What next for Jane Fenwick? @jane_fenwick60 #neverthetwain
#historicalcrimenovels #romance #victorianwhitby
Never the Twain is
finally published! It has been a long, but enjoyable journey. It is two years
since I started writing the book and it came about as a sort of by product of
another book I had started to write.
A
couple of years ago I gave up teaching to deal in antiques and collectables and
to try my hand at writing; the writing quickly took over and after two years I
gave up the shop too. My Constant Lady
was my first attempt at writing a book, my first born as it were. What I hadn’t
realised when I started writing was that the editing process took a lot more
time than the actual story writing. As light relief from editing I began to
write a story I called The Trouble with Twins. As I have mentioned in another
blog post, twins run in my family so I wanted to write about twins. I came up
with the idea of setting the book in late Victorian times as My Constant Lady is set in the 1760’s
and I thought I would confuse myself if I wrote in the same time period. And
besides, one of the things I love about writing is the research process;
writing about a different time period gave me the chance to do more research,
again it was another distraction from editing. It also meant several trips to
Whitby which is never a bad thing.
As Never the Twain began to develop it
quickly became apparent that although it was a romance it was also a story with
a crime at the heart of it. Not a ‘Whodunit’ more of a ‘Whydunit’. Some writers
are plotters but I’m what’s known in the book world as a ‘pantser’ which means
someone who writes by the seat of their pants. As I write the story revels
itself and I just follow it.
I never
know when I start writing where my characters will take me. I just keep writing
and let them take me wherever they want. I find this exciting as I never know
what’s going to happen. I hope my characterisations are strong so when I get
inside one of my characters heads I know what they will and won’t do, what they
might say or not say. Then I just follow them. As the book developed I thought
the original title The Trouble with Twins, sounded too lightweight and trivial
as the book had taken a darker, grittier tone so I changed it to Never the Twain.
The
biggest step for me in the early days of my writing was letting another person
read my work. It was so hard to hand over the manuscript knowing no one but me
had read it before. Self doubt does not come close to describing the feeling I
had at the time. I first gave My
Constant Lady to someone who although is a friend, I knew she would be
brutally honest. She was, but she was constructive too and when she said she
cried at the end I could have burst with pride. This spurred me on to finish Never the Twain.
I am a
member of the Romantic Novelists Association and was lucky enough to be on
their New Writers Scheme. This means they appoint a reader to critique your
manuscript. Although it was hard to pass the story over, again any criticism
was constructive. I realise this is how I will learn and grow and hopefully
become a better writer. In time my ambition is to become someone’s favourite
author!
I have
a friend who lives in the next village to where I live in the Yorkshire Dales
who is an author. She has published over twenty books successfully. With her
encouragement I decided to publish Never
the Twain. After a lot of deliberation I decided to self publish but as I
had never attempted anything like this before it was very daunting. I am barely
computer literate – when I was teaching if something went wrong with the
computers I either shouted for the “techy” guy or asked an eleven year old to
sort the problem. Suddenly I was making decisions about font styles, marketing,
cover designs and all manner of things I had never even heard of such as Meta
tags and blog tours! Without my friend Jill, laughably known as my “EPA”, this
book would still be languishing in a file marked Book 2!
My Constant Lady is
being edited as we speak and my designer Charlotte Mouncey, who also did the
cover for Never the Twain, is
working on it now. The cover design was one of my favourite aspects of the
publishing process; no matter what we think we do judge a book by its cover. I
was pleased when Charlotte found the painting, ‘A Whitby Terrace’ which is used
in the background of the cover. As the book has a theatrical touch I asked her
to find theatre masks and add a touch of blood. I love the end result and I
hope you do too.
My Constant Lady is
completely different to Never the Twain in
that it is the first in a three book saga. It is set in the North East of
England and is the story of Gabriel Reynolds a shipping magnate and an
independently minded red head, Eleanor Barker. Think Poldark with shipping not
mines and Whitby and Alnmouth not Cornwall. It is an historical romance and
will be released early in 2020. The second book in the series, The Turning Tides will follow in the
summer of 2020 and I am about to start writing the third and last in the series.
Although
I have an idea for the opening of the story who knows where it will take me?
Watch this space!
Never the Twain: A twin tale of jealousy
and betrayal, love and murder.
The
year is 1890. The port of Whitby is heaving with sailors and where there are
sailors there are brothels doing a roaring trade. Beautiful identical twins
April and May are in desperate straits. They have been abandoned by their
actress mother and are about to have their virginity auctioned off to the
highest bidder by a notorious brothel madam.
Their
fate is hanging in the balance when Captain Edward Driscoll a handsome, wealthy
shipping tycoon from Glasgow saves them before they can be deflowered.
But
have they exchanged one form of slavery for another?
April,
reluctantly swept up in her twin’s secrets and lies unwittingly becomes
embroiled in a murderous conspiracy. Is May’s jealousy stronger than the twin
bond which has always connected them?
Available from:
Amazon UK: https://amzn.to/2mbA6hp
Amazon US: https://amzn.to/2ksAaZI
Amazon UK: https://amzn.to/2mbA6hp
Amazon US: https://amzn.to/2ksAaZI
Never the Twain: A dark blend of Gothic
romance and murder.
Jane
Fenwick lives in the market town of Settle in Yorkshire, England. She studied
education at Sheffield University gaining a B.Ed (Hons) in 1989 and going on to
teach primary age range children. Jane decided to try her hand at penning a
novel rather than writing school reports as she has always been an avid reader,
especially enjoying historical and crime fiction. She decided to combine her
love of both genres to write her first historical crime novel Never the Twain. Jane has always been a
lover of antiques, particularly art nouveau and art deco ceramics and turned
this hobby into a business opening an antiques and collectables shop in Settle.
However her time as a dealer was short lived; she spent far too much time in
the sale rooms buying items that ended up in her home rather than the shop!
Animal welfare is a cause close to Jane’s heart and she has been vegetarian
since the age of fourteen. For the last twenty years she has been trustee of an
animal charity which rescues and rehomes cats, dogs and all manner of creatures
looking for a forever home. Of course several of these have been “adopted” by
Jane!
Jane
has always loved the sea and although she lives in the Yorkshire Dales she is
particularly drawn to the North East coast of Yorkshire and Northumberland.
This coastline is where she gets her inspiration for the historical crime and
romance novels she writes. She can imagine how the North East ports would have
looked long ago with a forest of tall masted ships crammed together in the
harbours, the bustling streets congested with sailors, whalers, chandlers and
sail makers. These imaginings provide the backdrop and inspire her to create
the central characters and themes of her novels. As she has always loved
history she finds the research particularly satisfying.
When
she isn’t walking on Sandsend beach with her dog Scout, a Patterdale
“Terrorist” she is to be found in her favourite coffee shop gazing out to sea
and dreaming up her next plot. Jane is currently writing a historical saga
series again set on the North East coast beginning in 1765. The first two books
are being edited at the moment; My
Constant Lady and The Turning Tides.
Look out for My Constant Lady in
2020.
GIVEAWAY!
I love historical fiction and any kind of crime story so this one sounds really awesome :) Thanks for sharing (and for the giveaway!)
ReplyDelete-Amber Terry-