Thursday, 18 September 2014

An Interesting Couple of Weeks


Lots of nice things have happened since my last post - so I thought this one could be a lot of bits and pieces of news.

My most recent news is that I have a story in both the weekly People's Friend and the Special. The first, which is called A Gift of Hope, is one of my WW1 stories. It's written in first person from the male perspective (which I really like) and although short, is one of my favourite stories. I absolutely love Jim Dewar's illustration.

The second story, One More Step, was one I was asked to write for Andre Leonard's great illustration. It is semi-autobiographical and I will be sharing with you the inspiration behind the story in my next post.

My story, 'Holy Toast' is in this month's Take a Break Fiction Feast and is a humorous piece, which is unusual for me - but I though it might be fun to have a go at something new. I'm now trying to think up some other ideas that might work as a light-hearted story, so I can have another go.

Also, I am pleased to be featured in Phil Barrington's 8 Days a Week article in Writer's Forum - where I am giving the female perspective on multi-tasking.

In other news, I was very excited to go to the paperback book launch of Juliet West's fabulous 'Before the Fall'. She is a marvellous speaker and an inspiration to us all. While there, I met up with one of my favourite authors, Ann Weisgarber, author of 'The Promise' who had come over from America - fabulous to chat to her.
 

I also  drove two hours to Della Galton's course on 'How to Market Your Book'. Della was a guest on my blog a while back and you can find her post on the link at the side. It was lovely to meet her and also fellow womagwriter, Kath McGurl. It was a great course but I hope that Della's statement that 'short story collections don't sell', won't be true!

Last but by no means least, my new ear grommets work... I can now fly pain free - yippee!

Monday, 8 September 2014

From Rom-Com to Psychological Thriller - Guest Post Cally Taylor


It gives me great pleasure to welcome today's guest, Cally Taylor, to my blog. Cally has moved from short stories to rom-com novels and finally has made her name as the author of psychological thriller The Accident. I wanted to find out a little more about her diverse journey.

 
Welcome to my blog, Cally - it's great to have you here.

Wonderful to be here. Thanks so much for asking me, Wendy.

 
It's my pleasure. Now I've been dying to ask - in the days when you were writing short stories, did you ever imagine that you would one day be a published author?

I never dreamed I’d be a published author one day. I’ve always been a voracious reader and, to me, authors were mythical creatures who lived in the fairy-tale world of ‘Publishing’. They weren’t ordinary people who had families and full time jobs and spent their childhood holidays in caravans in soggy Aberystwyth. No, their great-grandfathers were authors, they lived in Bloomsbury or Hampstead or Primrose Hill and they hung out at the Ivy. It was all about who you knew and where you went to school. Or so I thought.  

I felt the same about short story writers when I first started sending my stories in to the women’s magazines. I saw two names popping up all the time – Della Galton and Teresa Ashby – and I assumed they were in on ‘the big secret’ of women’s magazine publishing (whatever that may be) or they somehow knew the editors. The truth, I discovered years later, was that they’re exactly the same as me. They’re women who love telling stories and who worked really, really hard to see their work in print.

It’s the same with authors. There’s no ‘club’ you need to be part of, no secret network you need to join, you just have to write a stonkingly good novel and hope an agent, and then an editor, get what you were trying to do. Somehow I managed to do that and no one is more astonished than me.

 
I used to think that about magazine writers too, Cally, until I became one myself. Do you feel it was a natural progression, moving from short story to novel?

It was a natural progression for me because I’d always wanted to write a novel but I know that, for some short story writers, the idea of writing a novel is a real anathema. It’s a long, long slog and you don’t get that lovely ‘I just finished a story’ buzz that you get dozens of times a year if you’re focussing on short stories. With novels you’re lucky if you get that once a year!

When you write short stories you learn about the importance of an enticing beginning, three dimensional characters, pacing, plot, theme and a strong ending. What you don’t learn is how to craft sub plots or juggle multiple strands or points of view or how you sustain tension and mystery over a much, much longer story so writing my first novel wasn’t without its difficult moments. You can read a hundred different books on ‘how to write a novel’ but none of them can tell you how to craft your own story or how to fix its issues. Writing a novel made me realise why so many people ditch them after a few thousand words. You need stamina and determination to get to ‘The End’.

 
Your two novels, Home For Christmas and your latest, The Accident, are very different. What prompted you to make the change from chick lit to psychological thriller?

