Saturday, June 8, 2024

Starting Anew by Sue Moorcroft

What’s very new in my author life is writing a trilogy after twenty-four linked or standalone books. It’s known as the Skye Sisters trilogy, so you won’t be shocked to learn that it’s set on the beautiful Isle of Skye off the west coast of Scotland. Under a Summer Skye is Thea’s story and came out in May, to be followed by Ezzie’s book, A Skye Full of Stars in autumn and then Valentina in Over the Sea to Skye in summer next year.

Although Skye fitted my requirement to be remote from Suffolk in the east of England, where the sisters Thea, Ezzie and Valentina were brought up, I had no experience of the island. ‘My’ villages, created for various novels, have been set in England, Italy or France – but never Scotland. I had no continuing characters to call on, and no village already drawn in my pad.

My first trip to Skye was in summer, when a blue sky was populated by scudding clouds and my husband and I were not the only visitors. Canadian, American and Australian accents mingled with English voices like my own. The local folk speak English with a flowing Hebridean accent, or they speak Gaelic. Skye is the largest island of the Inner Hebrides, but handily joined to the coast of mainland Scotland by a bridge. From the map I’d already studied, I thought I’d create my new village just north of Broadford Bay, where we stayed, but when I saw the thick woods, the youth hostel and even some light industry … well, no.

So, we drove south to the Sleat Peninsula, the historic home of Clan Macdonald, and it was there that I found a scoop of land that sloped to the sea, a perfect home for Rothach village, where I’d send Thea and Ezzie to take refuge from the past. The bay would be Rothach Bay and Rothach Hall would stand on the headland above. I returned to the hotel to draw a map and conjure with street names and I’m pretty sure my husband thought my job was not that hard.

However, the other new aspect of the Skye Sisters trilogy is … writing the trilogy. I have many books where, for instance, a secondary character in one story gets a book of their own somewhere down the line, but those links have occurred on whim. To plan three books, each of which could be read standalone but that also made a series, is a fresh challenge. 

The structure is that Thea, Ezzie and Valentina are adoptive sisters, and their adoption backstories weave in and out of their respective books, yet the novels each have to follow closely on the timeline. And timelines aren’t my best thing.

However, Under a Summer Skye has met the world with gorgeous reviews and A Skye Full of Stars is almost ready. I’ve even moved Valentina to Rothach for Over the Sea to Skye – so I think I’m getting the hang of it.

Sue Moorcroft is an award-winning and
 internationally bestselling author and has reached the coveted #1 spot on Amazon Kindle UK. 

Her novels, short stories, serials, columns, writing ‘how to’ and courses have appeared around the world. If you’d like to see more of her covers go to www.suemoorcroft.com and click on ‘Gallery’.

Website [www.suemoorcroft.com]
Blog [http://suemoorcroft.wordpress.com]
Facebook profile [Sue.Moorcroft.3]
Twitter  [@suemoorcroft]
Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/suemoorcroftauthor/] @SueMoorcroftAuthor
LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/suemoorcroft]

9 comments:

  1. Sue,

    I enjoyed your blog post. I really like the idea of drawing up the village and surrounding area.

    Good luck on sales!

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    1. Thank you so much, Diana. 😊

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  2. My favorite thing about each series I start is the building of the world the characters will inhabit. I love that you went to Skye and checked it all out. My daughter, granddaughter and I will be in Scotland in September. WE aren't going to the Isle of Skye but we will be busy the short time we will be there. Fun post! I enjoy learning how other authors come up with their worlds.

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    1. Thanks, Paty. I love the world-building, too, and often have to consult the map of the village to ensure it all 'works'. For some reason, the interior of Rothach Hall remains etched in my imagination without a drawing. I hope you love your trip to Scotland. It's such a pretty place.

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  3. Great concept for a trilogy, Sue. And I love the titles!

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    1. Thanks so much, Lynn. My editor chose the titles! They do seem to be going down beautifully, though. I've just seen the cover rough for A Skye Full of Stars and I love it.

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  4. Sue, Thank you for being our guest here at Romancing The Genres and sharing your writing journey. I love the kind of research you did in order to have your "world" accurate. And your "Skye Sisters" Trilogy looks to be another winner! I know when you've guested here on RTG in the past, that you have different covers for the same book depending on where it's released. I find that attention to detail fascinating as it gives a glimpse into what readers in different countries find intriguing.

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  5. Thank you very much for inviting me, Judith. It's always a pleasure. :-)

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  6. I also want to thank you for Guesting with us at RTG, Sue. Your new series has piqued my interest. Three adoptive sisters on the Isle of Skye- a fresh premise!
    ~Sarah

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