Q & A
Interesting
to meet you, namesake!
Thanks for inviting me, Nik.
I’ve
got several books by other Mortons; coincidentally one of them, Babs Morton
comes from the north-east, my neck of the woods! Where do you hail from, Robin?
It’s a small world. Hampshire, England. I
think my forebears come from the north of England, but it’s a long time ago
since they moved south – I think it was just after the Jarrow marches…
Erotic
fiction is almost respectable these days. As this is your first foray into
fiction, having previously settled on writing history books, why were you drawn
to erotic fiction?
Well, it’s partial fiction, in my view,
since I’m rather the official narrator for Tilda Cuve-Banks. Tilda’s record of
her exploits – or that may even be sexploits! – were acquired by my agent. She’s
mysterious regarding the provenance of ‘the packages’, as she calls them.
Anyway, my agent knew of my interest in the period, which is also the time that
Tilda operated, and felt I could perhaps put a modern spin on the yarns. Tilda
was certainly ahead of her time in many respects. It’s a myth that the
Victorians and Edwardians were afraid of sex. In fact, many revelled in it, and
particularly enjoyed writing and reading about it.
Tilda
was a spy for the British. How many missions did she go on?
The current batch of papers give details of
three – East Africa, the Balkans, and Turkey. My agent is being close-lipped
regarding the possibility of any more ‘packages’…
So
Kilimanjaro might not be a one-off?
That depends on the readers. If enough
clamoured for more, I’d be happy to sift through those papers again and write a
sequel. I have plenty of non-fiction projects to occupy me until that time
arrives.
The
story seems to show a strong affinity for Africa. Is this something you picked
up from Tilda?
Partly. She has a wonderful turn of phrase, but some of her pages are merely notes and observations. I was already in love with Africa, actually. I was fortunate enough to visit the continent on several occasions. This fulfilled a long held ambition of mine, as I’d been brought up on a diet of the books by H Rider Haggard and Edgar Rice Burroughs.
Me,
too! Sorry, go on…
Well, I visited Mombasa, where some of Assignment Kilimanjaro is set, as well as Bahrain and South Africa. The continent does tend to get in your blood, in your heart. History fascinates me, naturally, and that’s why writing about it is my first love.
Even so, I’d always wanted to write a sexy adventure about a strong woman. You know, there were many brave and intrepid women explorers who defied convention in the 1800s and travelled the ‘dark continent’. These Tilda papers seemed like a dream come true. I was doubly pleased to be able to go back to the time of the First World War in east Africa, a neglected period.
Assignment Kilimanjaro is
a heady mix of fact and fiction, it seems to me. How much is fact?
Often, I found that I had to extrapolate
from Tilda’s notes at certain points. Yes, she definitely did meet the real
historical characters that keep cropping up. Winston Churchill, the heroic Paul
Emil von Lettow-Vorbeck, and spymaster Mansfield Smith-Cumming, for example. In
that respect it’s a variation on the Flashman books, though Tilda is no coward
– quite the opposite.
I like
the realism you’ve injected. I must admit I tend to think of Tilda as reminiscent
of Modesty Blaise.
Yes, only with much more sex. In some ways she resembles the wartime comic strip
Jane, who always seemed to lose her clothes yet raise the morale of the troops…
Yes,
I recall that some commentators said that the more clothes Jane lost, the more
morale rose in the troops! What else have you written?
I’ve also written a non-Tilda erotic short
story set in the American Civil War – ‘The Corporal’s Punishment’, published by
Xcite Books. It's a play on words and is featured in a collection of erotic stories here by four other Xcite authors. My other works are academic, non-fiction, and written under a
different penname.
Why
use a penname?
While I’m not fazed by the nature of this
type of book, it’s quite possible that in the academic field my reputation,
such as it is, could unwittingly be affected. That’s why I haven’t provided you
with an author photograph!
I would certainly caution any potential reader, that if you’re offended by graphic sex descriptions, then sorry, but this book isn’t for you. Not the best of sales pitches, I know, but I want to be up-front about that. Bad choice of words there, perhaps?
