Elizabeth Wins International Publishing Award

Elizabeth Wins International Publishing Award

Elizabeth Ducie has been honoured with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the 9th Annual Women in Publishing Summit. The award was presented at the closing session on Wednesday 11th March.

Elizabeth spent more than thirty years as an international manufacturing consultant and technical writer before turning to creative fiction in 2006—and what followed is a masterclass in what indie publishing, done with intention, can look like. Under her own imprint, Chudleigh Phoenix Publications, she has published more than twenty titles including the Jones Sisters international thriller series, the Coombesford Chronicles cozy mystery series, and six collections of short stories. Her debut novel, Gorgito’s Ice Rink, was runner-up in Writing Magazine‘s Self-Published Book of the Year Awards in 2015.

But the achievement that defines Elizabeth’s legacy is arguably her Business of Writing series—a practical, no-nonsense toolkit that gives indie authors the business systems they need to actually sustain a creative career. It is the work of someone who believes that writers deserve to understand their own industry, and who has spent decades making sure they can.

As well as being a member of Teignmouth Writers, Elizabeth is a founder member of Chudleigh Writers’ Circle, a former Director of Exeter Literary Festival, and a member of the Crime Writers Association. She has taught and lectured at Swanwick Writers’ Summer School and writing communities across the UK. She has been a member of the Women in Publishing community since 2020.

The Lifetime Achievement Award honours a woman whose long-term commitment to publishing has shaped and elevated the industry. Elizabeth Ducie has done that—quietly, consistently, and with the rigor of a scientist who never forgot she had stories to tell.

“I was delighted, but completely surprised, to hear I was in the running for the award,” Elizabeth said. “I never suspected I would even be nominated. And to hear my name announced was incredible. The Women in Publishing Awards exist to shine a light on the women doing the work—the publishers, editors, authors, and advocates who lift others as they rise. I feel honoured and humbled to have been included in this group and recognised in this way.”

The Women in Publishing Summit is a global virtual event and year-round community dedicated to helping authors and publishing professionals build visibility, revenue, and lasting impact. Founded by Alexa Bigwarfe, WIP is home to thousands of women across the publishing ecosystem—united by the belief that they are Better Together.

For more information about Elizabeth Ducie, visit her profile page.

Visit the Awards page for more information and to view past recipients.

Writing in Two Different Genres – by Elizabeth Ducie

Writing in Two Different Genres – by Elizabeth Ducie

When I wrote my debut novel between 2006 and 2014 (yes, it really did take me 8 years) no-one told me I should write to genre. Consequently, Gorgito’s Ice Rink ended up as a quest novel with elements of history, romance and mystery. A bookseller’s nightmare. But I published it myself and it was Runner-Up in the Self-Published Book of the Year awards, so I must have done something right.

However, when I began the next book, I knew a bit more and placed myself firmly in the thriller category. I modelled that book on the Women’s Murder Club series by James Patterson. If you’re going to be influenced, then why not by the best? Even more so when I realised that Counterfeit! was not a standalone story, but part of a trilogy, the Jones Sisters thrillers.

By the time I’d published Deception! and Corruption!, it was 2018 and I’d been sharing headspace with the Jones sisters for more than six years. I needed a break, so spent a year writing non-fiction, hoping they would get bored and go away in the meantime.

But that didn’t happen. Charlie in particular refused to leave. So I retired her and her family to a pub in Devon and allowed her to set up an amateur sleuthing group. My Coombesford cosy crime series was the result.

In June 2023, I had finished the pre-launch activities for cosy #3 and sat down by the pool in Greece (a tough life but someone has to do it) to plot out cosy #4, which I planned to write during NaNoWriMo in November and which would come out for the Christmas 2024 market.

But six chapters in, I realised I wasn’t plotting a cosy at all. I was working on the fourth part of my thriller trilogy. So I was now in the position of working on two series at once, both crime, but in very different sub-genres. And with a cross-over of characters between the two.

It’s been a busy fifteen months since then. Most of the time, I was only working on one book at a time and was able to remember whether I should write about chocolate chip cookies and the family’s adopted dog, Bertie; or put Charlie in yet another critical situation featuring a car chase, an explosion, or both.

In the end, I think I got it right. A few times I realised I was straying into the wrong territory and had to delete and rewrite. But if any reader spots a stray paragraph where the tone doesn’t quite sound right, then I hope they’ll understand why it happened.

Elizabeth Ducie’s explosive new book Retribution! is available now. To order a copy, click here.