That matters. That hugely matters. So thank you, everybody. Always, and from the bottom of my heart.
Stu
P.S. Next time we’re doing a more contemporary thriller thing. It’s going to be wild. Hopefully I’ll see you back here.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
They say there’s no wrong way to write a book, but they’re mistaken. There are many wrong ways, and I tried them all. It’s taken me three years to write Last Murder, because I wrote an entirely different book first, then had to rip it up and start again. Deadlines came and went, other projects were shifted, plans were cancelled, and weekends vanished. I made a lot of people’s lives more difficult than they should have been and I truly hate that. Soz everybody.
First amongst the hugely inconvenienced was my wife, Maresa, who has patiently listened to me complain about every character, sentence and paragraph of this book, night after night, for three years. She’s punctured my bad moods, indulged my ridiculous exuberance (a good writing day is something to behold) and helped bring clarity to the word fog. It should be impossible to love somebody this much, but time still slows down when I’m near her.
And now to my editors, Alison Hennessey and Shana Drehs, who must surely have worked out the perfect way to kill me by now. I’m not the ideal author. I deliver drafts late, then rip them up while they’re being edited. I add in elements they hate, remove the ones they like, then randomly change the plot. I’m a Frankenstein-esque creation of towering ambition and utter ineptitude, but they’ve never once let their impatience, disappointment or anger reach me. Their feedback has been spot on, delivered kindly, and has always made the book better – even if it didn’t stay the same book for very long.
For my agent, Harry Illingworth, I’m now basically a dog that keeps pissing on people’s legs before digging up their lawns. His job is to follow behind me, explaining that I’m incontinent but well-meaning. I honestly don’t know how he feels about any of this, but he keeps buying me pints so I think it’s going well. Thanks man.
The magnificent Amy Donegan, Cristina Arreola and Ben McCluskey are my marketing and publicity dream team. They’re the reason people know that I have a book out. They’re the reason people are excited and they’re the reason people buy them. If you’ve heard of me it’s because of them, and I’m extremely grateful.
I need to thank Faye Robinson, who’s my managing editor and is the reason this book is actually a book. I didn’t include her in these acknowledgements initially because I’m a moron, and then had to ask her to drop her own name into the copy at the last minute – which was probably quite mortifying and annoying for her. This example is a microcosm of the chaotic way I work, and something she’s had to deal with throughout this book. She deserves the hugest of thanks. And while we’re thanking people who have to live inside my chaos, I’d like to say ‘cheers and sorry’ to Lindeth Vasey and Jessica Thelander, my most excellent copyeditors and righters of numerous grammatical, structural and mathematical wrongs.
David Mann designed the cover, which is more beautiful every time I see it. Equally remarkable is Emily Faccini, who drew the map of the island. Seeing what these two come up with for each new book is possibly the most exciting part of the process.
Publishing is an enormous enterprise, with the success or failure of a book living and dying on the talent of hundreds of people I’ll never meet. I’m grateful to every single one of you.
And, finally, the hugest of thanks to my mum, dad and sister. Even after all these years, they’re the first people who read my books – even those dreadful first drafts. They’ve always believed in me, even when I didn’t. If you’ve a family like that, you’ll go far.
A NOTE ON THE AUTHOR
Stuart Turton’s debut novel, The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, won the Costa First Novel Award and the Books Are My Bag Readers Award for Best Novel, and was shortlisted for the Specsavers National Book Awards and the British Book Awards Debut of the Year. A Sunday Times bestseller, it has been translated into over thirty languages, and has sold over one million copies in the UK and US combined. The Devil and the Dark Water, his follow-up, won the Books Are My Bag Readers Award for Fiction and was selected for the BBC Two Book Club, Between the Covers, and Jo Whiley’s Radio 2 Book Club. Stuart lives near London with his wife and daughters.
@stu_turton
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First published in Great Britain 2024
This electronic edition published in 2024 by Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Copyright © Stuart Turton, 2024
Illustrations © Emily Faccini, 2024
Stuart Turton has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988, to be identified as Author of this work
This is a work of fiction. Names and characters are the product of the author’s imagination and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental
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ISBN: HB: 978-1-5266-3495-5; TPB: 978-1-5266-3491-7; WATERSTONES SIGNED EDITION: 978-1-5266-7399-2; GOLDSBORO SIGNED EDITION: 978-1-5266-7924-6; EBOOK: 978-1-5266-3493-1; EPDF: 978-1-5266-6508-9
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