Competitions : Flash Competition: Of Love and Other Wars

rp_LAOW-Book-Cover-197x300.jpgOf Love and Other Wars – seven more copies still to win.

THIS IS NOW CLOSED

Thanks to Sophie and the lovely people at Simon and Schuster, we still have seven copies of, Of Love and Other Wars, to give away. As well as the book, each winner will also receive a poster of the stunning book cover.

About the book:

At a rally in the Royal Albert Hall, two Quaker brothers, Paul and Charlie Lamb, sign a pledge of peace that only one of them will honour. Meanwhile, in a draughty Victorian mansion in Hampstead, Mr. Morningstar wonders why his wife, a crystallographer from dynasty of diamond cutters, turns into a cursing somnambulist at night, while their daughter, Miriam, comes home from her shifts at the munitions factory with her stockings inside out. As the streets throng with khaki, the Lambs and the Morningstars must decide how to do good in a world transformed by evil. Should a scientist Continue reading

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NK Chats To.... : Victoria Fox

Victoria is the author of Temptation Island, Hollywood Sinners and Wicked Ambition. 

Victoria FoxWe chat to Victoria about her ideal dinner guests, her favourite author and her approach to writing. 

 

What’s your writing style like?

Bonkbusters should have a great sense of humour and fun, and be a bit tongue-in-cheek, so that’s what I aim for. My characters are larger than life and get up to some seriously outrageous antics, so I try to keep my writing light and funny to accommodate this. All the bonkbusters I read as a teenager – Jackie Collins, Jilly Cooper, Shirley Conran – have influenced my style. The thing I love best about these women is how ballsy and brave they are. I don’t want my sex scenes to be watered down or uninspired – they have to be confident, assured and blazing-hot!

 

Are you working on anything at the moment that you can tell us about?

I’m finishing the final draft of my new book POWER GAMES, which is published July 2014. This one’s about seven celebrities who fall victim to a shocking revenge plot: their private jet gets sabotaged and they must fight for survival in the Borneo jungle! It’s my most ambitious novel to date and I’m very excited.

 

Who is your favourite author? Continue reading

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Book News – Julie Cohen

whereloveliesCohen’s new book due for release in July. 

We love Julie Cohen and can’t wait for her new novel. It’s called Where Love Lies and it’s due for release by Bantam Press on 31st July 2014 in hardback and e-book. 

About the book: 

Lately, Felicity just can’t shake the shadow of uncertainty that has pervaded her life. Her husband Quinn is the kindest person she knows and loves her peculiarities more than Felicity feels she deserves. But suddenly it’s as if she doesn’t quite belong.

Then Felicity experiences something extraordinary: a scent of perfume in the air that evokes memories and feelings that have been settled deep within her for a long time, untouched and undisturbed. As it happens again and then again, the memories of a man Felicity hasn’t seen for ten years also flutter to the surface. And so do the feelings of being deeply, exquisitely in love…

Which would you trust: your head or your heart?

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A Seaside Affair Blog Tour – We Chat To Fern Britton

Photo: David Locke at Headshot London

Photo: David Locke at Headshot London

 

A Seaside Affair by Fern Britton was released by HarperCollins on 24th April. 

We are very pleased to welcome Fern and her blog tour to Novel Kicks. We had a chat about her book, the fictional character she’d like to meet and her advice for writers.

 

Can you tell us about A Seaside Affair?

A SEASIDE AFFAIR is my new novel, out on the 24th April, and it’s all about the theatre. The Pavilions theatre in Trevay specifically, which is the fictional Cornish village I write about, based on the real village of Padstow. Left to rack and ruin, not supported by the local people or the local council, it’s on the brink of closure, until a giant coffee chain step in and prepare to buy it. Of course, the community quickly rallies round and a host of villagers decide it’s worth saving! Actors and celebrities descend on the town, and there are affairs, flings, misunderstandings – lots of fun. I was partly inspired by my tour last year with Strictly Come Dancing. I used to be a stage manager myself in the 70s, and when I was on tour I spent a lot of time with the stage management crew, sharing stories about all the scandals that went on, and thinking, yes, I want to write about the theatre next!

 

Who has been your favourite character to write? 

My favourite character – and it’s hard to choose them – Continue reading

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The Seaside Affair Blog Tour: Review

A Seaside AffairA Seaside Affair by Fern Britton. 

We’re happy to welcome Fern to our blog today with her blog tour for her new novel, A Seaside Affair. 

The Blurb: 

When the residents of the Cornish seaside town of Trevay discover that their much-loved theatre is about to be taken over by coffee chain, Café au Lait, they are up in arms. It is up to Penny Leighton, hotshot producer and now happily married Cornish resident, to come up with a rescue plan. Armed with only her mobile phone and her contacts book, she starts to pull in some serious favours.

The town is soon deluged by actors, all keen to show their support and take part in a charity season at the theatre. One of the arrivals is Jess Tate, girlfriend to TV heartthrob Ryan Hearst. His career is on the rise while hers remains resolutely in the doldrums. But when opportunity comes calling, it isn’t just her career prospects that are about to change. Trevay is about to put on the show of its life – but can the villagers, and Jess, hold on to the thing they love the most?

This book was my introduction to Fern Britton’s novels and so I didn’t know what to expect. I did also read that there were recurring characters from her previous books but as I discovered, you don’t need to have read the previous novels to keep up with this one. All the old characters are reintroduced in a concise way without holding the plot up. Continue reading

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Mick's Musings : Planning

rp_Mick-Arnold1-224x3001.jpgRight, that’s the easy part over; coming up with the title of this Blog entry. So let me tell you why this is going to be my subject. As you will know if you’ve been following me, I’ve now finished my latest book and am in the process of going through an intense edit. Well, I was discussing it with a work colleague and friend at the end of last week and I asked him, “What did you think of that bit in the last chapter?” ‘What bit was that?”

You know that sinking feeling? You got it! When I came up with the idea for this book and was fortunately able to come up with the ending too, I came up with something that was a “MUST”. It would clearly show evidence of closure for my heroine’s journey. So, opening up the file again, I started reading but the closer I got to the end the deeper the feeling became in my stomach. Sure enough, guess what didn’t make it in. Okay, this will obviously be included when I get around to this chapter, but does this mean something?

Have I subconsciously left it out because Continue reading

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Fiction Friday – Transportation

Friday 25th April 2014.

Fiction Friday is our weekly writing prompt. The aim is to write for a minimum of five minutes and then keep going for as long as you can. Once you’ve finished, don’t edit, just post in the comments below.

Fiction Friday

Fiction Friday

Today’s prompt: You are transported into your favourite book or movie. Which character are you? What changes in the story now you are there? Do you alter something significant?

