To have a book published is a magical experience that very
few people ever get to achieve, but thanks to TRESTLE PRESS and their amazing
outlook on the revolution of digital publishing about to hit readers around the
world like a literary tsunami, more amazing writers will be able to get their
writing out there to an ever increasing digital audience.
My first collection of short stories, KICK IT has just been
published this week and my goodness, I certainly did get a kick from seeing my
book up there for sale on Amazon. KICK IT is a collection of 5 short noir /
crime stories with a little twist of Scottish humour thrown into the mix.
Three of the stories have my favourite character, DC Gemma
Dixon, strutting her stuff around the crime scene of Glasgow. New to CID, Gemma
has to learn very quickly to stand up for herself in male dominated
environments where as the newbie she gets some of the roughest assignments on
offer.
I love having fun with Gemma as she banters with her fellow
officers, making sure that she asserts herself and doesn’t take any of their
cheek.
My other two stories deal with our perceptions of people and
I attempt to show how far off the mark we can be when we don’t take the time to
dig a bit deeper into ‘hidden stories;’ the secrets that people keep close to
their chests as they go about their daily lives. So much can be going on
beneath a person’s outward shell and I try to uncover some of these tales.
So I hope you check out my first ever e-Book and please let
me know what you think!
Question & Answer
1. Why crime writing?
I’ve always wanted to write as far back as I can remember
and over the years I’ve had various disastrous attempts that just didn’t work.
My writing was boring, bland and twee. I had come to the conclusion that I just
didn’t have what it takes.
Then I joined Twitter and quickly discovered that there were
lots of writers around the world tweeting about their writing. They would
discuss their difficulties, the characters they wrote about and the struggle to
get published.
Slowly I crept into this circle of talented people and as I
have always been a rabid reader of crime fiction, I thought that if I couldn’t
write then at least I could review and be a little help to those with talent
struggling to get noticed.
Eventually some very kind people asked if I wrote. After the
initial, ‘no, no, no,’ I decided to give the writing lark another go but this
time try to write within the crime genre….and that’s all it took. My years of
reading crime have somehow helped me understand how to write the type of story
that people seem to get a lot of fun out of reading.
2. Who do you read?
I’ve really enjoyed reading SMOKE by Nigel Bird, another
Trestle author. The story alternates
between its two main characters, Jimmy and Carlos. Jimmy is still at school,
theoretically, but is one of those lads who has fallen through the cracks in
the system and is more likely to be seen pounding the streets of his local
community begging smokes or getting blitzed out of his head with his mates.
Carlos has a swanky
new motorised wheelchair, top notch, and was Jimmy's sister's boyfriend before
somebody tied him to a railway line and he lost an arm and a leg. After a long
period of therapy he's back on the local scene and hopes that Kylie will take
him back and will allow him access to their young son. Problems start when
Kylie declares that the child isn't his.........
I love Nigel’s gritty
realism and I can see his characters when I walk down any high street in the
towns of Scotland.
3. What’s next?
I’m hoping to have
another collection of short stories KICK IT AGAIN out soon and then move onto a
serialization of a novella that I’ve been working on for some time. More
‘Gemma’ stories are in the pipeline and you will be able to meet Gemma again in
BRIT GRIT 2, soon to be published by TRESTLE.

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