I was in a very different place in my personal life when I wrote my chicklit books Heaven Can Wait and Home for Christmas. I was in my early thirties, I was in a relationship but lived alone, and I didn’t have any children. Like a lot of women at that stage of their life I was obsessed with love and romance and finding ‘the one’ and it felt natural to write romantic-comedies with themes that I could relate to.

When I wrote The Accident, my debut psychological thriller, I was thirty-eight. I was living with my partner and we’d just had a child together. My priorities couldn’t have been more different. I’d found the security and the family life I’d always craved and I wanted to protect it and keep it safe. Psychological thrillers hinge on worst case scenarios – what if your child disappears? What if your husband has a terrible secret? What if you’re losing your mind? – and it didn’t take a huge leap of imagination to come up with a similar scenario for The Accident. Once I’d identified what my worst fears were the plot started to take shape.

 
Which genre did you find easiest to write?

I can’t say that I find rom-coms easier to write than psychological thrillers or vice versa as there are elements of both genres that are tricky. With rom-coms I always worried that what made me laugh might not make the reader laugh, whilst with psychological thrillers the difficulty is getting the pace right. You need it to be pacey enough that your reader keeps turning the page but not at the expense of character development.

 

You must be very excited that Home For Christmas has been made into a film. Did you have much input into it or did you have to hand over your baby and stand back?

I am ridiculously excited that Home for Christmas is being made into a film. I’d heard of authors having their books optioned but knew the reality was that very few films are actually produced. As a result I didn’t let myself get too excited when Home for Christmas was optioned by JumpStart Productions. I couldn’t have underestimated them more because they did it, they got the film made, and I’m due to see the finished edit any day now (and I cannot WAIT!).

After JumpStart optioned the film I was asked if I’d like to write the screenplay. At the time I was up to my eyes in UK and US edits for The Accident and, with a day job four days a week and a pre-schooler to look after the rest of the time I just didn’t have enough hours in the day. I happily agreed for Jamie, the director, to write the screenplay and gave feedback on it as and when I could. When I went to watch the filming I was there as an observer (and an extra for a few scenes!). Lots of authors say that writing a novel is like giving birth. If that’s the case then I gestated and birthed Home for Christmas but JumpStart adopted it and brought it up. It was still ‘my baby’ but different. Seeing the characters that had started life in my head actually come alive in front of my eyes was one of the most surreal and magical moments of my life.    

 
I have to confess, chick lit is not my reading of choice but Home For Christmas made me laugh out loud in places as it's very visual humour. Did you imagine it as a film as you were writing it?

I never imagine any of my books as films when I plot them but I do visualize the scenes as I’m writing them. It’s funny because the editor who worked on Home for Christmas commented on how much slapstick there was in the book and said it tended to work better on screen than in novels so I cut quite a lot before the book was published. Lots remained though and I cannot WAIT to see the oyster scene in Home for Christmas. It’s one of my favourite scenes in any of my books and I just hope it looks as funny on screen as it did in my head.

 
Were you happy with the choice of actors?

I was delighted. Initially I didn’t think the main characters – April Pearson as Beth and Karl Davies as Matt – looked like the characters I’d created in my head but they nailed the nuances of their personalities and did a fabulous job. Other characters – like Mrs Blackstock and Grandad were spot on visually and I can’t wait to watch everyone interacting in the final film to see how well the chemistry works.

 
Moving on now to your thriller. In The Accident, obsession and control play a large part in the plot. Is there an element of fact amongst the fiction?

Yes, unfortunately there is. I escaped from an emotionally abusive relationship several years before I met my current partner. He never hit me but he was incredibly controlling, narcissistic and manipulative and I drew on the slow, subtle way he drew me into the relationship and the gradual diminishing of my self-esteem to create the relationship between Susan and James. Unlike my previous relationship James was physically and sexually abusive to Susan and those scenes were very hard to visualise and write.

 
Your past comes back to haunt you is something that your heroine, Sue, finds out in your novel - do you think this is true?

I do, and it’s something I’m exploring in my current book, Last Girl Standing, as well. I think we try and put the events of our pasts in little boxes and close the lid, especially if they’re painful, but everything that happens to us has an impact on our personalities and the way we behave. No one can ever completely escape their past.

 
How long did The Accident take you to write?

It took about six months to write the first draft and another three months to edit. If I’m honest I can’t really remember writing it! I was on maternity leave at the time and I was extremely sleep deprived.