Continue reading

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Cover Reveal – Tracy Buchanan

The Atlas of Us by Tracy Buchanan

The debut novel from Tracy Buchanan is due for release by Avon on 31st July 2014. We are very excited to be amongst the first to reveal the cover for Tracy’s novel. We think this cover is beautiful. What do you think?

Atlas

About the book:

The Atlas of Us is about family, loss, resilience, reconciliation and hope… 

When Louise Fenton flies to Thailand to find her mother, Nora, after the Boxing Day tsunami, she fears the worst when the only trace she can find is her mother’s distinctive bag. In the bag is a beautifully crafted atlas owned by travel journalist Claire Shreve, Continue reading

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Book News : Mark Billingham

Bones-BeneathNew Tom Thorne novel is available to pre-order.

Tom Thorne is back in Mark Billingham’s latest novel, The Bones Beneath which is due for release by Little, Brown on 22nd May 2014.

About the book:

The Deal

Tom Thorne is back in charge – but there’s a terrifying price to pay. Stuart Nicklin, the most dangerous psychopath he has ever put behind bars, promises to reveal the whereabouts of a body he buried twenty-five years before. But only if Thorne agrees to escort him.

The Danger

Unable to refuse, Continue reading

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NK Chats To.... : Jennie Ann Rake

Jennie Ann Rake

Jennie and her writing space.

 

Jennie Ann Rake was a primary school teacher before opening her fair trade shop in 2005.

Deception, Lies and Chocolate Muffins is her debut novel and was released by Book Guild Publishing in September 2013. We chat with Jennie about her writing process, her ideal dinner guests and superpowers…

 

What was the experience like writing your novel alongside running your own business?

Writing in my shop was – overall – the ideal location. I had a nice flat surface, and a strategically placed display and pot plant behind which I could hide my notebook. Also, there are many times when you don’t get a customer in the shop for twenty or more minutes and it was great to ignore the dusting and speed on with my writing. Sometimes a customer might tell me something that gave rise to a spark of an idea. I never quote anything. I’d hate to think that I might be reprimanded about disclosing part of a private conversation. I don’t work full-time in the shop – although I run it and am responsible for ordering, paying suppliers, doing shop display – so I’d type up the latest chunk of story when I got home.

Continue reading

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Wish List – Journals

I am stationery crazy. I can spend hours in a stationary shop browsing the shelves of notebooks and journals. My love for all things notebooks and pens is bordering on obsession. My bank balance never likes me after one of these visits. One thing I have always tried to maintain is a journal and there are some beautiful journals available.

We’ve had a look around the internet. Here are five of our favourite journals.

 

5 year journal

The Q&A A Day Journal is a five-year diary. With a section for each year, it’s easy to keep a small record of your thoughts and then look back at them as each year passes. Each page has a specific question (some of them unusual.) I have this journal and it’s fun to use. I love this. It’s available from Potter Style and it’s currently £10.34. Continue reading

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Book Reviews : To Catch A Creeper by Ellie Campbell

Across The Pond Press, April 2014

Across The Pond Press, April 2014

A Crouch End Confidential Mystery.

Cathy is riding high in her brand-new job at a (surprisingly bitchy) top London advertising agency working with best friend Rosa. But when Rosa’s pregnancy goes amiss and enemies sabotage her new career, she finds herself leading a chaotic double life of lies and deception, hiding a shameful secret from all, especially husband Declan who appears in the throes of a nervous breakdown. Meanwhile she’s agreed to unmask the notorious Crouch End Creeper, a burglar terrorizing their neighbourhood. Little does she know that her meddling, assisted by fellow mothers (the Wednesday Once Weeklies) and the Neighbourhood Watch, will lead their dangerous opponent to murder. And that it’s not only the tall elegant transvestite who is placing herself at risk…

I was attracted to this novel for totally the wrong reasons – it’s set in Crouch End, which is an area of London I love, and I’ve got a friend who lives there; and there’s a red-head on the cover – I’m a red-head and feel a pull towards others. Whatever the reason, I’m glad I was.

It’s a very light, easy read, exactly what I needed after a couple of ‘deep’ books I’d read just before. It was gripping though; I read it quickly, over a weekend.

Continue reading

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Courses and Competitions : How To Write For Children

Guardian Masterclass: write stories to fascinate and entertain the toughest audience in literature.

This one-day workshop will teach you the skills essential to keeping a young audience enthralled by your storytelling.

The Boy Who Fell From the Sky, by Lucy Coats, illustrated by Anthony Lewis Photograph: guardian.co.uk

The Boy Who Fell From the Sky, by Lucy Coats, illustrated by Anthony Lewis Photograph: guardian.co.uk

The aim of the masterclass is for all participants to go away equipped with a wider knowledge of what writing children’s (aged 7–12) books is all about and there is still time to book a place.

The tutor will be editor and writer, Lucy Coats and the speaker will be historical fiction author, Michelle Lovric.

This course is running in London on Wednesday 7th May or Saturday 31st May 2014 from 10am -5 pm. The course price is £220* and will cover a range of topics including how to build a good children’s book character, planning a perfect plot and an overview of the children’s book world.

This course is for people who have an interest in writing for children as a possible career, a casual source of income or simply for a unique and personalised way of creating fiction to read to your own children.

For more information and booking information, click here.

*price correct at time of publication.

 

 

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News : Sue Townsend Planned New Mole Novel

Puffin: Re-issue Edition, 2002

Puffin: Re-issue Edition, 2002

Author was working on new Adrian Mole novel.

Sue Townsend was working on a new Adrian Mole novel before her death. The new book was provisionally titled Pandora’s Box. The author of the fantastic Mole series died at the age of 68 and had written ‘some wonderful pages’ according to her publisher.

The unfinished book would have been the ninth of the Adrian Mole novels and it was due for release in the autumn.

The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4, was released in 1982 and along with the other novels, Continue reading

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Competitions: Sophie Hardach

LAOW Book CoverOf Love and Other Wars – we have ten copies plus ten posters to give away.

THIS COMPETITION IS NOW CLOSED.

Thanks to Sophie and the lovely people at Simon and Schuster, we have ten copies of, Of Love and Other Wars, to give away. As well as the book, each winner will also receive a poster of the stunning book cover.

About the book:

At a rally in the Royal Albert Hall, two Quaker brothers, Paul and Charlie Lamb, sign a pledge of peace that only one of them will honour. Meanwhile, in a draughty Victorian mansion in Hampstead, Mr. Morningstar wonders why his wife, a crystallographer from dynasty of diamond cutters, turns into a cursing somnambulist at night, while their daughter, Miriam, comes home from her shifts at the munitions factory with her stockings inside out. As the streets throng with khaki, the Lambs and the Morningstars must decide how to do good in a world transformed by evil. Should a scientist use her skills to maximise civilian casualties? Should a Quaker stand by as millions are murdered? And is it possible to LAOW Posterlove someone if you hate their convictions? When the two families are torn apart by war, Paul is forced to choose between his conscience and the woman he loves.

