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NOVELISTA is a friendly, straight-talking writing guide for people
who want to write a novel but don't know how to begin. It asks all
the important questions and gives a host of reassuring answers that
demonstrate that anyone can write a novel - even you! To begin
with, what the hell is a novel? It's basically a tiny world, where
characters are born, live, and (sometimes) die. To write one all
you need is a notebook and a pen - but along the way you'll want to
learn about good writing habits, planning, mastering descriptions
and dialogue and how to pull it all together. This book will guide
you through the process and orient you towards the goal of
publication. From absolute beginner to novelista, this book will
change the way you write and think about writing.
'Compelling' IAN RANKIN 'Stunning' SUNDAY TIMES The brilliant new
novel from award-winning writer and rising star Claire Askew. A
city that's no longer safe... An anonymous vigilante stalks the
streets of Edinburgh. As his behaviour escalates, the police are at
a loss - they can find no clues to his identity, and no trace of
his whereabouts. A detective in the path of danger... DI Helen
Birch has been told to stay away from the case - but she's never
been one to play by the rules. When her colleague Amy comes to her
asking for help, DI Birch finds it impossible to resist the
challenge - and soon, her life is on the line. Will she crack the
case before it breaks her? Or has she finally met her match? A
gripping crime thriller for fans of Susie Steiner, Elly Griffiths
and Val McDermid - guaranteed to keep you up all night... PRAISE
FOR CLAIRE ASKEW: 'Thought-provoking' Mail on Sunday 'A crackerjack
read' Val McDermid 'Meticulous and compelling' Ian Rankin
'Thoughtful and well-written' Guardian 'Compellingly written' Daily
Mail 'Stunning' Erin Kelly 'Absorbing and thought-provoking' The
Times
'Compelling' IAN RANKIN 'Stunning' SUNDAY TIMES The brilliant new
novel from award-winning writer and rising star Claire Askew. A
city that's no longer safe... An anonymous vigilante stalks the
streets of Edinburgh. As his behaviour escalates, the police are at
a loss - they can find no clues to his identity, and no trace of
his whereabouts. A detective in the path of danger... DI Helen
Birch has been told to stay away from the case - but she's never
been one to play by the rules. When her colleague Amy comes to her
asking for help, DI Birch finds it impossible to resist the
challenge - and soon, her life is on the line. Will she crack the
case before it breaks her? Or has she finally met her match? A
gripping crime thriller for fans of Susie Steiner, Elly Griffiths
and Val McDermid - guaranteed to keep you up all night... PRAISE
FOR CLAIRE ASKEW: 'Thought-provoking' Mail on Sunday 'A crackerjack
read' Val McDermid 'Meticulous and compelling' Ian Rankin
'Thoughtful and well-written' Guardian 'Compellingly written' Daily
Mail 'Stunning' Erin Kelly 'Absorbing and thought-provoking' The
Times
NOVELISTA is a friendly, straight-talking writing guide for people
who want to write a novel but don't know how to begin. It asks all
the important questions and gives a host of reassuring answers that
demonstrate that anyone can write a novel - even you! To begin
with, what the hell is a novel? It's basically a tiny world, where
characters are born, live, and (sometimes) die. To write one all
you need is a notebook and a pen - but along the way you'll want to
learn about good writing habits, planning, mastering descriptions
and dialogue and how to pull it all together. This book will guide
you through the process and orient you towards the goal of
publication. From absolute beginner to novelista, this book will
change the way you write and think about writing.
This changes things was Claire Askew's first full collection,
coming after years of work in Scotland's flourishing poetry and
spoken word scene. Her poems focus on the lives and experiences of
women - particularly the socially or economically marginalised - at
pains both to empathise and to recognise the limits of this
empathy. They embody a need to acknowledge and challenge the poet's
privileged position as documenter and outsider, a responsibility to
the poem's political message and to that message's human subject.
This changes things draws much of its strength from this
exploration of inbetweenness. Claire Askew's purposeful deployment
of objects, lighting effects and liminal spaces implicates her
reader in the poem's argument, holds up a mirror and asks us to pay
attention. The book's romantic relationships, depictions of
frustrated travel or social mobility, are bound up in its awareness
of the systems of power that permit no true state of innocence.
