Anna Sayburn Lane's Blog, page 4

February 3, 2024

February newsletter: a successful launch, a return trip to Nice and progress on book 3

Thank you to everyone who bought The Soho Jazz Murders and Blackmail In Bloomsbury last month. January was my best-ever sales month in five years of publishing. I managed 700 sales (not including all the Kindle Unlimited borrows) and The Soho Jazz Murders made the top 20 ‘hot new releases’ in historical mystery on Amazon. I was particularly thrilled that this put me in rather good company next to fellow newcomer Agatha Christie!

Read on for news of travels, book and movie recommendations, and a free book promotion.

Reviews of The Soho Jazz Murders

One reviewer kindly headlined their review of The Soho Jazz Murders: “The new Agatha Christie!” Here are a few other reviews that made my day:

‘An entertaining and atmospheric read. I like the developing relationship between Marjorie and her employer, Mrs Jameson.’

‘This was an engaging read that took you through night life in London in the 1920’s… The detective duo are great, one sophisticated, one spirited and game to try anything. All in all an enjoyable novel.’

‘A relatively new series in which you should definitely invest your time!’

Please do take time to leave a review if you’ve read any of my books. For independent authors without a bit marketing budget, reviews make a huge difference in helping us find new readers.

Back on the Blue Train

The next-but-one Marjorie Swallow novel will be set on the glorious Cote d’Azur in the south of France. I hopped back on the train from London to the Riviera at the start of January for two weeks staying in a very glamorous art deco apartment overlooking Nice harbour. Even Mrs Jameson would have to approve of the accommodation.

Turquoise sea, acid-yellow mimosa in the Cours Saleya flower market and ice-cream hues of the painted houses in the old town – strawberry, lemon and pistachio – meant grey old England felt a very long way away. This was the place the British upper classes used to flock to in winter, before hot summer beach holidays became the fashion. Artists and writers loved it too, from Picasso to Matisse, Monet to Renoir, Chekov to F Scott Fitzgerald, Hemingway to HG Wells.

It wasn’t too hard to imagine a few murders among the mimosa for Marjorie and Mrs Jameson to investigate. But if I need to jog my memory about the locations, perhaps I can squeeze in another trip south on the Train Bleu before I write it!

 

 

Work In Progress

It wasn’t all play and research, however – I knuckled down to some serious writing in Nice, meaning that I’m on track to finish writing the next Marjorie Swallow mystery, Death At Chelsea, in a couple of weeks. Then it goes off to my lovely editor and beta readers for their thoughts, before I work on the revisions. It’s on track for release in May – thank you to everyone who has pre-ordered. If you want to be sure of getting it, you can do so here.

Recommendations

I have a hot new release to recommend this month. I’m devouring Lynn Morrison’s 1920s ‘Dora and Rex’ series, featuring sleuth Theodora Laurent, a femme fatale with a mysterious past. The latest in the series, The Roman Riddle, was published on Tuesday. It sees Theodora and sidekick Lord Reginald “Rex” Bankes-Fernsby decamp to the Eternal City, where the British ambassador, no less, is accused of murder. I can’t wait to read more.

The next recommendation isn’t new at all (it came out in 2001), but if you love Downton Abbey and murder mysteries, then you should definitely check out Gosford Park, a 1930s-set murder mystery starring Dame Maggie Smith and written by Downton author Julian Fellowes. I re-watched it this week on Netflix and thought it was funny, sharp-edged and gloriously entertaining.

Cozy mystery promo

February is definitely the season to snuggle up with a good mystery – so if you’re running short of reading material, try the February Cozy Mystery Freebies promotion, running all this month. It has more than 30 free cozy mystery e-books to fill up your e-reader.

Competition winners!

Congratulations to Bryony Taha, Karen O’Conner and Holly Bradford who won signed copies of The Soho Jazz Murders for correctly identifying the murder victim in Blackmail In Bloomsbury.

