Author writes 50,000-word novel in bookshop

Kathryn Croft wrote for eight hours a day at a desk in a Guildford bookshop
- Published
An author who spent seven days writing her new novel in a public space said it was "an amazing experience, but the hardest thing I've ever had to do".
Kathryn Croft wrote for eight hours a day in a corner of Paper Moon, an independent bookshop in Guildford, Surrey – all while being livestreamed.
While originally aiming to write 80,000 words, she managed to complete a 50,000-word first draft of the book.
Ms Croft began at 10:00 BST on 1 September and finished at 18:00 on Sunday.
"I wrote, 'the end' – the best two words ever to write," she told BBC Radio Surrey.
Ms Croft writes psychological thrillers, with this untitled work telling the story of a woman trying to clear her name after finding a man she was due to meet on a date stabbed to death.
It will be her 20th book.

Kathryn Croft has already written several successful thrillers
"I'm an early person. I don't work well in the afternoon," she said.
"I might normally do 500 words then have a break. This time I couldn't, it was just 100% focus for eight hours.
"I care about the words I write. I didn't want to just write anything, so that was why I got behind. Fifty thousand for a first draft is pretty good.
"Normally I do 2,000 a day, so to do 80,000, I would have had to do 11,500 a day. I made 10,000 on Sunday and that was the most. I've learned that 2,000 words is a walk in the park."
The novel is due to be published in 2027.
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- Published1 September