From Page to Stage – A Guest Post by Steve Orme, Author of Storm Bodies

Oh dear. I have a huge apology to give to writer Steve Orme. Steve contacted me last October and I promised a feature on Linda’s Book Bag to celebrate Steve’s most recent novel, Storm Bodies. Steve kindly wrote a guest post for me and I promptly forgot all about it!

I do have a good excuse – I had just returned from a family funeral at the time and four deaths of family and friends in January alone this year have been very distracting, but I do feel awful. I’m hoping to make amends to Steve today by finally getting round to sharing his excellent piece on another fascinating aspect of his writing – the irony being it has distraction at its heart too!

First though, let’s find out more about Steve’s thrillers:

Storm Deaths

A reporter is murdered, a television weather presenter inexplicably disappears. Are the cases linked? Detective Inspector Miles Davies has to find out.

His attempts are continually thwarted by his boss who seems intent on ensuring that Davies doesn’t discover the truth.

But why is Davies reluctant to investigate whether any members of a local basketball team are involved?

Davies knows he has to weather the storm and find answers – before more bodies are discovered.

Storm Deaths is available for purchase here.

Storm Bodies

A grisly discovery by binmen on their round. A woman leaves her place of work but fails to arrive home.

Is there a serial killer on the loose? Detective Inspector Miles Davies and his team need to find out.

But with the Chief Constable urging Davies to come up with a way to get bored youngsters off the streets and the media eager for headline news, time is running out.

Does a local basketball club hold the key? And how many more lives will be lost before Davies can make an arrest? The answers will leave you on the edge of your seat.

Storm Deaths is available for purchase here.

From Page to Stage

A Guest Post by Steve Orme

When I started to write my second crime novel Storm Bodies – a standalone thriller although it wraps up a couple of situations unresolved in its predecessor Storm Deaths – I couldn’t have envisaged how long it would take.

It would be about three years before book number two landed on the shelves. That was because an offer landed in my inbox that both staggered and excited me.

For more than a decade I’ve been trying to tell the story of a Victorian doctor, William Palmer, who was suspected of poisoning up to 14 people including his wife, mother-in-law and four of his children. I’d teamed up with a couple of colleagues I’d worked with in regional television to make a short taster programme about the man known as the Rugeley Poisoner because of where he came from in Staffordshire.

But getting a documentary commissioned can be more difficult than securing a publishing deal. We took the programme to the History channel who said it was crime. So we took it to the Crime channel who said it was history!

I’d been thinking for some time about writing a play but was struggling to come up with a suitable subject. Then I realised it was staring me in the face: a stage play about the Rugeley Poisoner.

I wrote the first draft of What’s Your Poison? and sent it to a friend of mine, John Goodrum, who runs a touring theatre company, Rumpus.

His verdict? “It’s okay but I can’t do anything with it. It would need too many actors. Rewrite it for three actors and I’ll have another look at it.”

What started off as a major production with eight actors sharing 20 roles between them had to take on another life.

The main consideration when writing a play nowadays is cost: it’s no good coming up with the most amazing play ever if a theatre or producer can’t afford to stage it.

So how could only three actors tell the story of William Palmer convincingly? I decided to have a couple discussing Palmer in the present day, one believing he was a serial killer, the other expressing the view that Palmer could have been a victim of a miscarriage of justice. Palmer would appear in flashbacks along with characters who were integral to the story.

I sent off the next draft and forgot about it while I continued to write Storm Bodies.

Then, in November 2022 I received an email out of the blue from John: he wanted to tour What’s Your Poison?

My elation and exhilaration were tempered by fear about how the play would look when it actually appeared on stage during its 14-date tour of England and Wales.

When I attended the first rehearsal, I was blown away. John Goodrum who directed the play decided to play Palmer himself. He cast two actors, Pavan Maru and Jodie Garnish, as the couple debating Palmer in the present. Pav also played John Parsons Cook, the man Palmer was convicted of murdering, while Jodie also took the role of Palmer’s wife Annie.

