Today, Iβm delighted to welcome talented writer Laura Lyndhurst to Introverted Bookworm! Laura is an accomplished author and poet, and Iβm so glad sheβs here with us today.
So, without further ado, moving on to my review of her latest novel:
An Honourable Institution

Cressida DiFerrarro is an entitled rich girl. She enjoys a free and easy lifestyle, unfettered by complications. However, when Cressida is faced with a complex moral dilemma, her choices will determine the course of her life, as well as the lives of others, too.
I love the multiple points of view taken throughout the book. As a reader, I could fully immerse myself in each character’s individual mindset and point of view. This is an edgy novel, which poses complex questions along the way, with never a dull moment in sight. Lyndhurst expertly creates memorable, razor-sharp characters. Coercion, intrigue, and touches of dark humour, run throughout the narrative. Juicy stuff! The plot is simmering with unspoken tension, which kept me engaged from start to finish. This is a fascinating, addictive book!
Social Climbing and Other Poems

In Social Climbing and Other Poems, the poetry is written to prompts of images taken by photographer Clive Thompson.
βCold Comfortβ shows a photograph of snowdrops dusted with snow β a seemingly picturesque image, which is juxtaposed with the doomed holiday described in the poem itself: βFreezing our stamens off, rooted to the spot and paralyzed with cold.β
βTrolley Dashedβ is one of my favourites, using the Covid pandemic as inspiration. There is a photograph of empty shopping trolleys stacked in an orderly row. The poem is written from the perspective of these humble trolleys. They βwonβt be found dumped any old how within the car park.β Lyndhurst has a gift for giving life and a unique voice to inanimate objects, and even animals (such as in the humorously titled βCodfatherβ). Her witty, dry sense of humour adds a playful touch.
However, this humour is far from frivolous. Rather, it acts as a gateway to further insights. For example, in βI donβt know Much About Art but I know What I Like,β there is a humble-looking Greek door, freshly painted. The voice of the door (defiant, rebellious, determined to break with convention) is touching, and resonates with anyone who has ever felt like an outsider. The images and poems work well together, one lending meaning to the other.
An Interview with Laura Lyndhurst

IB: In Social Climbing and Other Poems, your poetry is inspired by Clive Thompson’s photographs. Do you find that inanimate objects, situations, or places, spark your creativity in general?Β
LL: Thatβs something I hadnβt really thought about. Iβve lived and travelled in many places, and some of my experiences in them have found their way into my writingβbut more as background to an idea Iβve had, rather than being the inspiration for the stories. As to inanimate objects and situations, theyβre certainly big catalysts for my workβand I think this feeds naturally into your next question.
IB: You are a fiction author and poet. Is the creative process the same or different when you sit down to write fiction versus poetry?
LL: Different, in the main, I think. Novels were all I intended to produce, when I first began to write, and situations are my usual catalyst for those. When I was teaching at a university I met a student whoβd undertaken sex work to fund her studies. She wasnβt the only one, in these days of high fees, and fortunately sheβd come through it with minimum damage. It set me thinking however, and I got to wondering what could happen to somebody who wasnβt so lucky, who thought they could copeβwe all think we know so much in our teensβand then got in over their head and maybe was destroyed by it. This was the basis for my debut novel Fairytales Donβt Come True, and I learned so much as I researched the subject. A university in Wales had actually conducted a project, interviewing students whoβd gone into the sex trade about their experiences. They had a surprisingly high uptakeβanonymity given, of courseβand the findings they published were disturbing. There was even a TV documentary made on the subject, although I couldnβt access that to view it.
It surprised me that more hadnβt been made of the issueβI mean, how many parents would be pleased to learn that their daughters, and sons in some cases, were doing this to make ends meet? It needed attention, I thought, which is how I put a rather naΓ―ve young woman into the situation where she goes looking for a sponsor to pay her expenses and apparently hits the jackpotβbut things go downhill for her. Thereβs also a sub-plot of her care nurse whoβs got her own mid-life-crisis issues, so two different situations here. The rest of the Criminal Conversation books follow on from Fairytales, which turns into a family sagaβbut each books explores characters in difficult situations and in search of a solution. The same goes for the Amanda Roberts books, and An Honourable Institution.
As to poetry, I never intended to write anyβit was my least favourite literary discipline at school. I got into it via a Facebook writing group, where the group leader posted a different picture every day and challenged us to write about three paragraphs around it. On my first attempt what came out was poetry, rather than prose, but I challenged myself to continue with poetry. As the pictures were of inanimate objects, that became my standard for writing poetryβalthough I have written a few which arenβt based around pictures.
IB: In your most recent novel, “An Honourable Institution,” you are skilled at inhabiting multiple points of view. How has this skill developed throughout your writing career?Β
LL: Thanks for the compliment! Again, not something Iβve given much thought to. My first effort at Fairytales was one point of view, that of student Mags telling her own story. It was rejected within a couple of days by the first agent I queried, which wasnβt an encouraging beginning. I had a rethink and decided that more was needed, so came up with Dora, a palliative-care nurse maybe fifteen to twenty years older than Mags, the latter telling the story of her life up to her late twenties, her age at the beginning of the book. I was in my early sixties when I began writing it, so Iβd lived through their respective agesβif not their personal situationsβand experienced the changes we all go through as we mature. Iβve also met and interacted with many other people in different walks of life, which has been a help. And of course Iβve read extensively from a young age, which has helped no end in unconsciously absorbing the ideas of other writers and the thoughts and situations of their characters.Β
IB: Your work is courageous, bold, humorous, and authentic. Do you feel that what you write mirrors who you are as a person, or do you enjoy the distance that writing offers? Or is it perhaps a combination of both?Β
LL: Once more, thank you. I think it has to be a combination of both. Certainly thereβs a lot of me in my writingβnot me as I am, but rather situations Iβve been in or the experiences of others which theyβve related to me. About twenty-five years ago, for example, I had a workman in to fix the boiler. He was early and I wasnβt totally prepared, so I apologised on the lines of βwhat must you think of me.β He told me he worked under a clause to never disclose what he saw or heard, to protect client privacy. However, he told me of an occasion when he felt he had to report the domestic situation he found, there being small children running riot while their parent lay in a drugged stupor. I remembered that, and it became the background for one of my characters.
I also write people who have life experiences which I never did, but might have liked to, given the opportunity. I didnβt get to university until I was in my forties, and I regret that I didnβt make it in my teensβbut there were valid reasons which I couldnβt change. With the benefit of hindsight and experience, if I could go back I think Iβd study and train for the legal profession. I donβt know why, thereβs just something which attracts me about it. Iβve put more than one character in my books who follows that career path, therefore, and theyβre as brilliant in their work as Iβd have liked to be in their place.
Some things are too personal, however, so if they do go into my stories Iβd never admit to them being something Iβve done, or would like to do. There are some things Iβd rather not write aboutβwe all have our preferencesβalthough there are genres I can read but not write. Iβm in awe of those who can write sci-fi, or fantasy, which I read sometimes, but itβs often a stretch for me to grasp their futuristic or fantasy worlds, making them a bit too distant for me to write.
You can find Laura Lyndhurst’s books on Amazon here https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/Laura-Lyndhurst/author/B088QFJJ3Q
Check out her site here: https://booksthatmakeyouthink2.co.uk/
And find her work here: https://books2read.com/ap/nkOGQN/Laura-Lyndhurst?edit=maybe-later


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