Blog Tour: The Coven (Beatrice Scarlet #2)by Graham Masterton

The Coven blog tour banner

I’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for The Coven by Graham Masterton, a historical mystery set in 18th century London. The Coven is the second book in the Beatrice Scarlet series and the follow-up to Scarlet Widow. I’m thrilled that Graham has agreed to answer some questions about The Coven and how he goes about researching his novels.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin


TheCovenAbout the Book

They say the girls were witches. But Beatrice Scarlet, the apothecary’s daughter, is sure they were innocent victims… London, 1758: Beatrice Scarlet, the apothecary’s daughter, has found a position at St Mary Magdalene’s Refuge for fallen women. She enjoys the work and soon forms a close bond with her charges.  The refuge is supported by a wealthy tobacco merchant, who regularly offers the girls steady work to aid their rehabilitation. But when seven girls sent to his factory disappear, Beatrice is uneasy. Their would-be benefactor claims they were a coven of witches, beholden only to Satan and his demonic misdeeds. But Beatrice is convinced something much darker than witchcraft is at play…

Format: eBook (368 pp.), Hardcover (416 pp.) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Published: 5th October 2017                                Genre: Historical Mystery

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk ǀ Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Coven on Goodreads


Interview with Graham Masterton, author of The Coven

Without giving too much away, can you tell us a bit about The Coven?

Beatrice Scarlet is the daughter of an inspirational London apothecary, who taught her everything he knew about chemicals and cures. She emigrated to America with her husband, a non-conformist parson, but after his tragic death she has to return to London, where the church have offered her a position at a home for reforming young prostitutes. The home is mainly financed by a tobacco baron, George Hazzard, who regularly picks out girls to work at his factory in Hackney stripping tobacco leaves and rolling cigars. However the latest seven girls that he has recruited go missing, and when Beatrice tries to find out where they might have gone, George Hazzard shows her evidence that they must have formed a coven and summoned Satan, and escaped from the factory by using dark magic. Beatrice is sceptical about this, and tries to find forensic evidence to show what really happened to them. Eventually her chemical research reveals the truth, and it is far more horrific than anything the Devil could have devised. It plunges Beatrice into the sordid depths of 18th century London, with all its dirt and disease and poverty and sexual exploitation, and puts both Beatrice and her young daughter into terrible jeopardy.

The Coven is the second book in your Beatrice Scarlet series. What are the challenges of writing a series compared to a standalone novel?

Remembering who all the characters are and what they did in the first novel is quite a challenge, especially if you have written other novels in between. For me, the most important consideration is to make sure that the characters develop emotionally, and that they learn by their experiences. No matter how outlandish some of my plots maybe, I try to make my characters and their situations as real and as vivid as possible, and particularly when I am writing about female characters, I am extremely sensitive to the social mores of the age and what was expected (and demanded) of women in whatever age the novel is set. What I do like about a series, though, is that you can leave a few cliff-hangers at the end.

When you conceived the idea for the Beatrice Scarlet series, what made you choose the 1750s as the time period in which to set the books?

Most importantly, it was a time when breakthroughs were beginning to be made in science and medicine, so there was an intriguing clash between old-school apothecaries and more progressive chemists like Beatrice’s father. Some of the traditional treatments were bizarre, like taking mercury to cure venereal disease, which made the patient’s teeth fall out and eventually killed them. Also it was the early days of American colonization, with its fervent religious drive, and in Scarlet Widow I wanted to show how religious zealotry conflicted with scientific fact. Apart from that, I was fascinated by the costumes and the language and by the challenge of writing a crime thriller in which nobody has a mobile phone or a car. You want to get to the scene of the crime quickly? Call for a hackney carriage, or run.

How do you approach the research for your books? Do you enjoy the process of research?

I relish the research, but it does make the process of writing a novel very slow. You have to check if every word was in usage at the time. Was ‘flabbergasted’ known in 1758? Answer – yes. But when a hackney driver suggests to Beatrice that London is so smelly that she will need a clothes-peg on her nose…no, sorry. Clothes-pegs weren’t invented until the 1820s by the Puritans in Boston. Before that, washing was hung out to dry on bushes in the summer or on fireguards in the winter, which led to a great many house fires in London. Did women wear knickers? What kind of street-lighting was there, if any? What time did people have breakfast, and what did they eat? How much did it cost to take a hackney from St Paul’s Cathedral to Bow Street? (About 1s 6d.) Thank the Lord for Google, but I also found an incredible book by Professor Jerry White about London in the 18th century and it contains almost every conceivable fact you would ever want to know about living in the capital in that era. Even a whole lot of facts you didn’t want to know.

