Today I’m delighted to revisit my Five on Friday interview with Thorne Moore which was first posted in July 2019. It’s been brought up to date to include Thorne’s latest publications. Thorne writes psychological mysteries, or “domestic noir,” exploring the reason for crimes and their consequences, rather than the details of the crimes themselves. Thorne’s a member of Crime Cymru, a Welsh crime writers collective and the Crime Writers Association.

Thorne Moore grew up in Luton. Since she was argumentative at school, her headmaster advised her to study law and earn a lot of money as a barrister. Since she was also perverse, she opted instead to study history at Aberystwyth and earn nothing at all, as she had already decided she wanted to be a writer. She worked in Luton library and then moved to Pembrokeshire to run a restaurant with her sister and a craft woodwork business, before finally taking the law degree through the Open University
Over to Thorne:
Which five pieces of music/songs would you include in the soundtrack to your life and why?
This is difficult because I’m not really a music person. But, let’s see. A soundtrack to my life.
Hills of the North Rejoice. School days. I loathed assemblies but I did love the imagery of this hymn, painting romantic pictures of distant places. Now, of course, I cringe at the implications of the words, real missionary stuff, putting other ignorant people right.
The Banks are made of Marble. Sung by Pete Seeger and the Weavers. Teenage years. 60s and 70s. Yes I know I should have gone for the Beatles or something more symbolic of the era, but this was the family song, coming home from the pub for Sunday lunch with too much Whitbread Trophy inside us, in the days before drinking and driving became unthinkable. All five verses with chorus please, and no stamping if you’re the one driving.
Dark Side of the Moon – Pink Floyd. University. Everything was weird back then and nothing was weirder than this, something new and different and exciting coming over the horizon. If I had to pick one track, it would be Time, not because of its significance then, but because of its significance now. I am running and running and the sun keeps sinking.
Nkosi Sikelel’i Afrika. It sums up a time when unspeakably bad things were being swept away and everything in the world was going to be wonderful. Okay so it turned out that the future wasn’t going to be wonderful after all, but one can always dream.
The Morse theme tune. It seems to have been in the background of my life for decades now, and it is both pleasing and clever, but it also symbolises our unwillingness to let go of what we like – first Morse, then Lewis, then Endeavour – and, as the years encroach, a yearning to go back to the beginning, which is sad but true. And it was composed by Barrington Pheloung. If that isn’t a perfect fictional name, I don’t know what is.
What five things (apart from family and friends) would you find it hard to live without.
I could make a list of a hundred ingredients of food and drink that I couldn’t live without. But if I had to settle on one, it would be bread. Which is bad for me.
And wine. (And cheese – I’m sneaking that in, to cheat). My perfect meal would be Tesco’s sourdough and rye, dolcelatte and a cabernet sauvignon. On a cliff top. Just saying.
The sea. I can’t quite see it from my house, because of a ridge in the way, but I know it’s there. It reflects in the sky and zings in the air and it keeps me sane and rational. It cleanses the mind. I’m not sure I’d be able to breathe if I didn’t know it was just around the corner.
The Internet. I know it has the potential to be a thing of evil, of propaganda, manipulation, lies and corruption, and how it will turn out in the end when we have finally come to terms with it is anyone’s guess, but I will never forget the thrill I felt, some time in the 90s, when its potential for simply opening access to every conceivable source of information hit home. It’s not a Pandora’s Box because it contains all the possible good of the world as well as its evils.
A sense of smell. I was walking in the garden this evening and suddenly, confronted with a waft of scent from lavender and clove carnations, I thought how awful it would be if I could no longer smell them. Of course it would mean that I could no longer smell the muck-spreading either.
Give five pieces of advice to your younger self?
Dear Thorne,
Eat less
Ask your grandmother about her family before you lose her.
Don’t choose to study political history, when you know you prefer economic and social.
Buy decent running shoes before you cripple your knees.
Get published a lot sooner.
Tell us five things that most people don’t know about you
I won a prize for handwriting at junior school. Those were the day of dip pens and inkwells. Then we switched to biros and now even I can’t read what I write.
I gained a bronze medal for Old Time Ballroom Dancing when I was ten. I think I can still remember how to do the Old Time waltz, but I have no memory of the Valeta or the Boston Two-step apart from their names. Just as well, as I have two left feet.
I was a girl guide for about 3 months. Try everything once.
I make medieval miniature furniture. Which is something you probably do know if you collect medieval miniature furniture, but otherwise you wouldn’t know.
My family has always been involved in politics. My great great great great great great great grandfather was made a freeman of the borough of Pembroke in 1714 as an exercise in vote rigging and my great great great great great uncle (Methodist Reverend) was taken in for questioning following the failed French invasion of Fishguard in 1797, since all Methodists were naturally assumed to be dangerous revolutionaries.
Tell us five things you’d still like to do or achieve.
See the Iguazu Falls. Which, even though they are now an organised tourist destination, are closer to the way I always imagined Niagara would be: a thundering fall on a vast river in a forest wilderness. I discovered, from Google maps, satellite view, that Niagara is slap bang in the middle of a concrete city, which rather spoils the illusion of nature in the roaring raw.
Visit Skellig Michael. There’s something about distant and inaccessible sheer rocks in the middle of the sea that make a religious retreat seem perfectly natural.
Cross Canada by train. Unless I am desperately trying to make connections somewhere around Birmingham New Street via two train companies with differing ideas of punctuality, I really like trains. And I really like Canada – or I’m sure I would, never having been there.
Spend a year in Venice.
Win the Booker Prize.
Thorne’s Books
(NB This post features Affiliate links from which I earn a small commission on qualifying purchases)

