Clementina
by Simon
Cann
GENRE: Crime
Thriller
BLURB:
Leathan Wilkey has
been hired to babysit Clementina, a seventeen-year-old whose rich daddy is
going through a messy divorce and is over-compensating.
Leathan soon tires of her spending habits, her selfie obsession, and her social
media preoccupation as his ward drags him from shop to boutique to jeweler,
approaching each with the self-possession that comes from a lifetime of getting
her own way and never once having to worry about money.
But when Clementina snaps her fingers and her boyfriend doesn’t come running,
something is up. He doesn’t appear because he’s been murdered.
When Leathan investigates, he finds that the boyfriend has no background and
met Clementina through a connection made by daddy’s business partner.
Daddy’s business partner who has been slowly and progressively putting daddy in
a vice, grabbing more of the business, and who is now menacing Clementina
directly to manipulate daddy.
Excerpt:
Johnson McElroy and Orville Michael
Mallet seemed pleased to have fixed a problem. A problem where I was having
trouble understanding what really made it a problem.
The two men—one groomed to look like
a logical and rational arguing machine; the other determined to display his
individual creativity, which looked exactly the same as everyone else’s
individual creativity—shook my hand at the door.
“You know the way out,” I said, as
if I had a clue. I only knew how to enter and leave if I was driven by Reece.
The two headed for the elevator and
I made my way through the cavernous entrance hall back to the open living space
and the kitchen area. The kitchen area, which had more floor space than most
apartments I had lived in.
“I should have a word with
Clementina,” I said to Angeline Bautista, the housekeeper who had remained
invisible while the two company men had been present.
“She’s gone out,” said the
housekeeper.
“When?”
“While you talked.”
“Where?”
She shrugged.
“What did Reece say?”
She looked confused.
“Reece—the driver. What did he say?”
The confusion remained. “Nothing.”
“But he must have said something
when he came up.”
“He didn’t come up,” she said.
“She went to him?” I could feel the
hesitation in my speech as my brain tried to catch up with the situation and
make sure my language was unambiguous for the non-native English speaker.
“No. She went out on her own,” said
Angeline.
“When?”
“While you talked,” she said with
greater emphasis.
“How long ago?”
She tilted her head from side to
side. “Ten minutes?” she said. More a question than a statement.
I pulled out my phone and called
Reece. “Does Clementina go out on her own?”
“Nope,” said Reece. “Daddy says no.”
“Well, she has.”
Reece swore under his breath. “I’ll
be up.”
Guest Post:
How I handled the research for the Leathan
Wilkey series
I knew I
wanted to write a series set in Paris even before I published the first book in
my other main series (the Boniface series…which is very good J you
should check it out: simoncann.com/boniface).
Well…I say I
knew I wanted to write a series set in Paris. In truth, I had a notion about
the character who would become Leathan Wilkey and I figured one city where such
a person might end up would be Paris. I had other cities in mind—in particular,
Budapest and Sarajevo—but Paris somehow felt most likely.
Felt likely.
Felt. Not really very scientific when I
was contemplating a series. So the simple way to confirm that Paris was indeed
the place was to go to Paris. I live in London so getting to Paris is a matter
of jumping on a train—from my front door to the center of Paris, it takes just
over four hours.
In spent a
week in Paris in early February. I learned very quickly that Paris is cold and
the wind that comes off the Seine is biting.
I walked the
streets—literally; every morning I would get up and walk around the
neighborhoods, returning to hotel late at night. I took photos—lots of photos.
I watched. I observed. I talked to people. I asked questions.
I quickly
realized that Paris was not simply a place where I could set a series, but it was a place where I wanted to set a series. I knew the series was going to be about
contrast and Paris had that mix of light and dark—physically, but also on a
deeper more emotional level—that I wanted for my series.
But the
Paris I wanted as the location for my books is not the Paris of the Eiffel
Tower, Notre Dame, Sacre Coeur, the Champs-Élysées, the Arc de Triomphe, or the
Louvre. I wanted the places where people don’t look—not necessarily the places
hidden from view, although there are plenty of those, but more the places
people don’t notice because there are looking the other way.
This meant
more trips to Paris and more time walking the streets. I also meant that I
often found myself near the tourist traps, but looking away from them—looking
to the shadows, looking to the less well scrubbed side of the city.
But for me
spending time in Paris was more than finding locations—my intention was not to
describe what the Eiffel Tower looks like from firsthand experience (and let me
throw in a spoiler here: I don’t describe the Eiffel Tower in my books).
Instead, I looked to understand how the physicality and the geography of the
city would affect my characters as they lived their lives in the city.
Having
decided on Paris I then read a lot. I read about the city, the history, the
government (regional and national), government institutions (police/gendarme,
ambulance, firefighters), and so on. And of course, I also read up on the
issues relating to Leathan’s back story—organized gangs and human trafficking
in UK.
Having done
the research, I put it all to one side and made up the story.
AUTHOR BIO:
Simon Cann is the author of the Boniface, Montbretia
Armstrong, and Leathan Wilkey series of books.
In addition to his fiction, Simon has written a range
of music-related and business-related books, and has also worked as a
ghostwriter.
Before turning full-time to writing, Simon spent
nearly two decades as a management consultant, where his clients included
aeronautical, pharmaceutical, defense, financial services, chemical,
entertainment, and broadcasting companies.
He lives in London.
Buy Link:
Giveaway:
$50 Amazon/BN GC
Follow the tour and comment; the more you comment, the better your chances of winning.
13 comments:
Hello everyone, it's Simon here.
Can I start by thanking the Avid Reader for her kind invitation to participate in this community.
I'm really looking forward to chatting with everyone and to hearing what you're all reading.
I'll be here all day, so if you've got any questions, comments, or thoughts, please jump in.
Over to you!
Simon
Thanks for hosting!
Congrats on the blog tour and thanks for the chance to win :)
Thank you, Lisa!
Great post, I enjoyed reading it. Thanks for sharing :)
My pleasure, Victoria!
I was actually going to ask you whether or not you been to Paris. Guess this post answered my question, LOL! Thank you for sharing your method of research. I found that post very interesting! :)
A week in Paris for research!!! Life can be good.
Hi clojo and Mary
Truth be told, I've now been to Paris several times in the name of research...and I'm going to go again.
Life is just so hard sometimes... ;-)
I'd like to thank the Avid Reader for her invitation to participate in this community and to thank you all for your kind welcome.
I'll be popping in at regular intervals, so if you've got any more questions then please keep asking. Alternatively, drop past my Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/simoncannauthor/) and say hi.
If you want to read more from Clementina, then hop over to Amazon: http://getbook.at/clementina Alternatively, you can download the first five chapters here: http://dl.bookfunnel.com/s1wzzajkj3
Enjoy your reading.
All the best
Simon
Thanks so much for all the work you put into bringing us such great giveaways. Have an awesome Sunday and Thank You!
Thank you so much for sharing your words with us and for offering this Giveaway of course! Best of luck to you with the remainder of the tour!
My pleasure, Bea. And thank you for you kind words.
Post a Comment