On behalf of squeamish readers, will they need to leave the light on or check under the bed after reading The Coven?

All of my novels in their different ways are confrontational, in that I believe in facing up to the realities of life, as well as trying to be entertaining. There are some extreme moments in The Coven, although nothing worse than actually happened in 18th century London. As far as supernatural terror is concerned, it really depends on how superstitious you are, and whether you would be frightened by the sound of somebody or something clawing frantically at your bedroom door in the middle of the night.

You’ve written over one hundred novels. Do you still get the same feeling of excitement when you sit down to start a new one?

Yes, I love it. I love meeting the characters. I love describing new places. I love the way that I suddenly discover the relevance of events that I wrote about in the opening scenes of a novel, even though they seemed random at the time. In some ways it’s like being a clockmaker. You start off with a workbench scattered with scores of cogs and springs and levers and end up with a ticking timepiece. What is also exciting (if a little hair-raising) is that much of what I write about in my novels has a way of coming true. In my latest crime thriller Dead Girls Dancing, a dance studio overlooking the River Lee in Cork burns down after an arson attack. A week after the book was published, a building on the same side of the river less than half a mile away was burned down. In the same book, the leader of an IRA splinter group gets shot, and less than a week after I had written that, the former leader of an IRA gang was shot only two streets away from my fictitious shooting. Some people say that my 1980s horror novel The Hell Candidate in which a presidential hopeful is possessed by the Devil and wins the US election was predictive, but I couldn’t possibly comment about that.

Do you have a special place to write or any writing rituals?

My desk faces the window which overlooks the street where I live, because I am extremely nosy and like to see what the neighbours are up to. I have a photograph next to my computer of my late wife Wiescka smiling at me in encouragement, as she always did. I start writing about 9am with a mug of horseshoe coffee, so called because the American railroad workers said it was so strong you could float a horseshoe in it. I don’t listen to music while I write because I feel that it would affect the rhythm of what I am putting down on the page. I usually take a break around midday to stretch my legs and buy a newspaper then it’s back to work until 4pm or 5pm. After that I might slope off to the pub to meet some friends or take a pretty young woman out to dinner.

Although you’re probably best known for your horror books, you’ve published books in a wide range of genres. Is there a genre you’d still like to experiment with?

When I started writing novels, I didn’t know what a ‘genre’ was. In reality it’s a classification invented by WH Smith and other trade booksellers to save them the bother of reading books to find out what they’re about before they put them on their shelves for sale. I made a career mistake in some ways when I stopped writing horror for a year or two after The Manitou and The Djinn and Charnel House and tried my hand at historical sagas like Rich and Railroad and Maiden Voyage. The Manitou and Stephen King’s Salem’s Lot were published around the same time and it’s likely that if I had stuck with horror I could have continued steadily to build up my audience like he did. But I have no regrets. I have enjoyed every minute of writing. I can’t think of any particular genre I would like to experiment with, although I would like to go back to writing humour. I began a humorous novel about a country-and-western group called If Pigs Could Sing (you can check it out in the Fiction section of my website) but my then agent hated it and so I abandoned it.

How do you think you would have coped living in 18th century England?

Probably very badly. I am quite fastidious and the thought of never brushing my teeth and wiping my sticky hands on my jacket while I am having dinner and having to endure the loud and unashamed farts of other people in public…I don’t think I could take it. There were 65,000 prostitutes in London in the late 1750s and sex was readily available almost anywhere for a shilling or two (James Boswell had it under Westminster Bridge). The trouble was, most of the girls carried some kind of STD and you would be lucky not to end up with gonorrhoea or syphilis. Cholera and smallpox and typhus were rife, and you would be lucky to live until you were 33.

Will there be further adventures for Beatrice Scarlet?

Highly likely!

Thank you, Graham, for those fascinating answers. I’m sure fans of historical mysteries are going to love getting to know Beatrice Scarlet in Scarlet Widow and The Coven and, from the sound of it, in future books.


GrahamMASTERTON_BW400pxhAbout the Author

Graham Masterton was born in Edinburgh in 1946. His grandfather was Thomas Thorne Baker, the eminent scientist who invented DayGlo and was the first man to transmit news photographs by wireless. After training as a newspaper reporter, Graham went on to edit the new British men’s magazine Mayfair, where he encouraged William Burroughs to develop a series of scientific and philosophical articles which eventually became Burroughs’ novel The Wild Boys. At the age of 24, Graham was appointed executive editor of both Penthouse and Penthouse Forum magazines.

