Thursday, 25 November 2021

Author Q & A Suzie Hull - In This Foreign Land

'I beg of you this one thing - that if I should perish here, in this foreign land, that you will look after her.'

March, 1914. When talented artist Isobel embarks on a journey to Egypt, it's to reunite her best friend Alice with her husband, Wilfred - and to use the stunning sights of Cairo as inspiration for her own paintings.

A whirlwind romance was the last thing she expected, but when Isobel meets Wilfred's handsome brother, Edward, neither can deny the strong connection between them - especially when unexpected tragedy strikes, leaving them all reeling.

Just as they get to grips with their grief, WW1 erupts, and the lovers are forced to separate. They promise to meet again in London. But when Edward is listed as 'missing - presumed dead' only weeks after landing in France, Isobel is devastated, unmarried and on the brink of ruin. She has only one way to save her honour... but it means betraying the love she holds so dear.

A heartrending and thrilling WW1 romance, In This Foreign Land is the stunning new debut from Suzie Hull, for fans of Kate Hewitt, Shirley Dickson and Kate Eastham.


Title: In This Foreign Land

Author: Suzie Hull

Published By: Orion Dash

Publication Date: 25th November 2021

Links:  UK:  Amazon    US:  Amazon


What was the inspiration behind In This Foreign Land

My novel changed quite considerably whilst being edited, but at its core the original idea still stands – I was on a train and passed a house where I knew a family lived a hundred years previously and I had an idea for a heart wrenching love story set in WW1, where the couple were torn apart by circumstances. As I passed the house I imagined the young woman hanging up nappies on a line and waiting everyday for a letter from her lover. I wanted to have part of their love story set in Egypt, but had no idea where to find accurate information of how they would travel there, and where they would stay etc. I mentioned this to my sister, and she paused, and said, we have two travel diaries from 1907/1908 in her husband’s family circle, and would I like to read them? Of course I wanted to read them! So whilst my own couple, Edward and Isobel have their own love story on the page, I was able to re-create the British community in Cairo directly from three women who journeyed there: Emma, Lina and Minna. I won’t spoil the plot of my novel, but suffice to say that life back in the early 1900’s was precarious when it came to personal health.


Did you always want to be a writer? 

No actually, I didn’t, not at school anyway, but the desire to write started when I was at home with my first baby, (reader she is now twenty-six), and I started several books over the years. One even took fifteen years to complete! But basically the feeling that I wanted to write just settled into my soul and it wouldn’t go away. And here I am. 


What other jobs have you had? 

I love this question! Loads is the answer to that. I’ve been a chamber maid, a nanny, I’m a Montessori Nursery teacher. I’ve worked in retail for years as well as being a classroom assistant. On the side, I’ve also done various charity jobs, and now and again I carried out surveys for a major food retailer in Northern Ireland. My claim to fame is that I once measured up twenty-six Tesco stores to get new bread shelves fitted. I loved it as I could fit the work in around my kids, but I got to the point where I felt sick every time I went into a bakery department and believe it or not I am now gluten intolerant! Lol!


How did it feel when you were offered a publishing deal? 

This is a dream come true. I know that’s a cliché but it’s true. I have cried many tears in frustration over the years because I knew this was what I wanted so badly. I’m just incredibly proud to get to this point and also very, very, grateful to my beta readers along the way and Rhea Kurien from Orion Dash for taking me on. 


Can you please tell us a little about your publishing story. 

As I said above, I started to write twenty-six years ago. That’s a very long time. I would have a burst at writing, then get stuck and set the manuscript away for a long time, sometimes even years; but I always came back to it and when I kept re-reading I thought to myself, you know, it’s quite good but I can do better. So I kept looking out for new opportunities and also other fellow writers on twitter and facebook who were also aspiring writers or just published. I found Hazel Gaynor who had just self-published her very first historical novel, ‘The Girl Who Came Home’, and also Carmel Harrington. I was awfully lucky to be able to join Carmel’s writing group, and that was my first major turning point. Then I joined the RNA’s New Writers Scheme which was amazing, but I submitted two other books first and then my newly published book three times! It took a lot of work. I was also mentored for six months by Sophie Orme who is an Editorial Director at Bonnier and she was the first person to really start working on this novel with me, and this gave me confidence that I was moving in the right direction. Like I said before, this novel has changed an awful lot from its early days when it started out as a dual-timeline and was called many different titles on the way. I think it’s taken four or five years for this novel to get to this point. It was nearly picked up by another publisher, but they decided they would rather it was purely historical rather than a dual-timeline and at the time I was nearly defeated in how to rewrite it yet again.

