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Showing posts with label debut novel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label debut novel. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 April 2018

Debut Author Spotlight


Debut Author Spotlight – 20 Questions
With SARAH SIMPSON



I'm delighted to welcome Sarah Simpson, author of HER GREATEST MISTAKE, to my blog on her publication day!
                                                                                                                                           









Sarah Simpson has a first-class honours degree in Psychology and has worked in a neuro-psychology department at a Brain Rehabilitation Hospital. She lives in Cornwall with her husband and three children, and runs her own practice at the Duchy Hospital in Truro. Her Greatest Mistake is her first novel.


I asked Sarah my 20 Questions and here's what she had to say:



1)      Congratulations, IT’S PUBLICATION DAY! Tell us in three words how you’re feeling right now:
Fortunate, emotional, joyful

2)      Describe your novel in ONE sentence:
Can I rely on a recent review? ‘A chilling, heart-string pulling psychological thriller.’

3)      How are you celebrating publication day?
      It’s Easter Sunday – so a family day for me. A walk on the beach and lots of lovely food and chocolate.

4)      Why/When did you decide to write your first novel?
I decided to write Her Greatest Mistake in 2006, but I didn’t begin to write it until 2016! It then felt like the right time in my life, we’d been through many changes including relocating to Cornwall. For me, it was the missing piece of the jigsaw.

5)      How long was it from the first submission of your completed manuscript to agents, to this day?
I think I first submitted it at the beginning of 2017 before realising – I shouldn’t have because my novel wasn’t ready! I then submitted again in April time of 2017. I was taken on by the lovely Broo Doherty (and I still thank my lucky stars). I think we first put Her Greatest Mistake out on submission to the first round of publishers in September. At the beginning of November 2017, I was delighted and little scared to be offered a three book deal by Aria, Head of Zeus. Since then, it has been pretty full on with the editing process, cover design et cetera. So exciting though. Everything seemed to suddenly happen so very quickly.

6)      So far, what has been the biggest surprise/shock about becoming a published author?
Genuinely, that I have written something people want to read!

7)      What are you most looking forward to as a published author?
To being able to write more and more, perhaps to be able to give up my day job with a licence to wander nonchalantly around my imagination, building stories I can share.

Ok, let’s get down to the writing process
8)      Which authors inspired your writing?
I have to go back to my childhood, to the wonderful Enid Blyton, I devoured her books, slinking away into her lands of fantasy at every given opportunity. Later on, it was the brilliant Agatha Christie, for the mystery, the fragrant atmosphere and vibrant characters she always created. More recently, it would be too difficult to say, so many brilliant authors out there, I really wouldn’t want to specify.

9)      How long did it take you to write ‘Her Greatest Mistake’?
Around twelve months, because I kept picking it up, putting it down, picking it back up. Convincing myself I couldn’t write and then thinking, maybe I can… Then after the twelve months, I ripped it apart completely and re-wrote it all over.

10)   What was your first draft like? 
From time to time, I look back at my first draft, then I realise I’m holding my breath whilst blushing. Wondering how I ever thought that one day I might be published. It is almost unrecognisable to the draft today (which is probably more like the 12th draft). The theme running through and the bones of the story are essentially the same, it’s more – how I voiced the story. I think I literally deleted 60,000 words during my re-writes. I was learning all the time though and it was a huge learning curve.

11)   How did you find the editing process a - before you had an editor?
I love the editing process! I am someone (forgetting that first draft) who edits as I go along too. I can’t seem to resist it. Some days I think, I’m not going to edit today I’m only going to re-fresh myself on this chapter, but I can’t help myself. I find the process almost therapeutic and I also find while I am editing - the story begins to come alive and take me places I hadn’t considered before.
                                                                   b - and now you do?
The editors are simply brilliant. Copy editors are like forensic experts seeking out the inconsistencies and discovering blunders seemingly invisible to the normal eye, but so obvious when it is pointed out! I confess, I love this process too!

