Out this week...

The Lazarus Prophecy is published in the UK and America as a physical book on Thursday of this week. I'm really pleased about this for two reasons. The first is that I'm old-fashioned enough to think a book hasn't really arrived until it manifests in three-dimensional form with wood-pulped pages bearing a black-inked font. The second is that publishers Bloomsbury Reader told me it would only be produced in physical form if it did sufficiently well as a download first.

The audiobook of The Memory of Trees came out last week and is outselling The Lazarus Prophecy audiobook pretty comfortably. I'm not really surprised by this. Nor does it bother me. Prophecy is a much more ambitious novel on an altogether bigger scale than Trees. But I think Trees is probably the most atmospheric story I've written and I'm really proud of The Forest of Mourning as a fictional location. Plus there's David Rintoul doing the reading. His past performances of my novels have left me stunned at just how much he brings to them.

I'll conclude on a technical note. Someone joked last week that the thorn bush at Gibbet Mourning in Trees had given him nightmares. I replied that it was a real challenge to describe. I won't resort to a thesaurus on principle - if I'm not familiar with the word, I can't expect the reader to be and so won't use it. But I'm not exactly an expert at botany. Consequently I almost ran out of adjectives describing that bush. A challenge, but a rewarding one, made so by the largely positive reaction from readers my thorny creation has so far provoked.
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Published on March 23, 2015 01:39
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message 1: by Chris (new)

Chris I read an advance copy of Lazarus Prophecy and loved it. One of my favorites books for the year. The premise is fascinating and disturbing. I enjoyed telling people that I know that are very religious and enjoyed how badly it freaked them out. I also thoroughly enjoyed Trees. That church in the woods really gave me the creeps.


message 2: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam All I had of Trees when it first occurred to me was a man in a ruined church staring at a stained glass depiction of himself. That was in 2001 and I began to write the novel in 2012, so obviously the image stayed with me. Glad you enjoyed the books and flattered you've taken the trouble to write and say so.


message 3: by Pam (new)

Pam Bischoff I'm looking forward to the Lazarus Prophecy, and am glad to hear it will be published as a physical book. I read The Colony as an e-book and did not enjoy it as much. Finally found Broadmaw Bay on amazon and ordered a used copy as I could not find one to buy or borrow here in the US. I have read all your books thus far and am a huge fan. You have great style and your writing is superb!


message 4: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam Thank you! All I'd ask is that you tell your friends. Nothing helps an author so much as word-of-mouth recommendation, which is priceless. Bay and Prophecy are very different thematically, but I do hope you enjoy them both.


message 5: by Susan (new)

Susan I loved Lazarus Prophecy - made sure my 5 star review is posted on Amazon .com and uk. Have certainly recommended your books in the past and enjoyed them very much.


message 6: by F.G. (new)

F.G. Cottam It's inspiring, Susan, when someone takes the time and trouble to say that sort of thing. Makes the effort (and the solitude of writing) seem worthwhile.


message 7: by Susan (new)

Susan Thank you for your kind comment and all the enjoyment your books have given me.


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