Posted on 26 Comments

Author Harvest ‘bales up’ Heather Garside w/ giveaway

Author HarvestHeather GarsideHi Heather, welcome to Harvest, and congratulations on your release – Breakaway Creek. (You know I love that cover, Heather.) 

Now some lucky reader of this blog will have the change to win an ebook version. Just leave a comment.

Heather, start by telling me if it’s scones and tea or some other homemade delight you have whipped up for me today! 🙂

Hello Jenn and thanks for having me. I’ve just knocked up some pumpkin sultana muffins and made us coffee. Hope you like coffee. (That was the easiest and best baking I’ve ever done!)

(Hmm, let’s see… I used to own a cafe and now I am a full-time writer. OF COURSE I LOVE COFFEE! 🙂  )

NOw, Heather, 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?

No gnomes at my place, I’m afraid. I do have a bird bath – does that count?

(Ahh, no. But nice try!)

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

I love oranges and used to grow them, before a combination of drought and hard bore water killed the trees. We’ve had some wet years recently so perhaps I should have tried again. But hello! I’m a writer, not a gardener!

(Oh, I hear ya, sista! Our fingers are insured now, aren’t they? Mine are. And speaking of birds before and fingers, I also refrain from all finger flips and other gestures now. My fingers are for typing only these days!)Breakaway Creek

If I came to your home and looked in the refrigerator, what would I find?

Plenty of healthy food but also lots of jars of homemade pickles etc which we’ve been given and don’t seem to eat. Probably quite a few things past their use-by date.

(Please refrain from using terms such as ‘past use-by date on my blog. Thanks!)

If you sorted your wardrobe by colour, what colour would stand out? (Ahh, do you sort your wardrobe by colour?!)

No, I don’t sort by colour. It would be hard as my wardrobe looks like the proverbial Coat of Many Colours.

(Oh gosh! You’ve taken me back to my primary school days when I had a role in the musical based on ‘Godspell’. I’d so wanted the lead role so I got to sing Coat of Many Colours. But no, bloody Michelle Jarvis (are you reading this post Michelle Jarvis where ever you are?) Yes, you were pretty and talented, while I resembled … Well, I cannot find the words to describe myself in 1972. (But clearly, by the look of in this class photo -below-I managed to find the refrigerator!) So anyway, losing out on that role devastated me. Obviously! Here I am still raving on about it, for goodness sake! Instead, I got some other poxy song to sing that was way too high for me and … well … Sorry. Where were we? Next question? And I’ll have another scone, please Heather.)

North Curl Curl Primary school 1972 (6th grade)What are you wearing now? Be honest! (and best not say a coat of many colours!)

As I had to slip into town this morning I’m better dressed than usual. A pair of decent-looking jeans and a long-sleeved shirt. But I’ll confess to tatty slippers on my feet.

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

I don’t mind whose – as long as it’s somewhere in the beautiful Adelaide Hills so I can visit my daughter frequently.

(I LOVE the Adelaide Hills.)

Country curiosities…

We love a sunburnt country (slip, slop, slap and all that). What’s your ideal hat? Or are you a boots person?

Once I would have said an Akubra, which I still wear when we’re doing cattle work. But I have a cloth hat to wear around our yard, which is lighter, cooler and doesn’t put dust all over the washing.

If you were a tree (or animal) what kind of tree (animal) would you be?

I’d like to be a cat and laze around all day.

Now for the big question… Why did the chicken cross the road?

Because it had flown the coop.

🙂

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?

Getting The Call – not that I would describe writing as my career, exactly. It’s one of my part-time jobs and I’m happy with that as I also enjoy my other jobs.

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Plotting used to be the easiest part but seems to have become much harder for me lately. I’m weird in that I enjoy editing.

(Not weird. Or we are weird together. I enjoy editing too.)

If someone was to write your biography, what do you think the title should be?

I’m sure no-one will ever want to write my biography. 🙂

Fun stuff…

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

I think Shelley, from Breakaway Creek, would enjoy spending time with me. I could take her for a ride and show her around the farm.

