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Author harvest ‘bales’ up Jaye Ford

Jaye, Jaye, Jaye, you greedy girl. TWO Davitt awards for Beyond Fear? (And you ate all the red velvet cup cakes BEFORE I arrived.)

Please explain:

Jenn, I thought I was getting scones and a cuppa delivered to me while I wrote this. Since it’s you who’s getting the treat, I’ve made myself my standard ‘work’ cuppa – a black coffee made in a single-cup plunger and drunk from my ‘Raymond Chandler: The Big Sleep’ mug, in the hope some of his coolness rubs off on my writing! For you, though, I baked some delicious red velvet cupcakes (thanks for the hint) and brewed a cup of Earl Grey tea. Enjoy!

Well thanks for the tea and…ahem…dry crackers, Jaye. So tell me…

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. Although I’ve got a couple of large urns and a few quirky pots and lamps in amongst the greenery.

(And did I mention TWO Davitt Awards!)

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

I’ve always wanted to grow tomatoes successfully. I try almost every year and there’s always some disaster – grubs or possums and now my dogs, one of which thinks the unripened fruit are green balls, picks them off and tosses them around the yard.

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

The best thing in my fridge today is the lasagne cooked by my two kids last night. They are 23 and 21 and sometimes I think I’ve failed to pass on my cooking skills then I realise what I failed to do was get them to cook when their mother is home.

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

Green – and no, it’s not that I’ve sorted by colour, it’s that there’s so much there. It’s an addiction.

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

Fifteen layers and a green lap rug – my office is always cold.

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

Someone who lives in Tuscany and can pay my airfare. Do you know anyone like that, Jenn?

(Yes, and red velvet cup cakes might have loosened my lips!)

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’ve got a small head and hats that don’t make me look like a pinhead are hard to find. I’ve got small feet, too, but I love boots – not only because they make my feet look bigger.

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

I’ve been both, actually. In a college play, I had the role of a tree that turned into a deer. I hear you snigger at the kind of acting ability that lands one such a role but I was the only tree deemed worthy of turning into an animal. That has to count for something!

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

To escape the knife-wielding psychopath closing in on her – I write thrillers, can’t help it!

(Wow, you and Juliet Madison – last week’s blog – are seriously scary dudes!)

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 first offer I had for a manuscript came after almost ten years of trying to get published. It started a bidding war for my thriller Beyond Fear and suddenly, instead of just hoping someone would read it, I was making decisions based on what I wanted for a career. A startling and immensely satisfying moment.

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

I find the early chapters quite difficult. I don’t do much plotting but I usually have a good idea of how a story will open. I have a little fun with the opening scenes and the voices then chapter two turns up and it suddenly feels as though the rest of the story is a huge, unwieldy object that I’ve got to try to wrangle into shape. At that point, I’m still working out who everyone is, what drives them and how the story will unfold. There’s always a moment when the book takes on a life of its own but until that arrives, there’s a fair bit of stuffing around and thumb twiddling that makes it all pretty frustrating.

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

Don’t tell her she can’t do it. My mum used to tell us we were generalists, meaning we weren’t the kind of people who were ‘good’ at any one thing but average at a lot of things. It used to bother me – I didn’t like the idea of ordinary, I wanted to be ‘good’ at something. It made me work hard at stuff. I should probably thank my mum for that.

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

Can you speak faster? To which I would answer, how fast can I go? I’m a fast talker anyway and when I’m nervous or fired up, I sound like I’m on fast forward.

Fun stuff

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

She probably thinks I’m a pain in the butt. Always asking why she’s doing that and what she’s thinking and getting all pernickety about how exactly she’s going to do it, instead of just letting her at it.

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

Have massive performance anxiety!

What food would you be?

Something sensible and relatively healthy with a twist. Maybe an apple with a couple of jelly babies on the side.

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

Paper weight, book holder, page holder, door stopper … does it have to be five?

(No Jaye, of course not, Jaye. It can be any number you want, Jaye. Just put the knife down, okay. It’s just a chicken and it’s just fiction!)

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

I’d give myself a 7 – not so weird that people wouldn’t let me in places, weird enough that they’d wonder ‘what the hell’ if they asked a few searching questions.

