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First Lines…

15 January 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

As we approach the launch of my fifth novel, Recommended for You, I thought it would be interesting to look back at how my books begin. Specifically, their first lines.

A first line does more than start a story. It sets intent. It tells the reader, consciously or not, why they should keep going. You cannot simply begin with routine, nor can you spend pages explaining the world before anything happens. The reader needs a reason to care from the very first words.

For a long time, I thought that if a sentence sounded good, it was enough. It took time to realise that a first line is a promise.

Here is how my five novels begin, and what I think of those openings in hindsight.

Never. Not in a thousand years. How could she possibly have imagined that it would end this way?
Under the Black Sand (2013)

The book begins with a murder, which is already an ending. “Never” is also the opposite of “always”, the final word of the novel. Structurally, it made sense. But does it truly pull the reader in? I am not sure. I would probably approach this differently today.

‘I want to be a proper journalist.’ Gunnar tried to ignore the clouds of smoke lingering in the air.
Blood and Rain (2017)

This line states intent. The book follows Gunnar’s attempt to become a journalist, and the second sentence introduces his discomfort with smoke, something difficult to avoid in the mid-1930s. By the middle of the novel, as his ideals erode and his life turns darker, he has started smoking himself.

It does what it is meant to do, but it is my least favourite opening. I am not convinced a new reader would immediately care about someone wanting to be a journalist. At that point, I was still learning.

The phone rang in an office in Palacio de la Isla, in Burgos, northern Spain. A man in military uniform was shuffling papers and looking at maps and, for a moment, ignored the intrusion.
Mont Noir (2023)

By my third novel, I felt more confident. This was the first time I consciously thought about what I wanted the opening line to achieve. The man is unnamed. He is important enough to ignore the ringing phone. The hope was that this would spark curiosity.

The novel could have opened elsewhere. With Celestina in Barcelona, or Frank in Amsterdam. But since Franco himself plays only a small role in the story, serving mainly as the catalyst for Celestina’s departure from Spain, this felt like the right place to begin. Without this phone call, none of the consequent events would have happened. But does it grab a reader?

The morning was grey, too dull for the events that were unfolding. At four o’clock in the morning, German troops had crossed the border and invaded the Netherlands.
A Sky Without Stars (2025)

I struggled with this beginning more than any other. I rewrote it repeatedly, aware by then of how much weight the opening carries. The contrast here is deliberate. A dull, quiet morning against an event that will upend countless lives.

In the opening scene, the protagonist buys plain wedding rings for a marriage that will never happen. By the end of the second chapter, Rotterdam has been destroyed, his future is in ruins, and routine becomes a fragile illusion. The novel follows five main characters, all facing the same historical moment, all making different choices for a future they hope will come.

The opening sentence reflects that tension, not just for the scene, but for the book as a whole.

The darkness was broken only by the soft glow coming from the phone. A notification, unseen in the dead of night. A silent rupture, a fault line that would fracture the ground beneath him.
Recommended for You (2026)

I once read that you should never start a novel with a wake-up scene. Strictly speaking, this is not one. Julian is not awake yet. What the opening establishes instead is quiet.

This is a quiet book. There are no chases, no guns, no villains in the traditional sense. What exists instead is a low, persistent menace. Julian lives a good life. Too good. A life without resistance or friction slowly becomes unbearable. Vera, his AI assistant, is endlessly kind, helpful, and attentive. The phone notification is a small disruption that exposes the fragility of that perfection and begins a collapse he struggles to control.

Five books, written over twelve years.
Different stories. Different beginnings.
A writer’s journey toward something resembling a craft.

Recommended for You is out 10 February.
Subscribe to the newsletter to be notified when new work is on the way.

Filed Under: Blog, Novel, Thoughts, Writing Tagged With: blog, first line, novel, thoughts, writing

And so the future arrives…

4 January 2026 by admin Leave a Comment

Happy New Year!

2025 was never meant to be a year of major change in my writing career, but life doesn’t ask what we’re planning. It just happens.

At the beginning of the year, A Sky Without Stars was on ice. It didn’t have a title yet. It didn’t have an ending. Somewhere in early spring, I opened the project and started reading. I couldn’t stop. I realised this was possibly the most coherent work I had ever created. It needed to be completed. It deserved to be published.

As I started writing, something like a dam broke. Creativity flowed, ideas rushed in. Many of them didn’t fit that project.

