An Interview With Emma Kavanagh – Author of Hidden

An interview with Emma Kavanagh - author of Hiddenauthorpic

An interview with Emma Kavanagh – author of Hidden

hidden Emma Kavanagh

Do you plan your books in great detail, or just go with the germ of an idea, and where does that idea come from?

I am a huge planner. I even have spreadsheets! I tend to come up with a general idea of where I want my story to take the reader, and then let that marinate for a while. I’ve had book four cooking on low for the past three months whilst I complete book three, The Missing Hours. Once I’m ready to start work on it, I begin with research, research, research, finding out as much as I can about the area I am going to be writing about. Then begins the planning. This will change as the story develops – which is why spreadsheets are so useful – but I always find it easier to have an idea of where I am heading. As to where my ideas come from, I am fascinated by psychology and true crime, which is an absolute gold mine for book ideas.

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How do you actually work? In silence in a study, at the kitchen table?

Oh, I would love a study…no, my study is now a nursery for my youngest son. I write in the living room on a big cozy chair that has become known as “Mummy’s work chair”. When I’m planning or researching, I can’t cope with silence. It’s too intense. I tend to have documentaries running in the background, which I half-watch to distract me from the pressure. When I’m actually writing though, it has to be in silence. I’m not one of those authors who can work in a coffee shop. Who can concentrate with all that cake?
Did you have a writing background before you began writing novels?

I’ve written short stories since I was a kid, and was a passionate writer throughout school and college. But once I started my own business (I ran a consultancy practice specialising in training police and military personnel in the psychology of critical incidents) I let the writing drop away. I was working hard and my focus was elsewhere. Then one day a story idea came knocking and simply wouldn’t leave. In the end I decided that it had to be worth a shot…

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Who has inspired you in the literary world?

So many people. I adore Kate Atkinson, especially for her willingness to push herself beyond genre boundaries and try something entirely different. Another must-read I have is Barbara Kingsolver. Her use of language is just exquisite. And I can’t not mention Agatha Christie. No one plots like she does.

 Do you read while you’re writing? I know a lot of authors don’t.

I always read. I read whilst I was in labour with my first child, whilst I was in recovery from a c-section with my second. I am always reading!! I know a lot of authors can’t read anything in the genre they write as they find it interferes too much with their creativity, but I’ve never found that to be an issue. In fact, it inspires me, to read beautiful language, clever plotting, awesome characterisation. I want to be that good!

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Your favourite book as a child?

I can’t just pick one!!! The Folk of the Faraway Tree by Enid Blyton. Matilda by Roald Dahl. Heidi by Joanna Spyri. The Wolves of Willoughby Chase by Joan Aiken. Um…how long do we have here?

What would comprise your perfect day if you had a magic wand?

Being with my husband and our boys (aged 1 and almost 4). A scrumptious breakfast which absolutely must include bacon. Going somewhere fun where we can all play. My kids are little so the dream trip has to be Disneyworld. And it is totally not because I am a complete child. Then, an early night for my boys, a nice dinner for myself and my husband, somewhere overlooking the ocean, a glass of wine, and then a comfy sofa so I can read my book.

Hobbies?

Reading (d’uh!). I love to swim and these days try to get to the pool as often as I can. And, although I rarely have time for this nowadays, I also love to sketch and paint.
Have you always wanted to write novels?

Yes. It was one of those things that I deep down always knew I would have to do. And now that I have started, the idea of stopping is like the idea of no longer breathing.
Ambitions/dreams.

My ambitions…I want to keep doing what I am doing. I want to be respected for my ability to tell a story and create characters that take on a life of their own. I want to be able to give my children the opportunity to travel and experience the world, and to teach them that they can achieve anything they set their mind to.

If you could choose one person to read your books, who would it be? 

I’ve seen this happen to a number of my author friends – a celebrity or big name author reads their book and then starts shouting about how wonderful it is. So it got me thinking, who would I want to shout about mine? Well, George Clooney would be nice (Hi, George!). But my hands down, would-immediately-pass-out-with-excitement person would be JK Rowling. I really don’t need to explain this one, do I? She knows Harry Potter, people!!!

 

 

Hidden by Emma Kavanagh Book Review

Hidden by Emma Kavanagh Book Review

Hidden follows on the heels of Emma Kavanagh’s debut psychological thriller novel, Falling. A second novel is a tricky beast – can the author do it again? Can they build on the success of the first? Can it follow in the same genre without being too much the same?

Kavanagh has succeeded with Hidden when other authors haven’t. Similarly to some series on television, the novel starts with the crime and then takes the reader back a stage, to the start of the action. Rather than peeling away the layers to get at ‘who dun it,’ Kavanagh builds up the layers, so that we get to the ‘why’ he ‘dun it’. And who actually did it. Clever stuff, with multiple viewpoints.

In Hidden, a gunman is stalking the wards of a local hospital. He’s unidentified and dangerous, and has to be located. Urgently.

