Facebook

PaperBackSwap Blog


Author Interview with Imogen Robertson

Interview with Author Imogen Robertson by Jerelyn H. (I-F-Letty)

 

As a lover of books, there is nothing better than finding an author whose writing you can become lost in, such is the case with Imogen Robertson.  My friend in the H/F forum sent me the first book in Ms. Robertson’s Westerman and Crowther series, Instruments of Darkness.  I saw these books described as Georgian CSI, it is partially true, this is when anatomists began to study more openly  the science of body and causes of death be it natural or not. 

One of the things that I have come to love most about PBS is the sharing of information, it seems we cannot help ourselves when we find an author we love; we have to tell people about it. Word of mouth still sells books.  This series has created quite a stir in our little corner of PBS.  They are beautifully written, interesting, and sometimes poignant.  I love them and can’t wait for the next release of Circle of Shadows on April 26, 2012.

I want to thank Ms. Robertson for agreeing to this interview and would like to welcome her to the PBS blog.

Imogen: Thank you for that lovely introduction! Pleasure to be here.

 

Jerelyn: I read that you have always written stories.  But how did you make the leap from television into writing, or did you also write for television?

Imogen: It was a bit of a leap of faith. For several years after I began working in TV I wrote very little but did I learn a great deal about story and structure. At some point I realised the urge to write was still there and I needed to do something about it, so I started going to poetry workshops, writing short fiction and reading a lot about the craft of writing. The ideas for Instruments of Darkness started to take hold and I spent my spare time on research. Things really changed for me when I won a competition in the Daily Telegraph for the first thousand words of a novel. The judges were incredibly encouraging and I’d just had a very good year directing, so I actually had some money on hand. That’s where the leap came. I decided not to look for any more directing work and just wrote the novel instead. That became Instruments of Darkness and Headline in the UK offered me a two-book deal. I’ve been very lucky. There was a moment there when I thought I was going to have to sell my flat and start all over again.

 

Jerelyn:  I always am interested in where an author’s inspiration comes from, so where did Mrs. Westerman and Mr. Crowther come from?

Imogen:  Funny, difficult to reconstruct now. Characters emerge out of the fog of your imagination, observation and research. That said, Crowther felt like he arrived fully formed. I had an image of him working in his study by candlelight in his shirt sleeves, and there he was, utterly himself. Harriet was more difficult. In my first draft she was too good at everything, too reasonable, too wise. I spent a lot of time staring at the Thames in London and wondering what her life would really be like; imagining a woman who had had a glimpse of a wider world and was now feeling confined by the conventions of her day. Then her voice emerged and off she went. Mind you, I’m still finding out about them both; that’s one of the great pleasures of writing a series, watching your characters grow.

 

Jerelyn:  What drew you to the Georgian era?

Imogen:  Short answer – Amanda Vickery’s book, ‘A Gentleman’s Daughter’. Longer answer? I live in London so am surrounded by Georgian architecture, I’m a great fan of baroque and early classical music and for years I just kept picking up biographies and collections of letters from the period. The more I read, the more interested I became. This was a time of enormous change; the industrial revolution was gathering pace, a consumer society was developing, science flourished, literacy rates were climbing and the towns and cities were growing very quickly, but at the same time it was still a world where life could be brutal and short. There was no modern medicine, no police force worth the name, conditions for the poor in the cities were foul, very high child mortality rates and even the wealthy found their money often provided very little protection from tragedy. A world in flux. What writer can resist that?

 

Jerelyn:  I love that there are family and friends and social expectations upon Harriet, it doesn’t seem like much has changed, has it?  Was it your intention to show these parallels to a modern woman’s life?

