Showing posts with label Daphne du Maurier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Daphne du Maurier. Show all posts

Friday, 27 February 2026

The setting as a character, and why the places in some novels stay with you

Some books leave you missing a place more than a plot. A craft-meets-reading-life look at how writers build inhabited settings through sensory detail, social texture, and the politics of place.
Some books leave you with a plot. Others leave you with a place.

You finish the last page and realise what you miss most is not the twist or the romance or even the protagonist. It is the street, the house, the river, the city at dusk. The particular kind of light that only exists in that fictional world.

Tuesday, 19 August 2025

Why we keep coming back to the same books over and over

A vintage copy of a novel resting open on a well-worn chair, hinting at a beloved story returned to again and again.
There are books I’ve read two or three times, and picked up more times. Not out of duty, but from a pull I can’t quite explain. 

They’re not always my favourites in the traditional sense. But they know something about me, or I know something about them. That's the power of rereading. 

Sunday, 9 March 2025

Crafting the perfect opening lines of a novel

Do you need a killer opening line for your novel? Or is there an alternative way to draw readers in right from the start? 

I'm slightly obsessed by the opening lines of novels, and for me, the opening line isn’t merely about crafting a flashy hook; it’s about setting the tone, sparking curiosity, and providing readers with a reason to keep turning the pages. A brilliant first sentence generates intrigue and anticipation, drawing the audience into your story before they even realise it.