Fresh off the press, recorded this morning. I'm talking about what inspired me to write "The Wrong Girl". Click here to watch.
BUY LINK for all you amazing people.
(ebook available now)
Have you ever noticed how the good things start with the letter S? Sex, scuba diving, sleep, single malt and Saturdays. This blog is all about the good things in life, of course. As a writer, however, I blog mostly about books.
So in the previous post I blogged about my AI-generated promo videos. Here is my favourite blooper:
The first time I tried to use AI in a promotional video for "The Wrong Girl" was back in the Dark Ages of 2024. The software was free and it didn't listen to my prompts. The family had a good time when they discovered my attempts on YouTube.
Fast forward a year, and here I am again. "The Wrong Girl" is being republished by She Rises, and I'm coercing Flow to create cool veo clips of a few scenes from the book.
What do you think?
29 July 2025 (USA time) marks the rebirth of my thriller, "The Wrong Girl". I'm grateful to Sands Press for publishing it last year, and to She Rises for breathing new life into it.
This is what the judge of Novel London Literary Competition had to say about the book: "The Wong Girl gripped the judges from the opening line. With strong and realistic characterisation, descriptions that bring the story to life and a plot which grips the reader, it is clear this book will be one which will have wide appeal. The author is definitely one to watch.""
The Wong Girl gripped the judges from the opening line. With strong and realistic characterisation, descriptions that bring the story to life and a plot which grips the reader, it is clear this book will be one which will have wide appeal. The author is definitely one to watch.""The Wong Girl gripped the judges from the opening line. With strong and realistic characterisation, descriptions that bring the story to life and a plot which grips the reader, it is clear this book will be one which will have wide appeal. The author is definitely one to watch."
"Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow" by Gabrielle Zevin is unlike any other book I've read. It's not SF, although I'm confident most SF readers will love it. And speaking of love, it's not a romance but it is about love. And friendship. And building computer games.
It reads easy but it makes you think deep.
My kind of book.
I recommend!