Imogen:  Yes indeed. Any historical writer is inevitably writing about their own time as well as the one in which they have set their novel. The lot of women had improved drastically in the last two hundred years; we have rights and opportunities now that were undreamed of then, but society still knows how to exert pressure on those within it. The idea of the proper role of women is still with us; more subtle and insidious perhaps in some ways, more blatant in others. Whenever I hear a woman saying ‘I’m not a feminist,’ I hear echoes of women in the 18th century who sneered at the blue stockings or the Anti-suffrage leagues of the early 20th. All opinions are welcome, but we need to keep thinking about these issues and asking questions.

 

Jerelyn:  Did you always see yourself writing mysteries?

Imogen:  You have to write what you love, so yes, I did always want to write crime. I love seeing what characters do under pressure and there is a heritage of superlative writing and story-telling in the genre.

 

Jerelyn:  Do you see yourself branching out into other genres, i.e. straight historical fiction?

Imogen:  Perhaps. I think the genre that pulls me most at the moment is the ghost story. I obviously read too much M R James when I was a child. That would probably be historical too. I hope I’ve got many years of writing left, we’ll just have to see what stories I get snagged on.

 

Jerelyn:  Really good books have to be well researched, is the research something you enjoy?

Imogen:  I love it. There is a great period when I am starting research for a new book when I read very widely and generally, just letting myself suck it all up and only thinking very vaguely about the plot. That’s incredible fun, browsing through the newspapers of the time and picking up nuggets for further investigation. It’s opening your mind up to all the different voices. Very exciting. Then finding the sources with all the small details that make your period come alive is very satisfying; the account books of opera houses, the advertisements for patent remedies…

 

Jerelyn:  What did you find most surprising while researching your novels?

Imogen:  Probably when I was looking at a guidebook to the Lake District from 1782 and found it used to belong to an H Crowther!

 

Jerelyn:  Which of the characters do you identify most strongly with?

Imogen:  I wish I were more like Harriet, she’s braver than I am, though I did give the poor women my vertigo in Island of Bones. I hope I have her curiosity about people. Secretly I’m probably more like Crowther in some ways, every writer needs to have a bit of the hermit in them, the observer.

 

Jerelyn:  I love Crowther and Harriet’s partnership, they kind of complete one another (In a nonromantic way) don’t they?

Imogen:  I hope so. They appreciate each other’s strengths and weaknesses, even if they clash from time to time. I think what they have been through together makes them quite accepting of each other and unusually honest.

 

Jerelyn:  Your write great children characters, are they drawn from the children in your life?

Imogen:  Thanks! I don’t have any children myself but I have six nephews and lots of friends with young children. I’ve always enjoyed their company, it’s fascinating to see how they learn about the world, watching them work it all out, the way they are unique personalities from the very beginning.

 

Jerelyn:  Did you read a great deal as a child? What were your favorite books?

Imogen:  I always had a book with me and read precociously. I was an awkward, rather lonely child and adolescent and spent a lot of time escaping into books. Georgette Heyer was a favourite, I fell madly in love with Natasha from War and Peace, sunk into Dickens and Austen and lots of Dorothy L. Sayers. My favourite children’s books were Ballet Shoes, Secret Garden, Tom’s Midnight Garden and The Phantom Tollbooth. Must have read all of those a dozen times.

 

Jerelyn:  Do you find that you have time for leisure reading?  If so what do you read now?

Imogen:  You have to keep reading. At the moment I’m reading Penelope Lively ‘How it all Began’, just finished ‘Capital’, by John Lanchester, ‘The Psychopath Test’ by Jon Ronson and yesterday when I’d done my words for the day I re-read ‘Off-loading Mrs. Shwartz’ by George Saunders from ‘Civilwarland in Bad Decline’ which is a masterpiece. So it’s an eclectic mix I hope. I read a lot of poetry too: Sarah Gidley, Laura Kasischke and I’m lucky enough to know some great British poets; Roddy Lumsden, Ahren Warner, Sarah Howe…

 

Jerelyn:  When I contacted you about doing this interview, you said that you were busy writing, is it something you can share with us?