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Published on February 03, 2024 01:00

January 5, 2024

January news: January sale, signed book giveaway and new book news

I hope you had a restful break over the holidays. I certainly needed some quiet, after a busy, exciting and challenging year. Between Christmas and New Year, I took a little time to think through some of my highlights from 2023.

I wrote the first two novels in the Marjorie Swallow 1920s murder mystery series (plus the free prequel, Murder At The Ritz).I was lucky enough to travel more than I had done for years – in the UK to Wales, Brighton, and Oxford, and further afield to Rome, Nice in France and Izmir in Turkey.I sold more than 2,500 books, my best year as a self-published author so far.

Thank you so much to everyone for helping me meet that milestone, whether you’ve read or bought a book, posted a review or just generally been encouraging! May your 2024 be everything you wish it to be.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

January sale and book giveaway
To celebrate the launch of my second Marjorie Swallow book, I’m reducing the price of the Blackmail In Bloomsbury e-book to 99p/99c in the UK and the US for the whole of January. If you’ve been meaning to get a copy, now’s the time! And then you’ll be ready to dive into the new book, The Soho Jazz Murders, in a couple of weeks.

I also have three signed copies of The Soho Jazz Murders to give away, to the first three people who reply to this email with the answer to the question at the bottom of this letter! So keep reading for your chance to win.

All That Jazz!

I loved writing The Soho Jazz Murders. Jazz music in the 1920s was the equivalent of punk in the 1970s or rock ‘n’ roll in the 1950s – rebellious, youthful and disapproved of by mainstream society.

So I enjoyed thrusting Marjorie into a night club full of jazz musicians, dance hostesses of dubious morality, aristocrats and gangsters. She visits the Harlequin with Daisy Caldwell, the jazz-loving flapper niece of the American ambassador to London. And when disaster ensues, Marjorie is drawn deeper into peril as she investigates the illegal drugs trade.

The Soho Jazz Murders is Marjorie’s biggest challenge yet. It’s coming out on January 18 and I can’t wait for you to read it!

Book news
If you follow me on Amazon (which you can do here) you may have spotted that I have a third book in the Marjorie Swallow series in the works, Death At Chelsea.

Marjorie thinks that an assignment to investigate the sabotage of plants destined for the famous Chelsea Flower Show will make a restful change from murder… but soon it’s not just the flowers that are dying. Even the prettiest bouquet can be poisonous!

It’s due to publish in May. If you want to pre-order, you can do so here.

Recommendations
Before Christmas I had the great fortune to go to the stage production of Cabaret in London’s West End. I’ve always loved the musical and this production was stunning – raw, thrilling and decadent. Expensive, but highly recommended.

I love a wander around an art gallery or museum in the run-up to Christmas. I visited the National Portrait Gallery in London for the first time since it’s big rebuild and I loved it. I always enjoyed visiting as a child, seeing all the Holbein portraits of Henry VIII and his wives, which really brought history to life. This time I focused on the early 20th century, finding out about the women artists, policewomen and photographers active during the 1920s.

The Christmas break is always a good time to catch up on reading. I love a historical thriller, and I’m devouring Robert Harris’s gripping novel set in the aftermath of the English civil war, Act of Oblivion. It’s not so far from a detective novel, with a man hunting down the men who signed Charles I’s death warrant, from an uneasy England to the New World.

Cozy mystery promos
Just one e-book promotion to tell you about this month – the January Cozy Mysteries Wonderland Sales Event. I’m taking part with Blackmail In Bloomsbury and there are loads of other cozy mysteries to browse, too.

The big question!
To win a signed copy of The Soho Jazz Murders, tell me: Who was the murder victim in Blackmail In Bloomsbury? First three out of the bag are winners.

Would you like to join the Readers Club? Sign up below.

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Published on January 05, 2024 09:29

December 4, 2023

December news: exclusive Christmas short story, festive promotions and book news

Whatever your faith or beliefs, midwinter is an excellent time to put on fairy-lights, plan a feast and gather friends for mulled wine and conversation. This is a tinsel-trimmed, festive edition of the Readers Club newsletter.

