Jeffrey Archer: 'I'm Surprised Vikram Seth Is Not The Captain Of The Indian Cricket Team!'

Reader’s Digest in conversation with the bestselling author who refuses to retire

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Reader’s Digest in conversation with the bestselling author who refuses to retire

English novelist Jeffrey Archer began writing in 1974 with Not A Penny More, Not A Penny Less, and followed it up with the hugely successful Kane and Abel, which firmly established him as a master storyteller. In the past 45 years he has written dozens of short stories, thrillers, generational sagas, plays, as well as a prison memoir trilogy, having served time for perjury in the early years of this century.

In 2019, now aged 79, Archer turned over a new leaf in his writing career, embarking upon a series of police novels, featuring Detective Constable William Warwick. If the name sounds familiar, it’s because this was, in fact, the hero of the crime thrillers written by the fictional Harry Clifton in Archer’s seven-part Clifton Chronicles (2011–2017).

I met Archer on a beautiful September morning at his penthouse apartment on Albert Embankment in London. The living room was awash with sunshine streaming in from large glass windows overlooking the Thames, the Houses of Parliament and The London Eye. Big Ben, sadly, was hiding behind a curtain, undergoing repairs.

Over a cup of hot chocolate, Lord Jeffery Archer—he is a life peer—settled down to talk about his writing, his interest in cricket and why he doesn’t want to retire…  

 

You were at the Jaipur Literature Festival this year. What was it like?

It was amazing! There were 7,500 people [at his session]. A very young crowd, 60 per cent were women, very young … it was a shock. I’ve been coming to India and drawing crowds of one or two thousand regularly, but never 7,500! It was o...

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