 Cut to the pandemic. I was at home, with time on my hands, and was able to have a couple of sessions with Alison May and feeling re-invigorated, I re-wrote it again. Summer 2020 I subbed it to Charlotte Mursell who is with Orion, at the RNA virtual conference and she liked it, but still made some suggestions to improve it. Autumn 2020 I re-wrote it again, subbed it to Charlotte in December that year, plus several other publishers and this time it was like a little magical bell had rung. I immediately had interest from a couple of publishers really quickly. When the email from Charlotte dropped onto my phone I initially thought it was a rejection. My daughter had to make me re-read it. Charlotte loved the story but it wasn’t right for Orion but she was passing it on to their imprint Dash, and someone would be in touch. Wow! I still refused to believe that this was it, and even when Rhea Kurien booked a telephone call with me, I was still not 100% sure I was over the finish line. I cried when she actually said they were offering me a two-book deal. Note: when they ask to phone you, it is good news!


What other books have you written? 

Many books which will not see the light of day. Some of my earlier books were a kind of Maeve Binchy Irish saga style. I also tried many times to write Medieval novels for Mills & Boon, and failed. I once got a super speedy rejection with two weeks from them which must have been a record. There are also a couple of Christmas contemporaries, one of which got to be short-listed in the Penguin Random House Christmas Love Story competition. 


Have you ever had writer's block? 

Yes. Anytime I feel sad and defeated it happens. 


If so how did you overcome it? 

Take time out. Read, watch films that inspire you, look after myself. It passes. Or, rather, my desire to write comes back again. You need to re-fill your creative well. Don’t worry too much about it.


What motivates you to keep writing? 

I love writing stories and so far, I keep coming up with new stories in my head so I need to keep getting them down. I also love reading non-fiction historical books. They inspire me. 


Where is your favourite place to write? 

I have taken over the dining table and it is a mess. But I can look out towards the front of the house and down our lane and that motivates me. I do need to see nature in order to write. 


Do your characters moods ever affect your mood and vice versa? 

When I was writing the contemporary part of my dual-timeline my characters ate a lot of scones and were forever drinking coffee! I like a lot of coffee and cake when I’m writing. But I don’t think my mood affects my characters. It’s their journey I’m re-telling, as though it’s already happened so my current feeling doesn’t slide in there.


What three pieces of advice would you give to an aspiring writer? 

Join the RNA New Writers Scheme. Find other writers to connect with. Keep writing. If that is your biggest desire in life then keep at it and don’t give up.

Suzie with Annette Hannah
at the RNA Industry Awards 2021

Which authors inspire you? 

I’ve always read historical novels from when I was in Primary school and I’ve always been fascinated by WW1 and WW2. I read Judith Kerr’s ‘When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit’ as a child and couldn’t believe that a child the same age as me had had to escape from their home. As an adult, Kate Morton’s book, The Lake House totally inspired me to start writing dual-timelines and I am always on the lookout for great page-turning historicals, preferably if they are set abroad. Favourite authors are Iona Grey, Dinah Jefferies, Hazel Gaynor, Jenny Ashcroft  and Jojo Moyes to name a few.


What are you reading at the moment? 

I have just finished Jojo Moyes novel, The last Letter from my Lover, which I adored, and I’m about to start Pam Lecky’s book, Her Secret War. 


If your book was made into a film what song would you choose for the opening credits? 

Well even though it is set during WW1, Ed Sheeran’s Perfect, would be, well…perfect. 


What is your next book about? 

For my next book I took inspiration from my Quaker roots and I have written another love story set abroad at the start of WW1. This time I have incorporated a dual-narrative but it’s all set within the past. 