I’ve written a special Christmas story, exclusively for Readers Club members, which you can download below.

The Soho Jazz Murders is on track for publication in January, and I’m getting cracking on the third book in the series. In the meantime, I have some recommendations of Christmassy releases from writer friends, as well as promotions to keep you jingling all the way.

Diamonds Are For Christmas

This festive short story features a sparkling Christmas from Mrs Jameson’s younger days–with a touch of mystery, of course. It’s December 24, 1892 and Iris is nineteen years old. She’s visiting Rome for the first time with her dauntless Aunt Isabel, and the Christmas Eve Ball at the Palazzo del Fiori is about to go very wrong…

The story is dedicated to my friends George and Christina, who took me to the Venerable English College in Rome this Spring and sparked the idea for the story.

Download link here: https://dl.bookfunnel.com/j6jgvcwnh7

 

 

 

Recommendations: A Christmas mystery special

I’m long been a fan of Benedict Brown, whose 1920s-set Lord Edgington mysteries are a delight. He has a new Christmas book out, The Christmas Bell Mystery, featuring the revered detective and his less-revered grandson Chrissie as they investigate a classic whodunnit in a snowbound manor house.

Link: https://mybook.to/Christmasbell

Verity Bright has a new Christmas book too – Lady Eleanor Swift is hoping for snowy walks on the Cornish cliffs after an invitation from a friend of her uncle. Godfrey Cunliffe has asked her to stay in Cornwall for the holidays – but only because he believes his gardener is trying to poison him! Eleanor hurries down to his picturesque manor house with her butler Clifford. But they arrive too late to stop the crime…

 

Lying dead at the bottom of the steep cliffs, however, is not Mr Cunliffe, but the gardener himself. And his plans for restoring the gardens to their former glory are missing. Jerome St Clair has gone from suspect to victim. This certainly puts a twist in the tinsel!

Link: https://mybook.to/MurderCornishCliffs

 

I’ll be tuning into BBC One at Christmas for the glitzy new two-part adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Murder Is Easy, starring Penelope Wilton (from Downton Abbey) as the inquisitive Miss Pinkerton. I’m also looking forward to Dope Girls, a drama set in the same 1920s Soho night club world as my next Marjorie Swallow mystery, The Soho Jazz Murders.

Book news

Talking of which, The Soho Jazz Murders has been checked over by my advance reader team, who have given it the thumbs up. I’m hoping to publish it a little earlier than planned, so if you’ve pre-ordered, it should be with you around January 18. If you haven’t ordered it yet, why not do so now? Think how pleased you’ll be to have something fun to read in January!

And I’m already researching and planning the next in the series. I’ve visited the Chelsea Physic Garden, read a fascinating account of the plant hunting adventures of Frank Kingdon Ward and looked up the Chelsea Flower Show of 1923 in the British Newspaper Archive. All I need to do now is write it.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

More cosy crime and historical mysteries

I’m taking part in two e-book promotions this month.

December to Remember Cozy Mystery Sales event

https://books.bookfunnel.com/decembertoremembercozymysterysalesevent/i5pacdjaq5

December Free Cozy Mysteries

https://books.bookfunnel.com/cozymysterydecember/6sjefpc0nr

The Big Give!

Christmas is about giving, and there’s one charity I always support this time of year. When I was a child, the best thing about Christmas was getting book tokens, or a longed-for new book in my stocking. But for some children living in poverty, there will be no book to treasure this Christmas.

The charity Book Trust gives books to children in need in the UK. It works with families and schools to support children with their reading. And at Christmas, it sends book parcels to children who might otherwise have no gifts. This may be the only book they own.

Books have been my comfort, refuge and escape since I was old enough to read. That’s why I donate to Book Trust, so that other children can grow up with their own treasured books.

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Published on December 04, 2023 07:04

November 3, 2023

November news: Turkish travels, Agatha Christie and book news

What an exciting month! I’ve been travelling again, this time a fascinating trip to Turkey. I published Blackmail In Bloomsbury, bringing me the best month’s book sales ever. I met one of my heroes. And I sent my next book, The Soho Jazz Murders, to my editor.

