Showing posts with label Macmillan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Macmillan. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 December 2016

Review ~ The Christmas Court by Joanna Courtney








Christmas Reading



27185754
Pan
2015


The blurb..

The Christmas Court by Joanna Courtney is a festive historical short story from the author of The Chosen Queen.

King Edward's royal court has gathered at Westminster to welcome William of Normandy to England. As the ambitious Norman duke takes his place amongst the English lords, rumour and speculation are rife. It appears that William has an ulterior motive for making his timely visit to his childless royal cousin . .

100 pages.


My thoughts..

Sometimes at this time of year with so much preparation in the run up to Christmas it can be difficult to settle down to some reading time which is why this beautifully written novella is the perfect kind of Christmas reading. Short and sweet, with a gloriously authentic feel, this medieval story combines all that is good about this author's writing.

King Edward's royal court in December 1051 comes alive in the imagination. The crispness of yule and the warmth of cracking log fires combine to form the backdrop to a delicious romance which warms the heart and feeds the soul. Lady Freya. and her bubbly companion, Alodie find that life at the royal court is as sumptuous and rich as they hoped it would be and for a few glorious days, before her arranged marriage, Lady Freya can lose herself in gaiety and merrymaking... that is until she catches the eye of a handsome Norman knight who turns her ordered world upside down.

Rich in historical detail and alive with all the curiosities of life at one of the greatest royal courts on earth, this story is a joy to read from start to finish.



Best Read With ...Hot roasted chestnuts and a cup of honey sweet wassail..



About the author





Follow on Twitter @joannacourtney1


Amazon


The Christmas Court is currently 98p on kindle





My thanks to Jess at Macmillan for my e-copy of The Christmas Court















Tuesday, 6 December 2016

Review ~ Christmas at the Cat Cafe by Melissa Daley







32319623
Macmillan
2016
The blurb..

Christmas at the Cat Cafe is the wonderfully festive sequel to Melissa Daley's uplifting tale, Molly and the Cat Cafe.

The Costwolds' town of Stourton-on-the-Hill has its very own cat café. Resident cat Molly, and her kittens, live here in feline paradise, while owner Debbie serves the locals home-made goodies. But even in the most idyllic surroundings, things don't always go to plan . . .

When Debbie's heartbroken sister Linda arrives at the café, Debbie insists she move in. But Linda is not alone, and the cats are devastated with the arrival of Linda's dog, Beau. Sadly, Beau's arrival is not the only bombshell - now Molly's home is also under threat when a rival cat moves in on her turf.

With Christmas approaching, Molly is unsettled, barely roused by the promise of tinsel to play with. Fearing for her feline family she hopelessly stares out of the café window searching for an answer. Only a Christmas miracle could bring everyone together.



My thoughts..

Well after a review yesterday about a dog named Bertie it was only fair to Jaffa to review a story today about a cat named Molly.  So here's himself making sure I didn't renege on the deal... 







Molly the cat shares her life with her five kittens and her owner Debbie who all live together in the delightful Cotswold town of Stourton-on-the-Hill. Together they run the idyllically named Cat Cafe where tea and biscuits are dispensed with love and wisdom. When Debbie's's erratic sister, Linda arrives complete with her dog, Beau, in tow, well, you can imagine just how the dynamics of the cat cafe changes overnight.

What then follows is a delightful tale of how two very different sisters try to come to terms with each other's lives, whilst at the same time, the menagerie of animals who must now all live together under the same roof also need to try to get along as best they can. However, for Molly and her family of kittens this is never going to be easy and with Christmas looming and their comfortable home under threat, a Christmas miracle is going to be needed if they are all to stay together.

The author has written a lovely story with a real Christmas feel to it which I am sure will delight animal lovers. The cat cafe is one of those places where you really wish you could visit and Molly is the purrfect protagonist and wonderful at recounting the story in her own inimitable style.

It also warrants a mention that the book is delightfully presented with a festive cover that really  cries out "open me" and that each delightful chapter of the book is headed by a purrfect black and white line drawing of a cat. I think my favourite has to be the cat with the pot of tea !

This was my first visit to the Cat Cafe and I am sure that it won't be my last. I am hopeful that this talented writer will bring us more of Molly's adventures in future stories.



Best Read With...A Feline Fancy and  Pot of Earl Grey tea..




