Showing posts with label Emma Kavanagh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Emma Kavanagh. Show all posts

Monday, 18 April 2016

The Missing Hours by Emma Kavanagh - Blog Tour guest post

It's my stop on the blog tour for The Missing Hours by Emma Kavanagh. I'm delighted to welcome Emma to my blog today. The Missing Hours is being published by Cornerstone on 21 April 2016.




Book 3…Shouldn’t I have a grip on this by now?
by Emma Kavanagh



It is a dream, this job. Seriously. I get to make stuff up for a living. My brain can wander anywhere it wants to. Sometimes it even comes back. Ha! I jest. What was I saying…

Oh, right. When people ask me what I do, I mutter the word ‘author’ in an undertone, much the way one would say the words ‘drug dealer’. Because this is SUCH an awesome job, that I don’t want to appear cocky about it, don’t want the gods of fate looking down at me and saying “Oops, she’s getting a bit big for her boots. Let’s do something about that.” So I mutter and I deflect and I talk about how grateful I am, all the while thinking, please, vengeful gods, don’t take it all away.

Because, you see, it really is a cool job.

But…

“So, what book is this you have coming out? Three, right? Oh, you’re an old hand at this now.”

And I smile and I say yes and then I go and lock myself in the room and cry from the sheer terror of it all.

Because the thing is, it’s still the same, even three books in. There’s the day to day work, which, again, is totally awesome. And yet, each morning I sit before my computer and feel the sparks of fear erupting in my insides. What if today is the day that I forget how to write? What if today is the day that those words simply will not come and that blank screen just stares at me and stares at me until I am battered down into submission.

How dare I do a job like this? I am just an average woman from an average town. To get to do something like this feels like the unlikeliest of mistakes. What if today is the day that the universe realises what it has done, and it all goes away?

Then there is the book-out-in-the-word thing.

My baby.

Out there.

All alone.

I confess that, for the most part, I try not to read reviews as it seems like the most effective way to keep some distance between me and the lunatic asylum. But, when I do read reviews, I will scour (and I mean SCOUR) them for the worst they can throw at me. Even in a sparklingly brilliant review, I will hunt for some meaty bit of criticism that I can use to beat myself across the head with for days.

Yes. Yes, there is something wrong with me.

Then there are sales. Oh, god! You see, you want good sales. Obviously. Your publisher has worked extremely hard and invested an awful lot in your creation. You want to see that faith rewarded. But then begins the insidious little thought - well, what if they are too good? What if I can’t write another book that can sell that well and then the sales plummet and oh-my-god-we’re-all-going-to-die-somebody-get-me-a-drink.

As you can see, I like to plan ahead with my worrying…

I read somewhere recently that creative types are the most prone to anxiety because their powers of imagination provide a virtual trough of horror stories, projected apocalyptic outcomes, from which they can select.

Yay!

But the thing is, this job I do, it falls decidedly outside the realm of normal jobs. I get to make things up for a living. I live three quarters of my life in a fantasy world and I get paid for it!!! Yes, it is pressure filled. It is a job that involves making a large percentage of your inner life public. You pour yourself out onto the page, make yourself vulnerable for people to see. The best of writing comes when what is on the page is more than words, static two dimensional characters. We have to create people, and people have tragedies and pain, and when they live that, we live that, and so sometimes that can make you more than a little crazy. But this is not pressure like that experienced by a police officer on the beat on a Friday night who has to insert themselves between two people intent on killing one another. It is not pressure like a soldier who has to put one foot in front of another, knowing full well that any one of those steps may cause the ground to erupt beneath him and his world to end in a flash of light and pain.

This pressure, the pressure that comes with this job, it comes from being so damned privileged. From having been given an opportunity to do what so many people dream of, and from wanting so very badly to be worthy of that opportunity.

So, each day I take a few deep, calming breaths. I remind myself that I have done this before. That I can do this again. And I begin anew, each day striving to be worthy of the good fortune I have received.

