To
understand how I came to write All Lessons Learned you have to understand how I
came to write the Cambridge Fellows series (of which this is the eighth book).
I’m a huge fan of the classic detective novel (Agatha Christie and the like)
and it’s always frustrated me that there weren’t a pair of gay detectives
solving those cosy crimes. After reading Death at the President’s Lodging
(which has got one or two really ‘slashy’ scenes) I became inspired to write my
own.
I
had an era I loved (the Edwardian, when many of my favourite authors like Conan
Doyle were writing) and a setting (Cambridge, my university) and the rest just
followed. It wasn’t hard to create a couple of contrasting Edwardian gentlemen,
both of them bright, handsome and keen to put their brains to solving
mysteries. And a single sex, ivy clad Cambridge college was an ideal place for
a pair of male lovers to hide their relationship, one which started in “Lessons
in Love”.
The
series grew, the mysteries multiplied, but at the back of my mind there was
always a little warning note. 1914 isn’t
far away. And right from the start of publication I had anxious readers
asking what would happen to Jonty and Orlando during WWI. I even had a list
from my 18 year old daughter of all the ways they could avoid having to fight,
such as working in Room 40 with the intelligence services. I had to bite the
bullet, shift the story sequence forward a few years and tackle the problem.
That
didn’t become any easier as I tackled the research. I get bored with history
books, so I go for primary/close secondary sources. Recollections from old
soldiers, collections of letters, photographs, poetry from the era; the more I
read the more my heart broke at the thought of the waste of young lives. (Don’t
get me started on Wilfred Owen or I’ll start blubbing.) Somehow I had to
reflect that in All Lessons Learned, without making it so realistic that my
readers were horrified or so sad that they felt betrayed.
Writing
the book was always a bit of a tightrope act, balancing the needs of the story
with the historical background and weighing up just how far I could go and
still deliver a happy ending. Even then I had to give a “three hankie” warning
to go with the publicity, alongside a reassurance that readers had to trust me.
I
felt so relieved when the book was done. Now I can go back and fill in some of
the gaps in the Jonty and Orlando timeline, although I haven’t written WWI out of
my system. I’ve done a novella and a short story since then, both with a Great
War theme and I’m sure I’ll return to it. How could I resist its siren (bugle!)
call?
Blurb:
The Great War is over. Freed from a prisoner of war camp and back at St. Bride’s
College, Orlando Coppersmith is discovering what those years have cost. All he
holds dear—including his beloved Jonty Stewart, lost in combat.
A commission to investigate a young officer’s
disappearance gives Orlando new direction…temporarily. The deceptively simple
case becomes a maze of conflicting stories—is Daniel McNeil a deserter, or a
hero?—taking Orlando into the world of the shell-shocked and broken. And his
sense of Jonty’s absence becomes painfully acute. Especially when a brief spark
of attraction for a Cambridge historian, instead of offering comfort, triggers
overwhelming guilt.
As he hovers on the brink of despair, a chance
encounter on the French seafront at Cabourg brings new hope and unexpected joy.
But the crushing aftereffects of war could destroy his second chance, leaving
him more lost and alone than ever…
Buy
link: http://store.samhainpublishing.com/lessons-learned-p-6245.html
(e-book February 2011, print January 2012)
Excerpt:
Orlando took a
final tour around the garden before settling down in his study with the McNeil
case. Spring was in full bloom, the late-flowering cherry a mass of sumptuous
pink blossoms and the tulips still a mass of colour. The daffodils had gone, no
longer standing proudly like trumpeters waiting to give the last post, but one
or two late narcissi could still be found if you tried hard enough. He’d not
yet got the bulbs planted in Jonty’s patch—that was a job for later this year—but
there were plenty of buds on the shrubs. It would be fine, given a bit of time.
Orlando started reading Mrs. McNeil’s notes, a disconnected
narrative of Daniel’s service history, interspersed with recollections of how
much her son had loved France as a child, but he was unable to concentrate on
them. His eye kept straying to the little writing desk, the one which had been
his grandmother’s and which had been privy to all her secrets, given her habit
of hiding important letters in a concealed drawer. Now it kept all the
correspondence he’d had from Jonty when they’d been apart.
They’d always known, of course, from the moment that war was
declared that things had changed somehow, even if the early part of the war saw
only their relocation to London.
They’d lived with the Stewarts and life had been much the same as when they’d
been in Cambridge,
except for the lack of dunderheads. When they’d put their names down to fight,
that change had become more marked, given the increased chance of one of them
not returning. From that moment, even though they were still together in
training, Jonty had written to him every week.
He opened the little desk and took out the precious
contents.
What do
they use to make these uniforms? Scouring pads?
Orlando had
often tried to figure out how Jonty had managed to get away with some of the
comments he’d smuggled past the censors. Some of the letters had evaded other
eyes entirely, delivered by hand or left under pillows.
Do you
remember how you said you’d have liked to serve under the old King George,
fighting Napoleon on land or sea? We have a new King George now and you’re to
have your wish.
Their eventual parting had been so painful, preceded as it
was by snatched nights of shared passion and tender longeurs—giving and receiving
each other’s bodies, lying in one another’s arms without speaking,
reacquainting themselves with every inch of each other, lest they be parted.
Lest they might then forget. The last meeting, on a crowded railway station,
had been almost wordless, from both necessity of discretion and aching in their
hearts. They had shaken hands, exchanged notes and gone off into the smoky
night. And each note had been almost identical.
I love you. Do not forget me. Love again if I don’t return.
Author
bio:
As Charlie
Cochrane couldn't be trusted to do any of her jobs of choice—like managing a
rugby team—she writes. Her favourite genre is gay fiction, predominantly
historical romances/mysteries. She lives near Romsey but has yet to use that as
a setting for her stories, choosing to write about Cambridge, Bath, London and
the Channel Islands.
A member of the Romantic Novelists’
Association, and International Thriller Writers Inc, Charlie's Cambridge
Fellows Series, set in Edwardian England, was instrumental in her being named
Author of the Year 2009 by the review site Speak Its Name.
Website: http://www.charliecochrane.co.uk/
7 comments:
Thanks for hosting me, Jadette. It's come out really well!
Charlie
Love having you! Just let me know when you wanna do it again.
O_O
I mean guest on my blog again.
Sometime in the New Year would be brilliant.
A lovely excerpt there. Is it January yet?
Thanks, Stevie. Unfortunately, January seems ridiculously close.
Charlie
Sounds great! Just let me know!
Thanks, Jadette. If you just wanted to give me a slot in say February then I'd fill it with the story behind the short I have coming out from carina then.
:)
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