First Love – Out This Week!

FIRST LOVE MARKETING GRAPHIC

This week – on Thursday the 28th of February to be precise – the new romantic fantasy anthology from Dragon Soul Press, entitled First Love, is finally released.

I’ve been yakking on about this for a while because one of my short stories, entitled Papercut, is a part of this prestigious volume. See? I’m not just about scaring the pants off people. I’ve got a lovey-dovey side too.

Papercut concerns a lonely teenage boy living with his ultra-strict Jehovah’s Witness mother. One night a mysterious girl made entirely of paper appears in his dreams, and… you can find out more by clicking the pre-order links below.

First Love also features stories from a bunch of other hugely talented authors, some of whom will feature in interviews on the blog over the next couple of weeks. Whether you fancy reading about the romantic dreamscapes of the religiously oppressed, or love stories involving forest nymphs, mages, selkies, Native American mythology, or, as one of my fellow writers pitched her story to me, “Bridget Jones meets Morgana Le Fay”, this is a must for those who like their romance with a fantastical twist.

To pre-order on Amazon Kindle in the UK click here.

To pre-order on Amazon Kindle in the US click here.

Paperbacks can already be ordered.

STOP PRESS: First Love paperbacks are out early!

First-Love-KindleFirst Love, the romantic fantasy anthology from Dragon Soul Press, is out a little early, if you decide to get it in paperback form. It can be ordered now here (in the UK) and here (in the US).

This anthology features my short story Papercut – a poignant, heartfelt love story about a lonely teenage boy living with his ultra-strict Jehovah’s Witness mother. In his dreams, he is visited by a mysterious girl made entirely of paper, leading to a fantastical journey into… You’ll have to read the story to find out.

To get First Love on Kindle, pre-order here (in the UK) and here (in the US). The official launch date is still the 28th of February.

First Love: A Dragon Soul Press interview with yours truly

Recently I was interviewed by my publisher, Dragon Soul Press, in conjunction with the release of their new romantic fantasy anthology First Love, for which I have contributed a short story entitled Papercut.

 

Papercut concerns a lonely teenage boy living with his overbearing Jehovah’s Witness mother, who has his world turned upside down when a mysterious girl made entirely of paper keeps appearing in his dreams.

Bits of this interview may crop up elsewhere, but here it is in full.

Did any of your books get rejected by publishers?

Yes. In some cases I came maddeningly close to mainstream publication. My most notable near misses were for Love vs Honour, a teenage romantic drama with a religious twist; and for Children of the Folded Valley, a dystopian memoir about a man looking back on his life growing up in the midst of a seemingly utopian cult. In the latter case, the publisher wanted me to rewrite the entire novel as a third person narrative, which was absurd. I felt thoroughly vindicated by the fact that when I self-published it, Children of the Folded Valley became my most successful novel to date by far. Everyone else I have spoken to says they can’t imagine it being a tenth as powerful as a third person narrative.

What inspires you to write?

The voices in my head. They won’t shut up.

What is your writing Kryptonite?

Social media (so distracting). Or exhaustion.

How hard was it to sit down and actually start writing something?

For First Love? Honestly not that hard. Although romance isn’t a genre I often tackle (despite the afore-mentioned novel Love vs Honour), romance with fantasy elements is a little different. I had the idea for my short story Paper Cut download into my mind almost straight away once I read the brief for the anthology.

What does literary success look like to you?

Someone making a film of your book. Even if the film ends up being terrible, it shows the book reached enough people that someone thought making the film was a good idea in the first place.

A more boring answer is making enough money on book sales so you can quit the day job. That’s a pipe dream for most writers though. Actually, a pipe dream is aspiring to be a plumber. Just as punching a clairvoyant who has won the lottery is striking a happy medium. Enough terrible jokes…

Do you read much and if so, who are your favourite authors?

Yes, I read constantly across many genres. I answered this question in fairly exhaustive fashion elsewhere on the Dragon Soul Press website, but this time I shall mostly restrict my answers to romantic fiction. I tend to prefer my romance doomed. Wuthering Heights (Emily Bronte), The English Patient (Michael Odaatje), Anna Karenina (Leo Tolstoy), The Remains of the Day (Kazou Ishiguro) and One Day (David Nicholls) are all good examples. There are a few exceptions to this, such as Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre, or Thomas Hardy’s Far from the Madding Crowd (which is sort-of happy at the end despite the melancholia and tragedy throughout). Many of my favourite novels that wouldn’t be classed as romance feature doomed romantic subplots. Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell for example, or Birdsong by Sebastian Faulks. Fantasy fiction also features a few great romantic tragedies, including one that to my mind rivals Romeo and Juliet, at the conclusion of Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy.

As Sally Sparrow once observed in classic Doctor Who episode Blink, “Sad is happy for deep people”.

