October 2018

On October 1st I pressed SEND on two years of research and writing a new novel. Off went the book through the ether to my editors. (In the old days it was a big jiffy bag I took to the post office.) It is a huge leap to press that button. No one had seen it; no one really knew much about it. Then I had to wait for them to read it and see what they thought.


It’s odd: by the time I turn in a novel I am so close to it that I have absolutely no idea if it works or not. An editor could just as easily say, “Sorry, this is terrible” as “Wow, fabulous!” For either response I would simply nod and accept their judgment, because my own ability to judge is shot. Strange, eh?


So what did I do while I waited? Well, in the book my heroine Violet Speedwell goes on a walking holiday in August 1932 between Winchester and Salisbury Cathedrals – 26 miles. I wrote the scenes without doing the walk myself, though I always meant to. So my husband and I and friends went a-walking, over a very rainy and then a very sunny weekend.


TCWinCathforweb      TCSalCathforweb


We started at Winchester Cathedral, and ended at Salisbury Cathedral. (Yes, THAT spire, all 123 metres of it!)



In between we stopped at a couple of places important to the novel.



farleymountforweb


 Farley Mount, an 18th-century folly to a horse


 


johnogauntforweb


The John O’ Gaunt Inn (which gets a bad rap in the novel but is actually very nice)



nethwallchurchforweb


The church at Nether Wallop (note pyramid similar to Farley Mount; same family)


 


tcwithnwbellsforweb


 Messing about in the Nether Wallop bell tower (I promise I didn’t ring them!)


 


And ... the editors are very happy with the book! Relief! I have a little tweaking to do, fixes to make it even better. Editing is a crucial part of  writing a book, and actually really fun.


 


There’s still the thorny question of a TITLE. Watch this space – once I’ve finally settled on one I’ll write about that tricky process.


 

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Published on October 18, 2018 09:04
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message 1: by Xochitl (last edited Oct 20, 2018 01:30AM) (new)

Xochitl Torres So exciting! I'm a huge fan. Ms. Chevalier.

I'm in Chicago and a major Anglo-Phile. I know not all of your novels do not take place in England. Yet when they doI feel as if I am there.

I feel as if I was with William Blake and surrounded by his mad genius.

Or fighting for recognition as a talented fossil finder, Mary Anning. When in truth she was a true paleontologist. I was by her side on those cliffs.

Thank you for sharing this latest journey with us.

I cannot wait for the new novel.

Thank you for your beautiful words that always ignite curiosity and a fire within me.


message 2: by sandi (new)

sandi I cannot wait for this new novel. I am a Big fan of T.C. and I have done this walk myself a couple of years ago. really looking forward to it.


message 3: by Connie (new)

Connie Outstanding!
Thank you for sharing a bit of your process, and for stressing the importance of editing. Recently I've read a couple of books that seemed to have missed that step--one was awash in so many similes, complete with "like", that I lost the flow of the story; a good, honest edit could have helped it be a really good story. It was so disappointing. So as an antedote, I picked up a copy of The Last Runaway...much better.


message 4: by Andrea (new)

Andrea Stoeckel I love your work. After hearing “Selected Shorts” do pieces from “Reader, I married him”, I just got an ebook of the compilation and am looking forward to delving deeper into the whole book.

I’m a Jane, not an Emily fan. I’ve read Jane Eyre over and over since I was quite young- I just turned 62 last week; as well as some of it’s different incarnations.

Here’s to many more wonderful books


message 5: by Sacha (new)

Sacha Urban This post and pictures are terrific, thank you so much for sharing. I just finished "Virgin Blue" and could not put it down. I'm a Swiss ex-pat living in Chicago and had to chuckle at the description of "les suisses" - so funny b/c it's true (and I never thought of their starkness as unusual.) It is said, that the Huguenots brought their watchmaking skill to the Swiss (thank you!). I also loved the bit of dropping the bread into the fondue - and that every family has a different lore of the consequences. In my family, the person who dropped the bread had to wash the dishes that night. A thoroughly magical, beautiful book. Merci, and I'm crossing my fingers that your editors will publish your latest work. Fondly, Sacha


message 6: by Tracy (new)

Tracy Chevalier Xochitl wrote: "So exciting! I'm a huge fan. Ms. Chevalier.

I'm in Chicago and a major Anglo-Phile. I know not all of your novels do not take place in England. Yet when they doI feel as if I am there.

I feel as..."


Thank you!


message 7: by Tracy (new)

Tracy Chevalier Sacha wrote: "This post and pictures are terrific, thank you so much for sharing. I just finished "Virgin Blue" and could not put it down. I'm a Swiss ex-pat living in Chicago and had to chuckle at the descripti..."

Hi Sacha,
I'm glad I'm not in your family, as I would have to wash the dishes EVERY night!
Cheers,
TC


message 8: by Tracy (new)

Tracy Chevalier Andrea wrote: "I love your work. After hearing “Selected Shorts” do pieces from “Reader, I married him”, I just got an ebook of the compilation and am looking forward to delving deeper into the whole book.

I’m ..."


Hey Andrea,
Hope you enjoy Reader... It is very varied, which is maybe why it works. I particularly loved Helen Dunmore's story - wish I could write like that.
All the best,
Tracy


message 9: by Tracy (new)

Tracy Chevalier Connie wrote: "Outstanding!
Thank you for sharing a bit of your process, and for stressing the importance of editing. Recently I've read a couple of books that seemed to have missed that step--one was awash in s..."


Yep! I sometimes think editing IS writing. It is so so important to look at each paragraph, each sentence, each word critically and think, "Is that right? How could I make this better?" Maybe a willingness to edit is what separates the pros from the novices. Having said that, I can think of a couple of "professional" books I've read recently that could have done with some serious editing!

All the best,
Tracy


message 10: by Tracy (new)

Tracy Chevalier sandi wrote: "I cannot wait for this new novel. I am a Big fan of T.C. and I have done this walk myself a couple of years ago. really looking forward to it."

Hi Sandi - And was it raining like crazy when you walked the Clarendon Way?? And were your feet sore and you ate a lot that night because of all the calories you thought you burned? Snap!

All the best,
Tracy


message 11: by Amy (new)

Amy Deuchler I'm really excited to read this one. Can't wait for you to announce the title.


message 12: by Ellen (new)

Ellen H Damn. Now I want to walk the Clarendon Way.

This fellow Obie is looking forward to the book; I'm presuming some time in 2019?


message 13: by Sharon (new)

Sharon So excited to have a new book by you to look forward to! I love how well-researched your work is. You truly bring the stories you write to life.


message 14: by Tracy (new)

Tracy Chevalier Ellen wrote: "Damn. Now I want to walk the Clarendon Way.

This fellow Obie is looking forward to the book; I'm presuming some time in 2019?"


Hey Obie! Yes, September 2019.

TC
Class of 84


message 15: by Noel (new)

Noel Can't wait. Thanks for sharing...hope you get a break in schedule. Do come back to Marin some time.


message 16: by Andrea (new)

Andrea Stoeckel Tracy wrote: "Andrea wrote: "I love your work. After hearing “Selected Shorts” do pieces from “Reader, I married him”, I just got an ebook of the compilation and am looking forward to delving deeper into the who..."

Reader was....interesting


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