Bethulia
Alison, Danny, Jude. Three girls bound closer than sisters. Nothing can divide them.
Until Alison falls for Simon Delaney. Handsome, successful and ambitious, what woman wouldn’t want him? He’s surely her perfect husband. So why does she commit suicide?
If it is suicide. The police say yes, except for the driven DC Rosanna Quillan. She says no, but she can only watch as Jude and Danny fight for the prize – the widower. How far would either of them go to have him?

Fatal Collision
Adam Winters is killed by a drunk driver. His devastated widow, Nicki, realises she is being stalked.
Offered an escape to a cottage by the sea, she and her daughter Willow arrive on the Pembrokeshire coast.
They settle into the community. But are drawn into troubles they have driven two hundred and fifty miles to avoid: family deceptions, jealousies, lies, a disappearance and a suspected killing.
Struggling to find peace with the past and truth in the present, Nicki discovers there is more than one sort of fatal collision”

The Covenant
The Owens are tied to this Pembrokeshire land – no-one will part them from it.
Leah is tied to home and hearth by debts of love and duty – duty to her father, turned religious zealot after the tragic death of his eldest son, Tom; love for her wastrel younger brother Frank’s two motherless children. One of them will escape, the other will be doomed to follow in their grandfather’s footsteps.
At the close of the 19th century, Cwmderwen’stwenty-four acres, one rood and eight perches are hardwon, the holding run down over the years by debt and poor harvest. But they are all the Owens have and their rent is always paid on time. With Tom’s death a crack is opened up and into this chink in the fabric of the family step Jacob John and his wayward son Eli, always on the lookout for an opportunity.
Saving her family, good and bad, saving Cwmderwen, will change Leah forever and steal her dreams, perhaps even her life…
The Covenant is the shocking prequel to the bestselling A Time For Silence.

Shadows (Llys y Garn 1)
Kate Lawrence can sense the shadow of violent death, past and present.
In her struggle to cope with her unwelcome gift, she has frozen people out of her life.
Her marriage is on the rocks, her career is in chaos and she urgently needs to get a grip.
So she decides to start again, by joining her effervescent cousin Sylvia and partner Michael in their mission to restore and revitalise Llys y Garn, an old mansion in the wilds of North Pembrokeshire.
It is certainly a new start, as she takes on Sylvia’s grandiose schemes, but it brings Kate to a place that is thick with the shadows of past deaths.
The house and grounds are full of mysteries that only she can sense, but she is determined to face them down – so determined that she fails to notice that ancient energies are not the only shadows threatening the seemingly idyllic world of Llys y Garn.
The happy equilibrium is disrupted by the arrival of Sylvia’s sadistic and manipulative son, Christian – but just how dangerous is he?
Then, once more, Kate senses that a violent death has occurred…
Set in the majestic and magical Welsh countryside, Shadows is a haunting exploration of the dark side of people and landscape.

Long Shadows (Llys y Garn 2)
Llys y Garn is a rambling Victorian-Gothic mansion with vestiges of older glories.
It lies in the isolated parish of Rhyd y Groes in North Pembrokeshire. It is the house of the parish, even in its decline, deeply conscious of its importance, its pedigree and its permanence. It stubbornly remains though the lives of former inhabitants have long since passed away. Only the rooks are left to bear witness to the often desperate march of history.
Throne Moore’s Long Shadows: Tales of Llys y Garn comprises a trio of historical novellas that let us into secrets known only to these melancholy birds.
The Good Servant is the story of Nelly Skeel, loveless housekeeper at Llys y Garn at the end of the 19th century, whose only focus of affection is her master’s despised nephew. But for Cyril Lawson she will do anything, whatever the cost.
The Witch tells of Elizabeth Powell, born as Charles II is restored to the English throne, in a world of changing political allegiances, where religious bigotry and superstition linger on. Her love is not for her family, her duty, her God or her future husband, but for the house where she was born. For that she would sell her soul.

