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A Saturday Chat at Sally Lunn’s with author Pauline Barclay

Sally Lunns Tea HousePauline 3Well Pauline, thank you for making it to Sally Lunn’s for a special interview and I’m amazed that I’ve been able to lure you away from all that sunshine in Lanzarote  Many people may not know that you and I go back a long way;we met on line in 2009 when our debut novels – Magnolia House and When Tomorrow Comes were published at the same time.

What fascinates me is that all your books have been set in different times and in their own right are very different stories, is this deliberate or just as the inspiration comes?

It is a little of both. I want my books to be different. The idea is that once you’ve read one of my books you know the next one will not be the same. The characters, setting and time will be very different.

Having asked the question above, I can see there is a common thread for all of them though.  What attracts you to a story when you decide to write it?

Now I am intrigued because I don’t set out to create a common thread or any relationship with any of my books. You must divulge when you have time! Sorry, I digress! What attracts me to a story? Gosh a difficult one, lots of different things, even smells can trigger of a memory that spills over into an outline of a story. Also I pick up ideas from listening to people, sometimes it is just a phrase, others a full story. From this I begin to formulate an idea for a story.

The working title was The Summer of Sixty Five.  What was the reason behind the new title?StormClouds-small-web-use

There were several working titles for this book. The summer of sixty-five, at the time, seemed appropriate, but I was never totally comfortable with it. In the end it did not convey what I feel the book is about. I spent an inordinate amount of time trying to come up with a title that reflected more about what was happening to all the characters in the book. Storm Clouds Gathering just came into my head one day and I knew that it was perfect.

Have you a new project?  If so is it under wraps or are we allowed to know a little bit about it?

Yes there is a new project and I have written around 24,000 but keep deleting  and changing things around! The working title is Maddisons (we two dd’s!!) Though I am confident this will not be the published title. Maddisons is set in the present time and is a story about the price of trust. I’m sorry, but at this stage, I don’t want to say any more, though I can say, love does come into the story, but the trust I am talking about is more about action and the dire consequences of what happens when you give your trust to someone you believe loves you.

Which is your favourite book out of the four you have written?

Mmmm! This is a question I am asked regularly and it is a tough one. I loved writing Satchfield Hall and my characters from Storm Clouds Gathering are still very close to me. But having said this, Mrs Leonard from Magnolia House stole my heart with her heartrending story and Doreen from Sometimes It Happens… made me laugh. Honestly, Joanna, I don’t know!

And lastly to change the subject completely, if you could invite four guests for dinner who would they be and why?

Paul O’Grady, because he’s fascinating.

Jamie Oliver as he has inspired so many young people to cook

Bruce Forsythe as he has brought dancing back into fashion for all ages

Colin Dexter for entertaining us with his brilliant Inspector Morse, both on-screen and in books.

Thank you Joanna for having me at your wonderful Sally Lunn’s beautiful tea rooms, the food here is fantastic, and letting me rambling on about my writing and my latest love, Storm Clouds Gathering.Pauline-desktop-2013 (1)

If you would like to know more about Pauline and her books her social network links are below:

Sometimes It  Happens… B.R.A.G. Medallion Honouree
On Sunday I shall be talking with Lizzie Lamb, author of Tall Dark and Kilted.
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Birthday Weekend

DSCF1638 (480x640)We left Bath under grey skies on Friday morning 2nd May.  Was hoping it might clear but obviously not meant to be.  Had lunch at Bampton then drove north towards Exmoor and dropped down along the East Lyn river valley.  This is Doone country.  Have not read the book for absolutely ages so thought I might now download on Kindle just to reacquaint myself with the story of star-crossed lovers John Ridd and Lorna Doone.   Sadly this story appears to have been overlooked in any recent TV adaptations of historical novels and to my mind is well worth bringing to the small screen.  As is Poldark – absolutely loved the series and it would be great to see a new fresh version.

Driving down we had my iPod playing on this occasion.  Usually in-car music is via my husband’s iPod, very much an acquired taste I’m afraid.  According to him I’m the big production girl and I guess it’s true – I love guitar driven rock in particular – melody, power and lyrics are essential both for the iPod and for working on the PC when I’m writing.  The three and a half hour drive was therefore wonderful, everything I love with not one Yes or Robert Plant track! I guess it could have been worse – Status Quo or Robbie Williams (apologies to SQ and RB fans reading this!)

Lynmouth, as always, was totally unchanged as was the Heatherville – Richard and Kay were there on our arrival with their usual warm welcome plus tea and home-make cake.  As we were driving along the river valley I thought ‘This is just like coming home’.  It’s our third stay and they are such fabulous people, more friends now than B & B proprietors.  They have worked incredibly hard since they took The Heatherville over in 2009 and this year it has been given AA 5 star rating for accommodation, breakfast and evening meal (which Kay will cook to order).DSCF1627 (640x480)

Once we were fed, watered and unpacked we walked down into the village and yes, it is a village.  Apparently out of season there are only 67 souls on the electoral roll here.  And such a different life to ours in Bath where we have every kind of shop imaginable.  Outside food shopping these residents have to travel to Taunton 40 miles away for anything esle they want.  The pace of life is slower here too and people are very friendly although like Bath the place is overrun daily with tourists in the holiday season.  I have to say once we reached the harbour it was cold; very cold.  We had dinner in the Bath Hotel that evening, a really weird experience in a large square room with absolutely no atmosphere or background music and only one other party of eight there.  It was a bit like attending a wake!  The food was good though, lots of it and inexpensive.

Lynton and Lymouth - Mike's birthday July 10 042 (640x480)On Saturday morning we caught the funicular railway up the cliff to Lynton, a place which I think could be described as half way between town and village.  DSCF1561 (640x480)After a browse we had coffee in a small restaurant.  Their menu board proclaimed it did ‘Steak and Owl Pie’ – we did point this out to the waitress but she didn’t think there was anything particularly wrong so perhaps there were indeed owls in the pie!  Or maybe it was a wind up the tourist moment who knows?  After this we headed out of Lynton to the Valley of the Rocks which is quite spectacular. The wind was so strong that if there had been rain and we’d had umbrellas we would have definitely had a Mary Poppins moment and been blown away.  Once we reached our destination we had lunch and a large mug of hot chocolate to warm us (yes it was that cold!)  Afterwards we took the coastal path back to Lynton which meant facing a gale all the way and almost being blown back one step for every two we took.  However, despite this discomfort the gorse and the whole cliff side looked quite spectacular and not one goat in sight, although a lot of goat poo on the path.  And I must again emphasise that yes we had blue sky but no it was absolutely freezing!DSCF1554 (640x480)DSCF1550 (640x480)DSCF1553 (480x640)

DSCF1551 (640x480)Saturday afternoon the remaining members of the weekend party joined us and in the evening we ate out at The Bistro, a really good restaurant which specialises in locally caught fish.  After the meal which included several bottles of wine it was back to The Heatherville’s bar to finish off the evening, courtesy of my husband, and then eventually to bed, most of us rather worse for wear!

Sunday dawned with blue sky and cloud and hooray, no hangover!  The wind had dropped a little, although walking down to the harbour that morning it still had that cold edge.  We then headed up the East Lyn river to Watersmeet for a coffee and a pit stop before making our way slowly back again to Lynmouth and a sandwich lunch.

DSCF1608 (640x480)DSCF1600 (640x480)For the little afternoon that was left I sat outside the B & B and read my Kindle.  I had purposely tried to avoid my own writing that weekend.  It was all about celebration and having a good time but, of course, writers never switch off and – this is true  mad woman that I am– the back page blurb for my latest book came to me at 5pm on Sunday morning.  Thank goodness I had a pad and pen with me.  I would never have held it in my head until I got home – it HAD to be written down otherwise I would have lost it.  I can tell you this is the one part of writing a book I don’t enjoy at all and I had been agonising over exactly what should go on the back page for ages.  Whatever I scribbled down eventually ended up with a line through it.  Too vague, too detailed, whatever I wrote, it would not come right.  But as usual it’s all a case of keeping calm and waiting for that inspirational moment.  I guess after four books I should have got used to this by now.  You just can’t hurry it; it comes when it comes and that’s it.