About the Author

Melissa Daley lives in Hertfordshire with her two cats, two children and one husband. One of her cats, Nancy, has a writing pedigree of her own and can be found on Facebook as Nancy Harpenden-Cat. Melissa was inspired by the Cotswolds town of Stow-on-the-Wold, which provides the backdrop for Melissa's novels.


Melissa Daley talks to Jaffareadstoo about Christmas at the Cat Cafe 








*The Kindle edition of Christmas at the Cat Cafe  is currently on a 99p promotion on Amazon UK






My thanks to Jess at Pan Macmillan for sending  me and Jaffa a review copy of this book.






Thursday, 20 October 2016

The Author in my spotlight is ....Melissa Daley



I am delighted to welcome Melissa Daley to Jaffareadstoo






Today Melissa is talking to us about her latest novel Christmas at the Cat Cafe



Macmillan
20 October 2016




Hi Melissa, a very warm welcome to Jaffareadstoo. Tell us a little bit about yourself and the cats in your life?



I live in Harpenden, Hertfordshire, with my husband, two kids, two cats (Pip and Nancy) and our most recent addition, Paddy the puppy. Nancy has been something of a local celebrity since she was a kitten, due to her extreme friendliness and her tendency to follow strangers home, jump into their cars, or make herself comfortable in the local pubs. I set up a Facebook page for her (Nancy Harpenden-Cat) as way of keeping track of her whereabouts, and things snowballed from there. She now has around 2,000 Facebook followers and her own memoir (or ‘meowmoir’) was published in 2011, called Sex and the Kitty. 


Cats are so enigmatic. How do you get inside the mind of a cat and how easy is it to transfer this to a story?


I actually think cats are far more expressive than we sometimes give them credit for, it’s just that their facial expressions and body language are much subtler than, say, a dog’s. But of course their enigmatic qualities also allow us to project our own emotions onto them, which is why they lend themselves so well to being anthropomorphised in fiction. Having spent my entire life living with and observing cats, I find it surprisingly easy to imagine my way into the mind of a cat. The challenge when writing a story from a cat’s point of view is making sure my cat characters have enough emotional depth to resonate with (human) readers, whilst always remaining convincingly feline too.


Christmas at the Christmas Cafe follows the story of Molly who we met in Molly at the Cat Café. Tell me is Molly based on any of your cats?


Pip and Nancy were both excellent muses when I needed to describe something specific about cat behaviour, for instance the neat semi-circle cats form when they sleep, with their tail tucked around their paws. It was very useful to have two models so close to hand! But in terms of Molly’s emotional journey and the way she responds to the upheavals she faces, I would have to say there is probably more of me in her character, than my cats.





Nancy



Pip



What do you enjoy most about writing?


The freedom to let my imagination run wild – there’s nothing else like it, in terms of unfettered creativity. I love the planning stage of the writing process, coming up with characters, working out the plot, trying to play the whole thing out in my mind and then getting it down on paper in a chapter plan. It’s when that’s done that the hard work really starts. The challenge is producing a book that does justice to the story I have in my head.


Do you have a special place to do your writing and do any of your cats like to interrupt the writing process?


I write at the computer in our front room, which serves as my study. Both Pip and Nancy have been known to wander in and drape themselves across my keyboard, or settle down for a lengthy wash on the print-out of my chapter plan. Sometimes it feels like they’re taunting me when they nap on top of my work – especially if I’m writing very early in the morning or late at night and am exhausted. It would be fair to say I have a certain amount of envy at their leisurely lifestyles, and their ability to take a nap whenever they fancy it.


Can we expect to see more of Molly’s adventures in future stories?


I guess that partly depends on whether readers want to read more! I’d love to let my imagination get to work on devising some fresh adventures for Molly and her kittens. Watch this space!

Melissa Daley




26889368 32319623





Both Molly and the Cat Cafe and Christmas at the Cat Cafe are published by Macmillan




Melissa Daley lives in Hertfordshire with her two cats, two children and one husband. One of her cats, Nancy, has a writing pedigree of her own and can be found on Facebook as Nancy Harpenden-Cat. Melissa was inspired by the Cotswolds town of Stow-on-the-Wold, which provides the backdrop for Melissa's novels.