Even the final poem, 'Hydra' - with its celebration of the body and
its senses - cannot ultimately allow us off the hook. This changes
things was shortlisted for the Saltire Society First Book of the
Year Award 2016, Seamus Heaney Centre Prize for First Full
Collection 2017 and Michael Murphy Memorial Prize 2017.
Claire Askew's electrifying second collection is an investigation
of power: the power of oppressive systems and their hold over those
within them; the power of resilience; the power of the human heart.
It licks flame across the imagination, and rewrites narratives of
human desire. It is a collection for anyone who has ever run
through their life 'backwards/ in the dark,/ with no map' - these
bright poems illuminate the way. How to burn a woman throngs with
witches, outsiders, and women who do not fit the ordinary moulds of
the world. It is a collection which traces historic atrocities, and
celebrates the lives of those accused of witchcraft with empathy,
tenderness and rage. It lifts a mirror up to contemporary systems
of oppression and, in language that is both vivid and accessible,
asks hard questions of our current world. These poems also delve
deep into love in all its forms: from infatuations to the bitter
ending of relationships. They ask what it is we want, how we might
go about getting it, and what its cost might be. How to burn a
woman sweeps the world up in its arms and presents it: a rough
bonfire of London buses, Salem streets, Edinburgh closes. Askew's
astute, incisive language lifts from every page, throwing sparks.
At 8am the first shots are fired. At 1pm, the police establish the
gunman has a hostage. By 5pm, a siege is underway. At 9pm, DI Helen
Birch walks, alone and unarmed, into an abandoned Borders farmhouse
to negotiate with the killer. One day. One woman. One chance to get
everyone out alive. The outstanding new novel from the highly
acclaimed author of All the Hidden Truths and What You Pay For -
both shortlisted for the CWA Golden Dagger.
Selected by the Sunday Times as one of the 40 best crime novels
published 2015-2020 WINNER OF THE MCILVANNEY DEBUT PRIZE LONGLISTED
FOR THE MCILVANNEY PRIZE SCOTTISH CRIME BOOK OF THE YEAR
SHORTLISTED FOR THE CWA GOLD DAGGER AND CWA JOHN CREASEY (NEW
BLOOD) AWARDS '(a) meticulous and compelling novel about the
aftermath of a major crime and its effect on the affected families
and investigating officers both.' Ian Rankin *** In the aftermath
of a tragedy, the world needs an explanation. In Edinburgh, after
the Three Rivers College shooting, some things are clear. They know
who. They know when. No one can say why. For three women the lack
of answers is unbearable: DI Helen Birch, the detective charged
with solving the case. Ishbel, the mother of the first victim,
struggling to cope with her grief. And Moira, mother of the killer,
who needs to understand what happened to her son. But as people
search for someone to blame, the truth seems to vanish... From a
prizewinning poet, ALL THE HIDDEN TRUTHS is a searing, compelling
and powerful debut. 'As scarily plausible as it is utterly
captivating, this is an absorbing and unforgettable debut.' Heat
'Raw, powerful, compassionate and deeply moving, with page-turning
tension to the end. A stunning debut.' Karen Robinson, Sunday Times
Crime Club 'You'll be gripped by the unexpected truths that emerge.
Compelling.' Marie Claire
'Stunning' - Sunday Times Claire Askew won the Scottish Debut Crime
Award with her debut All the Hidden Truths, praised as 'A
meticulous and compelling novel' by Ian Rankin. 'What if I told
you,' he said, 'that I believe my mother's life to be in danger?'
