Recently, to ring in the new year and new decade, Matthew Harffy stopped by for a virtual pint, and we got to talking about life and writing and family and all else that slips from the tongue during a night of good cheer. To learn more about the celebrated author Matthew Harffy, read on.
Matthew Harffy, British Author
When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
I’m not really sure about that! I think when I believed that I was actually going to complete my first novel, The Serpent Sword. That was back in 2012 and I had left the manuscript languishing on my hard drive for years, after Bernard Cornwell released The Last Kingdom, which was thematically very similar to the book I was working on. But I had an epiphany of sorts on a camping trip, where I decided that Flemings’ James Bond novels didn’t stop other spy thrillers being published, so why should Uhtred stop me from publishing my own series about an Anglo-Saxon warrior. That was when I made the decision to complete The Serpent Sword and get it published.
What is your work schedule like when you’re writing?
I used to write whenever and wherever I could, but now that I write full-time, I write Monday to Friday and aim for 2,000 words a day when working on the first draft. I take the dog for a walk and have some breakfast, then get writing. I sometimes get all the words done by lunchtime, if not, I do a couple more hours after eating something and taking the dog out again. By that time our youngest daughter is back from school and I start cooking dinner and go back to family life.
How long does it take you to write a book?
A few weeks of preparation and research before writing. Then I write the first draft over about three or four months. Then I revise that first draft, adding details and doing more research to complete the historical gaps and plot holes. Once that is done, I print out the manuscript and carry out an edit on paper. That takes a couple of weeks and then, I am ready for beta readers. From beginning to end, each novel takes about six months.
What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
I don’t go back and edit as I write. I move on and write chronologically, not allowing myself to get bogged down. I only go back to edit after I’ve completed that first rough draft. I think this means I am able to get through each novel relatively quickly, and it is always better to have something to edit than a blank page!
Blue
As a writer, what would you choose as your mascot/avatar/spirit animal?
I already have a lovely dog. Blue is half poodle and half border collie and he is a great writing companion.
What is your writing Kryptonite?
Social media and the general state of politics recently! I find it very distracting when there are big news stories happening, such as elections! I have to force myself to set my phone aside for a couple of hours so that I can concentrate and just write! The internet is a blessing and a curse for modern writers.
What advice do you have for writers?
Read, read and read some more. Then write what you would like to read.
If you could tell your younger writing self anything, what would it be?
Just finish the first draft and go for it!
Do you want each book to stand on its own, or are you trying to build a body of work with connections between each book?
I think it is important that each book is satisfying in its own right, but most of my books are part of a longer series, so there need to be links between each novel to paint the bigger picture. My latest novel, Wolf of Wessex, is not part of the Bernicia Chronicles series, but I have put in a couple of links to the other books for the eagle-eyed. So far, no reader has mentioned spotting the connections I have added…
What does literary success look like to you?
Being able to support yourself with your writing. It is not easy, I can tell you!
What are the most important magazines for writers to subscribe to?
I don’t subscribe to any magazines… so I don’t know!
How long were you a part-time writer before you became a full-time one?
About seven years, with a few more before that with it more like a hobby than anything really serious.
How many books have you written? Which is your favorite?
I am currently writing my ninth novel and I have a novella published too. So I am working on my tenth book! It is impossible to pick a favourite, but as the novella gets so little love and attention, I will give it a mention here. It is a standalone prequel to the Bernicia Chronicles called Kin of Cain, and I really liked how easy it felt to write something shorter than a novel. It was great fun to write and everyone who has read it seems to enjoy it. But people prefer novels!
What book are you writing now?
I am writing a book set at the start of the Viking Age. It is tentatively titled A Time for Swords, but that may well change. It is a whole new cast of characters, so it is challenging, but there is light at the end of the writing tunnel and I should finish the first draft in the next couple of weeks.
What books are you reading now?