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 would swap with my other heroine, Emma, from Breakaway Creek to experience life in the late nineteenth century.

If I said to you, “Just entertain me for five minutes, I’m not going to talk,” what would you do?

Read an extract from my book. (I can’t sing, dance or play a musical instrument, so the options are limited!)

(I can’t sing either according to my 1972 teacher! So how about you leave an extract below! Oh look! You have already.)

What food would you be?

Plum pudding – old-fashioned and homely.

(Lovely!)

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

Damper! I love hot damper with butter and syrup.

(Okay, scones, plum pudding, damper and syrup! I have put on about 5kg doing this post! I’m going to have to stop asking this question.)

Name 5 uses for a stapler that has not staple pins.

I can only think of one and that’s cluttering up my desk.

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

Perhaps a 6. I do talk to myself, so that must count as weird.

Now about Breakaway Creek. I love the sound of it already.

(And don’t forget to leave a comment, readers. I will announce the winner here in about a week.)

Breakaway Creek

Two love stories; two parallel lives; two destinies.

Two city women, a century apart, find love and adventure with rugged men in the Queensland outback.

Set in the 19th and 21st centuries, Breakaway Creek is a passionate rural romance of love and its consequences.

Shelley and Emma might be separated by time but they’re bound by a dark secret to a place called Breakaway Creek.

Distraught at her boyfriend’s betrayal, Shelley Blake flees the city to seek refuge with her parents. Her interest in an old family photograph is piqued by their unusual reticence. A search for answers takes her to the cattle station Breakaway Creek.

Here she meets Luke Sherman, a man embroiled in the bitter ending of his marriage and subsequent separation from his two small boys.

Neither of them is ready for a new relationship. Luke’s twenty-first century struggle to reclaim his children unravels as Shelley uncovers the truth about her ancestors, Alex and Emma. Their story of racial bigotry and a love that transcends all obstacles takes the reader back to the pioneering days of the 1890s.

Good luck in the drawer! Now closed: The winner of Heather’s Breakaway Creek is… Nan Berrett from Clare. Congrats and thanks everyone for joining the harvest.
Posted on 13 Comments

Author Harvest ‘bales up’ Jennie Jones

Author HarvestJennie Jones xI’ve been biting at the bit ‘bale up’ this lovely debut author (and what a striking book cover).  

So Jennie (with an ‘ie’) I was wondering… Is it possible that when your mum named you that she wanted to name you Jenn (with two ‘Ns’ – as all great Jenns are named) but when explaining the spelling — Jenn with two ens — she spelled out, “J.e.n.n. i.e. – (only to the listener, the ‘ie’ translated to a ‘that is’. So … J.e.n.n. (‘that is’ two Ns!). See? Jenn with two Ns and no ‘ie’. Hmm, you might want to check on that! 😉

Okay…

Let’s start by you telling me if it’s scones and tea or some other homemade delight you have whipped up for me today! 🙂

Welsh cakes cooked on the griddle, with zesty orange butter. (You’ll love them).

(Not sure I’ve had anything cooked on a griddle – not since I visited Jethro and Elle-May Clampet for some of Granny’s cookies, but I’m keen. Must be a WA thing.)

At home with…

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?

It was always no, never – especially the colourful ones. But two years ago we moved Jennie stone manhouse and I found a little stone man in the front garden. There was no way I could bin him. He’s staying (even though he’s lost the top of his hat). The dilemma is – if we move, do we take him or leave him?

(Pic of my gnome attached, if you want to use it)

(A little stoned man? Cool!  Oh, wait, you said STONE man. Not so cool. But I say leave him and tell the next owners to do the same. Imagine the stories he will tell in the dark of night when he comes alive and frolics with all the other stoned gnomes. Oh, sorry, STONE gnomes.)

If I came to your home and looked in the refrigerator, what would I find?