Police Firearms Officer Aden McCarthy is tasked with tracking him down. Still troubled by the shooting of a schoolboy, Aden is determined to make amends by finding the gunman – before it is too late. To psychologist Imogen, hospital should be a place of healing and safety – both for her, and for her young niece who’s recently been admitted. She’s heard about the gunman, but he has little to do with her. Or has he?

Kavanagh uses her years of experience training police forces and military units on the psychology of life threatening incidents, to give credence to her work. The tension builds, and never lets up.

Hidden – Emma Kavanagh Published in paperback by Arrow   £6.99

 

 

Hidden by Emma Kavanagh Book Review

hidden Emma Kavanagh

Hidden follows on the heels of Emma Kavanagh’s debut psychological thriller novel Falling.

A second novel is a tricky beast – can the author do it again? Can they build on the success of the first? Can it follow in the same genre without being too much the same?

Kavanagh has succeeded with Hidden when other authors have failed. Similarly to some series on television, the novel starts with the crime and then takes the reader back a stage, to the start of the action. Rather than peeling away the layers to get at ‘who dun it,’ Kavanagh builds up the layers, so that we get to the ‘why’ of ‘who dun it’. Clever stuff, with multiple viewpoints.

In Hidden, a gunman is stalking the wards of a local hospital. He’s unidentified and dangerous, and has to be located. Urgently.

Police Firearms Officer Aden McCarthy is tasked with tracking him down. Still troubled by the shooting of a schoolboy, Aden is determined to make amends by finding the gunman – before it is too late. To psychologist Imogen, hospital should be a place of healing and safety – both for her, and for her young niece who’s recently been admitted. She’s heard about the gunman, but he has little to do with her. Or has he?

Kavanagh uses her years of experience training police forces and military units on the psychology of life threatening incidents, to give credence to her work. The tension builds, and never lets up.

Let’s hope there’s another Kavanagh gem soon. Bravo.

Hidden – Emma Kavanagh. Published in paperback by Arrow   £6.99

 

 

Falling By Emma Kavanagh Book Review

fallingemmakavanaghA plane falls out of the sky. A woman is murdered. Four people all have something to hide.

This debut psychological thriller from former police psychologist Emma Kavanagh is stunning indeed. An engaging and exciting novel. This novel is brilliantly executed, it is a confident debut written by an extremely talented writer. You can tell that Emma Kavanagh was once a police psychologist: her novel is believable. She knows what she is talking about. The characters are incredibly well written and the nuances of life, grief and marriage are all well observed by the eye of a very adept writer.

The story itself is thoroughly engaging, drawing you in and making the book unputdownable. I love how the characters are woven together, how they end up dipping in and out of each other’s lives. This is a crime thriller that belongs on the same shelf as Nicci French. It is high praise indeed, but well deserved.

 

Jim is a retired police officer and worried father. His beloved daughter has disappeared and he knows something is wrong.

Tom has woken up to the news that his wife was on the plane, and he must break the news to their only son.

Cecilia had packed up and left her family. Now she has survived a tragedy, and sees no way out.

Freya is struggling to cope with the loss of her father. But as she delves into his past, she may not like what she finds.

 

Falling is available here. Read our Day in the Life piece on Emma Kavanagh here.

 

 

A Day in the Life of Emma Kavanagh

Before Emma tells us of a day in her life, let me tell you that she has written a brilliant debut psychological thriller for Random House: a plane falls out of the sky, a woman is murdered, four people all have something to hide.

fallingbook

Emma is a former police psychologist but this is her day now. Over to Emma.

Emma Kavanaghauthor

I would love to tell you what my typical working day looks like. But I am the mother of two small boys, the youngest just eight weeks old, and so once my maternity leave ends I’ll be working on figuring out a new typical.

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So let me tell you about a typical day in my old, pre-baby life. I wake about 6am, stirred to life by the dulcet tones of my 3 year old, shrieking “Morning, Mummy. Wake up.” I blink, try to remember who I am and why there’s a stuffed dog that smells of stale milk resting on my forehead, then face the day. I always get dressed. That may not sound like much of an achievement but remember that I’m a writer. Pyjamas are practically uniform. But I’m a believer in getting ready for the day, allowing my brain to remember that I’m in work mode now. Then, after making my toddler toast (which he won’t eat) and scuttling him to creche or an obliging set of grandparents, I get started.

 

Work time is sacrosanct for me. I don’t have much of it, and that which I do have is fiercely guarded. Once my toddler is out of the house, everything is about writing. I’m even pretty good at staying off Twitter. Most of the time. I open up my laptop, hunker down on my spot on the sofa, and begin by reviewing what I wrote the day before. I’ll do a bit of a tidy up on that, just ensuring that it reads well enough that I feel comfortable moving on, then I’ll look at what comes next. I don’t tend to edit much on a first draft, just bits here and there. I like to get the words out so that I have something to work with later.

workinprogress

I’ll spend as much time as I can writing. Then when my brain starts to fizz, I’ll move on to e-mails and general admin. If I’m feeling particularly efficient, I’ll jot down a rough plan for the next day. Then I get to be mummy again and my world devolves into talk about Play Doh and Elmo.

 

So, that’s my life in theory. Of course, now I have two sons. I am officially outnumbered. So…um…watch this space.