Thank you so much for joining us Suzie and Good Luck with the book.


Sincerely
Book Angel x

About the Author





















Suzie Hull lives in Northern Ireland with her family and numerous rescue cats. She originally had notions of being a ballet dancer, but after that didn’t work out, she trained as a Montessori Nursery teacher and has spent the last thirty years working with children. She has always had an enduring passion for history and books, and since she came from a family of creative women it was only a matter of time before she turned to writing her own. A member of the Romantic Novelists' Association, In This Foreign Land is her debut novel.

Friday, 19 November 2021

Author Q & A Julia Wild - The Secret Notebook



A page-turning, emotional WW2 novel for fans of Barbara Taylor Bradford, Lucinda Riley and Kathryn Hughes

A view to the past…

When Izzie Dean’s beloved nan, Molly Blackshaw, passes away, Izzie returns to the Blackpool bungalow where she grew up, to say goodbye once and for all. When Izzie’s homecoming reunites her with her first love, Justin Swift, every emotion that Izzie has repressed since the day he broke her heart comes rushing to the surface. But then an unexpected discovery changes everything.

Between the pages of the battered secret diary Molly kept during WWII, Izzie discovers a story of love, heartbreak, and the incomparable hardship of life in a world at war. Reading her grandmother’s words soon puts her own story into perspective, and suddenly Izzie realises that the only thing holding her back from happiness, might be herself. Now she just has to convince Justin that they deserve a second chance at forever…


Title: The Secret Notebook

Author: Julia Wild

Published By: One More Chapter

Publication Date: 8th July 2021

Links:    UK:  Amazon    US:   Amazon


What was the inspiration behind The Secret Notebook? 

The inspiration behind The Secret Notebook came after talking with Charlotte Ledger of 0ne More Chapter, then uncovering my own time spent living in a Blackpool guest house – discovering that RAF trainees were billeted there during WW2, and reliving the sights sounds, and walks along the prom both in and out of season.


Did you always want to be a writer? 

I always wrote diaries and stories starring friends and myself along with whoever we had a crush on at the time, and have always been an avid reader (gifts were always book tokens) but I didn’t realise just how obvious it was that I wanted to be a writer until I read a rare book that I didn’t enjoy much and thought ‘oh, I could do this…’ 

Little did I realise – you don’t just write a book and send it off to the publishers and get your cheque back in the post! (This was way before the internet came into being) And yes, I really thought that was how it worked!


What other jobs have you had? 

I have worked as a receptionist for a famous cheese company in London, a bank teller, a nightclub waitress, a legal secretary and for an environmental equipment company, also worked in a housebound library service delivering books to those who couldn’t leave home – and then in a local library. 


How did it feel when your first novel was published?

There is nothing to rival that feeling – I was so excited and I didn’t stop smiling for at least three weeks! Realising that all your effort has finally paid off is so joyous.


Can you please tell us a little about your publishing story? 

Whilst spending a day in a double-glazing showroom as a favour (when there were such places) I’d taken along a book to read and it was then I thought, I could write one! That was in 1989 and between then and being published in 1997, I joined Eastern Arts, who would critique a first chapter per year and in 1993 won a week on a Historical residential course; a tutor there said, ‘Join the Romantic Novelists’ Association…’ which I did – a very good move - and also went to night school for creative writing. I wrote and submitted everything from 18th Century blockbusters to Medical Romances, and then in 1996, Hilary Johnson, also known as ‘The Oracle’ and who at the time ran the RNA’s New Writers’ Scheme suggested that I try writing a contemporary romance for a new line with Robinson – Scarlet. Which I did, and Dark Canvas was accepted for publication on 2nd January, 1997! It went on to win the RNA’s New Writers’ Award for that year – and I was absolutely thrilled – I had that feeling of dreams coming true!


What other books have you written? 

Dark Canvas was the first, then Blue Silk Promise, Moon Shadow, Soul Whispers, Secrets and Illusions. Illusions won the RNA’s first Shorter Romance Prize in 2003. 

They were all destined for the same publisher, Scarlet, but sadly, that line finished. However, my lovely editor and friend, Sue Curran took me along to Heartline Books with her and the books were tweaked and published there.

