The 30-minute timer trick: The productivity hack behind Natasha Lesterâs 12 novels
The 30-minute timer trick: The productivity hack behind Natasha Lesterâs 12 novels
Natasha Lester is not a fan of the âmessy womanâ narrative so popular in contemporary culture. Instead, her books celebrate 20th-century women whoâve done incredible things and promptly been forgotten. And itâs earned the Perth writer a global readership.
N early nine months pregnant with her second child, Natasha Lester wheeled the pram down to the Nedlands post office. In it was her toddler, Ruby, plus some other precious cargo: the manuscript for a novel Lester had spent the previous few years writing, much of it in the snatches of time -during which Ruby was sleeping.
It was February in Perth, aka boiling hot. The queue was long and Ruby was fractious, so Lester unbuckled her, hoping sheâd toddle contentedly around the shop. âI was so hot and so tired and so large, I was not paying attention,â Lester says. âI heard the rustling of paper and looked down to see that sheâd found the manuscript in the bottom of the pram and was throwing pages around.â
Lester panicked. She was there to enter the manuscript in the Hungerford Award, granted biennially to a West Australian author for an unpublished work. âI couldnât even bend down to pick any of the pages up, I was that big,â Lester says. âEveryone in the queue must have seen the look on my face and thought, âWhoa, mad pregnant woman, letâs help out.â So they all started helping me gather up the pages.â In the middle of the chaos stood not quite two-year-old Ruby, âlooking as innocent as all get out. Like, âWhat, me? What did I do?â â
Lester eventually shoved the manuscript into an envelope and posted it off, not at all confident that sheâd got the pages back in order. She then went home and prepared for the birth of her second daughter. Lester was lost in the fog of baby Audrey when an email dropped into her inbox telling her that sheâd been shortlisted for the award. That might sound exciting, but Lester was downbeat on the way to the awards ceremony. She and her husband had moved back to their home town of Perth from Melbourne a few years prior, stockbroker Russell to set up an investment firm with his brothers, Lester throwing in her career as a marketing manager with LâOrĂ©al to study creative writing at Curtin University. Sheâd written the novel as part of a masterâs, and her supervisor had told her that when sheâd won a prize, theyâd called to let her know so she could prepare a speech.
Lester had received no such call. What she had -received over the years, however, was plenty of -unsolicited commentary about how difficult it would be to make a career from writing. Sheâd been long-listed for The Australian/Vogel Literary Award (also for an unpublished manuscript) but not won. Sheâd had poems and short stories featured in a couple of literary journals and received some encouraging notes from lecturers and judges, but nobody had yet wanted to publish her book, which sheâd just rewritten for the 13th time. If she didnât win the Hungerford, she reasoned, sheâd have to concede they were right. This writing thing was too damn hard.
Reader, Natasha Lester won the 2008 Hungerford Award. The $6000 cash booty was great, but more valuable was the publishing contract with Fremantle Press that came with it. Lesterâs winning manuscript would finally become a book.
âNow I can call myself a writer,â she thought.
A dozen books and three nearly-grown children later, Natasha Lester is one of the most successful Australian authors many of us have only vaguely heard of. Her novels, which lift little-known women out of history and fictionalise their stories, have been translated into 21 languages. And while itâs not independently verifiable â the books market is nothing if not opaque â her Australian publisher Rebecca Saunders says the English-language versions alone have sold more than a million copies worldwide.
Her biggest market is the US, where one of her books made the influential Pennieâs Pick rack at Costco in 2018 and the next one spent two weeks on The New York Times bestseller list. But sheâs popular in Europe, too, her novels selling in Bulgaria, Albania, Romania, Italy, Germany, Spain, Hungary and Portugal, to name just some of her Euro territories. Scandinavians are particularly partial to Lester â no one can really explain why, but sheâs sold more than 300,000 copies of her books in Norway, Denmark and Sweden, similar to her sales here despite our market being significantly larger. Any wonder then, that her combined global advances add up to hundreds of thousands of dollars per book.