Read on for all this, plus recommendations and promotions.

Adventures in Turkey
I’ve long wanted to visit Turkey and I finally got the chance to tag along when my husband was asked to speak at a conference in Izmir, a big port city in the south of the country. While he worked, I had plenty of time to explore!

As one of the ‘WAGs’, I was invited on a tour of nearby Ephesus, an astonishing city from the days of the Roman Empire. We saw the remains of temples, amphitheatres, the forum, shops and houses – even a 20-seat lavatory! Most impressive of all was the rebuilt façade of the city library, pictured below right.

Izmir too has Roman-era remains, but I was most intrigued by the bazaar. I spent hours exploring the maze of streets, coming across shops selling everything from Barbie t-shirts to heaps of spices, kitchen utensils to antiques, soap to budgerigars. I met a friend of a friend who lives in the city and she guided me around, helping me purchase fragrant freshly-ground Turkish coffee to bring home. We then stopped at one of the many shops selling Cay (pronounced chai), Turkish black tea served in small glasses, cheap, delicious and refreshing. It certainly beat a trip to the supermarket.

Less cheap but equally delicious was the peach Bellini that I sipped on the rooftop of our hotel after a refreshing swim! My fellow WAGs had heard about my book launch, so they made sure that I had a suitable celebration.

Meeting a hero!

Agatha Christie loved travel. She wrote to a friend that ‘your travel life has the essence of a dream… you are yourself, but a different self.’ That ability to imagine different lives is, I think, one of the reasons that so many writers love to travel.
The quote above comes from historian Lucy Worsley’s biography of Agatha Christie. It’s extremely readable and tells a fascinating story of a life from Victorian girlhood into the 1970s. I’m a big fan of Miss Worsley’s history programmes and podcasts, so when she visited Canterbury’s Marlowe Theatre to talk about Agatha Christie, I grabbed a ticket. She’s a brilliant presenter and it was a very entertaining evening. Not only is she formidably knowledgeable, she’s very funny and glamorous. She also remained kind and patient with all of us who’d queued to have her sign our books.

 

Recommendations: A Christie special

After all that gushing, it won’t surprise you to hear that my first recommendation is indeed for Lucy Worsley’s Agatha Christie. Her life involved two world wars, two marriages, a mysterious ‘disappearance’, intrepid journeys to Iraq and Egypt – not to mention writing an astonishing 80 books.

The second recommendation also comes via Lucy Worsley. Asked which her favourite Christie novel was, she nominated Murder At The Vicarage, in which the wily Miss Marple makes her first appearance. I’ve just re-read it and it is terrific. I liked the acidic way in which Miss Marple is described – the vicar’s wife say she’s ‘the worst cat in the village’ – and the humour of the vicar’s tribulations with his avidly curious parishioners, his ‘distractingly pretty’ wife and his appallingly bad cook. The mystery itself is satisfyingly twisty, with hidden couples, false identities and double bluffs. I was nowhere near guessing the true murderer when Miss Marple revealed it.

Book news
Blackmail In Bloomsbury looks like being my most successful book yet, which makes me very happy! Congratulations to Megwen Woodham, who won a signed copy of Blackmail In Bloomsbury for her correct response to my question last month.

One of my readers suggested Blackmail In Bloomsbury would make “the perfect Christmas present” for any lovers of classic crime… and far be it from me to disagree! If you think your mum, dad, aunt Maisie or friend at the book club would like it, why not grab a paperback? You can order from your local bookshop, or via the button below.

If you’ve already finished it and are anxiously awaiting the next in the series, good news! I’ve sent the first draft of The Soho Jazz Murders to my editor and all is going well for publication in January.

Here’s the cover – as you can see my designer Donna has come up trumps again with a lovely design.

You can pre-order your e-book copy now.

 

New to my Readers Club newsletter? Sign up below.

