Friday 10 February 2012

Night Publishing Leaps Forward: Tim Roux and Drew Cross


As my regular readers will know by now, I indulge myself in this blog by writing about the many books which are my old favourites, the ones which I read and re-read, and I feel, as I write, as if I'm talking to old friends who like the same sort of books as me.

But in between this, I like to discuss books which I've only come across recently and which I've really liked; and in those cases I feel like someone trying to lend a book which they've recently found to a friend who has never heard of it before. 'Go on, take it – I know you'll really enjoy it. But mind, be sure to give me it back!'

(I've long since stopped lending books to friends, I may say – I've lost too many that way. I still recommend them – but my friends now need to go out and buy their own copies – I'm hanging on to mine.)

My last blog was about Jane Austen. So this blog, in the usual sequence, is about two writers, and in particular two books, that I've discovered during the past few months.

The first is Tim Roux's book, previously The Dance of the Pheasodile, now re-published as Harry Walker's Wife.  Tim Roux operates Night Publishing, which published my first book Belfast Girls. So is there something suspicious in the fact that I'm recommending my publisher's own books? Well, no. My second and third books, Danger Danger and The Seanachie: Tales of Old Seamus are published by Precious Oil Publications, which is run by my husband Raymond McCullough. If I wanted to curry favour with my current publisher, I would be recommending Raymond's book, The Whore and Her Mother (a non-fiction look at prophecy about coming events).

As a matter of fact, I did mention it on a recent blog, but only because I really think it's worth reading. If I wanted to curry favour with my husband, there are other ways I could do it. (I mean, of course, like cooking him a particularly nice meal.)

So in looking at Tim Roux's book (which by the way is only one of his many excellent novels) I can honestly claim to be completely impartial.

Harry Walker's Wife is the story of Keith McGuire, who goes for a Hypnotherapy session to help him deal with his past, and comes to himself in the body of someone called Harry Walker, an unpleasant, crooked man, the opposite of Keith in every way. Meanwhile, Harry is living in Keith's body. The two men find themselves forced to live each other's lives, including living with each other's wives – a moral problem for Keith if not for Harry.

This is one of those books which make you want to kick yourself for not reading it sooner. Pressure of work prevented me reading Harry Walker’s Wife when I first got my hands on it, and how stupid was that? As soon as I started the book, I was gripped. I read it in one sitting when I should have been buying/wrapping Christmas presents (about two days before Christmas, I mean) and I felt that I had made a discovery.

Tim Roux is an author whose name should be known throughout the reading world. He is a skilled writer, able to move, amuse, thrill and terrify within a few sentences. His characters are likeable when he means them to be likeable, even when they end up doing unlikable things. And his plot -wow! I spent most of the book wondering how on earth he was going to resolve this fantastic situation without using the old cop-out, 'And then Keith woke up.' But not a bit of it. Mr Roux is not afraid to tackle the incredible and make it believable, and he resolves his plot in a way which is truly satisfying.

Tim Roux gives us a new twist on previous books with this type of subject (like Vice Versa by F. Anstey or Laughing Gas by PG Wodehouse, to say nothing of films like Big). This is not a straight body swop. Part of the iniquitous Harry Walker remains, sharing his own body with its new inhabitant, Keith, and encouraging him to do things Keith would never have done. So Keith, recovering his own body and life, is faced with a moral problem – did he do some of those evil things, or can he put the blame on Harry? Fascinating.

But the most obviously striking thing about this book is the speed with which the plot moves along, and the page turning skill with which Tim Roux keeps us gripped and impelled to read more.

I love this book. I think millions should be reading it. And I think Mr Roux should put some of the time, and the skills he now has, which he uses in publishing and publicising other writers' books, into pushing this one – and then we'll see what we will see!

Very warmly recommended. And currently it's free for your Kindle or Kindle app at these links:
http://www.amazon.com/Harry-Walkers-Wife-ebook/dp/B0076OL6DS/

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Harry-Walkers-Wife-ebook/dp/B0076OL6DS


One of those books, published by Tim at Night Publishing, is Drew Cross's Bite Marks. Not, as its author finds himself constantly explaining, a vampire story, but rather the story of a cop tracking a serial killer with strange tendencies.


This is another book which I read in one sitting. 


Drew Cross is a writer whose lyrical style shines forth from every page.

'The air is cobalt with scents of clean running water and the zigzag memories of dragonfly wings; the sun, a blazing heaven, dots tan speckles on lithe young limbs.' 

This is only one of the thousands of lines which are not only sheer poetry in themselves, but which carry the exact atmosphere which the author wants. In this particular scene,it's the memory of the original innocence of childhood. In others, the poetry conveys to us pain, guilt, or loneliness.


This is a gripping, page turning thriller which also deals marvellously with the damaged human condition, the scars of childhood, the generational hurts passed on unless they are deliberately cut off. There is only one writer I can think of who uses the crime story to do so much exploration of the human psyche, and that is Graham Greene. I consider that Drew Cross fully deserves to be placed beside Greene – who is acknowledged as one of the great writers of the twentieth century. 

Recently I watched the film of Brighton Rock on TV again, and was reminded how skilful Greene is at giving us a gripping, thrilling crime story, while making us aware of the underlying depths of life as a part of his story, rather than something imposed on it.
 It's not too much to say that Drew Cross does something similar.