Back home, NielsenIQ BookScan ranked her our eighth-highest-selling âhistorical mythological fictionâ author last year, putting her in the top 10 in the company of big international names such as Kristin Hannah and Ken Follett, Australian popular-fiction powerhouse Judy Nunn and Tasmanian literary star Robbie Arnott. Her Australian print sales totalled $540,000 in 2025.
Lesterâs books could be broadly classified as popular fiction â you know, the kind sold at airports and Dymocks with the authorâs name in big type on the cover â which helps explain why sheâs not as broadly celebrated as her sales suggest she should be. Commercial fiction writers tend to need to reach Liane Moriarty levels before the cultural firmament takes notice â unless their predilection is crime, in which case, thanks to our love of âoutback noirâ, -authors such as Jane Harper and Chris Hammer enjoy profile and sales.
âPopular fiction authors are writing books a lot of people want to read â they actually prop up the publishing industry,â says Cheryl Akle, whose Better Reading runs reviews, interviews and events for a 400,000-plus reading community. Many readers donât differentiate the way cultural gatekeepers do, Akle says, and are just as likely to pick up a Richard Flanagan, Tim Winton or Anna Funder as a Natasha Lester, Judy Nunn or Jane Harper. âThey love reading, they donât distinguish like that.â
Nor does Lester, 52, who might be writing popular fiction but herself enjoys reading authors such as Maggie OâFarrell, Margaret Atwood, Barbara Kingsolver and A.S. Byatt, together with her childhood favourites, the BrontĂ« sisters and Charles Dickens. That first book she published with Fremantle Press, What Is Left Over, After, was actually in a more literary vein, as was its follow-up. Modest sales, though, were not what sheâd given up a career with LâOrĂ©al for. âThe whole reason I wanted to become a writer was to make people feel the way I did as a kid who was totally swept away, into another time and place, by books,â Lester says. âBut based on the sales figures of my first two books there werenât that many people reading me, so I wasnât achieving that purpose. I wanted to get to more people.â
She started on a novel she thought would have broader appeal, exploring themes around how women are depicted in advertising and the media. But after multiple rewrites it just wasnât working. The themes were clogging up the storyline and she couldnât bear looking at it any more. So she decided to bin it, all 85,000 words of it â no small thing, as any writer will tell you. Worried she was losing her love of the craft, she piled all her favourite books onto her desk chair and decided to re-read them, no matter how long it took, in the hope of being re-inspired. Books such as Atwoodâs The Blind Assassin, Byattâs Possession and Kingsolverâs The Poisonwood Bible. âThe penny dropped,â she says. âI realised that what I most loved reading was historical fiction. If I liked escaping into that kind of world, why wasnât I writing that kind of story?â
Starting afresh, Lester decided to write a novel about a woman living in 1920s Manhattan whoâd battled the medical establishment to become an obstetrician. That book, A Kiss from Mr Fitzgerald, was published in 2016. It initially sold about 5500 copies but the modest numbers didnât matter this time. Natasha Lester had found her voice. And in turn, that voice would find an audience; A Kiss has now sold more than 16,500 print copies in Australia.
âIâm glad it took me a couple of books and that failed manuscript to find my path,â Lester says. âIt meant I could hone my craft and get to understand the publishing industry a bit more.â
Lester has released eight more historical novels in the decade since, many set in France and around World War II, two popular subject areas that were turbocharged during the COVID-19 pandemic. The titles tell the story. The French Photographer is about a World War II photojournalist who sounds a lot like American model turned war photographer Lee Miller, while The Paris Secret involves a woman pilot, designer Christian Dior and his Resistance-fighter sister, Catherine. The Paris Seamstress is about a dressmaker who flees the French capital as the Germans advance, while The Riviera House and The Mademoiselle Alliance feature women who risk everything during World War II, the former to protect precious art from looting Nazis, the latter running a network of intelligence agents across France.
