Born Michael David Ripley in
Huddersfield,
Yorkshire, England, he received a BA honours degree from the
University of East Anglia in 1974. He is the author of the
Angel series of comedy thrillers set mainly in
Essex and
London's East End. He won the
Crime Writers' Association "Last Laugh Award" for best humorous crime novel for
Angel Touch in 1989 and
Angels In Arms in 1991. He was also a scriptwriter for the fifth series of the
BBC comedy-drama
Lovejoy (1986–94) starring
Ian McShane, and served as
The Daily Telegraphs crime fiction critic for ten years. In 2003, at the age of fifty, he suffered a
stroke; his 2006 book,
Surviving a Stroke, is his autobiographical account of his recovery. After twenty years of working in London he moved to East Anglia and became an archaeologist. In the words of his publisher, "he was thus one of the few crime writers who regularly turned up real bodies". He currently writes the "Getting Away With Murder" column for the online publication
Shots. The inspiration for the column (he once claimed) came after a night of drinking gin with
Auberon Waugh and
Gore Vidal in London. He is the series editor at Ostara Publishing, which specialises in reprinting classic mysteries and thrillers, and was co-editor of the three
Fresh Blood anthologies promoting new British crime writing. He also lectures on crime writing at the
University of Cambridge. In 2007, he was made a patron of the
Essex Book Festival and ran his Creative Crime Writing course at the Lavenham Literary Festivals in 2009 and 2013. Working with the Margery Allingham Society he has completed the Albert Campion novel left unfinished on the death of Allingham's widower, Philip Youngman Carter in 1969. ''Mr. Campion's Farewell'' was published in April 2014. A second Campion "continuation" novel followed in 2015 and a third in 2016. Ripley has so far published 11 books in the Campion series. His non-fiction reader's history titled
Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang, a survey of the boom in British thrillers 1953–1975, was published in May 2017 and won the H.R.F. Keating Award for non-fiction at
Crimefest 2018. ==Continuing Margery Allingham's Campion novels==