Not at all…
My publisher, Accent Press – under the imprint Xcite Books – is offering Assignment Kilimanjaro in a free iTunes offer for October, ending on the 31st . Amazon may also Price Match this offer. If you could promote this offer that would be great! All this week it has been in the top 20 on Amazon. Here is the iTunes link:
https://itunes.apple.com/gb/book/assignment-kilimanjaro/id546634091?ls=1&mt=11
Thank
you, Robin!
Excerpt
ASSIGNMENT KILIMANJARO
PART ONE – TILDA GOES DOWN IN
THE JUNGLE
Chapter 1: A memorable
flight
Lake Amboseli, British East
Africa – February, 1915
‘You seem pleased to see me,’ she said. Good heavens, she thought, he certainly fills his khaki shorts! So the gentleman dresses on the right. ‘My name’s Tilda Cuve-Banks. What is yours?’
‘Hal
Denby,’ he replied, the slight warm breeze ruffling his dark-brown hair and the
short sleeves of his sweat-patched shirt. A careworn brown leather belt
supported a sheathed knife, a belt of .45 ACP cartridges and a holstered pistol
– it looked like a Colt M1911. His shorts came to a couple of inches above his
knees. Nice, sturdy knees, too; his legs were deeply tanned and very muscular
and covered in quite a few old scars. Socks round his ankles and tough worn
boots ensured he could travel in any terrain.
Denby’s dark
left eyebrow arched and his steel-grey eyes roved over her. ‘Is that Mrs
Cuve-Banks, then?’ His quick darting eyes had noted her wedding ring.
She nodded her
head. ‘Yes,’ she said but had no intention of explaining that Lord Quentin
Banks, her young husband of four weeks, had died in the trenches. Even in these
war-torn times, it usually felt safer if travelling as a married woman.
He smiled, the
mouth thin and a little on the cruel side, she thought. Judging by the
tumescence in the right leg of his shorts, he seemed to like what he saw.
Tilda
was as tall as he was, though high-heeled lace-up white kid boots aided her in
this. She wore a long-sleeved white chiffon dress with a high collar, the
bodice decorated with white beads. As she stood there, her bulging leather
briefcase in one hand, her other hand clamping the white pith hat on her head,
he could just distinguish the tanned flesh contours of her legs and arms as the
light wind blew off the lake against her. Tilda’s dark auburn hair was tied in
a chignon but already wisps had broken free and fluttered around her elegant
neck and high cheekbones.
He
took her hand and shook it. His grip was firm, as was hers. He let go and
turned to look at the biplane that bounced on the water of the rippling lake;
its fuselage was tethered alongside a long thin jetty made up of wooden planks
on sturdy thick piles of tree trunks. A man – probably the pilot – was
tinkering in the front cockpit.
Denby frowned
dubiously at the patched canvas and repaired struts and dangling rigging wires
and gestured at the seaplane. ‘We seem to be fellow passengers,’ he said in an
ominous tone.
Ignoring
his statement of the obvious, Tilda checked out her immediate surroundings.
Tied to the other
side of the jetty was a small fishing boat. Four Africans were unloading wooden
boxes of fish; she could smell them from here – men and fish. Behind her was a
mud-spattered Ford box-truck, already half full with fish and other produce.
Four mules were tethered beside the vehicle; the rich smell of manure and the
perpetual buzz of flies also carried to her on the breeze.
The fishermen
and farmers would get a fair price for the food, she knew. All to help the war
effort against the Prussian Colonel Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck.
As she hadn’t
responded to Denby, he tried again: ‘Are you going all the way?’
‘I always do,’
she replied, her light blue eyes flashing suggestively as he jerked round and studied
her.
Assignment
Kilimanjaro (Xcite Books, an imprint of Accent
Press)
from Amazon UK here
I enjoyed the Q & A and excerpt. Thanks, Nik!
ReplyDeleteThanks, David. Quite a character, Robin! Without her Batman, too...
ReplyDelete