![]() And then after I went to university, I studied English at Uni which I don't think it was any help whatsoever to my writing. So I kept scribbling away and I kept not doing anything with the books. It always seemed like something someone else did who was more important and had more special things to say. I will hesitate to call them novels because they were deficient in a number of kind of important areas, but they were definitely, they were on the way there.īut I never really thought that ordinary people like me could become writers. And eventually, by the time I was a teenager, I was writing pretty much book-length things. I started all these kind of long-running sagas and my Barbie dolls had these amazing kind of Jackie Collins love lives where they were always falling in and out of love with each other.Īnd as I got older the stories just got longer and longer and I started to type them out on my mom's typewriter and my dad's computer. I was always, even before I could write, I was telling stories to my little sister and my teddy. Tell us a bit more about you and how you got into writing. Joanna: It has been but let's turn back the clock. Ruth: It's really exciting for me as well, I'm not gonna lie. And Ruth I've seen your books like all over the world, which is super exciting. Her books have been published in over 40 languages. ![]() Ruth is the award-winning and New York Times bestselling author of five crime thriller novels, including ‘In a Dark, Dark Wood' and and ‘The Woman in Cabin 10,' which have both been optioned for screen adaptation. Joanna: Oh, it's great to have you on the show. Ruth: Hello, and thank you so much for having me. I'm Joanna Penn from, and today I'm here with Ruth Ware. You can find Ruth Ware at and on Twitter of Interview with Ruth Ware ![]()
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