The Auguries

On July 18 I was invited by my publisher at Severn House to submit the synopsis for a new novel. They'd previously published The Memory of Trees and The Lucifer Chord so were familiar with my style and themes.

I don't really do synopses, because I make them up as I go along. Often I don't know what's going to happen in the next line, let alone the next chapter. So I sent her a premise, which she must have liked, because she commissioned the book on the strength of it.

I write quite fast. By August 29 I was ready to send her the completed novel, 72, 000 words divided into 47 chapters. She emailed me on Friday saying she was delighted with the finished result and giving me a publication date of February 28 2019.

The Auguries is full-blown apocalyptic and the darkest thing I've written. Ordinarily I wouldn't describe my books as in the horror genre, I'd say they're more thrillers with a paranormal element. But this one is as close to horror as I've ever got. My 16th century alchemist from the Waiting Room, Gunter Keller, appears in this in sections set in Europe in the 1520s. But most of the contemporary action takes place in London and apart from him, the cast of characters is completely new.

My character Ruthie Gillespie got the stand-alone novel I thought she deserved in The Lucifer Chord. I'll definitely feature her again in the future, she's resting rather than retired. But Juliet Harrington, the main female protagonist of The Auguries, has ample charms of her own, as I hope at least some of you will discover early next year.
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Published on September 11, 2018 03:24
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message 1: by S.R. (new)

S.R. Cannot wait to read this! Have yet to be disappointed by any of your books :) Always a reading treat!


message 2: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam Thank you!


message 3: by Jodie (new)

Jodie Looking forward to reading this one. I always enjoy your books.


message 4: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam Nice of you to say so.


message 5: by Stacey (new)

Stacey I am looking forward to it! I just finished The Lucifer Chord yesterday and totally LOVED it!


message 6: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam Thank you, Stacey! And thanks for that very generous Amazon review.


message 7: by [deleted user] (new)

I am amazed at how quickly you write. How do you manage it?Loved The Memory of Trees and The Magdalena Curse.


message 8: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam The Auguries was untypical in that it went from idea to finished novel in just under six weeks. I do write fast, but usually ruminate on the story for ages before beginning it. I had the idea for Trees ten years before starting it (it had to wait its turn in the queue). Delighted you enjoyed that and Curse, which I rather wish was coming out now, as witches have suddenly become very fashionable! Mrs Mallory six years ahead of her time...


message 9: by [deleted user] (new)

‘I’m more good than bad’. Love that line. Hope I quoted it correctly. Really curse is one of my favorite books of the last few years and there is something about it that ‘sticks’. I have noticed the importance you often attach to scent and sounds. Does this inform all of your writing?


message 10: by Susan (new)

Susan Looking forward to reading it - always enjoy your books very much.


message 11: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam I just thought Lavinia Mallory would have a monochromatic wardrobe full of Katherine Hamnett and Bill Blass. Most of my women wear Gurlain fragrances. I use scents and music and weather to evoke both character and atmosphere. And I set a lot of stuff in the 1920s, which I consider a decade full of quite sinister sensation seeking and hysteria. And spats, of course!


message 12: by [deleted user] (new)

Spats. I’m reading The House of Lost Souls now. I thought I was the only one who saw something sinister in the glamor of the period between the wars. Souls seems different somehow from your other books that I have read ...more loose, less structured? Well, I am only on page 53, so what do I know.


message 13: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam I think the mood of the '20s in Europe and the States a reaction to the Great War. My storytelling has become leaner and more economical since THOLS but think you'll like the Pandora stuff set in 1927 (without giving too much away).


message 14: by [deleted user] (new)

Thank you for taking the time to reply and for sharing your insights. Now back to THOLS ...


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