THE FIRST VIRTUAL CAROLE BLAKE OPEN DOORS PROJECT

The circumstances of this extraordinary year meant that our Carole Blake Open Doors Project launched its very first virtual version this summer. We’re very happy to share Tabitha Topping’s piece about her Open Doors experience with us, pioneering our virtual approach – and even more delighted that she’s continuing to do some freelance work for the agency alongside her studies now!

’If I’m being entirely honest, when I applied for the Carole Blake Open Doors Project at the Blake Friedmann Literary Agency I had little to no idea of what a literary agent actually does, nor how they fit into the wider publishing ecosystem. All I knew was that the experience involved publishing in some way or another and that I fitted some of the requirements. It would be remiss of me not to apply, was my line of thinking. Thoughtless, even. I dutifully submitted my application, fully expecting to add it to my ever-increasing stack of rejections. Therefore, there was no one more surprised than me to find out that I had been successful in my application and that I was to spend two whole weeks shadowing agents and generally infiltrating the opaque world of publishing. Me! Out of everyone, they chose me! I gleefully noted the dates down in my diary, and allowed my mind to wander; imagining the meetings I would sit in, the publishers I would meet…

This was in March 2020. I think you all know what happened next. As the nation hastily went into lockdown, all Blake Friedmann staff shifted to home working and the Open Doors experience was understandably put on hold. It’s hard to think back and remember the whirling uncertainty and doom-mongering around that time, but I do remember being glad that it hadn’t been altogether cancelled. I assumed soon everything would return to normal and I would be in London in no time at all.

Needless to say that is not what happened. As lockdown became even further entrenched the whole idea steadily became more far-fetched and implausible. It was therefore somewhat surprising when Sian from Blake Friedmann got in contact with me at the beginning of July. She asked me whether given the current circumstances, I would be interested in doing the Open Doors experience remotely? Of course, I leapt at the chance. I didn’t know what it would involve or how it would work, but it was too good an opportunity to waste.

Using the medium of Zoom my days were jam-packed with virtual meetings. I met people from the agency, I met editors, I met book-cover designers, I met literary scouts – it seemed as if I met everyone! They were all from different publishing backgrounds, all with different experience and expertise, and all were so friendly and patently eager to share their knowledge of the industry. They answered my rather inane questions with such patience and enthusiasm that at times I felt weak at the knees. I also got the chance to sit through in-agency meetings, as well as meetings between members of the agency and other publishing individuals. Then, as the Frankfurt Book Fair was looming, I also attended meetings with the agency’s foreign counterparts and learnt all about the vagaries of foreign markets. This all being through Zoom, of course.

Between meetings I busied myself writing news articles for the agency’s website, reading submissions and manuscripts and offering my suggestions and edits. I drafted social media posts, proof-read contracts and even wrote a submission letter for one of the agents! Despite being remote I never felt for a moment that I lacked for anything – and even at times felt that I perhaps gained more than if I had done the experience in person. I was always busy and made to feel very much a part of the agency. I simply wallowed in information and advice and came away feeling that the industry was in fact very much permeable – even for the likes of me!

 If you’re harbouring any curiosity about the world of publishing I would very much recommend applying for the Carole Blake Open Doors Project – you won’t regret it!’ - Tabitha Topping, Carole Blake Open Doors 2020

FIND THEM DEAD SPENDS FOUR CONSECUTIVE WEEKS AT NUMBER ONE IN THE BESTSELLER LISTS

FIND THEM DEAD by Peter James, Macmillan, HB cover.jpg

FIND THEM DEAD, Peter James’ sixteenth Detective Superintendent Roy Grace novel has just appeared for the fourth consecutive week at Number 1 in the Sunday Times Paperback bestseller charts, breaking James’ previous personal records. FIND THEM DEAD’s success gave James his seventeenth Number 1 on the British charts last month, after only three days on sale.

In further exciting news for Peter James and his much-loved character, production on the ITV adaptation of the first two Roy Grace novels, DEAD SIMPLE and LOOKING GOOD DEAD, wrapped this week. Grace, adapted for ITV by screenwriter and Endeavour creator, Russell Lewis, with John Simm set to star as the tenacious detective Roy Grace, will air in 2021.   

In FIND THEM DEAD, Roy Grace gets a tip-off about a county lines drugs mastermind operating out of Brighton. On his first day back in his old job in Sussex, he is called to a seemingly senseless murder.

Separately, Meg Magellan finally has her life back together, five years after the car crash that killed her husband and their son. Her daughter, Laura, now 18, is on her gap year travelling in South America with a friend, and Meg misses her badly. Laura is all she has in the world. In between jobs, Meg receives a summons for jury service. She’s excited – it might be interesting and will help distract her from constantly worrying about Laura. But when she is selected for the trial of a major Brighton drugs overlord, everything changes.