After that, Heartline also folded, life took over, all my submissions to agents and publishers weren’t successful, so in 2014, when the library cuts happened, I took voluntary redundancy in order to bring out my backlist as eBooks.  I think I need to go back and look at refreshing the covers of these at some point! 

In 2018, the writing tide turned again when I met Charlotte Ledger at an RNA party and submitted to her at 0ne More Chapter @Harper Collins) That particular story wasn’t taken up, but after some collaborating the Secret Notebook came into being.


Have you ever had writer’s block? 

Yes, usually if my emotions are all over the place in my own life.


If so, how did you overcome it?

Talking to friends and fellow writers, taking some long walks. A breakthrough for me came about when I took a few pages of work on a train journey and found that change of writing location inspired me enormously – unexpectedly I was through the block!


What motivates you to keep writing?

That fizzy excitement when a new idea begins to grow – that motivates me to keep writing.


Where is your favourite place to write? (can we please have a picture)

I’ve turned the little bedroom into an office and just love it. Yes, of course, I’ve attached a photo. 


Do your characters moods ever affect your mood and vice versa? 

Yes, although interacting with friends or family if the character moods threaten to take over is a useful thing to do – or a walk (even up and down the garden a few times) is a great way to get the balance back. My own mood can affect the ability to write – I think worrying can be a difficult emotion to overcome. I meditate these days to help that but don’t always manage to throw it off. However, in the words of my lovely meditation teacher, Val, ‘Fake it till you make it’ – that can work too!


What three pieces of advice would you give to an aspiring writer?

First, don’t give up, second, write what you enjoy writing (it will show) and lastly, try to write in a natural voice (I used to litter my mss with fancy words just so that it looked as if I knew what I was doing!) I don’t do that now. I would also say don’t throw anything away that you write – it’s a fabulous way to see how your writing changes over time and I always thought of any work that was rejected as my apprenticeship – and still do!

 

Which authors inspire you?

Sidney Sheldon, Sandra Brown, Milly Johnson, Serena Mackesy, Debbie Viggiano, – there are so many brilliant new authors too.


What are you reading at the moment?

I’m just between books at the moment, I recently finished Big Sexy Love by Kirsty Greenwood which was amazing (I laughed and cried)


If your book was made into a film what song would you choose for the opening credits?

Oh! ELO’s Mr Blue Sky. I LOVE Jeff Lynne and that song reminds me of looking over the sea on a lovely summer day in Blackpool.


Who would you choose to play your favourite character in the film of your book? 

Izzie and Molly would be played by Nicole Kidman, Eric Christian Olsen would play Justin (he has the best smile and twinkly eyes!) Aiden Turner would play Jack Blackshaw. Apologies for casting everyone – it’s one of my favourite pastimes!


What is your next book about? 

It is very much in the building stage, but Tally and Gabe meet when they have both deliberately escaped the world to adjoining cottages in the Lake District – each for their own powerful reasons… There may be a thread running from The Secret Notebook.


Thank you so much for joining us on our blog today and good luck with the book. 

And huge thanks for having me on your blog, Sincerely Book Angels, it’s been great fun!

We reviewed The Secret Notebook here


Sincerely 

Book Angel x


About the Author

Hello there!

I was born near Manchester, am married and live in Bedfordshire and have three fantastic youngsters - all adults now.

After years of submitting to the Romantic Novelists Association in the 1990s, I came through the Scheme to win the New Writers Award (now the Joan Hessayon Award) with Dark Canvas, my first published book. Illusions, which was originally published in 2002, also won an award - the RNA's Romance Prize in 2003.

I love to read romantic intrigues, thrillers, suspense and love stories, love writing them too - turning what first appears simple into something far more mysterious! Always, my books start with... 'Oh, what if...?' a wonderful, tingling question, the story developing as I work.

As well as a variety of jobs in a craft shop, solicitors, a bank, a nightclub, and I worked most recently in local libraries for 18 years and when the cutbacks came, I took redundancy and am taking some time to be self-employed, doing what I love best - escaping into the writing world with a head full of dreams and story themes.