Sunday evening saw us all at The Rock Hotel for another excellent meal and then back to Richard and Kay’s to finish off the evening in their bar.

And then it was Monday morning and time to go home.  How can a weekend go so quickly?  I think we were all sad to leave.   We made home in three hours, crossing the moors again and coming up through Taunton and Glastonbury.  Four of the group were going to stop off and climb the Tor.   For me whenever I go to Glastonbury there is a definite atmosphere.  It might be banned substances on the wind of course, but joking aside, Glastonbury for me is very special, full of myth and magic.  I would have loved to have been able to stand on the Tor on 1st May to see the sunrise when the druids were up there celebrating Beltane.  Amazing place!

So now we’re back and it’s work tomorrow.  In the blink of an eye the weekend has gone, leaving lots of photos and good memories and of course, that excess weight!  I’m back on the diet now as we look forward to our next holiday away in South Devon at the end of June, – somewhere else I absolutely love.  Dartmouth, Kingsbridge, Totnes and Salcombe – all fabulous places.  I had lost five pounds before the North Devon trip with another six to go to get me down to the weight I really wanted to be.  Luckily all the walking this weekend plus keeping to fish and avoiding the pudding menu meant I didn’t put on too much.  However, we’ve been out to lunch today and with two large glasses of wine (alcohol is definitely the villain of the piece) I’ve not exactly made a good start.  Never mind I’m not going to beat myself up over it, I’ll be back to the Ryvita’s tomorrow with a vengeance.

If anyone reading this blog plans a holiday on the North Devon coast then Richard and Kay’s Five Star Heatherville is a must – it’s absolutely brilliant and you must go.  You will be treated like royalty!  The house is set high up above the village so the access road is a bit of a north face of the Eiger moment in the car.  We had to reverse the last stretch of road this time to get into the car park and the clutch did not like it one little bit!  And as for walking, well remember on your outward journey the village is downhill all the way and coming back?  Your calves may protest but you’ll be doing your cardio-vascular system a service – remember there’s no gain without pain.DSCF1634 (480x640)DSCF1534 (640x480)

Posted in Uncategorized, Writing

Tea and Talk at Sally Lunn’s with Serena Fairfax

Sally Lunns Tea Houseserena_fairfaxWelcome Serena to Tea and Talk at Sally Lunns, it’s lovely to see you here in Bath today.

This is a treat in more ways than one. A scrumptious tea in Georgian Bath, following where Jane Austen did not fear to tread.  The last time I visited this architectural gem was ages ago when I came with a boyfriend who had a job interview scheduled. I wandered around sight seeing whilst he underwent a gruelling afternoon being asked a lot of trick questions. He didn’t get the job – the feedback being unsuitable as lacking in entrepreneurial ambition although he eventually ended up employing himself with outstanding success!160bulbul

Now that we are settled and waiting for our food to arrive could tell me a little about yourself? 

I spent my childhood in India. My father was an international businessman (I kind of persuaded myself that was his cover story and that he was really a secret agent!)  so wherever he was posted –  we followed. Then I was sent to boarding school in England – a really fun place with inspiring staff- midnight feasts in the dorm etc – and thence to University where I read law. Joined a large London firm and am still in the day job!  wilful_fate_160

When did you start writing and what was it that made you decide to be an author?

There were the usual juvenile compositions  but I started writing category romances in the early 1990s when I heard Mills & Boon were looking for new authors ( I’ve not been able to crack that nut!) Robert Hale published my first two and they went into large print. Then nothing for ages, as I was busy earning a living. When I’d laboured sufficiently in the vineyard, I became eligible for a Sabbatical so grabbed it and not being someone who does things by halves, traded bricks and mortar for a houseboat, dusted off a mothballed typescript from the bottom drawer that eventually morphed into WHERE THE BULBUL SINGS which I self-published as an e-book and hard copy.

in_the_pink_160 (1)And what was your route to publishing?

Well, like true love it didn’t run smooth! More downs than ups but always exciting and challenging. Being an indie – author is like setting off on a journey without a compass or road map. There are unknown perils and pitfalls but ultimately there’s the real pleasure of unchartered waters and a safe haven.

You have written five books, all different.  Was that a conscious choice or did the inspiration for each just strike and make you think ‘yes, this is what I’ll write next?’

Six at the last count. Four – STRANGE INHERITANCE; PAINT ME A DREAM; GOLDEN GROVE and WILFUL FATE are unashamedly 50,000 word romances. WHERE THE BULBUL SINGS is a sprawling saga of 150,000 words that cried out to be told and IN THE PINK   (40,000 words ) is  an experiment and quite different from the others.  I can’t say it was a conscious choice  as it depends on what mood I’m  in when type that first sentence. It’s capable of luring one down an entirely different path.golden_grove_160

What is your advice for would-be writers?

I wouldn’t presume to give advice, as I’m not a household name.  All I can say is enjoy what you’re doing, keep b—-g on and drink lots of red wine.

If you could change one thing in your life, what would that be?

I’d like to experience a process that would render me invisible. That would be amazing because you’d be able to everything people normally only say about you behind your back and don’t dare to say to your face! Also I could happily gatecrash  celeb dos  and no one would be the wiser.

paint_me_a_dream_160And lastly, who would you most like to meet and why?

That’s a difficult one. If I’m allowed to time travel I’d choose William Harvey (he of the circulation of the blood) a brilliant, short, rather irascible man whose innovative theory was truly revolutionary and impacted hugely on modern biology and anatomy. He became known as the person who arrived to a great proficiency in Cat and Dog cutting.

Many thanks Serena for coming along today and giving such a great interview, it was lovely to meet you.

strange_inheritance_180

You can learn more about Serena and her novels by clicking on the social network links below.

Website      http://www.serenafairfax.com/
Blog         http://www.serenafairfax.com/serena_fairfax_author_blog/
Email:       info@serenafairfax.com
Linkedin     http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/serena-fairfax/4a/852/a67
Twitter      http://klout.com/user/Sefairfax?n=tw&v=connect_twitter
Facebook     http://www.facebook.com/serenafairfax

Posted in Uncategorized, Writing

Tea and Talk at Sally Lunn’s with ‘Torn’ Writer Gilli Allan

Sally Lunns Tea House319047_10200185805234291_856254877_n - Copy (2)

Welcome Gilli, lovely to have you here at Sally Lunns

Hello, Jo. Thank you for asking me out to tea.  I love Bath. It’s only 45 minutes down the road from me, so whenever I visit I always wonder why I don’t do it more often.

My first question as always is to ask a little bit about you. 

I’m married, with one son.  After art college I did a variety of jobs.  I was a shop assistant in several West End department stores, selling wigs, shoes, children’s fashions and accessories. I have also been a beauty consultant and a bar-maid, and once did a job which involved spotting American tourists in London and persuading them to go on a coach tour, that culminated in a free lunch at the Hilton. There they had to endure a high pressure pitch selling real-estate in Florida. I then found my dream job as an illustrator, in advertising.  More recently I have been a school governor, a contributor to local newspapers, and a driving force behind the establishment of a community shop in my village.  I still regularly attend a life-class.

Gloucestershire seems to be a popular choice for novelists.  How long have you lived there and what attracted you to the county?

Gloucestershire is indeed a popular location for novelists. (We are also awash with ‘celebrities’, as well as various members of the royal family. Not that I do any hob-nobbing, you understand!) I live in a village near Stroud, which is situated in the Cotswold Hills, and to name a few writerly names, Jilly Cooper, Mo Hayder and Katie Fforde all live within a few miles of me.