Christmas at the Cat Cafe is published by Macmillan on the 20th October

Amazon UK









My thanks to Melissa for answering my questions so patiently and also to Jess at Macmillan for my copy of the book and her help in compiling this interview.







~***~

Monday, 10 October 2016

Review ~ Stay Dead by Jessie Keane


27882560
Macmillan
September 2016


A bit of book blurb..

Stay Dead is the heart stopping sixth book in Jessie Keane's bestselling Annie Carter series. Annie Carter finally believes that life is good. She and Max are back together and she has a new and uncomplicated life sunning herself in Barbados. It's what she's always dreamed of. Then she gets the news that her old friend Dolly Farrell is dead, and suddenly she finds herself back in London and hunting down a murderer with only one thing on her mind ...revenge. But the hunter can so quickly become the hunted, and Annie has been keeping too many secrets. She's crossed and bettered a lot of people over the years, but this time the enemy is a lot closer to home and she may just have met her match.


My thoughts about the book..

This is the sixth book in the Annie Carter series and I sure that there are legions of this author's work who devour her  books as soon as they hit the bookshelf. As this was my first book by this author and therefore my first foray into the complicated world that Annie Carter inhabits, it must be said that I struggled with the story. Not because the writing lets it down, far from it, the plot and characterisation are very good, as the author clearly knows how to target her book towards her audience, but for me, it was more that without the benefit of knowing the series so far, I couldn't quite grasp the hidden nuances which make up so much of the story's overall effect.

There's no doubt that the author writes at a cracking good pace. The story moves along well and the hint of trouble and the constant threat of danger ensures that the story sits comfortably within the gangland crime/thriller genre. If you are already a fan then I am sure that you will love to see where Anna and Max's story moves along too,  however, if like me you are new to the Anna Carter series then it's probably better that you start at the very beginning, it seems like a very good place to start to get to know the fierce and feisty, Anna Carter. 



Best Read with... Large cups of coffee, heavy on the caffeine..



About the Author


Jessie Keane is a top twenty bestselling author. She's lived both ends of the spectrum, and her fascination with London's underworld led her to write Dirty Game, followed by best sellers Black Widow, Scarlet Women, Jail Bird,The Make, Playing Dead, Nameless, Ruthless (the fourth book to feature Annie Carter) and Lawless. Jessie's books have sold more than 750,000 copies, and she is a top 20 bestselling author. She now lives in Hampshire.





My thanks to Katie at Macmillan for my review copy of Stay Dead.



~***~



Thursday, 22 September 2016

The Author in my spotlight is .....Joanna Courtney



I'm really delighted to welcome back to Jaffareadstoo the historical fiction author 


Joanna Courtney









I am a huge fan of Joanna's first book The Chosen Queen and  was delighted to be given the opportunity to read and review, The Constant Queen which is her latest historical novel in the Queens of Conquest series.






27874227
Macmillan
22 September 2016
 A bit of book blurb...

Elizaveta is princess of Kiev, but that doesn't stop her chasing adventure. Defying conventions, she rides the rapids of the Dneiper alongside her royal brothers, and longs to rule in her own right as a queen.

Elizaveta meets her match when the fearsome Viking warrior Harald Hardrada arrives at her father's court seeking fame and fortune. He entrusts Elizaveta to be his treasure keeper, to hold the keys to his ever-growing wealth - and eventually to his heart.

Theirs is a fierce romance and the strength of their love binds them together as they travel across the vast seas to Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Iceland. In 1066, their ambition carries them to Orkney as they plan to invade England and claim the crown



To celebrate the paperback publication day of The Constant Queen, Joanna has written a special guest post for Jaffareadstoo which outlines her thoughts about the pros and cons of writing a novel based on Anglo-Saxon history...


When it comes to writing about the pre-1066 era there is one huge issue – the massive gaps in our knowledge, not just of the events but also of the people, the attitudes and reasoning behind the big dates. There are very few primary sources from this period and those we do have are either sparse, contradictory or overly imaginative so we’re never sure what’s actually true. Historians have a field day debating what happened when and why, but for authors trying to establish a factual spine for their novel it can be a minefield. That said, however, whilst these big gaps in the facts are a frustration for a historian, they are also a gift for a novelist, for I can fill them in with imagination - or, rather, with responsible interpretation.