How many hours a day do you write?

I don’t really time myself, but I have a daily goal of writing 1,000 words per day on weekdays, and 2,000 words per day at weekends, whenever I take on a project (either a novel or a short story).

What is your motivation for writing more?

To silence the voices in my head.

When did it dawn upon you that you wanted to be a writer?

It evolved over a longer process that always involved writing to some degree. I’ve always written short stories, but my first ambition was to be a journalist. That evolved into wanting to be a film director, but then I realised I preferred writing screenplays to the production rigmarole. That then evolved into writing novels.

Are you satisfied with your success?

No. I’ve still got loads of things I want to share with the widest possible readership. I have a pathological urge to entertain, and I don’t think I’ll ever be cured of it. Nor do I want to be.

First Love also features stories from a bunch of other hugely talented authors. Whether you fancy reading about the romantic dreamscapes of the religiously oppressed, or love stories involving forest nymphs, mages, selkies, Native American mythology, or, as one of my fellow writers pitched her story to me, “Bridget Jones meets Morgana Le Fay”, this is a must for those who like their romance with a fantastical twist.

To pre-order in the UK click here.

To pre-order in the US click here.

Paperbacks of First Love will be available from the 28th of February.

First Love: Now Available For Pre-Order

You can now pre-order First Love on Amazon Kindle. I have contributed a short story entitled Papercut to this Dragon Soul Press romantic fantasy anthology, and even though I say so myself, it is really rather good.

Papercut concerns a lonely teenage boy living with his ultra-strict Jehovah’s Witness mother. One night a mysterious girl made entirely of paper appears in his dreams, who takes him on a magical journey into… Well, you’ll have to read more to find out.

First Love is released on the 28th of February.

To pre-order click here (for the UK) and here (for the US).

First Love: Another short story coming soon

I have some more exciting news on the publishing front. Dragon Soul Press has selected my short story Papercut for inclusion in their upcoming romantic anthology, First Love.

The theme for this anthology is self-explanatory, but with elements of fantasy. My story, Papercut, concerns a lonely teenage boy living with his ultra-strict Jehovah’s Witness mother. One night a mysterious girl made entirely of paper appears in his dreams, and… Well, you’ll have to read it to find out what happens.

First Love is released on the 28th of February. Watch this space for further updates.

Christmas Present ideas

If you are scratching your head this year over Christmas presents, why not consider giving one of my novels? At the risk of sounding like a cliché, I have written across a variety of genres and therefore have “something for all the family”.

First and foremost, I have a novel about to be released on the 20th of December entitled Spectre of Springwell Forest. A nail-biting, page-turning ghost story, this supernatural mystery is my first novel to be published by Dragon Soul Press, and a must for any fan of bone-chilling suspense. Simply click here (in the UK) or here (in the US) to pre-order your copy. (NOTE: at present this pre-order is for the Kindle version only. Stay tuned for updates on the paperback.)

SSF coverHere is the blurb from the back of the book:

Lily Henderson has a horrifying secret buried far in her past. She hoped it would never be revealed. Now she has no choice.

To save her family, Lily must keep them from returning to the village of Springwell, where she lived with her first husband and young daughter decades previously.

In the past, after moving to Springwell, Lily encounters secretive locals, government scientists, and rumours of a ghost haunting the forest.

Are they linked to the mysterious deaths of local children? Do paintings by a local artist predict when tragic events are getting closer? Will Lily’s daughter be next?

“Two were taken. More will follow.”

If you enjoy stories with devious twists on the spectrum between psychological thriller, supernatural mystery and horror, why not also try The Thistlewood Curse or The Birds Began to Sing? The former is a gripping mystery involving astral projection and murder on Lundy Island. The latter concerns a peculiar writing competition in a remote and sinister Dartmoor house.

 

My short story Once in a Lifetime is also available, as part of the Dragon Soul Press All Dark Places anthology. A disturbing tale of existential dread, this short is based on a nightmare I had earlier this year. It concerns a man waking up in an entirely different life. As he struggles to understand what has happened, memories of his previous existence rapidly vanish, and are replaced with those from the life he has awoken inside.

Folded Valley coverOn a rather different note, we have my most successful (and arguably most “personal”) novel to date, Children of the Folded Valley. A dystopian memoir mystery with a science fiction edge, the plot concerns a man looking back on his life growing up in a strange cult.

For the young and young at heart, I have written a number of gripping tales, including treasure hunt adventure Uncle Flynn (my debut novel) and Dr Gribbles and the Beast of Blackthorn Lodge, which involves spies, haunted houses, mad scientists, and monsters (and that’s just chapter one).

My most recent novel for younger readers, Echo and the White Howl, is a thrilling animal fiction adventure about a pack of wolves set in the wilds of Alaska.