But I didn’t choose to live here.  My husband and I both originate from the South East of England. In 1988, when an out-of-the-blue job offer came for my husband, we’d neither of us ever set foot in the county, but it was too good an opportunity to turn down and all these years later we don’t regret the move.  We live near the head of a beautiful valley, and we back onto fields where cattle are grazed, and where we often see deer and rabbits. Buzzards glide overhead and our garden is regularly visited by a local pheasant, whom we call Jason (don’t ask), and one morning this week we watched a fox jump over our back wall and nose about for a few minutes.

When did the writing bug first bite?

There are two answers to this question – depending on whether you mean writing as a hobby or writing with the serious intention of being published.

I was ten, or thereabouts, when my fifteen year old sister began to write a Regency Romance.  The notion that it was possible to write the story you wanted to read had never before occurred to me, but it truly was a light-bulb moment.  My sister actually finished her novel, but my imagination and energy failed after only three or four illustrated pages of a small format notebook. But the writing seed had been planted and I continued with the hobby through my teenage.

But I never took seriously the idea of writing as a profession. After all, writers were clever, educated people.  I was neither.  I wasn’t a star pupil at school. I wasn’t even particularly outstanding in English.  I left at 16 to go to Art College.  In my early adult life I stopped writing altogether.  My career was in advertising, where I worked as an illustrator.  It was only after having my son, when I wanted to find something I could do at home to earn money, that the idea of writing, this time with the serious intent of getting published, resurfaced.

And what was the very first novel you wrote?

Do you mean my very first novel ? The one I started when I was a child, or the one written over twenty years later?

If it ever had a title, I don’t remember it, but my first ‘book’ was set in the olden days (the period was unspecific, but it wasn’t Regency. I recall drawing my female characters in full-skirted frocks, which I preferred to the high-waisted style.)  The plot revolved around the visit to a manned lighthouse by a party of ladies.  They were trapped there by bad weather.  Attempting to secure their  boat during the storm, my young hero fell on the rocks. Confined to a chaise longue by his not very serious injuries, he was nursed by my young heroine. At this point my imagination failed. I knew my main protagonists would need to fall in love, and crucially that kissing would be involved, but I couldn’t be bothered to work out how to get them from A to B.LIFE CLASS

The novel I began, when my son was toddler, is called Just Before Dawn.  My original plan – to write a book suitable for Mills & Boon (the Harlequin had yet to be added) – was immediately subverted when I began to work out my plot. My heroine is a young woman whose very first love affair ends in pregnancy.  The story opens when she is in hospital and going through a miscarriage. The romance is between her and the Obs & Gynae consultant!  When I first had the idea it made me laugh and I dared myself to write it, thinking, “If I can pull this off, I can do anything”. Just Before Dawn was the first novel I ever finished, and it was accepted by a publisher (unsurprisingly it wasn’t Mills & Boon) within 4 months of completion.

A lot of writers seem to stay with a theme when they write – romance, saga, crime etc.  Yours are quite individual novels dealing with different issues.  Did you deliberately want to avoid writing a certain genre?  If not, what inspired your books?

I don’t intentionally avoid a genre, it’s simply that the stories I am drawn to write don’t easily fit into a pre-existing box.  I often say that I’ve invented my own genre.

First and foremost, I’m an unapologetic member of the Romantic Novelists Association, and I would defend to the death the fact that all my books are love stories.  But I have never been comfortable with the word ‘romance’. With or without ‘category’ preceding it, it has come to mean a very specific style of fiction.  I am not entirely averse to reading about alpha heroes. I have nothing against the Cinderella tale, where the beautiful, but downtrodden, heroine transcends her situation and meets and marries her handsome rich and highly successful prince, but I’ve no interest in writing this kind of story.  I have always worried that attaching the label ‘romance’ to my books, might lead the potential reader to expect something different from the kind of story she’ll get, if she buys a book of mine.

You ask what inspires me.  Inspiration is a strange beast, there is never a single idea which inspires a whole book. It is always an amalgam of incidents, memories and reflections which prompt a story and which, so far, thankfully, continue to pop-up, even when in the midst of writing or revising.  But as for the inspiration for my style of fiction….?

Maybe I have to go back to my growing-up, to unearth my specific preoccupations. I’ve already said that my sister’s role was pivotal, but after my first foray into historical fiction writing, my instincts and interests drew me to a contemporary world.  As I grew older I began to read my sister’s magazines (mainly Honey), which she stored under her bed.  I would skim the fashion tips and articles, but avidly devour the fiction. I still remember one serial.

When I say remember, I actually recall very little about it – not the title, the plot, or who it was by – but what has always stayed with me is the atmosphere and my profound response to it.  It touched my pubescent emotions and I now wonder if it set the course for my own writing life. The hero was angry, emotionally tortured, self-destructive and hiding some traumatic event from his past. The heroine’s role in the story, I now realise, was to redeem him. Unfortunately, the magazine containing the final episode of this heart-wringing tale was missing. From then on, the many novels I started, throughout my teenage years, were set in a word I had zero first-hand knowledge of. It was a dark, seedy world of delinquency and rebellion. The heroes were always damaged young men, who had survived war, accident or heartbreak.  To do a bit of amateur self-psychoanalysis, perhaps my motivation in writing the kind of stories I then wrote was in fact a subconscious attempt to satisfactorily complete that serial in the magazines I’d dragged from under my sister’s bed.

My writing has moved on a bit from those days, but I never feel impelled to write about beautiful, privileged people living glamorous lives. I want my characters to be flawed, to live in a recognisable world and to have real-life dilemmas.  Please forgive me for quoting from this lovely review I once had from Sandy Nachlinger, in which she sums up what I’m trying to achieve.

“I enjoyed both TORN and LIFE CLASS, and would rank them among the best books I’ve read in years. The characters are real, their situations are believable, and their stories are messy — just like life! There’s no perfect hair or bodies-to-die-for in these books! I highly recommend them both.”

If you were offered a book deal to write a certain style of books, what would you choose?

In many ways, though I would dearly love to be super-successful and to earn loads of money, this is a nightmare scenario for me.  I assume you don’t mean that I might be offered loads of money to carry on doing what I’m doing, although I would even find this scary. I have never had to write to order.  But to be offered a big wad of spondulicks to write something else….? Oh, goodness!

I’ve sometimes thought about writing erotica, and I don’t think I’m too bad at the occasional sex scene, but for me they need to be significant to the plot. To have to write sex scene after sex scene, every few pages….?  Phew! I don’t think I could sustain it and would get terribly bored.  I enjoy crime thrillers and am quite happy to read quite gruesome stuff, but I don’t think I’ve the right kind of brain to first, come up with the clever plotting, or second find the enthusiasm to do the research necessary on police procedures, on injuries and dead bodies.  So, although I failed before, I might have a go at the category romance again. I know they’re difficult to get right, but at least they’re fairly short.

Have you a current project underway?

Fair copy - Copy - Copy - Copy - Copy - CopyI am currently revising and editing a book which will be published later in the summer (I hope). It is called Fly or Fall, and is about a woman, Eleanor (known as Nell), who dislikes change and has always been risk-averse.  She married young when she became pregnant with twins.  Life changes and circumstance, compounded by her husband’s impassioned advocacy, conspire to force a move away from London, away from her friends and her safety net, to a totally new environment.  Nell finds herself among women who have a totally different view of life to her own. She finds them materialistic and superficial. The fact they are married seems no bar to having adventures and revelling in the fact.  The house which Nell and her husband, Trevor, have moved to needs a lot of refurbishment. One of the men working for the building firm they engage to do the work, over a two-year period, is infamous as a local Lothario.  So why doesn’t he make a pass at her?

The book begins in 2006, like this:

Fly or Fall

The cartoon rabbit ran straight off the edge of the cliff. He hung, apparently oblivious to his predicament, feet pedalling the empty air. There was a snigger, halfway between laughter and derision, from our twelve-year-old twins.

Perhaps belief is everything, I thought. If you believe you’re still on the same level, that life hasn’t changed, you won’t see the void which has opened beneath your feet. And if you don’t see it, you don’t fall. Inevitably the rabbit did stop running, did look down. I felt with him the nightmare lurch of panic, the sudden plunge downwards as he dropped out of frame. The result was explosive. As the dust cleared a precisely incised, rabbit shaped crater was revealed at the foot of the cliff.

