Amie Jordan is one of six authors on the shortlist for the 2025 Branford Boase Award. The Branford Boase Award is shared with the book’s editor and Amie describes how she and her editor Rachel Leyshon of Chicken House worked together on All The Hidden Monsters and some of the particular challenges they overcame.

By Amie Jordan
I’m often asked how I wrote on All The Hidden Monsters and the honest truth is that it was never meant to be a real book when I started it. It actually just started out as a bit of writing practice. It was a different tense, different genre, different style to the other Big Project I’d been focused on for so long. But I’d just lost all sense of it, of myself, and knew I needed to take a step back. I only ever intended to step away for a while, work on something so totally different that when I went back, I’d have a fresh mind and fresh eyes to refocus myself. And then… I just never left Downside.
I met my characters Sage, Oren and P. And the rest, as they say, was history.
But the rest, as I say, would not have been possible without Rachel Leyshon, my editor at Chicken House.

See, my biggest problem is that I can’t stop talking. I consider it quite a fun fact (my mother less so) that every school report I ever received from nursery to college said ‘Amie talks too much and distracts others’ – my recent diagnosis of ADHD explains a lot – and this very clearly translates into my writing. My ability to stick to a wordcount in a first draft is truly laughable.
Then if we add my OCD into the mix (I know, almost a whole neurodivergent set!) know that I’m constantly compelled to over explain in obsessive and totally unnecessary detail. And if this is a blogpost about honesty I might as well also note that I don’t plot or write in numerical chapter order either. That’s because my OCD thrives off lists, and plotting chapters out is simply tantamount to writing down a big ol’ list, right? And once a list is written it’s set in stone.
The OCD really struggles to change it up. Naturally, this can make the editing process later on pretty tricky to deal with! So anyway, I just find that if I’m not writing in a chapter linear/list order, it somehow all feels easier to move around later. If anyone is interested to know, the first scene I wrote in ATHM eventually settled in as part of chapter thirty-six.
Does any of that writing process make sense?
No, it doesn’t.
But the point I’m trying to make is that despite all that, despite the fact I know it’s not ideal but can’t help it anyway, Rachel didn’t instantly balk. Between all the initial chaos she was still able to see the vision, sift through and highlight what worked, what was unnecessary over complication, and work to understand exactly what I was trying to achieve, guiding me there in the parts I wasn’t quite pulling it off.
I’m totally aware that some days it would’ve been so much easier to just tell me what to do, but she never did. She has the patience of a saint and is such an inspiration and an encouragement to someone like me specifically, knowing the traits I’ve always let overwhelm and hold me back have not mattered. Proof that people like me can make it with the right editor at the helm.
So my advice to any aspiring writers, but especially to those that see themselves reflected in me, would be this: it’s actually fine not to be perfect right away. It’s fine to be flawed. And for God’s sake, don’t torture yourself over it. If working with Rachel has taught me anything, it’s that if you truly have that spark of magic to begin with then it’s always going to be in there somewhere, and the right people will be able to see it. The very best of them will make you thrive.
I wasted so many years not having the self-belief or the confidence in my own work, knowing that I was too chaotic to ever be the shiny, impossibly perfect writer I thought I had to be from the start if I ever wanted to succeed in this childhood dream of being an author. I wish I’d been braver sooner.
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All the Hidden Monsters is out now and published by Chicken House.
Amie Jordan

Amie Jordan is from Salford and studied Film and Media at Manchester Metropolitan University. When she isn’t writing she spends her time knitting, having provided bespoke pieces for the costume departments of film, TV and theatre. All the Lost Souls, the sequel to All the Hidden Monsters, is out now!
The Branford Boase Award
Set up in memory of author Henrietta Branford and her editor Wendy Boase, the Branford Boase Award is the only award to recognise the editor as well as the author. Find out more about this year’s shortlisted books on the website. The winner will be announced on Wednesday 9 July.
