Imogen:  Happily. I’m at work on my fifth book at the moment and it’s not part of the Crowther Westerman series, but is a mystery set both in Paris in 1909 / 1910 and in the present day. It’s exciting to be writing about a new period, especially one as rich as the Belle Époque. I’ll be returning to Harriet and Crowther next year though, which I am really looking forward to. I miss them.

 

Jerelyn:  I don’t know if they have a site similar to Paperback Swap in the UK.  What are your feelings about such sites?

Imogen: Anything that encourages reading and sharing recommendations has to be good. Hopefully sites like this are a way for writers to find new readers who might then buy our other books, so it would be short-sighted to worry we are loosing sales. I’ve always lent and borrowed books myself and it’s part of the pleasure of reading. The sites that bother me are the ones that offer illegal downloads of books. Those can really hurt! Though I’m sure no one on this site would dream of using them.

 

Jerelyn:  Are you comfortable with the amount of marketing an author is required to do now days?

Imogen:  This is where the Crowther part of my character becomes a problem! It is great to meet readers and doing interviews like this is fun. I also get a real kick from fan mail. Somebody writing to say they’ve got pleasure from your work can be a real boost at the end of the day. That said, it can be tough sometimes when you feel you have to be out selling yourself at events when you’d rather be in a library or at your desk, but my publishers put a lot of effort into producing and publishing my work. It would be churlish, having been lucky enough to get a deal, not to go out and support your work as much as you can. I am rubbish at the hard sell though.

 

Jerelyn:  How do you feel about e-readers?

Imogen:  I love mine. It’s great to throw a library into my handbag on the rare occasions I leave the house, and it’s lovely to go from ‘I’d like to read that book’ to having it in front of you in a minute. I never feel I really own a book until I have a hard copy on my shelves though, so for me ereaders are a way to spend a fortune because I end up buying things twice! It is tough for the industry to adjust, but publishing is full of smart people working hard so I’m sure they’ll figure it out. In the meantime I just write and read.

 

Jerelyn:  When I putter about the house or I am in the car I love to listen to audio books, I have Instruments of Darkness on audio as well.  Are there plans for the others to be released in this format also?

Imogen:  It’s one of the strange things about being the writer that I don’t really know what plans there are for audio books. I’m sure they’ll appear in time though.

 

Jerelyn:  I would like to thank-you for visiting with us here on the PBS blog, and wish you best of luck with Circle of Shadows which will be out in e-book format on April 26, 2012. Do you have a print release date?

Imogen:  It’s been a pleasure! Circle of Shadows comes out in the UK in hardback on 26th April (Headline Review). Anatomy of Murder is coming out in paperback in the US in September (Penguin), and Island of Bones comes out in hardback in the US in October (Pamela Dorman Books). I don’t have a print release date for the US version of Circle of Shadows yet, but I’ll certainly add it to my website as soon as I know.

 

To read more about Imogen Robertson you can go to her website at, http://imogenrobertson.wordpress.com/  or follow her on Facebook, http://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Imogen-Robertson/108977532473638 , but I have yet to enter the world of twitter.  Also there is a wonderful video introduction to, Anatomy of Murder on You Tube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-SLOXpqkt2o

 

 

Book list:

Instruments of Darkness

 


Anatomy of Murder

 


Island of Bones

 


Circle of Shadows

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tags: , ,

50 Responses to “Author Interview with Imogen Robertson”

  1. Bonnie (LoveNE) , says:

    Thank-you Jerelyn for another chance at meeting an author! Imogen, thank you for an honest, interesting interview. I look forward to my next trip to B&N to check out your books!

  2. Jeanne L. (bkydbirder) , says:

    Great interview Letty, with an author who is on my list of “Five most Favorite” authors! I managed to get the first 2 books from PBS, but have purchased the next two of course. I will anxiously be awaiting the fifth installment of Crowther and Westerman books since I too will be missing them!

    Thank you for this insight into a very gifted writer!!!

