Do you work other genres into your crime fiction? Do you bend the “so-called” rules?
by Dietrich
In crime fiction, the path from crime to consequence rarely runs straight. Twists, detours and sharp turns keep readers hooked, and the same goes for how I approach writing it. Over the years, I’ve never been one to stick rigidly to a single lane. My novels are crime novels at their core—gritty, character-driven stories full of flawed people making bad choices—but I like to weave in other elements that bend the so-called rules of the genre.
My earlier books set in modern Vancouver — Ride the Lightning, The Deadbeat Club, Triggerfish — are straight-up urban crime tales: drug deals gone sideways, small-time crooks clashing with bigger fish, dark humor amid the chaos. But even there, I pull from noir traditions— dialogue driven and fast paced with a focus on the underbelly—while letting the city’s real vibe seep in. I don’t force a whodunit structure or insist on a tidy resolution. Sometimes the bad guys get away with it, or the hero isn’t all that heroic, and justice doesn’t always prevail.
Some stories border on thriller territory with high-stakes chases, or even a touch of Western grit.
Then there’s the historical side of my work, where things get even less straight. I love drawing from real events and figures to ground the crime in history, blending factual details with fictional drama. Under an Outlaw Moon is based on the true story of Bennie and Stella Dickson, a Depression-era couple who turned to bank robbing and were forced to live on the run. Call Down the Thunder dives into Dust Bowl desperation and criminal choices amid economic ruin. House of Blazes sets high-stakes crime and revenge against the chaos of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire. The disaster itself becoming a force that drives the characters’ actions. Crooked brings to life Alvin Karpis and the Barker Gang—Ma Barker and her boys—in their Chicago bootlegging and kidnapping era, turning historical outlaws into vivid, unpredictable characters driven by greed, loyalty and desperation. Dirty Little War keeps the 1920s–1930s vibe, exploring gangland conflicts and moral gray areas in that turbulent time.
I don’t set out to write historical fiction, but crime novels rooted in history. I love to blend in period atmosphere, slang, and social tensions, but the heart remains the crime: heists, shootouts and betrayals. It’s crime fiction with a historical twist, or historical fiction with a criminal pulse. Either way, it defies a neat box.
My latest, Rust and Bone (coming March 31, 2026), takes things further afield. Set at the tail end of World War II in Ukraine and Germany, it’s part coming-of-age story and part family drama set against a backdrop of war’s devastation—escape from captivity, survival in ruined landscapes, and the search for refuge while the entire world’s gone mad. It leans more literary in its exploration of human resilience and loss, but crime elements still simmer beneath. Survival often means breaking laws, making ruthless choices and crossing lines in a world without any rules. It’s another bend in the line, showing how crime and moral ambiguity persist even in historical extremes.

I also like to blend dark comedy into many of my stories—the absurd schemes in The Get and the punk-rock edge of Zero Avenue.
And I like to read outside crime—literary fiction, history, whatever catches my eye—and it all filters in. A straight crime plot can feel predictable if it follows every convention. I prefer letting characters lead, even if they veer off the expected path. Rules like “the protagonist must be likable” or “tie up every loose end” often get bent or broken when it serves the story.
Ultimately, crime fiction thrives on tension, moral gray zones, and the tangled mess of being human. Clinging too tightly to a predictable formula risks diluting all of that. My aim is to engage readers by weaving in whatever feels authentic and keeping things unpredictable.
