To enter: Continue reading

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Discussions : Only One Book?

rp_Jornal-300x18011.jpgToday’s discussion – Are you able to only pick one?

We will read many things in our lifetime, get engrossed in many stories, care about a variety of characters as if they were real people – friends we’ve known, loved or lost and we will visit lands and countries without even leaving our homes.

Books have that magical ability to completely transport us to somewhere else. Novels give us a glimpse into another world.

Of course, if you ask anyone who is into reading, they will probably be able to list many books that they have enjoyed or not liked and will give you many reasons for their decisions.

There are also so many lists Continue reading

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Book News : The Creative Writing Student’s Handbook

Creative Writing Matters, 2014

Creative Writing Matters, 2014

A new creative writing handbook from the founders of the Exeter Novel Prize.

Being a new writer can be scary and there is a minefield of information available. I have my fair share of ‘how to’ writing books. However, this one looks particularly helpful. Margaret James was my tutor for a writing course I did with the London School of Journalism a couple of years ago and her advice was very valuable. Now, along with Cathie Hartigan, Margaret has placed her writing wisdom into one e-book. I will definitely be getting my hands on this one.

The blurb:

This new handbook takes students through the entire creative writing process. You will find plenty of practical advice, helpful exercises, lots of tips and links to useful websites in this indispensable handbook for new and seasoned writers alike. Continue reading

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A Moment With Pippa Croft

First Time We MetPippa Croft is the author of The First Time We Met.

What was that first moment that you realized you wanted to become a writer?

I can tell you exactly. I was watching a BBC period drama called North & South in November 2004. Although I’d always worked as a journalist and copywriter, I’d shied away from writing fiction. I was worried that I’d be rubbish at it and I didn’t have any inspiration. North & South suddenly – and out of blue – inspired me to have a go at writing some fan fiction, which was quite a new thing back then. I shared my story on an Internet forum and haven’t stopped writing since. In my role as a journalist, I also actually got to do a phone interview with the sexy star of North & South, Richard Armitage.

 

What authors, books, or ideas have influenced you most?

Jane Austen, definitely, Continue reading

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Literary Fact : Henry Fielding

Henry_Fielding22nd April.

Henry Fielding was born on this day in 1707. Born in Somerset, England, he was educated at Eton College. He was an english novelist and his works included Tom Jones and Amelia.

His sister Sarah was also a successful writer and John, his brother, was a magistrate.

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The Illusionists Blog Tour – Review

The IllusionistsThe Illusionists by Rosie Thomas.

London 1870.
A terrifying place for a young, beautiful woman of limited means. But Eliza is modern before her time. Not for her the stifling if respectable conventionality of marriage, children, domestic drudgery. She longs for more. Through her work as an artist’s model, she meets the magnetic and irascible Devil – a born showman whose dream is to run his own theatre company.

Devil’s right-hand man is the improbably named Carlo Bonomi, an ill-tempered dwarf with an enormous talent for all things magic and illusion. Carlo and Devil clash at every opportunity and it constantly falls upon Eliza to broker an uneasy peace between them. And then there is Jasper Button. Mild-mannered, and a family man at heart, it is his gift as an artist which makes him the unlikely final member of the motley crew.

Thrown together by a twist of fate, their lives are inextricably linked: the fortune of one depends on the fortune of the other. And as Eliza gets sucked into the seductive and dangerous world her strange companions inhabit, she risks not only her heart, but also her life…

Continue reading

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The Illusionists Blog Tour – We Chat to Rosie Thomas

rosie thomas spotty jpeg smallThe Illusionists by Rosie Thomas. 

We are very happy to welcome Rosie and her blog tour for The Illusionists which has just been released by HarperCollins. We chat to Rosie about her book, her fantasy dinner party guests and where in history she would like to go… 

 

Can you tell us about The Illusionists and how did the idea originate?

In one sense The Illusionists is about imagination and reality, and I have taken stage magic as a means of illustrating how we don’t always know the difference between the two. Devil Wix, my anti-hero hero, is struck as a young boy by the gift of ‘wonder’ in a harsh world, and he sets out to create wonderment through magic and illusion. The setting is Victorian London, starting in the 1870s, so it’s quite creepy and gothic in places. It’s also a love story between Devil and Eliza Dunlop, who is a modern woman looking for more from her life than marriage and motherhood. There’s also a cast of strange characters including a dwarf, an engineer of automata, and a woman made of cogs and springs. Their theatre of magic and illusion, the Palmyra, is a character too. The idea for the story came to me when I was researching a classic ‘box trick’ for a scene in The Kashmir Shawl.

 

Which authors do you admire and is there a book that’s stuck with you?

I like Anthony Trollope. There’s so much sly wit and energy in his books, but he is full of human sympathy too and he doesn’t caricature the way Dickens does. I’ve always loved Georgette Heyer – such lightness and sparkle. Continue reading

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Fiction Friday – Opposites

Fiction Friday

Fiction Friday

Friday 18th April 2014. 

Fiction Friday is our weekly prompt where the internal editor is asked to step out. We post a prompt. Use it as inspiration to write for a minimum of five minutes and then keep going for as long as you like. Once you’ve finished, post in the comments below. Don’t edit, just post. 

Today’s prompt: Take a story you love. Maybe one you liked as a child or a snippet of a book you’ve read recently. Swap all the characters around. Make the hero the sidekick and the villain the hero? Maybe the adult who offers advice is the nervous and unknowing character? What if the hero’s best friend is actually the villain? Have a go at swapping everyone around. 

Continue reading

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Quick Spotlight – Uglies

Simon & Schuster Childrens Books (29 Mar 2012)

Simon & Schuster Childrens Books (29 Mar 2012)

Uglies by Scott Westerfeld

Set in the future, in a time when people live in small independent cities and everyone is pretty. Well not at first, but on your sixteenth birthday you are given an operation to turn you from an ugly into a pretty. For 15-year-old Tally Youngblood, this day cannot come quick enough. That is, until she meets another young girl named Shay, who is not so eager to get the operation. Tally quickly learns that all is not as it seems and that being ‘Pretty’ may come with a price.

I quite enjoy reading young adult books, as they are often fantastic and supernatural; easy reading with lots of action and this book did not disappoint. I read it in a night as I just had to keep turning the pages to find out what would happen next. The characters are well-formed but not overly complex and the storyline is predictable yet very well delivered; all the things to look for in an easy, fun read. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book. So much so that I went out and bought the sequels.

