Rosie Claverton is a screenwriter and novelist. She grew up in Devon, daughter to a Sri Lankan
father and a Norfolk mother, surrounded by folk mythology and surly sheep. She
moved to Cardiff to study Medicine and adopted Wales as her home,
where she lives with her journalist husband and pet hedgehog.
Connect with the author:
Interview:
Tell us about
your book! What is it about and what inspired you to write it?
Captcha
Thief is the third novel in The Amy Lane
Mysteries, which stars a pair of Cardiff-based crimefighters – agoraphobic
hacker Amy Lane and streetwise ex-con Jason Carr. In this book, they're on the
trail of a murderer and thief, seeking justice for a dead security guard and hunting
down a stolen Impressionist painting. I wanted to write something different
than the usual serial killer take, so an art heist seemed like the perfect
option to test my detective duo.
Tell us about
your publishing process. What was it like? Did you go indie or the traditional
way?
The first two
books in the series Binary Witness and Code Runner were published
by the digital-first imprint of a large publishing house, but they didn't want
to continue publication. Crime Scene Books are a small independent press who
were enthusiastic about Amy and Jason's adventures and wanted to see them in
print. It was an unusual journey, but I'm pleased with how it's turned out.
How did you
choose the title for your book? Did it come to you right away, before you started
writing the story, or did it come later?
This book has
gone through a heap of titles, like its brothers before it. I try to name the
series on a theme that merges both technology and crime. It was named Stealth
Portrait and Exhibit @, before we finally settled on the the
much-improved Captcha Thief.
Tell us about
the cover design process. Did you have a basic idea of what your book cover
would be like?
I had a lot of
ideas about what the cover might look like, trying to consider the art gallery
setting and the skulking criminal menace of the previous novels. However, the
concept from the artist was completely different to those ideas and yet it
really works well for the novel.
Who is your
cover designer and how did you find him/her?
My designer was
Mark Hobin and I worked with him via my publisher, who clearly has impeccable
taste.
How was your
experience working with the designer?
I gave them a
lot of information upfront about what kind of themes I thought would work well
with the book, and then he ran with it. He focussed on the computer side of the
mystery, with the binary code and computer keys surrounding the mysterious
criminal figure.
What has been
the readers’ response to your cover?
They love how
eye-catching it is, particularly the appropriate captcha text style. It
immediately tells the reader it's a book about cybercrime, and the vibrancy of
the colours feels exciting.
I was looking
for a cover for my Amy Lane short story Car Hacker and my first step was
asking my friends who their favourite designer was. That gave me a shortlist of
reliable creators who came personally recommended. Make sure you can see a
gallery of their work, particularly of books already published so you know
authors have invested in their skills.
Anything else
you’d like to say about your book?
The cover
highlights Captcha Thief's connection to the world of computers, but
it's not technical. I deliberately use broad brushstrokes for the hacking, and
there's also Jason running around Cardiff with his one terrible password and a
passing knowledge of Facebook. It's not all binary, code and captchas!
No comments:
Post a Comment