Right from the start all three bought into the play and got the characters spot-on. It was so much better than I’d imagined.

The play premièred at the Rose Theatre, Kidderminster. It went down amazingly well; it was one of the most exciting nights of my career.

Had I gone down the traditional route of writing a play and sending it to a theatre, I doubt whether it would have got into production, even  though I have a number of contacts in regional theatres.

What’s Your Poison? is now available for amateur as well as professional companies to produce. It has also led to the directors from a different theatre company contacting me about writing a play for them to stage in 2026.

The first one I’m offering them is a stage version of Storm Deaths. Theatre audiences love a crime story; take Peter James, for instance. Six of his books have been turned into stage shows and have grossed more than £17 million at the box office. So I’m endeavouring to introduce theatregoers to my main character, basketball-playing Detective Inspector Miles Davies.

Of course there are major differences between writing for the page and writing for the stage: apart from again reducing the number of characters, the basketball scenes have had to be changed because I don’t know any 6ft 10in actors!

If this new company doesn’t want to produce Storm Deaths, I should be able to bounce back with another idea we’re discussing.

There’s an old saying which states if you want to be a writer, you have to be a reader first. I obviously agree. And if you want to write for the theatre, you need to see as many plays as possible so you know what will work on stage and what won’t. I’ve got an advantage there: I’m the Midlands editor of the British Theatre Guide website, so I get to review all sorts of shows on my patch.

There’s little doubt that the main challenge facing writers today is getting their work out to a wide audience. I feel blessed that I’ve been able to write not only two novels which are available to the public but also a play which has been on a national tour. That’s driving me on each day to tell more stories no matter what the medium.

****

Thanks so much Steve and apologies once again for taking so long to share this. At least it only took three months and not three years!

About Steve Orme

Steve Orme is an award-winning journalist who has written for television, radio, newspapers, magazines and online websites.

He has written for national, international and local publications as well as becoming a valued member of the production teams for television and radio shows’ news and sports programmes. He has been writing about basketball for more than 35 years.

Steve is a fan of crime writing and has published Storm Deaths, and Storm Bodies in a series about basketball-playing police detective Miles Davies.

For further information about Steve, visit his website , follow Steve on Twitter/X @SteveOrmewriter and find him on Facebook and Instagram.

UK Giveaway: The Seventh Floor by David McCloskey

It’s just over a year since I was privileged to share an extract from Davis McCloskey’s Moscow X in a post you’ll find here. It’s my pleasure today to join the blog tour for David’s brand new book The Seventh Floor and, thanks to Rachel Nobilo, to be able to give away a copy of The Seventh Floor to a lucky UK reader.

Published by Swift Press on 30th January 2025, The Seventh Floor is available for purchase through the publisher links here where you’ll also be able to take a look at the opening of the book!

The Seventh Floor

ALL YOUR LIFE YOU’RE CIA.
THEN YOU’RE NOT.

A Russian arrives in Singapore with a secret to sell. When the Russian is killed and Sam Joseph, the CIA officer dispatched for the meet, goes missing, Artemis Procter is made a scapegoat and run out of the service. Traded back in a spy swap, Sam appears at Procter’s central Florida doorstep months later with an explosive secret: there is a Russian mole hidden deep within the upper reaches of CIA.

As Procter and Sam investigate, they arrive at a shortlist of suspects made up of both Procter’s closest friends and fiercest enemies. The hunt soon requires Procter to dredge up her own checkered past in service of CIA, placing her and Sam into the sights of a savvy Russian spymaster who will protect Moscow’s mole in Langley at all costs, even if it means wreaking bloody havoc across the United States.

Bouncing between the corridors of Langley and the Kremlin, the thrilling new novel by David McCloskey explores the nature of friendship in a faithless business, and what it means to love a place that does not love you back.

Giveaway

UK Only: A Hardback Copy of The Seventh Floor

For your chance to win a copy of The Seventh Floor by David McCloskey, click HERE.

UK Only and the giveaway closes at 11.59 PM UK time on Sunday 9th February 2025.