I am reading Lancelot by Giles Kristian. It is a great book and I had heard only good things about it. So far, everything I’d heard has proven to be true. When I have finished that, I am looking forward to reading the latest Lee Child novel that I was given for Christmas.
Author Matthew Harffy
Author Bio
Matthew Harffy lived in Northumberland as a child and the area had a great impact on him. The rugged terrain, ruined castles and rocky coastline made it easy to imagine the past. Decades later, a documentary about Northumbria’s Golden Age sowed the kernel of an idea for a series of historical fiction novels that became THE BERNICIA CHRONICLES.
Matthew has worked in the IT industry, where he spent all day writing and editing, just not the words that most interested him. Prior to that he worked in Spain as an English teacher and translator. Besides historical fiction, he has also co-authored seven published academic articles, ranging in topic from the ecological impact of mining to the construction of a marble pipe organ.
Matthew lives in Wiltshire, England, with his wife and their two daughters.
He has a B.A. in English, an M.Ed. in Higher Education Leadership (honors), an M.A. in Literature (honors), and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing & Fiction. He was born in Texas in 1979.
“Conquergood & the Center of the Intelligible Mystery of Being is a captivating new dystopian science fiction novel by CG Fewston, an author already making a name for himself with his thought-provoking work. Set in the year 2183, Conquergood is set in a world where one company, Korporation, reigns supreme and has obtained world peace, through oppression... The world-building in the novel is remarkable. Fewston has created a believable and authentic post-apocalyptic society with technological wonders and thought-provoking societal issues. The relevance of the themes to the state of the world today adds an extra wrinkle and makes the story even more compelling.”
“There is no better way for readers interested in Germany’s history and the dilemma and cultures of the two Berlins to absorb this information than in a novel such as this, which captures the microcosm of two individuals’ love, relationship, and options and expands them against the blossoming dilemmas of a nation divided.”
~ D. Donovan, Senior Reviewer, Midwest Book Review
“A Time to Forget in East Berlin is a dream-like interlude of love and passion in the paranoid and violent life of a Cold War spy. The meticulous research is evident on every page, and Fewston’s elegant prose, reminiscent of novels from a bygone era, enhances the sensation that this is a book firmly rooted in another time.”
“Vivid, nuanced, and poetic…” “Fewston avoids familiar plot elements of espionage fiction, and he is excellent when it comes to emotional precision and form while crafting his varied cast of characters.” “There’s a lot to absorb in this book of hefty psychological and philosophical observations and insights, but the reader who stays committed will be greatly rewarded.”
“Readers of TheCatcher in the Rye and similar stories will relish the astute, critical inspection of life that makes Little Hometown, America a compelling snapshot of contemporary American life and culture.”
“Fewston employs a literary device called a ‘frame narrative’ which may be less familiar to some, but allows for a picture-in-picture result (to use a photographic term). Snapshots of stories appear as parts of other stories, with the introductory story serving as a backdrop for a series of shorter stories that lead readers into each, dovetailing and connecting in intricate ways.”
“The American novelist CG FEWSTON tells a satisfying tale, bolstered by psychology and far-ranging philosophy, calling upon Joseph Campbell, J. D. Salinger, the King James Bible, and Othello.”
“In this way, the author lends intellectual heft to a family story, exploring the ‘purity’ of art, the ‘corrupting’ influences of publishing, the solitary artist, and the messy interconnectedness of human relationships.”
“Fewston’s lyrical, nostalgia-steeped story is told from the perspective of a 40-year-old man gazing back on events from his 1980s Texas childhood…. the narrator movingly conveys and interprets the greater meanings behind childhood memories.”
“The novel’s focus on formative childhood moments is familiar… the narrator’s lived experiences come across as wholly personal, deeply felt, and visceral.”
This is my good friend, Nicolasa (Nico) Murillo, CRC, who is a professional chef & a wellness mentor. I’ve known her since childhood & I’m honored to share her story with you. In life, we all have ups & downs, some far more extreme than others. Much like in Canada, in America, the legalization of marijuana has become a national movement, which includes safe & legal access to cannabis (marijuana) for therapeutic use & research for all.
