Blog Tour & Interview: The Summer House Party by Caro Fraser

TheSummerHousePartyTourBannerI’m delighted to be one of the hosts for today’s stop on the Blog Tour for The Summer House Party by Caro Fraser. Caro has kindly agreed to answer some questions about the book, its inspiration and her approach to writing.

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TheSummerHousePartyAbout the Book

In the gloriously hot summer of 1936, a group of people meet at a country house party. Within three years, the country will be engulfed in war, but for now time stands still as they sip champagne on the lawn, engaging in casual flirtations and carefree conversation. Then a shocking death puts an end to their revelry, changing everything in an instant.  For all of them, that summer house party will be a turning point. The mistakes made during that fateful weekend will change their lives forever.

Book Facts

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Publisher: Head of Zeus
  • No. of pages: 512
  • Publication date: 6th April 2017
  • Genre: Historical Fiction

To purchase The Summer House Party from Amazon.co.uk, click here (link provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme)


Q&A: Caro Fraser, author of The Summer Party

Without giving too much away, can you tell me a bit about The Summer House Party?

Hard to put such a long novel into a nutshell, but here goes….The book opens in the idyllic summer of 1936, three years before the war, at the country home of Henry Haddon, a famous society painter, and his wife Sonia. A group of friends – some young, some old, some wealthy, some less so – have been brought together for a week to enjoy the country house pleasures of tennis parties, picnics, and tea on the lawn. As the warm, lazy days unfold, intrigues and rivalries develop among the younger guests, and then a sudden death, like a foretaste of the war to come, puts an end to the party. In the years that follow the events of that week continue to haunt their lives, and as the country heads into war they must try to reconcile the choices and mistakes they have made….So there you have it – a blend of wartime romance and intrigue, ration books, spam, and a bit of sex!

Where did you get the idea for the book?

I’ve always loved English fiction of the 1930s and 40s, and wanted to write a novel set in that era. The run-up to the war, and its dramatic effect on everybody’s lives, struck me as a wonderful theme for a novel, and a country house party seemed the ideal setting for the opening, as it’s the perfect way to introduce characters and to depict events that are going to affect their lives for years to come. I also liked the idea of having a dramatic event early on in the novel – in this case the death at the house party – that resonates years later, because it gives scope for a sequel, or even a series, which I particularly enjoy writing. Everyone knows that feeling of getting to the end of a book and wanting to know more. That’s the way I want my readers to feel, so that they need to find out what happens next with the characters. I’m often quite curious myself! I’m already halfway through the sequel to The Summer House Party, and am hoping it may lead to a third novel.

Your previous books, such as your Caper Court series, have had a contemporary setting.  What tempted you to enter the world of historical fiction?

Partly a fascination with the period in which the novel is set. I think women of my generation have an affinity with the era just before the war, because it’s the world of our mothers and grandmothers, and while we may not remember it, we feel a connection through photographs and family stories. We’re intrigued by the domestic lives that women led back then, especially amid the hardships of war, and it was interesting to try and evoke that world, and to write at a length and pace that I think fits the time. I greatly admire the writing of certain novelists of that era, such as Dorothy Whipple and Winifred Holtby, who recognised that ordinary and everyday events possess their own drama, and who write about them with such elegant understatement and wry humour. I would love to think that I caught their spirit.

The Summer House Party is set just before the Second World War.  What were the challenges in creating an authentic picture of life in that period?

Catching the tone of the pre-war period was the challenge I most enjoyed – the way people spoke and thought, their assumptions and prejudices – and I found that steeping myself in the fiction of the day was the best way to capture the right voice. At least I hope it’s right! It also gave me an excuse to read lots of lovely novels from that period. As to the part set during the war, people have a very good idea through films and documentaries of what life was like then, so getting the detail right was very important.

How did you approach the research for The Summer House Party? Do you enjoy the process of research?

I do enjoy research, but there’s always the danger of getting so caught up in it that you waste time, so I try to focus on what I really need. It’s also important as a novelist to wear research lightly – you might learn a thousand fascinating things about what life was like in the blackout, but readers don’t want a history lesson. So I might read pages of stuff just to finish up with one scrap of information that I can use to give the thing authenticity. My research for The Summer House Party, apart from reading a lot of fiction of the time, was fairly scatter-gun and involved a lot of googling – the internet can throw up random and fascinating information that you didn’t even know you were looking for. In fact, one of the key plotlines in the book is based on a true story that I stumbled across during my research – it took one of the characters, Paul, in a direction I’d never considered.

