Showing posts with label Anna Jaquiery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anna Jaquiery. Show all posts

Friday, 17 April 2015

Blog Tour: Death in the Rainy Season by Anna Jaquiery

Phnom Penh, Cambodia; the rainy season. When a French man, Hugo Quercy, is found brutally murdered, Commandant Serge Morel finds his holiday drawn to an abrupt halt. Quercy - dynamic, well-connected - was the magnetic head of a humanitarian organisation which looked after the area's neglected youth. Opening his investigation, the Parisian detective soon finds himself buried in one of his most challenging cases yet. Morel must navigate this complex and politically sensitive crime in a country with few forensic resources, and armed with little more than a series of perplexing questions: what was Quercy doing in a hotel room under a false name? What is the significance of his recent investigations into land grabs in the area? And who could have broken into his home the night of the murder? Becoming increasingly drawn into Quercy's circle of family and friends - his adoring widow, his devoted friends and bereft colleagues - Commandant Morel will soon discover that in this lush land of great beauty and immense darkness, nothing is quite as it seems . . . A deeply atmospheric crime novel that bristles with truth and deception, secrets and lies: 
Death in the Rainy Season is a compelling mystery that unravels an exquisitely wrought human tragedy.

I am delighted to Welcome Anna Jaquiery to my blog today to talk about the writing process. I am always fascinated to know how others write, so this is a superb piece for me to be hosting as part of the 'Death in the Rainy Season' blog tour.

The writing process. I always find it interesting as a writer to read about the writing habits of others. Recently, I read something in which the British historian William Dalrymple described a typical day working on his novel. It sounded blissfully structured. I envied him the order and serenity of his writing life, though I am sure in reality, life gets in the way of his writing too.

When you publish a novel, people tend to ask about the writing process. Mine tends to be more or less the same each time. Before I start writing a novel, I do my research. With my first novel The Lying-Down Room, I researched baptism, and the influence of foreign religions and sects in Russia following the fall of the Soviet Union. With my second book, Death in the Rainy Season, I read books and articles on Cambodia, spoke to people who know the country well, and took a trip there. It wasn’t my first visit, but this time I went solely for the purpose of research. My third crime novel is set in a suburb north of Paris and deals with immigration. I’ve been immersing myself in everything from French crime novels and music to documentaries and films on Paris’s outer suburbs.

As far as plot goes, I tend to start with a premise, and a vague outline, nothing more. I don’t plan ahead very much, which, for me, tends to make the writing more interesting. I don’t want to know everything that happens before I’ve started writing a book. Where would the fun be in that? But I have a clear picture of the setting and of the characters, right from the start.

The writing process is all about discipline and endurance. Once I start writing, I write every day, diligently. For me, it’s important not to step away from the story for too long. I want to stay ‘in’ it as much as I can. I make time each day, even if it means sitting up late with coffee when everyone’s asleep. There are days when I feel like I’m just adding words and sentences to a story, almost mechanically, and I know I’ll have to go back and bring those sections to life. There are other days where I feel completely immersed in the story and the writing flows.

Because I don’t plan much, there are discoveries along the way. I like that part of the process too. The best moment, though, is when I’ve finished the book. There is still the editing process, which is hugely important - but there is nothing better than that feeling you get, when you’ve reached the end.
  

I'm the last spot on the blog tour, but be sure to check out the rest!

 Death in the Rainy Season is available to buy now from Mantle and all good book shops.

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Thank you to Anna and Sam Eades for allowing me to participate in the blog tour.

Thursday, 16 April 2015

Review: Death in the Rainy Season by Anna Jaquiery

Death in the Rainy Season by Anna Jaquiery
Publisher:
Mantle
Release date: 9 April 2015
Rating: ****
Back cover blurb: Phnom Penh, Cambodia; the rainy season. When a French man, Hugo Quercy, is found brutally murdered, Commandant Serge Morel finds his holiday drawn to an abrupt halt. Quercy - dynamic, well-connected - was the magnetic head of a humanitarian organisation which looked after the area's neglected youth. Opening his investigation, the Parisian detective soon finds himself buried in one of his most challenging cases yet. Morel must navigate this complex and politically sensitive crime in a country with few forensic resources, and armed with little more than a series of perplexing questions: what was Quercy doing in a hotel room under a false name? What is the significance of his recent investigations into land grabs in the area? And who could have broken into his home the night of the murder? Contd...



Death in the Rainy Season is Anna Jaquiery's second novel featuring the French detective Serge Morel. A detective whom I absolutely adore!

Death in the Rainy Season is a beautifully written crime novel. Is there such a thing as literary crime fiction? If not, I think there should be.

Morel is on holiday in Cambodia when Hugo Quercy is found dead in a hotel room. As the deceased is of French origin with family of political importance back in France, Morel is called in to investigate.

Reluctant at first, Morel soon realises that the Cambodian Police are largely incompetent and almost certainly corrupt, so he sets about the investigation with a quite lone determination, calling upon others only when strictly neccessary.

Morel uses his skill as a detective to form relationships and get to know those that were close to Hugo; the picture they paint of the deceased is not a particularly favourable one. It seems that it would almost be easier to ask who didn't kill Hugo, than who did?

One thing I did miss slightly in this novel was the presense of Lila, Morel's colleague back in the French police. I appreciate it would be unrealistic to have her fly over to get involved with the investigation, but I just loved their relationship so much the first time around.

I don't want to say too much more, as I want you to read this one for yourselves. Death in the Rainy Season is another brilliant novel by Anna Jaquiery and I cannot wait to see what she has in store for Serge Morel next.


I am pleased to announce that I will be taking part in the Death in the Rainy Season blog tour on Friday 17th April:

 

Death in the Rainy Season is available to buy now from Amazon online and all good book shops.

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Thank you to Sam Eades at Pan Macmillan who sent me an advanced proof of this novel in exchange for an honest review.