![]() HAWKINS: Yeah, it's difficult these days because getting away with murder is not what it once was. But perhaps that's why you keep coming out with thrillers, with murders at the center of them. KELLY: I'm going to object and say that my walks are interesting (laughter), but I don't think I'm looking for a place to stash a body. But as you wander around wherever you are, you look at places, yes, to dispose of a body, maybe to get away with murder. ![]() ![]() I think it's something that all crime writers do. You know, I don't actually think I'm alone in doing this. KELLY: Allow me to hope that your hunt for the perfect spot to stash a body is purely in the service of your fiction. A body does indeed turn up in London and on a houseboat in Hawkin's new summer thriller, "A Slow Fire Burning." You may already know her work. As she walks, Hawkins is looking around, scouting for the perfect place to dispose of a body. The writer Paula Hawkins likes to take walks near where she lives in London, which happens to be near the region's canal, where a lot of houseboats are moored. ![]()
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