I am delighted to welcome back to Jaffareadstoo
the author
The third Book in the Sam Mystery Series
Worm in the Blossom
is out now
Worm in the Blossom
is out now
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform 16 October 2015 |
October is a special month for
me. I should say that I like it because
it’s when I celebrate my wedding anniversary, married to a wonderful man, blah
blah. But in truth it’s because, for the
past two years and now this year as well, October is when I publish my new Sam
Plank novel. And today’s the day! “Worm in the Blossom” is the third in my
planned series of seven historical financial crime novels: each is set in a
consecutive year (the first takes place in 1824, the second in 1825 and this
one in 1826) and so it seems only right to publish them in consecutive years as
well.
I didn’t originally mean to do a series, honestly I didn’t. The first book – “Fatal Forgery” – took me four years to write. It started off as the story of a crooked banker (thank goodness we don’t have those any more – oh, hold on…), based on the true story of one Henry Fauntleroy but with many details (and particularly his ending) changed. I needed someone to chase him, so I invented a magistrates’ constable called Samuel Plank. Back in 1824, London did not have a police force – the Met was not formed until 1829. Instead, people who thought they had been the victim of a crime would complain to their local magistrate, who would then issue an arrest warrant for the suspect and send a constable out to find him – a magistrates’ constable. But when I finished the first full draft of “Fatal Forgery”, I realised that I much preferred Sam to Henry, and decided (and this after three years of spare time toil) to rewrite the whole thing with Sam at the centre of the story. I changed my style to reflect the sparer, more factual language of a constable, and dated the chapters in the manner of a police notebook. I gave Sam a clever wife to help him – Martha – and a young trainee constable for him to guide – William Wilson. And then, of course, I fell in love with Sam.
I was so sad when I finished
“Fatal Forgery” that my long-suffering husband drew a deep, shuddering breath
and suggested that I write another story for Sam. Or a series, I countered. A series of seven. And so I sat down and plotted out six more
books, with a different financial crime at the heart of each. Book two – “The Man in the Canary Waistcoat”
– is about investment fraud. And today’s
arrival – “Worm in the Blossom” – deals with corruption and extortion.
One of the joys of being a
modern, self-published author is the level of interaction that I can have with
my readers. “Fatal Forgery” sold mainly
through word of mouth – although it did get some excellent reviews in various
places (such as the Law Society Gazette,
who liked the legal angle, and the Guernsey
Press, as I do much of my day job there and Guernsey people are interested
in finance) – and I started a writing blog (https://susangrossey.wordpress.com/current-project-blog/
) to get opinions, views and suggestions.
It was such a thrill to hear what people thought of the characters. Most wanted to hear more about Martha, and
about how Sam had become a constable (he started out life as a barber), so I
was able to include both of those in “The Man in the Canary Waistcoat”.
Another thing I did through the
blog was to ask my readers to choose my titles.
For “Canary”, I had whittled it down to five possible titles but just
couldn’t decide, and so I simply created a poll on the blog and asked people to
vote – and “The Man in the Canary Waistcoat” was their selection. So many booksellers said what a strong and
intriguing title it was that I trusted to the vote again this time round: I
picked five titles that I could live with and asked people to choose. And “Worm in the Blossom” it is. (I call it “Worm” for short, but one friend
says that Martha would be horrified and I should call it “Blossom” instead.)
And why self-publishing? To be honest, I did try the “traditional” route: when I first finished “Fatal Forgery”, I did as advised and carefully selected some agents and publishers with a professed interest in my subject – crime and/or history. And I must have chosen well because they all replied. But all the replies were in essence the same: great story, well written, but we can’t sell it – publishers are only taking on books by known authors and celebrities. And no-one is that interested in financial crime. I was astonished by this last comment; after all, financial crime is in every news bulletin and on every front page.
So I decided to go it alone. I knew how self-publishing worked as I
already did it for my non-fiction, work-related books (I’m an anti-money
laundering consultant by day – I advise people on how to spot criminal money in
the financial system and what to do about it).
I invested in professional covers for the books – it was the least I
could do for Sam, who is rather particular about personal appearance and hates
shabbiness – and have been delighted at the way the designer has been able to
create a series feel, with elements of the cover repeated each time. And this has really paid dividends, as when I
plucked up my courage and took “Fatal Forgery” into two local bookshops, they
said that the things they need before they can even consider stocking a
self-published book are a “proper” cover and an ISBN. And then they both took some copies. And re-ordered. And have taken “Canary” and “Worm” as
well. It is so very exciting to walk
into a real bookshop and see my books there – it’s my sure-fire cure for a bad
mood!
Huge thanks to Susan for sharing her thoughts and ideas about the inspiration, writing and indie publishing of her Sam Plank Mystery novels.
Jaffa and I are looking forward to becoming reacquainted with Sam in
Oh. I must check these out. Thanks for the introduction.
ReplyDeleteI highly recommend this series Linda but do start at the beginning with Fatal Forgery..happy reading !
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