Anna Sayburn Lane's Blog, page 5
May 9, 2023
May newsletter: writing news and spring recommendations
Book news
I’ve been busy finishing the first in my new series of 1920s murder mysteries, Blackmail in Bloomsbury. The manuscript is off to my editor next week.
It’s my first historical mystery and I’ve discovered a few challenges along the way. For example, in one scene a man arranges to meet somebody at Piccadilly Circus, by the statue that Londoners call Eros. I wanted to check people used that name in 1922, so I looked it up – only to discover that Eros was removed from his pedestal in 1922 for the building of the new Piccadilly Circus underground station! Cue some hasty re-writing.
Next month you’ll receive Murder at the Ritz, the prequel novella which introduces the series. My beta reader team has been busy checking it through and I’ve been delighted with their responses.
Here’s a taster of comments: “Hugely enjoyed it… I really liked all the characters, especially Marjorie Swallow and Mrs Jamieson, and the story was fantastic… It is a great start to a very promising series… I loved the setting of a luxury London hotel.”
I hope you’ll enjoy it just as much.
Deal Music and Arts Festival
I’m thrilled to be appearing at the Deal Arts Festival in my home town of Deal in Kent in July. I’ll be on a panel with one of my favourite crime writers, William Shaw, to talk about writing crime by the seaside! The box office opens on 9 May if you’re interested in coming along. Link here: https://dealmusicandarts.com/festival/
What I’ve enjoyed this month
On TV, I loved watching The Gold, a dramatization of the aftermath of the massive Brinks Matt gold robbery which took place in London in the early 1980s. I grew up in south London at the time, so a lot of the pleasure was from recognising places, faces and fashions. I didn’t know that development of the area of London now known as Docklands was funded from the heist. I remember going for a ride on the brand-new Docklands Light Railway in the early 80s, across acres of derelict former docks and building sites. It’s now home to half of London’s biggest banks, not to mention very posh flats.
The novel Godmersham Park, by Gill Hornby, was another peek into English history. This was a bit longer ago, and a bit more decorous than the 1980s criminal underworld. It tells the imagined story of the real-life Anne Sharp, a governess to the family of Jane Austen’s brother Edward. The difficult position of an independently-minded (but unfortunately not independently-funded) woman in Georgian England is keenly exposed. It includes tantalising glimpses of Jane Austen herself, who understood only too well the perils of her situation.
The big question!
What have you been reading or watching this month? Hit ‘reply’ and let me know.
Have a wonderful May, and happy reading.
Subscribe to my newsletter here: https://annasayburnlane.com/newsletter/
April 20, 2023
April newsletter: Meet my new sleuth, Marjorie Swallow!
Meet Marjorie Swallow: grammar-school girl, draper’s daughter and apprentice sleuth.
When Marjorie is invited to tea with a mysterious American lady at The Ritz Hotel, she’s hoping for an exciting new career (and maybe one of the chocolate fondant cakes). But she is soon helping her new employer to solve a case of murder among the cucumber sandwiches. Will she get the job? Will she ever taste the chocolate fondant? And who slipped cyanide into the colonel’s tea?
Read on for an exclusive extract of my new novella Murder at the Ritz. This will be the first book in the light-hearted 1920s murder mystery series I plan to launch in the autumn. The novella will be exclusive to my mailing list – you won’t be able to buy it anywhere.
I’ll be sending a free copy to my mailing list as soon as its finished.
Murder at the Ritz (extract)
‘Miss Swallow. I have an appointment with Mrs Jameson, one of your guests,’ I told the uniformed boy. I flourished the card, in case he didn’t believe me.
‘One moment.’ He checked a ledger on the reception desk, running his finger down the thick cream pages.
‘Please follow me to the Palm Lounge, Miss Swallow. Mrs Jameson will join you there for afternoon tea.’
I really, really wanted this job, and not just for the tea.
This was my third interview since signing up with the employment agency on Shaftesbury Avenue. With my newly-acquired Pitman’s shorthand and typing qualifications, I had rather assumed I would walk straight into a secretarial post. But at my first interview, a government department on Whitehall, the Gorgon who interviewed me made me so nervous that I flunked my typing test.
