The Jigsaw Maker…making waves

January 5, 2007

This morning I received a letter informing me that the unabridged audio rights worldwide for The Jigsaw Maker have been sold to Oakhill Publishing ltd- available April-June.  What a pleasant way to start the weekend.

I can’t imagine what it will be like to listen to my words, my characters from someone else’s mouth.  It’s probably like hearing yourself on tape for the first time. 

I always reckoned I knew my own voice – deep, light Irish acccent, calm – but somehow the tape distorted it.  There was another voice, higher, the accent more pronounced, disturbingly familiar while being unrecognisable.  I listened a few moments before asking who the other woman was and wondered why I hadn’t spoken yet.  Even then the penny didn’t drop.

I know Lizzie in The Jigsaw Maker; I know how she looks, how she moves; I know what she sounds like. 

Or I think I do.


Thank you spam…

January 2, 2007

It was a matter of moral courage and fortiude that I did not turn on the computer over the Christmas break but devoted myself instead to family matters.  It was a good idea at the time and in years to came may well prove beneficial.  For the moment all it means is that the boys are fed, the cards are displayed (hey loookit everyone, I have friends ) and the underwear is out of the drier.  I was so smug.

Than I turned on the computer and realised that I also have have insider knowledge on the price of shares and leads on where to buy my viagra.

WHO IS SENDING THIS SPAM????

Someone in the ether is out to inform me….

Happy ‘007


Balls in the air…

December 23, 2006

..and I have no juggling skills

Isn’t Christmas wonderful?

Best wishes to all…. 


Stephen King and me

December 14, 2006

So it’s not just me.  Have any of you read Stephen King’s latest offering (www.stephenking.com)?  We’re not the only Meg Gardiner (www.meggardiner.com) fans, are we? He is profuse in his praise.  My dinner companion would have been MOST impressed  (you can get SK in hardback).

By the way, I don’t own Meg money either.


Paperback Writer

December 7, 2006

An experience to ponder – and I welcome your comments.

On Tuesday evening my husband and I had dinner with some colleagues of his and their companions. In the company was a woman I had never met before. When we sat down to talk, she leaned across the table and said, ‘I hear that you’re a…..wri-ter.’
She said the word slowly, struggled with both syllables and I had the distinct impression it was giving her mouth ulcers.
I said, ‘Yes, I am.’
She shook her head to clear her ears and then scanned the restaurant for the Bonjela nurse. ‘But…I’ve never heard of you.’
Neither has the pope. I do not doubt his credentials for a minute.
As nobody appeared to have a solution to this mystery, we started on the breadsticks.

After the third one, she had it figured out. ‘Em, are your books hardback?’
‘Apart for the large print editions, no, paperback.’
‘Ah ha!’ she said, wrinkling her nose in digust at the physical proximity to a person whose book cover bends. ‘That’s it – I only read
hardbacks. That’ll be why.’

I am a pacifist and generally save my ire for situations when it can actually do some good. Nevertheless, it was on the tip of my tongue to mention that Big Brother is so confident of its sales that all the spin-off books are in hardback, to my knowledge, and don’t require reading. All you have to do is look at the pictures. I don’t think that’s what she meant.
Instead I said, ‘Oh.’
Wuss.

After that, the food came and I have seldom seen a starter so assiduously chewed by grown men. They kept their heads down, I chewed my lip, she pontificated.

When the main course arrived she had another go.
‘So have you met Stephen Fry?’ she asked smugly.
I think the correct response to this is Omigod! You’ve met Spephen Fry, tell me all about it but the wine was lovely and the waiter was refilling so I just said. ‘No.’
‘Umm,’ she said. ‘I don’t suppose you move in literary circles.’
(Stephen Fry – if you’re out there I’m sorry about this. I think you’re very literary and I love Twinings Tea but she’d pushed it too far with the tone. )
I said, ‘Goodness, do you consider Stephen Fry literary? I always think of him as an actor/entertainer who writes rather than the other way round. And I love his tea commercials.’
(Stephen – I really am sorry – you’d have found her difficult too.)
I don’t think she’s a tea drinker. She said, ‘So who have you met?’
Ha! In the interests of brevity because we didn’t have all night (and I just knew we weren’t going to be invited back for a nightcap)
I offered just a few names.
‘At the Guildford Festival in October, I met Sarah Dunant, Nicholas Evans and Patrick Gale…’
She didn’t move a muscle.
‘…and Elizabeth Buchan, Santa Montefiore, Katherine McMahon…
Not a twitch.
‘…Harry Bingham?’
Nope.
‘Jane Yardley?’
There was deadly silence. For goodness sake – are any of you in hardback?
My husband, who doesn’t read fiction, ever, but can read people to within an inch of their last indiscretion, leaned forward and said, ‘Have you read Meg Gardiner?’
Alleluia! Her face cleared, her demeanour lightened and she beamed. ‘Ah, yes, I like Meg Gardiner.’
I didn’t pretend she is a friend of mine -that would have been pushing it.
I’ve read her books – that was enough.

For the rest of the meal we discussed Meg’s Evan Delaney series – the thrills, the high-octane action, the humour.
Even the men joined the conversation.

I didn’t have a dessert or a coffee.
I had Lady Gray.
A lively little number.


Oxford Bookcrossing

December 5, 2006

Do you know what bookcrossing is?  For the uninitiated it’s a way of sharing books across continents’  You leave a book where it can be found, read, commented on and passed on…..

