Liz Lawler is the author of the new novel The Next Wife. Her other books include Don't Wake Up. She spent 20 years as a nurse, and she lives in Bath, UK.
Q: What inspired you to write The Next Wife, and how did you create your characters Tess and Martha?
A: I was inspired to write this story while working at a railway station and seeing all the people taking the train. The commuters. The tourists. The day-trippers. The platform crammed with passengers eager to board the incoming train.
Then there are the individuals that catch your eye, as standing too close to the edge of a platform, and something doesn’t feel right. Immediately alert you can’t ignore the troubling situation as the environment was way too dangerous. They may not be there to make a journey, but to put an end to a sadness.
Rail suicide is a deeply tragic reality and I’m grateful to have been able to stop this happening on more than one occasion. When I wrote this story, I found myself remembering these vulnerable souls. Tess’s sadness was as deep as theirs and I knew I would have to watch over her to stop her stepping over the yellow line. Otherwise her story would not get told.
Martha’s feisty, gritty character possesses similar traits to my late mother, so I always had Mum in mind when I wrote about her. My mum didn’t have a failing memory, but my father did, so Martha has a bit of both my parents in her character.
My fondness for Martha is abiding, especially when I visualise her small, wrinkled features and sparse fluffy hair around her forehead.
Q: How does your background as a nurse factor into your writing?
A: I suppose after 20 years of nursing lots of memories are tucked away that at an unconscious level find their way into my writing.
Nursing exposes you to the entire spectrum of human behaviour. You see people at their absolute lowest and most vulnerable – when they are scared, grieving, or in pain. You learn to communicate with individuals experiencing confusion, delirium, or severe mental health. Wearing a uniform doesn’t protect you from second-hand impacts from absorbing patients’ trauma.
The plethora of characters I have experienced in my life translate into my writing; even if the plot is made up, the memories of real, visceral emotions are felt in the moment by fictional characters in the pages of my story.
Working in a hospital often feels like a second home; every corridor holds a story. Nursing was a large part of my life. Working as a nurse in Accident and Emergency gives you exposure to the most critical patients, and provides unparalleled, fast-paced clinical experience, which hopefully I bring to life in this story.
Transitioning from nursing to writing was by no means easy. Writing takes a psychological toll. While it frequently serves as a cathartic outlet, sliding under the skin of sociopaths and their victims can have me chewing my fingernails and afraid for what might happen next, as emotional attachment often forms and I cry when something really sad happens.
Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you started writing, or did you make many changes along the way?
A: I visualise a story like an unfolding movie in my head for weeks before writing it down so had seen the ending. I hear vivid conversations between characters and start mumbling the dialogue, while wearing the facial expressions of these individuals. I end up looking like the Mad Hatter, walking along talking to myself, with unkempt hair and oblivious to my surroundings!
However, translating the mental movie in my head to paper was a process of trial and error and many changes were made along the way. Characters develop their own agency and step out of the original outline, so I had to adjust their trajectory and write scenes again.
It’s not something I understand on an explicit conscious level, but something in the back of my brain telling me to trust in the direction the story is taking me.
Q: The novel is set in Bath and in London – how important is setting to you in your writing?
A: It was important to have Tess whisked away from everything familiar to a city she didn’t know. Bath is considered one of the safest cities in the UK and internationally. Leaving the fast-paced, metropolis city of London for the tranquil Georgian city of Bath should have made it a safe place for Tess to live.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: A story set in a London hospital where a patient tells a nurse a deadly secret.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: I was the first child in my family to be born in the UK. My mother had 14 children, and my 10 older siblings were born in Dublin in Ireland.
The experience of coming from a large Irish Catholic family meant I was never lonely or bored. It also meant that we never went anywhere on a plane. Holidays were either day trips to the seaside, or sometimes we stayed in a seaside chalet. Depending on my age at the time, there could be up to eight of us in a vehicle, plus a dog, as we set off for our destination.
My parents had enormous energy and while elderly, never tired of talking to us. My father was a great storyteller and regaled us with his own life as a child – he left school aged 10 and half and began his work life by selling kindling wood. My mother’s mother died when she was 4, and my mother was sent to an orphanage.
They were strong and confident parents and would have loved knowing that I became an author.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb












