Miss Caroline Bingley would probably not have approved of travel to America in 1814. But we assure you, she does not mind in the least now.
Miss Caroline Bingley, Private Investigator, is officially published by HarperVia today in the USA and Canada, with this eye-popping cover by Sarah Kellogg.
Fly free, little book. Sharmini and I are so pleased to see you out in the world.
The novel, co-written with Sharmini Kumar, is published by HarperCollins and out now in Australia and New Zealand. It will be in shops in the UK next week (April 6).
We hope you like it.
We’ve got lots of events lined up, and some of them are with our friend and Regency co-conspirator Alison Goodman, whose fabulous new novel, The Ladies Road Guide to Utter Ruin, is also out about now.
It’s an exciting time, but listen up, emerging authors: nobody tells you how nerve-wracking it is to have your book released, so I’m warning you now. And it doesn’t diminish with age or repetition. Well, maybe a little. For your first book, you think your world is about to change, and it kinda does, but then it settles down again. Unless you’re Helen Garner or Sally Rooney.
Anyway, I’m off again, like an old steeplechaser out of the gate, but this time alongside my co-author, Sharmini Kumar, for whom this is a first novel so she gets to have all the thrills, and I get to enjoy it.
I’ll post our upcoming events as I have details, but here are a few:
The Melbourne launch is on 3 April at Readings State Library but it’s well and truly booked out, so you can relax about that.
The night after, we’re on a panel at Sisters in Crime, with the lovely Alison Goodman, whose latest Regency rip-roarer is The Ladies Road Guide to Utter Ruin. 8pm, 4 April, Rising Sun Hotel South Melbourne. Bookings here.
On 7 April, we’re in Sydney for a launch event at Better Read Than Dead in Newtown, in conversation with the darling Pamela Hart. 6.30 pm: details and bookings here.
On 16 April, we’ll be at Collins Booksellers in Moonee Ponds, in conversation about all things Austen and crime. Bookings here.
On 30 April, we’ll be in Geelong for the legendary Books in Bars session at the Waurn Ponds Hotel with Dymocks Geelong. Details and bookings here.
I’ll post more Miss B events here very soon.
In the meantime, I’ve just emerged from running my first writers’ retreat at the gorgeous Continental House in Hepburn Springs. I mean, I go on retreats all the time, as regular readers know, and find them incredibly productive. But this was different – 13 writers and me, lots of teaching and writing and eating excellent food, in a lovely 1920s guesthouse. It was a huge amount of fun (and work, but I don’t mind that), and I look forward to many more. Now I’m planning future retreats and some new courses and masterclasses for after Miss Bingley comes out. Writers, watch this space.
Last week, it was my great honour to launch Marion Taffe’s debut novel, By Her Hand– a historical novel set in Mercia in the early tenth century that I highly recommend.
On 3 May, I’m launching another debut novel by a local author, The Butterfly Women by Madeleine Cleary. It’s set in the heart of Little Lon, and that’s where the event’s being held. Details and bookings here.
No rest for the wicked.
(Which reminds me, I LOVED Wicked. I’d just seen the new Melbourne production, which I think was even better than the first, with two incredible leads, so wasn’t expecting the film version to blow my mind. But it did, or at least it’s really grown on me.)