12)    When you write do you need music, or silence?
I rarely work in silence. I am quite used to working within the usual realms of a full house, barking dogs and caught between two entirely dissimilar tastes of music echoing from my children’s rooms. Whilst I was completing my book ready for submission, we had not long suffered a flood of the entire ground floor, so I also had the noise of floors being ripped up and replaced too. When I am alone in the house, I always have a background noise of some form. Though, I find that music can make me feel quite emotional, then my writing tends to become deeper and darker.

13)    What is your guilty pleasure when writing? 
Peanut butter. I love peanut butter, on toast, on crisp breads, or simply from a spoon! I make numerous cups of tea and coffee to throw away an hour later when stone cold. So I always keep a bottle of water with me, else I think I would become pretty dehydrated by the end of the process.

14)    What is your favourite part of the writing process? Least favourite?
Tough one, because it depends on what mood I am in. I do love writing the opening chapter and the final chapter. I’ve often written the final chapter quite early on in the process, before I really know what will happen along the way. I also love building characters in my mind. By the time I’d finished writing Her Greatest Mistake, and because Eve – the main protagonist was in the first person, I almost found it difficult to stop thinking as she would. Being able to step inside your character’s mind, I love! This is why I like to write in the first person.
My least favourite part is possibly the dialogue. I worry, not wanting to sound wooden or too manufactured. Which is unusual given I love to be inside the characters’ mind, I find it so easy to write about inner thoughts and feelings and yet more difficult to represent open dialogue. Strange?

15)    Did you need to conduct any research for your novel? How did you approach it?
Much of the material in Her Greatest Mistake came from my own professional experiences, certainly the psychological elements and the issues surrounding mental health conditions. My background is in mental health and I have also worked within the family court system alongside family solicitors, so all of this helped a great deal. I also chose to set the book in geographical areas I knew well, although I did visit certain stretches of featured coastline from time to time for inspiration. Money laundering is the only topic I needed to research and to do this, I accessed numerous case studies, newspaper articles and also several legal papers I found online.

16)    Now you have a book deal – with deadlines (!) – how has that affected your writing process?
It’s strange because it really does feel different. Perhaps because before I was writing with hope and now I am writing with a certain weight of expectation. I try not to think too much about the deadlines, though they are very much there. I think perhaps the biggest difference is the guilt element. Before, I often felt guilty spending my time writing, it felt a little indulgent, worrying over having so many other things needing my attention. And now, when I’m having to deal with the other things – I feel guilty for not getting to my writing!

17)   What do you do in your ‘spare’ time? 
At the moment, these times are few and far between! However, the beauty of having a huge dog is that he needs exercise, so I walk miles with him during my breaks. I love the simple things in life, walks on the beach, I love to be near the sea, it helps me gain a perspective on life. I also love to cook, creating dishes and watching my family enjoy them. Of course, I read as much as I can, I don’t ever want reading to be part of my work, I always want to savour and enjoy it. Especially now I understand just how much blood, sweat and tears has been shed for each piece of work. My children are older now but I love spending time with them and my husband, again - just doing the simple things.

18)   What’s coming next?
Book two is now complete, I am about to commence on the editing process with a deadline looming at the end of April. It will be available sometime at the end of Summer/ Autumn. I have some strong ideas for book three but I am simply allowing them to float around in my head for a little longer before I write anything down.

19)   Where can readers find you? 
You can find me here:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sarahrsimpson
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sarahsimpsoncornwall/
Instagram: sarahsimpsonauthor

20)   All importantly, where can readers buy your fabulous debut novel? 
click on the following:

Amazon




Here is the blurb for Her Greatest Mistake, published by Aria on 1st April -

DO WE EVER KNOW WHAT GOES ON BEHIND CLOSED DOORS?