And a 10 for seriously scary and seriously clever. (Scared Yet? Umm, yes!)

More about Jaye and her gnome…I mean her Davitt collection…and her books can be found at www.jayefordauthor.com The third thrilling book, Blood Secret (Random House), is due for release September next year (2013).

 

Author Harvest is just getting started. If you’ve enjoyed this post, there are plenty more in store with a spring, summer, autumn and winter harvest.

Why not subscribe to my blog and have the posts delivered to you inbox.

Just a thought 😉

 

 

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SCARED YET?… on THE ROAD HOME… after a HOLIDAY AFFAIR! – A 3-in-1 book review.

“Read widely,” they say. “If you want to write, first you must read.”

Trouble is, I’d rather be writing than reading. So I am taking the 2012 National Year of Reading (and The Australian Women Writers Challenge) to change that, to catch up and to read outside the genre I write in. But the books have to be good to keep me reading so…

Lucky for me I hit the trifecta with these three:

Scared Yet? by Jaye Ford – Her first book voted highest selling debut crime novel in Australia in 2011.

The Road Home by bestselling ru-ro author Fiona Palmer.

Holiday Affair – Annie Seaton’s debut novella that rocketed up the Amazon bestseller list.

Three very different but very enjoyable novels. Here’s why.

Scared Yet?

Couldn’t put it down. No, not an overused cliché but a fact. This book is every bit as fabulous as Jaye’s debut novel – Beyond Fear. A clever book from a clever author who knows how keep readers guessing until the very end.

Scared Yet? throws one ordinary woman into one extraordinary week of fear and uncertainly as she deals with the fallout of a faceless stalker who has her questioning everything and everyone she trusts. And all the while the notes keep arriving. ARE YOU SCARED YET, LIVIA? Brrrrrrrr!  I get goose bumps just thinking about this book. In fact, it should come with a warning: do not read at night!

It’s the kind of book that makes me glad I left the big smoke behind a few years back and took the road home to the country.

Hmmm, kinda cute segue to…..

The Road Home, by Western Australian author, Fiona Palmer.

Anyone who has ever dreamed of a life in the country will relate to this story. I did and, okay, yes, my little slice of country is only one very busy acre (rather than Fiona’s characters who have vast properties) but you get my drift! And size isn’t what matters.

Decisions aren’t always about bigger and better; sometimes it’s as simple as ‘have to’. Like Lara Turner whose life is at the crossroads. It’s not a matter of will she or won’t she quit the city for life on the family farm, but a case of the land drawing her to it.

Fiona’s books follow similar themes with characters passionate about farming life. Having met the author, she epitomises the young (you owe me for that Fee!) country girl whose love of the land cannot be ignored; much like Fiona’s books cannot be ignored if you love a good romance.

Publishers claim lots of things in their book promos, but in this case they are spot on: The Road Home is a heartwarming novel about finding your true place in the world, and the healing power of the land.

And when the country gets too quiet, there’s always the idea of a….

Holiday Affair, a novella by Annie Seaton.

A holiday affair is exactly what Annie Seaton’s character gets up to in this well crafted and entertaining debut novella.

The rather staid academic, Melissa Macintyre, invents an alter ego (Lissy) while on a holiday in the Whitsunday Islands where she meets up with hunky sailor, Nick. Yes, it’s the kind of story in which the characters have more ups and downs than the Aussie dollar and you know there will be happy ending – that’s why the romance genre outsells any other books when the real world gets a bit too dire. It’s escapism – stories that take you away and let you forget your troubles.

Annie Seaton’s story telling is so vivid I found myself wishing it was an audio book so I could close my eyes. The pictures Annie paints – her charming settings and feisty characters – kept me engaged until the last page and made my very first Amazon/Kindle experience a great one. I recommend this read to anyone who needs a holiday from life’s everyday. Thank you Annie. Please keep writing. I am ready for my next affair!!!!!!

I’m also ready for my next book(s):

Dead Heat by Bronwyn Parry

Bella’s Run by Margareta Osborn

Morgan’s Law by Karly Lane

Today’s authors

http://www.jayefordauthor.com/

http://www.fionapalmer.com

http://www.annieseatonromance.com/books.html