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Val McDermid on her writing life

Coffee, chaos and background music: Val McDermid on her writing life

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VAL McDermid grew up in Kirkcaldy, Fife, and worked in newspapers before emerging as one of the world’s most respected crime writers. Her characters – including DCI Karen Pirie and psychologi­st, Tony Hill – are household names thanks to her awardwinni­ng novels and TV adaptation­s like Wire in the Blood. Her first graphic novel, Resistance, co-authored with Kathryn Briggs, is about a fastspread­ing mystery disease, adapted from McDermid’s 2017 radio drama.

WHERE DO YOU WRITE?

I have an office which looks out on my steeply terraced garden, so all I see when I turn my head is a green space. The bookshelve­s contain part of my archive, as well as reference books and the To Be Read wall.

The desk is a chaos of books, scribbled notes and a coffee mug that says, “What would Karen Pirie do?” I have a slight obsession with Blackwing pencils, so I also have a couple of pencil jars with an assortment of them. There’s a print of a Stephen Conroy painting, The Healing of a Lunatic Boy, which I’ve had on my office walls since 1987.

ANY RITUALS?

I always have music on when I’m working. Anything without comprehens­ible lyrics. It blocks out anything disruptive.

DESCRIBE YOUR WORKING DAY

I write my books between January and March/April. I’m usually at my desk around 10, with my second cup of coffee. I write in roughly 20-minute bursts, interspers­ing those frenzies with email, Twitter, a walk round the block, a bit of gaming or cooking. I finish around 7pm, though when the deadline looms, I occasional­ly go back for a couple of hours after dinner.

DO NEWSPAPER SKILLS STILL SERVE YOU?

I took two things from journalism. One is not to be precious about waiting for the muse to strike – writing is a job. I may not have written great prose today, but I can go back and make it better. If I’ve written nothing, there’s nothing to improve. The other is the huge database of people I encountere­d in the course of my work, from the Prince of Wales to the bereft and homeless. I have a library of their faces, their mannerisms and their speech that I can still draw on.

DO YOU PRE-PLAN?

I used to plan in great detail because I thought plotting was my weakest skill. That stopped working for me, very suddenly and scarily. But I discovered that I didn’t need to work everything out in advance. Now, I know the basic story arc and two or three crucial turning points. Then I just start at the beginning and get stuck in.

HAVE YOUR WORKING METHODS CHANGED OVER THE YEARS?

Only in a practical sense. I wrote my first novel with a fountain pen on foolscap because I thought that’s what novelists were supposed to do. By the second, I’d graduated to an Amstrad word processor. Now I use a Mac…

HOW WAS WORKING WITH ILLUSTRATO­R KATHRYN BRIGGS?

We met up in Dundee, where she was living, and talked about the possible styles of illustrati­on she might use. Then she sent me some sample pages and I loved how she’d adopted various graphic styles to carry particular elements of the story. Because she was working from a radio script, without all the descriptiv­e elements of a novel, I think it gave her more freedom to be expressive and imaginativ­e. In essence, she used the dialogue of the script for the speech and captions of the adaptation.

I used to plan in great detail because I thought plotting was my weakest skill

HOW DID HAVING WRITTEN THE RADIO SERIAL AFFECT YOU LIVING THROUGH THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC?

I knew enough from my research to be very afraid. And to find myself frequently enraged at the cavalier attitudes of Westminste­r politician­s,

with their tendency to put their friends’ interests ahead of the science.

DID LOCKDOWN AFFECT YOUR WORK?

There’s no doubt I wrote more slowly, maybe about three-quarters of my usual speed. Probably because I spent a lot more time surfing the web to see what the latest news was. Shifting to online events was challengin­g too. It takes a lot more energy when there is no audience feeding their reactions back to you. The first time I paused for the laugh and nothing happened was terrifying. I was also very conscious that, since more people could see my events online, I would soon run out of fresh things to say. But I pivoted very quickly to digital platforms.

The launch event of Imagine a Country, the book of hope and imaginatio­n I co-edited with Jo Sharp, was one of the first casualties of lockdown. [Aye Write 2020 was cancelled after day one.]

We quickly put together a YouTube version of the Aye Write event. We became more proficient with the form, even branching out into a series of mad cookery videos – Cooking the Books, recipes from the fiction kitchen. They’re still out there on YouTube and thousands of people have enjoyed them, so the online option has provided us with interestin­g new opportunit­ies.

WHEN DO YOU CLOCK OFF?

When I’m working on a book, weekends cease to exist. I suppose I clock off around the end of

April …

DO YOU TAKE A BREAK AFTER EACH BOOK?

When I finish a novel, I’m usually already well on the way to the next book. So, I’ll be doing background reading, a lot of walking and thinking (some of it out loud), maybe visiting locations I want to use, and getting to know the characters whose story it will be.

I’ll be catching up on my leisure reading too, doing some gaming, making music.

The loosening of restrictio­ns to allow us to meet up with friends has been an absolute joy. Now I’m looking forward to sitting round the kitchen table, eating and drinking and talking the night away.

WHAT ARE YOU WORKING ON NOW?

I’ve just finished this year’s novel, 1979, which will be out in August. I’m doing the research for the next one, 1989. And I’m following the production of two TV series – Traces 2, and Karen Pirie, so I’m reading a lot of scripts.

And there are a few other bits and pieces to keep me out of trouble.

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 ??  ?? Resistance: A Graphic Novel by Val McDermid and Kathryn Briggs, is published by
Wellcome Collection, £18.99
Resistance: A Graphic Novel by Val McDermid and Kathryn Briggs, is published by Wellcome Collection, £18.99
 ??  ?? Val McDermid in her home office with her shelves full of novels and reference books and her messy desk
Val McDermid in her home office with her shelves full of novels and reference books and her messy desk

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