PAC Interview: Carol Westron
In a new series of interviews, I'll be talking to members of the Portsmouth Authors Collective - a group of local authors who have come together to help promote one another's books. Members of the Collective publish a full array of fiction and non-fiction titles, and in this, our first interview, we'll be meeting the crime writer Carol Westron.
Loree: Welcome to the blog, Carol. I'm thrilled that yours is the very first in a series of new interviews with members of the Portsmouth Authors Collective, so thank you for agreeing to start things off! And for the benefit of anyone out there who doesn't already know, Carol and I are sisters-in-law, not sisters. That explains the difference in accent!
We've known each other for a long time now, and my recollection is that I invited you to go to a writing group about thirty years ago, at the Portsmouth Arts Centre in Eastney, a group run by Keir Cheetham. Clearly, you have me to thank for getting your writing career off the ground!
Carol: I can’t remember a time when I didn’t make up
stories, certainly I was doing so as a young teenager. It was immature stuff,
but useful to kickstart my craft. The only time I totally put writing on hold
was when I had three children under five. However, as soon as I got a bit of
free time and enough creative energy, I was back to writing. As a sweetener for
the kids, I undertook to write a chapter of a children’s fairytale/fantasy on
the days they were all in school, which I read to them, snuggled up together on
the sofa, when I’d collected them from school. Recently, I tidied up the two
books that came from this time, Enchanter’s Power and Enchanter’s Quest, and
thanks to the encouragement of my wonderful beta reader, Dot Marshall-Gent, may
well publish them in 2023.
Carol: I’ve heard many crime fiction authors cite Enid Blyton’s Famous Five as their earliest influence but, although I read them, I think I always found the protagonists too privileged and their life experiences too alien to count them as an influence. My early influences include GeorgetteHeyer, Mary Stewart and Ellis Peters. From the former I discovered how to weave historical language into lively comprehensible dialogue. The two latter authors demonstrate how to set scenes, using rich evocative descriptions. The great Agatha Christie is the Mistress of Smoke and Mirrors, displaying clues in full-sight but in such a way that you don’t recognise them until the detective explains. Edmund Crispin is a genius at breaking the literary rules with flair. Regarding contemporary authors, I enjoy humour, such as displayed by Donna Andrews (my annual Christmas treat from my daughter.) I’m fortunate enough to have reviewed many fabulous authors, such as Peter Lovesey, Frances Brody, and M.K. Graff, whose novel The Golden Hour is the most evocative cosy I’ve ever read.
Carol: I’m intrigued by the ‘mild-mannered’ label. Have I really not revealed my true colours over all these years? More common descriptions are ‘stubborn’, ‘uncompromising’, ‘incisive’. Maybe we’ve not been in situations where you’ve see that side of me. What provokes my anger is usually injustice, especially to the vulnerable. This passion for justice does tie in with my writing. I love crime fiction because it matters. There’s nothing worse you can do to anyone than kill them or somebody they love. Of course, the detective cannot restore the dead to life but they can offer answers and some form of closure to the living. I have no criminal connections but I do have a useful source to make sure I don’t stray too far from proper police procedure and a brilliant psychological advisor who’d tell me if I made errors that way.
Loree: As a writer, what are the things you enjoy most, and what do you find most challenging?
Carol: There’s nothing like the buzz of writing the first
draft but I don’t plot and if I have time gaps when writing it’s hard to keep
cohesion of the plot and style. Although that can be remedied when editing.
Loree: Like many of the writers in the Portsmouth Authors Collective you’ve gone down the self-publishing route. Was that an easy decision to make? What are some of the pros and cons of self-publishing?
Carol: This is such a large question we could spend the
whole interview discussing it.
I didn’t find the decision hard: I’d already had a publisher
whose money-men pulled the plug at the last minute and an agent who loved my
writing but demanded I wrote sagas because she found those ‘easy to place’. It
was wonderful to take back control.
Pros - you have control over editing, content, lay-out,
cover etc. Cons - the same as the pros. The buck stops with you—any bad decisions
are your responsibility.
Loree: You’ve published seven novels, now, and four children’s books that were illustrated by your grandson, Adam. And during a lot of this time you were working and raising your family. You’ve been incredibly prolific. How do you do it? You must be very disciplined. Do you have a particular writing routine? Do you set yourself goals?
Loree: As a writer, what’s been your proudest achievement?
Carol: This is a deceptively hard question because my roles
as writer, teacher and Golden Age expert are so intertwined. Here’s a selection
of proud moments.
1. The superb reviews I’ve had for all of my novels, and the
wonderful Peter Lovesey saying that I was ‘a very good writer’.
2. The pride and empowerment my autistic grandson feels from
illustrating the Adi and the Dream Train books and the development of his
illustrative and story-telling skills.
3. My severely disabled students at the Horizon Centre
entered the Winchester Reaching Out competition and achieved 1st, 2nd and 3rd
places.
4. Giving an academic paper at St. Hilda’s Oxford, and sharing a platform with Martin Edwards.
Loree: Do you have any advice for people just starting out?
Carol: Read widely in your genre and write until you
discover your own voice. Join a local writers’ group, preferably one that gives
feedback. Above all, be kind to yourself, there’s no reason to beat yourself
up.
Loree: Writing is a hard business. Why do it?
Carol: I do it because it’s who I am. Next to my family,
it’s the most important thing in my life.
Loree Westron is the
author of Missing Words. She has an MA and a PhD in Creative Writing, and is the founder of the
Portsmouth Authors Collective.
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