    Jeanne

  3. Jerelyn H. (I-F-Letty) says:

    Well Jeanne I have you to thank for introducing me to Ms. Robertson’s work. I agree she is one of my must read authors.

  4. Aimee (peculiarway) says:

    Excellent interview, Letty! I love getting a “behind the scenes” glimpse at an author’s influences and writing process…as well as the scoop on upcoming projects! And you gave us both in your interview, yay!

    Ms. Robertson has moved very near to the top of my “must read” list, and I greatly look forward to the next Crowther and Westerman, as well as her other upcoming project.

  5. Bonnie (LoveNE) , says:

    I forgot to say one more thing…Imogen, Thank-you, Thank-you for some awesome covers! No half-dressed women that don’t look like me!!!

  6. Aubree G. (notyourstar) , says:

    Great interview Letty! I love meeting authors whose books I love! I’m very much looking forward to reading more from Ms. Robertson!

  7. Cheryl M. (hannamatt52) says:

    Another interesting interview. Thanks to both Letty and Ms Robertson for their time. I am certainly going to have to add “Instruments” to my wish list.

  8. Jill says:

    I am such a fan of the CSI type shows. The science as part of the story, and the conclusion. It had to begin somewhere. Add in rich and layered characters, a well thought out story line, and it’s a can’t lose books.

    Thanks Jerelyn, once again you show a knowledge of the author’s work, and insteresting questions that bring them into our homes as interesting people!

  9. Jeanne L. (bkydbirder) , says:

    @ bouillabaisse – HUH???? NOTHING whatsoever to do with this interview is in that comment!

  10. vigrx ebay says:

    Hey I am so delighted I found your site, I really found you by mistake, while
    I was searching on Aol for something else, Regardless I am here now and would just like
    to say thanks a lot for a fantastic post and a all round interesting blog (I also love the
    theme/design), I don’t have time to read through it all at the minute
    but I have saved it and also added in your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be back to read a
    great deal more, Please do keep up the fantastic work.

  11. This is really interesting, You’re a very skilled blogger.

    I’ve joined your rss feed and look forward to seeking
    more of your wonderful post. Also, I have shared your web site
    in my social networks!

  12. Hiya! I know this is kinda off topic however I’d figured I’d
    ask. Would you be interested in trading links or maybe guest authoring a blog article or vice-versa?
    My website covers a lot of the same subjects as yours and I believe we could greatly benefit from each
    other. If you’re interested feel free to shoot me
    an email. I look forward to hearing from you! Excellent blog by the way!

  13. I love it when individuals come together and share ideas.
    Great site, continue the good work!

  14. ACN says:

    Remarkable! Its actually amazing paragraph, I have got much
    clear idea concerning from this article.

    my web page ACN

  15. Howdy would you mind sharing which blog platform you’re using?
    I’m going to start my own blog soon but I’m having a hard
    time choosing between BlogEngine/Wordpress/B2evolution and Drupal.
    The reason I ask is because your design seems different then most blogs and I’m looking for something completely unique.

    P.S My apologies for getting off-topic but I had to ask!

    My page body by vi recipes

  16. I am extremely impressed with your writing skills and also with
    the layout on your blog. Is this a paid theme or did you customize it
    yourself? Either way keep up the nice quality writing, it’s rare to see a nice blog like this one today.

    Also visit my blog: Salaud on t’aime Telecharger le film

  17. There are several blog sitrs that offer such programs and all you have to do is to download
    them. Mac’s been advancing with the time and so did the movie tool that goes with it.
    Customer support for spy software is always important when software is involved, and as such, the company makes its representatives available round
    the clock. Try to find a plan that is balanced and one
    tha suits your requirements and you will bbe able to get tthe
    iPhone for a great price and make use of
    all the features that it has available as
    frequentgly as you require them. You can access BBC iPlayer from your Freesat set top box.
    Now, you are probably wondering how to jailbreak iphone 4.
    The basic requirements are iPhone 3G or 3Gs and your merchant account.
    If this annoys you, you should know that you can turn this feature off.
    It also allows you to sort your apls with categories and folders.
    s customer care team, you can swutch over to any other
    service provider within a few seconds. With newer techniques
    coming out every day in the PDA market, you can easily incorporate
    those in your handset if you have already unlocked it.
    You do not have to set back the options to the previously jailbreaked phone.