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Bella's Scribblings : I don’t do Marmite or a Short Story by any other Name

Bella Osborne

Bella Osborne

I don’t do Marmite (it is the work of the devil) and I also don’t do short stories. Short stories are incredibly difficult to get right, whether you are writing them for magazines, for competitions or just for fun. They will almost always come with a word limitation (hence the short) and despite this huge restriction there is an expectation that there is a whole story wrapped up in the prose (hence the story).

My track record with stories has seen me fill a whole exercise book at school with one story much to the mixed reaction of my English teacher who was wonderfully encouraging but with a pile of other marking to do, my lengthy witterings were not always timely. My next attempt at a finished story was my novel ‘Acting on Impulse’, the first draft of which came in at one hundred and twenty-eight thousand words. So you can see my ability to be succinct has not improved over the years.

So when my writing tutor asks the class to write a Short Story I break out in a cold sweat (and curse the fact that I sit next to both the radiator and the draughty window), my mind goes a complete blank and I decide categorically that I can’t do it. I will then spend the whole week trying to think about a plot based on whatever criteria has been set and will almost always conclude that it’s impossible to fit any of my ideas into anything shorter than ‘War and Peace’ or ‘Ivanhoe’ at a push (approx. 587k and 192k word counts respectively, in case you were wondering).

Continue reading

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A Place To Call Home Blog Tour – Review

Sphere, April 2014

Sphere, April 2014

A Place To Call Home by Carole Matthews.

Ayesha flees her abusive husband in the middle of the night. Scared and alone, they go to London where they take shelter in the home of reclusive pop star, Hayden Daniels. Ayesha and her daughter Sabina soon find a family with the occupants of Hayden’s home. Crystal and Joy, the other people taking refuge in the house soon become Ayesha’s friends as she tries to find her feet and her new life for her and Sabina. However, she doesn’t stop looking over her shoulder wondering when and if her past was going to catch up with her. 

This book tackles quite a dark subject of domestic abuse with sensitivity, warmth and humour. The characters drew me in from the first page as I wanted to know whether Ayesha and Sabina were going to be OK. At the beginning, Ayesha is very timid and very unsure of herself and I loved seeing how she progressed for the better through the book whilst she was with Hayden, Crystal and Joy. 

The mix of characters were fascinating, funny and loveable. I especially thought Crystal was great. I want to be her friend. Despite the bad things in her life she still manages to be positive. I disliked Suresh immensely and although I am ashamed to say it, I still could feel little sympathy for him, even at the end. 

Continue reading

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A Place To Call Home Blog Tour – We Chat To Carole Matthews

MatthewsCaroleA Place To Call Home is the fantastic new novel from Carole Matthews. 

We’re very happy and excited to welcome the lovely Carole Matthews and her blog tour to Novel Kicks. Her latest book was released by Sphere on 10th April and we chat with Carole about it as well as what writing rituals she has and which fictional character she’d like to meet.

 

Can you tell us about A Place To Call Home? 

Yes, it’s a story about a woman who escapes an abusive relationship and flees with her daughter. She ends up living with a rag-tag of characters in a place that she comes to feel safe. When that’s threatened she does everything she can to save it. The story is about finding a place to belong and making a family out of a fairly disparate bunch of people. It’s very heart-warming and a little bit teary too.

 

Do you plan and do you edit as you go? 

Yes, I do a lot of planning and have a four or five page synopsis when I start out that I pretty much stick to. I start every morning by editing what I’ve written the day before and, then, when I’ve completed one draft, I go through it all again.

Continue reading

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News : Donna Tartt Wins Major Fiction Prize.

The_goldfinch_by_donna_tartThe Goldfinch wins the Pulitzer for Fiction.

American novelist Donna Tartt has won this year’s Pulitzer prize for Fiction for her third novel, The Goldfinch.

The book is set in modern day New York and tells the story of a young man as he tries to come to terms with the death of his mother. A film adaptation is rumoured to already be in the works after the producers behind the Hunger Games have optioned Tartt’s novel.

The Goldfinch has also been nominated for a Baileys Woman’s Prize for Fiction (formally the Orange Prize.) The winner will be announced on 4th June at the Southbank Centre.

Speaking to USA Today, Tartt said that she was ‘very happy, delighted and surprised’ to win her first major literary prize.

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Discussions : E-Readers Vs Bookshops

rp_Jornal-300x1801.jpgWill e-readers spell the end for bookshops?

With the invention of the e-reader and companies like Amazon, Kobo and the iTunes stores giving us instant access to books, it’s making it easier to get books without even having to leave our homes.

Bookshops and Libraries have struggled as a result – the latter suffering closures due to budget restraints and Borders was certainly an example of a high street store losing the pricing war with the online retailers.

We have seen many well-known stores disappear from the high street in recent years. Places like Woolworths, HMV and Blockbusters have all struggled and failed to stay ahead of the game when it comes to keeping up with online rivals like Love Film and Netflix. Even supermarkets are posing a big threat not only to them but to bookshops.

Continue reading

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Book News : Maeve Binchy

9781409151784Maeve Binchy’s final book to be released on 24th April.

Chestnut Street is a collection of linked stories (which have been complied by her husband from a store of unpublished stories,)  and is due for release in hardback by Orion on 24th April (it is available for pre-order.) It’s the final book from the wonderful Maeve Binchy who passed away in 2012.

About the book:

Just round the corner from St Jarlath’s Crescent is Chestnut Street. Here, the lives of the residents are revealed in Maeve Binchy’s wonderfully compelling tales:

Bucket Maguire, the window cleaner, who must do more than he bargained for to protect his son. Continue reading

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News : JK Rowling to be Guest Editor on Woman’s Hour

takeoverFive women to be guest editors on Woman’s Hour for one week.

BBC Radio Four will be handing over Woman’s Hour to five female guest editors for one week.

‘The five guests, including JK Rowling, ‘will explore areas that resonate with them, including personal insights into the changes they would like to see in women’s lives,’ according to the Woman’s Hour website.

The Harry Potter author will be presenting the first day on ‘takeover week,’ which will kick off on Continue reading

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Writing Room : The Gate

writing room gateWriting Room is our online writing group.

Every month, we focus on a specific theme or area of writing. Anyone can take part. Just post any contributions in the comments box below.

For April, study this photo. What does it inspire? What do you think is behind it? How did you find it? Is it a secret garden or somewhere where you shouldn’t be? Is it on an estate where you have been sent to live or being forced to stay? Maybe you are trying to hide and this is where you end up. Write up to 500 words describing what you see and what it makes you think about. Continue reading

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NK Chats To.... : Portia MacIntosh

rp_pm-300x300.jpgPortia is the author of How Not to be Starstruck and Between a Rockstar and a Hard Place.

Hi Portia, thank you for joining us. Can you tell us about Between a Rockstar and a Hard Place and How Not to be Starstruck?

