Skip to main content

Interview with Sara Sheridan

     Today, I have the pleasure to interview Sara Sheridan. She is the author of the Mirabelle Bevan historical mystery series. She has recently published, On Starlit Seas, which is a novel based on the life of Maria Graham. I have greatly enjoyed her Mirabelle Bevan mysteries, and I look forward to reading this one as well! I hope this interview will give you some insight into her novel. Thank you, Mrs. Sheridan!



You were inspired to write On Starlit Seas on a real person. What drew you to her story? 

I found Maria Graham in the National Library of Scotland’s John Murray archive. They had the books she’d originally written and her letters, journals and other papers. It was like finding a diamond in a mine. It was her nature, really - she just sparkled. It seemed extraordinary to me that this woman hadn’t been memorialised. She was a traveller, a writer and a mathematician. I wanted to write about her immediately.

How did you weave historical and fictional parts in the novel? What was your research process of On Starlit Seas

I am a nerd. I am big into research. After I had read all Maria’s papers, I explored her world - I had already written two novels in the era but Maria’s places were her own - Piccadilly in London and the royal court in Brazil. I set out to learn what it was like to be a woman in that era. The spaces in Maria’s story provided the rest - the time between her first husband's death and when she met her second. And the huge advances in the chocolate industry, which was growing exponentially. 

You dedicated this book to seeing women. What do you think are Maria’s feminist qualities? 

Maria wasn’t a feminist in the modern sense but she had a sense of fairness that would be familiar to today’s equality activists. She didn’t conform to the expectations of women in her era - she was a rebel, although she was careful not to do do anything inappropriate to her class. She knew she was on a short leash and she couldn’t push it too far. But she still pushed it, of course. She pushed it plenty.


How different was it writing about a real-life person compared to writing historical mysteries with a fictional female detective? 

Well, they are such different eras. The research for the early 1800s is far heavier than for the 1950s, for a start. With real people, it’s important to honour their stories - what actually happened - I tend to try to write into the gaps in their stories. With fictional characters there is more intimacy because you know them inside out - you made them up after all - so you have absolute freedom.  

Do you plan to write more books based on real people in the future? 
I’ve just finished one based on James Clarke Ross’s 1842 expedition to map the exterior of Antarctica! So yes please. 

What do you hope readers will take away from the novel? 

I hope they’ll fall in love with Maria and the era. It was an extraordinary time when the world was expanding. I think it’s amazing to see where we came from - to make those connections about the places our culture evolved from. For women especially because so much of our history is untold. 

What are you currently working on now? 

I’m writing the 8th Mirabelle Bevan Mystery set just outside Inverness in 1958. It’s called Highland Fling. I’m about a third of the way through and I think I will be done next year - around February.

On a lighter note, chocolate is very important in the book. Did you do lots of hands-on research? 

You know how I love research! Books always have flavours for me. During Secret of the Sands (the book in this set before On Starlit Seas) I ate a lot of dates and coffee - it’s set in the desert, you see. With On Starlit Seas it was hot chocolate. I put on 7lbs!




About the Author:

     Sara Sheridan is the author of On Starlit Seas, Brighton Belle, England Expects, and London Calling. She is a cultural commentator who appears regularly on television and radio. In 2014 she was named one of the Saltire Society's 365 Most Influential Scottish Women, past and present. 

     For more information visit her website at http://www.sarasheridan.com/.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Deborah Swift's Book Blast

HF Virtual Book Tours is delighted to introduce you to historical novelist Deborah Swift! Deborah’s acclaimed novels are set in turbulent seventeenth century England and have been described as “brilliant” and “a must for all readers looking for something out of the ordinary but grippingly alive”. Her previous life as a scenographer and costume designer shine through as the settings are beautifully evoked, immersing the reader in the sights and smells of the time. Deborah’s multi-layered and engrossing historical adventures will make perfect picks for reading groups. Reading Group Guides can be conveniently found in the back of each book and on her website. Find more information on Deborah's novels below and enter to win a $25 Amazon Gift Card (£15 UK)! The Lady's Slipper Publication Date: June 3, 2011 Pan MacMillan Formats: Ebook, Paperback England, 1660. The King is back, but memories of the English Civil War still rankle. In rural Westmorland, artist Alice I...

Interview with Paula Margulies

     Today, I have the opportunity to interview Paula Margulies. She has recently wrote a novel about Pocahontas called Favorite Daughter, Part One , which won an Editor’s Choice Award at the 24th Annual San Diego State University Writer’s Conference. The story creates a different perspective to the American heroine. It is told in first person narrative, and it is how Pocahontas at a young age embarks through the many changes of her life. By doing so she transforms into a strong, courageous, wise woman. I am very pleased that she took the time to grant me this interview and to generously donate a copy of her novel to the giveaway. I look forward to reading her books in the future, and check back for my review of Favorite Daughter’s Part One soon. This interview is to give readers insight about her and her novel. Thank you, Mrs. Margulies. 1. Where and when do you write?  In my home office mostly, although I try to sneak away to artist residencies whenever ...

La Belle Creole: The Cuban Countess who Captivated Havana, Madrid and Paris by Alina Garcia-Lapuerta: A Book Review

La Belle Creole: The Cuban Countess who Captivated Havana, Madrid and Paris Author: Alina Garcia-Lapuerta Genre: Nonfiction, Biography, History Publisher: Chicago Review Press Release Date: September 1, 2014 Pages: 320 Source:  Netgalley/publisher in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis: The adventurous woman nicknamed La Belle Creole is brought to life in this book through the full use of her memoirs, contemporary accounts, and her intimate letters. The fascinating Maria de las Mercedes Santa Cruz y Montalvo, also known as Mercedes, and later the Comtesse Merlin, was a Cuban-born aristocrat who was years ahead of her time as a writer, a socialite, a salon host, and a participant in the Cuban slavery debate. Raised in Cuba and shipped off to live with her socialite mother in Spain at the age of 13, Mercedes triumphed over the political chaos that blanketed Europe in the Napoleonic days, by charming aristocrats from all sides with her exotic beauty and singing voice. She m...