I have the cover for the next Delamere Files novel, ‘A Case of Make Believe’, and you can see it further down this post. The book will be available in the next couple of weeks. As with all of my novels, it will be available in paperback from Amazon, in Kindle format and available in Kindle Unlimited. The series is turning out to be very popular, I am pleased to say. People like a good mystery, historical accuracy and an occasional love plot.
Here’s the blurb, and beneath that, a link to the full cover, again designed by Andjela.
A Case of Make Believe Blurb
Jack is left in charge of the agency, its new staff, and a missing person case that arrives unexpectedly from the Cheap Street Mission. A fourteen-year-old boy has vanished, and his older brother, Simeon, is desperate to find him. At first, the only clue is a cutthroat razor, but as Simeon’s past unfolds, so the case darkens with complications.
As they race to find the boy, Jack and Will’s journey takes them from the unbelievable illusions of Piccadilly’s Egyptian Hall to an opium den in Whitechapel, and from a molly house to the sewers deep beneath London. What the Delamere detectives don’t know is that if they fail to find the boy in time, the razor will play a gruesome part in a very public death.
Kidnapping, illusions, East End rent boys, and murders in the style of Grand Guignol, the fifth book in the Delamere Files series is the darkest yet. The books should be read in order.
Click the image to reveal the full cover and let me know what you think. (Ps. I know there should be a hyphen in Make-Believe, but there is a reason there isn’t which will become clear when you read the story. Inserts wink emoji.)
It’s nearly the end of the month and ‘A Case of Make Believe’ is off to the proofreader tomorrow. The blurb is more or less done, the author’s notes are complete apart from a section about sewers (you’ll see), the cover is done, and I will finish it when I have had the back text checked. Usually, Andjela adds this and finishes the cover but she’s due to have a baby any day now, so we’ve made this alternative arrangement.
I’ll show you the full cover on Saturday, so stay tuned.
Coming up next month, apart from the release of ‘A Case of Make Believe’, we have two promos to help out with. One is what’s becoming my standard (and successful) Mayhem and Motives promo where several of us mystery writers get together to cross-share titles via one page. The others are an LGBTQ etc., Romance and Fiction promo, into which I have entered Banyak & Fecks, and an LGBTQ etc., romance promo into which I have put ‘The Mentor of Barrenmoor Ridge’ and ‘The Mentor of Lonemarsh House.’ There will be a newsletter coming out with all the details soon, so make sure you are subscribed.
You can subscribe here or by using the box at the top of the righthand column on any page.
Bobby
For those who have read ‘Bobby’, the biography of my gay godfather, you will know that he was acquainted with Shirley Bassey (now Dame Shirley Bassey, singer of ‘Goldfinger’, ‘Diamonds are Forever’ and other great songs). I am about to send a copy of the book to Dame Shirley, or to her office, which may or may not reach her, because of all the famous people he met in his life, she is the only one still alive. Bob would have liked her to have a copy, I am sure, and I’d be interested to know if she remembers him, and the way her dog used to leap into his pond after she’d just had it groomed. (The dog, not the pond.) So, that’s this week’s admin, as is composing and arranging the newsletter, sending off the MS for ‘Make Believe’ and starting on the next book… Whatever that is going to be… I will have a look around some old newspapers from February 1893 and see what springs to mind.
The pieces of paper have come down from around my desk because the story is complete. The notebook is crammed with scribbles and things to check, but otherwise, the desk is more or less clear. Until the next time.
Things I have to do next:
I want to change a couple of names in ‘A Case of Make Believe’ because I want to use the names Fox and Sheridan.
I want to check over chapters 19 and 27 again because the point of view shifts and so does the tense, and I want to be sure it works.
Then, I must send off a copy of ‘Bobby’ to Shirley Bassey’s admin address in case she’s interested to remember him and her time in London in the 1950s.
Meanwhile, I must prepare the ‘Make Believe’ MS to send to be proofed.
But before that, I must come up with the final blurb and the author’s notes so they can be checked too.
