From studio and study to print

We’ve been waiting for lockdown to ease before putting our latest book in the hands of the printers. Tomorrow we visit Short Run Press, Exeter, to see how Peter’s page layouts, which he has worked out on paper, will translate to digital.. SO FAR, SO GOOD is a 150-page book with illustrations on nearly every page. It shows, in words and pictures, how we have made our life together, shaped by our separate years of childhood, meeting as young adults and sixty years of marriage. We began working on the book in the summer of 2020, the year of our diamond wedding anniversary. Now, in April 2021, we are about to go into production. The back cover will show this oil painting of our local lane.

‘Along the lane’, oil painting by Peter Barrett

back cover text:

When Peter and Susan met and married in 1960 they shared similar ambitions – Peter to paint for a living, Susan to write. The present book completes an unintended trilogy charting the way they have fulfilled their dreams: Travels with a Wildlife Artist, the Living landscape of Greece, Columbus, 1986; The Garden of the Grandfather, Life in Greece in the 1960s, 2018; and now this book, So Far, So Good, sixty years together in words and pictures, which celebrates their diamond wedding anniversary in the midst of the covid pandemic, 2020.

COPIES WILL BE AVAILABLE AT £15 (+ £3 p&p) FROM MAY 2021

More information from susan@susanbarrettwriter.com

A NOVEL ON LOCKDOWN

A NOVEL FOR LOCKDOWN

One of the hardest things about writing a novel, I find, is describing it in a few short sentences.  With Covid 19 this is particularly hard. It seems such a frivolous waste of time to be writing fiction in a pandemic.

I didn’t realise when I started writing my present novel in 2019 how apposite it would turn out to be in 2020. Its underlying theme is the balance of power in relationships, and imprisonment of various kinds, in life, work and love. This theme echoes the effects of the virus.

Covid 19 has come along and taken us by surprise. Its immediate effect around the world has been, and will continue to be, tragic. But its lasting effect may turn out to be good rather than bad. There may be a re-balancing of power in the relationship between the poor and the rich, and the underdeveloped and developed regions of the world. Humanity may pay greater respect to, and take greater care of, the natural world we depend on. The virus, in its containment measures, has caused a kind of imprisonment in life, work and love. But it has also brought joy and happiness, companionship and emotional proximity.

It seems heartless to be writing fiction at such a time. But I bet there are thousands doing it. Judging by the flood of inventive and clever videos on YouTube, created by talented people usually employed outside the home, I expect there will be an increased flood of novels hunting for agents and publishers. Very few people don’t believe that they have a novel within them. They’ve heard it often enough. The men will be bashing out science fiction and thrillers; the women, romance. They will be thrilled with the completion of their work and expect fame and fortune pretty well at once.  Some will self-publish. A few will find publishers. There will be readers who will be entertained, whose minds will be stimulated. Does creative work add to the world’s well-being? Yes, it does, as much for its providers as for its recipients.

So here’s the blurb for my just-completed novel ELFRIDA NEXT DOOR:

Taking coercive control to its limits, Nicolas keeps his wife in a hermit’s cell in the ruins of a priory at the bottom of his garden. Rachel, his new neighbour, becomes interested in the legend of Elfrida, the cell’s first occupant. This leads her into danger and gives Nicolas a new problem to solve.  The balance of power in relationships, and imprisonment of various kinds in life, love and work, provide the underlying themes of this light, dark novel. Or is it a dark, light novel.