I cannot in my novels write exactly what did happen but it’s very important to me to write what could have happened. What dates we do know need to be accurate and I try to use what is reported of people to create characters who work in a convincing way. For example, we know that King Harold went rushing down to Hastings to meet William before he had really summoned full reinforcements. If he’d waited a few days he’d have been far more likely to win, so understanding why he took that call is vital to telling a good story.

This information gap is especially problematic for women. It’s rare for the births of such girls (or even boys) to be listed so we often have to work out what children people had by tracing them back once they pop up as marrying someone 18 years later. We can get a glimpse of names, the odd snippet of gossip, or a signature on a charter but there is little else. 

When learning about the three heroines of my Queens of the Conquest series - Edyth, Elizaveta and Mathilda - it’s been up to me to interpret their characters the best way I can. Elizaveta of Kiev, for example, is known to have sailed to the Orkneys with her husband Harald Hardrada when he launched his attack on England, presumably so she was there to hasten to his side when he claimed the throne. That, to me, spoke of a brave and adventurous woman and I shaped my Elizaveta accordingly.

When writing about Anglo-Saxons, Vikings and Normans we are up against this tricky wall of a term - the ‘dark ages’. I hate it. They’re only ‘dark’ because we know so little about them; we are the ones in the dark. At the time, these people lived lives every bit as sophisticated, cultured and socially advanced as their later Tudor ancestors. Indeed, the intrigues and political conflicts around the dramatic events of 1066 were at least as complex as something like the Babington Plot. 

These people were not illiterate idiots with little more on their minds than ploughs and swords and ale. Their halls and churches were magnificent, albeit it mainly carved in wood so sadly lost to us now. Their law and government systems were highly developed and their clothing and particularly their jewellery was astonishingly intricate and elegant. Getting people to understand that, however, can be hard.

It was also a far wider world than people imagine. Water was the fastest means of travel, be it across seas or down rivers, and the Vikings in particular were masters of the water. In The Constant Queen the action moves from Medieval Kiev, to Constantinople, Norway, Iceland and, finally, the Orkneys and Stamford Bridge where Harald Hardrada met his sad end. Researching all these places took some doing but threw up wonderful settings for my characters. 

For example, Kiev in the mid eleventh century was an astonishing place – a vast walled city atop a huge set of hills with highly developed architecture, including magnificent halls, churches, fountains, and even huge brass statues. It was heavily influenced by Constantinople, a city of such riches that all contemporary chroniclers raved about it, and the river-route between the two was travelled by thousands every year. These people were not stay-at-home villagers with their nose in their corn. Traders swarmed all over Europe, spreading culture, goods and news and my high-born characters are a part of this connected continent. That makes them hard to research but exciting to write about.

Readers, myself included, love the Tudors for their glamour – they are historical ‘Dynasty’ as the wonderful if rather lurid program ‘The Tudors’ proved. I think there may be an underlying feeling that the sixteenth century is when people started to be recognisably like ourselves but that’s just not true. Evolution is a long and complicated process and for humans the 1000 years back to pre-1066 is a drop in the ocean. Yes, communication networks and transport and cooking/heating methods were different but people – the important part of any story – were still very much the same. Social norms were also different but the core emotions of love and fear and desire and ambition were surely identical and that’s what I look to explore in my novels – not the pedantic differences between then and now, but the exciting similarities.

So, in essence, the biggest ‘con’ of writing about this period is the lack of information we have about it, but conversely this is also its biggest ‘pro’ as it leaves room to create vibrant and hopefully believable stories. The Anglo-Saxon period was not a duller or ‘darker’ time than later periods and is no less fun to read about. I hope my novels can transport people back to a period they may know very little about and offer them both some new historical knowledge and, most importantly of all, gripping stories. 

©Joanna Courtney

Find out more about Joanna on her website by clicking here

Follow her on Twitter @joannacourtney1




Huge thanks to Joanna for such an interesting and informative guest post and for sharing her thoughts about the pros and cons of writing about Anglo Saxon history.


The Constant Queen is published in paperback today and is available to buy online and from all good book stores.



My thoughts about The Constant Queen..



