In the Swim by Jan Needle
One of the beauties of swimming in the
ebook pool is the flexibility that comes with it. I recently finished the
second book in what I intend to be a series of thrillers about an odd
partnership between a hardened cynic of a journalist/investigator in his forties
and a woman not yet thirty who is learning the tricks of this vulgar old trade
the hard way.
The first book has been out for about a
year now, and has had nothing but five and four stars on Amazon, and a few good
formal reviews to boot. It’s called Kicking Off, and is about the modern bleed
of criminality into the more respectable world – high finance, politics, the
self-styled ‘moral’ press.
It starts with the ‘extra-judicial’ death
of a rooftop rioter in a Scottish jail, which leads the authorities into a
desperate, and spreading, cover-up. At the same time a massively rich
businessman is unexpectedly given a sentence much harsher than the one he had
paid good money for, while an American super-criminal is targeted by law
enforcers he was confident were on his side. The politician who rises to power
on the back of this swamp has the moral compass of an alley cat.
My two protagonists – who in the nature of
the game I became extremely fond of and intimate with – are called Andrew
Forbes and Rosanna Nixon. I know precisely where both of them came from, and
part of them are obviously me (romanticized). Rosanna is called the Mouse, but
underneath her soft exterior is a blade of Scottish steel, while Forbes is a
hard drinking widower who is prepared to take almost any risk to nail a
wrong-doer (for a story.)
It is a hard world, vile, sexy, violent,
and I think I probably reveled in it. But when I came to write the follow up –
called The Bonus Boys – I found an odd thing inside myself. This one is about a
dreadful multiple killing in a quiet country house in West Sussex. Think,
maybe, In Cold Blood without the lonely prairies. But as I wrote, and rewrote,
and rewrote – I found myself cowering from some of the sex and nastiness. It is
horrid, like Kicking Off, with some appalling people in it. But I did not want
to examine the vileness in such minute, microscopic detail.
I wanted to draw a veil. I wanted to
indicate extreme suffering without plunging my hands wrist-deep in blood and
fluids. I found that the story I was telling was too horrifying for me to tell.
I began to (for want of a better description) tone it down. Not just the
violence, either. My two main pre-readers, both women, found the sex
disturbing, too. Neither could express their responses exactly, and neither
thought that I had done it wrong. They just wished it was not so raw. So ‘in
your face.’
By the time I had finished The Bonus Boys,
it was a different book from the one I started. And I reread Kicking Off and
wished that I could revisit that as well, in the same spirit. Too vile, too
violent – and for some readers, certainly, a hard, hard read. A friend of mine
who used to be a Detective Inspector said he thought it was terrific, and
terrifically authentic. But he could not say he ‘liked’ it, under any
circumstances.
The realization was quite a long time
coming. The Bonus Boys was almost ready to ‘go up’ when it occurred to me that Kicking Off was not set
in stone. Imagine what a publisher would say if you told him you wanted a
second bite at the cherry! But in the ebook world, everything is possible. The
excitement, let me tell you, was acute.
So now I’m working on the prison thriller
anew. No bowdlerizing, oh dear no – how can I bowdlerize my own work? I’m
making it more like I want the book to be. I’m improving it. And I’m able to
hold back on The Bonus Boys until Matti Gardner, my techie wizard son, has
recast Kicking Off. Then I’ll ask advice from my Authors Electric friends who
know about marketing and publishing and so on, and hit the world anew. At the very least it will be flagged up as a new edition.
A package, maybe? One free taster for a few
days, then the old one-two? There are generous brains aplenty to be picked.
Watch out, friends!
ANOTHER WONDER OF THE EWORLD. A highly thought-of conventional publisher has just contacted me out of the blue haze of gmail to tell me they’ve got hold of Killing Time at Catterick and are considering it for publication. Such fun! What would my admirers at the Army Rumour Service make of that, I wonder…
With the way public opinion is visibly changing about our military 'role', time might finally be on its side.
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