Showing posts with label Mark Edwards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mark Edwards. Show all posts

Thursday, 15 September 2016

The Inspiration behind Sophie, central character in The Devil's Work by Mark Edwards

Today it's my stop on the blog tour for Mark Edward's The Devil's Work. I would like to welcome Mark to my blog to talk about the inspiration behind his central character Sophie. Plus there's a Book Giveaway at the end of this blog post. The Devil's Work was published by Thomas & Mercer on 13 September 2016.



The inspiration behind Sophie
By Mark Edwards

Before I was a full-time writer, I worked as a marketing manager for a small publisher in London. It’s where I met my wife, Sara. We worked together for several years, at one point sitting at adjacent banks of desks. We were together 24 hours a day, talking about work when we were at home, chatting about home when we were at work.

After our first child was born, Sara went on maternity leave. When she returned seven months later, she was promoted immediately and became the manager of a small team. Over the coming months, I watched her deal with enormous stress – pressure from above and below, an enormous workload that meant she could never switch off, lots of issues with the people she was managing. As well as that, she felt guilty about the amount of time she was spending apart from our daughter, who was in full-time nursery. And on top of all that, there was always a huge amount of psychodrama in our office. Politics and gossip and power struggles. It was intense, and Sara eventually left to become a much happier freelancer.

When I came up with the idea for The Devil’s Work – a psychological thriller about colleagues from hell, where paranoia is fully justified – I immediately decided I wanted the main character to be a woman. I had written from female points of view before, but the protagonists in my solo books had previously always been male. I was a little nervous. Could I make Sophie, the central character, convincing?

I didn’t realise at first that I was writing about the situation Sara had found herself in a few years before. Or that Sophie was based, in some ways, on my wife. She didn’t recognise herself, though. In fact, when I showed the first draft to Sara she said that Sophie was more like a female version of me! It seemed that I had based Sophie on a hybrid of Sara and myself. But I feel confident that I have created a convincing woman. One early reviewer told me she had to keep reminding herself that I was male – the only instance when that is a compliment.

There are strong echoes of our marriage in the relationship between Sophie and her husband, Guy, too. The way Guy tells Sophie she worries too much and she tells him he doesn’t worry enough. His habit of describing everything as a nightmare and her irritation at that.

But there is one big difference between Sophie and Sara and me. Sophie has a dark secret in her past, something that comes back to wreck her life, and neither Sara nor I do.

At least, I don’t think Sara has a dark secret…



About Mark Edwards
Mark Edwards writes psychological thrillers. His first solo novel, The Magpies (2013), reached the No.1 spot on Amazon UK and has sold 300,000 copies to date. This was followed by What You Wish For (2014), Because She Loves Me (2014) and Follow You Home (2015). 
He also co-writes with Louise Voss, including a series featuring Detective Inspector Patrick Lennon, starting with From the Cradle (2014) and The Blissfully Dead (2015). 

Mark grew up on the south coast of England and starting writing in his twenties while working in a number of dead-end jobs. He lived in Tokyo for a year before returning to the UK and starting a career in marketing. He now writes full-time and lives in the West Midlands, England, with his wife, their three children and a ginger cat, Billie, who was named after an actress from Doctor Who.

Find Mark Edwards on his website and on Twitter - @mredwards


The Devil's Work
By Mark Edwards
Published by Thomas & Mercer (13 September 2016)



Publisher's description
The Devil’s Work is an exhilarating and chilling grip-lit novel that follows Sophie Greenwood, a young mother who unwittingly accepts a job at the office from hell! Re-entering the workforce after having her first child, Sophie thinks she’s found her dream job in the marketing department of an iconic children’s publisher.

But very quickly Sophie comes to find that someone is out to get her and that the dream job may turn out to be a nightmare. A mouse nailed to her front door… A stranger following her home in the shadows… Unexplainable whispers in the office late at night…


As her life begins to fall apart at work and at home, Sophie must confront dark secrets from the past and race to uncover the truth about her new job… before it kills her. What is her ambitious young assistant really up to? And what exactly happened to Sophie’s predecessor?