Before reading The Constant Queen, Elizaveta of Kiev and her husband, the Viking warrior Harold Sigurdsson, or as he is more commonly known, Harold Hardrada, were a complete mystery to me, and if I am perfectly honest neither of them ever appeared on my radar as historical figures I wanted to get to know, so what has been so refreshing about reading The Constant Queen is the fact that I am coming into a period of history which is completely new to me, and so, because of that, I could settle into the story without any preconceived notions of who did what, why and when.

When Harold Hardrada appears in Kiev, at her father's court,  in 1031 Elizaveta is still very young and even though in her early interaction with Hardrada,she shows a maturity beyond her years, there is still enough of the precocious child in her to want to run unbidden through the long corridors of the Kremlin. What the novel then goes on to explain is how the relationship between Elizaveta and Hardrada develops, and also of the initial conflict which occurs between Elizaveta and Hardrada's other spouse, Tora Torbergsdatter, who is always going to be her love rival for Hardrada's affections.

The story is so much more than just romantic historical fiction and even though it was interesting to see how the relationship between Elizaveta and Hardrada developed, it was also fascinating to learn the background behind Hardrada's later involvement in the Battle of Hastings. Beautifully researched and impeccably detailed this is one of those strong historical fiction novels which is impossible to power through, not because the story isn't interesting, as believe me it is, but because there is so much absorbing detail to take in. Sweeping between Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland and the Orkneys, the novel opens up a historical period of which I had scant knowledge and which on closer inspection I found to be hugely compelling.

Writing about the strong women that history has overlooked seems to be the trademark of this talented historical fiction author. With effortless ease she infuses her female characters with such a strong sense of purpose that you can’t help but be drawn, quite forcibly, into their lives. And as the pages turn, you are transported back to the eleventh century, back to a dark and dangerous time when to be a woman in a man’s world was racked with danger.


Whilst it is possible to read either of the books thus far in the Queens of Conquest series as standalone novels, I think that there is much more to be enjoyed in reading both novels in order. I am sure that the third book in the trilogy about Matilda of Flanders will be equally compelling.




Best Read with.... Tankards of strong ale and generous slices of roasted duck







My thanks to the author for sharing her work with me and also to Jess at Macmillan for her help with Joanna's guest post and also for my review copy of The Constant Queen.




~***~















Thursday, 5 May 2016

The author in my spotlight is ...David Hewson



Jaffareadstoo is delighted to welcome




On the Publication Day of his latest Detective Pieter Vos Novel





Voss #3
Macmillan
5th May 2016






Hello David, welcome to Jaffareadstoo and congratulations on the publication of  your latest novel.





Without revealing too much, what can you tell us about Little Sister?

This is a story about two sisters who, at the age of ten, were deemed guilty of a terrible crime: the murder of a man they seem to have believed, wrongly, had killed their family. We meet them eleven years on, after incarceration in an institution outside Amsterdam in a remote lakeside location. Their doctor thinks they’re well enough for a gradual return to the community. But when they set off for a halfway house in the city with their nurse they disappear - as does the nurse. And Vos, drawn into the case almost by accident, begins to realise that the family tragedy of a decade before was never fully investigated and is still, for some people, very much alive. So it’s a story about guilt and retribution and, for the sisters, Mia and Kim Timmers, a fight to understand what really happened to them in the past.




Where do you get your inspiration for a story from – are you inspired by people, places or do you draw purely from your imagination?

Bit of both really. I spend a lot of time in the Netherlands for these books. They’re published pretty much simultaneously in Dutch too so I have a publisher in Amsterdam who’s incredibly helpful when it comes to background. But I never use real-life incidents or people as inspiration. I think imagination’s a wonderful thing and I’d be cheating a bit if I did that. 




Your writing is very atmospheric – how do you ‘set the scene’ in your novels and how much research did you need to do in order to bring Little Sister to life?

I choose a particular area of the city and a set time of year because they will dictate a lot of the story. This takes place in high summer, much of it in the rural area outside Amsterdam called Waterland. So I rent an apartment and travel the buses, taking photos, making notes, trying out ideas. The contrast between rural Waterland and the busy city is a key part of this book. Mia and Kim can’t wait to escape their institution and reach the city. But when they get there — surreptitiously — it’s quite terrifying for them. 



Whilst researching the novel, did you discover anything which surprised you?