Graham Masterton’s debut as a horror author began with The Manitou in 1976, a chilling tale of a Native American medicine man reborn in the present day to exact his revenge on the white man. It became an instant bestseller and was filmed with Tony Curtis, Susan Strasberg, Burgess Meredith, Michael Ansara, Stella Stevens and Ann Sothern. Altogether Graham has written more than a hundred novels ranging from thrillers (The Sweetman Curve, Ikon) to disaster novels (Plague, Famine) to historical sagas (Rich and Maiden Voyage – both appeared in the New York Times bestseller list). He has published four collections of short stories, Fortnight of Fear, Flights of Fear, Faces of Fear and Feelings of Fear.

He has also written horror novels for children (House of Bones, Hair-Raiser) and has just finished the fifth volume in a very popular series for young adults, Rook, based on the adventures of an idiosyncratic remedial English teacher in a Los Angeles community college who has the facility to see ghosts.  Since then Graham has published more than 35 horror novels, including Charnel House, which was awarded a Special Edgar by Mystery Writers of America; Mirror, which was awarded a Silver Medal by West Coast Review of Books; and Family Portrait, an update of Oscar Wilde’s tale, The Picture of Dorian Gray, which was the only non-French winner of the prestigious Prix Julia Verlanger in France.

He lives in a Gothic Victorian mansion high above the River Lee in Cork, Ireland.

Connect with Graham

Website ǀ Twitter ǀ Goodreads

 

 

Interview with Shaun Ebelthite, author of White Water, Black Death

Today’s guest on What Cathy Read Next is Shaun Ebelthite, author of White Water, Black Death. As someone whose idea of the perfect holiday is several weeks on a luxurious cruise ship visiting exotic places, the premise of Shaun’s novel – an outbreak of a deadly plague onboard a cruise ship – should have had me breaking out in a cold sweat. Instead, it intrigued me and I’m very much looking forward to reading White Water, Black Death (isn’t that a clever title?) just as soon as it reaches the top of my review pile. I just may not choose to read it while on my next cruise….

I’m delighted that Shaun has agreed to answer some questions about White Water, Black Death, the inspiration for the book, and his experience of being a first-time author.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin


WhiteWaterBlackDeath2About the Book

“A cruise ship is the perfect target for a biological attack”. These are the chilling words emailed to the Seaborne Symphony in the mid-Atlantic.

Magazine editor Geneva Jones has been sent on the trans-Atlantic cruise to help secure a major advertising agreement from the CEO of the cruise line, Rachel Atkinson, but her efforts to win her over are curtailed by a mysterious crew death. Geneva suspects foul play. Rachel insists its suicide. A former investigative journalist, Geneva can’t resist digging deeper, but what she finds is far more devastating. There’s an Ebola outbreak on the ship, everyone is trapped aboard and Rachel is trying to keep it secret.

Geneva knows enough about Ebola to be terrified, but she’s also onto the biggest story of her career. As panic surges through the ship, she becomes fixated on a single question. How was the virus brought aboard? The answer is worse than she could have imagined, and the greatest exposé she’ll ever get, if she can only prove it.

Praise for White Water, Black Death:

“This story will be every cruise ship passenger’s worst nightmare… no one is above suspicion. This is a fast-paced thriller that will have the reader on the edge of their seat.” (Reader’s Favorite)

White Water, Black Death maintains a fast pace and keeps the reader guessing to the very last page. It may also be the most dangerous book of the year.” (Maritime Reviews)

Format: ebook (284 pp.)                   Publisher: J John Riley Books
Published: 5th September 2017      Genre: Thriller

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk ǀ Amazon.com
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

 

Find White Water, Black Death on Goodreads


Q&A: Shaun Ebelthite, author of White Water, Black Death

Without giving too much away, can you tell me a bit about White Water, Black Death?

White Water, Black Death opens with a cruise ship Captain trying to decide whether to respond to an SOS call in the middle of the Atlantic, with a major storm bearing down on his ship, while a journalist he doesn’t trust is trying to pre-empt his every move. What neither of them, or any of the other characters, realise is that the entire ship is already a giant floating Petri dish, with the most dangerous virus of the 21st century crawling on every surface.  With White Water, Black Death, I wanted to tell a story that hadn’t been told before. Although there have been plenty of plague ship books and ‘outbreak’ type novels, none that I’ve read have focused on something that can happen so easily in real life, with ‘everyday’ characters to which I hope most readers will be able to relate. Instead of a CIA operative or doctor with the NSA, my characters are the people that would be on the frontline if a cruise ship really were the target of a biological attack.

How did you get the idea for the book?