Gradually, Grace’s investigation draws him increasingly into the sinister sphere of influence of the drug dealer on trial. A man utterly ruthless and evil, prepared to order the death of anyone it takes to enable him to walk free. Just a few days into jury service, Meg arrives home to find a photograph of Laura, in Ecuador, lying on her kitchen table. Then her phone rings.

A sinister, threatening stranger is on the line. He tells her that if she ever wants to see Laura alive again, it is very simple. At the end of the trial, all she has to do is make sure the jury says just two words… Not guilty.

Peter James’ Roy Grace series has been translated into thirty-seven languages with worldwide sales of over twenty million copies

Read Peter James’ 'Author's Tale' interview with the Independent.

Listen to Peter James’ interviews with the Mail Arts+ and Writer's Routine podcasts.

 

Praise for Peter James:
‘Sinister and riveting… Peter James is one of the best British crime writers, and therefore one of the best in the world.’ — Lee Child

‘Peter James creates a world we can smell, touch and feel for his Brighton detective Inspector Roy Grace.’ – The Times

‘A master plotter who cunningly tunes into contemporary concerns. Peter James cannot fail to thrill.’ ­– Daily Mail

'Peter James is one of the best crime writers in the business.' — Karin Slaughter

About the Author:
Peter James is an international bestselling crime and thriller writer. In 2015 WHSmith customers voted him the Greatest Crime Author of All Time and in 2016 he was awarded the coveted CWA Diamond Dagger, a lifetime achievement award for sustained excellence. In 2018 he received a Specsavers Honorary Platinum Bestseller Award.

Successful nationwide tours of the stage plays of THE PERFECT MURDER (2014), DEAD SIMPLE (2015), NOT DEAD ENOUGH (2017) and THE HOUSE ON COLD HILL (2019) have played to packed theatres in dozens of British cities, and garnered magnificent reviews. The newest Roy Grace theatre production, LOOKING GOOD DEAD, will tour in 2021.

 Visit Peter’s website

 Like him on Facebook and follow him on Twitter

THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH BY MONIQUE ROFFEY SHORTLISTED FOR THE COSTA NOVEL AWARD

THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH by Monique Roffey has been shortlisted for the 2020 Costa Novel Award, one of the UK’s most prestigious awards. Eric Karl Anderson, one of the judges of the Costa First Novel Award category, commented in a blog post that he is ‘especially thrilled to see Monique Roffey's novel THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH shortlisted for the Novel Award’ and that it is one of his favourite books of the year. Also shortlisted for the Novel Award are Susanna Clarke, Tim Finch and Denise Mina.

THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH was published to wide acclaim by Peepal Tree Press in the UK and by W F Howes in audio. Booker Prize-winning author Bernardine Evaristo has also included the novel in a round-up of her five favourite books of 2020. Praising Monique Roffey as ‘the most adventurous of writers’, Evaristo adds that THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH is ‘packed with layers of meaning around womanhood, alienation, masculinity, toxic attitudes towards women, and inter-female rivalry, as well as love, compassion and the search for home.’  THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH was also shortlisted for the Goldsmiths Prize earlier this year, an award established to celebrate fiction which ‘extends the possibilities of the novel form’.

A vivid, moving story of love and trust, family and friendship in a Caribbean island community, THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH is a world brought to unforgettable life by a master storyteller. A fisherman sings to himself in his boat, but attracts an unexpected sea-dweller — Aycayia, a beautiful young woman cursed to live as a mermaid, swimming the ocean for centuries. Theirs becomes a calm, unspoken bond. But when she hears David’s engine again one day and follows the vessel, she finds herself in a fierce battle for her life. Caught by American sports fishermen, she is strung up on the dock as a trophy, but David rescues her, and gently wins her trust as she starts to transform, painfully, back into a woman. But jealous eyes are watching them…

Interwoven with David and Aycayia’s love story is that of Miss Arcadia Rain, a white landowner bringing up her deaf son on a dwindling estate. As her young son connects with fellow outsider Aycayia, an old lover of Arcadia’s returns to the island and she too begins to feel her way into love and trust again.

See more about THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH on the Peepal Tree Press site.  

The category winners of the 2020 Costa Book Awards will be announced on Monday 4th January 2021, and the Costa Book of the Year winner, chosen from one the category winners, will be announced on Tuesday 26th January 2021 and awarded a prize of £30,000. The Costa Book Awards was established in 1971 and is awarded to ‘the most enjoyable books of the year by writers resident in the UK and Ireland.’ Past winners of the Novel Award include Jonathan Coe, Sally Rooney, Jon McGregor, Sebastian Barry, Kate Atkinson and Ali Smith.

