Annie Ward is the author of the new novel Beautiful Bad. She also has written the novel The Making of June. She spent five years living and working in Bulgaria, and now lives in Kansas City, Kansas.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for Beautiful
Bad, and for your characters Madeline and Ian?
A: It was a long process, sometimes painful. I didn’t
come up with the idea for Beautiful Bad--in the form in which it exists
today—-until I’d completed several drafts of a very different book.
The original manuscript that I set out to write was a
memoir called The British Bodyguard. It was heavily focused on my husband’s
experiences working in close protection in the British army. Spending 16 years
in places like Rwanda, Bosnia, and Iraq can take quite a toll on a person and I
didn’t shy away from depicting the difficulties that came along with being
married to a former soldier.
It was pretty raw and candid. My agent suggested I
fictionalize it. I didn’t like that idea at the time. I was very personally
invested in the memoir. It was heart-breaking but I abandoned the project.
It wasn’t until a few years later that my husband and
I were talking about it and he joked, “The problem with the memoir was that
everyone was waiting to see which of one of us was going to kill the other
first.” It was at that moment that I finally had the idea to turn Beautiful Bad
into the dark, domestic drama that eventually hit the shelves.
Maddie and Ian evolved out of characters that were
based on me and my husband. I threw in a lot of lies, deceit, and madness and
the result was a psychological thriller with characters that were somewhat
unique to the genre.
Q: The book takes place in various locations around
the world, including Bulgaria and Kansas. How important is setting to you in
your writing?
A: Setting is VERY important to me in general, but in
the case of this book it was crucial.
At the time the book is set, Eastern Europe was fairly
dangerous, rife with escalating ethnic conflict. I lived there for five years
and the Westerners I met were, by and large, either obvious risk takers,
escapees from their lives, artistic outliers living on the cheap, government
employees or genuinely dedicated humanitarians. (Or criminals!) I found them
fascinating.
Beautiful Bad is a story about reckless and damaged
souls. It was crucial to this plot that the main characters were the type to
take risks and I felt that such people should meet in an exceptional and
dangerous location. The geographical origin of their relationship was part of
character development.
Kansas was equally important. It’s where I grew up and
it’s where Ian finds a degree of peace. I needed to present Kansas as a foil to
the many terrifying war-torn places around the globe where Ian had lived. I
also needed the return to Kansas to be the basis of a serious rift between the
husband and wife. The boredom of Kansas is a comfort to Ian, but Maddie is
slowly but surely going out of her mind.
Q: Did you know how the novel would end before you
started writing it, or did you make many changes along the way?
A: The original memoir ended truthfully with a man and
woman who are working hard to salvage true love that has taken a beating from
PTSD. It wasn’t a fairy-tale happy ending, but it was hopeful.
When I decided to fictionalize it, I thought to
myself, “Okay. If I get to make up the end, I’m going to go out with a bang.” I
always knew the book was going to end in a murder. I suspected it might
possibly end in two murders.
I finished a draft that contained one corpse. I
celebrated with a glass of wine and then a walk with the dogs, which is when I
have my best ideas. When I came home, I went into my office and spent a few
hours in there. Later that night I gave my husband a new draft of the last
chapter.
When he’d read it, he looked up at me like he was in
shock. He just stared at me and said, “No.” It was a last-minute decision and a
lot changed in that final chapter over the next couple of days when I tried to
get it right.
Q: PTSD plays a big role in the book. Why did you
decide to include that as one of the book's themes?
A: I decided to include PTSD as a theme in my book
when I realized that I was head over heels in love with a man who had it,
badly. It wasn’t until after I’d read back over the finished manuscript that I
thought, “Wow, Maddie is suffering from PTSD too.”
Only then, ironically, did I see that writing this
book, which included a harrowing description of the boating accident I had as a
child, had actually been “writing therapy” for me, just like Maddie’s therapy. I
suddenly understood that while I’d produced a twisty-turny psychological
thriller, I’d also written an honest, tragic romance about two people who truly
loved one another but had been broken by trauma.
It was important to me that their characters had
problems they were fighting to solve because that’s closer to the reality of my
life. Illustrating the way that trauma untreated can have terrible consequences
was cathartic and meaningful for me.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: My new book is the story of Natalie, an awkward and
lonely young woman who puts her life on hold in order to look after her brother
while he recovers from a mountain biking accident. She finds herself in
Blackswift, a scenic but remote Colorado town. It’s refreshingly quaint and privileged;
the kind of place Natalie would like to stay.
When not caring for her brother she hikes, goes to the
gym, tries to make friends and enjoys looking at the gorgeous houses that are
for sale. It’s a wonderful, relaxing break from real life--until a local girl
goes missing and Natalie admits she was the last to see her, in a bedroom in an
open house.
Natalie’s story is odd, and she quickly fall under
suspicion. As she learns more about the loyal, insular and tribal community of Blackswift,
she realizes she is a disposable outsider and a pawn in a much larger game. She
can’t trust anyone, not even her own brother.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Sure, lots! The movie rights to Beautiful Bad have
been optioned by Warner Brothers with Sue Kroll at the help of the production.
She made the recent Lady Gaga Bradley Cooper version of A Star is Born so I
trust that she knows how to deal with tragic romance.
Beautiful Bad just made CrimeReads’ 25 best crime
novels of the year (so far) list and it’s up for the Strand Critics Best Debut
Mystery Novel of the Year award.
I have two kids, two dogs, and just like in the book,
my husband succeeded in getting me to move back to Kansas. My husband is
managing his PTSD far more nicely than I handle my boredom.
If you like the book, please don’t forget to rate it
or (even better) review it on Amazon or Goodreads. It means more to us authors,
both personally and commercially, than you can possibly imagine. Thank you!
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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