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Thursday 23 April 2020

A Novel Conversation with Wendy Percival and Max Rainsford

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#NovConv
To be a little different from the usual 
'meet the author' 
let's meet 
character...
Max Rainsford


from

Q: Hello, I’m Helen, host of Novel Conversations, please do make yourself comfortable. Would you like a drink? Tea, coffee, wine – something stronger? You’ll find a box of chocolates and a bowl of fruit on the table next to you, please do help yourself. I believe you are a character in Wendy Percival’s novel The Malice of Angels. Would you like to introduce yourself? Are you a lead character or a supporting role?  

A: Thanks, Helen. A beer would be great. My name’s Max Rainsford. I’m a journalist – a former colleague of the book’s protagonist Esme Quentin’s late husband, Tim. As to whether I’m a lead character or a supporting role… well, let’s say if it wasn’t for me approaching Esme at the beginning of the book, there’d be no story!

Q: What genre is the novel and what is it about?
A: It’s a genealogy mystery and it concerns the wartime disappearance of a nurse in 1943. But at the start of the book, I’m more interested in the unsolved murder of an old soldier which Tim and I investigated when we were still wet behind the ears. Turns out there’s a link to this nurse Esme’s researching.

Q: No spoilers, but are you a ‘goodie’ or a ‘baddie’? (Or maybe you are both?)
A: Mmm. Tricky question. I’m on the side of the good guys as far as I’m concerned, but Esme might tell you different. She has a thing about my moral compass!

Q:  Tell me about another character in the novel – maybe your best friend, lover or partner … or maybe your arch enemy!
A: There’s one guy in the story that I’m particularly interested in – Lloyd Gallimore. Bit of a sly political animal. I’m convinced he’s got something to hide so I’ve been digging around in his past. That’s how I found out… but hang on. I can’t tell you that or I’d spoil the story. I’ll just say my investigative journalist antennae wasn’t far wrong.

Q: Is this the only novel you have appeared in, or are there others in a series?
A: This is my first time. Esme likes to keep her past nailed down, you know? She wasn’t exactly pleased when I showed up, hassling her for help. But in the end we helped one another.

Q: What is one of your least favourite scenes you appear in?
A: The one when Esme tells me exactly what she thinks of me. She pulls no punches, I can tell you that. Ouch!

Q: And your favourite scene?
A: The time Esme & me went to London to see the old boy – a former SOE officer, that’s a Special Operations Executive. He had some fascinating stories to tell – and a few secrets too.

Q: Tell me a little about your author. Has she/he written any other books?
A: Yes, Malice of Angels is the third novel in her Esme Quentin series. She’s written a couple of novellas, too. Her books are inspired by the stuff she digs up while researching her family history.

Q: Is your author working on anything else at the moment?
A: Yes, she is. Esme Quentin mystery number 4. This time it’s inspired by the story behind the last women in England to be executed for witchcraft in Devon in 1682.

Q: How do you think authors can be helped or supported by readers or groups? What does your author think is the most useful for him/her personally?
A: Adding a simple review on Amazon, Goodreads or sharing their thoughts on social media about a book they’ve enjoyed, saying what they loved about it is always appreciated.

Q: If your author was to host a dinner party what guests would he/she invite and why? Maximum nine guests – real, imaginary, alive or dead.

Author Elizabeth George: Her Inspector Lynley books were always a favourite of my author’s and a great inspiration, as was Ms George’s book about her writing life, Write Away. So much so, that when the first Esme Quentin book Blood-Tied was published, my author wrote to thank Ms George to tell her how helpful the book had been in her journey. Ms George very kindly wrote back to congratulate her on her success at being published.

 A Great Deliverance

Her late mum, Pat: Pat was a keen writer of children’s stories, mainly, though was never published. She died a long time before my author began writing herself so it would fabulous to share what’s happened in the last 30 years, in writing and life in general.


Patricia Shelley (nee Barton) 1975
Typewriter, Write, Tap, Keys, Paper

Victoria Wood: Another lady who’s sadly missed. Such a wonderful sense of humour! Apparently she wasn’t as gregarious as one might imagine so chuckling at life’s little anomalies with just a few people around a dinner table would seem most appropriate.

Victoria Wood.jpg

Julie Walters: And you can’t have Victoria Wood without Julie Walters, can you? I’m sure Julie would enjoy spending time with her friend again. And it would make Victoria feel more at home.

Julie Walters at the Paddington Premiere.jpg

Author Robert Goddard: another favourite author. Though my author would want to grill him on why he’s stopped writing the type of books she enjoyed most - the ones which had a very clever historical connection within the plot.
Robert Goddard


C J Sansom’s Tudor character, Matthew Shardlake: my author would love to hear about what life is like for this mild-mannered lawyer, and his hopes for the future.

 Heartstone book cover.jpg

Thank you Max, it was a pleasure talking to you. Would your author like to add a short excerpt? meanwhile,  would you like another beer? 
I’ll have one as well I think!
Salute! Here’s to writing a best seller!

Wendy
CONNECT WITH Wendy Percival

Universal Amazon link: http://mybook.to/MaliceofAngels

Excerpt from Chapter 1 of 
MALICE OF ANGELS, by Wendy Percival
It wasn’t until she turned into the narrow medieval passageway of Fish Street that Esme Quentin suspected she was being followed. He – if it was a he, it was difficult to be sure, encased as the walker was in a hooded trench coat – seemed to be keeping his distance. He slowed as she slowed, held back if she paused, as though biding his time before approaching her. Perhaps she should grab the initiative and challenge him? Demand to know who he was and what he thought he was doing creeping up on a middle-aged woman in the dark?
She stopped and looked round, but he must have pulled back as he’d disappeared into the shadows.
She shook her head and carried on down the cobbled street with a greater sense of urgency. Had he been in the records office? There was something vaguely familiar about the way he walked, a loping manner which she felt she should know. Thinking about it, she may have seen him before. He’d been watching from across the road as she’d hurried into the archives that morning. Had he been waiting for someone? Waiting for her? So why not come right out and seek her out? Why hover on the perimeter with intent only to follow her at the end of the day? And what did he want? To engage her genealogy research services? Perhaps he was shy or had a dark family secret he needed her help to uncover and was coy about explaining it. She’d been engaged by a couple of eccentric clients in her time but not one who’d used stalking as their modus operandi.
But she had no time to waste speculating. She’d already cut it fine by staying so long in the records office – she should have headed home ages ago. But she’d succumbed to her usual habit of being sucked into a story as her research unfolded. Once hooked she always found it so difficult to drag herself away.
She paused at the corner of the street to glance behind her. All was quiet. Perhaps she’d imagined the whole thing….
She let out a long sigh and allowed herself an indulgent giggle at her imagined melodrama, blaming her oversensitivity on an afternoon of reading first-hand accounts of wartime traumas.
The street narrowed and as Esme plunged into the shadow between the two buildings, someone grabbed her arm.




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2 comments:

  1. Absolutely love the Esme Quentin stories. Max is new and it will be interesting to see if he and Esme become business partners - or 'an item'!!! Still think these stories should be on TV ...

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