Seriously, I think that by book four, I’ll have this thing down…


About Emma Kavanagh
Emma Kavanagh was born and raised in South Wales. After graduating with a PhD in Psychology from Cardiff University, she spent many years working as a police and military psychologist, training firearms officers, command staff and military personnel throughout the UK and Europe. She lives in South Wales with her husband and young sons.

Readers can find out more about Emma on her Facebook page and follow Emma on Twitter - @EmmaLK 


The Missing Hours
By Emma Kavanagh
Published by Cornerstone ( 21 April 2016)
ISBN: 978-1780894676




Publisher's description
One moment, Selena Cole is in the playground with her children and the next, she has vanished without a trace.
A woman returns
Twenty hours later, Selena is found safe and well, but with no memory of where she has been.
What took place in those missing hours, and are they linked to the discovery of a nearby murder?
‘Is it a forgetting or a deception?’

Read my review here.


Follow the Blog Tour





The Missing Hours by Emma Kavanagh

The Missing Hours
By Emma Kavanagh
Published by Cornerstone (21 April 2016)
ISBN: 978-1780894676



Publisher's description
A woman disappears

One moment, Selena Cole is in the playground with her children and the next, she has vanished without a trace.
A woman returns
Twenty hours later, Selena is found safe and well, but with no memory of where she has been.


What took place in those missing hours, and are they linked to the discovery of a nearby murder?

My verdict
The Missing Hours is a well-written standalone crime thriller that's tightly plotted with well-developed characters.

Selena Cole, mother of two young girls, mysteriously vanishes for 20 hours. Where was she? Was she kidnapped? And why can't she remember anything? Meanwhile, a local solicitor has been murdered in a vicious attack. Detectives Finn Hale and Leah Mackay are working the two cases and wonder whether the two crimes could be linked.

Selena Cole specialises in kidnap and ransom cases, negotiating for the safe return of hostages all over the world. I found the K&R aspect of the plot particularly fascinating - especially the chapters about Selena's previous case files that are scattered throughout the book. By covering 'new ground', this gave the book an edge over some of the other crime thrillers I have read recently. It's clear that Emma Kavanagh has researched this topic in detail, and her own experience as a police and military psychologist certainly shines through in her writing.

The Missing Hours is written from multiple viewpoints and it's so easy to get right inside the characters' heads. The two detectives are brother and sister, which leads to great interaction, not just as colleagues but as siblings too. Vivid descriptions from the first page really bring the setting to life. There are many twists and turns, which keep the plot moving at a fast pace, and I was intrigued all the way through.

I received an Advance Reader Copy from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.


Friday, 17 April 2015

Hidden by Emma Kavanagh - BLOG TOUR

I am delighted to be today's stop on the BLOG TOUR for Emma Kavanagh's second psychological thriller Hidden, which is being published on 23 April 2015 by Century.






I would like to welcome Emma Kavanagh, who tells us what it's like being a published author. 

After graduating with a PhD in Psychology from Cardiff University, Emma Kavanagh spent seven years working as a police and military psychologist, training firearms officers, command staff and military personnel, throughout the UK and Europe, to deal with the most extreme situations. An expert in her field, she now applies her knowledge to her writing: creating realistic and incredibly tense stories.

Over to Emma...



Being Published: Life Beyond the Book Deal

I have been doing this for a couple of years now. Hidden is my second published book and I have just signed my second two-book deal with Arrow. One of the things that is becoming abundantly clear is that the vast majority of people have absolutely no clue what my job entails. None. NONE!

People seem to be fairly evenly split between those who think that I trot out a book in a 20-minute sit-down and get paid millions for the privilege, and those who think that I work harder than the builders of the pyramids and get paid nothing (or even, get to pay to do it!).

Yeah.

No.

I work pretty hard, although not pyramid-building hard. And in truth, the vast majority of my life is spent sitting, laptop on my knee, typing. There are other commitments that being published brings - things like writing for this lovely blog, for example! And these can often provide a nice little diversion from my life within my own head.

I don't get paid millions. Sigh. I don't pay for my book to be published. (What??)