When the Ebola virus broke out in West Africa, and cruise ships began cancelling port calls in the affected countries, I did a ship tour in Dubai and was handed a questionnaire asking about my travel history and current health. I realised then that a cruise ship’s only defence against a virus being brought aboard is a) the infected person knows they’re infected and b) that person is honest enough to tell the cruise line. It made me wonder what would happen if someone knowingly infected themselves with a deadly virus before entering a congested and isolated community, such as a cruise ship.

White Water, Black Death is your first novel so can you tell us a bit about your writing journey?

I wrote White Water, Black Death quite quickly; the main thrust of the story was finished in two or three months. The really time-consuming, but equally rewarding, part was editing it and re-writing it several times to flesh out the story with believable characters and events. I’ve been writing since I was a child, with dozens of unfinished manuscripts gathering e-dust, but this was the first one I managed to finish.  I think it was because I wrote out the major plot thread first, giving me a structure on which I could add and amend.

You have a lot of experience in the cruise industry. How realistic is the scenario at the heart of the book – an outbreak of a highly contagious virus?

It’s terrifyingly realistic. Your average cruise is a week to two weeks in length, while Ebola takes around two to seven days to show symptoms after infection. That makes it easily spreadable aboard a cruise ship because by the time people start showing symptoms, it would be too late to contain it. On a trans-Atlantic cruise, where a ship is at sea for up to a week without making any port calls, the consequences would be catastrophic. And that’s if any of the nearby ports could even provide help. In 2014 when a cruise ship had a passenger onboard who had only treated an Ebola patient (she had no symptoms) it caused panic and Mexico actually shut its maritime border to the ship.

The book describes the panic that sets in amongst the passengers once the outbreak becomes public. How did you approach writing those scenes?

White Water, Black Death is about the choices we make as people under extraordinary stress. It’s a pressure-cooker environment and I tapped into that emotion by using my writing as an outlet for the stress and feeling of being entrapped that I felt in my job. I was also writing the book through the night most days, as that was the only time I could set aside, and those feelings of exhaustion helped me tap into the kind of emotion I was trying to give my characters.

The characters in the book are presented with a number of moral dilemmas, such as the conflict between doing the right thing and commercial pressures. Is this something you feel strongly about?

Yes, but not in any ideological sense. I really wanted to tell a story that was nuanced, rather than black and white in terms of right and wrong. I think very few people are inherently selfish or ‘bad’ in the storytelling sense. Aaron wants to find out the truth about Chantal, his mother, Rachel, wants to protect her company, Geneva wants a good scoop and the Captain wants to protect the ship and its crew and passengers which may not necessarily fit with Rachel’s goals. The dilemmas they each face are (I hope!) true to life in the sense that they’re faced with questions that people would need to answer if this happened in real life.

What was the biggest challenge you encountered when writing White Water, Black Death?

Each of my characters has divergent goals, or things that they care about or want to protect in the crisis, but I’d like the reader to be sympathetic to the plight of each. I’m obviously not the best judge of whether I’ve succeeded, but trying to come close was the greatest challenge from a story telling point of view. In terms of the actual act of writing, the greatest challenge was finding time – inspiration can strike at the most inconvenient times!

Which other writers do you admire?

Patrick O’Brien and Douglas Reeman are my two favourite authors. Having to pick between them would be my own ‘Sophie’s Choice’ crisis.

Has writing your book put you off booking a trans-Atlantic cruise?

Not in the slightest. Cruise holidays are like Marmite for a lot of people. You either love it or hate it, but I definitely love it and even if I survived an ordeal such as that in White Water, Black Death, I would still always choose travel by ocean over anything else.

What are you working on next?

I’ve started writing a psychological thriller set aboard a luxury train in Africa. Its predominantly American and British passengers find themselves stranded in the wilderness when the train comes to a halt late at night on the first day of the trip. They’re told it’s because the railway line is badly maintained and they need to wait for repairs to be done, but then they hear rumours of a coup d’état, and foreigners are being targeted. I’m not sure where it’ll go from there, but that’s one of six or seven stories I’m kicking around.

Thank you, Shaun, for those fascinating answers. I know thriller fans are going to love the intriguing premise of White Water, Black Death.


ShaunEbelthiteAbout the Author

Shaun Ebelthite was born in Namibia, raised in South Africa and educated in Dubai in the Middle East where he is a maritime and cruise journalist. He has been covering all aspects of ocean transport for more than five years and runs the Middle East’s foremost online cruise magazine. He has had two children’s books published, and is now branching out into a new genre with his first thriller, White Water, Black Death.

Connect with Shaun

Website ǀ Facebook ǀ Amazon ǀ Twitter ǀ Goodreads