Today I’m delighted to feature one of my favourite thriller writers David Videcette. His books, based on true events, are perfect for readers who like their crime fiction as close to real crime as it gets. I’ve reviewed both The Theseus Paradox and The Detriment and can’t recommend them highly enough.
Author Bio:
As a Scotland Yard detective in specialist operations, David has worked on a wealth of infamous cases. He’s placed bugs on scores of vehicles, searched hundreds of properties, chased numerous dangerous criminals and interviewed thousands of witnesses.
David was a lead detective on the 7/7 London bombings investigation and is the author of the Detective Jake Flannagan thrillers, based on real events.
David regularly comments on matters surrounding crime, policing and terrorism for international news and media outlets.
His catchphrase is “I can’t tell you the truth, but I can tell you a story…”
Which 5 pieces of music/songs would you include in the soundtrack to your life and why?
Madness ‘House of Fun’ is a song about a boy on his 16th birthday attempting to buy condoms at a chemist and being misunderstood. As a consultant in the security industry, I spend a lot of my time people-watching, trying to second guess what members of the public are going to do before they do it, based on their speech and body language patterns. Misunderstanding someone’s motives and moves is something I never want to happen!
The Pierces’ ‘Secret’ is the theme tune to Pretty Little Liars. It’s all about keeping secrets and how sometimes we have to tell. Having worked on keeping secrets with the intelligence services for decades, this song has a particular resonance for me.
Rihanna’s ‘We Found Love’ because of its repeated line, ‘we found love in a hopeless place’. I write about a tough, no-nonsense detective in my novels called Jake Flannagan. He is very much based on me. He, like me, often falls in love with the wrong people, and it always ends in disaster.
Kings of Leon’s ‘Cold Guilt’ is about how we carry the burden of guilt around with us all the time. It strikes a chord with me for a number of reasons. I often wonder what life would be like if we could change the decisions we made in the past, and try an alternative route. How different would our worlds be? The song means something to me both personally and on a professional level.
Cheryl Cole ‘Fight for this love’ – This song is about not giving up on a relationship, about sticking with it, and finding a way through whatever is causing problems. It’s something that I see as very important, now, having learned the hard way that good people don’t grow on trees.
Highlight 5 things (apart from family and friends) you’d find it hard to live without.
Writing books and working in security mean that I am away from home for long periods of time. When I do get back there’s very little time to cook anything, so when I’m struggling, the microwave is the most used appliance in my kitchen, I couldn’t live without it!
I work a lot with the media, commentating on terrorism, crime and policing. I have to be up date with pretty much everything that is going on, 24-hours a day. I am hugely reliant on my iPhone and iPad so that I can speak to journalists and get on top of the latest developments in the news, so they are the next two.
The internet. Where would we be without that? I am on it in one way or another all the time. Looking at maps, researching, talking to people and most importantly – tracking people down using their unique data footprints – which I need for my books and my security work.
It’s very easy to get writer’s block. Which can be a real problem when you’ve got a deadline to keep to. I find that my mind is a bit like a sponge. When it’s empty, I need to fill it with something. So, I have an unlimited cinema membership, I take myself off to the cinema and watch whatever film is showing next. Often it’s some dire film that I’d never have gone to see normally. But I always gain something from it, which helps me break my writer’s block.
Can you offer 5 pieces of advice you’d give to your younger self?
I’m very critical of myself. I think this comes from my younger days. I’d like to say to myself: don’t be too hard on yourself; you need to prove very little to anyone.
I’ve learned to trust my gut instincts now, they are almost always right. I’d like to have learned this earlier.
I’m working hard down the gym trying to get back into shape and watching what I eat. If I could meet the younger me, I’d advise myself to stay away from the drink, and get back on the running track for my athletics club.
My youngest daughter was born the month before the 2005 bombings in London. The event had a huge impact on me and prevented me from spending much time with her. If I could meet me in 2004, the year before the bombings, I’d tell my younger self how to stop the attack, fifty-six people would still be alive and I could watch her grow up.