Throughout the drama, the ongoing ‘improvements’ to Nell’s new house can be viewed as a metaphor. Against the low-key backdrop of the financial crisis, which culminated in 2008, the story follows the dismantling of all of Nell’s certainties, her preconceptions and her moral code. Unwelcome truths about her friends, her children, her husband and herself, are gradually revealed.  Ultimately Fly or Fall is a love story. And by the end, where I bring the book bang up to date, Nell has rebuilt herself as a different person, a braver person, and she has embarked on a totally transformed life.

What is your favourite holiday destination?

I am slightly ashamed to admit this, but I am a real baby when it comes to holidays. I may not need the bucket and spade any more, but I love the sand, the sun and the sea.  My husband prefers city breaks, history, museums and art galleries.  I am an intelligent woman.  I can do museums and art galleries.  I am particularly fascinated by archaeological remains and can wander around old temples, forums and excavated dwellings with the best, but…..

What I really want from a holiday is a destination that doesn’t take too long to get to, it’s beautiful and there’s peace and quiet, sun, sea, and walks, as well as plenty of little restaurants and bars in which to eat local food and drink beer and wine. In other words TOTAL guilt-free relaxation and the opportunity to read and read and read. In fact, in a few weeks time I am going on such a holiday, to the Greek island of Fourni.  I’ll let you know if it ticks all the boxes

And lastly, if you could invite four guests to dinner, who would they be and why would you invite them?

This is a tricky question.   I could invite famous wits and raconteurs –  Stephen Fry springs to mind – but I know they’d make me feel stupid, tongue-tied and inadequate. It’s why I write. I know I’m fairly intelligent, but I’m not quick-witted, and it takes me time to order my thoughts and to find the perfect words to express myself.

So maybe I could invite attractive actors and celebrities.  Richard Armitage,  Vigo Mortensen in ‘Aragorn’ guise, and Hugh Jackman possibly, although I’d still be afflicted by the tongue-tied problem, but for different reasons .  And I’d be disappointed if they turned out to be vain, self-centred and preening. (However, I do have it on good authority, from someone who knows – no names, no pack drill, – that Hugh Jackman is a regular, very nice and unstarry, bloke!)

But I think I am going back into the past, if I may. I’ve toyed with inviting Prince Rupert (from the English Civil War) because I’ve loved him since I was 12, George Harrison, for pretty much the same reason, Richard 111 to ask him if he really murdered the princes in the tower, and Will Shakespeare, just to put the speculation to bed that he was really the author of the plays ascribed to him, but no…..

Instead I’m going to assemble some characters from my own family tree, if that’s all right. I’ve some fascinating individuals there, from music hall artists to eminent Victorians.  My great great great uncle G W Kitchin, for example, was a musician and a writer. He was the tutor to the crown prince of Denmark, was Dean of Winchester, then Dean of Durham and became Chancellor of Durham University. He was a committee member of the Association for the Higher Education of Women – the result of which was Summerville College. And he was a friend of Ruskin and Charles Dodgson. It would be fascinating to meet him.

For more information about Gilli and her work click on the author links below:

http://gilliallan.blogspot.com/

http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1027644.Gilli_Allan

http://twitter.com/#!/gilliallan

http://www.facebook.com/pages/Gilli-Allan/128177480684322?ref=stream

LIFE CLASS: A story about art, life, love and learning lessons.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Life-Class-Gilli-Allan/dp/1481943138

TORN: She may escape her old life but will she ever escape herself?

http://www.amazon.com/TORN-ebook/dp/B004UVR81Y

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Better Late Than Never…

OK White Rabbit syndrome again, I’m late.  My new book has been taking up so much of my time and I’m sorry there’s only a brief mention here.  But so you don’t miss out on who I am and what I do, I’m going to ask anyone picking this up to go to my website www.ladywriter.moonfruit.com where you can find all about me and my books, reviews and things that inspire.  And you can contact me as well to ask any questions.

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My latest novel The Other Side of Morning will be available later in the year

Posted in Writing

The Story So Far…

I feel almost as if I’ve been in hibernation over the past few months.  I’ve dipped in and out of Facebook and Twitter and hosted writers on my Tea and Talk at Sally Lunn’s on WordPress each Sunday.  But for the most part the new book has had my undivided attention.  In fact at times it seemed to have taken over my life completely.  It became the first thing I thought about in the morning when I woke up and the last thing before I went to sleep – yes I really seemed to be  suffering from obsessive writer’s syndrome!  The whole thing has certainly given me a few surprises and scares along the way but then I should be used to it by now – that’s how writing is.  You set out on a journey with all good intentions of following the plot you’ve decided on only to find yourself constantly pushed off course by some unseen force which appears to know better than you do how the book should be written.

Now I’ve almost reached the end of my first draft, hitting 152,000 words as I tell the of the love triangle between my three main characters.  There are moments with this book when I have felt emotionally drained.  The first 70,000 words wrote like a dream, but after that things were very up and down.  There were becalmed moments when the writing simply did not go well at all or completely dried up.   Then there were moments where self-belief turned tail and ran away and I wondered whether I should save my sanity and abandon the whole project completely. You see even though I know all about the myriad of moods which accompany me when I’m writing, I still manage to succumb.  Luckily I never make rash decisions; I always sleep on things because the next day the world is a whole new place.  And that’s how it was.  So I became skilled at going with the flow, riding out the storms and trekking my way across the inspirational deserts.  I think the fact that the cover had already been designed was another reason which kept me going.   I’m very glad I did because even though I’m only at first draft stage I know this book has already exceeded my expectations.

Luckily I have had pockets of time away over the first four months of this year. Time which has given me the opportunity to get away from the PC; to shut the door on the physical side of writing and relax.   I do, however, use the quieter moments to run ideas through my head.  I’ve no distractions when I’m not home and have found this is a really good time to sort out things that aren’t working.  When we left for four days in Chester last week I had written the final scene of the story but wasn’t entirely happy with the way it had worked out. Those four days away enabled me to return with the ending of the book completely worked out in my head.  Time well spent.

I have to say my books usually do not get written in chronological order.  It’s the way I do it – you might call it ‘ordered chaos’.  However this time the book has been more or less written in a straight line.  The only part I have to complete now is to finish the one missing scene which takes place in Verona.   I visited Verona a few years back so still had a vague memory of places like Juliette’s balcony and the Arena.  Google maps to the rescue!  Absolutely brilliant – you can wander the streets electronically and get a genuine feel for your surroundings!

Tonight will definitely see the words THE END typed.  It’s a strange time.  No more deliberating on how to write the next scene and from whose aspect.  No more working out whether the characters are reacting to each other in the right way.  Now it’s all about going back and retracing my steps to make sure not only that the writing is tight but also that the pace is right and the timeline is in the correct sequence.  Then there is the check to make sure the characters don’t start a scene wearing one thing and end up dressed in something completely different!  A book I read recently had the main female character wearing a blouse at the start of a particular scene and a jumper at the end of it!  Another had a woman with short hair who a few pages on was plaiting it!  This is more observation that criticism as it is such an easy trap to fall into.   Someone I used to work for long ago once told me with regard to reading that ‘we see what we want to see.’  As far as writing a novel is concerned that is also true and it’s so easy not to pick up on things when you tend to be very close to your work.   That is why I’m so glad that when I’ve checked and checked and tweaked and bullied my MS to the best of my ability I can then  e-mail my editor and say ‘over to you.’

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My fifth novel The Other Side of Morning will be published later this year

Posted in Uncategorized, Writing

Tea and Talk at Sally Lunns with author Jennifer Bohnet

Sally Lunns Tea HouseDSC01836Welcome Jennie to Tea and Talk at Sally Lunns, it’s lovely to see you here in Bath today.

