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Author Bar Yarns with Kathy Mexted

Kathy Mexted flyingMeet a freelance writer, journo and photographer who likes to fly! Yes, Kathy Mexted does it all and she’s been flying pretty high with the news her latest short story was shortlisted in a recent Qld Rural Writers comp. Just like some other emerging authors who appeared on Author Harvest last year (yes, you Juliet Madison)! I think we will soon start hearing a lot more about author Kathy! (Just take a look at her ‘stapler’ answer and you’ll see what I mean. (Yes, you, Allen & Unwin!)

I remember ‘meeting’ Kathy online. She had won a copy of House for all Seasons from Helene Young’s blog and I then found her blog, loving her wonderful, witty (but more recently poignant) way with words. I just had to have a yarn.

So, what can I get you to go with your beer nuts, Kathy? (Shandy? Wine Spritzer? Beer Yarns and beer Nuts welcomes Kim Kelly Pink Lemonade?)

Hanging Rock pink bubbles (Macedon NV Brut Rosé)

Hey, did you hear the one about …?

How do you sell a rabbit to a deaf man?  WANNA BUY A RABBIT? (OK. That was a joke that worked well in the bar of the British High Commission in Singapore in 1985. Even though everybody heard Graham screaming ‘Wanna buy a rabbit’, everybody seemed to fall for the joke. It lives on in his memory).

I’m a beer nut nut! What bar snack would you be and why?

Twisties. When I lived overseas I craved them and no two Twisties/nights in a pub are ever the same. They also take no preparation. I am not much for cooking.

The publican offers you free drinks all night if you will:

  • Dance to Gangnam Style
  • Sing John Denver’s ‘Take me Home Country Roads’ on the Karaoke machine
  • Spend an hour washing dishes

Sing – definitely. It’d be a first. OK. Maybe second, oh hang on… well, there was this one night in Brisbane when I first met my husband-to-be’s family at a wedding and in a bar at 2am Uncle Greg and I were singing Khe Sanh on Karaoke. You’ve gotta do it at least once, don’t you?

Time to liven the place up. Got a buck? We can crank up the old jukebox in the corner. You get to pick three songs.

  1. Springsteen, ‘Pay Me My Money Down’ (The Live in Dublin version). I’m all over Springsteen since he played at Hanging Rock at Easter 2013 and I walked over to both concerts. I’m completely converted now. What a performer. I’d have gone every night for a week if he’d been playing for a week. Current favourite is the Live in Dublin album.
  2. Spiderbait, ‘Black Betty’ for my brother’s fantastic banjo riffs. We have spent some cherished creative moments recently. Not on the banjo though.
  3. Chisel or Sarah Blasko singing ‘Flame Trees’.  That song jumps into my head every time I drive into my old hometown of Finley.  My young daughters now demand it on the way to Tocumwal/Finley.

An author, an agent and a chicken walk into the bar… how do you know which one crossed the road?

Let’s hope it was the agent running across the road waving a contract, but we all know it would be the author running in circles, one of which happened to be intersected by a road. Chickens don’t cross roads. That’s a myth.

There’s a stapler on the bar. Tell me what it’s doing there. (Buckle up, readers. This is one tall and terrifically told yarn!)

An author is stapling business cards to manuscripts and, sinking a Whisky, she sings the blues to an ever-sympathetic barman. The supportive regulars slap her on the back, ‘It’s a g-r-e-a-t book, hunny. You know you’re gonna be famous one day.’

The clock ticks over 6pm and in the corner a solo banjo player twangs and tunes his instrument. The black vinyl on his three-legged stool is frayed at the corners. The small crowd grows expectant and the author senses a more immediate urge. The urge to sing. Sing away the blues. Sing to the anticipation of a good night in the small pub. Sing to Saturday night. She calls her mate the trombonist and whips a harmonica from her handbag. By 9pm the place is jumping and the growing crowd raise their glasses with a yahoo, grateful for the distraction from harvest. A toothless shearer lurches at the musicians who momentarily fall silent. He rifles in an old duffle bag and produces a squeeze-box.

A stranger’s anchor-tattooed arm ripples as he strokes his snowy flowing beard and then joins the fracus on the lagerphone and by midnight the owner doesn’t recognise his normally subdued crowd. The revellers spill onto the footpath. A young girl falls in love. A mother of three is dancing on a table for the first time in ten years, and the publican has run out of glasses. In the back bar, three Allen & Unwin commissioning agents were having a quiet country weekend. Like swaying cobras drawn to the snake charmers tune, the intoxicating Irish music entices them out and as they succumb to the madness, their cold beers come to rest on the manuscripts on the bar. Above the damp type, the author’s name is unfamiliar to them from a recent slush pile. Surely this girl on the microphone must be able to write though because, against the menacing ping of the banjo, she sure as hell can hold the raucous crowd with a joke.