    The program would thhen automatically install itself.The
    total ccost of replacing the LCD screen on an iPhone doles not
    even come close to what a new one would cost without the discount given by a service
    upgrade. After you order, you will be given an access to all their software with deailed and easy to understand instructions.
    Once you do that, you can install the program in your phone.
    For those who haven’t had their fill of ‘Flappy Birds’ and are hungry for more games with similar modes of play,
    here are the most popular clones that run on iPhone iPad and iPod Touch:.
    You are no longer shackled by Apple’s vigorous restraints. Applications can be
    grouped into folders by dragging its icon from
    another. This is whgat I have been saying to readers, Please do not jailbreak your iPhone,
    if you don’t have the supported baseband. Right now as this
    innovative age remains on the stable level,
    almost every little thing improves and continues to evolve.
    Simply marvel at thee amazing bit of kit that puts sso much into
    the palm of your hand. The exploit is significant, because unlike the
    PS Downgrade dongle, it was allegedly run homebrews on the PS3 game console without downgrading it.

    Hiring iPhone application developers, you can create a unique
    app to market your business products or services. Nott just
    because it is dangerous, but you could get into leegal trouble for doing this.

    Check out my website :: http://jailbreakiphone5inafeweasysteps875612.pen.io

  18. Zita says:

    Wonderful blog! I found it while surfing around on Yahoo
    News. Do you have any tips on how to get listed in Yahoo News?
    I’ve been trying for a while but I never seem to get there!
    Thanks

  19. Hi there, this weekend is pleasant in favor of me, as this moment i
    am reading this impressive educational piece of writing
    here at my home.

  20. Usova says:

    I always emailed this webpage post page to all my contacts,
    as if like to read it after that my friends will too.

    my weblog

  21. of course like your web-site however you have to take a look at the spelling on several of your posts.
    Many of them are rife with spelling issues and I to find it very bothersome to inform the reality nevertheless I will definitely come
    back again.

    Feel free to surf to my blog; Drag Racing Cheats

  22. Simply wish to say your article is as surprising. The clearness in your post is simply cool and i
    can assume you are an expert on this subject. Fine with your permission let me to grab your
    RSS feed to keep up to date with forthcoming post. Thanks a million and please carry on the enjoyable work.

  23. Enriqueta says:

    Hello there! Would you mind if I share your blog with my myspace group?
    There’s a lot of people that I think would really appreciate your content.
    Please let mme know. Cheers

  24. Heya just wanted to give you a brief heads up and let you know a few
    of the pictures aren’t loading correctly. I’m not sure why but I
    think its a linking issue. I’ve tried it in two different browsers
    and both show the same results.

  25. Malinda says:

    Everything is very open with a very clearr description of the issues.
    It was truly informative. Your website is useful.
    Thank you for sharing!

  26. Ѵerƴ good post! We will Ƅе linking to this great content on oսr website.

    Keep uр the good writing.

    Look into my blog post; شراء زوار

  27. The foremost and maybe most important septic tank maintenance Portland technique for
    residents to consider will be draining the septic tank of its contents.
    This way, you can compare companies side by side without incurring any extra risk.
    In general, more people living under the same roof will require frequent septic tank pumping service to
    maintain it clean.

  28. Elvira says:

    Yeah, entirely agreee. You may have hit the nail
    on the head completely

    Feel free to visit my web-site: selling used car (Elvira)

  29. Free Wifi says:

    “We’re moving to free up a substantial amount of spectrum for Wi – Fi to relieve Wi – Fi congestion and improve Wi – Fi speeds at conferences, airports an ultimately people’s homes,”
    Genachowski said on stage at the event, according to a report from the Denver Post.
    Examine out if the application is user-friendly and is also handled effortlessly by a
    novice like you. The groups behind the new venture, along with Mc –
    Kinney, believe that the pioneering initiative will also encourage new ideas and growth from entrepreneurs and the
    business community.

