Read Into the Darkest Corner Page 41


  What single thing would improve your writing life?

  More stationery.

  What distracts you from writing?

  It’s funny you should ask that, because as I’m trying to think of an answer my seven-year-old son is in the bath shouting out random questions about the moon, whale sharks, bike riding and what would happen if he drank all the bathwater. Now he wants to show me how he’s discovered he can spit in two different directions at once by putting his finger in his mouth (a useful skill to remember for the future). Needless to say I often end up reading or writing the same sentence twice, and often I find I’ve written half a sentence and I have no idea how I originally intended to complete it. It’s a wonder I manage anything coherent at all.

  Are you working on a new novel?

  I’m planning to re-write a novel I wrote a couple of years ago. It’s more police-focused than Into the Darkest Corner, a story about a murder investigation with plenty of twists and surprises, and structurally it will be different, too: I’m planning to include lots of source documents so the reader should be able to take on an investigative role.

  Acknowledgements

  The book you’re holding now would never have come into being if it were not for the help and support of many people. Most of all I’d like to thank Vicky Blunden, Candida Lacey, Corinne Pearlman, Linda McQueen, Dawn Sackett and everyone at Myriad Editions, for taking my original ramble and turning it into something I’m immensely proud of, and for taking a chance on a complete novice.

  Into The Darkest Corner was originally written in 2008 as part of the annual National Novel Writing Month challenge, run by Chris Baty and a brilliant team of people, and if it had not been for the encouragement of the Nanowrimo website (www.nanowrimo.org) I doubt I would have made it past the first chapter. Thank you, guys! I hope you like it.

  I would like to thank my friends Ellen Doughty and Linda Weeks, who read the first draft and thenceforth encouraged me every step of the way. It was my cousin Michael George’s idea to actually send it off (even though he hasn’t read it yet), so I have him to thank for that.

  Greg Mosse, for his insightful and thought-provoking Crime Writing course at West Dean College, and in particular for his encouragement with regard to this book. Thank you, Greg!

  Thank you, too, to Lillian Fox, a gifted and inspirational writer, who steered me in the right direction many times and kept me going when I most needed a push. Vanessa Very read the manuscript when it was nearing completion and came up with some brilliant suggestions which changed everything. This book would be nothing without Lillian and Vanessa, so thank you both.

  Thank you to my lovely friend Alexia Fernholz, consultant clinical psychologist, who generously shared her expertise, and to Stephen Starbuck for assistance and advice with matters of procedure.

  Thank you Mary, Vicky, Hannah, Sonja, Ella, Hanna, Fiona, Shelagh, Nadia, Mia, Sophy, Jenna, Steven, Janet, Alison, Sarah, Tricia, Michael, John and David, Nickie and all my online friends who were all so supportive of me throughout this enterprise.

  To the wonderful and talented Medway Mermaids, thank you so much for your insightful comments, and for cheering me on.

  Special thanks are due to the fantastic Moscicki family (Jackie, Julie, James, Phoebe and Anna), and to Jane Mellinger, Nicola Samson, Maxine Painter, Lou Bundock, Naomi and Will Lay, Chris Gambrell, Clare Howse, Russ Shopland, Alexandra Amos, Lucy Smith, Emily Mepstead, Patricia Cox, Katie and Wayne Totterdell, Matt Liston, Tara Melton, Clive Peacock, Claire Eastham, Phil Crane, Bob Sidoli, Gordon Lindsay, Emma Dehaney, Lindsay Brown, Angela Wiley, Karen Aslett, Jenny Harknett, Pam Wiley, Judy Swan, Robert Nicks, Trish Cross and all my other dear friends who kindly put up with me talking about my book and encouraged me far beyond the call of duty – thank you.

  Last but not least, thank you to my Mum, and to David and Alex, who put up with most of all, and still love me nonetheless.

  About the Author

  Elizabeth Haynes grew up in Sussex. She works as a police intelligence analyst and lives in Kent with her husband and son. Into the Darkest Corner is her first novel.

  Copyright

  First edition published in 2011

  This ebook edition published in 2011 by

  Myriad Editions

  59 Lansdowne Place

  Brighton BN3 1FL

  www.MyriadEditions.com

  Copyright © Elizabeth Haynes 2011

  The moral right of the author has been asserted.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the written permission of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.

  Every effort has been made to identify the copyright holder of the front cover photograph. The publisher shall be pleased to make appropriate acknowledgement in any future edition.

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

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  Elizabeth Haynes, Into the Darkest Corner

 


 

 
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