Author Spotlight: Hannah Begbie

One of the joys of editing is working with talented writers and watching them flourish. The Book Edit is extremely proud to have worked with some fabulous authors and to have played a part in their journeys. As The Book Edit Writers’ Prize gets underway, we want to draw attention to some of the writers we have worked with as inspiration for those eager to follow in their footsteps and Hannah Begbie is the first of our award-winning novelists to take the spotlight.

Portrait of author Hannah Begbie

Author of Mother, 2018, winner of the Romantic Novelists’ Association Joan Hessayon Award, and Blurred Lines, 2020, both Harper Collins, Hannah Begbie’s work is sharp, compelling and relevant. A writer who is definitely one-to-watch, The Book Edit was delighted to work with Hannah as her writing journey first took flight.

As Hannah puts it, ‘In those uncertain months before securing an agent and then publisher, Emily’s work as editor on my manuscript was crucial. Her notes were always perceptive and challenging but framed with real encouragement and support. I was lucky to have someone so talented helping me take my story forward: Emily deserves real credit for the fact that it’s being published.’    

Currently writing her third novel, Hannah’s first two have been met with huge critical acclaim. Mother examines the complexities of motherhood with the additional difficulty of having a child with cystic fibrosis and Blurred Lines tackles the film industry’s darker truths, fast becoming a classic of the #metoo era (Read our review of Blurred Lines here). Exacting and fearless, Hannah’s work is both searing and filled with human warmth. If you haven’t read her yet, you are in for a treat. The Book Edit couldn’t be more proud to have supported Hannah at the early stages of her career.

For a chance to share your work with the industry and follow in Hannah Begbie’s footsteps, enter The Book Edit Writers Prize. Aimed at supporting talented writers who might not otherwise have access to the industry, the prize is open to unpublished novelists from communities and backgrounds currently underrepresented in British publishing. Enter before midnight on 22 October 2021. And don’t forget to look out for our next author spotlight.

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Interview with Rebecca Ley, author of debut novel, For When I'm Gone.


We were delighted when Rebecca Ley’s debut novel, For When I’m Gone, came out earlier this month. A heartbreaking story of love and loss, the novel is cleverly narrated through the handbook a young mother writes for her husband, to guide him after she’s gone.

Rebecca is not just a novelist but a successful journalist and mother of three, so we were thrilled when she found time to answer our questions about her writing journey.

Emily Pedder: ‘When did you first realise you wanted to be a writer’?

Rebecca Ley: ‘The day I realised that it was something you could do. I loved reading more than anything. I hope this doesn’t sound too pretentious but no other art form has ever reliably afforded me the same glimpse of transcendence as reading good writing - for me, it’s like plugging into the matrix. I find it harder to get that from music or visual art. So I always saw attempting it myself as the absolute ideal. But as I grew up, I understood how hard it was (and is!) to make a living from writing fiction, so I deliberately went into journalism, which has mostly proven a very varied and interesting career. They are very different disciplines, but I love them both.’ 

EP: ‘Is For When I’m Gone your first attempt at a novel?’

RL: ‘No. I did the Faber Academy course in 2012 and wrote the first draft of a novel about a newspaper, based on my experience of working on one. I got to 80,000 words but it wasn’t right, I knew it, so I bottom drawered it and got swept up in mothering infants. It’s unbelievably easy to let life get in the way.’

EP: ‘How was the process of writing the novel? Did it come easily or did it take time to find your voice and flow?’ 

RL: ‘In 2017 I sat down again and started what was to become For When I’m Gone. Part of the issue with my first book had been not feeling like it was in my authentic voice. So I was very deliberate about creating something that was. Not that my main protagonist is anything like me, just that the tone of the book felt right. I kept the sphere closer too, which felt truer to my own tastes. With those things in mind, it flowed much more naturally. I still had doubts - I don’t think any writer is ever completely sure about something they are working on. But it felt like ‘me’ and I realised how crucial that was.’ 

EP: ‘Who were your favourite authors as a child?’

RL: ‘Margaret Mahy and Dianna Wynne Jones. The thought of their books still gives me a kind of yearning feeling. I love a bit of magical realism, especially in an otherwise mundane situation. I wrote an entire dissertation about Iris Murdoch’s use of it!

EP: ‘If you could give your younger writing self some advice, what would it be?’