By 3am there is no more rum and the remaining glasses are disappearing up the road in a swaying chorus to Dirty Old Town. The shearers have stopped fighting and the local cop is acting as a courtesy bus. The barmaid throws the regulars onto swags in the dining room to sleep it off and as the owner stands in stunned after-shock, a lost and lone chicken wanders through the carnage. Bork-bork-bork-bork. Hosing out the bar, the owner stoops to pick up his stapler. He places in on the bar with a set of Holden ute keys, a black jacket, four cigarette lighters and the musicians upended three-legged stool. He’s not handing any of them over until next Saturday night.

The pub is the heart of a small town and most locals would be lost without one. What are three things you’d be lost without?

  1. Laptop
  2. Camera
  3. PhoneThe Outer Barcoo

Last drinks, my friend! It’s been great. But before we go, tell us how we can find out more about you and your writing/books.

I write magazine articles and usually provide my own photos. I can’t decide which I enjoy more. I have a completed Memoir manuscript draft titled ‘The Misses and Me’. It is waiting for me to send off for a manuscript appraisal.

You can follow Kathy’s blog called The Outer Barcoo.

Why not nick over there now?http://kathymexted.typepad.com

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Author Harvest ‘bales’ up Karly Lane

Hi Karly,

A ‘quick’ trip down the highway and here we are. Karly. Congratulations on rural romance book three — Bridie’s choice. Speaking of choice… Do I need to make one? Is it scones and tea or some other homemade delight you have whipped up today?

Photo: Marie Miller

Tim Tams… you can’t go wrong with Tim Tams…plus I don’t want to kill you with my cooking….

(And after reading some of your answers, below I am not going to complain. You join my list of ‘do not let this woman near a stapler’ people – right alongside Juliet Madison and Jaye Ford. Ouch!

A little Jenn fact: Karly Lane was the first person I saw demonstrate ‘The Tim Tam Slam’. Impressive!

Now, Karly, 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 here…no self-respecting garden gnome would set foot in this mad house!

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

Kiwi’s actually…and blueberries…

(Yum!)

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

Depends if you’re fluent in species of mould .I’m pretty sure I’ve grown a whole new variety in the food in the back of my fridge.

(Ahh… not so yum!)

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

Oh you’re are a funny one, Jenn…sort!!!!! I’m lucky if my clothes get from the folding basket TO the wardrobe!

(I love that you call it a ‘folding’ basket rather than an ironing basket. LOL I have one of those too.)

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

Well thanks to the stupid weather we’re having at the moment, I have a combination of winter jeans, summer t-shirt and jumper…with thick socks..I look sexy 😉

(I know what you mean…. about the local weather, not so much about the looking sexy bit!!!)

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 don’t do hats…but I love my boots.. bring on winter, I say! You can NEVER have too many boots!

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

A cat.. who had one of those ‘special’ owners who leaves the mansion to their pets in their will…I wouldn’t be a good stray…I need to belong to a rich person…yep, I think I could handle that.

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

Cause chooks are stupid. Obviously it saw something move in the wind and ran across to see if it was editable…well, that’s what my chooks would do anyway, despite the fact the greedy things have more chook food than they can eat right there on this side of the road…

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?

The day I saw my first book on a shelf.

(I remember that day too! I remembering buying the book and saying, “my friend wrote this”. Your 4PAN writer friends were all so excited for you. It’s lovely being a member of such a supportive bunch.)

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Having the patience to work through a plot problem.

(That sounds like what I call ‘a black hole’. Nasty place.)

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

Memoirs of a Sex Goddess Housewife…

(With a ‘folding’ basket, a mould-filled fridge and not-so-sexy sock feet! Hmmm!)

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

Q. Are you really a Sex Goddess Housewife?

A. Why yes…yes I am.

(Cute!)

Fun stuff…

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

Of course…my characters want to remain alive in the sequel.

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

I would attempt to cook you something…I’m told that’s pretty funny.

What food would you be?

I don’t think I’d like to be food…would kinda suck really…not much of a life expectancy is it?

(Unless you are in your fridge apparently!)

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

A really sharp bread knife.

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

  1. a paper weight,
  2. a book mark,
  3. a bug killer,
  4. a weight to pin a spider in place till hubby comes home to kill it,
  5. for getting someone’s attention when the TV is too loud to hear you.

 (Crikey! I gather this is on a bad plotting day!)

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

1 …I’m completely sane…everyone else is weird.

Tell us about your latest Allen and Unwin release 

Bridie’s Choice

Bridie Farrell and Shaun Broderick come from opposite sides of the tracks. But unlike Bridie’s family, who are perennial strugglers, the Brodericks are the wealthy owners of Jinjulu – one of the most prestigious properties in their local district.

All her life Bridie has longed to leave the small town she grew up in. But time afer time family responsibilities have kept her anchored there. Meanwhile, Shaun’s dream of taking over the management of Jinjulu is dashed by his dictatorial father who tries to rule Shaun’s life both on and off the farm.

The Brodericks are dismayed when Shaun falls in love with ‘that Farrell girl’, whom they deem unsuitable. And they don’t just make their feelings clear to Shaun but to Bridie as well.

