AN AUTHOR has landed a three-book publishing deal on the strength of her dark psychological thriller about mysterious disappearances at an exclusive diet clinic.
The Clinic is Sally-Anne Martyn’s debut novel, inspired by the time she worked as care worker in a former Victorian asylum.
Sally-Anne, who lives in Lower Whitley, writes female-led thrillers, inspired by the strong working-class women she grew up with.
Her imagination tends towards the darker side of things - as a child she loved Hammer House and Tales of the Unexpected.
The 49-year-old writer explained how she made the imaginative connection between the asylum where she had worked and a luxurious yet sinister diet clinic.
She said: “I like everything I write to have a foot in reality, regardless of what it’s about.
“The idea for The Clinic come from a time when, in the 1990s, I worked in one of the last Victorian asylums in the country.
“They were awful places where people were hidden away for all sorts of reasons – learning difficulties, Down Syndrome, women who had children out of wedlock – just anything that they didn’t understand.
“They were places for getting people out of sight, and out of mind, for good.”
It is this last though that Sally-Anne takes up and weaves it into the fictional world of The Clinic.
Marketing and publicity co-ordinator at Joffe Books, Hanna Hakkarainen, said: "I am thrilled to be working with Sally-Anne on her fantastic psychological thrillers.
“I was just immediately captured by Sally-Anne's brilliant sense of place, spine-tingling atmosphere, and excellent characterization.
“I've just started working on her next book, which already promises to outpace the first.
Sally-Ann has a three-book deal with Joffe Books, and she is currently working on her second novel, which is about modern-day witchcraft.
Her debut novel, The Clinic, will be published on Thursday, October 27, by Joffe Books in paperback and digital.
Sally-Anne grew up in Hathersage in the Peak District, but now lives in Lower Whitley with her husband and son, three dogs and five pet pigs.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereComments are closed on this article