Skip to content

2013 – my year in review

Alex Roddie
Alex Roddie
4 min read
Lost Valley Glencoe

So, my first full year as an author of mountain fiction has come and gone. Much has happened in 2013, and in this post I’d like to share some of my high points.

January


In January I returned to Glencoe (a former home of mine) to record a radio interview with Chris Sleight from BBC Radio Scotland. I took to the hills in my Victorian mountaineering equipment and cut steps up a Grade II winter climb on Stob Coire nan Lochan. It had been a while since I last cut steps in anger and it felt good to be climbing “properly” again!

Coire nan Lochan
The author climbing in Victorian mountaineering equipment

Two days later my brother James and I climbed the Beinn Fhada ridge to Stob Coire Sgreamhach, one of the last big ridges in the area I hadn’t climbed when I lived there. It was a bitingly cold day but the views into the Lost Valley were spectacular.

Beinn Fhada Glencoe



February


The big event for February was, of course, the paperback launch for my first novel, The Only Genuine Jones. Hannah and I travelled back to Glencoe, staying at the inn as guests this time, and on the 27th of February I took to the stage to talk about the remarkable story behind my novel.

The author signing copies

The paperback edition of the book sold really well (sold out, in fact!) and the whole experience was overwhelmingly positive.

Books fresh from the press

June


By early summer I was hard at work on my second novel, tentatively called The Forbes Challenge at that point although I eventually settled on the title of The Atholl Expedition (now available to download on Kindle). I made the decision fairly early on that I would have to visit the forests of Atholl and Mar for myself and follow in the footsteps of my characters. In early June I carried out my own Atholl expedition, trekking from Blair Atholl to Aviemore via the classic pass of Glen Tilt and the Lairig Ghru.

I was blessed by fine weather and completed the crossing in three days. In addition to my backpacking / bothying route I also climbed a number of Munros, including Beinn a’Ghlo, Cairn Toul, and Braeriach.

Lairig Ghru
The vast wilderness of the Cairngorms
Cairn Toul
Cairn Toul
Braeriach Cairngorms June
Winter clings on to Braeriach in June

September


In September I fulfilled a long-held ambition by visiting Glen Shiel. This area of the Western Highlands is crammed with Munro peaks and I ticked off a clutch of them while I was there, including the classic Forcan Ridge of the Saddle. Once again I was blessed with incredibly good weather, which worried me a little … I began to think I was storing up the bad weather days for a later trip (probably a winter one!)

The Forcan Ridge Glen Shiel
The Forcan Ridge of the Saddle

October and November


In Autumn I worked hard on The Atholl Expedition, putting in the hours and adapting my workflow to create a distraction-free environment. I experimented with writing on a vintage Mac–ultimately a very successful experiment, one I will continue into the new year–and I also invested in a bluetooth folding keyboard for my tablet. I spent a lot of time writing in my local coffee shop in Skegness. Slowly but surely, the novel took shape.

My LC475 in action
Nexus 7 with bluetooth keyboard
One of my portable setups – it’s adaptable!

December


Last but not least, this month saw the successful launch of my second novel on Kindle – an event hampered by connectivity problems and family illness, but that didn’t stop the book from staying in the top ten mountaineering books on Kindle for several days (and selling almost 80 copies so far). The response to the new book has been huge. Now I’m hard at work on the paperback edition.

And for 2014?


I have big plans for next year! Work is already underway on Alpine Dawn Book II, and I’m rather optimistically hoping to launch two books in 2014. I hope to visit the Cairngorms at least once (if not twice), and most importantly have fun in the mountains.

Have a happy and safe new year!

Notes

Alex Roddie

Happiest on a mountain. Writer, story-wrangler, digital and film photographer. Editor of Sidetracked magazine. Machine breaker.

Comments


Related Posts

Members Public

Bits and pieces: latest published work, plus thoughts on moving to a weekly newsletter

Good evening! It's so nice to see a few more people signing up to receive this blog/newsletter (is it a blog? Is it a newsletter? It's both) – and, honestly, I am humbled that people in 2024 are voluntarily asking to get more emails. Signing up

Bits and pieces: latest published work, plus thoughts on moving to a weekly newsletter
Members Public

Fragments from the journey home

A flying visit to Fort William and Glen Coe with Hannah. It's work – a media event at the new Páramo store opening on the FW high street – but it's also fun, catching up with friends who live in the most beautiful spot along the north shore

Fragments from the journey home
Members Public

'So how are things *actually*, Alex?'

It's 6.30pm on a Saturday evening in October and I'm flicking back through my blog posts for the year, reflecting on how I've totally failed to carry out my plan of returning to an old-school pattern of blogging. Not necessarily little and often,

'So how are things *actually*, Alex?'