My books tell the tale of music journalist Nicole Wilde, and the situations she finds herself in thanks to her famous mates, newsworthy relationships and generally chaotic lifestyle. Between a Rockstar and a Hard Place takes place over 24 hours, and sees Nicole’s rockstar best friend get drunk and go missing in a hotel, whereas How Not to be Starstruck takes place over several months and is more of an insight into that kind of lifestyle.

 

What’s your writing process like? Planning, editing?

Messy. Finding time to write is something that I have found difficult to fit in (which you can read more about in my guest post, My Constantly Changing Writing Space). When you’re touring, going to gigs and sleeping in different places, you can’t always have access to a laptop. Sometimes you have to use a pen and write on bits or paper, or write entire chapters in the notes app on your phone. Editing is something I have to make time with a laptop for. I’m just so lucky to be living in an age where my laptop, phone and tablet all link together and share information. I still have to type up my written notes the old-fashioned way though [laughs].

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The Best Thing I Never Had Blog Tour – Team Leigha or Team Harriet?

ErinErin Lawless talks about her main characters.

The Best Thing I Never Had is the new novel from author, Erin Lawless. It’s published by Harper Impulse and was released in March. We are delighted to welcome Erin to Novel Kicks today as part of her blog tour for her new book and we ask the question, who’s side are you on?

I’m asked quite a lot: #TeamHarriet or #TeamLeigha?

Most people find it quite straight forward. “Team Harriet!” they cry. “Who would ever be on Team Leigha??” My editor at Harper is, I answer with a smile. “But Leigha is such a BITCH!” they answer, appalled. Indeed she is, but then again, Harriet is a selfish idiot whose actions cause a hell of a lot of drama, so why should she be championed over her brittle best friend? #TeamDemi, I usually say, avoiding the question entirely – he’s the only halfway decent character in the whole book!

One of my all-time favourite reviews of Best Thing states that “when a writer can make you feel sorry for the novel’s antagonist, she has great talent”. The novel’s antagonist is undoubtedly Leigha, but that’s not the same as saying she’s “the bad guy”. Leigha hurts, and is hurt in return. A brittle, nervy over-achiever from a broken home, an erstwhile ugly ducking who has been suffering under the weight of unrequited love for as long as she can remember – the now gorgeous, popular Leigha seems from the outside to have everything she wants. Unfortunately, the only thing she ever wanted was something she could never have. And she’s just coming to terms with it all when the same scenario hits her again – bam! She’s left reeling and lashing out. Leigha’s no monster; she’s someone who deserves your pity.

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The Best Thing I Never Had Blog Tour – Review

Harper Impulse, March 2014

Harper Impulse, March 2014

The Best Thing I Never Had by Erin Lawless.

Five years ago they’d been seven friends at university that laughed hard and loved harder. Nicky and Miles, the couple that were always meant to be… Leigha and Adam, maybe not. So when Harriet and Adam grew close, during those endless days in the library and too many seminars they (well, Adam) hadn’t prepared for, they did the one thing that changed everything. They kept a secret. And when it came out, it all fell apart. When the day comes for bridesmaids to be chosen and best men to fulfil drunken promises, Nicky and Miles’ wedding isn’t just a wedding, it’s a reunion – loaded with past hurts, past regrets, past loves. (Warning, the review contains a small amount of spoilers.)

This begins with a prologue set in 2012. Nicky is about to get married and wonders whether she’s made the right decision to ask her three ex Uni housemates to be her bridesmaids.

The majority of the book then flashes back to 2006. Seven friends who are all in their final year at university, the story does flick between them all at the beginning as each of the characters are established but once that settles, I found myself getting completely involved in the story, deciding who I liked and didn’t. Although it is told from the point of view of seven people, Erin’s writing makes it easy to follow as everything flows well. It’s not long before everything becomes a little complicated Continue reading

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NK Fiction Friday : A Fairytale Story

Fiction Friday

Fiction Friday

Fiction Friday: 11th April 2014. 

The idea of Fiction Friday is to write. We post a prompt every friday. Use it as inspiration to write for a minimum of five minutes. Then, keep going for as long as you can. Once you’re done, don’t edit, just post in the comments below. 

Today’s prompt: Fairytales.

Write about a cowardly girl who must save a princess, evade an unwanted lover and defeat a tyrant before she can return home.  Things become complicated because of a jealous rival.  Assistance comes in the form of a magic ring.

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Ghostwritten Blog Tour – NK Chats to Isabel Wolff

Isabel Wolf windowBlog Tour: Ghostwritten by Isabel Wolff. 

Isabel Wolff is the author of A Question of Love, Forget Me Not and A Vintage Affair. We were very pleased to be invited onto the blog tour for her new novel, Ghostwritten which was released by HarperCollins on 27th March. We had a chat with Isabel about her new book, her ideal dinner guests and her best writing moment so far… 

 

Can you tell us about Ghostwritten?

The novel is set in present day Cornwall and on wartime Java, and is about a ghost writer, Jenni.  Jenni loves her job because it satisfies her curiosity about other peoples’ lives – she specialises in memoirs; it also means that she can immerse herself in their lives and not think about her own life too much. One day Jenni is commissioned to write the memoirs of a Dutch woman, Klara, who grew up on a rubber plantation on Java.  After the Japanese invasion Klara was interned in a prison camp, with her mother and younger brother: approaching 80 she has finally decided to tell her extraordinary story of survival.  Jenni is excited by this new commission, until she learns that Klara lives in Cornwall, in the very village that still holds terrors for Jenni after a traumatic incident there when she was a child.  Reluctantly, Jenni accepts, and goes to Polvarth.  As she listens to Klara’s story, she finds striking coincidences with her own life, and with the tragedy that has haunted her for so long. With Klara’s help she starts to lay to rest the ghosts of her past.

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Ghostwritten Blog Tour – Review

ghostwrittenGhostwritten by Isabel Wolff.

A childhood mistake. A lifetime of regrets.

Jenni is a ‘ghost’: she writes the lives of other people. It’s a job that suits her well: still haunted by a childhood tragedy, she finds it easier to take refuge in the memories of others rather than dwell on her own. Jenni has an exciting new commission, and is delighted to start working on the memoirs of a Dutchwoman, Klara. As a child in the Second World War, Klara was interned in a camp on Java during the Japanese occupation – she has an extraordinary story of survival to tell. But as Jenni and Klara begin to get to know each other, Jenni begins to do much more than shed light on a neglected part of history. She is being forced to examine her own devastating memories, too. But with Klara’s help, perhaps this is finally the moment where she will be able to lay the ghosts of her own past to rest?

 

I have read books based around the time of World War II but this is the first one I have read that tells it from the point of view of the Japanese occupation. From reading the blurb, I was intrigued but didn’t know what to expect.

