The real gatekeepers

This review/email was in my inbox when I got home from work:

Makes it all worthwhile…

πŸ˜‰

Saffi

A tale of two cities

As the US edition of Sugar & Spice starts to gather momentum on both .com and .co.uk (and with a lot more speed than when we first released S&S!) sites and has just stormed in at #47 in Police procedurals:

We have to ask ourselves as the writers of a Brit crime thriller, do people in this country prefer reading Americanised crime fiction?

Personally, my own preference is yes. I have always preferred American crime novels to British, but that is just me. What do the readers think? What are the experiences of fellow British crime writers?

Answers par avion to… πŸ˜‰

Euro vision?

Sugar & Spice has just received its 5th 5 star review in a row.

People have said it is a ‘love it’ or ‘hate it’ book. I can take that. Either way, people are talking about it…BUT, we are selling thousands more copies in Europe (UK primarily) than on .com. Why?

We even re-wrote it for the US market. It’s going well, made a steady start, but it isn’t setting the world on fire.

But… we’re in pretty good company:

We can’t figure it out. Why are the rest of the world not buying into it? Is it because of the subject matter? Is it because people outside of Britain don’t like Brit thrillers? OR…

are we just being too ambitious?

I mean…

3,657 out of 750,000 books without an agent or publisher or any kind of advertising… in less than 6 months?

Maybe we’re just greedy!

πŸ˜‰

Saffi

Get it now:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sugar-Spice-ground-breaking-debut-thriller/dp/B004AYDK

http://www.amazon.com/Sugar-Spice-Thriller-re-written-ebook/dp/B004W0IJCU

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sugar-Spice-Thriller-re-written-ebook/dp/B004W0IJCU

Saffina Desforges – what is she doing?

Hi!

It’s been a few days since I blogged (and for very good reason, books don’t write themselves you know) and I thought I might just put up a random update;

We have just hit 50,000 sales forΒ Sugar & SpiceΒ on Amazon alone since January 2011. That is pretty incredible considering we set ourselves a target of 150 a month from March!

Last month alone, we sold just under 21,000 books in the UK. Just wait a second while that statement sinks in…

The US edition of the book Sugar & SpiceΒ (.com) Sugar & SpiceΒ (UK) is slowly starting to take off too. We can now say that we have 2 books in the Top 100 charts on Amazon UK!

We had a very exciting phone call last night too. More on that at a later date.

We are hoping to have Book One of the Rose Red Series Snow White released by the end of July. Check back here for a sneak preview of the new cover in the coming few weeks; in the meantime, you can drop in on Ella’s blog for some juicy goss:Β Rose Red the inside story

On top of all that, as soon as Snow White goes live, we will be completing Equilibrium: First BloodΒ Book One of a dark, adult, Urban fantasty trilogy.

Phew, did I miss anything??

Some people say that writing is a solitary pastime. Well not for me it isn’t, not with a co-writer and so many characters to keep me company.

One hundred and thirty four days ago, nobody even knew we had written a book, now look!

They also say that you should stick to one genre – I say, “I have neverΒ done as I was told.”

Watch this space…

πŸ˜‰

PS. Look out for a forthcoming article in The Sunday Telegraph mentioning Sugar & Spice.

Sayonara Osama! Bin Laden bites the dust. A writer’s view on the bad guys…

Well, as much as I am a lover, not a fighter and I don’t condone the taking of a life in any circumstances, I have to say, there will be no tears shed from these baby blues for Osama Bin Laden.

The guy was a monster and no-one will ever forget the devastation that was 9-11. So yeah, bye, bye Bin Laden, may your sleep with the fishes be fitfull.

But what about the bad guys? As a writer, you have to love ’em. Every book has a protagonist and a bad guy (the technical term I believe is antagonist), without them, there is no story.

I mean, what’s the point of a book if your protag doesn’t have any obstacles in their way, right?

Which leads me nicely into my intro; guys, meet Mr. Nathan Hunter, The Huntsman.

“Boo. Hisssssssss.”

Obviously, that isn’t him.

He would never advertise the fact that he was evil, he doesn’t have to, you kinda know from the deadness of his eyes. The Huntsman in book one of the Rose Red crime series, Snow White, is a right piece of work. He thinks nothing of spraying basement walls with the grey matter that keeps you upright (other than it might mess up his Armani suit) and he certainly doesn’t fret over how many fingers you leave behind after his little ‘chats’ if you owe his boss (Queenie – now there’s another story for another day) money…he really isn’t someone you would introduce to your dad; but do you know what? I love him!

Sure, it’s great when your protag gets the girl and catches the bad guy (there’s more to that statement than I care to elaborate at this point) but the real fun in breathing life into these characters for you, isn’t with the ‘Little house on the prairie’ endings, it’s with the messy stuff.

There’s been so many great bad guys. I did a blog a zillion years ago on Robert de Niro’s character from Cape Fear once (you can read it in the archives) but there are just sooo many other great bad guys who you love to hate:

Hannibal Lecter, The Joker, the weird guy with the bug eyes from Con Air, the list is endless, but there is one who stands out a million miles above the rest:

Jack Nicholson in ‘The Shining‘ is probably the supreme bad guy. What a book and what a film, perfect. Couldn’t have picked anyone else for the part.

And I’ll just throw in a little shout out for the girls. Best ever scary Mary character, Kathy Bates in ‘Misery’. “What an oogie mess.”

When you’re writing a book, it’s kinda like a film running in your head anyway. You can see the pictures, hear their voices and almost envisage the credits rolling at the end. You even know what songs you want for the musical score. Writing a book is deconstruction of a movie.

And with all great movies (or books) comes a happy ending. Sure. And as a writer, you like tying up the loose ends and hoping that the reader breathes a huge sigh of relief when the witch is dead, BUT, you also kinda have fun thinking that somehow, they might just come back! πŸ˜‰

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