“What prompted you to become a writer of crime fiction?”
I’m going to have to break this question into two parts –
what prompted me to become a writer, and what then prompted me to become a
writer of crime fiction. Why? Because I’ve written for my entire personal and professional
life, but only truly “turned to crime” in my fifties, so feel I should explain
both elements.
As with many children who love to talk, I am, at heart, a
storyteller. Sometimes that got me into trouble – as “stories” can be taken
as “lies” when a child tells them to an adult. But that’s enough about that. So,
yes, I’ve always “told stories” and I was the girl whose English teacher would
tell her – every time an essay was handed back – “That was a bit long, you didn’t have to
write a book, you know”. So, storytelling and writing a lot – a good start for
any sort of writer.
Some of the non-fiction books I wrote...yes, one was translated into Chinese! |
I went to Cardiff University to study English because I
wanted to be a writer, but I was battered about the head with a stick upon
which were writ large the words CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL OF CRITICISM and became quickly
disillusioned, so I packed in English and studied psychology instead; I’d
decided I’d rather try to understand the human condition so I could write about
it myself, rather than spend years parsing what had already been written. When
I graduated, I applied my degree in psychology to the fields of marketing and
marketing communications and that’s when I began to “write for a living” – I worked
in public relations, advertising etc. and wrote pretty much all day every day,
to meet client briefs. I set up my own business when I was twenty eight and
wrote all the time for that too – as I had done, as well as training courses
and books for post-graduate managers of marketing and marketing communications.
I migrated from the UK to Canada in 2000 to teach marketing on the MBA course
at the University of British Columbia, and wrote my last management text on
marketing communications in 2003. So – I’d always written. A lot.
First two self-published crime fiction books |
So WHY crime fiction? I’d always read a lot of it and, even
when my bedtime reading was Shakespeare, as opposed to Enid Blyton’s Secret Seven,
I always preferred the tragedies with their acts of vengeance, murder, lust and
bloodshed over the comedies which I never found to be even remotely amusing. I
like a book where someone dies. There, I’ve said it. All in all, I write crime
fiction because I’ve always read it – and I’ve read it because I found Agatha
Christie books on my Mum’s bookshelves…so feel perfectly justified in blaming
my mother!
Cathy Ace is the Bony Blithe Award-winning author of The
Cait Morgan Mysteries (#8 The Corpse with the Ruby Lips was released on November
1st) and The WISE Enquiries Agency Mysteries (#3, The Case of the Curious Cook, was released in hardcover in the UK on
November 30th and in the USA & Canada on March 1st). You can find out more
about Cathy, her work and her characters at her website, where you can also
sign up for her newsletter with news, updates and special offers:
http://cathyace.com/
3 comments:
Cathy, I think it's good to break the question down into what made you become a writer and then a crime writer. And it's always fun to see the answers to those questions.
"I like a book where someone dies. There, I’ve said it."
Still laughing.
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