Eve and Gregg were the perfect couple, with the perfect marriage... which has become the perfect lie. Gone is the charming, attentive Gregg - instead Eve wakes up each morning beside a manipulative and sinister man who controls his wife's every move.
So Eve flees her immaculate marital home to keep herself, and young son Jack safe. Yet no matter how careful she has been, she knows Gregg will be relentless in his pursuit of his missing family. And that one day, when she's least expecting it, he will find them...
What was Eve's greatest mistake?
Marrying Gregg? Leaving him? Or leaving him alive...?
HER GREATEST MISTAKE is the gripping debut which will keep you guessing until the very last page. B.A. Paris meets Liane Moriarty in this electrifying thriller.


Huge thanks for taking the time to answer these questions, Sarah - and enjoy your publication day!

Thursday, 5 October 2017

Caroline England - 20 Questions

Debut Author Spotlight – 20 Questions
with Caroline England

                                      

I'm delighted to welcome debut author, Caroline England to the spotlight feature today. I first met Caroline at CrimeFest in May, and we also share publication days!

Beneath The Skin is a brilliantly dark, domestic noir about a life changing lie - here is the blurb:

No-one remembers your past. But you do.
‘Antonia, Antonia. My name is Antonia.’
It’s been her name for many years. But sometimes, like tonight, she forgets.
Antonia has a secret. A secret so dark and so deep that she can barely admit it to herself. Instead, she treats herself to Friday night sessions of self-harm while her husband David is at the pub, and her best friend Sophie is drinking too much wine a few doors down.
Nobody close to her knows the truth about what the teenage Antonia saw all those years ago. No-one, that is, except her mother. But Candy is in a care home now, her mind too addled to remember the truth. Antonia is safe. Isn’t she?
The lies start small. They always do. But when the tightly woven story you’ve told yourself begins to unravel, the truth threatens to come to the surface. And then what’s going to happen?


Sounds fabulous, doesn't it?

Now, over to you, Caroline:


1)      Congratulations, Caroline, IT’S PUBLICATION DAY! Tell us in three words how you’re feeling right now:
                
Thrilled, dream, true!

2)      Describe your novel in ONE sentence:
                
Four couples with interlinking histories; eight individuals, all with secrets that are ready to explode (thank you to Sarah Jasmon for putting it so succinctly!)

3)      How are you celebrating publication day?
                
I think a bottle of fizz might be in order!

4)      Why/When did you decide to write your first novel?

     The first novel I wrote was chicklit set in a solicitor’s office. I started writing it at my desk between working on my cases, but don’t tell anyone!

5)      How long was it from the first submission of your completed manuscript to agents, to this day?

 A fairly long time! But, like most writers, I submitted it far too early.

6)      So far, what has been the biggest surprise/shock about becoming a published author?

 How supportive and friendly other published writers are!

7)      What are you most looking forward to as a published author?

To readers enjoying my novel! Not everyone is going to like it, I know, but I hope    
some people do!
                
Ok, let’s get down to the writing process

8)      Which authors inspired your writing?

Funnily enough I was thinking about Einstein’s quote about fairy tales today: “If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairy tales.” I can’t recall my mum reading them to me, but she bought me fairy tale volumes every birthday and Christmas. I can see one now on my bookcase - The Yellow Fairy Book - I can still remember eagerly dipping in! I’ve never read Roald Dahl’s novels for children, but I discovered Switch Bitch, Kiss Kiss and his other short stories as a teenager. I loved the intriguing colourful tales with their dark twists. Looking back, I can see how they’ve influenced my own short stories.

I adored Mary Wesley’s surprisingly risqué novels and Elizabeth Jane Howard’s Cazalet Chronicles. I’m also a big fan of Maggie O’Farrell and Kate Atkinson’s contemporary fiction. I have always enjoyed reading crime fiction, from Agatha Christie as a child through to Ruth Rendell, Minette Walters, Val McDermid, Ian Rankin and more recently Mark Billingham and Jo Nesbo. And now I’ve found all the fab Avon HarperCollins crime writers! Though my novels are more ‘domestic noir’ than standard crime fiction, I think my writing has been influenced by the blend of these two genres, so I write about contemporary lives but with intrigue, complications, dark edges and secrets. And, of course, love.