And the second… well. The sales manager at the Daimler showroom had been less interested in my typing speed, and more interested in how fast I could dodge around the motorcars while he tried to explore my coachwork. Fortunately I’m a sporty little model with excellent acceleration. I may have broken the land speed record on my way back to the employment agency.
‘Very well, Miss Swallow. Try this one. Mrs Iris Jameson, an American lady newly arrived in London. Personal secretary, duties include social correspondence and…’ The woman in the agency had frowned at the card. ‘Assistance with discreet private investigations. Whatever that means.’
***
‘Now, I have a few questions, regarding your experience.’
I split open a warm fruit scone and scraped butter across it. Strawberry jam, too, not the endless rhubarb we’d been eating at home. Delicious. I tried to keep my mind on the interview.
‘Of course, madam.’
‘Don’t madam me. My name is Mrs Jameson. You’re not serving me in a shop.’ Goodness, she had a sharp tongue. If she had been in our shop, I’d have enjoyed watching her try to best my father.
‘How are you with blood?’
‘Blood?’ Oh Lord, did she have some gruesome illness that required dressing? I looked in regret at the scarlet strawberry piled onto my scone.
‘I have worked in a hospital, Mrs Jameson. I don’t faint, and I know how to get the stains out. But I don’t particularly enjoy dealing with it,’ I said firmly. ‘If there is a choice.’
She laughed. ‘Well said. Have you ever fired a shotgun or a pistol?’
My eyebrows shot up. ‘Never.’
‘That’s a pity. Never mind; I can show you. Can you drive?’
I smiled proudly. ‘I learned while I was at the hospital, on the ambulances. And a motor-cycle, so I could carry urgent messages to the surgeons at home.’ The motor-cycling had been terrifying, but also the most fun I’d ever had. I’d never dared tell my parents about it, or let them see me in the britches that I wore to ride.
‘Oh, that’s excellent. Good woman. How are you with cocktails? Can you mix a decent French ’75?’
The background to our rather alarming conversation had been most refined up to this point. A murmur of conversation, a gentle clink of tea cups being lifted and set down in saucers, and a soothing wash of piano music. The pianist was running smoothly through a repertoire of light classics and popular songs from the shows.
Then suddenly, he wasn’t. There was a loud crash of discordant notes. The young man playing the piano slammed the lid closed and stood, glaring right at us.
‘No,’ he shouted. ‘I won’t play for them.’
What I’ve been up to
I’ve made good progress with the first ‘proper’ novel in the Marjorie Swallow series, provisional title Blackmail in Bloomsbury.
But it hasn’t all been writing. I started March with an adventure, learning to canoe down the rapids of the River Dee in Wales. I’ll admit – I did wonder what I’d let myself in for. The excellent tutor managed to get me from extremely nervous novice to reasonably confident white water paddler in a couple of days, and I loved the experience.

While we were in Wales, we came across a rather eccentric motoring museum on the banks of the river in Llangollen. It was packed with cars and motorbikes from the earliest days of the twentieth century, as well as lots of motoring memorabilia. I enjoyed looking at some 1920s motor cars and motor cycles, and imagining what my two lady sleuths, Miss Marjorie Swallow and Mrs Iris Jameson, might have picked for a drive into the country.
March 1, 2023
March newsletter: writing news and a box-set bargain

I spent February in a flurry of writing activity. I’m working on a new crime fiction series that I’m very excited about. I’ll be sharing more news (and hopefully a novella to whet your appetite) next month. It will feature glamorous London locations, sassy lady detectives, and a sprinkling of murder and mayhem. I think you’re going to like it.
However, that means that the Helen Oddfellow series is on hold for now. Apologies to anyone waiting for news of her next adventure – I hope to come back to Helen at some point.
But there’s also good news if you’ve dipped into one or two of the Helen books and would like to read them all. I’m releasing books 1 to 4 in a new e-book collection, available on Kindle today. For 5 days only, this will be at the ridiculously low price of £1.99/$1.99. That’s four books for less than 50p/50c each. The price will go up on March 1, so don’t hang around!
What I’ve been up to
I had a trip to Brighton this month and finally got around to visiting the amazing Royal Pavilion, commissioned by the Prince Regent (Queen Victoria’s uncle) in 1815. The building is a wild oriental fantasy, inspired by Indian Mughal palaces on the outside, but stuffed with Chinese-style furnishings on the inside.