 

In addition, my George Hughes trilogy (comprising George goes to Mars, George goes to Titan and George goes to Neptune) are a trio of fast-paced science fiction adventures with thrills and perils galore.

 

I must emphasise my stories aimed at children are not just for children. Amid the humour, thrills and scares are themes many adults will appreciate too.

LvsHonour 1600 x 2400Finally, Love vs Honour represented something of a departure for me, in that it is a teenage romantic drama. But many of the themes present in my other novels – religious oppression, abuse of power and so on – are present and correct here, and this is a much darker tale than it first appears. I don’t consider it a complete success for reasons I have discussed in more detail here, but I still think it is well worth a read.

All the above books can be ordered on Kindle or as paperbacks from Amazon here (for the UK) and here (for the US).

My Five Favourite Gothic Mysteries

As regular readers of this blog (and indeed my novels) will know, I absolutely love a good gothic brew of mystery, melodrama, thrills and horror. To date I have written five novels of this kind, including The Birds Began to Sing and The Thistlewood Curse, as well as The Spectre of Springwell Forest, which is the next book I intend to publish.

Here are five classic gothic mysteries that I return to endlessly, that have proved a huge inspiration and influence. NOTE: Although undoubted gothic classics, for this list I have deliberately ignored Dracula and Frankenstein, since those are less mysteries and more full-throttle horror.

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Rebecca (Daphne Du Maurier) – I adore Daphne Du Maurier, and this one remains top of my gothic influences list. For instance, how many other novels have their own variations on the manipulative, vindictive, psychopathic housekeeper Danvers? The central narrative is great too, with the famously unnamed, tormented protagonist living in the shadow of her husband’s dead wife. It also has one of the greatest gothic mystery plot twists of all time, and an appropriately fiery climax.

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Jane Eyre (Charlotte Bronte) – This moody, brooding romance features one of the most iconic gothic subplots in the history of English literature (ie the classic, oft-imitated mad-woman-in-the-attic). A rich, melancholy, menacing work, brimming with vivid description, dangerous passions, and many other gothic touchstones (like Rebecca, this one ends in purging flames).

 

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The Hound of the Baskervilles (Arthur Conan Doyle) – I tend to think of this Sherlock Holmes story as a spinoff into gothic horror, rather than belonging in the main Holmes crime fiction canon. The quality of the suspenseful prose remains unsurpassed, not just in obviously scary sections, but in little moments, such as Watson’s unsettling first night in Baskerville Hall. The oozing dread and menace drips from every page.

 

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The Woman in Black (Susan Hill) – Despite the popularity of the long-running stage show and a successful film adaptation, the source novel is still one of the finest, most bone-chilling ghost stories ever written. The superbly abrupt, genuinely shattering ending (significantly different from the film) has lost none of its ability to shock.

 

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Coma (Film) – I’m referring here to Michael Crichton’s superb film version of Robin Cook’s novel, rather than the novel itself. The premise – a possible conspiracy in a Boston hospital whereby patients are being deliberately placed in irreplaceable comas – is a masterclass in escalating unease and paranoia, building to full blown suspense set pieces that are pure modern gothic. Genevieve Bujold makes a fantastic imperiled heroine, and Michael Douglas is also good as her is-he-or-isn’t-he-in-on-it boyfriend. A real nail-biter.

Download Love vs Honour FREE – for five days only!

Continuing my summer giveaways, Love vs Honour is available for the next five days as a free download from Amazon Kindle.

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After falling in love, teenagers Johnny and Sabina pretend to convert to Islam and Christianity respectively, to placate the disapproval of both sets of parents. Then it gets complicated as their elaborate deceptions unravel in unexpected ways…

Yes, I know teenage romantic fiction isn’t really a thing I normally write, but rest assured this novel has the dark edges and challenging/controversial themes found in my other works so it really isn’t exclusively for the young adult readership. If you haven’t read it, why not give it a go?

Here are a few review snippets:

“You may find, as I did, it becomes a hard book to put down. The premise of a Christian and a Muslim pretending to convert to each other’s religion to be with each other for the sake of pure, unadulterated love creates a strangely addictive narrative.” – Graeme Stevenson, Amazon.

“This book is one of the few that made me cry. I love it. If you are a fan of emotional books then I urge you to read it. I give it 5 stars.” – Splufic, Goodreads.

“The ending of the book really made the whole thing.” – A Critical Reader, Amazon.

And just for balance, not everyone loved the ending. Check out this “bad” review from I_love_books on Goodreads:

“No… Just No…
I hate such endings…
Wtf….
When the story got interesting then the author has to shock us?
No…
That’s bad…”

Why not decide for yourself if you like the ending? Download Love vs Honour FREE here.