What is your favourite and least favourite part of the writing process?

My favourite part is when I think I know where the story is going, but then a character does or says something I hadn’t anticipated – I find myself thinking, ‘Hold on, he wouldn’t do this, he’d do that instead’, and it takes the story in an unexpected direction. It’s great when characters really take a hold of you in that way, because they become like real people. It’s for that reason that I never plot things very tightly when I start a book.  My least favourite bit is when I get stuck on plot, and just can’t see a way ahead. That is a huge downer, and sometimes it takes a few days to resolve. But I always know it will resolve itself. I just go to the gym or do a bit of gardening and let the thing work itself out in my head.

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

I write in a space that is like a small study just off our kitchen area, with a window overlooking the garden, which is lovely at this time of year. My space is full of books, pictures of my children, a big David Bailey photo of Lennon & McCartney, and random stuff that I like. My writing day is fairly structured – start work at 9, coffee and biscuits at 11, lunch at 1, gym or a swim at 3 – but it’s flexible, too, and I often go up to town to have lunch with friends with whom I worked when I was a lawyer. Apart from that I don’t have any rituals. I work on a Mac, and when I’m travelling I work on my Ipad. I don’t understand people who can only write on translucent vellum with specially sharpened pencils or whatever – writing is a job and you should be able to do it with a biro on the back of an envelope, if you have to. It’s the words that count.

What other writers do you admire?

One of the writers I most admire most is Hilary Mantel. I wish I could write like that! I feel like throwing an armed guard around her until she finishes the next in the Wolf Hall trilogy. For sheer genius, John Updike. For the best characters and plots, Dickens. For the best storytelling, Stephen King. For fun, P G Wodehouse or Irvine Welsh.

What’s your favourite way to engage with your readers?

By getting them into the minds of the characters, so that they can identify with everything those characters are thinking and feeling. That’s what gives a book momentum, every bit as much as the plot.

What are you working on next?  Will it be more historical fiction?

I’m in the middle of the sequel to The Summer House Party, which is set in London in the 50s and 60s, so I suppose someone like my twenty-three year-old son would regard that as historical! The good part is that I can actually remember how things were back then, but I still do a lot of research because you forget details – like slang that people used, the places they frequented, the clothes and make up they wore. Janet Street Porter’s memoirs are proving very useful… Then I have promised myself – and fans of the Caper Court series – that I’ll get going on number 8 in that series. I’m very much looking forward to meeting up with those characters again – they feel like old friends.

Thank you, Caro, for those fascinating answers.  The gorgeous cover already had me enticed but now there is the prospect of a sequel and even a third book, I can’t wait to read it!


CaroFraserAbout the Author

Caro Fraser is the author of the bestselling Caper Court novels, based on her own experiences as a lawyer. She is the daughter of bestselling Flashman author George MacDonald Fraser.

Connect with Caro…

Website http://www.caro-fraser.co.uk/
Twitter   https://twitter.com/CaroFraser

Blog Tour/Interview: The Dog Walker (The Detective’s Daughter #5) by Lesley Thomson

I’m delighted to host today’s stop on the blog tour for The Dog Walker by Lesley Thomson, the fifth instalment in the bestselling The Detective’s Daughter series. Lesley has kindly agreed to answer some questions about the book, its inspiration and her approach to writing.

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TheDogWalkerCoverAbout the Book

A haunted house, a broken family and a body that has never been found. Stella and Jack must reawaken the secrets of the past in order to solve the mysteries of the present.

January, 1987. In the depths of winter, only joggers and dog walkers brave the Thames towpath after dark. Helen Honeysett, a young newlywed, sets off for an evening run from her riverside cottage. Only her dog returns. Twenty-nine years later, her husband has asked Stella Darnell, a private detective, and her sidekick Jack Harmon, to find out what happened all those years ago. But when the five households on that desolate stretch of towpath refuse to give up their secrets, Stella and Jack find themselves hunting a killer whose trail has long gone cold.

