Posted in Blogging

The Last Post – Introductory Novella

It is April 1918. May Keaps is a twenty year old ambulance driver stationed at The Front. As if transporting hideously wounded soldiers, sleep deprivation and constant shell bombardment weren’t enough, she becomes unwittingly entangled in the untimely death of a young captain, Tobias Fairfax.

Newly-arrived in Northern France he was found with a discharged pistol by his side; rumours on the battlefield were that it wasn’t an accident and he had taken the coward’s way out, committing suicide.

Whatever the explanation, Tobias left a dangerous legacy that puts May in the line of fire. But she is not the only one with a reason to want to uncover the truth. And in a world where life can be extinguished in the blink of an eye, May might regret her search for answers…

The Last Post is the haunting introduction to the May Keaps series.

In the depths of World War 1, protagonist May Keaps shows the true strength of her character from the very beginning of this introductory novella, as an Ambulance driver who whilst having to prove her calmness under pressure, shows also her compassion and tenacity to care for those around her no matter the cost.

I have to admit that wartime based books are not something I generally enjoy reading, but I knew I had to try to get outside of my comfort zone, and I’m glad I did.  It was a great introduction to a new series.

(It’s also currently free on Amazon – So go grab it now!)

Posted in Blogging

Graham Smith talks Novella’s

Graham Smith is a time served joiner who has built bridges, houses, dug drains and slated roofs to make ends meet. Since Christmas 2000, he has been manager of a busy hotel and wedding venue near Gretna Green, Scotland. (Where the cri.me’s partnered up!)

He is an internationally best-selling Kindle author and has four books featuring DI Harry Evans and the Cumbrian Major Crimes Team, and two novels, featuring Utah doorman, Jake Boulder.

2018 will be a busy year for Graham as he has the third Jake Boulder being published and a Harry Evans novel and novella.

An avid fan of crime fiction since being given one of Enid Blyton’s Famous Five books at the age of eight, he has also been a regular reviewer and interviewer for the well-respected website Crimesquad.com since 2009

Graham is the founder of Crime and Publishment, a weekend of crime-writing classes which includes the chance for attendees to pitch their novels to agents and publishers. Since the first weekend in 2013, eight attendees have gone on to sign publishing contracts.

Today, as part of Novella November he’s talking to us, about their uses as introductory catalysts and mid series teasers…

I’m something of a contrarian when it comes to short stories and novellas. Before I started writing, I tended not to read them as my preference was always for novel length works. However, as an aspiring author, I really learned a lot about the craft of writing, and brevity in particular, by writing short stories. To this end I wrote around forty short stories before refocussing my attentions on the unfinished novel which was sat on my computer.

When my debut novel, Snatched from Home was accepted for publication by Caffeine Nights, I contacted the publisher and mooted the idea of a short story collection with each of the five stories introducing a different member of the Major Crimes Team. My idea was that it would be free or certainly cut price and would therefore give readers a chance to meet the team and check out my writing style.

The publisher gave me the go ahead and I put finger to key – pen to paper is so last year. A couple of weeks after I’d submitted the collection, he emailed me back to say he liked them and could I also write a novella or short story collection to precede each novel in the series. Naturally, I said yes to this.

As I’d already written book two in the series, I Know Your Secret, I had to write a novella which fit between it and Snatched from Home. The problem I had was that there was only 48 hours between the end of one novel and the start of the next. Fortunately I came up with an idea for a story which would not just fit within that time frame, but would actually take place over a period of nine hours.

A month later, the first draft of Matching the Evidence was complete. With me caught up on the publishing schedule the next piece I wrote featuring the Major Crimes Team was No Comment, the novella which will be released in spring 2018 before the release of the next novel, When the Waters Recede.

For me, writing shorter form pieces such as novellas or short stories allows room for experimentation. By that I mean I can try different points of view so I can introduce support characters to the reader more fully, or that I can write a plot which doesn’t have the legs to be a full novel, but is still intriguing enough to be told in short form.

I could go on and on about short stories and novellas, but that would rather defeat the point, wouldn’t it? All I have left to say is, if you’ve not tried the delights of a shorter read, you’re missing out on some great bite-size fiction, so go on; try something that can be read during your commute or in a snatched ten minutes of peace. You’ll get a story that fills your need without leaving you sorry that you have to stop reading.

Graham can be found on

Facebook
Twitter
 – and at www.grahamsmithauthor.com

Posted in Blogging, Reading, Reviews

Novella November – Janet Evanovich & Lee Goldberg

Meet Fox and O’Hare, the latest madcap couple from the comic queen of mayhem, alongside one of America’s favourite TV show producers.

Beginning with their first ever ‘clash’ in The Shell Game, these two short stories are a great introduction to this quirky pair.

If you’re a fan of Evanovich’s Stephanie Plum, or you loving watching TV shows like Diagnosis Murder or Monk, then you will adore these shorts, and don’t worry when you get to the end, because there are four more full length books for you to dive into.

When rookie FBI agent Kate O’Hare meets career conman Nick Fox there’s bound to be a sting in the tale.

Fresh out of Quantico and looking forward to her first FBI assignment, Kate O’Hare is teamed up with high-end security expert, Nick Fox, to help protect a shipment of valuable Peruvian relics. Problem is, nothing is what it seems. Nick Fox is actually a con artist and he’s about to play the shell game with special agent O’Hare in a high-speed chase with armoured cars, a few smoke bombs and a little light flirting. It doesn’t take long for Nick to discover Kate O’Hare is smart, tenacious, and when she’s conned, she holds a grudge.

Life for Fox & O’Hare will never be the same again.

 


FBI special agent Kate O’Hare has made it her mission to nail international con artist Nicolas Fox. When she discovers his plot to plunder a venture capitalist’s twentieth-story Chicago penthouse of all its cash and treasures while the self-proclaimed ‘King of Hostile Takeovers’ is getting married, Kate is 85 per cent – okay maybe 92 per cent – sure that she’s finally going to bag Nick Fox.

Problem is, first Kate has to convince her boss, building security, and maybe even herself, that wedding planner Merrill Stubing is actually Nicolas Fox. Second, she has to figure out how to corner and capture him without disrupting the event of the year. And third, what’s going to happen once O’Hare finally gets her hands on Fox? It’s going take a pro to catch a con before the fireworks over Lake Michigan go off.

Posted in Blogging

Novella November

With many of  the writers I know currently heading out on their 2017 NaNoWriMo adventures this month, I thought I would take some time out to spotlight novellas and short stories.  Reading that can be ‘fit in’ by those who feel they are too busy to read, and to maybe bring new characters or authors to existing book worms. Whether as short sharp introductions to a new series, or as a teaser between books in longer series, to build anticipation while you eagerly await the next in the series.

So keep your eyes peeled people, you never know just what might grab your attention.