One reason why this book Bite Marks works so well simply as a crime story is the skill with which the writer tells us only enough to keep us guessing, enough to make us eager to find out what is actually going on. What is Shane Marks haunted by? What is he trying to conceal? Is he, or is he not, himself the 'monster'? And will he succeed in leaving behind his past, and forging new relationships, with his cop partner Marcus or with Karen?

It's only towards the very end of the book that these things become clear. Meanwhile they tantalise us, and pull us on to read further. But we want to know, not just the solution to the crimes, but who this man is who is at the centre of the story, this man Shane Marks. 


Drew Cross is someone we will be hearing much more about. As they used to say, 'He writes like an angel.' He also gives us a tight plot, and his characters have everything needed in the way of depth and reality. 
I'll be reading this book again, many times. You can buy it for your Kindle here:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/BiteMarks-ebook/dp/B004WE7RIS

Meanwhile, are you one of the nearly 3,000 people who've bought and read Belfast Girls? (Currently at #4 in the Amazon Women's Literary Fiction genre.) If you are, then have you tried my second Irish romantic thriller, Danger Danger? Or my lighter short story collection The Seanachie: Tales of Old Seamus? You can buy them for buttons at these links.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Belfast-Girls/dp/B004DNWS3W      

Or for slightly more as paperbacks.

Enjoy!

See you again soon. Love and God Bless, Gerry 









12 comments:

  1. Very interesting, Gerry :) Why did Tim change his book title?

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  2. Gerry these are two magnificent writers and I'm so happy they got a mention at last.
    I have read both The Dance of the Pheasodile as it was then, and Bite Marks. Excellent reads and you have done them proud. Bite Marks is one of the books on the Night stand at K College and there was a lot of interest in it the last time I was there. Tee xxx

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  3. Catherine, apparently someone warned him that the original title sounded too like paedophile, and that it might put some readers off. As I'm sure you know, the word is a clever mixture of pheasant (brightly coloured, attractive) and crocodile (ugh!) ie how Keith ended up when he was in Harry's body with some of Harry's spirit still there.
    The book seems to be doing really well as a free promo – great to hear it.

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  4. Tee, thanks for your comments. Yes, I'm constantly amazed by how good Night Publishing writers are. I think both Tim and Drew deserve to be best sellers. Tim seems well on the way to it currently – 297 in all ranks on Amazon.com (Free) when I last checked!

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  6. Wow! It's at #9 on Amazon.co.uk (Free) now!

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  7. Hi Gerry, great post, thank you! And both books sound like something I'd like to read but, as you know, my TBR pile is at ceiling height so I'm keeping that finger above the 'purchase' key for now. But feel free to remind me in a few weeks' time. Well done to Night Publishing, it can't be easy to do well in the heavily contested publishing world of today.
    Oh, and I have to agree, the 'paedophile' resemblance did strike me on first glance. Actually, I think 'Harry Walker's Wife' is better anyway. The first title is, well, yes, something I wouldn't remember as easily and that's not what you want when you want people to recommend your books :)
    Best of luck to both authors.

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  8. Yes!Fabulous books and I'm happy to own both of them. Wonderful post, Gerry. You are as always wonderfully supportive of work you enjoy.

    Hugs.

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  9. Jax, thanks for your lovely comments. Yes, Tim Roux has made an excellent job of Night Publishing – over 100 books already published, all of them good and quite a few very successful, and since Bruce Esler left he's been managing it all more or less single handed, with a little help from his friends. The result is that his own books have been neglected – time they started to take off!
    Drew Cross is a first class writer. I find it hard to read a full book online with no break, but that's what I did with Bite Marks.(In spite of the title, which gave me a completely wrong impression of the book!) Titles do matter. I agree with you that Harry Walker's Wife is a more attractive title for Tim's book. Bite Marks is a very clever title, but perhaps something less vampireish and more thrillerish would work better for Drew's book – I wonder?

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  10. Soooz, thanks as ever for your kind support. I'm not surprised that you own both these books – you always pick the good ones!
    I enjoy writing about books I've liked. It always seems pointless to me to write about something you disliked or even hated. I'm constantly amazed by reviewers on Amazon who seem to get a kick out of doing this. If I don't like something, I leave it alone – that's why, if I review a book either on my blog or on Amazon, I'm enthusiastic about it – if I wasn't, the review wouldn't be written at all.
    Your own two great books are part of the Night Publishing success story, of course. I see your first book, Empty Chairs, has now shot right to the top in the Amazon rankings, and the new book, Faint Echoes of Laughter, will undoubtedly follow it swiftly. Huge congratulations – but you really deserve it!

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  11. Im not sure you understood the book properly. I dont think there was any of Harry in Keith's body. Keith occupied Harry's body but not vice versa. What was left of Keith was basically an empty shell. We never saw things from the "real" Harry's point of view.

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  12. Hi, johnny. Interesting thoughts. Certainly, as I said, the book 'isn't about a straight body swop.' But on p. 106 of my copy, Keith plans to ask Ms. Starbright 'about how I could possibly have switched bodies with Harry Walker last time round.' On p.80 Keith wonders about the various possibilities – is Harry in his, Keith's, body or in someone else's, as part of a chain, or still trapped inside his own. We aren't given the answer. Later Chrissie's description of how 'Keith' is behaving, on p.105 might suggest that Harry isn't there – but not conclusively. It's also possible that Keith still has some influence over his own body, as Harry has over his. It's a complex situation, with a wide range of possibilities – 'fascinating', as I said.

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