Faced with a choice, Bridie must decide whether to turn her back on her heart or her dreams in order to make the biggest decision of her life…

From the author of the bestselling rural saga North Star and Morgan’s Law, this absorbing novel is about alternative destinies and the power of love.

While you’re here, why not leave a comment. Or subscribe to jennjmcleod.com to have future posts delivered to you inbox.

Thank you Karly and readers. http://karlylane.com

http://www.allenandunwin.com/default.aspx?page=651&book=9781743311608

 

 

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Author Harvest ‘bales’ up: Kylie Ladd

Kylie Ladd’s novels are real keepers. Lucky for readers she has a new one coming in April 2013 (Allen and Unwin). And another fabulous title too: Into My Arms. (Maybe now is a great time to catch up her last two novels: Last Summer and After the Fall.)

I caught up with this fellow wine-lover today and we talked boots, roots, and beavers.

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

Sadly, I don’t do homemade, unless homemade means made by the nice people who live at Coles. I’ll pour you a big glass of wine though, and after a while you’ll have forgotten about the scones.

(Scones? What scones? I’ll just grab some glasses.) 

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?

Gnome be gone. We do, however, have two quite mad chickens in our backyard that provide at least as much colour and far more entertainment. Their names are Agnes and Rooney (blame my children for that) and they are Barnevelders- absolutely beautiful looking birds, but dumber than a box of hammers.

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

None! That’s what Coles is for! (Oh dear. Despite the chickens, I seem to be failing this whole country-vibe already.)

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

Stuff from Coles. (NB. This is not a sponsored post. But it could be, Mr Coles. Hint.)

(I knew you looked familiar! *snigger*)

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

I sort *everything*. Of course I sort my wardrobe by colour… also style, function, season and shade. Blue.

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

An old Roots windcheater that I bought when we lived in Montreal for two years and is very comfy for writing in. Roots is a sportingwear company (the Canadian Nike, basically), whose logo is a beaver. Their marketing person clearly isn’t from Australia.

(So no puns about you beavering away on edits then, eh?)

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

Martha Stewart’s. I bet she sorts everything by style, function, season and shade too.

(Ah yes, she makes up EVERYTHING herself and is very creative in many way, but we won’t go 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?

Boots. I have a pair of Blundstones that I got when I was about 18, which was last century. I wear them all the time and they are the most comfortable things ever (right up there with the Roots windcheater). When I took them to London a few years ago I had people stop me on the street and ask if they could buy them. (True!)

(Boots? Roots? Beavers?  Only here on Harvest, folks!)

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

A horse. I love them. In fact, I thought I was a horse for about three years between the ages of 9 and 12- a bay called Tammy, after my first riding school horse. My ten year old daughter seems to have inherited the gene, and confided to me recently that she is a chestnut filly named Cinnamon. I am feeding her carrots and hoping it lasts right through high school.

(You will stop with the carrots if she starts turning orange though, won’t you?)

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

Our chickens are so very stupid I have no idea why they do anything. Yesterday a dragonfly buzzed near them while they were sitting together on the lawn. They jumped up in a panic and ran straight into each other. Crossing an entire road would be well beyond them.  

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?

When Mrs Whitla read out my first major work, “Peppy and Pip go to Boarding School” to an enraptured 3W when I was 8. Ok, possibly they weren’t enraptured, but I was. I’d written a whole NOVEL (10 pages at the back of my maths exercise book) and someone liked it!

(So you failed maths I take it?)

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

All of it. Starting, finishing, the bits in between, editing, re-writing, plotting, re-reading, doing promotion, reading reviews… it’s all unrelentingly difficult, interspersed with moments of abject gloom and self-loathing. But if it wasn’t such a challenge I don’t think I’d be drawn to it.

(Funny, my fave saying when someone asks me about the writing/publishing business is… Ignorance was bliss!)

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

Don’t die wondering. Or with a messy house.

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

What is your personal best for the 50m freestyle? (27.86. I’m still proud of that, but it never comes up.)

Fun stuff…

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

Hmm… I had four protagonists in my first novel, ten in my second (except one was dead), and six in my third. I suspect my protagonists wish I would just make up my mind.

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

I’d bring out Agnes and Rooney, then pop a balloon behind them. Mayhem!

(ROFL, you crack me up – which makes me think about the eggs Angnes and Rooney would jettison after your balloon prank!)

What food would you be?

Belgian chocolate. Smooth. Seductive. Not too rich (hey, I’m an author).

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

You’d have to ask Coles.

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

Just one: Excellent reason for my kids to nag me into taking them to Smiggle.

(We just got ourselves a Smiggle here. Woo hoo!)

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

2 – Not at all weird. It’s the ones you least suspect who can get away with stuff.

You can find more about Kylie and her books on www.kylieladd.com.au  and do what I do… Follow her on Twitter: @kylie_ladd

Links to Booktopia:

http://www.booktopia.com.au/last-summer-kylie-ladd/prod9781742375014.html

 http://www.booktopia.com.au/after-the-fall-kylie-ladd/prod9781742372303.html