The biggest surprise was discovering Waterland. It’s only fifteen kilometres from the centre of Amsterdam but it’s like travelling from the middle of London to furthest Cornwall. The best known place is Edam where the cheese originated. A lot of the story, though, takes place in the fishing and tourist village of Volendam and the little island of Marken. The Dutch view this as a holiday area and it’s delightful but foreign visitors barely know it exists.



When do you find the time to write, and do you have a favourite place to do your writing?

Well writing’s what I do for a living so finding the time for it is no problem at all. Though I could always use more. Mostly I write at home in Kent but I always take the work in progress with me on the road. A fair bit of this book was actually written in an apartment overlooking the Prinsengracht canal, not far from where Vos’s fictional houseboat would be. But home, with a big screen and no distractions, is probably the best place to write.



Can you tell us if you have another novel planned?

The fourth Vos book is already finished and will be out in a year’s time. After that… I’m working on a few ideas. And the first Vos book is being developed as an eight-part series for Dutch TV which is exciting too - looking forward to seeing that.




David Hewson is a former journalist  who has worked at The Times, The Independent and The Sunday Times. He is the author of twenty crime thrillers set in various European cities, including the critically acclaimed interpretation of Danish TV drama The Killing and the Nic Costa series set in Rome. His ability to capture the sense of place and atmosphere of the cities in his novels comes from spending considerable research time there. David was inspired to write his new detective crime series starring Pieter Voss ( The House of Dolls, its sequel The Wrong Girl and now Little Sister) after exploring the city of Amsterdam..






















Twitter @david_hewson







My thanks to the author and to the publishers Macmillan for my review copy of  Little Sister

and to Sophie at EDPR for her help with this interview.




~***~

Tuesday, 18 August 2015

Review ~ The Bones of You by Debbie Howells

The Bones of You
Macmillan
July 2015



Everyone has secrets but some are more dangerous than others.


Eighteen year old Rosie Anderson has disappeared, and in the pretty village where she lives, alarm bells start to ring, as Rosie is so quiet and inoffensive that no-one can quite believe she would act so out of character. And yet for her family, and the village at large, the nightmare is only just beginning.

The Bones of You takes a family tragedy of epic proportions and cleverly weaves a tense psychological thriller which is a cut above the average whodunit. It is beautifully written, with a real sense of both mystery and suspense that you can't help but be drawn into the story, as right from the very start, we know that something dreadful has happened. As the story unfolds we are allowed a glimpse into the very heart and soul of a family who are completely at odds with themselves.

What then follows is a cleverly plotted and suspenseful family drama which looks at the concealment of secrets and of the overwhelming deceit of lives in turmoil. I think that there was just the right amount of suspense and whilst the book doesn’t focus on police procedure there is a very clear sense that this is a complex criminal case which has very human emotions at its heart.

Reminiscent, perhaps, of The Lovely Bones, but no less important because of that comparison, I think that to say more about book’s content would be to give far too much away, and that would be so unfair. However, what I will acknowledge is that this is a very clever debut novel, by a talented author who I am sure will go on to give us more heart stopping moments. I can't wait to see what she does next.




Debbie Howells

Debbie Howells is a florist and lives with her family in Sussex. Her agent discovered The Bones of You on the slush pile and immediately spotted it as a future best seller.


Find Debbie on her website
Follow her on Twitter @debbie_howells





My thanks to Lauren at Macmillan and Bookridgr for my copy of The Bones of You


Published 16 July and available from all good book shops. 



~***~








Thursday, 7 May 2015

Guest Author ~ Joanna Courtney








Author of 




 Published today

7 May 2015


23358228
Macmillan Publishers
7 May 2015



Joanna ~ A big welcome to Jaffareadstoo and thanks for taking the time to answer our questions.




How long have you been writing and what got you started?


I’ve been writing pretty much all my life – at least since I developed the coordination to hold a pen. I was an avid reader as a child and used to make up stories for my siblings on long car journeys to our grandparents in Scotland. By the age of 10 I was writing boarding school novels, of the Enid Blyton ilk, and I’ve never really stopped since.

I started actually having fiction published when I stopped work to have my first child thirteen years ago. I wrote short stories then as I could fit them into the minimal gaps between caring for her and I was first published by The People’s Friend and then, gradually, by all the other women’s magazines.
Once my daughter and son were safely at school and I had more time I moved on to serials but all the time I had also been writing novels. I must have completed at least ten adult books before The Chosen Queen was accepted for publication and the number of times I’ve announced my intention to ‘give up all this writing nonsense’ must be countless. It all feels worth it now though.