Along the way, we need to apply for Neil’s Irish passport renewal, because it only contains two of his names and his UK one has all three, and the UK office won’t renew his UK passport until he’s changed his Irish one to reflect theirs, and it’s all very petty but has to be done and needs a covering letter.
(Must write a covering letter for Dame Shirley’s copy of ‘Bobby’ too.)
I need to get the ISBN number of the next book, and set up the front matter details.
Which reminds me, I must change the ‘Where There’s a Will’ files now the guys have added the title of the next book to the very end of that MS – this won’t affect sales or reads.
What else…?
Must get a newsletter ready as I have a couple of promos to announce for September.
I think that’s today’s list of things to do once I’ve posted this post.
Here’s the good news: I have finished the initial draft of the Delamere Files book five, ‘A Case of Make Believe’, and am now working on the tidy-up draft. Meanwhile, Andjela has made me a cover and here’s the title…
I will show you the rest of the excellent cover nearer the release date which should be next month. Andjela is just about to have a baby so we’re sending her her all our best wishes from Greece, and I know you will too.
While I’ve been doing that, and she’s been doing the cover, Daz over in India has done me a sketch of the new Delamere detective, which is something else I will hold back for now – we can’t have all the goodies released at the same time, I must whet some appetites.
What I can reveal, though, is that ‘Make Believe’ is packed with historical detail that’s true not only to the period but also to the day on which the story starts. I have used messages in newspapers that appeared on January 10th, 1893, and I have used a programme from Maskelyne and Cooke’s Egyptian Hall mystery and illusion performances of the time, plus other headlines and details I found in the newspaper archive. Also, a couple of scenes take place in the London sewers, so I have been down there (on a virtual tour), I’ve poured over the maps, looked into the founding of the London County Council, the Board of Works and other such organisations, and have used my 1888 street atlas of the city to locate an opium den and a molly house (boy brothel). If you thought ‘Where There’s a Will’ was heading towards dark territory, you wait until you see what ‘A Case of Make Believe’ is all about. You may have to make yourself believe such things actually went on in 1893.
Remember, the promos that keep us afloat.
While you’re waiting for ‘Make Believe’ to come along, be sure to check out this month’s promos to find some new authors and new titles to read. Here are both banners with the links built in.
Some writers sit as a tray in a shed, some writers use libraries, hotels and other public places. Then, you have writers who have garret rooms, use the kitchen table, or scribble in books when in the park. Me? I am lucky enough to have a room large enough to house a desk and a corner PC unit. I do my reading research, reading, plotting, noting and handwritten work at the old desk, and everything computer-wise in the corner.
Today, I thought I’d show you around my writing corner as I’ve not done this for a while, and recently, I have had many new readers buy and enjoy my books. So, here’s a welcome to them, and a quick tour of where the hard work happens.
First, the long shot
This is a wide-angle photo taken from my office door, to give you an idea of the layout. Just off stage to the left is a bookshelf (the contents of which could be a blog post or two on their own). The trunk I’ve had since I was eight and went to boarding school. Apparently, it was donated to my grandfather first and then to me, and it is an original Louis Vuitton from around 1912. The little case on top of it is a modern filing cabinet Neil bought me. The windows are open because it is 32° (at 3.30 in the morning – I couldn’t sleep), and the lights beyond are the masts of a ship. The fan on the trunk is already doing its work.
I will come back to the corner unit in detail in a moment. First, skip to the right and the door leads to Neil’s office/a spare room where our nephew stays when he visits. Then, we have a printer where the ink costs more than the machine, so I only use it for scanning, and have someone else print documents as and when I need them because it’s cheaper. Bottle of water? At this time of year, I get through about three of these a day, that’s 4.5 litres. The poster and pictures on the wall? The poster is all the Clearwater Mysteries front covers printed out, a gift from my PA, Jenine, and above it is a photo of Neil and me not long after we first met 27 years ago. Moving left, behind the lamp is a print of one of my mother’s paintings, and a map of Kent, my home county.