“This is a wellness movement,” Nico explains. The wellness movement is focused on three specific areas: information, encouragement, & accountability.
In these stressful & unprecedented times, it makes good sense to promote & encourage the state or condition of being in good physical & mental health.
TEXANS FOR SAFE ACCESS ~ share the mission of their national organization, Americans for Safe Access (ASA), which is to ensure safe and legal access to cannabis (marijuana) for therapeutic use and research, for all Texans.
Recently, to ring in the new year and new decade, Matthew Harffy stopped by for a virtual pint, and we got to talking about life and writing and family and all else that slips from the tongue during a night of good cheer. To learn more about the celebrated author Matthew Harffy, read on.
When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?
I’m not really sure about that! I think when I believed that I was actually going to complete my first novel, The Serpent Sword. That was back in 2012 and I had left the manuscript languishing on my hard drive for years, after Bernard Cornwell released The Last Kingdom, which was thematically very similar to the book I was working on. But I had an epiphany of sorts on a camping trip, where I decided that Flemings’ James Bond novels didn’t stop other spy thrillers being published, so why should Uhtred stop me from publishing my own series about an Anglo-Saxon warrior. That was when I made the decision to complete The Serpent Sword and get it published.
What is your work schedule like when you’re writing?
I used to write whenever and wherever I could, but now that I write full-time, I write Monday to Friday and aim for 2,000 words a day when working on the first draft. I take the dog for a walk and have some breakfast, then get writing. I sometimes get all the words done by lunchtime, if not, I do a couple more hours after eating something and taking the dog out again. By that time our youngest daughter is back from school and I start cooking dinner and go back to family life.
How long does it take you to write a book?
A few weeks of preparation and research before writing. Then I write the first draft over about three or four months. Then I revise that first draft, adding details and doing more research to complete the historical gaps and plot holes. Once that is done, I print out the manuscript and carry out an edit on paper. That takes a couple of weeks and then, I am ready for beta readers. From beginning to end, each novel takes about six months.
What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
I don’t go back and edit as I write. I move on and write chronologically, not allowing myself to get bogged down. I only go back to edit after I’ve completed that first rough draft. I think this means I am able to get through each novel relatively quickly, and it is always better to have something to edit than a blank page!
As a writer, what would you choose as your mascot/avatar/spirit animal?
I already have a lovely dog. Blue is half poodle and half border collie and he is a great writing companion.
What is your writing Kryptonite?
Social media and the general state of politics recently! I find it very distracting when there are big news stories happening, such as elections! I have to force myself to set my phone aside for a couple of hours so that I can concentrate and just write! The internet is a blessing and a curse for modern writers.
What advice do you have for writers?
Read, read and read some more. Then write what you would like to read.
If you could tell your younger writing self anything, what would it be?
Just finish the first draft and go for it!
Do you want each book to stand on its own, or are you trying to build a body of work with connections between each book?
I think it is important that each book is satisfying in its own right, but most of my books are part of a longer series, so there need to be links between each novel to paint the bigger picture. My latest novel, Wolf of Wessex, is not part of the Bernicia Chronicles series, but I have put in a couple of links to the other books for the eagle-eyed. So far, no reader has mentioned spotting the connections I have added…
What does literary success look like to you?
Being able to support yourself with your writing. It is not easy, I can tell you!
What are the most important magazines for writers to subscribe to?
I don’t subscribe to any magazines… so I don’t know!
How long were you a part-time writer before you became a full-time one?
About seven years, with a few more before that with it more like a hobby than anything really serious.
How many books have you written? Which is your favorite?
I am currently writing my ninth novel and I have a novella published too. So I am working on my tenth book! It is impossible to pick a favourite, but as the novella gets so little love and attention, I will give it a mention here. It is a standalone prequel to the Bernicia Chronicles called Kin of Cain, and I really liked how easy it felt to write something shorter than a novel. It was great fun to write and everyone who has read it seems to enjoy it. But people prefer novels!