9)      How long did it take you to write ‘BENEATH THE SKIN’?

This is a tricky question as the first draft was written fairly quickly, maybe ten      
years ago, then I came back to it in more recent times and fleshed it out.

10)  What was your first draft like?

The basic story was pretty much the same as it is now. I thought it was      
complete, but of course it wasn’t! It has probably doubled in length since then.

11)  How did you find the editing process a - before you had an editor?
                                                        b - and now you do?

I think the self-editing process is a massive learning curve. My local writing group is particularly good at spotting howlers. I actually enjoy the process and I have certainly got better at it over time, but there’s nothing like having another pair of eyes, especially professional ones!

12)   When you write do you need music, or silence?

Silence (though the cats make their presence known, often by sitting on the           
laptop and purring loudly!)

13)   What is your guilty pleasure when writing? 

 Yorkshire tea!

14)   What is your favourite part of the writing process? Least favourite?

 Lying in the bath and getting inspiration is my favourite. Getting distracted by life and
 thinking I’ll never have the ability to write again is the least.


15)   Did you need to conduct any research for your novel? How did you approach it?
               
No.

16)   Now you have a book deal – with deadlines (!) – how has that affected your writing process?
                
I’m very much a ‘doer’ so I quite liked the deadlines for book 2, but I don’t know       
how I’d feel about writing from scratch. Super stressed probably! Fortunately I had My    
Husband’s Lies in the bag!

17)  What do you do in your ‘spare’ time? 

 Spending as much time as I can with my three gorgeous girls!

18)  What’s coming next? 
                
My Husband’s Lies will (hopefully) be published in May 2018. It’s available for pre-            order now on Amazon!

19)  Where can readers find you?
                Twitter: @CazEngland
                Facebook: Caroline England Author
                Instagram: CazEngland1
                Website: carolineenglandauthor.simplesite.com
                Email: carolineenglandauthor@gmail.com

20)  All importantly, where can readers buy your fabulous debut novel?
            Just click on any of the following to be taken to the site:
                Amazon
                Waterstones
                HarperCollins
                WHSmith


Now, here's a bit about Caroline:

Born Yorkshire lass, Caroline studied Law at the University of Manchester and stayed over the border. Caroline was a divorce and professional indemnity lawyer and instigated her jottings when she deserted the law to bring up her three lovely daughters. In addition to the publication of her short story collection, Watching Horsepats Feed the Roses by ACHUKAbooks, Caroline has had short stories and poems published in a variety of literary publications and anthologies. She was shortlisted for the Impress Prize 2015, in the Pulp Idol 2016 finals and long listed for the UK Novel Writing Competition 2017.

Thank you for taking the time to answer these questions - wishing you HUGE success with Beneath The Skin - and enjoy your day!

I think we'll both be celebrating later :)

Thursday, 24 August 2017

Elisabeth Carpenter - 20 Questions

Debut Author Spotlight – 20 Questions
with Elisabeth Carpenter



I am thrilled to have Elisabeth join me to chat about her debut psychological thriller, 99 Red Balloons: A chillingly clever psychological thriller with a stomach-flipping twist - published by Avon, HarperCollins today!





Elisabeth Carpenter lives in Preston with her family. She completed a BA in English Literature and Language with the Open University in 2011. Elisabeth was awarded a Northern Writers’ New Fiction award, and was longlisted for Yeovil Literary Prize (2015 and 2016) and the MsLexia Women’s Novel award (2015). She loves living in the north of England and sets most of her stories in the area, including the novel she is writing at the moment. She currently works as a book keeper.






1)      Congratulations, IT’S PUBLICATION DAY! Tell us in three words how you’re feeling right now:

Excited, nervous disbelief!

2)      Describe your novel in ONE sentence:

Two girls go missing, decades apart, and family secrets are slowly revealed.

3)      How are you celebrating publication day?

Lunch and dinner out with the family – with a glass of Prosecco, of course!

4)      Why/When did you decide to write your first novel?

