Valarie McDermid, FRSE,FRSL (born 4 June 1955) is a Scottish
crime writer, best known for a series of novels featuring clinical psychologist
Dr. Tony Hill, in a grim sub-genre known as
Tartan Noir.
Biography
McDermid comes from a working-class family in
Fife. She studied English at
St Hilda's College, Oxford,[1] where she was the first student to be admitted from a Scottish state school.[2]
After graduation, she became a
journalist and began her literary career as a
dramatist. Her first success as a
novelist, Report for Murder: The First Lindsay Gordon Mystery occurred in 1987.[3]
McDermid's works fall into five series: Lindsay Gordon, Kate Brannigan, Tony Hill and Carol Jordan, Inspector Karen Pirie, and Allie Burns. Her characters include a journalist, Lindsay Gordon; a private investigator, Kate Brannigan; a clinical psychologist, Tony Hill; DCI Karen Pirie working out of Fife, Scotland; and Allie Burns, an investigative reporter whose stories start in 1979 with a planned set of sequels a decade apart. The Mermaids Singing, the first book in the Hill/Jordan series, won the
Crime Writers' AssociationGold Dagger for Best Crime Novel of the Year. The Hill/Jordan series has been adapted for television under the name Wire in the Blood, starring
Robson Green.
McDermid has stated that Jacko Vance, a TV celebrity with a secret lust for torture, murder and under-age girls, who was featured in the Wire in the Blood and two later books, is based on her direct personal experience of interviewing
Jimmy Savile.[8] In 2010, McDermid received the
Cartier Diamond Dagger from the Crime Writers' Association for "outstanding achievement in the field of crime writing".[9]
McDermid considers her work to be part of the "
Tartan Noir" Scottish crime fiction genre.[10] In addition to writing novels, McDermid contributes to several British newspapers and often broadcasts on
BBC Radio 4 and
BBC Radio Scotland.[11] Her novels, in particular the Tony Hill series, are known for their graphic depictions of violence and
torture.
In August 2022 McDermid reported that the
estate of
Agatha Christie had threatened her publishers with legal action if they referred to McDermid as "the Queen of Crime", stating that the term was copyrighted by the Christie estate.[12]
Raith Rovers
McDermid was a lifelong fan of
Raith Rovers football club, her father having worked as a
scout for the club.[11][13][14] In 2010, she sponsored the McDermid Stand at
Stark's Park, the club's ground in Kirkcaldy, in honour of her father.[14]
A year after sponsoring the stand, she became a board member of the club, and starting in 2014 her website became Raith's shirt sponsor.[15]
In February 2022, McDermid said she would be withdrawing her support and sponsorship from Raith Rovers after the club signed striker
David Goodwillie, who had been ruled to have raped a woman and made to pay damages in a civil case in 2017.[16][17] Following the signing of Goodwillie, Raith Rovers women's team severed ties with the main club and renamed themselves McDermid Ladies, after the writer. McDermid moved her sponsorship to the new ladies' team.[18][19]
Ink attack
On 6 December 2012 a woman poured ink over McDermid during an event at the
University of Sunderland.[20] McDermid was signing books, and a woman asked her to autograph a Top of the Pops annual which contained a picture of the disgraced late TV presenter
Jimmy Savile. After McDermid reluctantly agreed the woman threw ink at her and ran out of the room.[21] McDermid said the incident would not stop her from doing signings.[22][23]
Northumbria Police arrested Sandra Botham, a 64-year-old woman from the
Hendon area of
Sunderland, on suspicion of assault.[23][24] Botham was convicted of common assault on 10 July 2013,[25] received a 12-month community order with supervision and was made to pay £50 compensation and a £60
victim surcharge.[26] She was also given a restraining order forbidding her from contacting McDermid for an undefined period of time.[27]The Northern Echo reported that Botham's actions were motivated by McDermid's 1994 non-fiction book A Suitable Job for a Woman, as Botham said the book contained a passage that besmirched her and her family.[28]
Personal life
McDermid formerly lived in both
Stockport and near
Alnmouth in
Northumberland[29] with three cats[30] and a border terrier dog. Since early 2014 she has lived in Stockport and Edinburgh.[31][32]
In 2016, McDermid captained a team of crime writer challengers on the TV quiz Eggheads, beating the Eggheads and winning £14,000.
In 2010, she was living between Northumberland and Manchester with publisher Kelly Smith,[33] with whom she had entered into a civil partnership in 2006.[2]
On 23 October 2016 McDermid married her partner of two years, Jo Sharp, a professor of geography at the
University of Glasgow.[34][35]