Showing posts with label Tim Arnot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Arnot. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 January 2016

Stranded by Tim Arnot

Stranded is the third book in the Flick Carter series and follows straight on from Hunted.

Flick, Shea and PJ find themselves trapped on a slave ship heading to foreign shores.  Back in Bristol, Socko doesn't believe the government when they say PJ (Princess Jessica) is dead and that Flick and Shea are terrorists who set off the bomb that destroyed much of the harbour at Bristol.

With nobody knowing who to trust and main characters being killed off, this is a good continuance and finale to this trilogy.

Even though the two main parties/threads of this story barely cross over, I liked both stories. Even though I think the audience for this is supposed to be younger, it had quite adult themes, whilst not being graphic about them.  The descriptions of this future, yet past world kept me in the time zone and I enjoyed being there.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B019YI0ZKS/?tag=jookuf-21


Sunday, 18 October 2015

Hunted by Tim Arnot

This is the second in the Felicity (Flick) Carter series of books, set in a post-apocalypse England where there's no technology, and martial rule keeps most people in order.

Even though she's very young, Flick has been using alcohol to drown her sorrows about losing her home, her family and her friends.  She's kicked out of her village and ends up becoming a trainee in the Kingsmen.  A lot of this book is her during her enforced training.  I wasn't too interested in this bit, 

We also follow Shea as he loses friends too.  In the background we have the mystery man who is following Flick and killing anyone who gets in his way.  We also have more of Princess Jessica/Lieutenant Dixon, who I think is my favourite character.

I am enjoying this world that the author has fleshed out.  It might be England, but it's a very different one to now.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00MNSOT0O/?tag=jookuf-21



Saturday, 9 May 2015

Wanted by Tim Arnot

I'd ignored this book for some time as "post apocalypse dystopian books are not my thing", but once I started reading it, it was a normal story of survival and teenage angst.  Flick meets Shea and even though she's young, sparks fly.  But is that because Shea has been shot down whilst in a flying machine ...  that surely doesn't exist in this post-technological world where old cars are pulled by horses?

Whilst this story is set in times where technology doesn't exist anymore, it's still a story that seems very true in that type of era.  It's now a hard life where every day is a struggle.

I took a chance on this and I'm glad I did as I enjoyed this.  It is obviously the first book in a series, but it was satisfactorily resolved and I don't need to read the next, but I'm sure I'll be tempted to sooner rather than later.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00CVTK6Q6/?tag=jookuf-21


Sunday, 1 June 2014

Interrogating Tim Arnot

Meet Tim Arnot.  You'll find him hanging out after the apocalypse.



How do you strike the balance between writing something you want to write and writing something that people want to read, in terms of the compromises you make, if any?

I write what I want to read. I hope other people want to read the same kind of things. So far no one has complained because I killed off X, or Y didn’t get off with Z. I guess the only compromise I make is in terms of “maturity”. I pitch my writing at what might be termed a “15 Certificate” level, so that determines how much swearing there is (yes I have f-bombs, although not many), and what levels of violence, sex and nudity I allow myself.


What excites, attracts or appeals to you about the genre(s) you write in.

My stories are post-post-apocalyptic (is that a genre?). There was an apocalypse somewhere in the distant past, and presumably a post-apocalypse too, although it’s not important to the story. We’ve had lots of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic fiction that deals with the immediate aftermath (Terry Nation’s Survivors on TV in the 70s was probably my introduction to the genre, and consequently a big influence), but I think it’s much more interesting to look at what has happened to society, say, 100 years down the road.


Do you have a box, drawer, folder etc where you keep thoughts and ideas for future stories? Such as names you have come across, bits of dialogue, ideas, characters - even if you have no idea when you might use them?

I have an A5 sized notebook for every project, that works kind of like the rough books we had in school. So I try to do all my planning etc. in that. It does capture many plot bunnies, but there are lots more that crop up while I’m driving, or in the bath, out shopping etc., and that relies on me remembering them until I can scrawl them down on the back of a napkin, or get my phone out an email myself. Those bunnies do have a habit of getting lost.

