The Sun (Malaysia)

A stab in the dark

> Daniel Mallory writing as A.J. Finn is still coming to grips with the success of his debut novel, The Woman in the Window

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Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, the Times Literary Supplement.

He is also an executive editor for William Morrow, a highly-regarded publishing company.

In an email interview, when asked why he used a pseudonym as his real name would have helped him open doors faster, Mallory said: “Ah, but that’s exactly why I didn’t wish to use my real name!

“I wanted editors to judge the book on its own merits, without taking into account its authorship.

“I also feared – wrongly, as it turned out – that no one would buy the novel, in which case, I didn’t want anyone to know that I’d written it!

“Beyond that, I thought it might discombobu­late the authors whom I published if they were to see their editor’s name on a book of his own.”

Mallory began writing the book in September 2015, and only completed it a year later.

He said: “I hadn’t dabbled in fiction since my schooldays, but I’ve written plenty of academic papers and book reviews. “So I assumed that the ins and outs of sentence

level compositio­n – the writing – would pose no problem; it was the characteri­sation and plotting that daunted me.

“To my surprise, Anna took shape very quickly, like a figure approachin­g through mist, dragging her story with her pretty much intact. It was the writing that proved challengin­g!

“It turns out that simply getting a character from the sofa to a window can, in fact, be a tricky business.”

Considerin­g how the premise could be initially dismissed as a rehash of Alfred Hitchcock’s classic film Rear Window, did Mallory have any apprehensi­ons of publishers dismissing it before reading the whole book?

He replied: “The book builds slowly throughout the first quarter; this is very much by design – I sought to acclimate the reader to the rhythms and routines of a life spent indoors.

“But I appreciate that the story doesn’t strike out in its own direction until about page 100.

“My hope is that readers will find the character and her circumstan­ces sufficient­ly intriguing to want to continue spending time in Anna’s house.”

As to why he depicted a character with a psychologi­cal instead of a physical problem, Mallory said: “[As] someone who has struggled with severe depression throughout his adult life, I wanted to explore the issue of mental health, a problem that too few people are willing to engage and discuss.

“I hoped to demonstrat­e that psychologi­cal impairment can be just as debilitati­ng, if not more so, than a physical handicap. “Secondly, I was interested to see Anna

grapple with and, ultimately, overcome her demons.

“This seemed to me a more compelling journey than simply waiting for an injured limb to heal.

“And finally, I thought that agoraphobi­a served as an effective metaphor for the character’s situation: she is locked in mentally, just as she is locked in physically.”

There is a character in the book that many thought was going to be a love interest, and perhaps save Anna, but Mallory choose to go another route.

“You know, an American editor said the exact same thing when she was bidding on the rights,” Mallory revealed.

“Hand-to-heart, this never occurred to me!

“At no point did I imagine that [this character] might help or rescue Anna; it was important to me that she become her own saviour.

“This is for two reasons: I wanted to demonstrat­e that a disadvanta­ged person – in Anna’s case, laid low by depression – can still create her own salvation; and also, [I] get quite annoyed by novels (and there are many of them) in which a man saves a woman in peril.

“Women are perfectly capable of taking care of themselves, and Anna’s no exception.”

He said that it has yet to sink in that he is a best-selling author in 40 territorie­s, has a film deal, debuted at number one on the New York Times bestseller list, and so on.

“I am in a state of happy, grateful disbelief. Of course, this means I’d better outdo myself when it comes to the second book!”

As for his second book, he said it is nearly finished. “It’s another psychologi­cal thriller, this time set in San Francisco, one of America’s most mysterious and romantic cities.”

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