Lovewriting.co.uk

Lead in text...

Breath of CorruptionBreath of Corruption

Caro Fraser

  • Literary/Contemporary
  • Crime/Whodunit
  • Relationship Tales

Lovereading Price £7.99

RRP: £7.99

Download Extract Buy Now

Why I wrote this book

The is the seventh in the Caper Court series of legal novels, and I’m happy to say that my readers can’t seem to get enough of Leo and Anthony, and the other inmates of 5 Caper Court. I wrote this in response to popular demand, and already have ideas for the eighth. Although it’s part of a series, the book makes a great read on its own – though I would highly recommend new readers who like Breath of Corruption to go back to the first book, The Pupil, and start the story from the very beginning.

Synopsis

The seventh in the highly popular Caper Court series of novels recounting the lives and loves of a group of London barristers. An absorbing blend of romance and professional intrigue with fascinating insights into London's legal world.

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk: "Fantastic characteristion. Stunning surroundings. Fluent and colourful prose which is an absolute pleasure to read."

About the Author

Caro Fraser I was born in Carlisle in 1953, but my family moved to Glasgow shortly afterwards and I was brought up there until my mid-teens, attending Glasgow High School for Girls. Then when I was 15 my father, George MacDonald Fraser, author of the 'Flashman' books, wrote the first book in the series and the family moved to the Isle of Man, where I went to the Buchan School.

I've been writing all my life, for as long as I can remember. When I was very young both my parents were journalists, and the house was always full of books, and reading and writing stories and poems seemed to me to be the very stuff of life. I thought it was what everyone did.

I started writing professionally in 1992, between babies. Before that I was a commercial lawyer, and before that an advertising copywriter. I originally went into advertising because, having ambitions to become a writer of books, I assumed it was logical to work in some creative capacity connected with writing before I got round to penning my first novel. It also sounded like fun. In fact, it turned out that after writing copy for reclining armchairs and whisky all day, the last thing I wanted to do when I got home was write more fiction. So, after working in Scotland for three years, I moved back to London and became a lawyer, which not only stretched me further intellectually, but also provided me with the background against which many of my books are set.

My first novel The Pupil was based on my time spent in pupillage - which is something akin to an apprenticeship for becoming a barrister - and was written largely from a male standpoint. I don't know why this was; possibly because at that time most barristers' pupils were male, or perhaps because it lent the necessary distance to enable me to find a voice I was comfortable with. The novel deals with the trials and fortunes of Anthony Cross during his six month pupillage at Caper Court, and the various characters he meets in the eccentric world of the Inns of Court in London. Chief among these is Leo Davies, an attractive, talented, charismatic and extremely successful barrister, who happens to be bisexual, and under whose spell Anthony quickly falls.

Woody Allen once said that the advantage of being bisexual is that it doubles your chances of a date on Saturday night, and by the same reasoning a bisexual character doubles the number of possible romantic plotlines, something I exploited to the full in the Caper Court series of novels - of which there are presently six, The Pupil, Judicial Whispers, An Immoral Code, A Hallowed Place, A Perfect Obsession and A Calculating Heart.

Dealing with the same set of characters book after book is quite gruelling for a writer, so in between each Caper Court novel I have written six 'stand-alone' novels, which I like to think are romantic fiction for the thinking woman - The Trustees, An Inheritance, Beyond Forgiveness, A Little Learning, Familiar Rooms In Darkness and A World Apart.

I live in London with my husband, who is a lawyer, and my four teenage children, and find time to write in between driving, cooking, shopping, washing, ironing and tidying. I try to eat and sleep as well.

At present I have four books waiting to be published. One is a long, slightly gothic children's poem called 'The Songs Of The Three Kingdoms' -I'm hoping that the new film Eragon is going to make dragons big again! The second is called 'Hanging Fire', and is a quasi-feminist novel of an experimental nature, in that I conduct a dialogue with my main character throughout. Sounds odd, I know, but everyone who's read it so far has been incredibly enthusiastic - publishers, however, are apparently wary of 'high concept'novels. The third is called 'The Girl In The Yellow Dress' and is an old-fashioned yarn about a family from the 30s to the 80s. Last but not least, I've just finished my latest Caper Court novel, provisionally entitled 'A Breath Of Corruption', in which my charming hero Leo walks his usual amoral tightrope.

I've had a stream of emails from lovely people asking when the latest Caper Court is due to be published, but since leaving my previous publishers, Penguin, I'm finding it hard to get even this book published -times are tough in the book world right now. So it would be a help if you'd email me and let me know if there's a market for this book - I believe there is!

Book info

Genres
Format

Trade Paperback
208 pages pages

Author

Caro Fraser

Publisher

Matador

Publication date

1st November 2007

Author's Website

caro-fraser.com

ISBN

9781906221232