Now, Closer.
Okay, so on top of the desk, left to right, we have an old school bell I bought for a production of my musical ‘Time and Again’ back in 1997. The three photographs are 1) my godfather, whose life story you can read in my recent release ‘Bobby.’ This photo was taken in WWII, probably around 1940. 2) is a photo my cover designer, Andjela, put together for me. It’s Neil’s face on an old photo body, and I used the same image for Professor Fleet on the cover of ‘1892.’ 3) That’s our godson, Harry, the day after his 16th birthday when Neil took him SCUBA diving. (He’ll be 17 on Tuesday; tempus fugit!) The tiny image beside it is the Serbian National Theatre in Belgrade. We were there. I saw this old postcard, liked it, bought it, and then found a street artist drawing the same building, so bought that sketch too. I just liked it.
As you can see, there are several pieces of paper stuck to this corner unit. On the left, those pieces are my notes about my Book Funnel group promos, the things which are keeping us fed at the moment. There’s a banner at the bottom of this post linking to the currently running ones in case you’re looking for more good reads. These pieces of paper remind me of my dates and obligations. I have two running this month, three in September, and have lined up one for October so far. On the right, those pieces of paper are my notes for ‘A Case of Make Believe’, and they go along with the notebook that’s there beneath my arm support, currently in use because I have tennis elbow thanks to spending so long each day in repetitive typing mode.
Dotted around the desk, you can see on the left, a glow-in-the-dark model of the witch from the Aurora model kit (remake, not original). If you look closely you can see, top shelf left, my one and only remaining Dartington crystal glass beside one I bought in Prague in 1995, Bohemian crystal, and beside that, a small bear, a present from my husband. Then, I have my other glasses and some tablets, a beaker of water, and a cup of tea (must go and make another shortly).
Centre, obviously, is the computer just waking up and giving me a daily dose of how my AVG security is kind of ‘Meh,’ but it’ll do. AVG begrudgingly tells me that, and they’re doing it because I’m not giving in to their demands and buying every last and unnecessary security add-on. Then, finally, to the right of all that, my reading/writing glasses, some electrolytes because it’s summer, and some notebooks.
Perhaps not the most fascinating of writing corners, but it works for me. I can turn my head and look at the sea and sky, or I can stare straight ahead at the screen. Beyond it is a magnetic noticeboard on which is currently pinned a list of my favourite typos (to remind me to check them when an MS is complete), a certificate to say I adopted a Galapagos penguin in 2020, and out of sight (is out of mind) a reminder of what bills have to be paid when.
That’s me. That’s where I sit sometimes for eight hours a day banging our stories and researching the past. Today, I shall be doing just that and, as I have an early start, may even finish draft one of ‘A Case of Make Believe’ by the end of the working day – which will be around 10.00 a.m. as I was up at 2.00.
Here’s the link to one of the currently running promos. Feel free to give it a click and browse the books.
I’ve been working on ‘A Case of Make Believe’ but I have been going about it in an odd way – odd for me. Usually, I start at the beginning and plough on until the end, then go back and start again. This time, though, I have already written the climax in first draft form, and I have taken the story to almost the crisis just before the climax, and now I’ve stopped and gone back to the beginning. Why? Ah ha! I am glad you asked…
Something was missing. Every story should have some kind of emotional throughline that will engage the reader. In ‘Finding a Way’ and ‘A Fall From Grace’ it was Jack and Larkin gradually getting together, so it was a kind of falling in love throughline. There’s also one in ‘Where There’s a Will’, but for the secondary characters, and not so much of one in ‘Follow the Van’, apart from Jack possibly being misled. However, when we get to book five, ‘A Case of Make Believe’, Jack is settled in his love life, and Will is happy, but there was no emotional tug. Yet, there should be and there is… there was… I just hadn’t realised what it was. So now, I am going back over draft one which is 80% completed, to complete draft two up to 80%, and while I am doing it, I am adding in and highlighting the emotional throughline that was there but not there.
