Interview with Peter James and his book, The Hawk is Dead

The Hawk Is Dead

Roy Grace Book 22

Peter James

October 2025

MacMillan Pub

The Hawk Is Dead, by Peter James, blends fiction with reality.  The story features the real King and Queen of England within a suspenseful mystery. 

Queen Camilla is traveling on a train that is derailed in a tunnel on the way to Brighton.  Determined to find safety, they rest for a bit which is where the action begins.  One of her trusted aides is murdered by a sniper and another bullet whizzes by the Queen’s head. Detective Roy Grace from the Sussex police questions if Camilla was the target or did the sniper aim for the person he shot. The inquiry moves to Buckingham Palace where another person is murdered. The investigation becomes intense as Grace tries to figure out who was the target, and why these murders are happening, knowing if he gets those answers he will find the murderer. 

A bonus is how the author created a behind the scenes vision of life in Buckingham Palace. Readers learn about the royal palace’s staff, traditions, artwork, and how the Royals interact. 

The story is very plausible and has riveting scenes that will have people turning the pages.

Elise Cooper: Did you start with writing crime novels?

Peter James:  No – back in 1977 my then wife asked when I was going to write a novel, as I’d always talked about it.  I read an article that there was a shortage of spy thrillers.  So, I wrote one and to my amazement I got a two-book deal.  Unfortunately, neither sold well. 

EC: You seem to be known for crime novels, how did they come about?

PJ:  We were robbed and a detective came to fingerprint our house.  He saw my two spy thrillers and said if ever I needed research help with the police to call him.  We became friends along with his wife who is also a detective.  They invited me to a barbeque where I met twelve of their friends, all in the police force. After speaking with them I realized no one sees more of human life and death than a cop.  Long story short, they started inviting me on-ride outs. Increasingly I was putting police characters into my books. I tried to show the human side of being a police officer and that it was not just a job for them. I was smuggled into crime scenes as well.

EC: Did any of them give advice for the Roy Grace Series?

PJ: In 1997 I met homicide detective Gaylor and we really clicked.  He had been tasked with reopening all the unsolved murders in Sussex England. He said he was the last chance each victim would have for justice and the family for closure. I liked that human image about him. We started talking about the novel I was writing then and he started making suggestions.  I thought how he has a real creative streak to him. He helped me on the next two books I wrote.  In 2002 he was promoted to the head of homicide for Sussex police. I was offered to write a crime detective as a central character.  I phoned Gaylor and asked how he would like to be a fictional cop. He loved it. We have worked together ever since on all Roy Grace books. He tells me how Roy would think and act under different circumstances and has opened doors to the police in the world. 

EC: Do you think your Roy Grace novels are typical detective stories?

PJ: I wanted to do something different than the cop with a drinking problem and/or a broken marriage. No cop in the UK would last 24 hours with a drinking problem.  I decided to create a detective who had a personal puzzle of his own he could not solve. In the first book, readers learn that Roy’s wife Sandy who he loved and adored had vanished off the face of the earth nine years earlier, on his 30th birthday. All his down time has been taken up with his hunting for her.  He wonders if she took off with a lover, had an accident, took her own life, or got kidnapped. In the second book in the series, he starts dating Cleo, which blossoms into a love affair. 

EC: What happens with Sandy?

PJ: Roy has always idolized her. Part of the difficulty of moving on is the constant fear that she will come back. In his eyes she is the perfect wife, yet readers will see another side to her. I published THEY THOUGHT I WAS DEAD a couple of years ago, which is Sandy’s story. 

EC:  How would you describe Roy?

PJ: If ever I was unlucky enough to have a member of my family murdered, Roy is the detective I would want to investigate. Over the years he has changed. He has moved on with his personal life, becoming a father. He becomes smarter and tougher. When I have asked police detectives I know if they have changed, they all answered yes and that they have become more cynical. They do face real danger all the time. 

EC: Did you have any interaction with the Queen and King?

PJ: About ten years ago in the Daily Mail Newspaper there was a photo of the then Duchess of Cornwall, Camilla, in her office, with two of my Roy Grace books right behind her head. In the article she said I was one of her two favorite authors; the other one was Jane Austen. I wrote to thank her and received a handwritten two-page letter from her telling me she is a genuine fan who has read all the Roy Grace books and some of my stand-alones too. We continued to correspond and she suggested I write a Roy Grace story set in London. I thought, hey, people who have disobeyed past Queens of England did not have things end well for them!  She also wanted to see some of the filming of the TV show Grace.  

