Thursday, April 5, 2018

Guest Post: 5 Books Recommended for Aspiring Authors by Jenny Morton Potts




Jenny Morton Potts was born in a smart, dull suburb of Glasgow where the only regular excitement was burglary. Attended a smart, dull school where the only regular excitement was the strap. Worked in smart, dull sales and marketing jobs until realising she was living someone else’s life.
Escaped to Gascony to make gĂ®tes. Knee deep in cement and pregnant, Jenny was happy. Then autism and a distracted spine surgeon who wanted to talk about The Da Vinci Code, wiped out the order. Returned to wonderful England – and unlikely ever to leave again – Jenny, with assistance from loyal hound, walked and swam her way back to manageable health.
Jenny would like to see the Northern Lights but worries that’s the best bit and should be saved till last. Very happily, and gratefully, partnered for 28 years, she ought to mention, and living with inspirational child in Thaxted, Essex.





5 Books Recommended for Aspiring Authors


Well, this of course will depend on the kind of writing the author wants to do. But let us suppose that the author has not yet decided:  
For structure approaching perfection, you could do no better than an early Jeffrey Archer. For example, 'Not a Penny More, Not a Penny Less'. The sheer talent of story-telling is there too, as well as pace and full denouement satisfaction.  
Now let's turn to artistry. Margaret Attwood would be my choice here. She's simply the best. As a sentence maker, she can't be beaten IMHO.  
Dialogue? You could do worse than turning the clock back a few decades and leafing your way through an E M Forster. 'A Room with a View' is a dialogue delight. And Forster is very funny. They say, don't they, that humour can be a problem. I can tell you that this great author never felt that. 
 Now, what about a writer who ticks all the boxes, with all the bells and whistles and any other metaphor I can chuck in there. David Mitchell. The man can go to any location, with any characters, in any era, and write with genius.  
 And finally, I'd like to include a Russian. Writing is a serious business and the Russians do serious extremely well. As do the French of course. I could choose Kafka or Dostoevsky. But instead I plump for Solzhenitsyn and his reality. His 'Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich' had such a profound effect on me and I'm sure, in consequence, my writing. So I conclude with that. 





A gripping psychological thriller with chilling twists, from a unique new voice.


Keller Baye and Rebecca Brown live on different sides of the Atlantic. Until she falls in love with him, Rebecca knows nothing of Keller. But he’s known about her for a very long time, and now he wants to destroy her.

This is the story of two families. One living under the threat of execution in North Carolina. The other caught up in a dark mystery in the Scottish Highlands. The families’ paths are destined to cross. But why? And can anything save them when that happens?









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