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Author of DIRTY GAME, which was last month's Crime Book of the Month
Hi Jessie! Thanks for taking time out to answer a fewquestions for BOOKS MONTHLY – here goes:
BM:You're way too
young to remember the 1960s – how did you come to write your first
published novel about that era and what was it about those years that
fascinated you?
JK: I’ve always loved the feel of the
sixties – it seemed such a happy, carefree time when everything was
possible & ‘swinging’ London was the fashion hub of the world. And the
music! Simply the best. It was a completely natural setting for Annie
Bailey and DIRTY GAME.
BM: DIRTY GAME is the
first in a trilogy – when can we expect to see BLACK WIDOW published? Have
you finished writing it and do you have a working title for the third book
yet?
JK: BLACK WIDOW is scheduled to be
published September 09, but in publishing all things are flexible! I
completed BLACK WIDOW recently, and am now working on the third book of
the trilogy, which has the working title SCARLET
WOMEN.
BM: Looking ahead,
are there other periods of recent British history that excite you enough
to make you want to write about them? Or will you concentrate on the
sixties and seventies for a while?
JK: I love the sixties and the
seventies were great too, but the current day has its fascinations too.
And the eighties. Power dressing and punk and big City dealers, very
exciting. And Layla, Annie Bailey’s daughter, will be 21 years old in
1987…
BM: Is Annie Bailey
or any of the characters in DIRTY GAME based on someone you know –
yourself, perhaps? Are you ever tempted to write yourself into one of your
novels?
JK: To a writer everything is an
inspiration. Characters are often compilations of many people. And no, I’m
never tempted to write myself into my novels, but apparently I’m very like
Annie Bailey – a bossy cow with a can-do attitude who never gives
up.
BM: What sort of
novels did you write before you came up with DIRTY GAME? Were they also
thrillers?
JK: Before DIRTY GAME became such a
rip-roaring success, I wrote lots of different things, including chick lit
and comedy crime. My excellent agent Judith Murdoch recently told me that
she had scrawled ‘dire’ across one of my chick lit efforts, so clearly
that wasn’t the right genre for me. As for comedy crime, I realised after
some time of trying that only Janet Evanovitch ever made a living out of
that. However, I did send one of my comedy crime attempts out to another
London agent, and he saw enough talent in that to get in touch and say why
not try straight crime. That set me thinking and started me out on the
road to writing DIRTY GAME. The instant I started writing it, I knew I’d
found my writer’s ‘voice’ and that crime was the right genre for me.
Suddenly, writing became fun again.
BM: Are there any
plans to turn DIRTY GAME into a film or a TV series? Who would you want to
see playing the main roles of Annie, Max and
Ruthie?
JK: I would love DIRTY GAME to become
a made-for-TV series, or a film. I think it’s very ‘filmic’ in its feel, I
just seem to write that way. Annie Bailey would have to be Alison King,
who plays sexy and intense factory boss Carla in Coronation Street. Max
Carter could be played beautifully by Matt Healy, who brings arrogant
brooding bad boy Matthew King to life in Emmerdale (think he’s free later
this year). And Redmond Delaney just has to be gorgeous red haired Damian
Lewis. Ruthie? Someone soft and gentle and blonde. Any
suggestions?
BM: How did you
research DIRTY GAME to get such a degree of accuracy and such a great feel
for the period?
JK: I ploughed through a lot of books
on the sixties, and researched extensively on the net. The ‘feel’ of the
period just comes from a love of it, I think. Put in the details, add a
great big dollop of fascination, and the rest just
happens.
BM: What was it that
inspired you to become a writer in the first place? Were you good at
creative writing at school? What authors were your main
inspiration?
JK: I always wrote, even when I could
barely crawl! I won my first writing award when I was 8 years old, and I
was writing full-length novels by the time I hit fifteen (mostly to escape
the pretty grim reality of my life, and I don’t think they were very
good!) I was abused as a child, and spent my teenage years on a very tough
estate, so writing was a way to escape from all that. Oddly enough, one of
my main inspirations was Alistair MacLean who wrote Ice Station Zebra and
Where Eagles Dare among many others– my Dad loved his books, passed them
to me, I read them and loved them too.
BM: do you have a
favourite crime/thriller author whose books you can't do without? Do you
read other genres as well or do you find you have less time to keep up
with reading now you’re committed to a three-book contract and have
deadlines to meet?
JK:I think Tess Gerritsen is
brilliant, I admire her work. I do dip into other genres, mainly for
relaxation and beach reads, but my own writing takes up too much of my
time for me to read many other people’s work.
BM: Can you name five
favourite books, titles you couldn't be without? Series count as one
title, for example, Stephen King's seven-volume THE DARK TOWER, which is
one series I couldn't be without!
JK:Five favourite books? I’m a huge
fan of Stephen King, I love both Salem’s Lot and The Shining, very spooky!
Anything by Marian Keyes is good, particularly The other Side of the
Story. Wilbur Smith’s Egyptian trilogy is simply great. Frank Herbert’s
Dune trilogy is so awesome I am constantly amazed by
it. Dick Francis’s Whip
Hand is a book I always return to, I love his stoic, quiet hero Sid
Halley. Having read all these I’ve come to one very simple conclusion:
these best sellers are best sellers for a reason – they’re easy to read,
compelling, the reader has to keep turning the page. I’ve had great feedback on DIRTY GAME
and I only hope that DIRTY GAME will grow into a best seller
too.
BM: Jessie, many,
many thanks for finding the time to talk to me – I hope DIRTY GAME turns
out to be the spectacular success it deserves to be and that it won't be
too long before BLACK WIDOW turns up on my doorstep! Very best wishes and
thanks for such an entertaining read!
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