This book is about love and loss and healing. It can help open up a conversation about grief across generations. We hope it helps. Stay safe everyone. “He put Murphy in his big yellow estate car and took him away.” Losing a loved one is the hardest thing we ever experience. It feels like a mountain we cannot possibly climb. Yet day by day, we can take single steps. We might never reach the peak, but this much is always whenever we look back, we can hardly believe how far we’ve come. Murphy is a true story about that mountain – about losing someone – and healing. It is about a dog who had to find a new family - and about a family who had to find a dog. Stories with dogs in them are almost always good ones. Murphy is for children, as all dogs are. His story is about the power of love, during the worst times. Written by Conn Iggulden, the bestselling author of the Emperor, Conqueror and The Wars of the Roses series. Illustrated by Lizzy Duncan, illustrator of the Tollins series of Explosive Tales for Children and the new Dotty Melody series. Lizzy is a fully qualified art psychotherapist.
I was born in the normal way in 1971, and vaguely remember half-pennies and sixpences. I have written for as long as I can remember: poetry, short stories and novels. It’s what I always wanted to do and read English at London University with writing in mind. I taught English for seven years and was Head of English at St. Gregory’s RC High School in London by the end of that period. I have enormous respect for those who still labour at the chalk-face. In truth, I can’t find it in me to miss the grind of paperwork and initiatives. I do miss the camaraderie of the smokers’ room, as well as the lessons where their faces lit up as they understood what I was wittering on about.
My mother is Irish and from an early age she told me history as an exciting series of stories – with dates. My great-grandfather was a Seannachie, so I suppose story-telling is in the genes somewhere. My father flew in Bomber Command in WWII, then taught maths and science. Perhaps crucially, he also loved poetry and cracking good tales. Though it seems a dated idea now, I began teaching when boys were told only girls were good at English, despite the great names that must spring to mind after that statement. My father loved working with wood and equations, but he also recited ‘Vitai Lampada’ with a gleam in his eye and that matters, frankly.
I’ve always loved historical fiction as a genre and cut my teeth on Hornblower and Tai-Pan, Flashman, Sharpe and Jack Aubrey. I still remember the sheer joy of reading my first Patrick O’Brian book and discovering there were nineteen more in the series. I love just about anything by David Gemmell, or Peter F. Hamilton or Wilbur Smith. I suppose the one thing that links all those is the love of a good tale.
That’s about it for the moment. If you’d like to get in touch with me leave a comment in the forum or you can tweet me @Conn_Iggulden. I’ll leave it there for the moment. If you’ve read my books, you know an awful lot about the way I think already. There’s no point overdoing it.