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Competitions : A Single Breath by Lucy Clarke – Winners

rp_Lucy-Clarke-196x300.jpgWinners of our Single Breath Competition. 

Thanks to Lucy and Harper, we had three copies of A Single Breath to give away. 

Well done to Emma in Birmingham, Vanessa in Glamorgan and Kat who have all won a copy of the new novel from Lucy Clarke. 

About the book: 

When Eva’s husband Jackson tragically drowns, she longs to meet his estranged family. The journey takes her to Jackson’s brother’s doorstep on a remote Tasmanian island. As strange details about her husband’s past begin to emerge, memories of the man she married start slipping through her fingers like sand, as everything she ever knew and loved about him is thrown into question. Now she’s no longer sure whether it was Jackson she fell in love with – or someone else entirely…

 

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Books Need Us Blog: The London Book Fair

By Maria Vassilopoulos – Books Need Us. 

In the Book trade we are currently in the middle of the London Book Fair, the biggest trade event we have in the UK! If you’ve been before then some of what I’m about to say will be familiar to you. If you are coming along then it may help, and if you are thinking of going next time then it will hopefully give you a good picture of what to expect.

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What is it?

The London Bookfair has been going since 1971 and originally was a much smaller event – read more here. Nowadays the emphasis for the publishing business is around meeting their sales teams and bookstore buyers, showcasing new products, reminding customers about their past and best-selling titles and selling and acquiring international rights.

 

What’s there?

Basically most of the UK book trade under one roof. As the big publishing conglomerates have the plush stands its easy to spot them but also great to explore the medium and smaller publishers. There is also a digital zone were you can find out about the latest content driven technology. Each year a different country becomes the Market Focus – for example this year it’s Korea, so it’s quite interesting generally to see what publishing looks like in a different international market. There are seminars throughout the 3 days and these range from finding a job in publishing to marketing a children’s book – if you want to do a bit of networking then these are a good idea.

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Courses and Competitions : The Bridport Prize, 2014

 

The Bridport Prize’s mission is to ‘encourage emerging writers and to promote literary excellence.’

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The closing date for the prize is Saturday 31st May 2014 and it’s open to all nationalities. You must be aged 16 or over. They offer three categories – Poems, Short Stories and now Flash Fiction. Overall, there is over £15,000 in prize money. 

The poem and short story categories each have a first prize of £5,000. The second prize offered is £1,000 and the third prize is £500. An additional 10 supplementary prizes (for each category) will be awarded £50 each. 

The short stories have a word limit of 5,000 words (not including the title,) and are £9 per story entered. The poems should be no longer than 42 lines and it’s £8 per poem entered. 

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Book News : Lisa Jewell

The new novel from Lisa Jewell due for release in July. 

The Third WifeLisa is the author of Ralph’s Party, Before I Met You and The House We Grew Up In. Her new book will be called The Third Wife and is due for release from Century on 3rd July. It’s available to pre-order now. We massively adore Lisa’s books. We’re looking forward to reading the new novel. 

About the book: 

London 2011: In the early hours of a summer morning, a young woman is killed by a bus. A tragic accident? Or suicide? A year later, her devastated husband, Adrian Wolfe, is determined to find out. Adrian and Maya had only recently married, and he’d always believed they were happy together. His children from his two previous marriages loved her. Continue reading

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Mick's Musings : Inspiration

rp_Mick-Arnold1-224x3001.jpgAs writers, we’re always on the look-out for this, this flash – or ‘Pow’ as my friend Bella puts it – that will set off that spark which will ignite a new story. We don’t know where it comes from or what, if anything, it will bring. But when it comes, there’s this desperate need to grab what it brings with both hands and scribble it down.

I’m sat here listening to The Beach Boys ‘Pet Sounds’ album. My all-time favourite. In fact, I have 4 separate single album versions of it, a 4-disc box-set and enough outtakes to sink the Titanic. It’s music I find easy to listen to and it relaxes my mind. But does it provide the ‘Inspiration’? It physically hurts me to admit it, but no, it doesn’t.

What did this week was driving into work on Tuesday and on came Tina Turner and Private Dancer. An idea well, the seed of an idea came into my head and I desperately kept hold of it until I got into work and then I typed down what I could remember. A cup of coffee later to settle the beating heart and there’s the idea for a story, about a situation I very much doubt I would ever have come up with without that moment.

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News : Longlist Announced For Desmond Elliott Award

Nathan Filer’s novel amongst the long list for the Desmond Elliott Prize

Nathan FilerThe Shock of The Fall by Nathan Filer is amongst the ten authors who made the long list for this year’s Desmond Elliott Prize. This award celebrates first time British and Irish authors.

Nathan was also the recipient of the Costa Book of the Year Award in January. Other authors who made the list include Kate Clanchy, Donal Ryan and Eimear McBride for her novel, A Girl is a Half-Formed Thing which took nine years to publish after being rejected several times.

The shortlist will be announced on 26th May and the overall winner will be announced on 3rd July and will win £10,000. Good luck to all the nominated authors.

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NK Chats To.... : Lorna Peel

Lorna is the author of Only You.

lorna-peelHer second novel, Into the Unknown is due for publication next year. Hi Lorna, thank you for joining us.

Can you tell us about your book, Only You?

Thirty-one year old divorcee Jane Hollinger teaches adult education classes. Her self-confidence and self-worth is very low, as she hadn’t known her ex-husband was cheating on her. Jane’s sister and best friend subscribe her to a dating website but little do any of them know that Jane’s fantasy man is a student in her family history evening class! Through Jane, I wanted to explore what it would really be like to be in a relationship with a famous person but you wish they weren’t famous because you are a very private person who prefers to live a quiet life? Could you love that famous person enough to be able to put up with all the intrusions the relationship would bring with it?

 

Can you briefly describe your writing style?

With Only You, it was a very informal and light conversational style. Into The Unknown, my forthcoming WWII historical romance, was a little more formal.

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NK Fiction Friday : Strange Days

Novel Kicks Fiction Friday: 4th April 2014

Fiction Friday

Fiction Friday

The aim of Fiction Friday is to shut away your internal editor for a while. We post a prompt. You write for a minimum of five minutes and then, keep going for as long as you can. Once you’re done, don’t edit, just post in the comments box below.

Today’s prompt: In approx 250 – 350 words, describe the strangest day you can imagine. What’s the setting? What’s happening? Who is it happening to?

 

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Blog Tour: Win a Copy of A Single Breath

A Single Breath by Lucy Clarke – we have three copies to give away.

Thanks to Lucy and the lovely people at Harper, we have three copies of A Single Breath to give away.

Harper, March 2014.

Harper, March 2014.