 
I know that you are at present working on your third novel, Last Girl Standing. Can you tell us something about it?

Last Girl Standing is about friendship, deceit and murder.

Jane Hughes works in an animal sanctuary in rural Wales and she’s in a fledgling relationship with Will, the local primary school teacher. She’s the happiest and most content she’s ever been – until she receives a note through the post that says, ‘I know your name’s not really Jane Hughes’. Someone from her past is after her, and they won’t stop until they destroy everything, and everyone, she loves.
 
Thank you again for sharing your answers, Cally and we wish you well with your new novel.

 
Cally Taylor is an author with two writing heads. Her Cally Taylor head writes romantic comedies and women’s fiction whilst her CL Taylor head writes dark psychological thrillers.

Cally’s latest - a dark psychological thriller called THE ACCIDENT (written as CL Taylor) - was published by Avon HarperCollins in April 2014 and in the USA (as BEFORE I WAKE) by Sourcebooks in June 2014. It shot into the top ten of Amazon.co.uk's Kindle chart within two weeks of release and rights have been sold to Germany, Italy, Russia, Brazil, Turkey and Poland.

Her international bestselling romantic comedies, HEAVEN CAN WAIT and HOME FOR CHRISTMAS were published by Orion in the UK and translated into 14 languages.

HOME FOR CHRISTMAS is being developed into a feature film by JumpStart Productions featuring Karl Davies, April Pearson, Lucy Griffiths and Derren Nesbitt. Shooting took place in April and May 2014 and the film will be premiered in December.

 


Psych thriller blog: http://www.cltaylorauthor.com



 

 


 

Monday, 1 September 2014

Sleeping in a Troglodyte Cave

 
We've just come back from a great holiday in the Dordogne. We stayed in the medieval town of La Roche Gageac on the banks of the river and the view above was taken from my bedroom window.
 
It's years since I've holidayed in a country other than Greece and it did us good to be made to remember our classroom French - why should we always presume that people should speak English?

We swam in our pool, visited Chateau, walked the cobbled streets of small villages such as Beynac and Rocamadour and of course ate too much - but what can you do when the markets such as the one below in Domme are filled with such wonderful produce?

 
We hired canoes and having been driven 16km upstream, paddled back to our village. The photograph doesn't show how exhausted I was by the end of it and two of our family members ended up with badly sunburnt feet! It was great fun though.


"What about the  Troglodyte cave?" I hear you ask.

Well here it is:

 
It was a bed and breakfast just outside Loches in the Loire Valley. We stayed in it on our way back to Dieppe and it really was a cave! The conversion was amazing and the owners (who live in another cave) couldn't have been nicer. I have to say, though, that my night in the cave was the strangest experience. I woke to find the downstairs wood burner had sent strange shadows across our ceiling, like cave paintings!


Our bedroom was on the first floor and below was a small sitting room and the second bedroom.




We ate breakfast in a cave too!






Now I'm home again, it's back to the writing. Luckily, as always when I've been away, I've come back with a wealth of ideas - I've just got to find time between the unpacking and the washing to write them down!

Thursday, 21 August 2014

Truth is Stranger than Fiction... or is it?

 


Thirty minutes late and full of excuses, I arrived at the abode of fellow author Hilary Mantelpiece. I tried to hide my guilt under a cloak of invisibility but she saw right through it.

"You're late... KJ." She was obviously not amused. "I have a very large rucksack and I'm not afraid to use it!"

Maybe I should have worn my spectacles when reading the note the owl had brought me earlier that morning - on which were written the instructions for meeting our new writing friend, Agony Christie. Luckily, if Ms Christie was dismayed by our tardiness, when we eventually arrived at our meeting place, she hid it well.

"I've booked first class," she said, indicating for us to follow her into the carriage of the train. "What do you think?"

"It looks like the sort of place where one might hear a cry emanating from one of the carriage compartments in the dead of night."

"You have such a vivid imagination, Ms Rolling Pin," scoffed Ms Mantelpiece. "And don't even think of bringing up the assassination attempt when we went to the Woman's Weekly Fiction Workshop... you know no one believes you."

The tea we drank was divine, straight from the orient and it went well with the Dangelberries I had conjured up with a flick of the wand I'd borrowed from a young wizard. We talked of commas and campervans and absent writerly friends and when Agony's husband, David Bayleaf, sometimes known as Agent G, arrived with his camera, we were thrilled.

"Make us look beautiful," I cried.

His look was scornful.
 