Book cover of Rebecca Ley's For When I'm Gone

RL: ‘Not to worry so much about narrative perspective. I was so hung up on whether I should use an omniscient narrator, or a closed third or first person. Obviously it’s an important decision, but not one that should let you get in the way of actually making a start. You can always change your mind at a later date and mix it up within a novel. As you write, the right form becomes clearer.

EP: ‘What would you have done if you hadn’t become a writer?’ 

RL: ‘If I wasn’t doing any form of writing - so I wasn’t a journalist either - I may well have gone into law. More through a lack of imagination than anything else - it’s the kind of respectable professional choice open to you as an English graduate. But I think it’s for the best that I didn’t. I’d almost certainly be richer, but I’m pretty sure corporate office life would make me profoundly unhappy.’

Rebecca Ley, author of For When I’m Gone

Rebecca Ley, author of For When I’m Gone

EP: ‘How have you found combining motherhood with writing?’

RL: ‘Until you have childcare, I think it’s pretty impossible to write regularly. Or at least, it was for me personally. Your days are just so absorbed with looking after these tiny beings, your nights are so fractured. But once I found childcare, I have actually found motherhood quite an inspiration in terms of subject matter and motivation. That said, it can feel like there are too many browser tabs open in your mind at all times. And I find it very difficult to do any writing at all if they’re in the house. If they’re near, even if someone else is looking after them, they have the pull of my attention. The only time I can manage it if I start writing first thing, with a cup of tea, before engaging. Sometimes I can fool myself that they don't exist for an hour or two.’

EP: ‘What inspired you to come up with a narrator who’s already dead in For When I’m Gone?’

RL: ‘For When I’m Gone started as a ghost story. Haunting presented itself as a metaphor for motherhood. I used to trudge around my house, picking up discarded sippy cups and toys, feeling almost like I was haunting my own life. Which isn’t to say that I was unhappy, because I wasn’t - or not predominantly - but just that mothering involves absenting yourself, in a sense. Your desires and ambitions are no longer centre stage. Which is a weird transition, particularly in our society perhaps, but also has tremendous upsides. It can be a lovely relief not to think about yourself all the time.'

Over time, the ghost story element of Sylvia’s life was largely curtailed (although there is still a hint if you look for it!) but the sense of a narrator who is already dead remained. It was important to me that those parts are written in the present tense, in that manual form. She’s dead, you know she is - but she’s right there. 

Dying is so weird - how can someone, with all their aspirations and joys and petty jealousies, cease to exist? I wanted to look at that. I was writing obituaries for my day job at the time, so the incomprehensible inevitability of non-existence was very much to the forefront of my mind!’

EP: ‘What’s the most important lesson you’ve learned as a writer?’

RL: ‘In terms of writing a novel, it’s crucial to get words on the page. You can go back and rework, but you have to get them out first. Don’t judge what you’re producing harshly - that’s for later. But there’s a caveat and that’s that you also have to try and articulate the mood of your book, even if the early stages. It can just be a feeling, an ache in your chest, that you are trying to write towards. 

The other lesson has been how much of writing happens in your subconscious. Things you don’t expect will intrude and you should let them.’

EP: ‘What are you working on now?’

RL: ‘I’m ghosting the memoir of a remarkable man called Hassan Akkad. He’s a Syrian refugee and Bafta-winning filmmaker who volunteered to work as a hospital cleaner when the pandemic hit. He then persuaded Boris Johnson to extend the bereavement scheme to cleaners, porters and healthcare assistants after they were initially excluded. He’s so inspiring; it’s a complete privilege to help him tell his story.

I’m also working on my second novel for Orion.’

Thank you so much, Rebecca! We wish For When I’m Gone all the luck in the world.


Greg Keen launches debut crime novel Soho Dead

Novel Studio alumnus Greg Keen has signed a two book deal with Amazon Publishing’s Crime Imprint, Thomas & Mercer. His first book, Soho Dead, came out in July and is described as a “fast-paced, darkly funny crime novel” in which the hero, PI Kenny Gabriel, finds that “the further he investigates the unnatural death of an old friend's daughter, the more he confronts his own past.” This follows hot on the heels of Greg’s CWA Debut Dagger award which helped secure his agent, Veronique Baxter at David Higham. Soho Ghosts is due out next year.