As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.
On The Table Read Magazine, “the best book magazine in the UK“, author Clare Hawkins shares the inspiration behind her new book, The Dust Of Melita, and her creative writing process.
Written by JJ Barnes
I interviewed Clare Hawkins about her life and career, the story of her new book, The Dust Of Melita, and what inspired her to write it.
I have many interests and activities as well as writing. After 38 years working in various sectors of education, I teach voluntarily nowadays, write historical novels, read, cultivate an allotment, learn German, cycle, jog and play music badly. I have a dear husband of 47 years, two daughters, four grandchildren (between 9 and 7), two boys and two girls.
As a keen teenage reader, with a particular liking for romantic and historical novels by Georgette Heyer and Mary Stewart, I dreamt of being an author or journalist.
I tried to write short stories for women’s magazines in my twenties, but my first serious step didn’t happen until my 50s. My two daughters had left home, my part-time teaching for the OU finished and I found I had Saturdays completely free. I enrolled on a distance learning course in novel writing, wrote my first novel and then couldn’t stop.
My first completed novel took about one year. My first published book, by Cahill Davis Publishing ‘The Dust of Melita’, was originally written in 2015, and took about a year and a half from the initial research to completion. The manuscript was submitted to Cahill Davis Publishing in July 2022 and it was published in April 2023.
My daughter fell in love and married a Maltese man. Knowing so little about Malta, I started reading about its history and became fascinated. The tiny island, placed so strategically in the Mediterranean, has been the focus of so many extraordinary events and power struggles that I felt compelled to explore some of these through fiction. A visit to Malta allowed me to see the amazing topography and sense, through its unique historic sites, the wonderful legacy of its past.
The research. There was so much to read and I knew I would have to stop at some point if I really intended to write a novel. Because I chose to create different fictional stories at various key points in Malta’s history, I had to read quite widely, as well as gaining enough depth to write convincingly about the main period in which it was set, namely the Second World War siege in 1940.
One of my sources referred to the memoirs of a young British infantry soldier who served in Malta during the infamous WW2 siege. His youth and naivety appealed to me, so my main character was a little like him.
The main antagonist was war. I was, and am, horrified by the brutality and futility of war and the suffering, disruption and destruction of the lives of its victims, both civilians and armed forces. So the antagonists are the Italian and German forces who bombed the island and torpedoed the convoys of ships in the Mediterranean, to starve the people into submission.
The initial inciting incident is the main character’s escape from an Italian bombing raid, which leads to the beginning of his exploration of the island’s history and the process of his own self-discovery.
The ruthless bombardment of the island.
I plotted it broadly, then wrote chapter summaries, but these many elements changed as I wrote, and as the development of the characters and their situations demanded new details and twists.
Members of my writing group gave me very valuable feedback from the first readable draft onwards. It needed editing in terms of plot plausibility, characterization and sometimes style.
Identify the central ‘tension’ in the story, think about the main character(s) and plot, then write a draft, no matter how rough. Get it down on paper. Now you’ve got something to work on!
I’ve just finished a novel set in Scotland in the reign of James IV, inspired in part by his cruel linguistic experiment. I am also thinking about the next novel on the theme of treachery, which I’d like to write as a series of linked episodes at particular ‘flash points’ in British history, featuring characters who for different reasons betray their tribes, comrades, families or causes.
I am very glad that quite a few people have enjoyed reading the story. It was worth the effort as it was enjoyable as well as challenging.
Kindle: https://amzn.to/4aCo9nV
Paperback: https://amzn.to/4acK8Ca
https://www.facebook.com/HawkinsAuthor
https://www.twitter.com/@hawkinsauthor
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/26807920
Amazon and the Amazon logo are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc, or its affiliates.
On The Table Read Magazine, "the best entertainment eBook magazine UK", Los Angeles duo LaFrantz…
On The Table Read Magazine, "the best entertainment eBook magazine UK", former commercial pilot Ricky…
On The Table Read Read Magazine, "the best entertainment eBook magazine UK", author Umberto Nardolicci…
On The Table Read Magazine, "the best entertainment eBook magazine UK", Andrea Mendoza-Vasconez's The Love…
On The Table Read Magazine, "the best entertainment eBook magazine UK", Ted Z and the…
On The Table Read Magazine, "the best entertainment eBook magazine UK", Beth McKenzie's new single,…