"I only do boats,"  he said.

 
The truth is stranger than fiction.... or is it? If you like your fiction to be well-rounded, you might like to read my friends' accounts here and here for the whole story.

 

Wednesday, 13 August 2014

Why Write About Weddings? - Guest Post Sue Moorcroft



Please give a very warm welcome to my guest this week, Sue Moorcroft. As many of you will already know, Sue wears many hats: Romantic novelist, author of 'how to' books, short story, serial and article writer, competition judge and creative writing tutor... phew!

Sue has joined me today to answer some questions about something that has been on her mind a lot recently - weddings! Not surprising really, seeing as her new book is called 'The Wedding Proposal'.

So without more ado, here is my interview with Sue.


Weddings? Proposals? Let’s get down to the nitty-gritty, Sue - why the obsession with weddings?

A wedding is such a life event that it provokes interest. We stop to see a bride and groom, even if we don't know them. We smile and wish them well - or maybe snark 'They'll learn!​'. But we usually react. There's a lot of money spent on weddings; an incredible amount, in some cases. A wedding can be a fairytale or a sensational event but very few couples seem to just wander into a registry office with a couple of witnesses and do the legalities. For the vast majority, it's a landmark and it's treated as such.

I like that faith in love and happiness.

Do you think the Royal Wedding in 2011 stimulated the market for wedding stories and romance in general?

When it took place, definitely. I know two people who were asked by publishers to write wedding books specifically to come out at the same time. I'm not aware that the 'Kate and Wills effect' is still focused on weddings, though. I think it's babies, now!​

Do you think you have to be a born romantic to be able to write a romance or can you pretend?

I doubt that you can pretend. As I'm a long time member of the Romantic Novelists Association and I've been to RT Booklovers Convention in America twice, I have met a lot of writers in the romantic fiction genre. I don't recall a single one of them who seemed to be pretending.​

With your new novel having the title, The Wedding Proposal, what would you say to a critic who said that marriage was out-dated?

I would say that there's social proof to the contrary because loads of people still get married. I am struck, though, by how many people live together for a significant time and then get married once they know that they wish to begin a family, so the function of marriage has probably changed in the past few decades.​

I'm sure that all these couples don't just get married because it's an efficient legal device with which to share children, though! I think the decision to have children together is probably the moment when the couple decides that they want to spend their lives together and the marriage comes along with that.​

How long did it take to write The Wedding Proposal?

I never time these things but it will have come out ten months after Is This Love? so it's probably around that long.​

I'm always doing other things at the same time as writing a book. I teach creative fiction, judge competitions, write columns, short stories and serials. And then there's all the promo and the business side of my job.

In your view, is it important for a romantic read to have a fairytale ending?

I might not say 'fairytale' so much as 'happy and satisfying'. I don't think most readers read romance to be disappointed at the end. They want to share the euphoria with the hero and heroine.​

If you could go back in time and attend any famous wedding, whose would it be?

Catherine Parr and Henry VIII. I'd like to say to Catherine, 'Don't worry, you'll be OK.' Parr was the name of my paternal grandmother so maybe some more of my family would be in the congregation?​

Your novels are all romances. Have you thought of writing in a different genre e.g. crime?

I don't think I have the right kind of mind to write crime. I have to have a plotty head, obviously, but crime writers are really good at it.

I have​ written a lot of short stories that aren't romantic - about two old men arguing over a ladder or a woman going to the wrong funeral, for example. There aren't any magazines around at the moment that publish only romantic stories, I don't think. (So it's time somebody started one!) My first couple of books were much more family drama orientated, too, although in both cases there was a strong romantic element.​

And finally, any advice for an aspiring romantic novelist such as myself?

Pay attention to the dynamic between your hero and heroine - put the right ones together and it can drive your entire novel. To be honest, I have a lot of advice on this subject and it's all nicely encapsulated in my 'how to' book, Love Writing - How to Make Money Writing Romantic or Erotic Fiction ...

Thanks for having me on your blog. It has been a pleasure.

You're very welcome, Sue. Thank you for visiting.
 



Can a runaway bride stop running?

Elle Jamieson is an unusually private person, in relationships as well as at work – and for good reason. But when she’s made redundant, with no ties to hold her, Elle heads off to a new life in sunny Malta.

Lucas Rose hates secrets – he prides himself on his ability to lay his cards on the table and he expects nothing less from others. He’s furious when his summer working as a divemaster is interrupted by the arrival of Elle, his ex, all thanks to his Uncle Simon’s misguided attempts at matchmaking.

