Mark Edwards (British writer)
Mark Edwards | |
---|---|
Born | 1970 Kent, England |
Known for | Fiction writer |
Website | markedwardsauthor |
Mark Edwards (born 1970) is an English London-based, best-selling fiction writer. His books have sold over four million copies and been translated into 12 languages. Edwards has written over a dozen thrillers since his 2013 solo debut, The Magpies, and his 2022 novel No Place to Run made it into the top ten Kindle chart.[1] He has co-authored six books with Louise Voss.
Early years
[edit]Edwards was born in Kent, England, on 4 November 1970. He grew up in Hastings, East Sussex, where he attended Rye College. He graduated from Staffordshire University in 1993, with a degree in sociology. While pursuing a career as a writer, Edwards worked for the civil service and did customer service for a rail franchise, and eventually a London-based book publisher. He also had a stint as an English teacher in Tokyo, Japan, while pursuing his first publishing deal.[2]
Career
[edit]In 1999, Edwards appeared in the BBC documentary Close Up: First Writes, which followed three writers, including Jake Arnott, at the start of their writing careers. In 2011, he self-published two novels co-authored with Louise Voss, Killing Cupid and Catch Your Death, the latter of which became the first novel by a self-published author to reach number one on the UK's Amazon bestseller list.[citation needed] This led to a four-book deal with HarperCollins. In 2013, Edwards published his debut solo novel, The Magpies, which reached number one and led to a deal with Thomas & Mercer, part of Amazon Publishing.[1] His 2019 novel Here to Stay received positive reviews, including one from critic Natasha Cooper, who said, "Mark Edwards has sold millions of copies of his domestic suspense novels. On the evidence of Here to Stay, his latest, it is not hard to see why."[3]
Self publishing
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (October 2024) |
When Amazon launched its ebook reader, the Kindle, in Britain in 2010, Edwards joined an emerging group of writers who had success self-publishing their work. Edwards and Voss released their first novel, Killing Cupid, on Kindle Direct Publishing, which eventually climbed to the top 100 on the Kindle charts. That same year, the pair published Catch your Death, which at one point was selling 1,000 copies a day. In a few months, the books were number one and two in the bestsellers list, and the pair were the first self-publishing British authors to reach the top spot on Amazon. The acclaim earned them TV appearances and a four-book deal with HarperCollins as well as an advance of roughly £50,000 each.[2] During an interview with The Guardian in 2013, Edwards said self-publishing on Amazon can be advantageous for emerging writers who don't yet have publishers but are ready to seek out a wider audience.[4]
Influences
[edit]Edwards has said he is a fan of American authors such as Stephen King, who have shaped the kind of stories he likes to tell: "Extraordinary, often scary, things happening to ordinary people." The works of both Harlan Coben and Linwood Barclay influenced Edwards when he wrote No Place to Run.[5]
Personal life
[edit]Edwards lives in Wolverhampton with his wife and their children.[6]
Novels
[edit]with Louise Voss
- Killing Cupid (2012)
- Catch Your Death (Kate Maddox Book 1) (2012)
- All Fall Down (Kate Maddox Book 2) (2012)
- Forward Slash (2013)
- From the Cradle (Detective Patrick Lennon Book 1) (2014)
- The Blissfully Dead (Detective Patrick Lennon Book 2) (2015)
- "One Shot (Detective Patrick Lennon Book 2.5)" (short, 2015)
Solo
- The Magpies (#1) (2013)
- What You Wish For (2014)
- Because She Loves Me (2014)
- Follow You Home (2015)
- The Devil's Work (2016)
- The Lucky Ones (2017)
- A Murder of Magpies (2018)
- The Retreat (2018)
- In Her Shadow (2018)
- Last of the Magpies (2019)
- Here to Stay (2019)
- The House Guest (2020)
- The Hollows (2021)
- No Place to Run (2022)
- Keep Her Secret (2023)
- The Darkest Water (2024)
- The Wasp Trap (forthcoming, 2025)
References
[edit]- ^ a b Frasier, Katie. "Thomas & Mercer nets three-book deal with 'king of suspense' Edwards". bookseller.com. Retrieved 18 October 2022.
- ^ a b Brodbeck, Sam (13 June 2017). "Publishers rejected me, but I went on to earn six-figures selling 1,000 books a day". telegraph. Retrieved 13 June 2017.[better source needed]
- ^ Cooper, Natasha. "September 2019 Crime Round-up". literaryreview. Literary Review. Retrieved 10 September 2019.
- ^ "Mark Edwards: 'Traditional or self-publishing, the great thing is we have options now'". The Guardian. 25 June 2013. Retrieved 25 June 2013.
- ^ Salvalggio, Karin (21 June 2022). "Mark Edwards: Proverbial needle, proverbial haystack". bookanista. Retrieved 10 July 2022.
- ^ "My Writing Life: No Place to Run by Mark Edwards". writing.ie. 27 June 2022. Retrieved 27 June 2022.