I started writing 99 Red Balloons in 2015, but this was actually the fifth manuscript I’ve written. With 99, I wanted to explore the impact of a missing child on the wider family.

5)      How long was it from the first submission of your completed manuscript to agents, to this day?

I started submitting around the beginning of June 2016 - so just over a year. It’s been a crazy, but amazing, fourteen months!

6)      So far, what has been the biggest surprise/shock about becoming a published author?

Luckily, I have a friend who has been through it before me (which is you, Sam, haha!). You were always there to answer my questions, which I really appreciated.

As well as editing the book itself, there are also a lot interviews for blog posts, which I hadn’t thought about before. They are really fun to do, as everyone asks different questions – some I’d never asked myself!

7)      What are you most looking forward to as a published author?

Seeing my book on shelves next to other authors – it’ll be a dream come true.

Ok, let’s get down to the writing process

8)      Which authors inspired your writing?

Not technically an author, but Sally Wainwright is one of my writing heroes. Also, I loved The Time Traveller’s Wife. This book was so different to anything I’d read before. I wasn’t a big fan of pure science fiction as I felt it was too descriptive. Previously, I read lots of women’s fiction, which I still love, but this book mixed genres so seamlessly it was inspirational to me. The depth of the characters that Niffeneger created meant I was in floods of tears by the end of the book.

9)      How long did it take you to write ’99 Red Balloons’?

About a year, on and off.

10)   What was your first draft like?

I like to get the story down first or I might not finish it. I tend to write quite detailed anyway as things pop into my head.

11)   How did you find the editing process a - before you had an editor?
                                                                 I go through my work again and again. 
                                                                 b - and now you do?
                                                                ...and again! It’s much the same, but a lot more detailed. It’s great having a professional suggest ways to improve the book. I have a brilliant editor, which helps!

12)    When you write do you need music, or silence?

Having a six-year-old in the summer holidays means I rarely have the luxury of silence during the day, but I wouldn’t change it! (School starts back in a few weeks haha!)

13)    What is your guilty pleasure when writing? 

Lots of coffee (morning) and tea (afternoon)

14)    What is your favourite part of the writing process? Least favourite?

I love and hate first drafts, and I love and hate editing. It’s a mixed bag!

15)    Did you need to conduct any research for your novel? How did you approach it?

The book I’m writing now is part-set in 1986. Luckily, I remember quite a bit, but I’ve read books of the time, bought newspapers and magazines from that year. I also got a Freemans catalogue on disc, which was really fun to go through.

16)    Now you have a book deal – with deadlines (!) – how has that affected your writing process?
Not much as a process, but it is daunting writing book two knowing it’s going to be published. I suppose it makes me work harder to get it right.

17)   What do you do in your ‘spare’ time? 

I go to an art class once a week in term time; I like reading, going out with friends, seeing new places, visiting museums. And sometimes I like doing nothing.

18)   What’s coming next? 

Book two is written and I’m just putting the final tweaks to it. It’s about a mother who goes missing in 1986 from a Spanish Island. Her family receives an email from someone claiming to be her. The narrative follows her daughter in the present, and the mother in the past, in the lead-up to her disappearance.

19)   Where can readers find you?

On Twitter - @libbycpt and on Facebook - Elisabeth Carpenter Author 
My website is:  www.elisabethcarpenter.co.uk 

20)   All importantly, where can readers buy your fabulous debut novel?
99 Red Balloons can be found in bookstores and supermarkets and you can, of course, get it on  AMAZON

Here's the blurb for 99 Red Balloons:

Two girls go missing, decades apart. What would you do if one was your daughter?
When eight-year-old Grace goes missing from a sweetshop on the way home from school, her mother Emma is plunged into a nightmare. Her family rallies around, but as the police hunt begins, cracks begin to emerge.

What are the secret emails sent between Emma’s husband and her sister? Why does her mother take so long to join the search? And is Emma really as innocent as she seems?

