An old boyfriend once told me that, while my general knowledge did not impress him (he was on University Challenge, so it did seem unfair that he should judge me), he was envious of my knowledge of pop culture. It pains me to admit that he may have had a point. Whereas he enjoyed highbrow ‘entertainment’, I was happy to watch sitcoms all day. When it comes to my cultural influences, the temptation is to spend my word count listing the best things that have ever been written. Instead, I will try to restrict this article to the things that inspired me to become a barrister-come-author.

My degree was in English Language and Literature and only after university did I decide to convert to law. My first love was reading. I am a child of the Harry Potter generation, and those novels first ignited my passion for reading. Favourite novels from my teenage years include The End of Mr. Y by Scarlett Thomas; an extremely weird but wonderful novel about a PhD student who finds a rare book in a second-hand bookshop which takes her on a journey through the troposphere. Another book about books, The Angel’s Game by Carlos Ruiz Zafón, is a gothic masterpiece and the first psychological thriller I ever read. He combines the bildungsroman storytelling of Dickens with the cinematic thrills of Hitchcock. More recently, I have loved The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, which was a tremendous influence on my writing. A high concept thriller that takes the best tropes of an Agatha Christie murder mystery and combines them with a science fiction plot akin to Philip K Dick’s best work. The Rose Code by Kate Quinn is another of my favourite novels from recent years. I have become a Second World War history fanatic and one of my favourite things to think or read about is life at Bletchley Park (see also: Robert Harris’s Enigma). Bletchley Park is like a glitch in the matrix: a place and time where women were not equal but certainly more respected, neurodivergent people were the rock stars, and hitherto forbidden relationships between people of the same sex an open secret. Although the magic of Bletchley Park vanished after the war, I find pleasure in exploring that realm through fiction. Lastly, a book that inspired me to be a barrister: Great Expectations by Charles Dickens. Dickens does not portray life at the Bar as glamorous, nor did it meet with Pip’s great expectations, but there was something about the studious drudgery in the Temple that appealed to me.

Turning next to television, I am more a fan of the smaller screen than I am of cinema. Growing up, I loved watching detective shows with my parents: A Touch of Frost, New Tricks, Jonathan Creek, Silent Witness, and Inspector Morse were favourites. As an adult, I have been drawn to high concept ideas with enchanting ensemble casts. All of my favourite TV programmes are cancelled after two series. This does not bode well for my career as a novelist. These cult phenomena include Utopia (2013), Sense8, and Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency. More successful shows include Black Mirror and Mare of Easttown, the latter being a return to my crime procedural roots. I’m also a big fan of sitcoms, The Office (UK) and The Thick of It having shaped my sense of humour.

While I can’t confess to being a film buff, one film that had an enormous impact on me was The Big Short. Mark Baum’s prophetic line at the end of the movie ‘I have a feeling in a few years […] when the economy tanks, they will be blaming immigrants and poor people’ has stayed with me. Other films I adore include Christopher Nolan’s Inception and Memento. He is a wonderful storyteller, combining high concepts with fast-moving plots. On the comedic side, you can’t go wrong with The Full Monty and Cool Runnings. Finally, the movie that had more influence on my wish to become a barrister than any other is – to my shame – Legally Blonde. The final cross-examination is electric. To my mind, as exciting as Tom Cruise’s questioning of Jack Nicholson in A Few Good Men. There is something very comforting about the message of Legally Blonde. While I can’t confess to being a rich Cali Girl, the central meaning of the film is broader; there’s no such thing as the perfect lawyer. What makes the profession a privilege to be a part of are the range of unique characters who bring their own style to bear. 

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One of Laura’s favourite things to think or read about is life at Bletchley Park.

 

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Legally Blonde: ‘The final cross-examination is electric.’.
Last but (I hope) not least is my own novel. In The Trials of Lila Dalton (Pushkin Vertigo: 2024), Lila finds herself in a courtroom with no memory of how she got there. The man in the dock is accused of mass murder, and she’s his barrister, but she can’t remember anything about the case. She can’t remember anything at all. Stranded on an island hundreds of miles from the UK, where they try domestic and foreign criminals for the most serious crimes, the next flight out doesn’t leave for days. And she’s being watched. Someone keeps breaking into her hotel room to leave cryptic notes, threatening her with deadly consequences if her client is not acquitted. Lila must win her case and solve the mystery of her own identity before it’s too late.