EC: Where can you view the Roy Grace TV series, which is based on the novels?

PJ: It can be viewed on BritBox and is titled “Grace.” They just finished filming season 6 that will be out next spring. In April they will start filming season 7. Each season follows a book per episode although some episodes are new and not from the books.  They have covered 18 of the 22 books so far. 

EC: Did the Queen watch the filming of a Roy Grace episode?

PJ: We were filming an episode on the harbor waterfront near Brighton, which was a good spot because it could be easily made secure. In a warehouse, she interviewed me for her book club – and I was astonished that she knew more about Roy Grace than I do!!!!  She met John Simm and the rest of the cast.  I jokingly suggested she might like to be an extra and she replied, ‘Perhaps I could be a dead body???’  She has a wicked sense of humor – and fun!  Then she invited me to join her for lunch back in the warehouse.  Her private secretary opened her handbag and pulled out a banana, a thermos of soup, and a ham and cheese sandwich!  A few months later one of her senior members of the Royal Household said to me that she really would like me to set a Roy Grace novel in Buckingham Palace – with a murder or two – or possibly three.

EC:  Did the idea for the story come out of the suggestion?

PJ: I realized that the Palace is in disarray because of the renovations. The Palace is filled with over one million objects of artwork. I was given two three and a half hour tours of the Palace, literally everywhere – down in the basement, along all the floors and up on the rooftop!  This is where I came up with this story of how these crooks in the Royal household stole and sold some on the dark web. I discovered it happened, but the thief put the stolen goods on eBay. I did take a tour of the Palace and had my tracker on and found out I had walked 3.5 miles. I want to make all my books as authentic as possible. Everything written in the story is true except the names of members of the Royal Household – although King Charles and Queen Camilla appear as themselves.

EC: Did you ever meet King Charles?

PJ:  I met him and the Queen several times. He told me he loved how I kept his wife so entertained with my books!  He is warm and charming.   

EC: How would you describe Queen Camilla in the story compared to the real Queen?

PJ: I did put a lot of words into the King and Queen’s mouth – they appear extensively throughout the book.  Then early in the editing, I asked her to read a draft, as now was the opportunity to change anything she was not happy with.  My publishers bound a special copy for her, and I had it hand delivered to her – and then followed the most nervous week of my life!!!  I was invited to Clarence house a few days later.  She strode towards me with a big smile and said, ‘I ABSOLUTELY LOVE IT!!!!”  I asked her if there was anything she wanted changing and she replied, emphatically, ‘NOT ONE WORD!”

She is quite heroic in the book and I’ve made her appear as very well rounded. She is caring, intellectual, strong, diligent, composed, dutiful, sarcastic, and determined – all of which is true to life.

EC: Many in the US do not see the Queen with these characteristics.

PJ: She is portrayed as the wicked woman, which is really not fair.  Charles and she were in love. The late Queen Mother insisted Charles had to marry a virgin and could not therefore marry the woman he truly loved and the whole tragedy of Diana began from there. Camilla was his first love. She was vilified by a lot of people, but certainly in the UK and in many other parts of the world, she has now won admiration and love. People do not realize that no one in the Royal family has made such an impact on reading. Her Instagram book club, The Queen’s Reading Room is in almost every country in the world. I think she is reading’s biggest ambassador. I love that she is not a literary snob but reads across the whole spectrum – everything from literary fiction – historical and present – right down to humble mystery writers like me!

EC: What was said about the train, is that true?

PJ: Yes.  She prefers to go on a train and not going on a helicopter. The Royal train has been used for decades, like a hotel on wheels. It is very old inside: Formica tabletops, avocado bathroom, and a bullet hole in the floor of the dining room – from an over-zealous guard one night!!!!

EC:  Would you ever send Roy to investigate a crime in the US?

PJ: I have often thought about Roy coming to the US on some kind of exchange.  It may well happen.

EC: Next book?

PJ: One of the books I loved was Arthur Hailey’s Hotel. It is set in a hotel in New Orleans, full of characters. Ever since reading this I have always wanted to set a novel in a hotel. I have Roy investigating a big murder in a hotel in Brighton. It will be out around the same time next year.

I will also have a book coming out about writing for those who want to learn about this craft and a little bit about my life.

THANK YOU!!