Q&A: Roger Simpson, Author of Halifax #2: Resurrection

Q&A: Roger Simpson, Author of Halifax #2: Resurrection

Briefly tell us about your book:

Jane Halifax is back, but she’s not quite herself. A near-fatal car accident has left Jane in a coma. When she wakes, she has no idea who she is.

Initially comforted by unlikely spectres from past cases, Jane is unaware of everyone else’s concerns: the police who believe she was deliberately run off the road; a lawyer whose files were in her car at the time of the accident – files he should never have lent her; her neurosurgeon who fears a relapse; and her partner, Tim, who has to cope with the fact Jane remembers almost nothing of the last two years – including their relationship.

A young woman called Luna keeps luring Jane back to the present. Linked to a twenty-year-old case from Jane’s past, Luna has a quest of her own she can only solve with Jane’s help. But if Jane wants to help Luna, she first needs to heal herself, and there just might be reasons beyond the accident that are hampering Jane’s recovery.

How did you think of the title of the book?

I wanted to come up with a story that would introduce Jane to readers who may not have seen the telemovies or the tv mini-series.  I thought the best way to do this would be to wipe Jane’s memory banks clean and force Jane to have to reconstruct her past – and, in the process, introduce herself to the reader.  And because I am always partial to big, Old Testament words, reconstruction became resurrection

Do you write about people you know?  Or yourself?

My characters are usually drawn from people I know (or have read about or researched) and are often based on myself – even when not intended. It is part of the writing process. Usually, a character is a combination of a number of people. They are seldom based on just one single person – for then you are writing non-fiction. The process is often subconscious, but if you don’t ground characters in some kind of reality (that is, a reality you understand or a reality based on personal experience) the characters will be in danger of being hollow and unconvincing.

I don’t have particular people in mind when I create a character, but as you piece them together and explore them in prose, you are always drawing on experience. It is often not until afterwards that you realise who you’ve based the characters on. And sometimes it can be a shock and you worry they might recognise themselves in what you’ve written.  But hopefully, you’ve been cleverer than that as writing thrillers and mystery stories is a craft that demands that you constantly keep things hidden, camouflaged and disguised.

What’s some great advice you’ve received that has helped you as a writer?

The best advice I have ever got was from Bill Link, creator of Columbo.  And his advice was to never leave home (i.e. don’t start writing) unless you have the ending.  The thriller or murder/mystery is all about the ending, and if you don’t have a good one, the reader will be entitled to throw the book against the wall. I would add to that advice one other thing: once you have that great ending – plot backwards.

What’s your daily writing routine like and what are you working on at the moment?

I plan for 3 months or more until I think I have the story – and especially the ending.  Then I try and write 1,000 words a day.  If I encounter problems along the way, it is usually because I have wandered away from the plan.  But sometimes you discover that you have actually written yourself to a better place in which case I will go back and rewrite the plan.  Which is precisely what I am doing at the moment on the third book in the Jane Halifax series – UNBLESSED.  Planning and writing: writing and re-planning. I think that’s my writing process.

Buy a copy of Resurrection here.

Reviews

Captivatingly Chasing Memory: Read an Extract from Resurrection by Roger Simpson

Review | Extract

27 September 2023

Captivatingly Chasing Memory: Read an Extract from Resurrection by Roger Simpson

    Seamlessly Suspenseful Storytelling: Read Our Review of Resurrection by Roger Simpson

    Review | Our Review

    19 September 2023

    Seamlessly Suspenseful Storytelling: Read Our Review of Resurrection by Roger Simpson

      Your Preview Verdict: Halifax #2: Resurrection by Roger Simpson

      Review | Preview

      23 August 2023

      Your Preview Verdict: Halifax #2: Resurrection by Roger Simpson

        Better Reading Preview: Halifax #2: Resurrection by Roger Simpson

        Review | Preview

        19 June 2023

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            Publisher details

            Halifax #2: Resurrection
            Author
            Roger Simpson
            Publisher
            Simon and Schuster
            Genre
            Fiction
            Released
            30 August, 2023
            ISBN
            9781761102530

            Synopsis

            Jane Halifax is back, but she’s not quite herself… A twisted story of betrayal, where the formidable forensic psychiatrist will discover that the only person you can trust is yourself.

            A near-fatal car accident has left Jane in a coma. When she wakes, she has no idea who she is.

            Initially comforted by unlikely spectres from past cases, Jane is unaware of everyone else’s concerns: the police who believe she was deliberately run off the road; a lawyer whose files were in her car at the time of the accident – files he should never have lent her; her neurosurgeon who fears a relapse; and her partner, Tim, who has to cope with the fact Jane remembers almost nothing of the last two years – including their relationship.

            A young woman called Luna keeps luring Jane back to the present. Linked to a thirty-year cold case from Jane’s past, Luna has a quest of her own she can only solve with Jane’s help.

            But if Jane wants to help Luna, she first needs to heal herself, and there just might be reasons beyond the accident that are hampering Jane’s recovery...

            Roger Simpson
            About the author

            Roger Simpson

            Roger Simpson is one of Australia’s leading writers and producers.He has created seventeen series for television including the highly acclaimed telemovie series Halifax f.p. (1994–2001) and its sequel Halifax: Retribution (2020), the cult series Good Guys, Bad Guys (1996–1998), the police drama Stingers (which ran for eight seasons until 2004), the much-loved rural serial Something In the Air (2000–2002), the teenage sci-fi sensation Silver Sun (2004–2005) and the top-rating streaming series Satisfaction (2007–2010).Roger is the winner of twelve awards for writing including nine Australian Writers Guild AWGIE Awards as well as numerous awards as a producer. He is currently completing the stage play, The Trial Of Paul Gauguin, which was long listed for the National Playwrights Conference in 2016 by the Eugene O’Neill Theater. HALIFAX: Transgression is his first book.

            Books by Roger Simpson

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