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Susan Grossey

~ Author of books on financial crime and money laundering

Susan Grossey

Tag Archives: Helen Hollick

At long last – and a longlist!

03 Monday Jan 2022

Posted by Susan Grossey author in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Discovered Diamonds, Helen Hollick, marketing, Portraits of Pretence, Samuel Plank, self-publishing, The Notes of Change, writing

The day has finally come: I am a full-time author.  Well, that’s over-stating it, but on 31 December 2021 I retired from my “day job”, and now I can spend more time learning about self-publishing, marketing my books, exchanging ideas and encouragement with other indie authors – oh, and doing some writing as well.  I found my last three months of work so busy and all-encompassing, what with planning my exit and providing “just one last training session” for so many lovely clients, that I have not even opened “The Notes of Change” (the final Sam Plank novel) since the end of October…  But now I can, and the first order of business is to read it again, from start to, well, not finish, but to “wherever I’m up to”, so that I can remember the plot.

Actually, that’s another over-statement, because of course the real first order of business was to turn my efficient business office into an equally efficient but much softer and more creative “writing den”.  My husband very kindly did the grunt work of removing a now-surplus second built-in desk and making good the walls, and then I scarpered while he and a neighbour manhandled the new “sofa of reclining reflection” through the house and garden and up the office steps.  It looks marvellous – and within ten minutes had been colonised by Maggie the cat, henceforward known in her new incarnation as “writer’s muse”:

Maggie thinking deeply creative thoughts – about dinner

And what of this longlist, I hear you cry!  Well, as if to welcome me properly to authordom, on 1 January 2022 I had a wonderful email from the sainted Helen Hollick (quite why she has not received a damehood for services to the self-published, I do not know – she’d certainly have no trouble finding a hat to wear to her investiture!).  Her review website for indie and self-published authors – Discovered Diamonds – has launched a new award.  The Richard Tearle Discovering Diamonds Award is named in honour of one their most prolific reviewers, who died last year, and “Portraits of Pretence” (the fourth Sam Plank novel) has been longlisted for the inaugural award, by dint of having been the Discovered Diamonds “Book of the Year” in 2017.  I can’t wait to see who will join Sam on the longlist, and then we’ll have to be patient until they announce the winner and runner-up in spring 2023.  What with a new sofa and the honour of being a longlist nominee for a new award, my new writing life is off to a flying start.

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Juggling constables

14 Friday Feb 2020

Posted by Susan Grossey author in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

blogging, Cambridge, Gregory Hardiman, Helen Hollick, library, Martha Plank, newsletter, Regency, research, Samuel Plank

I rather fear that my blog posts at the moment are a bit dull – there’s not much to say when you’re knee-deep in research.  But I am finding it a mental challenge to live with two constables at the same time.  There are six Sam Plank novels out there and I want to take every opportunity I can to promote them and acquire new readers.  In this endeavour I have help from all sorts of lovely people, including – today – Helen Hollick, who has featured a conversation with Martha Plank on her historical fiction blog Let Us Talk of Many Things.  In an imaginative departure for her blog, Helen periodically features conversations not with authors but with their characters, and today it is Martha’s turn.

At the same time, I am ramping up the research for my new series – the Gregory books – which will be set in Cambridge (but still in my beloved 1820s).  This involves long hours in the library (don’t feel sorry for me – it’s my version of paradise) and even the outlay of £20 on a comprehensive and chunky history of the university (I figure that I’m planning five Gregory books, so it’s a bearable investment of £4 per book).

But what should I do about my monthly updates?  These go out to subscribers on the first of each month (do sign up – I’m currently writing for a very select and loyal audience of thirty-one!) and so far have concentrated on the research that underpins the Sam books.  Indeed, all nineteen updates have been called “Sam Plank update”.  Shall I re-brand them?  Or keep that title and just explain each time that the research – although still late Regency and therefore equally of interest to Sam fans – is being done to furnish Gregory with his life and backstory?  It doesn’t matter one jot at the moment, I suppose, but when the Sam books are picked up for a blockbuster Sunday night telly drama and I’m having to beat journalists off with a stick, I want to have my author profile and presence all neat and tidy.  In the meantime, turn away now if you’re squeamish: I’m off to research facial and eye injuries caused by muskets in the Peninsular Wars.

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Let us talk of many things!

16 Tuesday Jan 2018

Posted by Susan Grossey author in Uncategorized

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Book of the Year, bookshop, Helen Hollick, map, marketing, Plank 5, Portraits of Pretence, promotion, Samuel Plank, title

It’s all happening today!  First of all, the divine Helen Hollick has featured a little piece by me on her terrific historical fiction blog, Let Us Talk of Many Things.  She gave me free rein – rather brave – and I decided to write about how I explore Sam’s London.  And quite by chance I realised that it is an interesting blend of old and new, as my two most-consulted resources are a map from 1827, and the Transport for London online journey planner!

Secondly, I have taken delivery of my “Book of the Year 2017” promotional stickers.  For those of you interested in the financial side of things, I ordered them from Vistaprint, using – with her permission – the logo designed by Helen.  I chose circular, matte, easy-peel stickers to mimic those seen most often in bookshops, and 120 small stickers (3.6 cm in diameter) cost me £26.03 including delivery and VAT.  That’s nearly 22p per sticker and a wild extravagance, but I treated myself.  I have now put them on the copies of “Portraits of Pretence” that I have in stock, added them to the books in my local bookshops, and posted them to the more distant stockists in Ely and London.  I have also been keeping a beady eye on sales for a spike, given all this publicity, but it is so far proving elusive.

