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Book Launch Love – Coffs Harbour

Web_a proud dadHere’s me with my proud dad. (I’m his baby girl.)

Now my baby has been set free into the unknown. Okay, so that’s slightly melodramatic; it’s not a real baby and I’m not exactly setting it free. And thanks to a few terrific reviews this last week, the unknown is now also a lot less ‘unknown’. (see below)

I admit to being terrified that readers wouldn’t like it, that book reviewers would stab me in the heart (sorry, there I go with the dramatics again), and that Simon & Schuster would be left shaking their heads and saying: “Geez, that was a mistake!” So there was a kind of audible, if somewhat shaky sigh that escaped my mouth with that first review (and I’m pleased to say the good reviews keep coming!).

Of course, the best thing about publication week is the book launch; planning for such an event started years … err … I mean months ago. I decided to hold the event in the best little, big bookshop. The Book Warehouse at Toormina was going to be perfect for the small no-one-will-come-anyway event.

Hmm, fifty-plus RSVPs later, poor Julie spent sleepless nights wondering how she was going to rearrange the shop to accommodate the growing guest list. (Not to mention the added angst with The Mayor of Coffs Harbour – Denise Knight – officiating on the night.)

Totally out of the blue, a visitor (and a much-needed distraction) lobbed on my doorstop the day before the launch. Carolyn and I started hairdressing together at sixteen; she’d driven up from Sydney as a surprise guest. We hadn’t seen each other for 25 years. (Here she is as my bridesmaid thirty-odd years ago and you can tell one of us is still in the beauty industry, while the other is a struggling artist without a hairdressing budget!)

I admit that my publication dream has always included the glamorous book launch – a fabulously flamboyant affair – author swanning around, signing books and hobnobbing with literati, with much muttering about literary awards and movie deals. And that’s EXACTLY what I got (okay, minus the literary awards and movie deal). But the night was everything I could have hoped for – and more – with a humbling number of people coming from far and wide to help me celebrate. Most importantly though, as I read the first chapter – seven whole minutes (I timed it) – not one guest fell asleep, or if they did we were so crammed into that little store that they couldn’t have fallen anywhere anyway!

If I could do it all again, I wouldn’t change a thing (and in fact I probably will do it all over again this same time next year when The Simmering Season comes out. (I hope the sun has come out in Coffs Harbour by then too!)

Thank you to everyone who attended. Those who sent messages. Those who braved the elements. Those too far away to even try. Those watching over me. You were with me.

I think the Chinese proverb from the card I received from The Book Warehouse team says it all:

“I dreamed a thousand paths. I woke and walked my own.”

Enjoy these images of the launch – House for all Seasons March 4, 2013.

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What people are saying:

Daystarz Book Review – (full version)

Told from the alternating perspective of each of the four women, once childhood friends, House for all Seasons is a delightful read. I found myself engrossed in this story from the first few pages. It is a book that holds your attention throughout with enough interesting detail about the characters to have you wanting more. This book is believable and it draws you in as each of the women faces their past and their relationships with each other during their youth.

It takes the reader on a journey back to the days of the girls youth in Calingarry Crossing and to a tragic event that initially tore them apart yet now reunites them. It’s fascinating to read how each of the girls perceived this event, their part in it and what impact it still has on their lives.

We follow along as each of the four main characters confront their past and present in a way that enables them to shape their future, leaving old demons behind.

I thoroughly enjoyed the depth of character development and by the end of each of the women’s stories felt that I knew them personally. Each of the women’s personalities and lives were so different; their back stories so interesting that at times I couldn’t turn the pages fast enough. I really liked Poppy and Amber probably just because they were the most contrary and seemed to have the most growing to do.

There is a significant twist to the story that I just didn’t see coming and which really makes for a great ending to this book.

Jenn J McLeod has written a brilliant book in House for All Seasons which has me eagerly awaiting her next literary venture. This book is a must read and is the first on my top ten books list of 2013. I cannot say enough good things about this book, I highly recommend it as a must-add to your personal library.

Gotta be happy with that!

More reviews:
Book’d Out
1girl2manybooks
Goodreads – Helene Young

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It’s time … come home to the country

House for all Seasons Jenn J McLeodAutumn is here – Jenn’s favourite season – and so is the official release of  House for all Seasons.

To celebrate everything that’s great about small town stories, welcome Canadian powerhouse duo – Carli and Carli and Juliecarli and julie 2Julie Kennedy.

 

 

 

Bryce Courtney (The Power of One) wrote: “The joy of a small town lies in its unchanging nature.”.

 

You can watch Carli and Julie (below), but first I want to thank everyone who has ever encouraged me to keep writing and keep trying. There are no words to convey how I feel right now, or how I might say thank you to the wonderful Lou Johnson, Larissa Edwards, Carol Warwick (and the entire Simon & Schuster, Australia team) for giving my ‘House’ a home.

And a big Aussie thank you to the amazing Carli and Julie Kennedy with the perfect song for this occasion. So (click) to come home to the country with Jenn and to Small Town Stories with Carli and Julie.

Link to You Tube song

If you loved Small Town Stories you can download the song (and there’s more) from iTunes or go to the girls’ store: www.cjkennedy.com.

While you’re clicking away online you can also: ** buy House for all Seasons as an ebook; ** order a gorgeous print version online ; or better still ** pop down the street and support your local bookshop. We should all do our bit to keep a bookshop in business.