    Look at my web site: Free Wifi

  30. Fine way of explaining, and good piece of writing
    to obtain facts about my presentation topic, which i am
    going to deliver in school.

  31. single parents in the news

    Author Interview with Imogen Robertson « PaperBackSwap Blog

  32. Fantastic goods from you, man. I have understand your stuff previous to
    and you are just too wonderful. I actually like what you have acquired here,
    certainly like what you’re stating and the way in which
    you say it. You make it enjoyable and you still care for to
    keep it sensible. I can’t wait to read far more from you.

    This is actually a wonderful web site.

  33. Alfonzo says:

    Hi there I am so grateful I found your weblog, I really found you by error,
    while I was researching on Aol for something else, Anyhow I am here now and would
    just like to say kudos for a tremendous post and a all round exciting blog (I also love the theme/design), I don’t have time to look
    over it all at the minute but I have saved it and also added in your RSS feeds, so when I have time I will be
    back to read much more, Please do keep up the superb jo.

  34. I’m more than happy to discover this web site. I wanted to thank you for your
    time for this wonderful read!! I definitely liked every part of it
    and i also have you book marked to check out new things in your web site.

  35. excellent put up, very informative. I ponder
    why the other specialists of this sector don’t
    notice this. You must continue your writing. I’m confident, you
    have a great readers’ base already!

    Check out my page Black Storm Télécharger

  36. Truly when someone doesn’t understand after that its up to other users that they will assist, so here it occurs.

  37. publisher says:

    I was curious if you ever considered changing the page layout of
    your blog? Its very well written; I love what youve got to say.
    But maybe you could a little more in the way of
    content so people could connect with it better.
    Youve got an awful lot of text for only having one or 2 pictures.
    Maybe you could space it out better?

  38. Music says:

    I am really thankful to the holder of this web page who has shared this enormous piece of
    writing at at this place.

  39. It’s difficult to find experienced people on this subject, but you
    seem like you know what you’re talking about! Thanks

  40. Magnificent goods from you, man. I have remember your stuff prior to and you’re simply too
    excellent. I actually like what you’ve acquired here, certainly like what you are stating
    and the way in which during which you are saying it. You’re making
    it entertaining and you still take care of to keep it wise.

    I can’t wait to learn much more from you. This is really a terrific website.

  41. I really like what you guys are usually up too. Such clever work and exposure!

    Keep up the amazing works guys I’ve added you guys to blogroll.

  42. Wow, that’s what I was seeking for, what a stuff!

    present here at this weblog, thanks admin of this
    website.

  43. I feel this is among the so much significant info
    for me. And i’m satisfied reading your article.
    But should commentary on few general issues, The
    web site style is perfect, the articles is actually excellent :
    D. Just right task, cheers

  44. Thanks for stumbling upon the Tax Drawback Decision Weblog The blog is designed to help folks with tax issues and illustrate whether or not being represented by a reliable staff of
    tax professionals is price your while. Staff of Washington Tax Services , almost 27 years of steady operation.

  45. It’s amazing to visit this site and reading the views of all colleagues about this paragraph, while
    I am also zealous of getting know-how.

  46. There is certainly a lot to learn about this topic. I like all the
    points you made.

  47. Nice answers in return of this query with real arguments and describing
    everything concerning that.

  48. I pay a visit daily some blogs and sites to read articles,
    except this webpage provides feature based writing.

  49. This post is genuinely a pleasant one it helps new net people, who are wishing
    for blogging.

  50. You ought to take part in a contest for one of the greatest blogs online.

    I’m going to recommend this website!

Leave a Reply