âThere will definitely be Jane Eyre fanatics who email to tell me Iâm a terrible human being who will go to hell.âNatasha Lester
âFrance, fashion and forgotten women in history â the three Fs encapsulate what sheâs stood for,â says Saunders, who discovered Lester when she returned to Australia from London to become head of fiction at Hachette. She took the manuscript for A Kiss from Mr Fitzgerald to a pub around the corner from the office, which she was pleased to find had sparkling wine on tap. She started imbibing, and reading. âI couldnât put it down. I could not believe my luck,â she says. âIt can take months and months to find a book you believe in.â She gave Lester some blunt advice before taking her on: âTo be commercially successful, you need to be able to basically do a book a year. Thatâs a tough call, not a lot of authors can do it. I publish Michael Robotham and heâs a master at it; heâs up to his 20th novel.â
Lester was up to the challenge. Her 10th historical novel, The ChĂąteau on Sunset, will be published in Australia next week, in the US and UK in June, then rolled out to other markets in due course. A loose -retelling of Jane Eyre, it is set in West Hollywoodâs ChĂąteau Marmont, a hotel famous in the 1950s and â60s for the actors, directors, musicians and other celebrities who stayed there, some living for extended periods in the poolside bungalows where directors auditioned starlets for films in ways that would spark #MeToo claims today. âThere will definitely be Jane Eyre fanatics who email to tell me Iâm a terrible human who will go to hell for what Iâve done, and that Charlotte BrontĂ« will be rolling in her grave,â Lester says with a laugh, noting that Jane Eyre has been her favourite book since age 10. âIâm prepared for them.â
Natasha Lester is already seated when I arrive for lunch at her favourite French restaurant, Bistro Felix, just off Martin Place in Sydney. I get the feeling sheâs always punctual, just as I suspect sheâs always well groomed. Sheâs the kind of person the phrase âlooks a million dollarsâ could have been coined for, a petite blonde with a big smile, warm blue eyes and thick honeyed hair that didnât blow-dry itself. Today sheâs wearing silky green pants and a pink strapless top, Tiffany & Co. watch on her wrist and a chunky blue and gold ring on her left hand.
She bought the watch when she made The New York Times bestseller list, not only to recognise a moment that might not come again but also to remind herself, when sheâs having a bad day, that she can write â the NYT said so. âJust because you have one book that sells like this doesnât mean the next one will,â she says. âYou never feel like youâve reached a point where you can relax.â It was a carefully thought-through marker â one of her characters worked at Tiffany & Co. in Manhattan, and sheâd made The New York Times â the Times â bestseller list.
As we order lunch (fish and salad, hold the fries), I ask about her childhood in the Perth suburb of Warwick. It was fairly unremarkable, says Lester, the middle child of an -accountant father, Ken Lafferty, and stay-at-home mother, Michele. She and older sister Kareena were mad about reading, borrowing as much as they could from their weekly trips to the library, making up elaborate hospital stories for their dolls, and writing and illustrating their own little books.
Lester loved French, history and literature, but when it came to what to do after school, there were no obvious career paths involving any of them (hats off for ultimately finding a way to combine all three). On the suggestion of her dad, she enrolled in a business degree at Curtin University, choosing the marketing and public relations stream because at least it would involve some writing.