The lavish decoration allowed the prince, later George IV, to entertain high society in unique style. I particularly loved the Music Room (see below), with its extraordinary ceiling, and wished I could see it thronged with people in Bridgerton costumes, dancing the night away.
Upstairs a small exhibition explained how the pavilion had a very different role during World War I, as a hospital for Indian Army soldiers who had been wounded while fighting for the British in France and Belgium. The photographs of Indian soldiers lying in rows of beds beneath the extravagant chandeliers are quite surreal. I wonder what they made of it all.
What I’m enjoying
I do enjoy historian Lucy Worsley’s programmes, whether she’s investigating the murders of the Princes in the Tower, telling us what goes on behind the scenes at Hampton Court Palace or simply having fun with the BBC’s dressing up box. I particularly enjoyed her short series about the Queen of Crime, Agatha Christie, available in the UK on BBC iPlayer now. Christie became aware of the possibilities of poison during her time working as a VAD in the Torquay Town Hall Red Cross Hospital– another grand building re-used as a hospital during World War I.
January 27, 2023
February newsletter: treats and recommendations for the winter months.
January can be tough, can’t it? My theory is that the only way to make it through the dark mornings, dark afternoons and dark evenings is to indulge in plenty of treats.
I had some lovely treats in January. I went to the candle-lit Sam Wanamaker Playhouse, the recreated Jacobean playhouse that stands next to Shakespeare’s Globe theatre, to see a wonderful and very funny play about storytelling. And I had a very special posh afternoon out, with tea at the Ritz Hotel in Piccadilly, London, for a friend’s special celebration (see photo!).
But mostly, I indulged in lots of evenings curled up with a good book. It’s what winter evenings are made for.
Free books promotion
I’m sure you could do with some good books, too! Whether you’ve finally made your way through your Christmas stash, or just feel like trying something new, February is a good month for new books.
If you haven’t read my first novel, Unlawful Things, now is the time to try it for free. The e-book available free of charge until Monday 30 January. It’s part of a promotion by the book recommendation service Hello Books. Why not see what other free thrillers they have this month?
What I’m enjoying now
Here are some things that have kept me entertained this month:
MW Craven’s incredibly twisty and well-plotted novel The Botanist. Absolutely addictive! I loved the intricate plot but also the funny and believable detective team.
LJ Ross’s Northumberland-set mysteries, starting with Holy Island. My father comes from the north east of England so I know some of the locations – but fortunately my childhood family holidays didn’t involve quite so much murder.
The BBC crime drama Happy Valley. The series – the third and final – has been an absolute masterclass in acting and dramatic tension. The two female leads, Sarah Lancashire and Siobhan Finneran, and writer/director Sally Wainwright, conjured the most gripping scene I’ve ever watched out of two sisters talking quietly in a cafe.
January 3, 2023
January newsletter: My favourite books of 2022 and New Year book giveaways
I’ve had a lovely sociable Christmas with friends and family this year – a welcome relief after the Covid-blighted winters of the last few years. I had a good few books in my stocking too, including the rather wonderful Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus. I raced through this fierce and funny book with great enjoyment.
Here’s my annual round-up of books I loved in 2022.
Two short and razor-sharp historical novels
Stephen May: Sell Us The Rope. A vibrant, funny and menacing novel set in May 1907, when a young man from Georgia calling himself Koba arrives in the East End of London for the 5th Congress of the Russian Communist Party. The novel vividly conjures up the grimness of London at the time.
Denise Mina: Rizzio. An account of the historical murder of the advisor of Mary Queen of Scots, re-told by a masterful modern crime writer. The build-up, the murder itself and the perilous aftermath are told with heart-stopping pace. Sharper than a serpent’s tooth and highly recommended.
Three books of illuminating non-fiction:
Merlin Sheldrake: Entangled Life. A mind-altering book on fungi, which kept me gripped through a four-hour airport transfer, and changed my outlook on all things fungi in the process. Beautifully readable.
Steven Nightingale: Granada Light of Andalucia. This lyrical travel/history book made me long to return to the Albaicin and prompted me to start writing a Helen Oddfellow mystery set in this fascinating city.