What book are you writing now?
I am writing a book set at the start of the Viking Age. It is tentatively titled A Time for Swords, but that may well change. It is a whole new cast of characters, so it is challenging, but there is light at the end of the writing tunnel and I should finish the first draft in the next couple of weeks.
What books are you reading now?
I am reading Lancelot by Giles Kristian. It is a great book and I had heard only good things about it. So far, everything I’d heard has proven to be true. When I have finished that, I am looking forward to reading the latest Lee Child novel that I was given for Christmas.
Author Bio
Matthew Harffy lived in Northumberland as a child and the area had a great impact on him. The rugged terrain, ruined castles and rocky coastline made it easy to imagine the past. Decades later, a documentary about Northumbria’s Golden Age sowed the kernel of an idea for a series of historical fiction novels that became THE BERNICIA CHRONICLES.
Matthew has worked in the IT industry, where he spent all day writing and editing, just not the words that most interested him. Prior to that he worked in Spain as an English teacher and translator. Besides historical fiction, he has also co-authored seven published academic articles, ranging in topic from the ecological impact of mining to the construction of a marble pipe organ.
Matthew lives in Wiltshire, England, with his wife and their two daughters.
Links:
The Bernicia Chronicles
http://getbook.at/TheSerpentSword
http://getbook.at/CROSSandCURSE
http://getbook.at/BloodandBlade
http://getbook.at/KillerOfKings
http://getbook.at/WarriorOfWoden
http://getbook.at/StormOfSteel
https://getbook.at/FortressOfFury
Wolf of Wessex
https://getbook.at/WolfOfWessex
Novella – Kin of Cain
https://getbook.at/KinOfCain
Website: www.matthewharffy.com
Twitter: @MatthewHarffy
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MatthewHarffyAuthor
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CG FEWSTON
The American novelist CG FEWSTON has been a Visiting Scholar at the American Academy in Rome (Italy), a Visiting Fellow at Hong Kong’s CityU, & he’s a been member of the Hemingway Society, Americans for the Arts, PEN America, Club Med, & the Royal Society of Literature. He’s also a been Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce (RSA) based in London. He’s the author of several short stories and novels. His works include A Father’s Son (2005), The New America: A Collection (2007), The Mystic’s Smile ~ A Play in 3 Acts (2007), Vanity of Vanities (2011), A Time to Love in Tehran (2015), Little Hometown, America (2020); A Time to Forget in East Berlin (2022), and Conquergood & the Center of the Intelligible Mystery of Being (2023).
He has a B.A. in English, an M.Ed. in Higher Education Leadership (honors), an M.A. in Literature (honors), and an M.F.A. in Creative Writing & Fiction. He was born in Texas in 1979.
“Conquergood & the Center of the Intelligible Mystery of Being is a captivating new dystopian science fiction novel by CG Fewston, an author already making a name for himself with his thought-provoking work. Set in the year 2183, Conquergood is set in a world where one company, Korporation, reigns supreme and has obtained world peace, through oppression... The world-building in the novel is remarkable. Fewston has created a believable and authentic post-apocalyptic society with technological wonders and thought-provoking societal issues. The relevance of the themes to the state of the world today adds an extra wrinkle and makes the story even more compelling.”
~ Literary Titan
A TIME TO FORGET IN EAST BERLIN
BREW Book Excellence Award Winner
BREW Readers’ Choice Award Winner
“A spellbinding tale of love and espionage set under the looming shadow of the Berlin Wall in 1975… A mesmerising read full of charged eroticism.”
~ Ian Skewis, Associate Editor for Bloodhound Books, & author of best-selling novel A Murder of Crows (2017)
“An engrossing story of clandestine espionage… a testament to the lifestyle encountered in East Berlin at the height of the Cold War.”