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Published on November 03, 2023 08:19

October 9, 2023

October newsletter: book launch, reviews and a Riviera adventure

It’s been a busy month with travel, writing and final preparations for the launch of my new murder mystery series. Blackmail In Bloomsbury was published this week and I’m excited to see it climbing the charts. Read on for news about my attempts to travel like the 1920s beau monde, reviews of my new book and recommendations for lovers of cosy crime and gritty thrillers alike.

A Riviera adventure
Like all true Agatha Christie fans, I have a romantic view of train travel. So when I had the opportunity of a few September days in Nice on the French Riviera, there was only one way to go.

In Christie’s day, the beautiful people left London on the famed ‘Train Bleu’ via Paris. In her Mystery of the Blue Train, there are first class sleeping compartments, porters to turn down the beds and a restaurant car (where one M. Hercule Poirot enjoys his dinner).

Nowadays you take the Eurostar from St Pancras to Paris Gare du Nord then the Metro across Paris to Gare d’Austerlitz. That was where the fantasy collided with reality! The station is under reconstruction and my cramped couchette was shared with five strangers. Sadly no dining car and no helpful porters! It wasn’t the most restful night, but it was thrilling listening to the French countryside rushing by past the window, and the views the next morning of the Côte d’Azur were stunning. Happily no-one in my carriage was murdered for their priceless rubies (or their snores, although I was tempted).

Nice itself is a delight and I had a wonderful few days exploring the coast, as well as a cocktail in the iconic (and expensive) Negresco Hotel on the Promenade des Anglais. Will there be a Marjorie Swallow book set on the Riviera? I wouldn’t bet against it!

Reviews: Book bloggers on Blackmail In Bloomsbury


Blackmail In Bloomsbury has been out for review among the book bloggers, and I’m glad to say they thought it was “a solid start to a promising new series.” Here are some of their comments:

“Anna Sayburn Lane has done a fantastic job of bringing 1920s London to life. From the drawing rooms of bohemian Bloomsbury to the elegance of the Italian Rooftop Gardens, the sights and sounds of post-war London leapt off the page.”

Amy Louise Shelf of Unread Books

“Blackmail in Bloomsbury left me deliciously guessing ‘whodunnit’ until the very end (with quite a few wrong guesses as the story progressed!). The characters are delightful… The thing that makes this cosy is down to the setting, the characters and the dialogue. There’s a beautiful balance between the lightness of the tone amidst some thrilling scenes.”

Mrs Bennett’s Bookshelf

I found this joyful Christie-esque murder mystery the perfect pick-me-up… Perfect plotting, gentle humour and two fabulously strong female leads: the pages just flew by. Highly recommended for all fans of cosy crime, or anyone just wanting to escape for a while.

Bookographia

Recommendations: cosy countryside and gritty city

I recently asked on Facebook whether my readers preferred gritty contemporary crime (think Ian Rankin’s Rebus) or cosy classic crime (think Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple). Personally I enjoy reading (and writing) both genres, but some people have strong preferences. With that in mind, here are two recommendations for each side of the debate.

Rosie Hunt writes 1920s cosy crime. Her heroine Lady Felicity Quick is a society journalist living in England’s green and pleasant countryside, with a side-line in investigating murders. She’s intrepid, good-natured and inquisitive – I think she and Marjorie Swallow would have a lot in common! You can discover Lady Felicity for free in Murder At Afternoon Tea, the first in her series.

Trevor Wood’s Jimmy Mullen trilogy could hardly be more different, but is equally enjoyable. The hero Jimmy is a rough sleeper fighting PTSD demons as well as crime on the mean streets of contemporary Newcastle. It’s full of dark humour and will make you wonder about the stories behind the people on the streets.

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Published on October 09, 2023 09:21

September 7, 2023

September Newsletter: one month to go!

It’s all systems go at the seaside as I put the final touches to Blackmail In Bloomsbury, ready for launch next month. The book is back from the proof-reader; I’ve sent copies to the book bloggers for review and – most exciting of all – I’ve finally held a copy in my hands. No matter how many books I publish (and this is number five) nothing beats seeing your words down on paper in a ‘proper’ book for the first time!