Robertson Bennet returns to Edinburgh after a 25-year absence in
search of his parents and his inheritance. But both have
disappeared. A quick, routine police check should be enough - and
Detective Inspector Helen Birch has enough on her plate trying to
help her brother, Charlie, after an assault in prison. But all her
instincts tell her not to let this case go. And so she digs. George
and Phamie Bennet were together for a long time. No one can ever
really know the secrets kept between husband and wife. But as Birch
slowly begins to unravel the truth, terrible crimes start to rise
to the surface. Beautifully written and ingeniously plotted, Cover
Your Tracks confirms Claire Askew as a major new talent in crime
fiction. Praise for Claire Askew's novels: 'Stunning debut...
compellingly written' - Daily Mail 'A meticulous and compelling
novel about the aftermath of a major crime and its effect on the
affected families and investigating officers both' - Ian Rankin
'Splendid debut... thoughtful and well-written' - Guardian
'Gripping, heartbreaking and horrifyingly plausible. I couldn't
tear myself away from this book. Claire Askew is a stunning new
voice in crime fiction' - Erin Kelly, author of He Said/She Said
'Moving and memorable' - The Sunday Times 'A fine,
thought-provoking debut' - Mail on Sunday 'Claire Askew takes us
away from the obvious plot and asks us tantalising questions... an
absorbing psychological trio for Askew's thought-provoking entry
into crime fiction' - The Times
FROM THE AUTHOR OF ALL THE HIDDEN TRUTHS, WHICH WON THE MCILVANNEY
DEBUT PRIZE '(a) meticulous and compelling novel about the
aftermath of a major crime and its effect on the affected families
and investigating officers both. Set in Edinburgh, too' - Ian
Rankin 'Askew asks intricate moral questions, while never ignoring
the rigours of crime' - Daily Mail DI Helen Birch faces a terrible
choice - family or justice? - in the gripping second novel from the
author of All the Hidden Truths DI Birch joined the police to find
her little brother, who walked out of his life one day and was
never seen again. She stayed to help others, determined to seek
justice where she could. On the fourteenth anniversary of Charlie's
disappearance, Birch takes part in a raid on one of Scotland's most
feared criminal organisations. It's a good day's work - a chance to
get a dangerous man off the streets. Two days later, Charlie comes
back. It's not a coincidence. When Birch finds out exactly what
he's been doing all those years, she faces a terrible choice: save
the case, or save her brother. But how can you do the right thing
when all the consequences are bad? As she interrogates Charlie, he
tells his story: of how one wrong turn leads to a world in which
the normal rules no longer apply, and you do what you must to
survive. From one of the most acclaimed new voices in crime
fiction, What You Pay For is a brilliantly tense and moving novel
about the terrible disruption caused by violence and the lines
people will cross to protect those they love.
FROM THE AUTHOR OF ALL THE HIDDEN TRUTHS, WHICH IS SHORTLISTED FOR
THE CWA GOLD DAGGER AWARD AND WON THE MCILVANNEY DEBUT PRIZE '(a)
meticulous and compelling novel about the aftermath of a major
crime and its effect on the affected families and investigating
officers both. Set in Edinburgh, too' - Ian Rankin 'Askew asks
intricate moral questions, while never ignoring the rigours of
crime' - Daily Mail DI Helen Birch faces a terrible choice - family
or justice? - in the gripping second novel from the author of All
the Hidden Truths DI Birch joined the police to find her little
brother, who walked out of his life one day and was never seen
again. She stayed to help others, determined to seek justice where
she could. On the fourteenth anniversary of Charlie's
disappearance, Birch takes part in a raid on one of Scotland's most
feared criminal organisations. It's a good day's work - a chance to
get a dangerous man off the streets. Two days later, Charlie comes
back. It's not a coincidence. When Birch finds out exactly what
he's been doing all those years, she faces a terrible choice: save
the case, or save her brother. But how can you do the right thing
when all the consequences are bad? As she interrogates Charlie, he
tells his story: of how one wrong turn leads to a world in which
the normal rules no longer apply, and you do what you must to
survive. From one of the most acclaimed new voices in crime
fiction, What You Pay For is a brilliantly tense and moving novel
about the terrible disruption caused by violence and the lines
people will cross to protect those they love..
