One reviewer said of the book that it took them right back to the Maldives, and it’s hard to imagine any other setting provided the inspiration and back drop, though the location is never specifically mentioned. I ask about what inspired the setting?
Sue says, ‘It was indeed the Maldives and I am so pleased that was recognised. I did want to convey the beauty of the
islands. We had many many dive trips there in our expat days, staying at
various small islands. And I wrote and edited quite a bit of it on those
trips.’
So what exactly is an eco-thriller?
‘Yes. That is an excellent question,’ says Sue, adding into
our live chat interview the line <...looks evasive and tries to change
subject...> but she goes on to say, ‘Perhaps because one of the book's main
themes is the way we find a paradise destination, go there, in our droves, and
in doing so, do we spoil it? And yet we are wanted and needed there. The issue
of global warming is touched upon too. But I take no sides politically
speaking, and have no political answers to offer.’
I wonder were there things about the Maldives and society
there that made her uneasy while she was there or have her misgivings emerged
with hindsight? Or indeed are these misgivings entirely fictional?
‘I wouldn't say I had any misgivings really - the tourist
islands are very separate from the day to day life of the Maldives and I never
even travelled to Male, the main island. My thoughts over the years were mainly
about the increasing luxuries tourism requires, and how it weighs with these
small isolated islands, so remote and set so low in the beautiful Indian Ocean.’
The story at times is very funny as it charts the different
relationships of the group on the island, but there are moments of dreadful
unease that become real terror. I ask Sue if she has walked around a remote
island at night on her own? And if so, how did it feel?
She thanks me for finding the book both funny and
frightening as that was what she was aiming for. ‘Yes,’ she says. ‘I have
walked on the islands at night, though not all the way round as my heroine
does. It was lovely. And felt safe. I liked the evenings and nights there best
of all. There are no cars, no traffic noise, just the sea beating and beating
against the island edges. The stars are bright and the air smells of frangipani
blossom. I wasn't so keen on Disco/Karaoke night blaring out from the bar at
the other end, but that was only one night, and it is what many tourists want. I
never felt at all uneasy about walking on my own in the dark there. I enjoyed
it. But it is nearly ten years since I was there, and sadly things may have
changed, as violence seems to be on the increase everywhere.’
Sue’s first book, a novelette called Till They Dropped, was
very different in terms of its setting and characters, yet it had that same
edge-of-seat tension and was perhaps giving the same message from a very
different angle. I ask if she would agree.
‘Yes, “Till they Dropped” could be described as an eco-thriller
I guess, as, many many years ago, I began to wonder about all the shopping
malls being built, and whether the world would run out of shoppers. So I
decided to write the story of the last shopper left alive, and the deadly
danger that would put her in. But that was also about the brave new world we
tried so hard to build in the wake of WW2.’
Will there be any more Maldives-inspired books?
‘I don't think so, no.
So I hope I have done them justice in this one.’
Undoubtedly, she has. Waiting for Gordo perfectly captures
the beauty and remoteness of these small tropical islands.
What is next?
‘I am working on another thriller inspired by my childhood
family home and another paradise which was my granny's rambling old house and
garden - a fairy tale place for us grandchildren. And I am using a Rebecca-ish
theme in that my heroine is the second wife haunted by the memory of the first
wife. I even have a Mrs Danvers figure. It is nearly finished. And I hope it is
scary, but also funny.’
I for one, can’t wait for the next book, and I’ll leave the last word to Sue who, in response to that genre question again, says, ‘I would like to call it a post-modern version of Rebecca, but the problem with that is that someone might ask me what that means. And the only thing I can think of to say with reference to “post-modern” is that it is a phrase that testifies to the foolishness of calling any movement in art “modern”.’
Follow Sue’s blog HERE
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