The Unravelling
When they were ten everybody wanted to be Serena’s friend, to find themselves one of the inner circle. But doing so meant proving your worth, and doing that often had consequences it’s not nice to think about – not even thirty-five years later.
Karen Rothwell is randomly reminded of an incident in her childhood which just as suddenly becomes an obsession. It takes her on a journey into a land of secrets and lies; it means finding that gang of girls from Marsh Green Junior School and most importantly of all finding Serena Whinn.

Motherlove
One mother’s need is another’s nightmare
1990, and three woman are contemplating motherhood. Lindy is homeless and longs for a family. Heather is stressed and dreading another baby. Gillian is childless and aching. When two babies are born in Lyford hospital, it’s the start of a new life for all three. For two, it’s a dream come true. For the third, it’s the beginning of a nightmare.
22 years later, two girls set out to discover who they really are, But answers aren’t easy to come by, or easy to accept.

A Time for Silence
When Sarah, struggling to get over tragedy, stumbles across her grandparents’ ruined farm, it feels as if the house has been waiting for her. She is drawn to their apparently idyllic way of life and starts to look into her family history only to learn that her grandfather, Jack, was murdered. Why has nobody told her? Sarah becomes obsessed with finding out what happened to Gwen and Jack. But are there some family stories that should never be told…

Inside Out (Salvage book 1)
Triton station, Outer Circles headquarters of Ragnox Inc, on the moon of Neptune, is as far as the intrepid can go. It’s a place to make money, lots of money, and for seven lucky travellers, bound for Triton on the ISF Heloise, that’s exactly what they intend to do. Maggy Jole wants to belong. Peter Selden wants to escape. Abigail Dieterman wants to be free. Merrit Burnand wants to start again. Christie Steen wants to forget. No one knows what David Rabiotti wants. And Smith, well, Smith wants everything. Does it really matter what they want? The journey to Triton will take them eleven months – eleven months to contemplate the future, come to terms with the small print of their contracts, and wish they’d never signed. But changing their minds is not an option. Sometimes it really is better to travel… than arrive.

Making Waves (Savage book 2)
Two hundred years in the future, with the Solar System in the hands of mega-corporations…
Tod Fox, commander of the Heloise, has delivered six rash volunteers to Triton, control centre of Ragnox Inc. But then he took one away again.
Now volunteers and crew face a new chapter in their lives, as human resources at the mercy of Ragnox Director, Jordan Pascal, or as allies of Pan, under Benedict Darke, the relentless enemy of the Triton regime.
Where will their allegiance lie? There is no middle ground in Arkadia. It is war. No mercy. Victory at any price.
Reblogged this on Judith Barrow and commented:
Another great Wednesday Windback from Jill with Thorne Moore @ThorneMoore
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Enjoyed seeing this again. Thanks, Jill.
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Thanks Judith and apologies for missing your publication day last week, it’s been a bit fraught at this end. Hope it went well and all good luck with the book x
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No Problem, Jill. It was a brilliant day. Hope all is well now.x
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We’re getting there thanks x
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Reblogged this on https:/BOOKS.ESLARN-NET.DE.
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Thanks for this great interview and the news. It is always a pleasure to get more information about the authors themselves. Somehow that always swings with the reading of the works. Best wishes, Michael
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Thanks you Michael.
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Wow! Thank you for this. Happy days.
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My pleasure Thorne and apologies for excluding your photograph – it’s now been corrected.
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And I didn’t even notice it wasn’t there!
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I did, sadly after the event! So I’m afraid it’s your book cover that’s now floating around the ether instead. But I guess that’s no bad thing either.
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Reblogged this on Thorne Moore.
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Far too interesting and entertaining for somone who should have been catching up on other things. Lots of ‘chords’ struck – and whilst on that topic, we sang two hymns every morning in assembly and I can still remember most of the words to most of the verses. It’s no surprise my memory’s so bad now; there’s no room left in it. Also, why did continuity announcers talk over the Morse music? And seeing this wonderful output of Thorne’s, all 5* reads from me, how have I missed Motherlove? I shall remedy that. I really enjoyed this post, Jill!
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Glad you enjoyed it Alex. I particularly liked this one, especially for the music. Hills of the North Rejoice is one of the hymns we sang at school and it’s one I liked but I’ve never heard it since school. I still remember the words. As for the Morse theme, one of my favourites, I bought the CD just for the few minutes of the theme, because, yes announcers always spoke over it!
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Such an interesting read. At school, I was taught the Social and Economic History of the UK/World and when it came to exams, the paper was about Political and Parliamentary History – duh! We all sat and scratched our heads. Love your many times great grandfather’s history too. So exciting. We have a few interesting characters in our family history too. Just love it. thanks Jill for introducing Thorne. Tweeted.
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Glad you enjoyed it Jane and thanks for sharing x
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My pleasure. I am finding my way back in the saddle again. Have a fab week, Jill xx
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You too x
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I enjoyed this compendium of Thorne’s work – I’ve read some of her books, but this reminds me there’s a whole lot more to enjoy.
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I’m glad you enjoyed it Noelle x
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