Please note that I will need a UK address to pass to the publisher for the randomly chosen winner’s prize, but will not retain any personal details once the prize has been sent.

About David McCloskey

David McCloskey is a former CIA analyst and consultant at McKinsey & Company. While at the CIA, he wrote regularly for the President’s Daily Brief, delivered classified testimony to Congressional oversight committees, and briefed senior White House officials, Ambassadors, military officials, and Arab royalty. He worked in CIA field stations across the Middle East. During his time at McKinsey, David advised national security, aerospace, and transportation clients on a range of strategic and operational issues. David holds an M.A. from the Johns Hopkins School for Advanced International Studies, where he specialized in energy policy and the Middle East. He lives in Texas with his wife and three children.

For further information about David, visit his website, follow him on Twitter/X @mccloskeybooks and find David on Instagram and Facebook.

There’s more with these other bloggers too:

Life Hacks for a Little Alien by Alice Franklin

My enormous thanks to Elizabeth Masters and Ana McLaughlin at Quercus for sending me a surprise copy of Life Hacks for a Little Alien by Alice Franklin. I’m delighted to share my review today.

Published by Riverrun on 13th February 2025, Life Hacks for a Little Alien is available for purchase through the links here.  

Life Hacks for a Little Alien

‘Climb up here, Little Alien. Sit next to me. I will tell you about life on this planet. I will tell you how it goes’

From her first words to her first day at school, Little Alien can’t help but get things wrong. She doesn’t understand the world the way others seem to, and the world doesn’t seem to understand her either. Her anxious mum and meticulous dad, while well-intentioned, are of little help.

But when Little Alien sees a documentary about the Voynich Manuscript – a mediaeval codex written in an unknown language and script – she begins to suspect that there are other people who feel just like her. Convinced that translating this manuscript will offer the answers she needs, she sets out on a journey that will show her a delicious taste of freedom.

So begins this charming, witty, and profoundly moving novel about the power of language, the wonder of libraries – and how to find a path that fits, when you yourself do not.

My Review of Life Hacks for a Little Alien

A neurodivergent child tries to make sense of the world. 

Life Hacks for a Little Alien is such a brilliant read. There are so many elements here that, despite being relatively brief, Life Hacks for a Little Alien would reward being read several times over. The presentation of language – its diachronic and synchronic development, its capacity for misinterpretation and confusion, and its key to understanding and our sense of who we are – is stunning. That might make the book sound dry or inaccessible, but not a bit of it. There are witty footnotes, definitions, and warmly humorous further reading suggestions that make this story zing with interest and engagement. I found myself laughing aloud throughout my reading. 

I loved the fact that Little Alien is gender ambiguous in appearance and is never referred to by a proper name other than the endearments from her parents. This means that the character feels relatable and universal. Whilst Little Alien is possibly far more neurodivergent than the majority of readers, how she thinks and feels is exactly how we’ve all thought and felt at some points in our lives. She could be any or all of us. This makes the story incredibly impactful and moving. The representation of authority from school teachers to the police, for example, is so deftly handled that the lack of understanding towards Little Alien feels terrifyingly realistic even as it is funny and entertaining.

I also loved Little Alien’s obsession with the Voynich Manuscript. I had never heard of it previously but was so convinced by Alice Franklin’s writing that I had to find out if it is real. It is! The inability to define and fully understand the manuscript echoes to perfection the manner in which society fails to have the key to neurodivergent individuals. It shows how children like Little Alien may have skills, intelligence and understanding encoded in their own personalities that others cannot appreciate.

With themes of intelligence, linguistics, integration, difference, the power of reading and, above all, the humane and sensitive exploration of who we are as individuals, I thought Life Hacks for a Little Alien was superb.

A love letter to language, to difference and to all those who’ve ever simply wondered about life. Life Hacks for a Little Alien is a witty, humorous and affecting story that deserves to be read far and wide. It provides the reader with understanding and a sense of belonging. It’s really quite wonderful.

About Alice Franklin

Alice Franklin lives and works in London. She has an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia. Life Hacks for a Little Alien is her debut novel.