I saw algorithms, political unrest, digital manipulation. A world drifting toward something unsettling.

While finishing Sky, I started work on Recommended for You, a novella about loneliness in the age of algorithms, AI companions, and increasing social isolation. I imagined a perfectly average man, living roughly five years in the future.

Sky and the new novella were completed around the same time, but I needed to finish the old work first. The Frank and Celestina trilogy had been with me since 2017, and it deserved a proper conclusion. Only once that was done could I turn my attention fully to the modern stories.

That time has come.

Recommended for You will be released in a month. But it won’t be alone. Two more novellas are scheduled for this year. One is a near-future political thriller, involving elections, deepfakes, and assassination. Later in the year, a very dark story set in Iceland follows. Again near-future. Again unsettling.

I hope you’ll join me on this journey.

At some point last year, I said that 2026 would be nothing like 2025. Now you know why.

Once again, happy New Year. May the scary things stay in our fiction.

Peace and love.

Filed Under: Blog, Novel, Personal, Thoughts, Writing Tagged With: a sky without stars, blog, new year, novel, personal, recommended for you, roadmap, thoughts, writing

Quiet Christmas…

25 December 2025 by admin Leave a Comment

Christmas has a particular texture.

Not just the lights or the noise, but the quieter things underneath. The pause. The cold air. The sense that the year is folding in on itself. We busy ourselves with preparations, but really, we should use the season to find quiet and bond with loved ones.

It is the season where we celebrate different things. Christmas, Yule, is whatever we want it to be. We have our own reasons, beliefs. We may be celebrating a birth, the light returning, the approaching new year. The season is about the new.

Stories belong to that space.

This year closed an era for me.

A Sky Without Stars marked the end of a trilogy that began years ago. Three books, one long arc, finally complete. Finishing it felt less like celebration and more like release. A permission to move on and explore different ideas.

That is where Moss Garden came from.

It is a small, quiet piece. Observant. Still. A story about place, solitude, and what happens when the world finally stops asking anything of you. Where Sky closes a door, Moss Garden opens another one. Not loudly. Not with intention. Just enough to let something new in.

2026 will be very different from anything that came before. More on that later.

If you are reading over the holidays, I hope you find a book that fits the season. Something unhurried. Something you can hold in your hands. A new truth, or a place or character that will stay with you for years to come.

However you are spending these days, I hope there is room for rest and for stories.

Merry Christmas, and thank you for reading.

Moss Garden is a short story and is available free on Kobo, Apple, Barnes & Noble, Everand, Fable, Smashwords, Thalia and Vivlio.

Filed Under: Blog, Novel, Personal, Short Stories, Thoughts, Writing Tagged With: blog, christmas, novel, personal, short stories, short story, thoughts, writing, xmas, yule

Physical!

7 November 2025 by admin Leave a Comment

There’s something special about holding a book in your hands.

The texture of the cover. The quiet crackle of paper. Even the faint smell of ink and glue. It’s physical, tangible. Something you can touch, lend, shelve, and return to years later. Or give to others, share.

A book on a shelf.

Not on a screen. Not as a file or a thumbnail.

A book. With a spine, a cover, weight.

And now, the trilogy has that weight.

It took eight years, but the three stories – Blood and Rain (2017), Mont Noir (2023), and A Sky Without Stars (2025) – finally belong together. They’ve been redesigned with a unified look. Clean, consistent, and unmistakably part of the same world. For the first time, they look like what they are. Three parts of a whole.

Each stands on its own, but together they tell a single story. A story of war, love, personal loss and small victories, and the long shadow of history.

And now, you can hold them.

All three are available on Amazon in both paperback ($9.99) and hardcover ($18.99) editions, with two-day delivery in most regions.

These stories have been through many drafts, the earlier ones have new covers and the inside pages have been redesigned. Thinking up the characters, concepts, plotting the stories and writing them, designing the books in three different format… I have no idea how many late nights they caused. But they are here now.

Seeing them side by side at last, with a unified design and an affordable print option, feels like closing a long chapter.

You can find them all here: Amazon Author Page ›

Filed Under: Novel, Writing Tagged With: a sky without stars, blood and rain, hardcover, mont noir, novel, paperback, publish, trilogy, writing

Celestina – from Anarchy to the Skies

24 October 2025 by villia Leave a Comment

Back in 2014, I started drafting my second novel. There were three rules to set this novel apart from my first.
Nothing supernatural.
It would be shorter than my debut.
The story would be linear.