The most unusual thing to emerge from this very suburban childhood came when the kids were in their late 20s, and Kareena decided to become Keeran. Gender transition is much talked about today but was pretty unheard of in the Lester family circles of the early 2000s. It was hard on everyone, most of all Keeran, says Lester, who wrote movingly about the experience in a short story a few years later. âOne of the things that doesnât get talked about a lot is your own personal grief, because obviously the person going through the transition is facing so many more difficulties,â she tells me. âYou sort of lose a sister. Obviously you gain a brother as well, but you lose someone, too, which is tricky to talk about.â
Her mother, Michele, remembers the pair as close growing up, and says all three of her children were big readers. âNatasha always loved to write, even as a kid she wrote little poems,â Michele says. âI canât say I would have picked her to become a famous author but sheâs always been very driven. If she set her mind to something, it was going to get done.â
Lesterâs first job after university was in an ad agency. It was all very Mad Men â smoking, drinking, bum-pinching. Aggro. So much testosterone-fuelled aggro. âI look back now and go, âOh god, if I only knew then what 20-somethings know today, Iâd have realised it was totally inappropriate.â But I just thought, âOK, this is normal, this is the workplace.â â
She eventually moved to London, where she ran campaigns for saucy romance novels for Harlequin Books. She met husband Russell during a stint back in Perth, after which the couple moved to Melbourne. In 2001 she became a marketing manager for Maybelline, part of the LâOrĂ©al cosmetics empire. Buffy the Vampire Slayer was big, so it was all Sarah Michelle Gellar magazine spreads and handsome launch budgets. âOne time, we got a whole lot of those wrinkly puppies in a studio for an anti-wrinkle cream campaign.â Another time, they hired a house by modernist architect Harry Seidler to launch a glossy new nail polish on its glossy marble benchtops.
âI knew Iâd always wanted to be a writer but I also wanted to find out, did I have the talent to be that?âNatasha Lester
Her close friend since her early 20s, Erin Corner, doesnât remember Lester pining for the writing life. âSheâs not the sort of person to be unhappy or treading water, she makes the best of every situation,â Corner says. Privately, though, Lester did still want to write. And with the hours her job as Maybellineâs âeyes and nailsâ marketer demanded, including midnight finishes when the French were coming to town, she was doing very little of it. âI was not happy with the idea of taking 10 years to write a book while working full-time,â she says. âI was ambitious.â
The move back to Perth for Russellâs work was the impetus she needed to roll the dice. In lieu of getting another marketing job, sheâd enrol in a creative writing course. âI knew Iâd always wanted to be a writer but I also wanted to find out, did I have the talent to be that? And would I enjoy it?â As she went on to discover, the answer to both would be affirmative.
Lester had her three children as her writing career was taking off, which came with challenges. The novel she threw away was written during a difficult time, when Audrey, now 17, was diagnosed with hip dysplasia, a condition in which the hip joint doesnât sit properly in the socket. Lester is cheerful as she describes going to the supermarket with baby Audrey but it sounds like hell. Audrey had to wear a body cast for the first few years of her life, with a piece of dowel braced between her legs to force the hips back into place. The car seat and pram had to be modified, and popping baby in a shopping trolley was not an option given the angle of Audreyâs little legs.
âWith the full body cast, they leave a small hole in the nappy area so the baby can go to the toilet,â Lester explains. âThey tell you to cover the hole with the largest size sanitary napkin you can find, then wrap a nappy around it. You have to keep it all clean to avoid infection. So Iâd take her to Coles every week to buy 10 packs of maternity napkins â for her, not for me.â Sheâd pay for the napkins, wheel them back to the car, stow them in the boot, then return to the supermarket to do the rest of the weekâs shopping, baby Audrey always in tow. The pair spent a lot of time in hospital, when Lester would try to grab moments to write. No wonder the book wasnât singing.
Many years later, to her astonishment, Lester discovered that World War II French intelligence leader Marie-Madeleine Fourcade, who Lesterâs 2025 novel was based on, also suffered hip dysplasia â as does Lester herself. In The Mademoiselle Alliance, she describes the time Fourcade had to fold herself into a mail bag and stay there for 10 hours to be smuggled from France into Britain. Write what you know, they say â and the reader feels Lesterâs keen knowledge of the condition in every excruciating twist of that journey.
It was exhaustion from researching Fourcadeâs life that made Lester turn away from World War II for her upcoming book. A lot of her research for The Mademoiselle Alliance involved reading archives in French, in which she is fluent, including the prison diaries of Fourcadeâs lover, Leon Faye. âI needed a break from heartbreaking war stories,â she says. âPlus, Marie-Madeleine was such an extraordinary woman, I got to the end of her epic story and thought, âI just donât think I can find another woman whose life had that extraordinary scope.â â
The timing was prescient: the market has recently cooled for World War II stories, which her San Diego-based agent Kevan Lyon attributes to a glut of them, and The Mademoiselle Alliance didnât sell as well in the US as some of Lesterâs earlier books. This is the thing with books: if something takes off publishers rush to put out titles just like it, and by the time some come out, readers have moved on. Not that Lester takes any of this into account when sheâs writing. âMy marketing brain works well for me on the business side but doesnât come into it on the story side of things.â Call it intuition then, that The Chateau on Sunset looks to Hollywood not France, and the book Lesterâs currently writing for 2027, working title Girl of the Year, has Andy Warholâs It girls as inspiration.