You can pre-order Blackmail In Bloomsbury today!

And onto the next…

In August I dived into writing the first draft of the next Marjorie Swallow murder mystery, The Soho Jazz Murders. I absolutely love this part of writing; when the story is fresh in your mind and you have the fun of introducing the characters that have popped into your head, creating the settings and making sure all the elements needed are in place. I’m more than halfway through the first draft now.

Research for this book has been exciting. I’ve read about 1920s nightclubs, flappers, early jazz musicians and organised crime. I’ve enjoyed learning some of the slang of the era – my favourite is the phrase ‘giggle juice’ for booze! I can certainly relate to that after a glass or two of my sleuth Mrs Jameson’s favourite cocktail, the French 75 (recipe below).

So what is the story about? Well, I don’t want to give away spoilers but it involves Freddie the pianist, the American ambassador’s wayward niece, and Marjorie going ‘undercover’ as a dance hostess in a Soho nightclub on the trail of a drugs gang. I think it’s going to be a lot of fun.

Recommendations: books, blogs and booze

Did you know that Dorothy L Sayers, one of the greats of ‘Golden Age’ crime fiction, worked in advertising? The wit and wordplay of copywriting obviously stood her in good stead. It also provided the setting for one of her most enjoyable novels, Murder Must Advertise. I read it for the first time recently and was blown away by its contrasting witty tone and dark subject matter. I found it completely gripping and loved the pin-sharp dissection of the work of an advertising agency.

I read it on the recommendation of Kate Jackson, a prolific blogger about classic crime and author of the entertaining-sounding British Library book How To Survive A Classic Crime Novel. I’m a big fan of the British Library’s crime books, so I’ll be picking up a copy next time I’m there for research. Kate also wrote a very funny blog post, Dorothy L Sayers Guide to Amateur Sleuthing, which you might enjoy.

My version of the French 75 comes from Cecil Beaton’s Cocktail Book, a splendid publication which kept me amused during those long evenings of lockdown. As well as delightful recipes to try, it includes lots of inspiring photographs of the Bright Young Things photographed by Beaton in his studio. As the book says, the French 75 is ‘a beautifully straightforward sweet and sour combination, with a charge of gin and a bubbling fuse of champagne leading to a kick likened to the French 75 field gun.’

Here’s how: Shake 25ml gin, 20ml lemon juice, 10ml sugar syrup together and fine strain into a champagne flute, then top up with champagne and garnish with a lemon twist. Cheers!

 

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Published on September 07, 2023 03:13

August 4, 2023

August newsletter: Rome, jazz and Blackmail In Bloomsbury

The advance reader team have been sending me their feedback on Blackmail In Bloomsbury and I’m delighted to say they think (to use the slang of the time) it’s the bee’s knees! Here’s what they had to say:

“Thank you for a perfect summer read! Enjoyed it immensely!”

“Thoroughly enjoyed it. Loved Mrs Jameson, & the story was excellent.”

“I very much like the way Marjorie is shaping up to be tougher and less naïve than one might initially assume.”

Keep an eye on your emails – it will be ready to pre-order this month.

When in Rome…

It’s a running joke in my family that you can’t take me anywhere without me writing a story about it. Well, it’s happened again. I had the great fortune to visit Rome earlier this month with friends who know it well. We had a fantastic time visiting gorgeous palazzos, fascinating old churches and (of course) hanging out in cafés and bars over the occasional aperitivo.

As readers may remember from Murder At The Ritz, Mrs Jameson is a well-travelled woman who spent a lot of her life in Italy. I wondered what Rome had been like when she was a young girl, fresh from Boston, perhaps attending her first ball in a palazzo like the ones we visited… The resulting short story, Diamonds Are For Christmas, will be with you as a little Christmas present later this year!