Follow the Blog Tour



WIN A COPY OF THE DEVIL'S WORK
I have two copies of The Devil's Work to give away, one to each of two lucky winners. To be in with a chance of winning one of these fantastic books, please follow me on Twitter (@VictoriaGoldma2) and RT one of my The Devil's Work giveaway tweets by 5 pm on Thursday 21st September 2016. 

The two winners will be chosen at random on Friday 22nd September 2016 and will be notified through Twitter DM, so make sure you're following me. 

Good Luck!

Monday, 29 June 2015

AUTHOR IN THE SPOTLIGHT - Mark Edwards - BLOG TOUR

I am delighted that MARK EDWARDS is joining me on my blog today, as part of the Blog Tour for his latest book. Mark 's latest book - Follow You Home - is published by Thomas & Mercer on 30 June 2015. 




So Mark, what inspired you to write a book in the first place?
Follow You Home came from a conversation with my editor. Both The Magpies and Because She Loves Me, my previous novels, were inspired by something that happened to me: living above nightmare neighbours and having a jealous girlfriend. My editor jokily asked me what other terrible experiences I'd had, which made me think back to something that happened to me when I was 20. My then-girlfriend and I went inter-railing around Europe but were robbed on a night train on our second day and stranded in southern France. This led to me thinking about the worst thing that could have happened. So Follow You Home starts with a couple setting off on a night train in a foreign country and it all goes horribly wrong...

Where do your ideas come from?
As above, the spark always comes from something difficult or stressful that has happened to me. Then I try to make it as dark as possible, to put my characters in really difficult situations. I pick up ideas, too, from news stories or TV shows - for example, the next Voss and Edwards book was inspired by a documentary about crazy One Direction fans!

Have your personal experiences influenced your writing? And if so, how?
Apart from the above, everything that happens to me influences my writing. Whether it's writing about relationships, the way couples interact for example, or work situations. I don't go around with a notepad writing down people's conversations, although people sometimes suspect I lurk around doing this. But I absorb everything that goes on around me, as I am sure all writers do.

Describe your writing style in 10 words or less?
I write psychological thrillers in which scary things happen to ordinary people.

Do you have any strange writing habits?
Yes, I have a trained parrot who does all my typing… I recite the words and he skitters around the keyboard, tapping it out.

But seriously… I don't know if it's strange but I do most of my writing in cafés and at my local gym, surrounded by people and noise. I do this because I have small children at home and my office was turned into a nursery when our third child came along. but I now find it very hard to write when it's quiet.

Do you plot out the whole book before you start or just start writing and see where it leads you?
I used to be a 100% pantser, making it up as I went along, but I now try to plot in advance. I tend to plot out the first part, and then start writing, extending the plot and figuring it out as I go along. This technique is, I think, called the 'driving in the dark' technique. You can see what your car headlights reveal but, beyond that, everything is shrouded in darkness. This makes writing more exciting.

What do you consider to be the hardest part of your writing?
Two things. The biggest one is plotting. When you write psychological thrillers, readers expect twists and turns, misdirection and shocks. Coming up with these twists, making it all work, dropping in enough clues without giving it all away… that's what makes it hard. The second thing is, now that I'm on my 11th novel, is keeping it fresh. Not repeating things. Not repeating things.

Do you read? If so, who are your favourite authors?
Yes! Mistrust any author who doesn't read. In fact, if I found out an author doesn't read, I would instantly think their books must be rubbish - because the words you read provide fuel for your own writing. And why would you want to be a writer if you don't love books? My favourite authors are Donna Tartt, Bret Easton Ellis, Mo Hayder, Peter James, Sarah Lotz, Ira Levin, Paula Daly and tons of other crime and psychological thriller writers. Far too many to list here.