____________________________________________________________________

PHEW! Okay, so now the official ‘Jenn, the author’ thing is done, how am I really feeling?

I actually think I want to throw up! I am giddy and shaking and … Oh, now I think I’m having a hot flush! Someone pass me a fan — quick!

Speaking of fans …

I want to say a BIG thanks to you. Yes YOU! The one still reading this post. The one taking time out of your precious day to help me celebrate and spread the word.

More than anything I hope you enjoy House for all Seasons and you tell your friends, and they tell their friends.

 

Jenn

 

 

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Author Harvest ‘bales up’ Dawn Barker

Author HarvestFRACTURED_left

I’m so excited about  Dawn’s debut novel – out NOW – I’m putting the blurb right up front so you don’t miss it.

  Fractured – all their dreams have shattered.

Tony is worried. His wife, Anna, isn’t coping with their newborn. Anna had wanted a child so badly and, when Jack was born, they were both so happy. They’d come home from the hospital a family. Was it really only six weeks ago?

But Anna hasn’t been herself since. One moment she’s crying, the next she seems almost too positive. It must be normal with a baby, he thought, she’s just adjusting. He was busy at work. It would sort itself out. But now Anna and Jack are missing. And he realises that something is really wrong…

What happens to this family will break your heart and leave you breathless

Just reading that sends shivers up my spine, so you’d best feed me because food comforts… (Not that there’s anything wrong with that, doc!)

What treat have you whipped up for me today, Dr Dawn?Dawn Barker

Jenn, I’m very much a tea person, served in a pretty pot.

(I like tea. I like how the tea leaves  after you’ve drained your cup create shapes. Sometimes I see rabbits and faces… Kind of like ink blots. Not that there’s anything wrong with that — right?)

So about that comfort food, Dawn?

For special guests, I show off my Scottish background by baking a pretty good  – if I do say so myself – shortbread. Sprinkled with lots of sugar of course…Fractured - both

(Ock, mon! A wee bit o’ Scottish shortbread never hurts. Sorry, that’s the McLeod part of me coming out! Not that I have a split personality or anything – okay?  Speaking of split (or Fractured!), Hachette is very clever designing your covers with alternate sides of the face.) 

At home …

My mum says garden gnomes make a house a home! Are you loud and proud in your love of garden gnomes at home, a closet gnomer or with a strict ‘no gnomes’ policy at your place?

There are no gnomes in our garden, I’m afraid, although my three little girls tell me there are fairies in amongst the bushes. I think that beats gnomes any day.

(I think fairies win, hands down!)

What vegetable (or fruit) have you always wanted to grow at home?

We have lots of fruit and veggies growing at home, although very few of them survive the hot Perth summer! At the moment – it’s 37c outside – the only things still going are grapes, lemongrass, cherry tomatoes, chilli, mint and lemons. Actually, that sounds like a good combination. Thai prawns and a mojito anyone?

(Yes please!)

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

Anyone whose house has a balcony, a view, a playroom and a full time nanny so I can sit and read a book with a pot of tea without my children clambering all over me!

Country curiosities…

The big question… Why did the chicken cross the road?

You should know better than to ask a psychiatrist a question like that! I’m interested in why you ask that. Why do you think the chicken crossed the road, Jenn?

(*gulp*)

About you…

Your turning point: when was that point in your life that you realized that being an author was no longer going to be just a dream but a reality and a career?

In 2010, my manuscript for Fractured was chosen for the Queensland Writers Centre/Hachette manuscript development programme. In some ways, this was more significant than the day that Hachette offered to publish it, as it was the first acknowledgement by the industry that I wasn’t just dreaming, that there was something in my writing and that my story that was worth pursuing. Of course, since then there have been many moments in my publishing journey where I’ve had to remind myself that I am actually now doing what I’d only dreamed of before!

(I’m so excited Fractured and House for all Seasons are coming out together. Not ‘coming out’ as in … well, you know… Not that there’s anything wrong with that!)

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

I have three very young children, and so for me, finding the time and space to write is a constant challenge. I try to write every day, but there are some days when I have to remember that I can’t do it all.

Fun stuff…

What does your protagonist think about you? Would he or she want to hang out with you, the author, his/her creator.

The protagonist in Fractured is very similar to me in many ways. I deliberately created a main character that readers could relate to and see elements of themselves in, because the experiences of the family in my novel really could happen to any of us.

If you could trade places with any other person for a week, famous or not famous, living or dead, real or fictional, with whom would it be?

I’d love to be Truman Capote at his prime: living a literary life in New York when writers were really celebrated, hosting The Black and White Party, hanging out with the jet set. But a week would be long enough. I like peace and quiet. I’m usually asleep by 10pm, and I don’t think Mr Capote was…

(Not that there’s anything wrong with that!)

How weird are you? Rate yourself on a scale of 1 (not) to 10 (very).

I’m afraid I’m not very weird at all. I spend my day playing with the children, running a house, and trying to fit in some writing and exercise. I think on that scale, I’m a 1.

(Hmm, I reckon only a psychiatrist can say that and get away with it!)

Dawn says you can buy the book in all the usual places: Booktopia, Dymocks and Fishpond! But she likes people to try their local bookshop first.

For the ebook version: http://www.booktopia.com.au/fractured-dawn-barker/prod9780733629853.html

Catch Dawn on Facebook, Tweeting as @drdawnbarker and on her website: www.authordawnbarker.com