and to introduce
Alison ~ welcome to Jaffareadstoo........
Without giving too much away – what can you tell us
about Sewing the Shadows Together ?
It’s a murder
mystery showing how the murder of Shona, more than thirty years ago, has
affected the lives of her brother Tom and best friend Sarah. When the convicted
killer is proved innocent, suspicion falls on family and friends, and dark
family secrets are uncovered before the truth finally comes to light.
Whilst you are writing you must live with your
characters. How do you feel about them when the book is finished? Are they what
you expected them to be?
My characters really came alive for me as I was writing and I could hear their voices. I found myself listening to them as they sometimes directed the plot. I disliked some of them, felt sorry for others and was glad how it turned out for the main characters in the end. They developed their own personalities as I wrote, but mostly they remained true to the idea I had for them at the beginning.
Which character
in the story did you identify with the most?
I identify most with Sarah, I suppose because she is about the same age as me. Although we are very different because, fortunately, I have never had to suffer the loss of my best friend, and my family situation is not the same as hers, I can empathise with her desire to do everything she can to keep everybody around her happy.
I identify most with Sarah, I suppose because she is about the same age as me. Although we are very different because, fortunately, I have never had to suffer the loss of my best friend, and my family situation is not the same as hers, I can empathise with her desire to do everything she can to keep everybody around her happy.
Are you a plotter...or ...a start writing and see
where it takes you, sort of writer?
I had the idea
for Sewing the Shadows Together in my head for more than thirty years before I
started writing and, although I hadn’t written anything down, the story felt
almost fully-formed as I began writing it. Things did change, though, as the
characters took on their own personalities and the story took on its own
direction.
Do you write the type of books you like to read and
which authors have influenced you?
Definitely –
Sewing the Shadows Together is exactly the sort of book I like to read myself –
with a strong emphasis on character and relationships, vivid settings and a whodunit
mystery with lots of suspects and clues. I like reading mainly Scottish and
Scand noir and the books I’ve read have definitely influenced me – too many to
mention really, but I really admire Ian Rankin and Henning Mankell.
What’s next?
I’m writing
another novel, set in Scotland, Yorkshire and Switzerland. Although the
characters are different there is some similarity in them as it’s about the
effect of crime on ordinary people and hidden family secrets.
Find Alison on her website
Follow her on Facebook
Follow her on Twitter @alisonbailliex
Find Alison on her website
Follow her on Facebook
Follow her on Twitter @alisonbailliex
My thoughts about Sewing The Shadows Together
Matador 2015 |
Thirty years after the murder of
his thirteen year old sister Shona, Tom McIver returns to Scotland, from South
Africa, ostensibly to bring his dead mother’s ashes back to her beloved homeland.
This return visit allows Tom the opportunity to catch up with some old friends at a high school reunion, but meeting his sister Shona’s best friend, Sarah Dunbar, brings
back painful memories which Tom had long since buried. Shockingly, during Tom’s
visit to Scotland, further information about Shona’s murder comes to light,
and new DNA testing reveals that the man imprisoned thirty years ago for
Shona’s rape and murder couldn’t possibly be her killer. In light of this new
evidence, the investigation is reopened and the search begins again for Shona’s
murderer, with disastrous consequences.
What then follows is a well plotted psychological suspense story with a distinct air of family drama. From the start of the book there
is much to take in, not just, about the murder investigation and all that
entails, but also about the tangled relationships that exist between the main characters.
Any return to the past, and a life once led, is always fraught with the danger
of reawakening uncomfortable memories, and this story is all about the memories of
the past, and about how people are shaped by what has happened to them, whether
it be good, or bad. The characters are particularly well thought out and I
enjoyed following their progress, and as the cracks in their individual stories
start to appear, I had great fun in trying to figure out who had hidden the most
secrets. I particularly empathised with Sarah’s dilemma as she struggled to maintain
her own sense of self-worth in a family who constantly made demands on her
time and who often drained her of energy.
I was surprised to discover that
this is the author’s debut novel as she writes with genuine confidence and great
style. There is a real sense of time and place and she does a commendable job
in weaving together all the strands of the story. The revelations when they
come really do take you by surprise, and by the end of the story with all the loose
ends knitted together, there is a real sense of completeness about the
whole thing. The use of D H Lawrence’s poem The
Bat as the book’s epigraph, not only explains the title of the book, but also, alludes to the general feeling of darkness that pervades the story.
I really enjoyed it and can't wait to see what Alison Baillie does next.
My thanks to the author for inviting me to be part of this exciting blog tour.
Links to the other tour hosts can be found here
Sounds most intriguing! And I love the title. Definitely one for my TBR list.
ReplyDeleteThanks Wendy - you would love this one :)
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