All That Jazz

My next 1920s murder mystery is going to involve a lot more jazz! I’ve put together a playlist of some ragtime favourites, including classics like the Tiger Rag by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band and the wonderfully-titled I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate. Well, don’t we all! You can listen to it here: https://buff.ly/44pGrGm

What I’ve enjoyed this month

The novel is now underway and features the archetypal Jazz Age character, the flapper. I went to the British Library last week to read up on some 1920s history, but on the way out got snared by this appealing little book from Pushkin Press in the bookshop.

Where All Good Flappers Go is a compendium of stories by some of America’s greatest writers, including F Scott Fitzgerald, Dorothy Parker and Zora Neale Hurston. The stories celebrate the flapper as “An artist in her particular field, the art of being – being young, being lovely,” as Zelda Fitzgerald put it. But the flapper was more than that – she was courageous, charming, irreverent and out for a roaring good time. I was jolly pleased to be taken along for the ride.

The big question!
I often get inspired to set murder mysteries in places I visit. What do you think is a great location for a murder mystery? Hit reply and let me know. The first answer that makes me laugh gets a free e-book copy of Blackmail In Bloomsbury.

Want to receive my newsletter and get your free copy of Murder At The Ritz? Sign up here.

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Published on August 04, 2023 08:08

July 16, 2023

Deal Music & Arts Festival

William Shaw, Amanda Holloway and Anna Sayburn Lane sign books after the event.
I had a great time taking part in a panel on crime fiction at my local arts festival alongside author William Shaw. I’m a big fan of his books so it was thrilling to share a stage with him and journalist Amanda Holloway. We talked about devious crimes, how to create a scary villain, and why seaside locations in Kent make for particularly good settings for crime novels! There were some excellent questions and I had a lot of fun. This was the first year Deal has had a literary strand to its arts festival, so I hope we can all do it again next year!
Anna Sayburn Lane, William Shaw and Amanda Holloway on stage at the Astor Theatre

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Published on July 16, 2023 02:56

July 6, 2023

July newsletter: Blackmail In Bloomsbury cover design

I hope you enjoyed Murder At The Ritz, the first Marjorie Swallow adventure. Blackmail In Bloomsbury, the first full-length novel in the series, is on track to publish in October. Here’s the cover! Thanks to Donna Rogers, my amazing cover designer, for another beautiful design.

A bohemian party, a handsome artist – and murder
At her first Bloomsbury party, Marjorie Swallow enjoys dancing, conversation, and the attentions of a handsome artist.
But for one guest, the night ends in murder – and Marjorie’s artist friend is a prime suspect. From the garden squares of Bloomsbury to the seedy backstreets of Soho, trainee detective Marjorie and her employer Mrs Jameson undertake a perilous hunt for the killer.
Can they save an innocent man from the gallows? Is it ever a good idea to blackmail a murderer? And will Marjorie’s new satin T-strap shoes be ruined forever?
If you enjoyed Murder At The Ritz, I think you’re going to love Blackmail In Bloomsbury.

Join my advance readers club!
I’m looking for more readers to join my advance readers club. How does it work? You get a free advance e-book copy of Blackmail In Bloomsbury, in return for letting me have your feedback within two weeks. That helps me to spot any clangers that have got past me and my editors. Then, when the book is published, I’d be most grateful if you could post an honest review on websites like Amazon and Goodreads. Fancy getting involved? Hit ‘return’ and let me know.

More about Marjorie

So who is Marjorie Swallow, my new sleuth? Marjorie seemed to spring to life almost fully-formed, perhaps because I drew on my own family for inspiration. For a start, Marjorie is my middle name. I hated it at school, I love it now!

My grandmother Marjorie Swaddling (born Marjorie Ball) grew up in South London, one of 10 children. She’s bottom right in the photo. She grew up in the 1920s and 1930s, living above the builder’s yard in Lee High Road. After working as a hairdresser she met and married my grandfather Dave Swaddling, who had a bicycle and toy shop in Catford. So my mother – like Marjorie Swallow – was the daughter of a Catford shop-keeper and also won a scholarship to Sydenham High School for Girls.