TheDogWalkerBook Facts

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Publisher: Head of Zeus
  • No. of pages: 400
  • Publication date: 6th April 2017
  • Genre: Crime

To purchase The Dog Walker from Amazon.co.uk, click here (link provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme)

 


Q&A: Lesley Thomson, author of The Dog Walker

Without giving too much away, can you tell me a bit about The Dog Walker?

It’s a story of a place as much as of people. Five cottages near a dark lonely towpath beside the River Thames. The only people who go there at night are dog walkers and joggers. In 1987 a woman disappears and is presumed murdered. The crime is never solved. 29 years on the woman’s husband asks Jack and Stella to find out what happened to her. The story involves lots of scary scenes and a few dogs.

How did you come up with the idea for The Detective’s Daughter series and, in particular, the character of Stella?

A cleaner and a detective share something in common. Both encounter scenes of relative chaos and restore order. Both have a forensic eye for detail and get to enter a lot of different premises, legitimately. However, it struck me as interesting if the cleaner had a link to a detective yet was in contention with that role. Stella wanted to break away from her father so at eighteen refused to join the police. She struck out on her own as a cleaner. But as the series has progressed she grows closer to her dead father and accepts her ‘investigator’ heritage.

The Dog Walker is the fifth book in The Detective’s Daughter series.  What are the challenges of writing a series compared to a standalone novel?

There are not many. It’s a pleasure to revisit characters that develop with each novel. The main challenge is that previous books obviously set ‘facts’ in stone. Then again I like working within some boundaries; I have to dig deeper. Mainly though, a series gives me opportunities to develop less prominent characters, show the changes experience has wrought upon Jack and Stella over a longer story arc. One of these strands is the changing relationship between Stella and Jack and their personal journeys.

Are you a dog walker yourself?

I am. It’s how I came up with the idea. I walk my dog on dark early mornings in empty eerie places. One day it occurred to me that I assumed that the people I’d meet were other dog walkers and that therefore I was safe. But what if I was wrong?

You wrote a short story, The Runaway, about Stella’s childhood.  What was the motivation for this?

It was a chance to open a window into Stella’s past that in a novel would be a distraction from the story. I wanted to explore her early years – the seven year old Stella paid dearly for her parents’ break up – it has contributed to who she has become.

When writing, do you like to have the plot fully worked out or see where the story takes you?

Like Stella I’m a Spreadsheet Queen. I plot out the story, chapter by chapter, including who’s in each chapter, what happens and why. This plan will change as I write. I revisit the spreadsheet and add or takeaway proposed chapters. But I need to know the entire story before I start and this includes the final scene. Within the chapters things will happen that I hadn’t planned.

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

I write in a tiny study overlooking the Sussex Downs. Even when it’s grey and misty outside I have a long view and lots of light. I start at the same time every day, break for coffee at 11, lunch at 1 and a walk with the dog. Back after about an hour and then work until 5.30. I drink from a particular mug that I never use outside work time (you did ask). I could go on, but best that I don’t….

What other writers do you admire?

Many, but here’s a few: Wilkie Collins, The Brontës, Charles Dickens, Patricia Highsmith, Ruth Rendell and Ngaio Marsh. Contemporary: Elly Griffiths, Tana French, Michael Connelly, Kate Atkinson and Donna Tartt.

I know you teach creative writing.  What is the main piece of advice you give your students?

To get inside the story you’re telling, live and breathe it; believe in its truth. Write the story you want to read, not one you think others would like because how can you cover everyone’s tastes? Above all: keep writing.

What are you working on next?  Are there further cases waiting for Stella?

Yes there are. Stella and Jack move to the countryside to try to solve the murder of a young woman forty years ago. Living in a large old house in the middle of nowhere gradually, as the clues fall into place, they see that the murderer is still out there.

Thank you, Lesley, for those fascinating answers – especially the clues about the next The Detective’s Daughter book!


LesleyThomsonAbout the Author

Lesley Thomson grew up in west London. Her first novel, A Kind of Vanishing, won the People’s Book Prize in 2010. Her second novel, The Detective’s Daughter, was a #1 bestseller and sold over 500,000 copies. Lesley combines writing with teaching creative writing. She lives in Lewes with her partner.

Connect with Lesley

Website http://lesleythomson.co.uk/
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/LesleyThomsonNovelist?ref=tn_tnmn

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