What can you tell us about The Chosen Queen that won’t give too much away?

Given that it’s about the wife of King Harold who infamously died with an arrow in his eye at the Battle of Hastings (or not – you’ll have to read it for my take on that), the final outcome of the novel is never really in any doubt. For readers, therefore, I’m hoping that what will keep them interested is less ‘what’s going to happen,’ than ‘how is it going to happen’.
That said, this is a novel about Edyth, whose life is barely documented at all, so hopefully there are some surprises. Her emotional motivations and struggles are also pretty much all my own interpretation and I’ve written this novel in the firm belief that what makes us human hasn’t changed much in the last 1000 years, so some of her dilemmas are hopefully relevant to everyone.
What I’ll say, therefore, is - consider what you’d feel like if you were told that the fate of your country depended on you marrying your best friend’s boyfriend…



The Queens of Conquest trilogy will focus on a Saxon, a Viking and a Norman Queen. Which, if any, of the women did you identify with and why?

I think it’s a truth that other writers will attest to that you tend to become very involved with whoever is your current heroine. At first I was very intertwined with Edyth of Mercia, but for the last six months I’ve been deep in the head of Elizaveta of Kiev, and now I am slowly climbing into that of Matilda of Flanders. I think it’s a bit like having children – I love them all equally but in different ways.
It’s probably true that Edyth is the most like me – quick to get herself into bother but not one to let things get her down. This is perhaps because I wrote her first, so it was like dropping myself back a century (and up a class or two, to boot!). I’ve loved writing Elizaveta too, though, because she is the sort of fiery, defiant person that I would secretly rather like to be and I admire her so much for that. Matilda I am yet to unveil. She has made a guest appearance in my ebook novella - coming out next Christmas - and from writing that I’m liking her already. She’s classically been stuck on the baddies’ side of the Conquest so it’s going to be fascinating exploring the story from her (and William’s) point of view.



In your research for the books did you come across anything that surprised you?

I don't think there’s been much that’s surprised me, but I do love the way that historical research can throw up connections that really get you thinking about the shape of your novel. When I first started researching Edyth, for example, I didn’t know that she’d been married to the King of Wales and, what’s more, the only man ever to have been the King of all Wales.
It was clear already that Edyth was chosen as Harold’s queen because she was sister to the Earls of the North and would bring him their desperately needed allegiance as the country faced invaders. Finding out more about her rule in Wales, however, helped me to work out how her experiences there also made her the best woman, personally, to help Harold hold England.
For me one of the thrills of writing historical fiction is taking the known facts (which are often few in this period) and imagining the personal motivations that might help to link them up. I hope that is what will make this trilogy accessible and entertaining for the modern reader.



What would you like readers to take away from your books?

I hope that my trilogy will give readers a sense of a period that is less well known than, say, the Tudors, but it’s the characters that I really hope will stick with them. My primary aim as a novelist is to tell a good story and for me that comes from creating people that readers can really get to know and to feel for.
I hope, therefore, that they will come away from my books with a sense of the three queens as individuals with stories all of their own, not just as figures woven into the fabric of history. 1066 was obviously a vital year for England and I love the tension of ‘what if’ that the events bring to the book but it’s not my aim to teach readers, just to tell a tale of three women trying to live their own lives as best they could in exciting and often difficult circumstances.



What is your perfect writing day?

Any day, whatever else might have happened, is usually made perfect by writing a section – be it chapter, paragraph or just sentence – that I’m really pleased with. That said, my ideal day would probably start with a nice sunny walk with the dog to clear the cobwebs and think about where I’m going to take my characters, then plenty of time in my lovely office to get it all down on paper. I write freehand when I’m drafting so I usually do that curled up on the sofa by my window, ideally with plenty of coffee and more than likely a square or two of chocolate to keep up the creative energy!
At the moment my son is still at primary school so, dearly though I love him, the best gift I could have for a really great writing day would be not to have to break off to pick him up at 3.15. I’d love to find the time to go away somewhere quiet for a few days to write. If I ever manage that, I’d probably keep going til 5ish stop for an hour or two – enough time for another walk, maybe a bath and something to eat - and then write again in the evening, perhaps with a small glass of wine at my side this time.



