Spotlight

Spotlight: Draca – Geoffrey Gudgion

About the book:

Jack’s a Royal Marine. A war hero, haunted by his past. Or is he just haunted?

‘A superbly written, fast-paced, ‘crossover’ novel between literary fiction and subtle horror, with characterisation worthy of Susan Hill and seascapes of a modern Conrad.’ Ian Drury, Sheil Land Associates, Literary Agents

Jack Ahlquist’s a troubled guy; a decorated veteran who’s having flashbacks to combat, and who’s drifting between jobs. Doctors could fix his wounds, but not his marriage or his career. He’s spent time caring for his much-loved grandfather, Eddie, but he didn’t expect to inherit Eddie’s cottage and century-old sailing boat, the Draca. The legacy drives a wedge through an already dysfunctional family; Jack’s estranged father expected to take it all.

Draca was was the last of the sailing pilot cutters, old Eddie’s pride and joy. Eddie, obsessed with his Viking ancestry, has left a last letter for Jack; he wants Draca burned, with his body inside: a fireship funeral. ‘Draca will know where,’ he writes. 

Impossible, of course. Draca is beached and derelict. Besides, Jack has other ideas; Draca will sail again, and restoring her gives Jack a new purpose in life. Good therapy for a damaged hero, some say, but yachtswoman ‘George’ Fenton has doubts.

George is an orphan with attitude who’s made her own way from care and foster homes to be manager of the local boatyard. She saw changes in old Eddie that were more sinister even than cancer, and by the time the old boat tastes the sea again, the man she dares to love is going the same way. Like his grandfather, Jack finds a wild exhilaration in rough seas, alcohol, and ever riskier sailing. Combat stress, some say, but George senses a malevolence about Draca itself, and it centres on a Viking carving that Eddie fitted as a figurehead. To George, Jack’s ‘purpose’ has become ‘possession’; the boat owns the man. 

So is Jack haunted by his past, or just haunted? When Grandpa Eddie died raving that he ‘tried to give it back’, was he talking about the Viking figurehead, or had his cancer gone to his brain? 

One thing is sure; four characters are heading for a confrontation; there’s Jack, the flawed hero on a mission to self-destruct. There’s his controlling and disinherited father, pushing him ever closer to the edge. And there’s George, the feisty yachtswoman, trying to pull him back. 

Then, between them all, there’s an old boat with some very dark secrets and perhaps a mind of its own.

When all four collide, there may be no survivors.


Half of all author royalties will be donated to the veteran’s charity Combat Stress, who care for heroes like Jack whose wounds are more than physical.

www.combatstress.org.uk

About Unbound:

Unbound is a crowdfunding publisher that gives people the tools, support and freedom to bring their ideas to life.

We’re a team of writers, designers, publishers and producers working together in a converted warehouse in central London.

Half of us spend our time finding, commissioning and making our books. The other half builds Unbound and looks after our community.

Together, we have over 300 years of expertise in publishing and connecting people around creative projects.Join us

We started Unbound with a simple mission: make publishing work. For everybody.

We believe that everyone should be given the chance to seize their own success, and that great ideas shouldn’t fall between the cracks because they don’t fit the mould.

And that’s what we’ve built – a better way of doing things.

A community, platform and a publishing model that shift the balance of power to you, people and communities that champion underserved ideas and voices.How it works

We’re a team of writers, designers, publishers and producers working together in a converted warehouse in central London.

Half of us spend our time finding, commissioning and making our books. The other half builds Unbound and looks after our community.

Together, we have over 300 years of expertise in publishing and connecting people around creative projects.

You can help Draca get funded here: https://unbound.com/books/draca/

About the author:

Geoff served in the Royal Navy for nearly eleven years, and made his first attempts at writing fiction during long deployments in warships. Fortunately none of these early efforts survive.

A subsequent career in marketing and general management produced several false starts to novels. Geoff wanted to inhabit a world of his own imagination and write books, while his employers insisted he live in the real world and add commercial value.

A row with his Chief Executive gave him the opportunity to become a freelance consultant and, in the process, release time to write. His first novel, Saxon’s Bane, reached #1 in Kindle’s ‘ghost’ category. Draca will be his second published novel.

Geoff now writes full time. When not crafting words he is an enthusiastic amateur equestrian and a very bad pianist.