Tag Archives: blogival

Soho Honey – AW Rock Q and Q – Blogival Tour

For my second act of the Blogival festival I’m delighted to welcome A.W. Rock to the ‘stage’ author of the gripping Soho Honey.

Hi and thanks for joining me. I believe you spent a while working in Soho, are the characters in your novel inspired by real people?

I have spent both my working and social life in Soho. I have worked in the film industry shooting, editing and dubbing tv commercials, pop promos and short films. Then at the end of the day socialising with with a wide variety of people that I have met in the bars and clubs. Some of these people have influenced the characters I have created in Soho Honey. No character is based on any one person but I have taken a variety of characteristics from people and distilled them into the characters in the book. A couple of the characters are a combination of only two people I have known e.g. Snowman and Mikey. Whereas others are a mixture of people I have known.

There was a lot of characters within your first novel, do you have any kind of system for keeping track of them?

I know them all so well that they are like real people to me and so I  don’t have a problem keeping them in mind. Also when they appear in the story they are relevant to that particular scene and since I know them so well I don’t have to give their characteristics a second thought.

What is your typical working day like, are you still involved in directing?

When it’s a day that I am going to spend writing I break the ice by taking an empty foolscap pad and writing my first thoughts down without trying to make any particular sense or being grammatically correct. I speed write one or two pages and then I’m ready to start the day on my latest project. It is a free thought process that allows me to open up my mind to work on the book or the screenplay. I then find it much easier to get involved in to the world that I’m writing about. I’m not making as many films as I used to but we had great fun shooting, editing, creating the music and dubbing the one and a half minute film trailer for Soho Honey which appears on the website sohohoney.com .

What is your ideal afternoon off work?

To go into Chinatown for a dim sum lunch. Then to Bar Italia for an espresso and one of their custard tarts. Then to watch a film in the cinema on Shaftsbury Avenue. Then go to one or two of my favourite bars in Soho and see who I bump into.

Do you read a lot yourself and if so who are your favourite authors?

Ross Macdonald – for his strong storytelling and strong dialogue. He comes from a crime writing period in the USA that for me is story-telling at its best. Raymond Chandler – for his wry observations of human behaviour and his dry ironic dialogue.  Patricia Highsmith’s Ripley books – because of the sense of foreboding that saturates her stories and her insight into the strange character of Ripley. Gogol – although not exactly a crime writer I love his engaging short stories that contain elements of crime, in an existential way.

What are you working on next?

I am writing a 60 minute pilot episode for a new tv series called Lying Low in Soho. It incorporates some of the characters from Soho Honey but with a totally new story. I have not shown it to anybody yet so it is as yet uncommissioned but I’m looking for a tv production company who would be interested in producing it. I have also got the skeleton of the story for Soho Honey, Book Two and will be writing it ASAP.

Thanks very much for joining me and I look forward to reading the next installment of Soho Honey.

Leave a comment

Filed under book review, Crime fiction Q&A

Addicted to death – Matthew Redford Q and A – Blogival Tour

I love the idea of a good festival, Glastonbury is kicking off this weekend with some great bands and I do like the idea of going for a few days. Until that is, I realise it involves camping, mud, portaloos and lots of other people. Therefore as an alternative I’m taking part in a much more civilized festival, Blogival!

For the first of two acts appearing on the ‘acrimereadersblog stage’ I’m delighted to welcome author Matthew Redford. You may remember I read his book Addicted to Death last year (my review is here) and it was one of the funniest books I’d read in a long time!

So thanks for joining me Matthew. I loved your novel, what inspired you to write about Food-sapiens?

I want to be the champion for the Food-Sapiens community who, in my eyes, are under-represented in the crime fiction world. After all, little old ladies have Miss Marple and Hetty Wainthropp, even the nation of Belgium has two notable crime exports in Poirot and TinTin, and the poor Food-Sapiens have been once again overlooked. So I wanted to raise their profile and make people realise that Food-Sapiens play an important part in today’s society.  Just ask yourself whether the world we live in would be diminished without the likes of the Eurovision stars of the past such as Brotherhood of Yam and Sandwich Shaw? I think we know the answer…

What is your typical working day like?

The dreaded morning alarm erupts at 5:30am and after some early morning cursing and a few uses of the snooze button, I am up and about just after 6am. A quick coffee and a bite to eat at home before I hotfoot it to the train station. I’m in work for 9am where I work my fingers to the bone (naturally) before the evening train calls. Home just after 7pm, prep dinner, stick some music on (type depends on the mood) and either catch-up with friends, read or just slump on the sofa…And then it all begins again in the morning. Roll on the weekend!

What is your ideal afternoon off work?

So many things to do, such little time. I would start off by having a nice light lunch, supplemented by a glass of rose (just one of course). I would like to have planned the afternoon so that I was either meeting friends or catching up with my parents perhaps, and we would find a nice quiet corner of a coffee shop and spend a good few hours gossiping. Afterwards we would go for a walk through one of London’s parks or maybe along the embankment, before heading into town and picking up tickets for a night at the theatre (something musical). 

Do you read a lot yourself and if so who are your favourite authors?

I do try to read as much as possible and I find few train journey home a good way of fitting in some reading. I’m currently reading the British Library Classic range – a real treat for how crime mysteries were once written. 

Do you have a ‘day job’ or are you a full time writer?

I have a full time job working for a healthcare regulator which I genuinely love. I work with a great group of people and that makes such a difference. Would I like to be a full time writer? If it paid the bills and kept a roof over my head, then yes, I would love to give it a try. 

And so finally, what are you working on next?

Ah, the follow up novel – “Know your onions” is the working title. And just for you a little spoiler. DI Wortel is going to have delve into the world of vinegar fracking, which you might not know, is one of the UK’s biggest exports and a fundamental factor underpinning our economic success… 

I can’t wait to read that, and to catch up with the food-sapiens again.

Addicted to Death is currently available on amazon

Leave a comment

Filed under Crime fiction Q&A