Francesca Wade: Square Haunting. A fascinating history of five extraordinary women finding freedom in Mecklenburgh Square, Bloomsbury between the wars, from Dorothy L Sayers to Virginia Woolf.
Three novels that took me out of this world
Alan Garner: Treacle Walker. A spare, deceptively-simple and wonderfully evocative book. From its pungent language to its vivid images and otherworldly air, this is a book to escape into – and one I’ll be reading and discovering new time and again.
Amor Towles: A Gentleman in Moscow. I loved this spellbinding historical novel about making the most of life. A perfect flavour of escapism, a sense of style and elegance, and a frisson of derring-do.
Francis Spufford: Light Perpetual. The imaginary lives of five children lost in one rocket attack on south London. The prose is luminous, the stories compelling. The opening chapter, describing the scene in Woolworths a split second before the rocket brings instant destruction, is masterful.
Best of crimes
Dorothy Koomson: My Other Husband. A tense, gripping thriller, a real ‘couldn’t put it down’ book with twists you don’t see coming.
William Shaw: The Trawlerman. Another atmospheric and wonderfully enjoyable crime thriller from William Shaw, set on the south coast of Kent in Folkestone and Dungeness. I love the roundedness of Shaw’s characters – good people do bad things, and vice versa.
Pascal Garnier: How’s The Pain? This slice of noir is hilariously jaundiced. It tells the story of terminally-ill ‘vermin exterminator’ Simon, who has one last job to do – and needs a driver. Lyrical, funny, horrifying and unexpected.
Free books to start the New Year!Money is often a bit tight right after Christmas – so how about some free e-books to load up your e-reader and get you through those cold January nights?
I’m taking part in two giveaways this month. Firstly, my short novel The Crimson Thread will be available free all month in Bookfunnel’s Happy New Year Giveaway, along with lots of other lovely goodies.
Then the first Helen Oddfellow mystery, Unlawful Things, will be free from 27th to 29th January, via Hello Books! Put the dates in your diary and follow this link from 27th Jan.
December 5, 2022
December newsletter: Helen Oddfellow in Granada, Dickens in Kent and Sherlock in London
Work in progressI’ve spent November in the fascinating city of Granada, in southern Spain. Not in reality, alas, but in my head. Granada is the wonderfully evocative backdrop for the next Helen Oddfellow adventure.
I visited in January and fell in love with its hidden alleyways, Arab-style architecture and multi-layered history. I couldn’t resist sending Helen there – but she doesn’t get the relaxing break she was hoping for! She’s soon on the trail of the legendary Book of Nothing, hidden at the time of the book-burnings in the medieval city and reputed to hold dangerous, ancient knowledge…
I decided to write the first draft of the novel in a month-long daily writing sprint, which is a new writing method for me. It was a challenge, but I wrote 50,000 words, around 2,000 words a day with two days off. It’s a very messy first draft, but it gives me a great base to work from.
Dickens in Kent
From Helen in Granada, to Charles Dickens in Kent. Dickens inspired my latest novel Folly Ditch, so I spent a lot of time researching his life. This month I’m giving two talks to local history groups about Dickens’ Kent connections.
Did you know Dickens was caught up in one of the first train crashes? He was travelling in the Folkestone to London boat train (the train that met the boat from France) when it derailed on a viaduct in Staplehurst, Kent. Dickens was in a carriage that was stuck half-on, half-off the bridge, and scrambled out to help other passengers. Eight people died and many more were injured. Afterwards Dickens – incredibly – climbed back into the carriage to rescue the manuscript of his work-in-progress, Our Mutual Friend. Even more intriguing, Dickens was not travelling alone, but with Nellie Ternan, now thought been his mistress. Disasters can unmask secrets, however well hidden.
I’ll be talking about Dickens at Deal’s Astor Theatre on Thursday 15 December, as part of the regular The History Project evenings. Tickets here.
Recommendations: what I’m enjoying now
One fictional character that no-one seems to get tired of is Sherlock Holmes. I enjoyed the latest outing for Sherlock and friends, Netflix’s Enola Holmes 2, which gives us the further adventures of Sherlock’s younger sister Enola, who wants to beat her big brother at the detecting game.
