Why Weeps the Willow seems to be selling very well now thanks to the promotion it's been given since I signed it up to Kindle Direct Publishing Select.
I always thought that people would buy the book if they only knew it was out there to buy, and that certainly seems to have been the case.
My father came from Norfolk and when I was a child we used to spend our summer holidays staying at my grandmother's house in the Waveney Valley.
After she died we continued holidaying in Norfolk, but on the north coast of the county, near Holkham Hall. It was Holkham which gave me the idea for Lacey Hall in my story.
Why Weeps the Willow grew out of a love of ghost stories as well as a love of Norfolk. It wasn't the first one I wrote, but it was the best.
I wrote it several times. Becky Melchin, one of the main characters in the final version didn't even appear in the first, but she grew on me somehow, and almost took over the story in the end.
The Calthorpes of Wiverton, whose story I used as the reason the Symonds Family pulled out of shipping, really existed. I read about them once in the Norfolk Magazine.
The County Agricultural Inspectorate was a real body during the First World War, and the agricultural practices recommended to the Symonds by them were accepted agricultural practices of the time, intended to improve the output of the land. Sugar Beet was introduced to East Anglia around the time of the First World War for the reasons given. Turnip Townsend and Cole of Holkham were landowners and agricultural innovators during the seventeen hundreds.
The treatment of amnesiacs by incarcerating them in an asylum was common practice at one time, so it would have been possible for Paul Kingdom's condition to have been treated in that way.
I borrowed Paul's experiences at the Front from a number of books I read, which were written at the time of the First World War by officers serving in France, and the Zeppelin attack on the Marconi Works at Chelmsford, described by Reverend Melchin, really happened.
When writing the main version of Why Weeps the Willow I had a chart on my wall with Lacey and the Hall mapped out on it, so I could be sure that it was geographically possible for the things which I said happened there to occur. Such as the harvest moon facing Paul along the length of the ride at the start of Chapter Two.
I also had a time line on the wall, so that there wouldn't be any mistakes in the sequence of events as I set them down, and so that if any should creep in I would pick them up and put them right.
Why Weeps the Willow has been a labour of love over the years, and I like to feel that my grandmother, whose picture as a young woman forms the cover of the book, would have approved of it being used in that way.
No comments:
Post a Comment