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#WriteRoundOz w/ Maggie Joel (book giveaway)

maggie_joel

Half the World in Winter - Maggie Joel

Today I am visiting NSW, and the marvellous Maggie Joel, who recently completed the Allen & Unwin Wordy Women author tour with previous Author Harvestee, Kylie Ladd and also Fiona Higgins (who I hope to ‘visit’ in the near future – hint, hint, Fiona).

Maggie has been writing fiction and non-fiction since the mid-1990s and her short stories have been widely published in Southerly, Westerly, Island, Overland and Canberra Arts Review, and broadcast on ABC radio. Her first novel, The Past and Other Lies, was published to critical acclaim in Australia and New Zealand by Murdoch Books in April 2009 and in the US by Felony & Mayhem Press in 2013 and was chosen as the Sydney Morning Herald’s ‘Pick of the Week’. Her second novel, The Second-Last Woman in England, was published by Murdoch Books in Australia and New Zealand in 2010, in the US in 2011 and in the UK by Constable & Robinson in 2013. This book was also selected as the Sydney Morning Herald’s ‘Pick of the Week’ and was awarded the 2011 Fellowship of Australian Writers’ Christina Stead Award for Fiction. Maggie’s third novel, Half the World in Winter, was published in Australia by Allen & Unwin in October 2014.

Maggie, thank you for letting my park my rig on your …underground car park??

Jenn, I see you’ve managed to squeeze your van into our apartment block’s underground car park which is just as well because frankly you’ll be lucky to find an unmetered parking place on this street! Welcome to Sydney’s Inner West.

What’s that I see written on your ‘welcome mat’?

There IS a welcome mat but there’s nothing written on it – it’s there so I know I have got out of the lift on the right floor and am standing outside my own flat and not someone else’s.

I miss my HUGE refrigerator. If I looked in your refrigerator right now, what would I find?

White wine, Corona beer and Indian Tonic Water. A bottle of vodka in the freezer. Even my closest friends would not exactly describe me as a cook…

Downsizing my life into a 24 ft caravan meant leaving lots of things behind in boxes. What (or who!!) would you have trouble leaving behind if you took off in a caravan?

Space. I’ve only recently moved from a small inner city apartment to a large inner city apartment and every day is joy of spatial discovery for me.

 Whose home would you like to visit in your van and why?

Could we go and visit Hillary Clinton? I think she and I could have a good old chat over a cup of tea and some biscuits 

Do you REALLY have room at your house to park a fifth wheeler caravan and do you mind visitors? Oh, sorry, you don’t have to answer that one!! 🙂

Oh yes visitors provide a useful distraction from writing. So long as I know you’re coming – I really don’t do spontaneity – you are most welcome. And your van.

 

Country curiosities…

My latest novel, Season of Shadow and Light, has a strong horse theme. (I love what horses can teach us). If you were an animal what would you be?

A kitten or a panda. Everyone would instantly adore me and I wouldn’t actually need to do anything.

 You’re cooking and your food is going up against the best cooks from the CWA (Country Women’s Association). What would be your winning dish?

I mix a mean Gin and Tonic and my skills with a take-away menu are legendary.

 

About you…

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Plot. Gets me every time. I love dialogue, characterisation, setting and research, that all comes fairly easily, but nailing that plot down can drive me to distraction on occasion.

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

My Past and Other Lies’ – which is a corruption of the title of my first novel, ‘The Past and Other Lies’.

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

‘How did you feel when you heard you had won the Booker Prize?’

And my answer: ‘I am so humbled. Winning it the first time was incredible, but to have taken out the prize three years in a row is something I never dreamed of.’

Favourite four…

Favourite place in Australia: Sydney. I arrived here one winter’s morning many years ago and never left.

Favourite holiday destination (anywhere): New York City. Took my far too long to get there but it was everything I hoped it would be and more.

Favourite movie: The Hours, from Michael Cunningham’s astonishing book of the same name. I re-watched it on TV recently and was blown away by it all over again.

Favourite quote: Pretty much anything Winston Churchill said – that man was the last word in pithy one-liners, every one of them priceless.

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

Well, knowing you’re a fellow writer I’d talk about how I got started as a writer and how I go about writing my novels. I mean what writer doesn’t like talking about their process, or hearing about someone else’s process?

 

Giveaway

Maggie has a signed copy of her first novel, The Past and Other Lies, to give away. Entries close 20 February. Enter by telling us YOUR favourite Aussie town. (I’ll add an entry to anyone who Tweets/Facebooks.)

Find more about Maggie Joel on her author website.

Now…

About Half The World In Winter, published in September 2014 by Allen & Unwin

In 1881 in London, everything changes for the wealthy Jarmyn family. The misfortunes on the railway the family had built echoes the shocking death of nine-year-old Sofia Jarmyn. And at the heart of this family, a terrible secret is tearing their lives apart.

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A captivating drama of family secrets and tragedies.

It is London, 1880, and Lucas Jarmyn struggles to make sense of the death of his beloved youngest daughter; his wife, Aurora, seeks solace in rigid social routines; and eighteen-year-old Dinah looks for fulfilment in unusual places. Only the housekeeper, the estimable Mrs Logan, seems able to carry on.

A train accident in a provincial town on the railway Lucas owns claims the life of nine-year-old Alice Brinklow and, amid the public outcry, Alice’s father, Thomas, journeys to London demanding justice. As he arrives in the Capital on a frozen January morning his fate, and that of the entire Jarmyn family, will hinge on such strange things as an ill-fated visit to a spiritualist, an errant chicken bone and a single vote cast at a board room meeting.

Written with charm, humour and rich period detail, Maggie Joel has created an intriguing novel of a Victorian family adrift in their rapidly changing world.

 

12 thoughts on “#WriteRoundOz w/ Maggie Joel (book giveaway)

  1. My favourite town would have to be Coobowie where I grew up. There are maybe 200 people in it which as a kid/teenager means you can’t do much without a parent finding out. lol
    Beach one side and farm land behind the town. Everything thing (1 hotel, 1 shop, 1 caravan park) within walking distance).

    1. Ann-Marie, that sounds like my little setting in book 5 (yep! it’s set in a small town caravan park!!)

  2. My favourite town is Dowerin in the north-eastern wheatbelt of Western Australia.. It epitomises everything that a small country town is like and the community is the glue that keeps the town alive. I really miss living there.

    1. I’ll look that one up, Delores. Thx for dropping by

    2. Congratulations Delores, Your name was drawn as the winner of Maggies’ book. Pls let me know your postal address by emailing me jenn (at) jennjmcleod (dot) com

  3. […] and check out my previous guest post – Maggie Joel, who is also giving a book […]

  4. Hmm… I’m coming home to a different country. The JJ blog has changed… I needs to take my shoes off and get a little comfortable and have a nosey around…

    1. Dear Lily, lovely to see you here. So happy you like the reno. Let’s get together and #WriteRoundOz when your book comes out.

  5. My favourite Aussie town right now would be one without cyclonic winds and rain! Half the world seems to be inundated with snow and rain!

  6. I think I’d say Yamba. It has a bit of everything.

  7. Thanks for dropping by and meeting Maggie Joel, everyone.

  8. Sorry. I forgot to say thank you so much. Can’t believe I was lucky enough to win. Look forward to reading the book.

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