The protagonist would be an Icelandic wannabe journalist. A man with ambitions larger than his worldview.

The Spanish Civil War was a period in history I knew almost nothing about, and the project became an excuse to explore it. I read Homage to Catalonia by George Orwell and In Diamond Square by Mercé Rodoreda and some other works. I watched an old British documentary from the 1980s where people who had lived through the war told their stories.

Only then did I start writing.

My man from Iceland makes a deal with the German embassy, is unwittingly recruited as an informer and sent to Barcelona. There he meets many characters. One of them would come to define everything that followed.

At that point, Blood and Rain was not meant to be part of a series. But the characters had other ideas.

Celestina first appears as noise through a wall late at night. Then, over breakfast, we see her properly. Smoking a cigarette, frying eggs, talking about anarchism. Possibly the strongest character I have ever written, and I had no idea what she would become.

By the end of Blood and Rain, Celestina has turned into a killer and the Icelander has fled the city. Their relationship is broken and there are loose ends that need tying up.

Mont Noir was meant to do that, but strong characters rarely do what they’re told. Celestina was recruited to blow up a train and a plane and blame it on her old friend, but things take a turn. In Mont Noir we get glimpses of her past. How she became an anarchist. How she ended up on the streets of Barcelona with a gun in her hand. How she learned to hate authoritarian regimes and injustice.

At the end of Mont Noir her story still wasn’t finished. She needed a third book.

A Sky Without Stars began life before Mont Noir was even published. Here, Celestina has become an aviator. She longs to fly into battle, but women aren’t allowed to. Instead, she joins the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force, ferrying planes from one airfield to another. After a promotion, she begins flying espionage missions. When one fails, she finds herself behind enemy lines, in Amsterdam. The only person she can turn to is her old friend from Barcelona. The one she could have loved. The one she almost killed.

In A Sky Without Stars, Celestina finally becomes who she was always meant to be.

She began life as a side character, a love interest, a voice in the background. But she wouldn’t stay there. Her story was deeper than I realised. Her loss greater. Her strength more profound. She needed three books to grow, but she did.

By the end of A Sky Without Stars she has become what she was destined to be. A reluctant hero with nothing to lose, and everything to give.

As I wrap up the trilogy and move on to new projects, I’ll deeply miss Celestina. She has lived in my head and heart for a decade, guiding me as I learned to write. Her story may be told, but her spirit will live on in every strong female character I create from now on.

A Sky Without Stars is out now.

Filed Under: Novel, Writing Tagged With: a sky without stars, blood and rain, celestina, frank and celestina, mont noir, novel, writing

It Never Stops – The Soundtrack of a Trilogy

17 October 2025 by villia Leave a Comment

If the Frank & Celestina trilogy had a theme song, it would be Sketches of Spain by Nits.

Not the Miles Davis piece, but the haunting Dutch song from 1983. It is quiet, elegiac, and full of echoes.

It begins with the line:
“The streets of Barcelona are filled with blood and rain.”

That lyric became the seed for the first novel’s title, Blood and Rain. It captured everything I wanted the story to be. A collision of love and violence, beauty and loss.

When I wrote the trilogy, I often returned to that song. It moves like memory – gently, hesitantly – as if afraid of breaking what it remembers. Then the percussion breaks the calm like a machine gun. And the refrain that refuses to fade:
“It never ever, never ever, never stops.”

In the deepest, darkest moments of A Sky Without Stars, as the world relentlessly piles its weight onto Frank and those he loves, he echoes that line in despair: “It never stops.” The same sentiment, the same exhaustion. War is relentless, and all anyone caught in it wants is for it to end.

That line became the emotional spine of the entire saga. It’s history itself speaking. The endless cycle of wars, betrayals, and fragile acts of mercy that never truly end. In A Sky Without Stars, those words close the circle between music and story.

It isn’t coincidence. Sketches of Spain is one of those rare songs that take you to a place and show you what’s happening with the same clarity as a photograph or a piece of film.

For me, that song is the trilogy:
how beauty survives horror,
how memory outlasts time,
and how, even when everything ends,
it never really stops.

No matter when you’re born, there are choices to make, and hard times to endure.

It never stops.

Listen to Nits – Sketches of Spain (live)

A Sky Without Stars is out now.

Filed Under: Music, Novel, Writing Tagged With: blood and rain, celestina, music, nits, novel, spain, thoughts, writing

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