On Saturday there’s a joint Transita/Bookcrossing day in Oxford Town Hall from 2-5.  Tomorrow I’ll post more details…


Chatting up Chaps on the train..

November 29, 2006

Yesterday should have been devoted to preparing for a talk I’m giving on Thursday as the final event of The ELmbridge Literary Festival (Vera Flethcer Hall, Ember Court ROad, Thames Ditton 8pm.) but instead I had to go to London. I boarded the train at Weybridge to find only one seat available – opposite a young fellow with earphones and a woolly hat pulled low over his face.  Other passengers regarded him suspiciously as he had a way of twitching every so often, pulling his neck upwards and wincing.
I sat opposite and watched (casualty of the job – writer’s curiousity) and realised I’d seen that movement before.
At breakfast.
My sons, 17,16 and 13, are all keen canoeists and the day after a really tough workout they wrap scarves around their necks and twitch and agitate if they’ve got stiff muscles. H was too lean for a canoeist:they have a very particular shape – broad shoulders/chest, narrow waist. And they tend to be mesomorphs. This chap was tall and lean.
He noticed me watching.
‘Rower?’ I asked.
He leaned forward, beaming. ‘No – water polo. I’m off to see my chiropracter. I’m a tri-athlete – professional.’ And he sounded so proud.
If I’d been his mother, I would be proud too; it was the quickest journey to Waterloo I ever had. 
Alex Lewis is training to be fast enough to get onto the Olympic Team for the 2012 Olympics.  He’s bright, friendly, very personable and talks to strange women on the train.
I said I’d keep my fingers crossed and cheer him on when the time comes.
So if he makes it – and I sincerely hope he does – please cheer him on too.
He deserves it.


dovegreyreader….

November 27, 2006

This is a name that crops up on the Transita website a lot.  This weekend I finally got round to checking out all the sites/blogs I’ve wanted to look up for a long time.

That was a good idea.

The bad idea was opening them all at the same time so that when I decided to write to some I got the messages mixed up and so there are computer savvy folk the length of the country staring at their screens saying things like, ‘Whaaashe on about?’ and ‘Oh dear, who hasn’ t been taking her fish oils then?

Me. Sorry.

Dovegreyreader’s blog is one of the nicest.  She reviews books and she posts pictures so that her blog is gorgeous to look at .   And I know her real name too.  She was very kind about The Jigsaw Maker before it came out and just as kind since.  Thank you, Lynne.  I hope we’ll meet in the flesh some day.

By the way, if any of you are taking your flesh to Oxford on 9th December. Transita is hosting a Transita/Bookcrossing event.  Buy two books, set one free to travel the world.  It’s a novel idea – in every sense of the world.  More on this later…..


Hitting the ground running

November 22, 2006

When I was eight, we lived in a small town in County Kildare in Ireland, called Monasterevin.  It’s where most of the enduring impressions of my life were laid down and are now emerging as inspiration for stories.  It’s also proving rich picking for a talk I’m giving next week as part of the Elmbridge Literary Festival.  Linda Gillard and I started off that festival giving a weekend workshop and I end it by giving a talk. The ladies who wrote the blurb for it did a great job. They’ve promised ‘an entertaining and humour-filled evening.’  They’re opening the bar at 7 and when the attendees are nicely pickled, I’ll stand up, STONE COLD SOBER and talk for an hour about how I came to be a writer and how I always wanted to be a storyteller.  A full hour, no stopping for breath, no deviation, no repetition.
It reminds me of Monasterevin.  When I was eight I used to go for long walks with my parents and I liked to tell them stories – all the way around.   My mother sometimes asked when the story would end.
I’d tell her, when we reach home.
She’d be quiet for a while then she’d say, ‘Pet, will we walk a little faster?’
As a treat, she’s even let me run sometimes – all three miles.
So Monasterevin is very alive in my head just now.
The talk is entitled, ‘Hitting the Ground Running…’


Purgatory and the Prose Pincher….

November 19, 2006

An interesting thing happened on Friday.

A local primary school was having its Christmas shopping night and I decided to have a table so that the literate could buy their grannies a book for Christmas, signed by the author.  At 3.00 all the stallholders set up – making their tables look as attractive as possible and then scooting home for tea before returning at 6.00.  I came back at 10 to – I was <em>keen.</em>  Writing is a solitary pursuit so any opportunity to meet old friends (drink mulled wine) sell books (drink mulled wine) and generally socialise is welcome.

My 13 year old son, being a fastidious fellow, checked when we got back that all was in order. He displayed the posters, checked the float and then counted the books…

There were two missing.

TWO MISSING!

Someone had actually gone to the trouble of pinching a copy of Toppling Miss April (with the new cover – maybe they didn’t realise it was the same inside) and Soft Voices Whispering.  They’d obviously read The Jigsaw Maker. How do you react to that?  As a practising Catholic at a Catholic Primary School fundraising event in the church hall, I really didn’t expect to need security cameras. I said so.

On my right, the Pampered Chef representative looked aghast and checked her table – all present and correct.  The Murano Glass Jewellery rep on the other side checked hers -  fine too.
All around the large hall folk ascertained that their supplies were in order and it emerged that I was the only victim….

RESULT!

Mine was the only stall deemed worthy of the effort, worth the risk of some serious explaining at the pearly gates. What a compliment (albeit backhanded).

So if anyone’s having difficulty getting his/her hands on a copy of either of the aforemnetioned books, hang fire.  There are  copies in purgatory and I won’t be pressing charges.  It kept me going all evening.

I didn’t need the wine.