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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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Bar Yarns w/ Gracie Macgregor & ‘Hearts on Hold’ Giveaway

Gracie Ed (2) I met Gracie at her Calypso Bar. Now here she is at Calingarry Crossing pub having a bar yarn and a …. warmed olive? Oh well … Find out about the Calypso Bar below, along with details of how to WIN a copy of Gracie’s novel Hearts on Hold.

Come on in, Gracie. Grab a pew. What can I get you to go with your beer nuts? (Shandy? Wine Spritzer? Pink Lemonade?)

I have recently discovered this amazing Swedish strawberry and lime cider: it’s the very essence of harvest time! Tall glass, lots of ice, please!

Okay, well, here’s a beer coaster. How about a beer coaster blurb for Hearts on Hold?

The strongest sunshine casts the darkest shadows…HOH

Cate Boyd is searching for a place where nobody knows her name. The sleepy Maltese village of Xlendi offers privacy, anonymity, and the serene life she craves, far from her former world. But her peace is shattered when monolithic development company Vena announces its plans to level her village, and threatens to expose Cate’s secrets if she stands in its way. The arrival of seductive, nosy professor Brandon Blackshaw seems too coincidental for comfort — especially when she discovers that Vena is his research partner. As the pressure mounts, Cate must decide which is more important: her hard-won privacy, or the future of her beloved Xlendi.

Hey, did you hear the one about … Tell us a joke (preferably one that comes with a punch line you actually remember!)

A footballer walks into a bar. You’d have thought he’d have seen it.

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

Sadly, I can’t “do” nuts, or I end up doing a run to the nearest hospital. It gets pretty ugly. Instead, I’ll be perfectly content with a lovely bowl of mixed olives – warmed, if you wouldn’t mind. I don’t want much, do I?!

Ahh, that beer hit the spot. Let me slip a drink coaster under your glass while you tell us: are you a messy desker or tidy desker? (NB: 1 = “I am a neat nut case” and 10 = “What desk? Where? Is there a desk here somewhere?”) Are you game to post a working space picture right now?

Gracie's DeskSure. Happy to post a picture of my desk. It’s not where I work, though, because it’s got a bit of other stuff on it at the moment. I wouldn’t necessarily call it messy. “Messy” seems like such a pejorative term. I think my desk is… industrious. Really? You’re really going to make me rate it? Ok. I’m a 1. Just not where my desk is concerned.

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

Which do you choose?

Can I have the drinks before I have to sing for my supper? John Denver all the way, baby. Why should my poor little Mazda be the only one to suffer?

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. (FYI- Links to You Tube clip)

  1. Merry Clayton’s “Yes” from the Dirty Dancing soundtrack:
  2. The Finns’ “Anything Can Happen”
  3. Wendy Matthews’ “If Only I Could”

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

It doesn’t matter. The author’s going to have the best story about what happened next.

There’s a stapler on the bar. Tell me what it’s doing there.

Keeping a tight grip on its (bank)notes?

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. Choc-coated coffee beans. They’re sometimes the only things that keep me sitting at the space-which-is-not-my-desk pounding on my keyboard. Until I have to      get up to refill the bowl. Then all procrastination bets are off.
  2. My iPad. I do not like Macs as a rule (heresy, I know), but I do love my iPad.
  3. My gorgeous teenaged son. I’ve left him until last in the list just so he doesn’t get too embarrassed. Or too full of himself. He’s already far too confident in his ability to get me to do pretty much whatever he wants!

Shhh! The last race of the day is on the TAB screen and I reckon I’ve picked a winner. I browse the race guide with the jockey colours influencing my bet. When browsing a bookshop, what influences you? (Order this list: Author. Cover design. Title. Tagline/blurb. First chapter. Last page!)

  1. Author
  2. Author
  3. Author
  4. Tagline/blurb
  5. Tagline/blurb
  6. Author. I have no memory for titles, I rarely notice covers and I NEVER read first or last pages before I can sit down and read the book from go-to-whoa.

There are a few good prizes up for grabs in the bar jackpot. Do you have a lucky number?

Your lucky number is: 7. No, 8! No! 3! Sorry, I’m not being greedy. I used to be indecisive but now I’m not so sure.

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.

Jenn, thanks for asking, and thanks for inviting me along to the harvest, I’ve had terrific fun!

Readers can find me in these places:

Website & The Calypso Bar!:  www.graciemacgregor.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GracieMacgregorAuthor

Twitter: @graciewrites

Escape Publishing: http://www.escapepublishing.com.au/product/9780857990594

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/GracieMacgregor

BOOK GIVEAWAY TIME!

Jenn, I’d love to give away a copy of “Hearts on Hold” (epub format or PDF) to your choice of the best answer to this question:  One of the least-recognised benefits of choc-coated coffee beans is …

Okay folks, over to you. You have about two weeks. Gracie and i will still be in the bar so we may need a nudge!