Thank you for inviting me Jo. I love Bath but it’s ages since I’ve visited – despite my brother and family living here. In fact when I leave here I’m going to pop down and see my brother – he’ll be surprised to say the least!

As we settle down to await tea and cakes could tell me a little about yourself? 

Well, I was born in Weston-super-Mare just down the road from here, grew up between there and Bristol when my parents divorced. Moved to Dartmouth, Devon when I got married and had my family, moved to Wales to farm, moved back to Devon and finally we came to France.

Oh, we’re having some of the famous buns – thank you. Haven’t had one of these for so long.

And you currently live in France, how long have you been there and what prompted the move?

We’ve been in France 14 years this May. We came on two push bikes with a trailer behind my OH’s bike for Holly our 14-year-old collie bitch, and rode down the canal paths to the South of France. The 1990s had been a disaster for us financially and we just needed to get away for a bit! Quarantine laws were still in effect so we knew we couldn’t go back until either they changed or Holly was no longer with us. In the event the law didn’t change until we’d be in France for 2 years – by which time Richard had got a guardien job and we were happy living in the South of France. So we just stayed put! Two years ago we were finally able to think about owning our own home again and we moved up here to a tiny cottage in rural Brittany.

When did you start writing and what was it that made you decide to be an author?

I don’t think I ever consciously took the decision to be an author! Writing is just something I’ve always done – either for fun or for much need funds when the family were small.

And what was your route to publishing?

I started writing features and then humorous anecdotal pieces about my life when we lived in Devon and Wales. I had my own column in the South Hams Newspaper Group for over three years when we lived in Dartmouth. And when we lived in Wales I was editor of the Carmarthenshire W.I. Area magazine. It wasn’t until we came to France that my fiction writing started to take off. My short stories have found homes in the UK, and internationally in Australia, Sweden, South Africa, Ireland – sadly not yet in France, where there doesn’t appear to be the same culture for woman’s magazines.51zB9XUD0qL._SS500_

I see from your website that you are inspired by writers such as Erica James, Judy Astley and Katie Fforde.  Are your books similar to theirs.

I write the kind of book I enjoy reading – contemporary woman’s fiction that deals with relationships of all sorts, family, couples, siblings, mixed marriages etc. I also prefer emotional conflict in a story as opposed to crime or gung-ho conflict. So I guess the answer is, yes I hope my books would be regarded as being in a similar genre to my favourite authors as they are real experts at exploring relationships and creating great, interesting characters.

You write short stories as well as full length novels.  Do you alternate when you do this? i.e. novel-short story-novel or is it the next idea you have which dictates the length of the project?

No I don’t alternate in that way. I try to write at least four short stories a month – I need an income while I write my novels. As the world’s worst procrastinator – or the best if you look at it another way – these days I try to be stern with myself and set deadlines and goals and to stay off the internet! With all the publicity authors are expected to do these days, it’s all too easy to lose hours on Twitter and Facebook and the various writing forums I belong to.

51kA9KzQrsL._SL500_If you could change one thing in your life, what would that be?

I’d love to be musical – and be able to sing in tune! I’m tone deaf.

And lastly, who would you most like to meet and why?

I’d love to meet Peter Mayle and talk to him about his novels as well as his books about life in France. His stories about the good life in France influenced a lot of people into changing their lives (for better or worse) and I’d like to ask him how he feels about that.  I’d also like to talk to him about how easy he found the transition to writing novels – and then perhaps he could introduce me to his friend and neighbour Ridley Scott and they could make Rendezvous in Cannes into a film! Well I can dream can’t I?

Many thanks to Jennie for coming along to Sally Lunn’s today – to find out more about Jennie and her writing click on the links below:

Twitter: @jenniewriter
Facebook Author Page:
SHADOWS OF CONFLICT
ROBERT HALE LTD
MY WEBSITE:
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Tea and Talk at Sally Lunns, this week hosting Sheryl Browne, a lady who writes fabulous, funny, heartbreaking romantic fiction.

Welcome Sheryl and Snoops,  lovely to see you both Sally Lunns Tea House here at Sally Lunns.

Hi, Joanna.  It’s lovely to see you, too. Thank you for inviting Snoops (aka Rambo, star of Recipes for Disaster) along. He’s perfectly well-behaved, as you can see, as long we can avoid the usual hordes of screaming fans.  Yes, Snoops, they do serve cream with their teas.  Ivy House clotted cream, to be precise.  Nothing but the best at Sally Lunns, you know.   Sorry, Jo, he’s a bit fussy now he’s uber-famous.Sheryl and Dogs Photo

My regular opening question is to ask my guest to reveal a little about themselves.

Ooh, now, what to reveal that hasn’t already been seen?  Well, I live in Worcestershire but grew up in Birmingham, UK.  I’m a mother, a partner in my own business and a foster parent to disabled dogs.  I can’t help myself.  If a hoppity three-legged dog in need of care comes along…  Well, do you blame me?

I decided to become a literary superstar when… Lol! I am now published, but I’m not sure many writers become literary superstars in today’s tough publishing climate. We keep writing though, (passionate souls that we are), lovely reader feedback so often giving us the impetus we need to keep at it.

How did your writing career begin and where do you get your inspiration from?

My writing career began when I took leave of my senses.  Ignore me.  I love writing.  I simply wouldn’t know how to be without it.  I’m artistic by nature therefore I’ve always had a creative imagination.  Reading, anything and everything, and making up stories in my head was a kind of escapism for me.  And, believe me, when you come from a large family, escapism is as necessary as food for survival sometimes.  I suppose then I’ve had a passion for writing since childhood.  I’m an avid reader.  I love anything that explores life and relationships and how people cope with and grow through certain life events.  Looking back, my first attempts at novel-writing were possibly a catharsis to loss in my Recipes For Disaster coverown life.  Without going into too much detail, I’d taken compassionate leave from work to nurse my mum through early onset Alzheimer’s.  Losing my mum in my twenties was devastating, of course, but I found my way of coping was to remember the hysterically funny moments we had (and we did, much to the bemusement of my father, who just didn’t get women’s quirky SOH).  Out of necessity, I’d worked since leaving school and being a young single mum when my mum got ill giving up work to write wasn’t an option.  I started jotting things down in my spare time, though, and from little acorns…

Do you put any of your personality into your female characters?

Oh, God, yes, definitely.  I think we are all multi-faceted creatures and, though we would prefer to put out best front forwards, there are times when we might be sad, angry, lonely, feisty, quirky, have a touch of the old green-eyed-monster.  Human beings come with a whole gamut of emotion, after all.  I think I’m generally a happy, bubbly person (mainly because I’m happier when I’m happy, if you get my drift), but sometimes life’s little mishaps or obstacles have caused me to be any of the above.  I draw from Somebody to Love - Coverthat.   I think most writers draw from personal experience,  and then go on to do a great deal of research, determined to get the detail right and never to trivialise emotive issues that some people might live and struggle with on a daily basis.  My writing, though romantic comedy, has been described by an agent as funny but thoughtful.  Thoughtful because I feel drawn to look at the relationships of people whose lives may be little more complicated than most (someone parenting a special needs child, for instance, or caring for an elderly relative).

You are signed to Safkhet and I understand have another three book deal which is brilliant!  How did you become one of their authors?

It’s a long story, but I’ll try to keep it short. My first book got picked up by an agent but, sadly, it didn’t get picked up by a publisher. The bug, however, had bitten. Being a passionate soul who would wither and die without her writing, I kept at it, enlisting editorial help, drafting and redrafting, taking on board feedback; using every piece of criticism constructively and – the dreaded part of the writing process – submitting.  Eventually my current lovely publisher, Safkhet Publishing, read some of my work, liked my style and commissioned me to write my debut book, Recipes for Disaster (romantic comedy written around fun recipes)!  I was so nervous waiting for their initial feedback I’d almost bitten my fingernails down to my elbows.  And then they said Yes! They loved it! Music to a writer’s ears.  Needless to say, I was euphoric.  Thanks here to Snoops, co-writer and, as mentioned, superstar of Recipes for Disaster.