Meanwhile, ageing widow Maggie Taylor sees Grace’s picture in the newspaper. It’s a photograph that jolts her from the pain of her existence into a spiralling obsession with another girl – the first girl who disappeared…


Huge thanks for joining me on your publication day, Elisabeth! Hope you have a fantastic day and enjoy your prosecco later!

You can pop along to see Elisabeth at Waterstones, Preston on 12th September - for details click HERE




Wednesday, 2 August 2017

Victoria Jenkins – 20 Questions

Debut Author Spotlight – 20 Questions
with Victoria Jenkins



The Girls in the Water : A completely gripping serial killer thriller with a shocking twist (Detectives King and Lane Book 1)

Victoria Jenkins lives with her husband in South Wales, where she writes crime fiction and teaches English. The Girls in the Water is her debut novel, the first featuring Detective Inspector Alex King and Detective Constable Chloe Lane. The second book in the series will be published in late 2017.



1)      Congratulations, Victoria, IT’S PUBLICATION DAY! Tell us in three words how you’re feeling right now:
Lucky, excited, hopeful.

2)      Describe your novel in ONE sentence:
Two female detectives hunt a killer in South Wales, with devastating consequences that hit uncomfortably close to home.

3)      How are you celebrating publication day?
Quietly. I will probably be glued to my laptop for a big chunk of the day – it’s become a third arm. The support online – both from people I know and those I’ve never met – has been incredible. I feel so lucky, and very grateful. I’ll be going out for dinner in the evening with my husband and my sister – it wouldn’t be a celebration without food involved at some point!

4)      Why/When did you decide to write your first novel?
The Girls in the Water isn’t the first book I’ve written – I’ve written several over the past decade, although most of them I’d be too embarrassed to ever have my name associated with! I’d written from a young age, so it was just a case of finding the ‘right’ thing to write. I wrote this book after the book that grabbed the interest of my agent failed to get a publishing deal – it felt like a case of ‘now or never’, so the pressure turned out to be a good thing for me. 

5)      How long was it from the first submission of your completed manuscript to agents, to this day?
The time between getting signed by an agent and getting the book deal was eleven months, but between finishing The Girls in the Water and getting the publishing deal with Bookouture was a space of about four months. While initially submitting to agents I’d read a lot of ‘Agent on Monday…book deal by Friday’ stories, but the reality for most is a lot different and I think from speaking to other authors that my experience is probably closer to the norm. It’s a waiting game, but it’s one that’s well worth playing. The best way to kill the time is to get on with writing something else. 

6)      So far, what has been the biggest surprise/shock about becoming a published author?
The editing process. Structural edits, line edits, copy edits, proofreads…it can feel never-ending at times! The final version of The Girls in the Water is very different to the first, but the editing process is there for a reason, so the time is well spent. 

7)    What are you most looking forward to as a published author?
Being able to justify the amount of time I spend in my pyjamas.
  

Ok, let’s get down to the writing process

8)      Which authors inspired your writing?
I love Linwood Barclay’s books. In my letters to agents, I used to write something along the lines of, ‘I’d like to be a female, British Linwood Barclay’. The stories are just so accessible; they’re the kind I start, get lost in from the first page, and then find I’ve finished within a matter of days. Not an author, but while writing The Girls in the Water I was binge-watching the BBC2 series The Fall. I think some of the darker elements of the book definitely took an influence from that.

9)      How long did it take you to write The Girls in the Water?
The first draft that was sent to my agent took about six months. She then gave me revisions before submitting to publishers, and then there were all the additional edits that came from my editor at Bookouture. In total, I think around nine months was spent on the book. 

10)   What was your first draft like? 
The very first draft was just the bare bones of the story, probably around 80,000 words – I always like to get the plot down first and then go back and add the descriptions of characters and places, as well as the details relating to police procedure.

11)   How did you find the editing process
               a - before you had an editor?
Difficult. Once I’d got my descriptions down (which quite often weren’t detailed enough)   I’d find it hard to see beyond what was there on the screen in front of me. A fresh pair of eyes is definitely needed when it comes to editing.
                                        
               b - and now you do?
Far easier. Having someone else’s input makes you able to see the things you’ve missed, or the things that just don’t make sense. Sometimes they’re glaringly obvious and I’ll think, ‘well how did I not notice that?’ but when you’ve looked at something so often and for so long, it’s almost as though you stop seeing what’s staring you in the face!