Enola, daughter of an undercover suffragette with a nice line in pyrotechnics, investigates the disappearance of a match girl from a factory where an outbreak of ‘typhus’ is killing off the workers. The film is great fun if you fancy a winter evening lounging on the sofa.
I’ve also discovered another enjoyable Sherlock spin-off. Liz Hedgecock’s A House of Mirrors puts Holmes’ landlady Mrs Hudson centre stage as a redoubtable sleuth in her own right. But is she really Mrs Hudson? Not everything is as it seems in this clever introduction to the series. I’ll be back for more.
History and Mystery promotion
Talking of series, my Helen Oddfellow series is part of the History Crime And Mystery Series promotion with Bookfunnel this month. The promotion is a great way to discover your new favourite series. Find out more here.
November 14, 2022
November newsletter: News on my next book, spies in Canterbury and Christmas books
Work in progress
I’ve been plotting out the next Helen Oddfellow mystery – and it’s time to start writing. I’m taking part in NaNoWriMo, the mad month where writers try to complete a 50,000 word novel in November. The idea is to push myself to get a first draft down on paper. Follow me on Twitter @BloomsburyBlue to see how I get on!
Murder, mystery and spies
I had fun guiding 30 enthusiastic visitors around the beautiful city of Canterbury on my Marlowe, Murder and Mystery tour in October. We visited places connected with the playwright Christopher Marlowe, who inspired my novels Unlawful Things and The Crimson Thread. The city centre is full of Elizabethan-era buildings, and we started at the church where Marlowe was baptised in 1564 (number 10, St George’s, on the map below). We also visited the building where Queen Elizabeth I stayed, before Marlowe joined Her Majesty’s Secret Service…
Would you like to join me next time? I know not everyone can get to Canterbury, so I’m offering a free online tour, on Tuesday November 15 at 20:00 GMT. Please register so I know how many to expect.
Registration here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/christopher-marlowes-canterbury-online-tour-tickets-457056206417

My walk was part of the excellent Canterbury Festival, which brings together musicians, artists, performers and writers for two weeks of arts events. I enjoyed an entertaining talk on women and espionage, by the spy writer Nigel West. Did you know that the Canterbury playwright Aphra Behn, one of the first women playwrights, was a spy for King Charles II, back in the seventeenth century? There must be something about Canterbury writers that makes them into good spies!
Recommendations: what I’m enjoying now
I heard crime writer Dorothy Koomson talk at the Fatal Shore crime writing festival recently and couldn’t resist her latest novel My Other Husband. It’s tense, twisty and tremendous fun. The heroine is a successful crime writer, author of The Baking Detective series. When people around her start dying in ways that resemble the crimes in her books, she thinks she knows who it is – but how can she clear her name?
I’ve been diving into some old movies recently. I enjoyed the wit and style of the 1960s spy thriller The Ipcress File, starring Michael Caine and based on the Len Deighton book. It’s very much of its time, but just the thing for a dark autumnal evening.
Offer: Christmas book bundles
What could be more Christmassy than a set of signed books by your favourite author? I’ll be signing and sending out a limited number of book bundles in December. If you’d like to buy one, two, three or all four books, signed with a dedication of your choice, drop me an email on hello@annasayburnlane.com and let me know which books you’d like. First come will be first served. The cost will be £9 per book plus postage. Sorry, but because of postage costs this offer is UK-only.
Have a great November, and happy reading!
September 30, 2022
Signing books at my local bookshop
After more than two years of online events, it was lovely to be invited to sign copies of my books at the Deal Bookshop in my home town of Deal, Kent. I had fun chatting to friends and customers who dropped by to pick up a copy of Folly Ditch, my latest Helen Oddfellow mystery thriller. It’s a friendly place and quite the social hub on a Saturday afternoon! Thanks to David for inviting me, and to all the staff for their help.
September 5, 2022
Book launch for Folly Ditch
I had fantastic fun being interviewed and answering readers’ questions at the online launch party for my new book, Folly Ditch. The video for the launch is online now on my YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhaTp9gTrzA
August 8, 2022
Join my launch party for Folly Ditch
Join me for the online launch party on Tuesday 23 August at 19:30 BST. I’ll be reading from the book, taking part in a Q&A with journalist Kathy Oxtoby, and answering questions from readers. There will be at least one giveaway during the event. You can access the event with this link.