Sorry I've not posted for quite some time. I've been up to my neck in the blood and guts of Tell Tale. For some reason finishing this book has been the hardest so far. I have all the words, the problem is they are in the wrong order! I have a deadline at the beginning of July and if the book is not finished it will be my blood and guts spilling everywhere. Yes, editors are dangerous people. I might have to move abroad and take up a new identity.
The only piece of news to report is that Touch is getting a new cover (ebook) so it matches the other books. Shame it can't be on the paperback, but there you go. The new cover is a wet and miserable scene which does nothing for Devon's tourist board... but that's the way I like 'em!
Wednesday, 18 June 2014
Wednesday, 16 April 2014
On the Moor
One piece of writing advice I sometimes give is to forget about research until after you've finished the first draft of your book. I certainly try to obey this rule, believing that it is otherwise easy to get bogged down and distracted by all sorts of interesting things which in the end might have very little to do with the story.
I don't believe I broke my rule on Sunday by visiting Fernworthy Forest to investigate the reservoir and surrounding woodland. The trip was more about getting some inspiration from the area for a certain part of book four - Tell-Tale. The day turned out to be a fine one with blue skies and sun. This was good for the accompanying family, not so good for recreating the kind of atmosphere I was looking for. At least that's what I thought at first. Turned out that once we were deep in the forest there was atmosphere aplenty. I could almost hear the banjo plinking away as we pushed our bikes through the low hanging branches of an overgrown track. In four hours meandering around and picnicking we only encountered a single set of people, a couple, 'London types', strolling hand in hand wearing spotless new Berghaus waterproofs. They were unaware of the danger, unaware of the demented mind passing feet from them. I don't know if they made it back to Chagford for dinner. Maybe they did, maybe they didn't. I guess it depends which turning they took after they left us. I should have warned them I suppose. It's something I'll have on my conscience when their car is found by the police. If,I mean.
He's clever, you see. He's got an old tractor and he pulls the cars deep into the wood, pushing them into an old mineshaft. His victims he takes back to his shack where he wiles away many a pleasant hour tormenting them. The couple should have stayed up in London. Waitrose. Lattes. A night at the theatre. Down here locals prefer their own sort of fun.
When we got back to the car the shadows were long and the chill reminded us it was still only mid April. We loaded the bikes and drove off. Was it my imagination or did something move in amongst the trees as we left? A lumbering figure with a crooked smile wearing a brand new Berghaus.
Fernworthy
Sunday, 2 March 2014
Audio Books
What with all the excitement with the publication of Cut Dead I've completely forgotten about the fact that the 27th February also marked the publication of audio versions of Touch, Bad Blood and Cut Dead (in the UK, Europe and Commonwealth countries). I was really nervous before hearing these as I wondered whether the narrator would fit. I needn't have worried because the books are read brilliantly by Stevie Lacey. I actually found myself getting emotional in a way I didn't expect. So weird to hear somebody else articulating my characters!
You can listen to samples (up to twenty minutes long) on Soundcloud or below:
The books are available from Audible and others in the UK, Angus and Robertson in Australia and other retailers in other locations (!).
You can listen to samples (up to twenty minutes long) on Soundcloud or below:
The books are available from Audible and others in the UK, Angus and Robertson in Australia and other retailers in other locations (!).
Thursday, 27 February 2014
The Big Day
Publication day for Cut Dead finds me with an internet connection something akin to a yoghurt pot attached to a piece of string (I know, I should have written this piece in advance and scheduled it). Here's hoping that when I press the "publish" button my words manage to ooze along the phone line to you.
A big 'thank you' to everybody who has given a shoutout this morning - if I haven't replied it's because of the above issues!
A special thanks to those who have hosted articles on this week's blog tour:
Wandering Angie:
http://wanderingangie.com/2014/02/25/adventures-in-books-blog-tour-cut-dead-and-author-interview-with-mark-sennen/
Killing Crime Time:
http://www.killingtimecrime.com/2014/02/the-hero-as-villain-by-mark-sennen.html and a long extract: http://www.killingtimecrime.com/2014/02/extract-from-cut-dead-by-mark-sennen.html
The Friendly Shelf:
http://thefriendlyshelf.wordpress.com/2014/02/26/blog-tour-cut-dead-a-di-charlotte-savage-novel-by-mark-sennen/
Writing.ie:
http://www.writing.ie/guest-blogs/permission-not-to-plan/
Crime Book Club:
https://crimebookclub.wordpress.com/tag/mark-sennen/
A big 'thank you' to everybody who has given a shoutout this morning - if I haven't replied it's because of the above issues!
A special thanks to those who have hosted articles on this week's blog tour:
Wandering Angie:
http://wanderingangie.com/2014/02/25/adventures-in-books-blog-tour-cut-dead-and-author-interview-with-mark-sennen/
Killing Crime Time:
http://www.killingtimecrime.com/2014/02/the-hero-as-villain-by-mark-sennen.html and a long extract: http://www.killingtimecrime.com/2014/02/extract-from-cut-dead-by-mark-sennen.html
The Friendly Shelf:
http://thefriendlyshelf.wordpress.com/2014/02/26/blog-tour-cut-dead-a-di-charlotte-savage-novel-by-mark-sennen/
Writing.ie:
http://www.writing.ie/guest-blogs/permission-not-to-plan/
Crime Book Club:
https://crimebookclub.wordpress.com/tag/mark-sennen/
Monday, 10 February 2014
Not Long Now...
Just a quick reminder that there's only a couple of weeks until the publication of Cut Dead. The big day is 27 February 2014. For all those of you who are not ebook fans, the good news is that this time the paperback is being published on the same day. In Cut Dead DI Savage is on the trail of a particularly nasty killer (are there ever nice killers?) with a very personal agenda and a preference for carrying out his crime on the longest day of the year. The team must reopen a cold case and try to catch the murderer before he strikes again. The problem is they have just days until Midsummer. The clock is ticking...
Available at your local bookshop, Amazon and other retailers.
Thursday, 9 January 2014
Exciting News!
Well, it's exciting for me anyway. I'm pleased to announce that the future of the next three Charlotte Savage novels is assured. HarperCollins have agreed a new three book deal which will see my favourite female DI having books out in 2015, 2016 and 2017. Book four, provisionally titled Tell-Tale, is well under way and will be published in early 2015.
A big thanks to my agent, Claire Roberts, and to my editor, Lydia Vassar-Smith at HC, for sorting all the messy stuff out. I hope Charlotte can repay everyone's faith in her. If not then she's going to be slapping parking tickets on car windows or be forced to take a job as a dog warden (she hates dogs).
Meantime, you can look forward to book three. It's out in ebook and paperback in just over a month.
http://www.tridentmediagroup.com/news/new-tmg-deals-from-publishers-marketplace-117
A big thanks to my agent, Claire Roberts, and to my editor, Lydia Vassar-Smith at HC, for sorting all the messy stuff out. I hope Charlotte can repay everyone's faith in her. If not then she's going to be slapping parking tickets on car windows or be forced to take a job as a dog warden (she hates dogs).
Meantime, you can look forward to book three. It's out in ebook and paperback in just over a month.
http://www.tridentmediagroup.com/news/new-tmg-deals-from-publishers-marketplace-117
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