Lester loves an exclamation mark, using them liberally in her Substack newsletter, Bijoux, in which her marketing skills are on full display with special reader offers, chats about zeitgeist topics like the Wuthering Heights film and insights into her writing life. But she knows literary types use them only sparingly, so when an email from her American publisher arrived in late 2019 with lots of exclamation marks in the subject line, she knew something was up.
The email was to inform her that The Paris Orphan, her fourth book in the historical fiction vein (released as The French Photographer in Australia), had made the NYT bestseller list. âShe said, âThis is so exciting for you, you can cross that one off your bucket list,â â recounts Lester. She replied saying sheâd never imagined any of her books would ever hit The New York Times bestseller list, so that was not on her bucket list â but she would âgo and write it down now so I have the satisfaction of crossing it offâ.
It was not the first email from her publisher with exclamation marks in the subject line. Her previous book, The Paris Seamstress, had been released in the US in August 2018, her first foray into that market. A few uneventful months later sheâd got an email from her publisher, also replete with exclamation marks, informing her that The Paris Seamstress would feature in Pennieâs Pick for December. âI thought, âWell, this is exciting but who is Pennie?â â
Pennie Clark Ianniciello was the influential books buyer for retail giant Costco, and her -imprimatur meant The Paris Seamstress would grace the Pennieâs Pick stand at the front of Costcoâs 500-plus American stores for the crucial Christmas period. Whatâs more, Lester would feature in the -retailerâs magazine, mailed to more than 15 million members a month.
As often happens when lightning strikes, things rolled on from there. Target picked up The Paris Seamstress on the back of its Costco profile; the following year, The Paris Orphan landed its prized NYT slot. Kevan Lyon says these two books have sold more than 500,000 print, audio and e-book copies in the US. âThat lets you know how much of a rocket ship Seamstress was,â she says.
Lester wrote Ianniciello a letter when she retired, âto say thank you and how much of a difference sheâd made in my lifeâ. Itâs a common -refrain from an author keenly aware that without buyers such as Ianniciello, or literary magazines such as Overland, which published her early pieces, or the various lecturers and judges who encouraged her when she was starting out, she might not be here, making a living from the thing she loves doing more than anything else in the world.
If the minutiae of a life says a lot about the person living it, here are some things Iâve learnt about Natasha Lester. Her desk is an oasis of calm, complete with pink water jug and candle, garden vista beyond. She writes in half-hour blocks then steps away from her desk briefly â for a swim at Cottesloe Beach, just down the road from her home, or a quick cup of coffee â before returning for another half-hour writing block, timer set.
She writes the main storyline before delving into research, so as not to waste time down rabbit holes researching extraneous facts, and doesnât plot it all out in advance, preferring to let it unfold organically.
She stays off social media for six months of the year, when deep in the researching and writing process, and gets active during the other six months for promotional purposes.
She travels for research â to Paris, Lyon and Marseilles to retrace Marie-Madeleine Fourcadeâs footsteps for The Mademoiselle Alliance, to Champagne to find a grove of trees she needed to describe in The French Photographer. âThey were bent and gnarled and spooky and had been there for centuries,â says husband Russell. âWhere most people would be sipping champagne in Champagne, there we were, tramping through a forest trying to find these trees.â
Her oldest daughter, Ruby, is her first reader. âI go in with my red pen and tell her whatâs wrong â if sentences are too long, if I feel out of breath as a reader, if something doesnât make sense,â says the 20-year-old, a voracious reader herself who is studying fashion and textiles in Sydney. Ruby accompanied her mother on a trip to Chateau Marmont last year to get a sense of the place, including its all-important layout, for Lesterâs upcoming book. They loved the antique furniture, the personalised letterhead and the subtle enforcement of its no-photography rule. They were intrigued by a guest who dined alone with his book each night, ordering only a bowl of raspberries and a peppermint tea. He must be famous â if only they could work out who he was.
