Your latest book, The Abyss: A Journey with Jack the Ripper
will be released early
next month. Without giving too much
It started off as a book about
no-one in particular,
just a look at a life, but then early on I decided to
turn
it into fictional episodes from a fictional Jack The Ripper's
life. I
suppose I wanted a different perspective on the
whole Ripper murders. The five
'canonical' victims get to
tell their own stories in their own words up to and
beyond
their deaths. It's just a slim volume, but it says everything
I wanted
to say and I hope I manage to bring the flavour of life in Whitechapel at that
time to life.
How difficult was it for you to keep Sherlock
Holmes out of the book, considering the story is set in Victorian London?
Actually, it was easy. Whichever
direction the book had taken, Holmes was never going to figure.
Why do you think Jack the Ripper still fascinates
people, 125 years after the events took place?
The
squalor, the horror, the atmosphere of those evil streets and the most telling
fact of all, he was never caught.
What kind of research did you have to do in
preparation for the book?
I have a few books on
the subject so they were obviously a great help as were the good old internet
searches which reveal everything you ever wanted to know about the crimes, the
victims, the investigation and life in the East End.
Your Lyme Regis trilogy has been a great success, do
you plan to bring Holmes and Watson back to Lyme Regis for a fourth instalment?
Three was and is the limit for
this series. Lyme Regis was and still is a small town and further appearances
by Holmes and Watson in Victorian/Edwardian times in the town would stretch
credibility too far. I am also conscious that the peripheral characters would
be in danger of turning the series into some kind of soap-opera. So, as much
fun as they were to write, there will be no more.
Your children’s book, Sherlock Holmes and the Missing Snowman is a lovely story and I
intend to read it to my son over the Christmas period. Do you plan to write any
more books for children?
At this moment in time I have no
plans to do so......but in the future......who knows!
Is there
anything you are currently working on?
My
current project is a contemporary comic novel partly set in Lyme Regis. We meet
a young family, new arrivals in Lyme and flashback to see how they met etc and
how their early lives were and the effects of dodgy knees.
Do you find it difficult organising time to write?
Have you ever suffered from writer’s block?
I try not to organise
and just write when I feel I like it which can mean some 3am appointments with
my laptop!! Perhaps though that is the reason why I don't seem to suffer from
writer's block......er......apart from now......um..........er.
When you’re not busy writing, which authors do you
like to read?
Give me a PG Wodehouse and I am
happy. Have got into Nordic crime fiction quite heavily so Henning Mankell and
Jo Nesbo figure a lot recently. William Trevor is perhaps my favourite author
and I have a great regard for the comic novels of David Nobbs (creator of
Reggie Perrin etc) who was kind enough to let me 'pinch' a couple of paragraphs
of his to use in Sherlock Holmes and the Lyme Regis Trials.
Finally, if you could write a pastiche about any
fictional character (ignoring any copyright issues), who would it be?
Good question. Ponders. Have
dabbled with a Doctor Who and Holmes crossover so I lean towards Doctor
Who....let's face it there is so much scope with a Time Lord!
The Abyss: A Journey With Jack The Ripper will be released on the 9th December, it can be pre-ordered from Amazon stores in the UK and US.
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