 

WP_20180116_09_24_24_Pro

And thirdly, I will be launching the “Plank 5” title poll at the end of this week.  My creative team and I (that’s me and the husband) are looking at a long list of possibilities in order to narrow it down to the final five.  The big thesaurus is out – the one with its own special magnifying glass – so it’s serious stuff.  Voting will open on Friday.

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A gong for Sam

31 Sunday Dec 2017

Posted by Susan Grossey author in Uncategorized

≈ 11 Comments

Tags

blogging, Book of the Year, Discovering Diamonds, Helen Hollick, marketing, Portraits of Pretence, publicity, Samuel Plank, self-publishing

Yesterday I was driving home from visiting family and listening to the news on the radio.  They announced who had been given a New Year Honour (for overseas readers, here’s what they are), and I had a little daydream about how marvellous it would be to be recognised (à la Lady Antonia Fraser) for services to literature.  Once home, having been offline for a couple of days, I checked my email and good heavens!  I found that I had been given something even better!  “Portraits of Pretence” – the fourth Sam Plank novel – has been chosen by influential book review website Discovering Diamonds as their Book of the Year for 2017.

Discovering Diamonds is a wonderful place.  I stumbled on it – or rather, the people behind it, before it was created – right back at the start, just as I published the first Sam Plank novel, “Fatal Forgery” and was looking for reviewers.  Everyone associated with the website – and in particular our marvellous leader Helen Hollick – has been incredibly generous with their time, expertise, guidance and encouragement.  If you’re a fan of historical fiction – of any era and in any formats, whether e-book or paperback, Victorian or Roman, self-published or traditionally produced – their reviews are unmissable.

Regular readers of this blog will remember how excited I was when “Portraits” was chosen as their Book of the Month in March.  And now to find that I have scooped the annual award – well!  Naturally Sam would dispute my role, as Helen quite rightly points out that he is the hero of it all: “The three main characters have, through the absorbing series, become good, fictional, friends.  I find them believable, plausible and very likeable.”

I know the fashion is to say that awards don’t matter, that the work itself is the reward.  And of course I do love writing the Sam Plank stories.  But they are not edging Grisham or Rowling off the bestseller lists, there is no-one from the BBC knocking at the door and begging to be allowed to make them into a Sunday night corset drama, and my marketing efforts cost much more in time than they generate in income.  And so an award like this does matter – it matters enormously.  Hopefully it will generate some publicity for Sam, but more importantly it confirms to me that I can write, that the books are worth reading, and that I am right to continue.  Thank you, Helen: to me, this award is priceless.

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Double diamond!

09 Sunday Apr 2017

Posted by Susan Grossey author in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Discovering Diamonds, Helen Hollick, Portraits of Pretence, review

A couple of weeks ago I shared the lovely news that “Portraits of Pretence” had been chosen for review as a “Discovered Diamond” – an accolade worth a great deal to me, as it is the opinion of fellow writers of historical fiction.  And then today I learn that it is even better than that: “Portraits” is their March Book of the Month.  This is decided by Helen Hollick, who launched the “Discovering Diamonds” website – and she really knows her historical fiction onions, so I am thrilled.  I am now entitled to use an even fancier logo on my website – look over to the left!

And my bookmarks should be arriving tomorrow, according to the parcel people – I’ll let you know.

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What do historical fiction readers want?

03 Saturday Sep 2016

Posted by Susan Grossey author in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

blogging, Facebook, Helen Hollick, historical fiction, MK Tod, Twitter, writing

Do you ever feel that you’ve overstretched yourself?  I have two websites, two blogs, several Facebook pages and two Twitter feeds, and it’s still a mystery to me how, when and why they all link together.  So I apologise for doing this the wrong way.  But one of the blogs I follow avidly is written by fellow historical fiction writer Helen Hollick, and recently she posted an excellent interview with another author, MK Tod, on what it is that readers want from historical fiction.

Now I know that I should be able to link cleverly to this post, so that it shows here, but it’s all too much for me – I’m having to lie down in a darkened room with a plate of Jaffa Cakes to hand, and simply give you the link instead:  https://ofhistoryandkings.blogspot.co.uk/2016/08/historical-fiction-what-do-readers-want.html

So big apologies to both Helen and MK for my technical duncery, but I do recommend it as an excellent read – I agree with every word.

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It’s here: “Notes of Change” – the seventh and final Sam Plank novel!

Sign up for monthly updates on the history behind Sam – and get a FREE glossary of Regency terms!

FREE Official Guide to the Sam Plank Mysteries – sample chapters and glossary!

“The Solo Squid: How to Run a Happy One-Person Business”

It’s here: “Heir Apparent” – the sixth Sam Plank novel!

“Heir Apparent” has been chosen as Book of the Month for November 2019!

New e-boxset of first three Sam e-books! Click image to buy…

The Alliance of Independent Authors - Author Member

“Portraits” has been chosen as Book of the Year 2017!

Out now: my “Susan in the City” collection of newspaper columns

Sam speaks! “Fatal Forgery” and “The Man in the Canary Waistcoat” audiobooks now available

Awarded to “The Man in the Canary Waistcoat”!

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