A chicken and an egg – and me, staring at them wondering how I’m going to answer the chicken and road question.

(And obviously a little hash stash for those gnomes, hmm, JJ?)

If you sorted your wardrobe by colour, what colour would stand out? (Ahh, do you sort your wardrobe by colour?!)

Doesn’t everyone sort their wardrobe by colour? And season?

(Oh, you had me at season!)

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

Fluffy brown dressing gown with big white spots.

(Hmm, images of Granny Clampet!) The Beverley Hillbillies – For those young’us out there.

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

Anyone who has a country manor or stately home. They could trust me. I’d walk around loving the atmosphere and might be inclined towards some light dusting of the antiquities. I’d even be happy with any ghosts residing there.

Country curiosities…

We love a sunburnt country (slip, slop, slap and all that). What’s your ideal hat? Or are you a boots person?

I love hats. Here in Australia I go for the baseball cap, but when I lived in the UK I would find any excuse to wear a hat, especially at weddings. This winter I’m also buying me a pair of cowboy boots (high-heeled girly ones).

Now for the big question… Why did the chicken cross the road?

To cross, or not to cross, that is the question: –
Whether ’tis nobler in the mind, to suffer
The slings and arrows of outrageous side;
Or to take arms against a road of troubles,
And by crossing end them?

(#amspeechless!)

About you…House On Burra_Cover

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?

When I received a report from the Romantic Novelists’ Association and their New Writers Scheme. I knuckled down and worked tirelessly (not true – it was exhausting!) to get my manuscript up to scratch for submission. I knew, somewhere deep within me I had a chance. When it was accepted for publication, I couldn’t quite believe that the chance had really come my way, until I reminded myself that all the work, effort and sheer brain-slog had created the magic I wanted.

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Creating the story plot. The characters and settings come easily, but what will happen to them and why gives me the heebie-jeebies, so I have to delve deeper and darker into the dimness known as: there is fiction at the end of the tunnel.

If someone was to write your biography, what do you think the title should be?

I Googled my name a while back to see how many more Jennie Jones’s were out there, and found a book written by Maggie Osborne entitled:  The Promise of Jenny Jones. (And it’s a western – my favourite!) So if anyone ever wants to bother writing my biography, could you please call it The Promise of Jennie Jones and can there be some nice photos in it too?

(Or Jenn Jones. You’d best check on that spelling first!)

What question have you always wanted to be asked in an interview? How would you answer that question?

Reporter: “I understand you’re being ‘baled up’ by the Jenn J McLeod?”

Me: “YES! She asked me! Honestly, I didn’t have to beg or even pay her!”

(LOL Love it! Plus, you’re a Jenn (or a Jennie) and we are special!!!! )

Fun stuff…

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

If I lined them up in a room, I think my heroes and heroines might stare at me blankly for a moment, then ask: ‘You’re going to make us do what?”  I suppose at that point, I’d have to buy them all a drink and explain myself.

(Fictional friends. Cheap shout! Is that why it’s a bit of a dry argument right now? Something to wash down those Welsh cakes would be nice.)

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?

Any woman who owns a stately home (even the ones in disrepair – I wouldn’t mind!)

If I said to you, “Just entertain me for five minutes, I’m not going to talk,” what would you do?

I was an actor for many years, Jenn, so I’d sing and dance for you of course. Name your musical!

My two fave musical songs (you may see a certain seasonal influence):

South Pacific’s ‘Younger Than Spring Time’ because I wish I was! (Do you know that one?  Here, I’ll get you going… “Younger than spring time, are you  /  Gayer than laughter are you… La, la, la!!! )

Oh and State Fair’s – ‘It Might As Well Be Spring’  (Oh, happy days, I just found the ringtone online!!!!) And some lyrics…

I’m as busy as a spider spinning daydreams
I’m as giddy as a baby on a swing
I haven’t seen a crocus or a rosebud or a robin on the wing
But I feel so gay in a melancholy way
That it might as well be spring…..