Warrant for Love - coverYou are a well-known rom-com writer with a great following.  Could you ever see yourself moving into a different area of writing and if so what would it be?

Ooh, I could.  Well, sort of.  I’m currently undertaking an MA in Creative Writing (very part-time at Birmingham University).  One of my modules (which I passed, I’m pleased to say) was screenwriting.  I once reached runner stage up in a BBC sitcom comp and would love to write script basically – though I think it would also be romantic comedy.  I still have a lot to learn though.  Maybe, one day.

Changing the subject completely  I know you are a disabled dog fosterer which must be really rewarding,  how did this come about?

I had a dog that was so badly grieving the loss of her mate that the poor girl was on sedatives.. When she became skeletal from not eating, I knew I had to do something fast.  I decided the best course of action was to put her in the rescue centre.  No, not permanently!  Just over a few days to try her out with different dogs.  So, fingers crossed, that’s what I did – and every time I rang hopefully thereafter, I was told, ‘Not happening. They’re fighting like cat and dog.’

NYXThen we tried one last dog. I rang the next day, my heart in my mouth, and they said, Yes!  Apparently, they were sleeping together like little bookends.  I’ll take her, I said. What make is she? Cross Rottweiler, they said (Eek!) and she has cancer. So, that’s how it all started. I fostered her, knowing I’d have to make a huge decision whether to allow her surgery, which might save her or kill her.  She survived and loved life.  From there on, I decided I would take the OAP or disabled, ‘special needs’ dogs.  Snoops was brought in by the police, who’d rescued him from youths playing football, unfortunately using Snoops as the ball.  He was blinded in one eye, the other also damaged, so he has very little sight, but…  Well, do I need to say he’s happy and healthy now – and that I love him to bits?I don't believe it

If you could take four people on holiday who would they be and why?

George Clooney – so I could bask in his smile.  Ben Affleck – so I could … drool.  They’d probably only fight over me, though, wouldn’t they? *sigh*.  OK, really?  My son.  He hasn’t had a great time of things lately, but keeps fighting.  Oh, and Snoops, Odi and Dougal, my current dogs. Well, they are little personalities – and at least we’d have a healthy walking holiday.

If you had to spend six months on a desert island what five things would you take with you?

Cover FrontMy dogs (do they count as one?).  A fishing rod, so I could feed them.  I’d like to say my Kindle (the one time I would prefer it over paper books) so I could catch up on all the books I so want to read.  I’m guessing there would be no electricity though, so I’d have to take a trunk packed full of books.  A huge fat pad and a box of pencils.

If you would like to know more about Cheryl and her writing , check out her social network links below:

 

Sheryl’s Website

Safkhet Publishing

Amazon.co.uk

Amazon.com

Author Facebook     

Romantic Novelists’ Association

Sheryl is a Loveahappyending Lifestyle Author and Feature Editor.

Twitter: @sherylbrowne

 

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Tea and Talk at Sally Lunn’s with Jane Risdon

Sally Lunns Tea House408558_349422021811309_614060150_nWelcome Jane, it’s great to see you here at Sally Lunns.   

Hello Jo, thanks so much for inviting me to chat and enjoy this lovely tea with you.  I’ve been looking forward to it so much.

My first question as always is to ask my guest a little bit about themselves.

Gosh, that’s a dangerous invitation.  How long have you got?  Well, I’ve been married forever to someone I met when I was sixteen.  He was in a band that came to live near me and pestered the life out of me until I agreed to date him.  He proposed after two weeks.  We have a son and three grandchildren so I guess I liked his music.  We eventually worked together in the Music business, in management, after he gave up performing and have lived and travelled all over the world which has been fun but seriously hard work.  Not for the faint-hearted.

How long ago did you first begin writing and what was the trigger?

I suppose I have always wanted to write. I’ve had a love of words, books, paper and all that goes with the act of writing and reading since I was very young.  I have always been a book-worm and somewhere along the way I must have decided that I wanted to write as well. The exact moment is not apparent to me, but throughout my life I have scribbled notes and ideas on bits of paper and in note books, just in case I guess.  I have always had an over-active imagination and love drama of all kinds.

I had a few abortive attempts to write a book many years ago but our lifestyle really made it impossible.  On the road constantly without any free time for decades, and spending time in recording studios with songwriters provided little time for me to indulge myself.  My whole focus was on other people, their careers and their songs, which I did help with (on the writing side) from time to time.

The trigger I guess was being reunited with a lifelong friend who we hadn’t seen for years, but kept in touch with – Christmas cards, but saw rarely – you know how it is with some friends.  She is a successful award-winning writer and at one time had been my husband’s (band’s) fan-club secretary whilst enjoying a career as a journalist on Rock and Pop magazines.   Anyway we met up again about three years ago, and she kept saying I had a story to tell and I should do what I’ve always wanted to do, and write.  So after a lot of faffing about I got down to it and sent her my efforts which she loved and called ‘brilliant,’ which encouraged me, though I admit I thought she was just being ‘kind,’ and didn’t want to upset me!

To cut a long, long story short – for fear of sending you to sleep  – I started to write a novel which she really thought should be published and spurred on by her comments I also tried to have a go at Short Stories and Flash Fiction, which seemed to be well received by other people who read my efforts.  I am now working on two other novels as well.

She then asked me to co-write a book with her which we are doing at the moment, so I was persuaded that perhaps I might not be that bad after-all if she had the courage to work with me on a joint project.  I’ve completed my parts and she is writing hers now in- between having her latest book published, and being contracted to write three others as well.

You seem incredibly busy with projects.  The novel or the short story – have you a preference and if so why?

No, I don’t think I have a preference.  I really started writing short stories and flash fiction to see if I could.  I enjoy it and it is a challenge for me, making me use words and pace differently. When writing novels you have more time and space to develop characters and be more descriptive, allowing the plot to unfold.  I think it is more satisfying to look at thousands of words and know that they came out of my imagination and they are unique, even if the genre is not. So I might be leaning towards the novel more….

Photography is also one of your passions and I understand helps with your writing.  Is this a spontaneous thing – capturing something that you just happen to see or do you plan it in a more structured way?

My whole family is into photography.  I never realised that my siblings are camera addicts, not just me, until I met up with them all after years of being on the road all the time.  We all photograph the same sorts of things and in the same way.  So cool.

My husband and I used to always take photos of our artists and lots of video too, in addition to the official photos and video being shot by professionals for the Record companies etc., though back in the days of film with all the costs involved we didn’t take so many personally, as we did in later years.  If I had to pay for film now there is no way I would take as many photos as I do.

I love to walk and explore woods and countryside and on those walks I usually have my camera with me and so I take lots of photos.  Sometimes a location will spark something  or a stretch of water – which inspired my short story, ‘The Look,’ which is in the anthology ‘I Am Woman, Vol. 1,’ – the whole plot came into my head as I took the photo and I nearly ran home to write it.

Old buildings, churches and villages often set me off after I’ve visited and taken photos.  My novel (still being laboured over), ‘Ms Birdsong Investigates,’  is set in rural Oxfordshire and Berkshire in what is called The Vale of the White Horse, and old photos and walks I had been on years ago gave me the visual for the story originally.  A touch of the Agatha Christie coming over me I think!

So, yes; I take photos and use them as visual notes to remind me of locations and how certain locations work.  I draw maps too.  I am sure many writers do the same.  I don’t go through any elaborate rituals setting up the lighting and so forth.  I am strictly a ‘point and shoot,’ type of gal.  There might be some thought about angle and the setting of the shot, but really it is nothing scientific and if the photos come out well I am happy, but it is more luck than judgement.

You were involved in the music business for many years.  This must have not only been a very energizing but also glamorous environment to work in.  How did this career develop and were you involved in any specific areas?