One of the nice things about Scrivener (the program I use for writing) is that it has a “Research” folder, and that can capture web sites. So if I’m browsing – for the sake of argument – the difference between a brig-rigged sailing ship and a ship-rigged one (it’s the number of masts, btw ;)) I can easily save the web site for later reference.


How do you manage plot bunnies (ideas that invade your mind that aren’t usually helpful to the story you’re writing but breed like...er...bunnies)?

They go in the book, along with the rest. I tend to plan fairly well in advance – you need to when you’re writing a trilogy, because things that are going to happen in book 2 might need to be set up in book 1, and stuff for book 3 needs to be kicked off in book 2 – so they don’t distract me too much.

I never get rid of stuff I’ve written – even if I’ve “deleted” a 30,000 word sub-plot, because one day it might come in useful.


How much of you is in your characters? Which of your characters is the you that you’d most like to be? Or be with ?

Probably quite a lot, I dunno. I think it would take someone else to spot it, and it’s not something I really think about. Who would I like to be? Probably Socko. He started off as basically a simple cypher to deliver some evidence, but he really kicked off my imagination, and has now got his own spinoff series. In terms of who would I like to be with? That’d be telling, and anyway she wouldn’t be interested.


Do you become so wrapped up in your writing that your spouse wonders if they're married to you or one of your characters?

There’s a spouse? Anyone who’s seen the state of my house and garden would know that boat sailed long ago!


What type of book do you like reading? Is it the same genre as you write?

I love reading space opera. Big epic spaceship battles are definitely my thing. I did try to write one one year for NaNoWriMo, but it was awful. Truly awful. But I do read pretty widely – Post-Apoc and Dystopia of course, but also thrillers, fantasy, speculative fiction are my staples. I’ve recently discovered Urban Fantasy: Ben Aaronovitch – look him up if you haven’t read him. Utterly brilliant. I’m not so keen on out and out horror, and I run away screaming from historical romance.


What lengths do you go to to convince us readers that your book has the X factor?

Not enough, obviously. Like every author, I struggle to find the pot of gold whose name is visibility. It doesn’t matter how wonderful your words are, how many freebies you have, knickknacks or whatever, if nobody knows about it. In the end I decided it was probably more important to get on with writing the next book, and not worry about it too much.


How do you feel when a reader points out the spelling mistake(s) you have made?

I love it. Of course I strive for a perfect product from the get go, but we’re all human, and things do slip past  me, my editor and my beta readers. But because direct publishing through Kindle, Kobo etc. allows near-instant updates, we can fix issues pretty much as they arise (unlike traditional publishing, where any errors are fixed possibly forever).  I have a standing “thing” that anyone who emails me with an error that I subsequently fix, gets a part in the next book. There are several Characters in Hunted, for instance who are named after people that reported a typo in Wanted.


What do you like most about visiting KUF/GR/forums?

I’ve found a great bunch of people there, many of whom I now consider friends, and some of whom are now my beta readers. The GR UKAKF tends to have quite a low signal to noise ratio, but it’s a good place to let your hair down for a bit, and we’ve had a couple of meet ups, which was fun.


What is on your near horizon?

Hunted, my second novel is currently with beta readers, and is expected out in August. I’m starting to ramp up publicity for that. I’m currently writing the third Socko spinoff – “Socko’s First Fire” and the third part of the Flick Carter trilogy, tentatively titled “Defeated” plus another spinoff novella are in development.


Where can we find you for more information?

https://www.facebook.com/TimArnotAuthor is my Facebook page. @TimArnot is my twitter. My blog is http://www.tim-arnot.com but I admit to being rather lax at keeping it updated. I do have a mailing list for people interested in new releases, at http://eepurl.com/Bezk5 and I’d love more people to sign up for that. You can also spot me around the KUF GR and KBoards forums.