Burton Mail

Losing my sight was terrifying, I feared at one point it would never return

After facing some tough health battles, writer Lynda La Plante tells GABRIELLE FAGAN why coming out the other side feels like a ‘rebirth’

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LYNDA LA PLANTE is adept at dealing with fear and drama, exploring themes of murder and intrigue in her bestsellin­g crime books. Privately however, she’s currently navigating a totally unfamiliar landscape – her son’s teenage years.

“Worry and fear is a constant really, isn’t it, when you get to the dreaded teenage years,” she says, talking on the phone from her Surrey home.

“I’ve just been out with my son for a driving lesson: that was interestin­g. He’ll say, ‘I was a bit slow on indicating there’, and I’ll go, ‘Errr, actually you didn’t indicate at all!’ It’s a bit testing,” she adds, roaring with laughter.

Lorcan, Lynda’s 17-year-old son, is clearly the light of her life. The Liverpudli­an, now 77, adopted him as a baby when she was 59.

“I suffered years of infertilit­y and had so many drugs to try to give me a baby, they provoked an early menopause when I was only 32,” recalls the writer, who parted from her American musician husband, Richard, in 1996.

“After trying to adopt for years, I thought it was over for me and babies, and then I got Lorcan. He’s a lovely, kind, generous boy, who I think will become an inventor. He’s brilliant at electronic­s and – thank goodness because I’m hopeless – computers, and he flies drones. During lockdown, he made hospital masks 24/7, churning them out on his 3D printer. I was so proud.”

While she’s hailed as the ‘Queen of Crime Writing’, Lorcan shies away from his mother’s limelight.

“He’s very private,” Lynda says. “I wanted him to have his photo taken when he did the masks but he doesn’t even like being in the background when I do my online video chats about my books. He just firmly says, ‘No, Mother’.”

Adoption is a theme in Lynda’s latest book, Buried – the first in a series, which, 25 years on from Widows (made into a 1980s TV series and a film in 2018), finally reveals what happens to Dolly Rawlins and her gang.

It also launches a complex new hero, Detective Constable Jack Warr. “The basis of the story is Jack’s search for his (biological) father, but I also wanted to show the love he received from his (adoptive) mother and father. That abiding love helps give him strength and a foundation for the rest of his life,” Lynda says.

He “doesn’t have the baggage, divorce, or personal problems that are so familiar. Jack is fun, a bit erratic and never in the right place at the right time, and very modern

– his left hand is his mobile phone”.

Her other new book, Blunt Force, is the latest in a series focusing on the early life of Jane Tennison, before she became the tough character made famous by Helen Mirren in Prime Suspect.

Lynda, a Rada-trained actress before turning to writing, says the plot – the murder of a theatrical agent – sprang from a conversati­on with an LA detective, about the struggles of his team investigat­ing the murder of a movie star.

“They found it really hard getting to the truth because actors are so used to performing, and their ability to fake and ‘lie’ if it suits them is unbelievab­le. I had a ball doing it, as I know the showbusine­ss world so well myself, and I thought: ‘I’ll use that’,” she says gleefully.

That Lynda’s prolific output has continued unabated – she’s had 38 internatio­nal best-sellers in a stellar career spanning more than 40 years – is remarkable, considerin­g the recent hurdles she’s faced.

Three years ago, she began suffering crippling neck pain, and then lost her sight following an eye operation. She’s since regained partial vision, so has to dictate her books to secretarie­s and laboriousl­y proof-read using a magnifying glass.

“I pace up and down acting out the story and give all the characters their own voices, which can be a nightmare for the people typing it up, but it brings it alive to me. It helps get over the hurdle of not typing it myself, which I so loved to do,” she says wistfully.

“Losing my sight was terrifying, and I feared at one point it would never return. What’s so hard to take is that it really wasn’t necessary,” Lynda adds. “I had only mild cataracts but really was just fed up with losing reading glasses and having to carry them around.”

“I have glasses with big thick lenses and enlarged print on the computer, but can’t use it for any length of time as my eyes get too sore. I used to fall a lot and negotiatin­g steps is still worrying, but I can drive short distances, although not at night or in bright sunlight,” she explains.

After some unsuccessf­ul surgeries, her neck problem was finally resolved not too long ago.

“I felt vulnerable and fragile for so long, and in such pain all the time with my eyes and neck – I couldn’t even sleep. It was like living a nightmare,” she confides. “It made me feel very, very old. But I just had to get on with it because I’m the breadwinne­r.

“I hate ageing with a vengeance, mainly because I want to be around for as long as possible for my son, but now I actually feel incredibly youthful,” Lynda adds. “I feel I’ve come out the other side of all this and it’s like a rebirth.”

She’s still as passionate as ever about her work – she relaxes by watching true crime documentar­ies, which Lorcan also enjoys – and is continuall­y researchin­g.

“I love exploring the light and the

dark that everyone has in them, but only some people reach into what can be evil. I like delving into what triggers that,” she says, of the painstakin­g process to create each book – she’s the only lay person to be admitted to the Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences.

“I research and talk to criminals, police and scientists before I write, and then do a big edit when I’ve finished. If, for instance, a forensic expert tells me the blood spattering after someone’s throat was cut wouldn’t spray in the direction I’ve written, I change it.”

And while she may be one of the UK’S most respected writers, she has no truck with complacenc­y. “You can’t trade on your name. You’re only as good as your last book,” she declares. “I’m obsessive about keeping up the pace. There are a lot of people with sharpened pencils, ready to take your place if you don’t.”

Her feisty determinat­ion – she says “rejection doesn’t mean no” is the best advice she’s ever received” – has pulled her through tough times.

“I have a very full life and a happy dispositio­n if you let me be, but if you don’t, the other side of me will rear up and I will fight you,” she says.

“I can be quite tough and a bit of a street-fighter, if there’s something I feel strongly about.

“Small-mindedness or lack of generosity will spark in me such a rage – out comes the Liverpool background!”

With characteri­stic humour, she jokes: “For instance, anyone trying to take my HRT patches off me had better watch out!”

Buried (£8.99) and Blunt Force (£18.99) by Lynda La Plante are both published by Zaffre.

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Author Lynda La Plante and, left the hit TV shows Widows and Prime Suspect. Lynda revisits their characters in her latest two novels
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