As well as writing solo, you also collaborate with Louise Voss. Has writing with Louise affected the way you write or research your own books? If so, how?
It hasn't really affected how I research books, although the books with Louise do require more research as they are police procedurals. Co-writing is great as it gives you a sense of freedom. I write something, send it to Louise, she gives me instant feedback… I think it makes us both more comfortable about taking risks.

If you were writing a book about your life, what would be the title?
'Mark My Words'

What advice do you have for aspiring writers?
Being a writer is so stressful that you have to really, really want it and be unable to stop yourself doing it. So only start writing if it's your passion and you believe that you have something original and interesting to say.

And lastly, why should people read Follow You Home?
Follow You Home is scary and exciting. It starts out like the Blair Witch Project and ends up like an action-packed Simon Kernick thriller. And I guarantee you won't guess the final twist. Don't just take my word for it. It's had rave reviews from writers including Angela Marsons, Clare Mackintosh and CL Taylor, who says: 'Twisty, turn and downright creepy in places, Mark Edwards has, yet again, produced an unputdownable psychological thriller. He is a master at creating a tangled web of secrets, lies and red herrings so cleverly constructed that I was kept guessing all the way through.

About Mark Edwards

Mark Edwards writes psychological thrillers. His first solo novel, The Magpies, topped the Kindle chart in the UK. What You Wish For followed in March 2014 and Because She Loves Me was published in September 2014. Follow You Home will be out in June 2015.

Mark has also co-written five novels with Louise Voss: Catch Your Death (a number one bestseller in the UK), Killing Cupid (chosen by Peter James as his book of 2012), All Fall Down and Forward Slash. From the Cradle was published in 2014 and is the first in a series featuring DI Patrick Lennon.

Mark lives in the West Midlands with his wife, three children and a ginger cat.

Find Mark Edwards and Louise Voss on their official Facebook page and follow Mark on Twitter - @mredwards.


Follow You Home
Published by Thomas & Mercer (30 June 2015)



Synopsis: 

It was supposed to be the trip of a lifetime, a final adventure before settling down.

After a perfect start, Daniel and Laura's travels end abruptly when they are thrown off a night train in the middle of nowhere. To find their way back to civilisation, they must hike along the tracks through a forest… a haunting journey that ends in unimaginable terror.

Back in London, Daniel and Laura vow never to talk about what they saw that night. But as they try to fit back into their old lives, it becomes clear that their nightmare is just beginning...

Click here to find it on Amazon UK.




Friday, 26 June 2015

Follow You Home by Mark Edwards

Follow You Home
By Mark Edwards
Published by Thomas & Mercer (30 June 2015)
ISBN: 978-1503944374



Publisher's description
It was supposed to be the trip of a lifetime, a final adventure before settling down.

After a perfect start, Daniel and Laura's travels end abruptly when they are thrown off a night train in the middle of nowhere. To find their way back to civilisation, they must hike along the tracks through a forest… a haunting journey that ends in unimaginable terror.

Back in London, Daniel and Laura vow never to talk about what they saw that night. But as they try to fit back into their old lives, it becomes clear that their nightmare is just beginning...

My verdict
Follow You Home is the story of Laura and Daniel, who are on the trip of a lifetime, backpacking around Europe, before they settle down and have children. After they are thrown off a train in Romania one night, they have a horrific experience. Stunned and emotionally scarred, they make a pact that they will never mention it again - not even to each other. But the past doesn't always stay hidden, and a series of accidents and events suggests that someone is out to get them.

Mark Edwards has the knack of taking normal people and putting them into difficult situations to see how they would cope. After Romania, Daniel tries to get on with his life, but Laura struggles to do so, leading to a downward spiral in her physical and mental health. Their relationship breaks apart too - but can they rely on each other when their lives may be in danger?

Follow You Home keeps you guessing right until the end, when you finally discover what Laura and Daniel actually saw that night in Romania. This easy-to-read thriller is creepy and filled with suspense, various dodgy characters and twists and turns. A perfect choice for Mark Edwards fans (or anyone who enjoys creepy thrillers).

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