Tom Hindle
English, 2014
"Iād often tinker with the script in my room on Ffriddoedd Site"
āI can vividly remember the moment when my time in Bangor began.
My dad had driven me from down Leeds, and after helping me with my things and giving me a few sound words of life advice, heād promptly jumped back in the car. I can still remember going straight to the window of my fourth-floor room after heād gone, seeing the Menai Strait to my left and Snowdonia to my right, and wondering what the next few years would bring.
As it happened, they would be three of the best years of my life. It was in Bangor that I met my girlfriend ā now fiancĆ©e, incidentally ā I made friends who to this day remain some of my closest, and I pursued a number of different hobbies. I played bass in a band, hiked in Snowdonia, and, when there was a spare moment, turned my hand to writing.
Itās difficult to think of a time when I wasnāt writing something or other, although it has to be said that that one project in particular that has now taken me to some pretty extraordinary places. In my last year of school, just a few months before I moved to Bangor, Iād stumbled upon an idea that I thought would make a decent play: a murder mystery, set on board a 1920s cruise liner.
Iād often tinker with the script in my room on Ffriddoedd Site, and again in the house that I rented with my two best mates on Orme Road. I even discussed it with a friend from Rostra, the theatre society, who told me that if I managed to finish it, heād put on a production.
Iāll get this part out of the way now: I didnāt finish the play.
Between studying for my English Language degree, working a part-time job in an Anglesey seafood restaurant and enjoying the many wonders that North Wales has to offer, those three years passed in something of a flash. But when it came to graduating, I knew I wanted a job which would, in some way, enable me to write for a living.
I applied for dozens of internships and placements, all over the country, but with so little success that I moved back to Leeds and took a job at Pizza Express to keep myself afloat. After the best part of a year, though, my ābig breakā finally came. I secured a junior role at a PR agency in Reading, where I spent two years before moving to a larger agency in Oxford.
Itās been seven years now since I landed that first PR job, and while itās certainly given me the chance to write for a living, I never forgot the murder mystery Iād worked on in Bangor.
On New Yearās Day, 2018, I resolved to finally do something about it. I dug out my notes and what Iād written so far of my play, and devised a plan to write my story from scratch. This time, however, without Rostra there to put on a production, I was going to do it as a novel.
I spent six months researching and refining the story, eighteen months writing it up, and in January 2020 I sent the finished manuscript to a dozen-or-so literary agents.
I honestly thought, at that point, that I was done. Iād written my story. The agents Iād sent it to would presumably either ignore or turn it down. It was time, now, to return to real-life.
What followed was quite different.
Just three weeks later, I signed with a brilliant agent, who went on to secure an offer for my book from Penguin Random House.
As I write this, weāre now just two weeks away from the book being on shelves. Early readers have been posting their reviews on social media every day and weāve even had a couple of Sunday Times bestselling authors provide quotes thatāll appear on the cover. Iāve attended a press event in Covent Garden, at which no less than fourteen journalists, including the fiction reviewers from the Guardian, Express and Financial Times, had been invited to meet me and hear about the book. Iāve even had to work on an autograph, as in a few days Iāll be signing 500 limited edition copies for London-based .
Itās been a surreal experience; one which Iād never have expected but am quite certain wouldnāt have happened without my time in Bangor. Partly, of course, because it was in Bangor that I worked on the first iteration of what is now my book. But I think it goes a little deeper than that.
Iām not sure Iād have had the nerve to send my work to an agent without the self-confidence I gained by performing in The Menai to a packed Old Boysā Weekend crowd. I donāt think Iād have had the determination to write a book alongside my PR work without learning to balance a degree with a busy job and half a dozen extra-curricular interests. And, quite frankly, I donāt think Iād even have reached the end of my first draft without regular pep-talks from my fiancĆ©e. Thereās a very good reason the book is dedicated to her.
Itās difficult to put into words quite how important my time in Bangor was, although I hope Iāve given something of an idea. The reality is that this little town in the mountains changed my life. It did ten years ago, it seems to still be doing so now, and I wouldnāt be surprised if it at some point in the future it does it again.ā
A Fatal Crossing will be released on 20th January 2022. Itās available to order from , and . An audio version will also be available on .