Galvanizing and electrifying glimpses from the brink of the
contemporary Craft This eclectic collection of essays on
responsible witchcraft is a fascinating snapshot of contemporary
occult practice. Essay topics include the ethics of decolonization,
meditations on what it means to honour Mother Earth during the
Anthropocene, the reclamation of agency for working-class and queer
witches through practical spellwork, a gender-fluid perspective on
breaking down traditional hierarchies in magical symbolism, a day
in the life of a disabled Pagan Irish practitioner, and so much
more. These essays show how we can all find inspiration and a force
for powerful change in the modern Craft. Featuring contributions
from: Claire Askew, Lisa Marie Basile, Stella Hervey Birrell, Jane
Claire Bradley, Madelyn Burnhope, Lilith Dorsey, AW Earl, Harry
Josephine Giles, Simone Kotva, Iona Lee, Briana Pegado, Megan
Rudden, Sabrina Scott, Em Still and Alice Tarbuck
*** LONGLISTED FOR THE McILVANNEY CRIME NOVEL OF THE YEAR AWARD **
One day. One woman. One chance to get everyone out alive. 'TELL
JACK BAUER HE HAS BEEN SUPPLANTED... A taut hostage scenario'
iPAPER 'A breathless, real-time, 24-style thriller that combines
nail-biting tension with boundless compassion' ERIN KELLY 'Askew is
proving to be a master of the suspenseful police procedural' SUNDAY
TIMES CRIME CLUB At 8am the first shots are fired. At 1pm, the
police establish the gunman has a hostage. By 5pm, a siege is
underway. At 9pm, DI Helen Birch walks, alone and unarmed, into an
abandoned Borders farmhouse to negotiate with the killer. The
outstanding new novel from the highly acclaimed author of All the
Hidden Truths and What You Pay For - both shortlisted for the CWA
Golden Dagger. 'Phew, the electric tension in this nail-biting,
clock-ticking, thriller almost blew my fuses! Tension reaches
screaming point...unmissable! 10/10' PETERBOROUGH TELEGRAPH 'The
tension builds to genuinely frightening peaks ... Enjoy the
breath-taking thrill of the ride' THE SCOTSMAN 'An engrossing and
thought provoking read' BELFAST TELEGRAPH 'Nail-biting' CRIME
MONTHLY 'Tension-packed' CARLISLE LIFE 'Breath-taking' ON MAGAZINE
'This 24-style thriller is filled with nail-biting tension' SCOTS
MAGAZINE 'This nail-biter keeps up a rollicking pace-this is one
you're likely to devour in one sitting!' MY WEEKLY 'Askew displays
pitch-perfect understanding of tone and cadence ... breath-taking
thrill' YORKSHIRE POST 'Askew has delivered a peak-page turner and
fans of crime-fiction will be left with a cliffhanger ending and a
pronounced desire to learn where DI Birch turns up next' IRISH
EXAMINER
FROM THE AUTHOR OF ALL THE HIDDEN TRUTHS, WHICH WON THE MCILVANNEY
DEBUT PRIZE '(a) meticulous and compelling novel about the
aftermath of a major crime and its effect on the affected families
and investigating officers both. Set in Edinburgh, too' - Ian
Rankin 'Askew asks intricate moral questions, while never ignoring
the rigours of crime' - Daily Mail DI Helen Birch faces a terrible
choice - family or justice? - in the gripping second novel from the
author of All the Hidden Truths DI Birch joined the police to find
her little brother, who walked out of his life one day and was
never seen again. She stayed to help others, determined to seek
justice where she could. On the fourteenth anniversary of Charlie's
disappearance, Birch takes part in a raid on one of Scotland's most
feared criminal organisations. It's a good day's work - a chance to
get a dangerous man off the streets. Two days later, Charlie comes
back. It's not a coincidence. When Birch finds out exactly what
he's been doing all those years, she faces a terrible choice: save
the case, or save her brother. But how can you do the right thing
when all the consequences are bad? As she interrogates Charlie, he
tells his story: of how one wrong turn leads to a world in which
the normal rules no longer apply, and you do what you must to
survive. From one of the most acclaimed new voices in crime
fiction, What You Pay For is a brilliantly tense and moving novel
about the terrible disruption caused by violence and the lines
people will cross to protect those they love.
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