It is always a
pleasure having the wonderful, Helen Hollick visiting PBHQ. Helen’s visit today
is even more special because Helen is talking about her latest book. It is a
new genre for Helen, a cosy murder mystery. If you love cosy mysteries, you
will love this book and if you don’t, then please treat yourself, I promise you
won’t be disappointed. Now help your
self to a glass of bubbly and settle down to meet Helen and her new character, Jan Christopher...
When writers are
asked, ‘How do I start writing a book’ (setting aside the obvious answer of
‘put bottom on seat and just write!’) the usual answer is ‘Write what you know
about.’
Which I’ve always
found to be a little puzzling as I write historical fiction and eighteenth-century
nautical adventures. I don’t actually know any post-Roman Britons, was not
there at the Battle of Hastings (I’m not that old!) and nor have I ever
sailed in anything bigger than a small dinghy. However, the art of writing is
making it up - with a lot of research added in.
When I came up
with an idea to write a cosy murder mystery, however, I knew exactly where and
when I was going to set it – and use as much of ‘what I know’ as I possibly
could. I decided to set A Mirror Murder in
the 1970s, using my experience as a library assistant during that decade for my
lead character, Jan Christopher. Her uncle and legal guardian is DCI Toby
Christopher, and she forms a romantic alliance with his Detective Constable,
Laurie Walker. I had my characters, the setting, the plot – the murder (and the
murderer) but to my astonishment I discovered that I had to do as much research
for 1971 as I did for 1719!
Did we have teabags back then? What fashions were popular? How did the
police communicate in the ‘70s? (Remember the blue police telephone boxes now
only used in episodes of Dr Who?) 1971 seems only
yesterday but it’s actually fifty years ago! No computers back
then, no internet, no mobile phones. When I left school us girls were expected
to be shop assistants, hairdressers, typists or housewives and mothers – not
meaning any disrespect to these, but at the lower level of Secondary School
education, we were not thought bright enough to consider anything even remotely
intellectual.
Like me, in A Mirror Murder Jan Christopher knew
that she wanted to write, but her ‘I want to be a writer’ was scorned by the
teachers. She liked books and reading, so was guided to apply for a job in the
local library. A library assistant was regarded as one of the more elite jobs.
Even so, the librarian was always addressed as ‘Mr’, never by his first name.
Equality was only on the brim back then, and if you were shy and naïve – like I
was – well, you didn’t question anything, you just accepted it.
Jan, (her full name is January, but she only uses ‘Jan’) is a little bit
like I was at eighteen; shy, not worldy-wise, but I wanted to give her more
opportunities than I had, bring out her confidence, her conviction in herself.
All helped, of course by the dishy DC Laurie Walker who becomes her boyfriend.
I enjoyed writing a little bit of fictional revenge into my story. One
of the librarians at a library where I was sent to cover for absent staff was a
bully. I’ve got my own back in A Mirror Murder; I’ve made him experience
the displeasure of the Chingford CID! But, no spoilers...
Most of the public who came into the library were lovely people,
although there were those who grumbled (they will be in future stories – I
might even murder one or two of them!) The old lady, used in A Mirror
Murder, who cut food coupons out of the newspaper was real, as was the
young lad who made a puzzling request for a book (again, no spoilers). We put
new books under the counter for our favourite borrowers, learnt quickly that
shelving returned books was not a task to be hurried (the longer you took the
less likely you’d get other boring jobs to do.) Even during the electricity
power cuts because of strikes during the three-day-week in the early ’70s we
had people insisting that they could use a torch to select their books, and
while tidying the shelves of a morning before the library opened various items
would be found... an uncooked rasher of bacon used as a bookmark...
BUYING LINK:
Amazon Author Page (Universal Link) http://viewauthor.at/HelenHollick
The first in a new series of cosy mysteries set in
the 1970s... Will romance blossom between library assistant Jan
Christopher and DC Laurie Walker – or will a brutal murder intervene?
Eighteen-year-old library assistant Jan Christopher’s life is to change
on a rainy Friday evening in July 1971, when her legal guardian and uncle, DCI
Toby Christopher, gives her a lift home after work. Driving the car, is her
uncle’s new Detective Constable, Laurie Walker – and it is love at first sight
for the young couple.
But romance is soon to take a back seat when a baby boy is taken from
his pram, a naked man is scaring young
ladies in nearby Epping Forest, and an elderly lady is found, brutally
murdered... Are the events related? How will they affect the staff and public
of the local library where Jan works – and will a blossoming romance survive a
police investigation into murder?
ABOUT HELEN
Helen and
her family moved from north-east London in January 2013 after finding an
eighteenth-century North Devon farmhouse through BBC TV’s popular Escape To
The Country show.
First
accepted for publication by William Heinemann in 1993 – a week after her
fortieth birthday – Helen then became a USA Today Bestseller with her
historical novel, The Forever Queen (titled A Hollow Crown in the UK) with the sequel, Harold the King (US: I Am The
Chosen King) being novels that explore the events that led to the Battle of
Hastings in 1066. Her Pendragon’s Banner
Trilogy is a fifth-century version of the Arthurian legend, and she also
writes a pirate-based nautical adventure/fantasy series, The Sea Witch Voyages.
Her
non-fiction books are Pirates: Truth and
Tales and Life of A Smuggler.
She also runs Discovering Diamonds, a
review blog for historical fiction. She is currently writing more Voyages for
the Sea Witch series and the next in the Jan Christopher Mysteries
series. She has other ideas for other tales – and would like the time to write
them!
CONNECT
WITH HELEN:
Website: www.helenhollick.net
Newsletter
Subscription: http://tinyletter.com/HelenHollick
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/helen.hollick
Twitter: @HelenHollick
Thank you
for stopping by and please come back as Helen had more to tell. Yes, of course,
there will be bubbly. Now you must return.
I hope
the sun is shining on your face and in your hear.
Hugs
Pauline
2 comments:
thank you so much, Pauline, for your hospitality!
I loved this book and can't wait for the next one! I've never been a librarian but spent a lot of time in our local public library when I was a child, and visiting the fictitious one in the company of such likeable characters was a joy. Thank you for sharing further insights in this interview. Looking forward to Jan Christopher's next adventure!
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