 12)    When you write do you need music, or silence?
A few years back I used to listen to music all the time while writing, always through headphones. I don’t know why that’s changed, but now I find I need total silence. I know a lot of people say they need noise and life around them, but I’d get nothing done. I am easily distracted.

13)    What is your guilty pleasure when writing? 
I keep my sweet tooth under much better control these days than I did when I was younger, but only because I tend not to buy biscuits and cake too often – if it’s in the house, it won’t be there for long. I drink a lot of tea while I’m writing, but I think this is more to do with finding something to distract myself with when things aren’t going to plan rather than the tea itself!

 14)    What is your favourite part of the writing process? And least favourite?
Favourite part? The End. Only joking. My favourite part is when I’m so immersed in something that I get lost in it. I think that’s why I’ve always written: writing means a break from the real world. I love the real world too, but like anywhere else, I don’t want to be there 24/7! My least favourite part: writer’s block. Urgh. I sometimes go for weeks without writing a single word, particularly when I’m in the early stages of a book. Getting past the 10k word mark is always a relief; I start to feel as though I may sort-of know what I’m doing at this point, rather than just making things up as I go along (which I suppose is what I’m doing anyway!)

15)    Did you need to conduct any research for your novel? How did you approach it?
Police procedure was all new to me until about eighteen months ago. I’ve been lucky that a friend’s uncle and my husband’s cousin are both police officers and they gave me help with some of the details needed for The Girls in the Water. I had to do some pretty grim research on drowning victims and the effects of water on corpses too, most of which was done on the internet.

16)    Now you have a book deal – with deadlines (!) – how has that affected your writing process?
Weirdly enough, the pressure of deadlines seems to have been a good thing for me. Knowing I’ve got a timeframe to work within (as well as now having people I have to keep happy!) has focused my mind quite a bit. There will still be days when I write nothing, but I try not to panic too much. One day I can write nothing; the next I might get down 6,000 words. The process seems to have its own rules!

17)   What do you do in your ‘spare’ time? 
I wish I had an exciting answer for this one, but I am quite boring. When I’m not working, I spend a lot of time with my family. I try to read as much and as often as possible, but this is usually done at bedtime. I’m a bit useless at relaxing; whenever I do get the chance, I tend to spend the whole time feeling guilty about not doing something else!

18)   What’s coming next?
Book 2 is written – I’m just at the stage of completing the final set of edits. I feel a huge pressure with this one, as I obviously want readers to love the characters enough to stick with them for Book 3. I hit the 10k word mark of book 3 today, so I’m past the dreaded point I mentioned earlier!

19)   Where can readers find you? 

20)   All importantly, where can readers buy your fabulous debut novel? 

Purchase The Girls in The Water  as kindle, paperback and audio via AmazonHERE



Here's the blurb: 

When she woke, she found herself in darkness. She couldn’t move. She was going to die and she had no idea why… 

When the body of Lola Evans is found in a local park on a cold winter’s morning, Detective Alex King and her new recruit Chloe Lane are called in to lead the hunt for the killer. 

Days later, a second girl goes missing. It seems the two shared a troubled history, and were members of the same support group. Who is the monster preying on these vulnerable girls? 

As the detectives start to piece together the clues, Chloe realises that she too is in danger – as she uncovers secrets about her own brother’s death which someone will kill to keep hidden. 

Alex and Chloe are soon fighting for their lives, and in a race against time to reach the next victim before it’s too late… 


Chilling and totally compelling with an utterly surprising twist, The Girls in the Water is perfect for fans of Robert Bryndza, Sarah Hilary, and Patricia Gibney.



 Huge thanks for answering my 20 questions, Victoria - enjoy publication day! Wishing you great success with The Girls in The Water.