I love it when people tell me they think the Music Business is glamorous.  The end result may seem to be but I can assure you it is a battle-field, bloody and with few prisoners taken.  Long hours, repetitive activities such as recording the same word a thousand times until it has the ‘right feel,’ or re-writing, re-recording and mixing the same song over and over until it is acceptable.

Endless travel in close proximity to a lot of people you’d never invite for dinner normally; never knowing which city, hotel or room you happen to be staying in because all the cities, hotels and rooms morph into each other and being so tired and disorientated, your brain refuses to acknowledge where you are and what time it is.  Trying to recall the important faces and names and trying to forget the hundreds of people you meet daily who really are not ‘anyone,’ of importance to the artist or your own career.

The energy required is almost super-human at times but I know what you mean.  When you hear a voice, piece of music or a song which ‘hits the spot,’ and that shiver goes down your spine and your hair stands on end…..or when you see your artist performing magic on stage and all their little tantrums and annoying habits disappear, well, I guess that is energizing.  I call it relief.

I said earlier that my husband was a musician and when he decided to call it a day, we decided to pass on all his (well our), knowledge and experience to others trying to make it in this cruel business.  I was working – one of us had to be grown-up – in the Civil Service and it was a big decision to take.  Anyway, we decided to go initially into management which involves discovering talent, mentoring and shaping it and then exploiting it all in the hope of obtaining a Recording and Music Publishing contract eventually, and the ‘fame and fortune,’ we all believe will follow.

We worked in promotion as well, putting on big shows at the London Hippodrome initially which meant getting 5,000 bodies through the box-office every month, or we ended up owing the club money.  We had recording studios and managed record producers, songwriters and artists going on to have our own music publishing company as well.  We managed a couple of actors for a while, from one of the Aussie soaps and an American TV series.

As well as obtaining Record contracts for our artists with the Major labels, and then getting them on tour, having their music on television and movies soundtracks, and everything else that  goes with the exploitation of the artist and their catalogue, we also worked with other managers needing our experience and contacts.  We worked all over the world, had hits, and placed music on the most successful television series worldwide at the time, and placed some of the artists into the shows as well.

Managers are not Agents, so it is important not to confuse the two.  A Manager controls every aspect of the artist and their career.  An Agent finds them work, such as tours, concerts, gigs etc but not the TV, Movie and Recording side of their career.

Of all the celebrities you have worked with who was your favourite?

There have been so many I cannot really pick a favourite.  Alice Cooper was (is) a lovely man and we had a lot of fun working with him back in 1989.  In fact I am writing about it at the moment – one of the novels I mentioned before –  because some of the musicians we managed back then were auditioning for his touring band at that time – he was about to release his album, ‘Poison,’ and the whole thing was so funny and mad it cries out to be a story.

David Cassidy was a really nice man too, not at all what we expected.  One of our artists recorded a duet with him on one of his albums and we spent a great deal of time with him in Los Angeles where we lived back then.  We were making an album with our artists and he asked if the female singer would sing with him because he had heard her voice and was knocked out by it.  Los Angeles had just experienced the race riots (Rodney King), and so we also took part in the ‘Stand and Be Proud,’ fund-raising concert and album as well.

The year we worked with David was memorable in many ways because we had terrible fires raging across the canyons, floods and mud-slides and then ‘The’ earthquake.  All we needed was the plague of locusts.

David Hasselhoff was a really nice man but kept reminding us how many records he was selling in Germany all the time we filmed Baywatch with him.   The number rose every time we met him, but he and Pamela Anderson were incredibly kind to our artists who were on the show with them.  We also recorded music and songs used for the whole series so it was a long relationship with the series and the producers.

Mariah Carey was a very nice woman, again not what you’d expect having heard all the tales about her.  It is hard to pick any one person from a career that has covered thirty odd years.  I could list the absolute b******s we worked with, but then I might get sued. 

What was your best moment?

Cripes.  I have no idea.  Some days it was all wonderful and sheer heaven and then other days I hated it and everyone around me and just wanted to see the back of them all.  It is such an intense and personal relationship, manager and artist, and working in Hollywood with the icons of the Music, Movie and TV business is not only exciting, inspiring and unreal; it’s also the absolute pits.  The whole business brings out the very worst there is in human behaviour.

Getting into the American charts was amazing.  There hadn’t been a British artist in the American Charts for ages and ages.  Having chart hits in SE Asia was incredible, working with Chinese artists and working with Record companies in Taiwan when few Western companies in the music industry ventured there to do business; that was thrilling.   Working with an amazing Thrash band who were not only talented songwriters and performers but also really very funny too….I cannot pick the best moment.  Really, I cannot.

And the funniest?

How long do you have?  I think you will be wishing you had never asked me Jo.  Let me see, whilst I am thinking I’d love another cup of tea and a scone please.

Not only did we manage our own artists, I mentioned we worked with other managers as consultants, helping them with their artists.  I do recall an audition one of these managers wanted me to attend when he was considering taking on a new rock singer and wanted me to watch and listen and then give my opinion of him.  We sat alone in a recording studio, the engineer in the booth ready to run the track so the vocalist could sing for us.  The track started an in walked a clone of Steve Tyler; long black hair, tighter than tight clinging pink satin tights, a slashed to the waist tee-shirt with a huge gold medallion around his neck and half of Max Factor’s factory on his face.  I particularly loved his fire-red lipstick and black eyeliner.

I looked him up and down as he grabbed the mic, postured and posed and that is when I realised he had something in his trousers, at the top of his leg.  I tried hard not to stare but I couldn’t help myself.  As he started to sing – I cannot for the life of me recall anything about the song – and moved around, provocatively strutting and posing, I noticed that the ‘thing,’ at the top of his leg seemed to be moving down his thigh.  He tried hard to restrict its journey as he sang.

The track pounded out and he belted out the lyrics to the song and at one point decided to try to do the splits whilst leaping in the air.  It all nearly ended his career as he tottered to regain his balance on landing and did the splits on the wooden floor.  I watched the engineer holding his head in his hands as his shoulders heaved and the manager next to me kept clearing his throat.   My face ached with the effort of containing hysterical laughter.

The track went on and as the vocalist carried on singing  he managed to stand upright after a lot of slipping and sliding, by which time the ‘thing,’ in his trousers had reached his knee.  I couldn’t take my eyes off it by this time, fascinated as to what it might be.  I think I knew what it was supposed to have been.  By this time our Steve Tyler was groping his leg trying to ease the ‘thing,’ back up to where it was supposed to be, all the time winking at me and pouting  in-between getting to the bridge in the song where the key changes, and the song changes too.  As he hit the higher notes he managed to return the ‘thing,’ to its original place and he held on to it for the remained of the song and physical jerks, winking and pouting at me.

The performance ended, we politely clapped.   As he came towards me and planted a huge wet kiss on my face saying, ‘That was for you doll, all for you,’ in a phoney West Coast accent.  He bent to shake my hand and the ‘thing,’ shot out of the bottom of his tights landing on the floor in front of me.  We were presented with a prize-winning courgette.

And no, the manager didn’t sign him.

Simon Cowall is not the only one who has had to sit through such mind-torturing experiences.  If I had a penny for all the funny situations I have found myself in, I would be bailing out Cyprus on my own.

Mind you, Simon has had to sit through meetings with my husband and I as we played him recordings of artists.  But nothing that was not worthy of his time and consideration I must say. 

And lastly, if you could invite four guests to dinner, who would they be and why would you invite them?

I can never think of anyone when asked this.  I want to say my brothers and sisters because when we get together we never stop laughing – we are all spread across the globe so it doesn’t happen often but when it does the noise is unreal, and we end up rolling on the floor doubled up.

Doris Day is a huge love in my life, so I would have her.  Daphne Du Maurier and Agatha Christie as well, and the amazing Fred Astaire if I really had to choose, though part of me wants Einstein and Tim Berners Lee as well.  All the things I really love are represented.

Thanks so much for a lovely tea and I have enjoyed chatting to you so much Jo.  I hope I haven’t hogged the conversation too much; so much to say, so little time.  It has been a blast.  We must do lunch some time….I’ve just come over all ‘Hollywood,’ forgive me.