Forced to live in close proximity, it’s hard to ignore what they had shared before Lucas’s wedding proposal ended everything they had. But then an unexpected phone call from England allows Lucas a rare glimpse of the true Elle. Can he deal with Elle’s hidden past when it finally comes to light?

 

Sue Moorcroft writes romantic novels of dauntless heroines and irresistible heroes. Is this Love? was nominated for the Readers’ Best Romantic Read Award. Love & Freedom won the Best Romantic Read Award 2011 and Dream a Little Dream was nominated for a RoNA in 2013. Sue received three nominations at the Festival of Romance 2012, and is a Katie Fforde Bursary Award winner. She’s a past vice chair of the RNA and editor of its two anthologies.

 
How to contact Sue:

Website:  here
Blog:  here
Facebook:  here
Twitter:  here

The Wedding Proposal by Sue Moorcroft is available as an ebook from 4 August and as a paperback from 8 September. You can buy it here
 

Saturday, 9 August 2014

Nowhere to Hide


Sometimes I want to hide.

It all started when I was invited by a lovely fellow writer from the town where I live, to join other writers at her house. It would be a chance to listen to each others work. "Lovely," I hear you say and of course you would be right: evenings like this are lovely... unless you are me!

So what is the problem?

Well to start with, I don't particularly like groups. I love meeting up with two, three or even four people, and will often be the one to instigate such events, but more than that and the pleasure subsides and dread slips in. If I don't know anyone, then that is even worse.

I love writing and I love my work being read... in a magazine, in someone else's head, in the privacy of their own home. Reading my own work? That's a different matter.

Patsy Collins asked what it is that makes me so nervous at the thought of reading my work out and I found it easy to answer. Firstly, I can't get over the feeling that reading something you've written might be viewed as showing off - which of course is stupid, if you've been asked to do it. The main problem, though, is I'm not a limelight person, which is why I like to sing in an 80 strong choir and only ever dream of singing a solo; or why I love dancing in a sea of other dancers but if the spotlight fell on me... ooh er!

Also, I'm quite a perfectionist - if I can't do something to the best of my ability (sing, dance, write) then I'd rather not do it at all. If I read out my work and stutter, stumble and lose my place then, in my eyes, I've failed.

So what did I do last night? Well, I could easily have made an excuse and stayed at home but I didn't - I made myself go. Writing buddy Tracy Fells collected me from my house and when the time came, I didn't chicken out but volunteered to read second (better that waiting the whole evening getting more and more nervous).

And did I muck it up? Luckily no - after all I've had 20 years experience of reading to a class of children - but I think my tomato red face clashed with the walls!

Of course, it was a lovely evening, with an interesting variety of prose and poetry and some wonderful cakes. I could so easily have missed out.

If I'm asked again, I shall be happy to read something else and I know that each time it will be easier. By the time I have to do author readings in Waterstones it will be a doddle... but I might have to duck the flying pigs first :)





Friday, 1 August 2014

I've Made it to 80!


I've just realised it's the two year anniversary of my first story sale and also my blog - Happy Birthday Blog!

It's been a busy month and an exciting one. As you can see from my photo, I have made it to 80 sales (the last one sold today, just in time for my blog post). With six sales in July, that has made it one of the best months since I started writing.

Also last month, the People's Friend Annual 2015 plopped through my letter box. I've always wanted to have a story chosen for it and I'm pleased to say 'The Buttercup Ring' is one of my favourites. I sold it a long time ago and wondered what had happened to it - and now I know!
 
Another thing that happened is that I have been asked to be the judge for the Chiltern Writers short story competition. I feel very proud that the organisers should feel I am worthy of the job - I look forward to reading the entries in November.

I have also had some lovely guests on my blog, Karen Aldous, Natalie Kleinman and Samantha Tonge. Thank you lovely ladies and another thank you to all my lovely readers for making them all feel so welcome! I have some exciting guests lined up in the next few weeks but I won't spoil the surprise by telling you who.

A new thing for last month was taking the plunge and joining the rather scary world of Twitter. I'd like to say I know what I'm doing but it will probably seem obvious that I don't - so if you follow me (@WendyClarke99) be patient. If I don't do things quite as I should it's because I'm a novice. The friendliness and helpfulness of other writers never ceases to amaze me.

Finally, guess what? I started the novel... well, it had to happen sometime!