Do you reward yourself when you finished writing your book?

It’s quite hard to say exactly when a book is ‘finished’ – is it the end of the first draft, submission to the publisher, the final edit, or when it comes out on the shelves? They’re all milestones and yes, I do try to mark them in some way – usually with a bottle of bubbly!

Writing is a tough, lonely, frustrating, infuriating, depressing business a lot of the time and I do think it’s really important to recognise when you’ve achieved something. In a conventional office job there are often opportunities for recognition and a sense of achievement and we writers owe to ourselves to foster that sort of positive spirit whenever we can.



You can find more about Joanna here 
and follow her on Twitter @joannacourtney1




My review of The Chosen Queen featured on Anne Cater's excellent blog,
 Random Things Through My Letterbox, in March 2015. 





Huge thanks to Joanna for being  a lovely guest on the blog today
and to Katie James at Macmillan for her help with this interview.




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Thursday, 23 October 2014

Author in the spotlight is ...Kerry Wilkinson

I am delighted to welcome Kerry Wilkinson to the blog to talk about his latest book in the Jessica Daniel series of crime novels.

21847680
Jessica Daniel #8
Macmillan
2014
Kerry Wilkinson



Hi Kerry ~ welcome to Jaffareadstoo...


What inspired you to write a crime series?

It was a bit of an accident in that the plot for Locked In - my first book - dropped into my head unexpectedly one Saturday. If the plot for a wacky space opera with singing ducks had made its appearance known instead, I think my life might have taken a different turn.


What makes a good villain?

Someone whose motive is sound. He or she might be evil to everyone else's eye - but if the villain truly believes in their own actions, that's what makes them scary. It's why explanations such as, "The bad guy's crazy" is such a cop out.


Are you a plotter.... or a start writing and see where it takes you sort of writer?

I plot everything methodically, chapter to chapter. The final draft doesn't necessarily end up the way I'd originally plotted but it's there or thereabouts.


What scares you about writing books?

Nothing. There's nothing to be scared of.


What books do you like to read?

All sorts. I recently finished Stephen King's Mr Mercedes, which is a thriller. I'm reading Columbine, a non-fiction telling of the massacre and I'm also into Seconds by Bryan Lee O'Malley - a comic about choices, which is utterly brilliant. I never limit myself to one genre.


What’s next ?

There's another Jessica book, Scarred For Life, out in early 2015; then the second of my young adult-fantasy trilogy, Renegade, in April/May. I'm writing new stuff at the moment, too. I always have something on the go. I feel lazy if I'm not doing five things at once.


More about Kerry can be found here:



Twitter @kerrywk




Kerry - thanks so much for sharing your thoughts on crime writing. We wish you continuing success with your writing.


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Wednesday, 22 October 2014

Review ~ Crossing the Line by Kerry Wilkinson

21847680
Macmillan
September 2014


Detective Inspector Jessica Daniel is newly promoted and facing a series of challenges which test her expertise and resources to the limit. Working the grim and dangerous streets of inner city Manchester is never easy and when a series of unrelated crimes spiral out of control, for her own peace of mind, Jessica needs to keep one step ahead of the criminal fraternity. The story gets off to a good start with the punchy investigation into the violent assault on a local councillor; then when further crimes start to escalate, Jessica and her team realise that they have something very dangerous to investigate.

This is my first experience of reading Kerry Wilkinson’s Jessica Daniel’s crime series, and as this is book eight, I felt like I had come rather late to the party. There seems to be a lot of back story to catch up on and there are oblique references to events of which new readers know nothing. I’m afraid, that I felt a little bit lost at times, which is why it’s always better to start at the beginning of a well established series. However, being a northerner, I did enjoy the Manchester setting, and the darker elements of Mancurian life were brought realistically to life.

Overall, the story was interesting and well controlled, although I did think that the first half of the book was a little slow in getting going, but once Jessica and her team started to work together better, the story became more interesting.

I’m not altogether sure that I would invest in the series from the beginning but if you like realistic northern crime in a gritty and uncompromising setting then my advice would be to start with book one, which was Locked In, and take it from there.


Amazon UK


My thanks to Sam Eades at Macmillan for my review copy of this book.


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