About the book:

When Eva’s husband Jackson tragically drowns, she longs to meet his estranged family. The journey takes her to Jackson’s brother’s doorstep on a remote Tasmanian island. As strange details about her husband’s past begin to emerge, memories of the man she married start slipping through her fingers like sand, as everything she ever knew and loved about him is thrown into question. Now she’s no longer sure whether it was Jackson she fell in love with – or someone else entirely…

To enter: Continue reading

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A Single Breath Blog Tour – The Places That Inspired The Novel

A Single Breath by Lucy Clarke.

We are happy to welcome Lucy Clarke to Novel Kicks. As part of her blog tour for her second novel, A Single Breath, she tells us about the places that inspired the novel.

 

I first visited Tasmania in 2011, and fell in love with its wild beauty and its remote shacks. I knew I wanted to set my next novel there, so once I had the loose plot line in place, I returned the following winter on a research trip. I spent an incredible month doing a recce of the island, working out where specific events in the novel would take place, as well interviewing many locals, including two fascinating marine biologists. While I was there, I also learnt to scuba dive, which gave me a beautiful insight into the underwater world, and helped me write the freediving scenes within the novel.

Here are a selection of photos from my research trip, which inspired the story of A Single Breath.

 

A real Tassie shack! A bit more rustic than Eva's

A real Tassie shack! A bit more rustic than Eva’s

 

My husband and friends preparing fish on a gutting bench like Saul's

My husband and friends preparing fish on a gutting bench like Saul’s

 

 

A graceful sea dragon similar to the one Eva and Saul see while freediving

A graceful sea dragon similar to the one Eva and Saul see while freediving

 

The Cape Bruny lighthouse inspried the scene where Callie takes Eva to visit a lighthouse on Eva's wedding anniversary

The Cape Bruny lighthouse inspried the scene where Callie takes Eva to visit a lighthouse on Eva’s wedding anniversary

 

Exploring the wild beaches of Bruny island

Exploring the wild beaches of Bruny island

 

Hiking with my husband near the cape where the bushfire happens

Hiking with my husband near the cape where the bushfire happens

 

Learning to scubadive - my first glimpse of the underwater world in Tasmania

Learning to scubadive – my first glimpse of the underwater world in Tasmania

 

Over-excited by all the wild Tasmanian beauty!

Over-excited by all the wild Tasmanian beauty!

 

My perfect choice of creative fuel - a berry muffin and clotted cream  Heaven!

My perfect choice of creative fuel – a berry muffin and clotted cream. Heaven!

 

Writing on the beach

Writing on the beach

 

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A Single Breath Blog Tour – Review

A Single Breath by Lucy Clarke

Single BreathEva and Jackson are married, happy and in love but when, on a trip to Dorset, Jackson falls into the sea and drowns, Eva’s life is shattered. She knows that she can’t live without him. She decides to go to Tasmania, where Jackson grew up to meet his family, friends – the people who knew him as well as she does but when she arrives, she starts to find out more about Jackson’s past and that things are never as they seem.

From the first chapter, I knew this book was going to make me cry and I was right. Eva looses everything that she loves in one moment and the tone of the book really helps convey the grief she is feeling in an honest way. As a character, she’s fairly lost and doesn’t know what to do in order to get to the end of each day and I really did empathise with her. I wanted to give her a hug. We can all relate to loss in some way.

There were moments of this book that were truly heart-breaking (hence the making me cry part,) and I really wanted to know what happened at the end. I finished the book both Continue reading

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Bella's Scribblings : Mummy Lit – What?

Bella Osborne

Bella Osborne

So I was looking at the calendar and I got a little excited as it was nearly Mother’s Day and I love Mother’s Day. It’s a day that I thought I would never get to celebrate after a rocky road to becoming a Mummy but thankfully we made it via the scenic route and each year it is an utter pleasure to receive a homemade card and cold toast for breakfast from my daughter.

I was slightly wrong footed when I was discussing my writing with another writerly type person (we like to seek each other out, there’s safety in numbers) and we started discussing genres. I will call my writerly type person Bonita, for that is not her name. I explained to Bonita that I thought my writing was Romantic Comedy with a slightly darker side and went on to regurgitate my short blurbs on novel number one and my current work in progress. She agreed whole heartedly for novel number one which could be described as Notting Hill meets Eastenders and is about a womanising Hollywood actor, Tim, who falls in love with an ordinary woman called Kate. However, when I started to talk about my second novel which has the working title Virtual Family, there was lots of head shaking from Bonita (it’s a good name isn’t it?).

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Book Corner : April – The Shock of the Fall by Nathan Filer

Book Corner is our online book club. 

The_shock_of_the_fall_coverApril’s book – The Shock of the Fall by Nathan Filer. 

How it works… 

Anyone can take part in our book club. Every month, we pick a new book for discussion. We will post a question to kick things off and then you can talk about any of your thoughts about the book in the comments box below. 

This month, our pick is The Shock of The Fall by Nathan Filer. This was Nathan’s debut novel and he was the winner of the Costa Book of the Year award for 2013 for this book. 

About the book:  Continue reading

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Book News : Emily Giffin

The One and Only is the new release from Emily Giffin. 

The One and OnlyEmily is the author of Something Borrowed, Something Blue and Where We Belong. Her new novel is due for release by Ballantine Books on 20th May. You can get a sneak peek of chapter one on Emily’s website. 

About the book: 

Thirty-three-year-old Shea Rigsby has spent her entire life in Walker, Texas—a small college town that lives and dies by football, a passion she unabashedly shares. Raised alongside her best friend, Lucy, the daughter of Walker’s legendary head coach, Clive Carr, Shea was too devoted to her hometown team to leave. Instead she stayed in Walker for college, even taking a job in the university athletic department after graduation, where she has remained for more than a decade.

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Skeletons Blog Tour – Review

Skeletons by Jane Fallon

Penguin, 2014.

Michael Joseph, 2014

Jen has discovered a secret. It’s not hers to share, but is it hers to keep? If she tells her husband Jason, he might get over the shock but will he forgive her for telling the truth? She might drive a wedge through their marriage. If she tells someone else in Jason’s family – the family she’s come to love more than her own – she’d not only tear them apart but could also find herself on the outside: she’s never really been one of them, after all. But if she keeps this dirty little secret to herself, how long can she pretend nothing is wrong? How long can she live a lie?

Jen knows the truth – but is she ready for the consequences?

Jen leads a happy life. She is happily married to Jason, she has two daughters and she is very close to her husband’s family – her sister-in-law being her best friend.        

Jen then learns a secret. It’s a secret that has the potential to ruin her perfect life and the perfect family around her. It’s not her secret but she’s in a horrible position. Either way, people are going to get hurt.