Thank you for coming along Jane and no you didn’t hog the conversation; for me the most important thing about Tea and Talk are the guests and the great interviews they deliver and you have done just that!

If you would like to know more about Jane and her work please check out her links below:

I Am Woman Anthology vol 1 available http://www.amazon.co.uk

http://www.facebook.com/JaneRisdon2  – My author page

http://wp.me/2dg55 – My  author Blog.
The pod-cast of the Honey Trap, Flash Fiction.
wp.me/p18Ztn-4ID The Honey Trap – Flash Fiction Published Story
morgenbailey.wordpress.com/2012/… My short story, A Walk to Destiny
morgenbailey.wordpress.com/contr… My Flash Fiction Story the White Witch of England (also Pod-cast – links on my blog)
Telling Tales Anthology by Writers for Welfare availablehttp://www.lulu.com

Next weekend Tea and Talk at Sally Lunn’s will be hosting the lovely  Sheryl Brown, a lady who writes fabulous, funny, heartbreaking romantic fiction.

 

  

Posted in Writing

Tea and Talk at Sally Lunns with the lovely Linn B Halton

Sally Lunns Tea Houselinn halton-65 (216x300)Welcome Linn, lovely to have you here at Sally Lunns. This weekend has been busy as I’ve had two guests so hope not to pile on the calories too much. The cakes in here are wonderful!
Thank you for inviting me, I’m partial to a toasted tea cake myself but cup cakes are now a serious contender ha! Ha!
My first question as always is to ask a little bit about you.
I live in Arlingham, alongside the River Severn in Gloucestershire, UK. We’ve been here about eighteen months and we love the small community atmosphere of this little village. Writing is my third career and one I had to wait quite a long time to have the pleasure of beginning. After nearly 20 years in finance, I then found myself involved with interior design. It had been a long-time hobby and I’d styled quite a few homes for friends over the years. Getting involved with designing the interiors for new build show homes took it to another level. It was one of the most enjoyable working periods of my life, because it was great fun. However, it was very hard work and often a pressure due to very tight timescales from a house being completed, to having to get it totally set up.
Often people don’t realise that the interior designer not only ‘styles’ the interior, but chooses the final finishes, fixtures and fittings, then has to buy all the furniture, soft furnishings and decorative display items. All those items have to be stored off-site until the house is ready and then typically it’s a two-day turnaround to get things delivered, unpacked and set up. The final result often makes it seem like a glamorous job to have, but organising storage, someone to accept delivery of the goods and check them, sorting the labour for moving-in day and even things like arranging for the disposal of packing materials, can be a headache! I had a good team I could call on to help out and everyone worked until the job was done, regardless of how late in the day it was. I learnt a lot, including how to iron curtains in situ with a steam iron – invaluable! I’ve even been known to whizz the iron over a fully made up bed to get final creases out of the duvet cover…
How long ago did you first start writing?
In terms of the five books I now have published, I began writing in March 2009. I had given up work in December 2008 to look after my mum, but sadly she passed away just three months later. I had a choice, to go back to work or to take that ‘time’ to write. I haven’t stopped since.
What sparked your interest in the paranormal?
Interesting question Joanna! I don’t really connect with the word paranormal. To me it smacks of ghosts and people who seek out encounters because they want scientific proof to parade to the world. For me personally, and I might be alone here, connecting with loved ones is something totally different. I’ve had experiences dating back to a young child and a mere few were things that were unpleasant; I’ve had no more than four or five that I would class as terrifying. On those occasions I left immediately and never looked back. As a child the encounters were mainly to do with things associated with the houses I lived in. Increasingly over the last ten years it has become more about my loved ones, having lost my parents and an aunt and uncle to whom I was very close. When something happens it’s natural to look for some simple explanation so you can pass it off lightly. I’ve tried them all – tired eyes, trick of the light, imagination, wishful thinking. However, I have also visited a number of incredibly good psychic mediums who validated beyond doubt some of the spirit helpers around me. I think my spiritual journey began after my father died in 2004. For a long time I talked about the incidents but simply filed them away as unexplained. Living with someone who was an even greater sceptic than I was to begin with, meant I had to wait until someone else brought up the topic in conversation. Then my husband Lawrence had his first experience and things changed. Since then we have had quite a few shared experiences and, as the saying goes, seeing IS believing. However ‘the proof’ is personal, a bit like believing in God. If you aren’t ready to take that step, then you simply won’t pick up on what is happening around you, around all of us.

You decided to incorporate that interest into your writing. What was the trigger for the first book?
Since a very young age I knew romance was always going to be my genre and I have a journal full of ideas for stories that I’ve kept since I was a teenager. However, when I sat down to write Touched By The Light in March 2009, my mother had literally just passed away. I was in the middle of sorting the funeral and her effects and began writing simply to have a break away from the sadness of it all. To keep my sanity I needed to lose myself for a couple of hours a day in something totally unrelated. The opening scene is one where Mya, who is twenty-three years of age, is in an emergency room in a hospital and suddenly she ‘follows the light’. Given my personal situation, I think it’s obvious what was on my mind, although I hasten to add that it’s a romance with a lot of humour in it, but written to make the reader think about both sides of life. However, when I include psychic elements I always draw on actual first-hand experiences to weave into the fictional stories. The result is that I get a lot of mail from readers who have had similar experiences and some are sharing theirs for the first time with me. I always feel that’s something rather special and for which I’m very grateful.
You are now a successfully published author with Sapphire. How did that come about?
It was a random exchange on Twitter, when Sapphire Star had literally just launched. After a brief exchange I submitted The Quintessential Gemini, my second manuscript and the only one that doesn’t have a psychic twist. I was almost ready to self-publish it at the time but that Twitter exchanged convinced me to have a go. Shortly after I signed the contract I submitted my third manuscript, The Restaurant @ The Mill and that was accepted too. They are a fabulous team and the support has been fantastic. It can really make a difference when you are a new author.
What is your next project?
I have two on the go, The Quintessential Astrologer (a sequel) and The Glass Wall. Very different stories, but great fun to write.
 I know you have an incredibly busy life but when you do get spare time what do you like to do?
I write. My ‘work’ time is taken up with running websites, to the extent that I am no longer OCD when it comes to housework I’m afraid. Neat, tidy and clean, yes, but the dusting can wait and often does. Any time away from the computer is spent with the youngest members of our family and in finishing the renovation work to our cottage, a converted cowshed and hayloft.
What is your favourite holiday destination and why?
France and California. For the same reasons – we’ve visited some many times over the years and feel we have an affinity with both. Also there are so many memories from when the children were young, when my mum and dad often came with us on trips and wonderful people we’ve met. Also the romantic times we’ve had for wedding anniversaries and birthdays etc. Treasured memories and we will be making some more when we are off to France again in June.
And lastly, if you could invite four guests to dinner, who would they be and why would you invite them?
Jonathan Cainer, he’s my favourite astrologer and I’ve followed him for more years than I care to remember. Richard & Judy, I assume they count as ‘one’, being a couple! Having seen them live at the RNA RoNA awards recently, I was amazed to discover they sit opposite each other at the kitchen table to write. Jamie Oliver, and I would ask him to do a demonstration so that I could sample some of his delicious recipes. James Blunt, because he’s an interesting guy and the words to some of his songs are amazing. I would want four separate dinner parties though, as I would have so many questions for each one!

A great mix of guests Linn and yes I guess you would need to have four dinner parties for such a diverse quartet!  Thank you so much for coming along and for such a great interview.

More information on Linn and her writing can be found on the social network connections below:

Life, love and beyond … but it’s ALWAYS about the romance! 

Author Website ~ A Lovehappyending Lifestyle feature editor  ~ RNA page Signed by: http://sapphirestarpublishing.com/ Twitter: @LinnBHalton Facebook: Linn B Halton

I’ll be back with Tea and Talk on the 31st March when I’ll be chatting with author Jane Risdon.