Praise for THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH

‘THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH arrives bearing tragedy and beauty. Monique Roffey has created a new myth for an age of ruined oceans. She continues to be one of our most exciting new Caribbean voices.’ — A.L. Kennedy

‘Monique Roffey is a unique talent and most daring and versatile of writers.’ — Bernardine Evaristo

‘Monique Roffey is a writer of verve, vibrancy and compassion, and her work is always a joy to read.’ — Sarah Hall

THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH is wonderfully written, with both soul and intense drama – it glistens almost, like the mermaid! I love its all-round charisma and also its great compassion for both humanity and the natural world.’ — Diana Evans

‘THE MERMAID OF BLACK CONCH is like a lost myth, found, and made fresh again for our times.’ —  Tessa McWatt, author of Shame on Me: An Anatomy of Race and Belonging

Photo: Marcus Bastel

Photo: Marcus Bastel

About Monique Roffey

Monique Roffey is an award-winning novelist. House of Ashes (Scribner UK) was shortlisted for the Costa and the BOCAS Prize. Archipelago, winner of the OCM BOCAS prize for Caribbean Literature, was published by Scribner in the UK, Viking in the US, and translated into 5 languages. Her second novel The White Woman on the Green Bicycle was shortlisted for the Orange Prize and the Encore Prize, among other accolades.

Read an interview with Monique Roffey here

Visit Monique’s website

Follow Monique on Twitter

Matt Harvey's screenplay MANDRAKE going into principal photography

Principal photography began this week on Matthew Harvey’s original screenplay MANDRAKE, the latest feature film backed by Northern Ireland Screen through its New Talent Focus scheme, directed by Lynne Davidson.

Produced by Village Films, MANDRAKE is a supernatural thriller about a probation officer (played by Deidre Mullins) tasked with rehabilitating a witch killer after two-decades of imprisonment. Derbhle Crotty as the witch co-stars with Paul Kennedy as the cop.

Previous to MANDRAKE, Matt’s work includes the 2017 film AN ACT OF DEFIANCE about the trial of Nelson Mandela and nine others accused of sabotage against the government during the apartheid era in South Africa. The film won five awards including the Golden Calf for Best Feature Film.

Matt’s three-part TV thriller CRACKED SCREEN, co-written with Hamish Wright, is in development with the BBC

MANDRAKE is financed by Northern Ireland Screen and post-production house Yellowmoon. It will film entirely on location in Northern Ireland for three weeks.

Click here for more information on MANDRAKE

Matt Harvey is represented by Conrad Williams in the media department.

Film/TV rights to Ros Anderson’s debut THE HIERARCHIES optioned by Margot Robbie’s company LuckyChap, SK Global, and Mazur Kaplan

After a fiercely fought auction, film/tv rights in Ros Anderson’s debut novel THE HIERARCHIES were acquired by SK Global and Mazur Kaplan, who will will co-produce with Margot Robbie, Tom Ackerley and Josey McNamara under their LuckyChap Entertainment banner. The deal was negotiated on behalf of Ros Anderson by Conrad Williams of Blake Friedmann and Steve Fisher of APA Agency.

With a unique and compelling voice, THE HIERARCHIES is the diary of Sylv.ie, a synthetic woman designed to please and serve her human ‘Husband’ from the moment she comes to life. She lives in a single room at the top of his luxurious home, her existence barely tolerated by his human wife, and concealed from their child. Deeply curious about the world beyond her room, between the Husband’s visits Sylv.ie watches the family through her window, absorbing all she can. She keeps a diary, and through this learns that she cannot rely on her memories, or on what the Husband tells her. When she is taken to the ‘Doll Hospital’ it is not for her benefit, but to be altered. Sylv.ie needs to escape, but what will the world hold for her?

THE HIERARCHIES is a literary and speculative voice-driven novel that asks what it really means to be human. Set in a recognisable near future, and laced with dark, sly humour, THE HIERARCHIES is less about the fear of new technology than humans’ age-old talent for exploitation. From its outsider’s perspective, the novel explores notions of memory, consent, artifice, and ‘femininity’. It asks what it means to be ‘natural’ and celebrates the power of female friendship. Sometimes startling, often moving, and always unforgettable, readers will be gripped by THE HIERARCHIES from its very first page. It’s been described as perfect for fans of Never Let Me Go, I, Westworld, Ex Machina, Black Mirror and The Testaments.     

THE HIERARCHIES was published by Dutton in North America in August 2020, and will be published by Dead Ink and Bolinda in the UK in June 2021.

Praise for THE HIERARCHIES:

“Fascinating…Anderson gracefully executes the process of Sylv.ie’s self-discovery, making her feel real and deeply sympathetic…Readers will be drawn in by Sylv.ie’s emotional story.” — Publisher’s Weekly

“In The Hierarchies, Anderson has constructed a novel that goes beyond common conversations about what we will do, and what will happen to us, if robot women come into being…It’s a shocking and eye-opening debut, one that has me looking at my coffee maker a little differently.” — Bitch Media

‘A quiet triumph…Anderson’s prose — Sylv.ie’s voice — offers a beautiful combination of naivete and wisdom, full of nonhuman puzzlements, off-kilter observations and limpid poetry.”Paul Di Filippo, Washington Post