Lester doesnât change the content of her books for different markets, although in The Paris Secret, in a nod to her US readers, she made the pilot American rather than British. âIt didnât change the plot line,â she assures. But when a Russian publisher asked her to delete a reference to the Russian soldiers who raped female prisoners as they liberated Ravensbruck concentration camp, she pushed back. âThey felt their readers would not be happy to read it,â she says. âI said, âOver my dead body will I take that out of the book, itâs the truth.â â She assumes it stayed in but âas I canât read Russian, I canât be sureâ.
These days, she has a no-publication clause for two countries: Russia and Israel. Such are the issues authors with a global readership must think about in 2026. Paradoxically, sheâs not published in France. âItâs the hardest market to crack and I havenât managed it yet,â she says, âbut I do hear from a lot of French readers, who just go buy the English version.â
Lester enjoys engaging with readers. When some Americans lamented her use of swear words, she was puzzled: there are no f---s in her books. âThen I realised they were talking about the word âdamnâ.â A former pilot emailed her about The Paris Secret, which features a 1940s female aviator and for which sheâd meticulously researched the specs of a Spitfire. âI thought, âUh oh, this is where I find out what Iâve got wrong,â â she says. âHe went on to say, âOh my gosh, Iâve just read The Paris Secret, it took me right back to my flying days.â â
As to why her books focus on 20th-century women doing remarkable things, Lester says it just kind of happened; she didnât set out to make it her thing. That said, sheâs tired of the âmessy womanâ narrative prevalent in so much contemporary fiction, so perhaps there was some subliminal force willing her to present an alternative. âThere are so many strong, capable women in the world â women such as Marie-Madeleine, who can run a resistance network of 3000 men and do it admirably,â Lester says. âWe should see women like that in novels, in newspapers. Why are we so caught up in people making a mess of their lives? I donât want to feel powerless. I donât want my daughters to feel powerless. And I donât want my readers to feel powerless.â
Speaking of power, I ask Lester about the tangible flow-ons from her success. She jokes that the familyâs beach house at Busselton could be called âthe house that Alix builtâ because her advance for her 2022 release, The Three Lives of Alix St Pierre, contributed substantially to it (the book went on to be judged best historical novel at the 2023 Romantic Novel of the Year awards). It means she gets to plan things like taking each of her kids on a mother-child trip, to a place of their choice, when they finish year 12.
âI took Ruby to Venice, Florence, Seville and Barcelona. In Venice, we stayed right on a canal and could step out the front door and into a gondola. Audrey and I chased the Northern Lights right up into far north Norway, staying in a specially designed Northern Lights cabin. At the end of next year, Iâll take Darcy [who is 16] wherever he wants to go, too. My writing career helps makes those things possible.â
She knows sheâs living the writerâs dream â knows too, that itâs been hard won. âIâll never stop being grateful for those things because it took many years to reach this point, years of tiny advances and books selling just a few thousand copies, years of continuing to write simply because I loved it and keeping faith that one day it might also be financially worth it. And now it is.â
Get the best of Good Weekend delivered to your inbox every Saturday morning. Sign up for our newsletter.
Read more profiles from Good Weekend:
From corporate high-flyer to Australiaâs culinary queen
âIâm a lots-of-feelings personâ: Inside the world of ABC chair Kim Williams
The man who wants athletes to push their bodies to the limit
How it works
Once you click Generate, Ollama reads this article and crafts 5 comprehension questions. Your answers are graded against the article content â general knowledge won't be enough. Score 70+ to count toward your certificate.
Questions are cached â you'll always get the same 5 for this article.