My grandmother and mother grew up in the aftermath of the two world wars that shaped the 20th century. As a child, I learned about Auntie Vi (the child on her mother’s knee), whose fiancé died in the second world war, and Auntie Dulcie (bottom left), whose husband was also killed. My grandfather was away fighting in France when my mother was a small child. It’s this aftermath of war, and the changes it brought, that first sparked my interest in writing about the 1920s.

What I love most about Marjorie Swallow is her mixture of innocence and quick-wittedness. She enjoys life, she’s kind and courageous – and she has a great sense of humour. Perhaps the many excellent women in my family history were peering over my shoulder while I wrote?

What I’ve enjoyed this month
The book I’ve enjoyed most this month is Stephen Bates’ fascinating The Poisonous Solicitor, a true-life 1920s murder mystery investigation. Did the mild-mannered small-town solicitor poison his wife with arsenic? Or was he really intending to use it to eradicate the dandelions in the lawn?

I’m also getting into the Shedunnit podcast by Caroline Crampton, which unravels the mysteries behind classic detective stories. From the forensics of Agatha Christie to 1920s slang, it’s a treasure trove for aspiring classic crime authors.

Free cozy crime and historical mysteries
There’s a banquet of crime and historical mysteries this month! I’m taking part in three promotions via Bookfunnel. Murder At The Ritz will be featured, along with lots more e-book free novels and novellas. Why not take a look?

Cozy Mystery Freebies

Free Cozy Mysteries

Historical Fiction Freebies

The big question!
What did you think of Murder At The Ritz? I love hearing from readers, so do let me know.

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Published on July 06, 2023 01:43

June 28, 2023

June newsletter: your exclusive free novella

It’s finally here – the first Marjorie Swallow adventure. Murder at the Ritz will be the first in a new series of murder mysteries set in 1920s London. The novella is available free to all newsletter subscribers.

Tea, cucumber sandwiches and a sprinkle of cyanide…
October 1922. Marjorie Swallow isn’t a regular at The Ritz. But she really, really wants this job. She’s been summoned to an interview to become a personal secretary to the mysterious Mrs Jameson, who wants assistance with ‘social engagements and private investigations’.
Over afternoon tea in the Palm Court, Marjorie’s detective skills are put to the test when a fellow guest keels over in suspicious fashion. Who killed the colonel? There are no shortage of people who wanted him dead. But which of them managed to slip a spoonful of poison into his Darjeeling?

Murder At The Ritz is exclusive to newsletter subscribers – if you’re not already on the list, sign up here: https://dl.bookfunnel.com/rqxoko8o77

Deal Festival reminder

Tickets are selling like hot cakes for my panel session at the Deal Music and Arts Festival! If you want to hear me and William Shaw talking about crime writing by the seaside, you’ll need to book soon. Check out the website here: https://dealmusicandarts.com/festival/

Research
While the first full book in the series, Blackmail in Bloomsbury, was with the editor, I took the opportunity to do some in-person research in London. I enjoyed a (rather damp) tour of London’s West End crime hotspots, and a trip to the Bow Street police museum, tucked around the back of what was formerly Bow Street police station and magistrates court.

The eye-opening tour taught me about the close working relationship between police at Bow Street and the various nightclub owners, criminal gangs and pornographers of Soho. Apparently businesses only got raided if they weren’t sufficiently generous in their hospitality to certain policemen. Oddly enough, Bow Street museum didn’t make much of this – but you can see the original cells where the likes of the Pankhursts, Oscar Wilde and the Kray twins were held before their appearance before the magistrates.

Recommendations
Staying with the 1920s crime and nightlife theme, I’m really enjoying Kate Atkinson’s Shrines of Gaiety, a novel set among the women running and working for 1920s nightclubs. It owes a lot to the true history of Kate Meyrick, the Soho ‘Queen of Clubs’ I heard all about on my West End walk.

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Published on June 28, 2023 02:53