The setting for a crime novel- what makes Portsmouth, the Solent and the Isle of Wight fascinating to readers around the world

Morse has his Oxford, Rebus has Edinburgh and Andy Horton has the Solent and surrounding coastal area. 

Many of you know that I draw my inspiration and ideas from the area in which I live and where my DI Andy Horton crime novels and thriller novels are set: Portsmouth, the Isle of Wight and generally the Solent area on the South Coast of England.  And readers from all around the World as far a field as China, Australia and America are reading about Andy Horton's marine mystery country.

It is a vibrant area full of contrasts and contradictions, which is why I find it fascinating.  Portsmouth is also my home town, or I should say the city where I was raised, so I know it well, warts and all.

It's a waterfront city with a colourful and diverse history. Home to HMS Victory, HMS Warrior 1860, the Mary Rose Museum, The Royal Naval Museum, and  the Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. But it's not all history.


New navy ships rub shoulders with old.  HMS Victory in the background. 


There is a thriving Commercial Ferry Port with sailings to France, the Channel Islands and Spain. And soon the cruise liners Hebridean Princess and its sister brands Voyages of Discovery and Swan Hellenic will be sailing from Portsmouth with the completion of a new passenger terminal in February 2011.  That's sure to provide inspiration for a new Andy Horton novel or a thriller.

Because the harbour entrance is so narrow you feel as if you can almost touch the ships as they sail past you at the ancient fortifications of Old Portsmouth. No where else can you get so close.


Ferries in Portsmouth Commercial Ferry Port

One of the most densely populated cities in Europe, the Portsmouth poor rub shoulders with the rich as  the ancient walls of Old Portsmouth and it's tiny historic houses rub shoulders with the stunning new waterfront of Gunwharf Quays renamed Oyster Quays in the Horton novels.


The Round Tower at Old Portsmouth, used in the Inspector Andy Horton novel Deadly Waters

There is always something to see particularly on the sea! The navy ships, the orange and black tug boats, the Continental and Isle of Wight ferries, the hovercraft, pleasure craft, fishing boats, Border Agency boats, lifeboats and much, much more... 

The Isle of Wight,  just a few miles across the Solent, seems a world away with its rolling downs, beautiful bays, stunning coastline, and prehistoric remains. Yes, it has its poor areas and its rough places but it also, like Portsmouth, has that island mentality that makes it unique.  It has some lovely walks, great for thinking through plots while admiring the scenery.


Looking down on to the promenade from Shanklin to Sandown from the cliff top at Lake

People sometimes ask me if I will run out of ideas for my novels. Perhaps one day I might but a stroll along the coastline wherever that might be: Portsmouth, Hayling Island, the Isle of Wight and I know a new idea will spring to mind and set that to rights.

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