Gotta love old-time songs.

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

Unsliced bread, ripped apart whilst warm and devoured with real butter and Welsh cheddar cheese.

(I don’t believe you. Prove it – right this minute!)

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

I’d like to say 2 but I think those who know me would be frowning. Therefore, I admit to 9, but prefer to think it’s the arty part of me that pushes that envelope.

Thanks Jennie, I am soooooo happy to be welcoming a new House to the block. Pretty soon House for all Seasons will have an entire street. (Oh, there’s a blog idea!) 

Now, tell us about The House on Burra Burra Lane:

A dilapidated house, a city girl looking for a tree change, and a rugged vet with a past. Just another day in rural Australia…

Just ten days after her fresh start in the isolated Snowy Mountains, Samantha Walker trips over a three hundred pound pig and lands in the arms of Dr. Ethan Granger — and the firing line for gossip. It was hardly a ‘date’ but sparks of the sensual kind are difficult to smother in a community of only 87 people. Now there’s a bet running on how long she’ll stay and what she’ll get up to while she’s in town.

Ethan has his own issues — Sammy’s presence in his childhood home brings with it painful recollections of family scandals and a bad‐boy youth. When the gossip around them heightens, his life is suddenly a deck of cards spread on the table for all to see. Then Sammy’s past catches up with her… and it looks like all bets are off.

Wonderful. Now, if you don’t know Jennie, here’s how you can find out more and connect with her. She is a lot of fun to know.

Links:

Buy The House on Burra Burra Lane

Jennie Jones Romance Webpage:  http://www.jenniejonesromance.com

Visit Jennie Jones Romance Author Facebook page

 

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Author Harvest ‘bales up’ Helene Young w/ book giveaway

Roo Bin Esque To quote solo circumnavigator Paul Lotus: “You can’t steer a boat that isn’t moving? Just like a life.”

Well this author is moving all right. She’s gone from flying over the ocean in a Dash 8, to sailing across it in Roo Bin Esque (with the a none-too-happy-about-it Staffy named Zeus).

So Helene Young, start by telling me if it’s scones and tea or some other homemade delight you have whipped up for me today. 🙂

Jenn, come aboard, GW caught fresh fish today so we’re having tempura battered whiting, marinated olives and fresh baked sour dough to go with the gin and tonics, or champagne if you prefer.Zeus aboard Roo

(Hmm, don’t mind if I do. I mean the boats already rocking, isn’t it? G’day Zeus, boy.)

At home with…

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

Eclectic garden ornaments were my specialty rather than gnomes. When we lived in a house we had a huge boot with a desert rose growing in it and an iron rooster who guarded the pool. Sadly, there’s no room on Roo Bin Esque so they are both residing with friends now.

(But you do have GW and he is kinda cute!)

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

Hydroponic lettuces. We’re currently growing basil and parsley on the boat 🙂

If I looked in the refrigerator, what would I find?

Hmm, the eggs look a little lonely with only a block of parmesan and a couple of roma tomatoes for company– must be time to go ashore…

If you sorted your wardrobe by colour, what colour would stand out? (Ahh, do you sort your wardrobe by colour?!)

Eeek, sorting by colours? Even my OCD pilot personality doesn’t need to have my cupboard in that much order! But the predominant colour is white. White works shirts, white shorts, white pants, but then there’s the multi-coloured dress and a heck of a lot of black and then I’d have to decide whether the coloureds had black backgrounds or white and …. Help!!!

(Yes, Helene. I can see that sorting your wardrobe would be akin to hoisting yourself up 60 feet of mast or flying at 25,000 feet!)

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

A sarong by Nude Beach – they make the best all cotton sarong with extra length for room to grow!

(Extra length for room to grow? Length, Helene? You are short. You always will be short. In fact, you will start shrinking in a few years. More champagne?)

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

The Kwila Hut on Haggerstone Island – gorgeous tranquil haven.

(Nice! Check it out.)