I know what I mean!
Hopefully, I will have the second draft/first draft completed by the end of the month, and then I will set about the other things which need to happen; cover, editing, proofing etc. So, we should be looking at September for release?
Meanwhile, I am thrilled to say ‘Bobby’ is doing very well and my godfather’s story is being widely read – so he will be happy about that. I am also taking part in another BookFunnel/Book Mojo promo, so any clicks you can give the banner below would be greatly appreciated. (No cost to you, but each click brings me a better reputation.) these promos are working really well for me, so it would be great if you could support them with a click.
I should be here on Saturday. I missed last Saturday for various reasons (having a cold and no motivation, mainly), but I’m back up and running now, and I will think of something to tell you by then. Happy reading!
Here’s an update on my current work in progress, ‘A Case of Make Believe’, which is still a working title and not yet finalised. I am up to chapter 17, around 65,000 words and it’s strange…
Usually, a story will flow in order of events, and after I’ve done the first draft, I might go back and move things around. However, I usually start writing at chapter one and wander forwards from there. With this one, I wanted to get the finale down on paper so much I have already written it, and that’s very unusual for me. I needed what was the opening chapter to tie up exactly with the finale/climax, so maybe that was why I did it that way around. Now, though, that opening chapter has become the ‘smoking gun’ and won’t appear at the beginning, it will have to slip in later on, otherwise, I will have given away too much at the start…
It’s still interesting, though, how things can be chopped and changed, and how as a writer you come to instinctively know when something is or isn’t right. At first, the opening (a piece by Larkin Chase published in a newspaper in 1893) seemed to be exactly right for how I wanted things to start. Now, though, 65,000 words in, I can see that it needs to come later. The important thing, though, is that it’s written, and as I always say, ‘Don’t get it right, get it written.’ Then later, you can get it right.
What’s also interesting about this one is that I feel like I want to get to the denouement already. I aim for around 90K to 100K words per novel these days, so the reader has plenty to get their teeth into. This one, at 65K feels like I could be done with it by 70K, and that sets off alarm bells for me. It means there’s something missing, and I know what it is. So, that will have to be written in when I get to draft two.
Still, it’s fun, there are a couple of new characters, a lot of darkness and villainy, and some not very nice things going on in the criminal underworld of London in 1893, making this one probably my darkest to date.
It will also be thrilling, I hope, and talking of thrilling… Here’s another list of over 100 titles for you that will interest you if you’re into thrillers and adventure novels. Click the banner, head to the page and have a free browse to see if there’s anything there you’d like to read while you wait for ‘A Case of Make Believe.’
That’s the title of the biography of my godfather. I started working with him on this in 2004 when I was selling my house in the UK. We spent over eight hours in interviews while he told me his life history, and it’s a fascinating one. It’s also a very gay one because he knew he was ‘different’ back in the 1920s, and left home when he was 14 (in 1933) to explore London, where he became a rent boy. He did that job, as he saw it, from the age of 14 to 19, before going to war in the Navy. There is much more that comes after too.
I am hoping that I’ll be able to put up some of our recorded interviews as audio files on my website within the next couple of months. More news about that in due course.
Meanwhile…
August Promos!
This is how I am getting my books known, and your participation is much appreciated. All you need do is click the link to the promo and browse some titles, no need to buy anything unless you want to, and it doesn’t cost a thing. What it does do is help authors like me receive more attention, and that’s always a good thing.
This is a varied selection of 27 titles including biographies.
It also runs all month.
I have entered my biography of my gay godfather into this promo in the hope it will gather more attention. I have to say, it’s done very well in its first month, and that’s because I have been able to share it on social media historical info pages and groups. Places like ‘Memories of Old London’ have been interested because Bobby was from south London and lived most of his life in the city, while his life spanned from 1919 to 2007.
That’s it for now. I hope you have a great August. Thanks as always for your interest and support.
Yours
Jackson
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