I have a job. And like most other jobs, there are things that I must do and time parameters in which they must be done. I have a deadline for submission for book 3 (it's fine - it's AGES away!). Before that rolls about, I have to finish it, edit it myself until I am happy that it's as good as I alone can possibly make it, whilst still doing all of the other tasks that fall to a published author. I go on Twitter - a lot. This began as a way to get my name known but has become a lifeline. Writing can be a very solitary business and social media has allowed me to get to know a huge bunch of writers and to come to consider them friends.

Occasionally I am allowed out of the house (not often) on research trips, to London for meetings with my agents and my publishers, and, when publication time rolls around, to do events. I LOVE these. And not just because I spend 11 months of the year staring at the same four walls. I get to talk to people and sometimes have drinks!

As a writer seeking a publishing deal, it seems like the holy grail. That, once this is achieved, life will take on a beautifully rosy glow and all manner of things will be well. Now, don't get me wrong, it's awesome. AWESOME! However, there is still terror. Publication day is deeply exciting and simultaneously deeply traumatic. What if everyone hates it? What if no-one hates it because no-one reads it? Why do I have baby sick in my hair in my author photo? See? Trauma! Some people will tell you they adore your book and you will feel a little like an imposter, because it can't be you who has written this book they love. Some will tell you they hated it. And then you will cry.

It's not a job for the faint of heart. It is, however, a job that I have dreamt of my whole life and one that I wouldn't swap for anything!


Hidden by Emma Kavanagh,
published by Century, hardback at £12.99



My verdict: An excellent well-written character-led psychological thriller.


Read an extract of Chapter 1: http://www.deadgoodbooks.co.uk/index.php/extract-hidden-emma-kavanagh/

Find out more

Follow the Blog Tour: http://www.reviewedthebook.co.uk

Follow Emma Kavanagh on Twitter: https://twitter.com/EmmaLK

Sunday, 12 April 2015

Hidden by Emma Kavanagh

Hidden
By Emma Kavanagh
Published by Century (23 April 2015)
ISBN: 978-1448184576




Publisher's description
HE'S WATCHING

A gunman is stalking the wards of a local hospital. He's unidentified and dangerous, and has to be located. Urgently.

Police Firearms Officer Aden McCarthy is tasked with tracking him down. Still troubled by the shooting of a schoolboy, Aden is determined to make amends by finding the gunman - before it's too late.

SHE'S WAITING
To psychologist Imogen, hospital should be a place of healing and safety - both for her, and her young niece who's been recently admitted. She's heard about the gunman, but he has little to do with her. Or has he?

As time ticks down, no one knows who the gunman's next target will be. But he's there. Hiding in plain sight. Far closer than anyone thinks...

My verdict
Hidden's first chapter hooked me from the outset with its fast-paced writing and dramatic scene. The book begins with the vivid description of the first few moments after a shooting spree at a hospital by a lone gunman. This is seen through the eyes of Charlie, a local reporter, who clearly knows some of the victims well. I found this to be an effective introduction to some of the key characters.

Hidden jumps between timelines, building up to the day of the shooting.  I found this very easy to follow, as each chapter is clearly signposted with who is telling the story and when this is taking place. The book is written from four main viewpoints  - Charlie, Aden (a police firearms officer), Imogen (a psychologist) and the gunman - as it follows their journey to that fateful event. Several threads weave together as the tension builds up.

Hidden has believable interesting characters, many of whom are linked in some way. We learn about their back stories, including that of the shooter, although the identity of the shooter isn't revealed until right at the end of the book. The author uses twists and turns to lead the reader off track, with several red herrings strategically placed throughout the book. I thought I had guessed who the shooter was on several occasions, but then changed my mind again as I continued to read.

Emma Kavanagh is a former police psychologist. In Hidden, she has explored how different police officers react and cope with tragedies and life-and-death situations.

This is an excellent well-written character-led psychological thriller.

I received an Advance Reader Copy from the publisher through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

Join me on Emma Kavanagh's Blog Tour on 17th April.