Country curiosities…

We love a sunburnt country (slip, slop, slap and all that). What’s your ideal hat? Or are you a boots person?

I wear a hat for work that looks like a prop from Police Academy Three (does anyone remember those tragic movies??) but that’s not my preferred option. I love hats – in any shape and style. I have an extensive collection of caps, sunvisors and straw hats. I’m now collecting floppy hats with strings to tie them on so they don’t blow off in the stiff breeze on the yacht!

If you were a tree (or animal) what kind of tree (animal) would you be?

I want to come back as a Staffie living with a couple of nut cases on a yacht in tropical paradise. Whether I’ve done enough good deeds in this life to be so rewarded remains to be seen. I’ll get back to you on that one. 🙂

Now for the big question… Why did the chicken cross the road?Zeus-sleeping

Because the Staffie was chasing it…

(Yeah, sure he was. In his dreams maybe. Zzzzzzzzzz!)

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?

I’m still looking for that elusive moment!

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Discovering the day only has twenty-four hours in it… Finding time is always a struggle, but I know I’m not alone in that.

If someone was to write your biography, what do you think the title should be?

Flights of Fancy 🙂

What question have you always wanted to be asked in an interview? How would you answer that question?

Q: Where did you meet your husband?

A: He literally swept me up into his arms on a dark and stormy night in the Lake District and carried me off the touch footy field. (I’d badly torn a knee ligament in a fall and I figured anyone who could carry me like that was a keeper.)

(What a hero!)Half Moon Bay

Fun stuff…

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

I think Ellie and I could be good friends. Nick? I’d love to hang out with him. 🙂

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?

Ameila Earhart, the week before she embarked on her last flight.

(Oh wow, that would be fascinating.)

If I said to you, “Just entertain me for five minutes, I’m not going to talk,” what would you do?

Take you for a sail.

(Uh-oh. Is that a distant shore I see back there? I said IF I was to ask… *gulp* (Jenn hates water–unless it’s Tonic and in a glass with some Gin! Top up, GW?)

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

Panini – hand-torn.

(Dunked in garlic oil, then dipped in sea salt and oregano. Yum!)

Name 5 uses for a stapler that has no staple pins.

  1. A door stop
  2. An aircraft wheel chock (for a light plane.)
  3. An anchor for a crab pot
  4. A paperweight to stop the maps flying away
  5. On the end of a line to test the depth of water

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

I reckon I’m about a 6, but GW’s just fallen about laughing, tripped over Zeus, and he’s holding 10 fingers up…

I’m now feeling a little queasy so how about you tell us about the story inside that gorgeous book cover for Half Moon Bay. 

Ellie Wilding has been running from her past, but when the residents of Half Moon Bay call for help she knows it’s finally time to return home. As an international photojournalist, she’s used to violence in war zones, but she’s shocked when it erupts in the sleepy hamlet on the north coast of New South Wales, threatening all she holds dear.Battle-weary Nicholas Lawson walked away from his military career leaving unfinished business. In a coastal backwater, that decision returns to haunt him. He remembers all too vividly his last lethal assignment in Afghanistan when Ellie’s sister, Nina, was shot and killed. Ellie’s been in his dreams ever since, even if she doesn’t remember him…As a storm rages and floodwaters rise, Ellie struggles to save her community. But who can she trust? Nick Lawson, the dangerously attractive stranger with secrets, or an old friend who’s never let her down?

Okay book lovers, Helene has a copy of Half Moon Bay to give away to one lucky person. But of course I’m having terrible trouble with my blog at the moment so if you enter and you don’t see your comment appear, don’t worry. I’ll be sure to included it in the draw!!! *evil laugh* 😉              

In your comment, Helene wants to know… ‘If you could interview a character from any book or movie who would it be and what’s the first question you’d ask them?’

CLOSED: Congratulations Patricia.

Find Helene at:

www.heleneyoung.com

https://www.facebook.com/HeleneYoungAustralianAuthor

https://twitter.com/HeleneYoung