I wrote blogs and articles for magazines for many years, but I didn’t have the confidence to write anything longer. Having now written two novels which been fantastically well received and sold incredibly well, I realise that this nervousness was misplaced. I’d tell the younger me to get drafting that book as soon as possible.
Tell us 5 things that most people don’t know about you.
I really don’t like maggots at all. I think this stems from a life spent as a police detective and having seen too many dead bodies over the years. To me, maggots equal death.
As a detective, I had BBC cameras follow me every day for a year for a TV documentary series about the police. The producers would call me up and tell me what to wear each day so that the continuity was right on screen!
I’m very superstitious. I went through a lengthy stage of not wearing matching socks as I thought it brought me bad luck and I can’t make a cup of tea until I’ve thrown the teabag into the cup from a distance.
I’ve memorised the entire script from the film, ‘The Great Escape’ thanks to watching it obsessively as a child.
I once tracked down a 7/7 bomb factory.
What are the first 5 things you’d have on your bucket list?
I still haven’t sky dived and parachuted, which I must do.
I’d really love to spend several months or a year riding a motorbike from London to Singapore.
I’d love to live on a large boat, perhaps even do some sailing in it too…
I want to solve some of the infamous unsolved murders from the past and write a factual book about them. I’m currently in talks with various parties about one very famous unsolved case and potentially making a TV documentary about the whole process.
Thanks for sharing with us David, I’m with you on maggots, though thankfully not for the same reasons. Given some of the things you must have seen and had to deal with, I reckon you deserve to get working on those bucket list items.
o – 0 – o
David’s Books
July 2005: in the midst of Operation Theseus, the largest police investigation that the UK has ever known, Detective Inspector Jake Flannagan begins to ask difficult questions that lead to the mysterious disappearance of his girlfriend and his sudden suspension from the Metropolitan Police.
- Who masterminded London’s summer of terror?
- Why can’t Flannagan make headway in the sprawling investigation?
- Is Jake’s absent girlfriend really who she claims to be?
While hunting for the answers to the most complex case in British history, one man will uncover the greatest criminal deception of our time.
The truth costs nothing, but a lie can cost you everything…
June 2007: a barbaric nail bomb is planted outside a London nightclub, a spy is found dead in his garden, and a blazing Jeep is driven into Glasgow airport. Three events bound by an earth-shattering connection that should have remained buried forever.
Detective Inspector Jake Flannagan must uncover how a series of astonishing events are inextricably linked, before the past closes in on him.
We all have secrets we say we’ll never tell…
David loves to interact with crime fiction fans. Readers can chat to him on Facebook, or Twitter or Instagram. For the chance to win a signed copy of David’s latest thriller, pop in your email address here.
Maggots. Eeww.
I’m just trying to figure out how you throw a teabag into a cup from a distance. I have horrible aim. I’m pretty sure the teabag would go everywhere except in the actual cup 😂
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I’m with you on maggots. I’m sure I saw that David had posted a video of him throwing teabags – try and have a look
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Thank so much for having me today on the blog, Jill. 🙂 I love the winter wonderland snow effect on your site. Very Christmassy!
To coincide with our interview, Amazon have a limited time offer on the Kindle version of The Theseus Paradox. UK readers can grab it here for just 99p: http://hyperurl.co/KindleTheseusParadox
Have a super weekend.
Best wishes,
David
David Videcette
http://www.davidvidecette.com
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Thanks for agreeing to take part. I think the snow might be a default setting from last year, I didn’t realise it was there. It didn’t show when I looked on my tablet and I did worry you were imagining little white maggots lol. Hope the deal on The Theseus Paradox increases the profile and also boosts the sales for The Detriment – looking forward to number 3 (no pressure), best wishes, Jill
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Awesome, Jill! This is the most fun author interview I’ve read in a while and the books sound great too!
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Glad you enjoyed it Ann Marie, I love getting the replies back for this series. Despite the questions being the same, everyone responds differently and it really gives you a glimpse of the person behind the books. I’d definitely recommend the books as well xx
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[…] David took part in my Five on Friday series back in December 2017 he revealed he wanted “to solve some of the infamous […]
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