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Skeletons Blog Tour: NK Chats to Jane Fallon

Blog Tour: Skeletons by Jane Fallon.

Photo credit: Lee Carter

Photo credit: Lee Carter

Skeletons is the latest book from Jane Fallon (who also wrote Getting Rid of Matthew, The Ugly Sister and Foursome.) As part of her blog tour for her new book, we had a chat with Jane about the book, her fantasy dinner guests and her favourite word. 

 

What’s the best piece of writing advice you’ve been given?

Keep moving forward. Don’t be tempted to go back and edit as you go along or you’ll just keep rewriting the same passage over and over again.

 

What’s Skeletons about and how did the idea originate?

Jen was the only child of only children whose father left when she was young. When she met Jason she fell in love with his big artsy bohemian family as much as with him. They’ve become her family too. His father Charles is much more of a father to her than her own. When the book starts Jen and Jason have been happily married for 20 years. And then she sees Charles in the street with a much younger woman and it’s clear they are more than colleagues. Jen knows if she tells Jason it will blow the family apart. But can she keep it secret?

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NK Fiction Friday : The Heist

Fiction Friday: 28th March 2014

fiction friday logoEvery friday, we post a writing prompt. The aim is to write for a minimum of five minutes and then keeping going for as long as you can. Once you’re done, don’t edit your piece of writing, just post in the comments below. 

Today’s prompt is that your characters are in the middle of some sort of heist. How many people involved and the scale of the robbery is up to you. The first line is, ‘Just get on with it. We need to get out of here, now.’ 

Remember, don’t edit, just post. 

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Competitions : Winners of our Half Bad Competition

We had two copies of Half Bad by Sally Green to give away.

rp_HalfBad_PB_COV_HighRes-194x300.jpgThank you to all who entered our competition to win a copy of the fantastic Half Bad by Sally Green.

Well done to Lisa in Manchester. She would like the ability to turn back time like Hermione could with the time turner in Harry Potter.

Also congratulations to Peter in Folkestone who would like the ability to fly.

You have both won a copy of Half Bad.

A bit about the book:

Half Bad is about one boy’s struggle for survival in a hidden society of witches. You can’t read, can’t write, but you heal fast, even for a witch. You get sick if you stay indoors after dark. You hate White Witches but love Annalise Continue reading

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Two nations, divided by a common book cover

By Michele Gorman.

ExpatI’ll never forget the day I first saw the cover for my debut novel back in early 2010. My editor emailed it to me while I was waiting to meet with my agent. I was sitting in a beautiful café on Piccadilly on a sunny February day (a rare thing in London). Excitement, tinged with nerves, fizzed when I opened that image. For months I’d wondered how Penguin would package the book that I’d spent years writing and rewriting until it was as perfect as could be. Would they take the same care over the cover? Would it reflect the story, about a young American woman named Hannah who moves to London only to find that she’s completely ill-equipped to live there?

It did, and I loved it. The cover fit perfectly with the story and perfectly with the romantic comedy genre in the UK – a pretty illustrated pastel cover. It reflected Hannah’s uncertainty, swept along and buffeted by London.

Then, about a month later, my agent took me out for dinner. “You’re not going to like what I have to tell you,” she said, pushing the cake we were sharing in my direction. “Penguin wants to change the title. To Single in the City. They feel that it has broader appeal.”

That explained why she’d been plying me with wine for two hours.

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Book News : Clemency Burton-Hill

The new release from the author of The Other Side of The Stars.

all the things you areThe new novel from author and actress, Clemency Burton-Hill is being released by Headline on 10th April 2014. It’s called All The Things You Are. We think it has a lovely cover and we’re looking forward to reading.

A little about the book:

When New York journalist Natasha Bernstein loses her job and discovers her fiancé has been keeping a dark secret, her world collapses. Turning to her family, she takes inspiration from her formidable grandmother Esther, who runs a community centre in downtown Manhattan. As she starts to rebuild her life, Natasha’s friendship with Rafi – the enigmatic architect working on Esther’s centre – restores her sense of wonder at the world and her faith in who she is. But when Rafi and Natasha take a trip to Jerusalem, they are plunged into a story far deeper than their own. Continue reading

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Book News : Ellie Campbell

To Catch A Creeper by Ellie Campbell.

dfw-ec-tcac-cover-mid

Across The Pong Press. March 2014.

Today is publication day for To Catch a Creeper, the follow-up novel to Looking for La La.

The blurb for To Catch a Creeper:

Cathy is riding high in her brand-new job at a (surprisingly bitchy) top London advertising agency working with best friend Rosa. But when Rosa’s pregnancy goes amiss and enemies sabotage her new career, she finds herself leading a chaotic double life of lies and deception, hiding a shameful secret from all, especially husband Declan who appears in the throes of a nervous breakdown.  Meanwhile she’s agreed to unmask the notorious Crouch End Creeper, a burglar terrorizing their neighbourhood. Little does she know that her meddling, assisted by fellow mothers (the Wednesday Once Weeklies) and the Neighbourhood Watch, will lead their dangerous opponent to murder.  And that it’s not only the tall elegant transvestite who is placing herself at risk…

To celebrate publication day, Continue reading

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Peach Blossom Blog Tour: NK chats to Mingmei Yip

Novel Kicks chats to Mingmei Yip.

MingmeiPeach Blossom Pavilion is the author of Skeleton Women and Song of the Silk Road. Originally released in 2008, Peach Blossom Pavilion is due for release on 27th March and we’re happy to be part of Mingmei’s blog tour where we got the opportunity to have a quick chat.

 

Who are your favourite authors?

I read all of Anchee Min, Lisa See and most of Amy Tan’s books; all these women wrote about Chinese themes but attracted a broad readership. They have been inspirational for me. I like to think that I also have found readers of all sorts of background – my novels have been translated into nine languages so far.

My favourite authors who wrote in Chinese are Eileen Cheung, Continue reading

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Peach Blossom Pavilion Blog Tour: Review

Peach Blossom Pavilion by Mingmei Yip.

Peach Blossom PavilionWhen Precious Orchid’s father is falsely accused of a crime and found guilty, he is executed, leaving his family a legacy of dishonour. Her mother’s only option is to enter a Buddhist nunnery, so she gives her daughter over to the care of her sister in Shanghai. At first, life at Peach Blossom Pavilion feels like a dream. She is schooled in music, literature, painting, calligraphy, and the art of pleasuring men. The beautiful Pavilion has a darker purpose as an elite house of prostitution. And even as she gets attention of China’s most powerful men, Precious Orchid never gives up on her dream to escape the Pavilion, be reunited with her mother, avenge her father’s death, and find true love.

This isn’t a book I would pick up just from browsing book shelves in a shop but I am glad we were given the opportunity to take part in the blog tour. Continue reading

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