~ Lone Star Literary Life Magazine
“There is no better way for readers interested in Germany’s history and the dilemma and cultures of the two Berlins to absorb this information than in a novel such as this, which captures the microcosm of two individuals’ love, relationship, and options and expands them against the blossoming dilemmas of a nation divided.”
~ D. Donovan, Senior Reviewer, Midwest Book Review
“A Time to Forget in East Berlin is a dream-like interlude of love and passion in the paranoid and violent life of a Cold War spy. The meticulous research is evident on every page, and Fewston’s elegant prose, reminiscent of novels from a bygone era, enhances the sensation that this is a book firmly rooted in another time.”
~ Matthew Harffy, prolific writer & best-selling historical fiction author of the “Bernicia Chronicles” series
“Vivid, nuanced, and poetic…” “Fewston avoids familiar plot elements of espionage fiction, and he is excellent when it comes to emotional precision and form while crafting his varied cast of characters.” “There’s a lot to absorb in this book of hefty psychological and philosophical observations and insights, but the reader who stays committed will be greatly rewarded.”
~ The Prairies Book Review
LITTLE HOMETOWN, AMERICA
GOLD Winner in the 2020 Human Relations Indie Book Awards for Contemporary Realistic Fiction
FINALIST in the SOUTHWEST REGIONAL FICTION category of the 14th Annual National Indie Excellence 2020 Awards (NIEA)
“Readers of The Catcher in the Rye and similar stories will relish the astute, critical inspection of life that makes Little Hometown, America a compelling snapshot of contemporary American life and culture.”
“Fewston employs a literary device called a ‘frame narrative’ which may be less familiar to some, but allows for a picture-in-picture result (to use a photographic term). Snapshots of stories appear as parts of other stories, with the introductory story serving as a backdrop for a series of shorter stories that lead readers into each, dovetailing and connecting in intricate ways.”
~ D. Donovan, Senior Reviewer, Midwest Book Review
“The American novelist CG FEWSTON tells a satisfying tale, bolstered by psychology and far-ranging philosophy, calling upon Joseph Campbell, J. D. Salinger, the King James Bible, and Othello.”
“In this way, the author lends intellectual heft to a family story, exploring the ‘purity’ of art, the ‘corrupting’ influences of publishing, the solitary artist, and the messy interconnectedness of human relationships.”
~ Lone Star Literary Life Magazine
“Fewston’s lyrical, nostalgia-steeped story is told from the perspective of a 40-year-old man gazing back on events from his 1980s Texas childhood…. the narrator movingly conveys and interprets the greater meanings behind childhood memories.”
“The novel’s focus on formative childhood moments is familiar… the narrator’s lived experiences come across as wholly personal, deeply felt, and visceral.”
~ The BookLife Prize
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American Novelist CG FEWSTON
This is my good friend, Nicolasa (Nico) Murillo, CRC, who is a professional chef & a wellness mentor. I’ve known her since childhood & I’m honored to share her story with you. In life, we all have ups & downs, some far more extreme than others. Much like in Canada, in America, the legalization of marijuana has become a national movement, which includes safe & legal access to cannabis (marijuana) for therapeutic use & research for all.
“This is a wellness movement,” Nico explains. The wellness movement is focused on three specific areas: information, encouragement, & accountability.
In these stressful & unprecedented times, it makes good sense to promote & encourage the state or condition of being in good physical & mental health.
To learn more you can visit: Americans For Safe Access & Texans for Safe Access, ASA (if you are in Texas).
The mission of Americans for Safe Access (ASA) is to ensure safe and legal access to cannabis (marijuana) for therapeutic use and research.
Link: https://www.safeaccessnow.org/
TEXANS FOR SAFE ACCESS ~ share the mission of their national organization, Americans for Safe Access (ASA), which is to ensure safe and legal access to cannabis (marijuana) for therapeutic use and research, for all Texans.
Link: https://txsafeaccess.org/about-1
Stay safe & stay happy. God bless.
Nico Murillo Bio ~ Americans & Texans for Safe Access ~ Medical Cannabis
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