Today I’m thrilled to welcome crime author Ian Patrick to the blog to talk about his revision process. Educated in Nottingham, Ian left school at sixteen. After three years in the Civil Service he moved to London for a career in the Metropolitan Police. He spent twenty-seven years as a police officer, the majority as […]
What’s Your Revision Process Like? – Catherine Ryan Howard
I am thrilled to welcome Catherine to the blog today to talk about her revisions process. Catherine is from Cork, Ireland and now lives in Dublin. Her debut novel, DISTRESS SIGNALS, was an Irish Times and USA Today bestseller and was shortlisted for both the IBA Crime Novel of the Year and the CWA John […]
What’s Your Revision Process Like? – Nic Parker
I’m pleased to welcome back Nic Parker to the blog to talk about her revision process. You can find her First Draft Process HERE. Nic was born in 1971. Her love for the horror genre flourished in early childhood. She enjoyed the opulence of genre productions in the eighties, chasing after forbidden video nasties with […]
What’s Your Revision Process Like? – Cass Green
I’m thrilled to welcome crime author Cass Green to the blog today to talk about revising. You can find her first draft process HERE. Caroline Green is an award-winning, best-selling author of fiction for both young people and adults. Her first book, Dark Ride, won the Waverton Good Read Award and the RoNA Young Adult […]
What’s Your Revision Process Like? – Douglas Skelton
Today I’m pleased to welcome to the blog, crime writer, Douglas Skelton. Douglas Skelton is the author of 11 true crime/Scottish criminal history books, four titles in the Davie McCall series and now the Dominic Queste thrillers, the second of which – Tag – You’re Dead – will be published by Contraband in April. His […]
What’s Your Revision Process Like? – D S Nelson
Today I’m pleased to be able to welcome D S Nelson to the blog to talk about her revision process. You can find her First Draft process Here. Her introduction to murder came from Agatha Christie. Christie’s inquisitive Miss Marple of St Mary Mead and very Belgian Poirot with his ‘little grey cells’, captured her imagination from a young age. […]