition, we’re sharing some exciting CWA news and having a nosy at our summer book club reading list. We’re also treating you to not one but two brilliant interviews. One with novelist and former Pitch Perfect winner, Suzy Aspley and the other with thriller writer A.A. Chaudhuri. So, what are you waiting for? Grab yourself a cuppa and settle down for a good old read!

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Bloody Scotland Newsletter - March 2024

March 2024

Bloody Scotland Newsletter

Bloody Scotland Newsletter - March 2024


Hello, and welcome to the March issue of our newsletter! Spring has finally sprung – we hope you’re enjoying the brighter weather after what feels like a very long winter. In this issue, we’re sharing some news and taking a closer look at our spring book club selection. We’re also treating you to an interview with spotlighter Adam Oyebanji and a special My Bloody Scotland from Kate Foster. So, put your feet up and get ready for a great read!

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