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Bill Knox

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William Knox (1928 – March 1999) was a Scottish author, journalist and broadcaster, best known for his crime novels and for presenting the long-running STV series Crimedesk.

Life and career

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Born in Glasgow, Knox became the youngest journalist for a Glasgow newspaper at age 16. He went on to report on crime, on motoring, and to become a news editor.

He began writing crime novels in the 1950s. Knox often wrote under pseudonyms, frequently for the American market. These included Michael Kirk, Robert MacLeod and Noah Webster. He published over 50 crime novels, including several series, notably the "Thane and Moss" books.

In the 1970s, he was approached by Scottish Television to present a series asking for public assistance in solving crimes in the central Scotland area. Knox presented the fifteen-minute slot for over ten years, always signing off with the promise that any calls to the police "can be in confidence". At this time he also made a series of short programmes called Tales of Crime, also for STV, in which he recounted famous Scottish criminal cases.

His crime novels from the 1960s onwards, and in the 1970s his Crimedesk television series, publicised the Glasgow slang term "neds", referring to petty criminals or small-time hoodlums.[1][2] A 1982 analysis of crime fiction discussing Knox's 1977 novel Pilot Error noted his description of Strathclyde Police as being unconcerned about "neds" getting hurt in a fight as long as no one else was affected.[3]

His final novel, The Lazarus Widow, was unfinished at the time of his death, and was completed by Martin Edwards.[4]

The novels went out of publication following Knox's death in 1999. In 2024, Zertex Media, a publishing company owned by crime writer Barry Hutchison (who uses the pen name JD Kirk), began republishing the books, starting with Deadline for a Dream in January 2024.[4]

Bibliography

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  • Deadline For A Dream (US: In At The Kill) (1957)
  • The Cockatoo Crime (1958)
  • Death Department (1959)
  • Leave It To The Hangman (1960)
  • Death Calls The Shots (1961)
  • Die For Big Betsy (1961)
  • Little Drops Of Blood (1962)
  • Sanctuary Isle (US: The Grey Sentinels) (1962)
  • The Man In The Bottle (US: The Killing Game) (1963)
  • The Scavengers (1964)
  • The Taste of Proof (1965)
  • The Deep Fall (US: The Ghost Car) (1966)
  • Devilweed (1966)
  • Justice On the Rocks (1967)
  • Blacklight (1967)
  • The Klondyker (US: The Figurehead) (1968)
  • Court of murder: Famous trials at Glasgow High Court (1968)
  • Blueback (1969)
  • Children of the Mist (US: Who Shot the Bull?) (1970)
  • Seafire (1970)
  • To Kill a Witch (1971)
  • Stormtide (1972)
  • Draw Batons (1973)
  • Whitewater (1974)
  • View from Daniel Pike (1974)
  • Children of the Water (1974)
  • Rally to Kill (1975)
  • Hellspout (1976)
  • A Witchdance in Bavaria (1976)
  • A Pay-off in Switzerland (1977)
  • Witchrock (1977)
  • Pilot Error (1977)
  • Live Bait (1978)
  • Bombship (1980)
  • Killing in Antiques (1981)
  • Storyland Wall Frieze (1981)
  • Tales of Crime (1982)
  • Bloodtide (1982)
  • The Hanging Tree (1983)
  • Wavecrest (1985)
  • The Crossfire Killings (1986)
  • Dead Man's Mooring (1987)
  • The Interface Man (1989)
  • The Drowning Nets (1991)
  • The Counterfeit Killers (1996)
  • Lake of Fury (1996)
  • An Incident in Iceland (1996)
  • Place of Mists (1996)
  • Salvage Job (1997)
  • Blood Proof (1997)
  • A Burial in Portugal (1997)
  • Cargo Risk (1997)
  • Isle of Dragons (1997)
  • Nest of Vultures (1997)
  • Country Club Wives (1997)
  • A Cut in Diamonds (1997)
  • Drum of Power (1998)
  • Mayday from Malaga (1998)
  • Death Bytes (1998)
  • A Problem in Prague (1998)
  • Cave of Bats (1998)
  • Witchline (1999)
  • The Lazarus Widow (with Martin Edwards) (1999)

Notes

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  1. ^ "The chavs and chav-nots in a bitter war of words - Scotsman.com News". Edinburgh Evening News. 29 August 2007. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
    Knox, Bill (1962). Little drops of blood. Published for the Crime Club by Doubleday.
  2. ^ Knox, Bill (1975). Rally to kill. Published for the Crime Club by Doubleday. ISBN 9780385026901. neds.
  3. ^ Dove, George N. (1982). The police procedural. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling Green University Popular Press. pp. 79–80. ISBN 0-87972-188-X.
  4. ^ a b McLean, Pauline (1 March 2024). "Bill Knox: the return of the grandfather of tartan noir". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 2 March 2024.