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GIVEAWAY: 3 Copies of The Cougar Club by Susan McBride

Meet three women who aren’t about to run and hide just because the world says they should be on the shelf and out of circulation.
Kat
Her life seems perfect until she loses her high-powered advertising job and catches her live-in lover in a compromising position-with his computer!
Carla
This sexy TV news anchor is in danger of being replaced by a twentysomething blond bimbo. Wasn’t it just yesterday that she was the up-and-coming star?
Elise
A married dermatologist, Elise thinks her plastic surgeon husband is playing doctor with someone else.
Kat firmly believes that aging gracefully isn’t about giving up; it’s about living life with your engine on overdrive. So this unofficial “Cougar Club” quickly learns three things about survival of the fittest in today’s youth-obsessed society: True friendship never dies, the only way to live is real, and you’re never too old to follow your heart.

I have 3 copies to giveaway of The Cougar Club by Susan McBride! Susan has graciously sent me the copies to give to away to readers. It’s easy to win- post a comment here, on Twitter, or on Facebook. Winners will be posted on June 9th. Good luck!

Interview with Kate Lace

Q: Why do you want to write books?
Because it beats working for a living? No, seriously, when I wrote my first novel I was living in Ireland because of my husband’s job (he was an army officer), I had three small children and going out to work was simply not really an option. Until the move to Ireland I’d been running a small publishing business from home but my partner’s husband had been posted to Alabama (she was also married to an army officer) so it was impossible to carry on and I was bored to sobs. Writing a novel seemed a good option, although at the time wrote my first book I wasn’t sure I’d be any good at it. Now I do it because I really love living in a fictional world where my characters can got to wonderful locations and in my head, I’m there too. On a wet winter’s morning, imagining you’re basking in summer sun on a deserted beach on a Greek island is a pretty good escape from real life.

Q: When did you know you wanted to be an author?
Becoming an author came as a real shock as it was never something I’d ever thought about until it happened. I wasn’t the sort of kid who penned stories for her sibling or friends nor did I write anything other than what I had to for homework. Furthermore I went to the sort of blue-stocking school where we wrote essays, endless essays on mind-numbingly dull subjects – flights of fancy were definitely discouraged. Writing creatively happened entirely by accident. I left school to join the army (a ratio of 500:1 men to women and the chance of foreign travel being the big draw) and served for 8 years before getting thrown out when I began a family – which was what happened 25 years ago. A couple of years later we moved into a quarter next to a woman who edited a magazine for army wives. She asked me to help with the admin because that’s what I was really good at. One day she was short of some copy and asked me to write ‘300 words about anything and make it funny’. I’d spend 8 years obeying orders so I did as I was told and wrote a piece about my fellow army wives. Apparently it was funny, it was well received, I was asked to write more columns and then it was suggested I might like to think about producing a book. I baulked at the idea of a whole book but my neighbour said she’d write it with me. Half a book didn’t seem quite such a huge task, so Gumboots and Pearl, which is a wry look at how to be a perfect officer’s wife, was my first book. And once you’ve written one, even if it’s only half of one… well, the idea of writing another isn’t so scary.

Q: How were you able to break into the writing industry?

Gumboots and Pearls was self-published – which I suppose is a bit of a cheat. However we only took that step because we hawked the book round quite a few publishers who all really liked it but said there was no market for it. No market?! There were thousands of army wives around and lots of ways to bring the book to their attention – especially in places like Cyprus and German where they are a totally captive audience with special newspapers and radio stations just for the Forces. I mean, just how easy would it be to advertise it? But the publishers couldn’t see it so we decided to go it alone. We sold a staggering 16,000 copies and then went on to publish more books. This meant that when I came to try to sell my first novel I did have a bit of a track record to put on my CV and a readership who might be persuaded to buy something else of mine. But of course I also had the most enormous dollop of luck as my book just happened to land on the desk of an editor who was looking for new authors for a new mass market paperback venture. I have to say that ‘luck’ plays a ridiculously large part in a lot of authors’ writing careers and mine was no exception.

Q: Where do your ideas for storylines and characters come from?

If I knew I’d bottle it. The glib answer is that a deadline helps focus the mind when it comes to finding ideas but the truth is I generally think of a setting first – skiing, yachting, the movies, whatever – and then think of a character to put into that world and find a reason why she does what she does. In The Chalet Girl Millie (the heroine) needed a job where she gets fed and housed because her father has thrown her out of the family home so working as a chalet host ticks all her boxes. In Moonlighting Jess is a pole dancer, but she’s been professionally trained and dreams of dancing in Cats or the Lion King. However, when the story opens she knows that is never going to happen and she’s so utterly skint that the chance of making some real money, even if it means taking her kit off, isn’t something she can afford to turn down.

Q: What do you love about Little Black Dress books?

Apart from the fact that they pay me I love them because I think most of the heroines are in very believable situations. Mills & Boon are just fantastic for pure escapist fantasy where billionaires take up with their PAs or secretaries, where the world of the uber-glamorous is brought to life on the page, but LBD are a bit more down to earth. And they tend to have a lot of humour in them, which I also like. My favourite sort of read is one where you end up laughing AND crying and LBD can and do deliver exactly that mix.

Q: You also write romantic fiction under the name Catherine Jones. Why do you use separate names?

I wrote 6 books as Catherine Jones, all about the army and, to be totally frank, my sales were pretty poor. I thought the public would love an insight into the world of macho-men in uniform but apparently soldiers weren’t the turn-on for other women that they were for me. So I needed a change of writing style and a new publisher and when publishers are looking at taking on an author, their past sales figures (if they’ve been previously published) can influence whether or not they take you. So I decided to go via the slush pile again and when you’ve been born with a name like Catherine Lace it’s daft not to make use of it So I dumped Catherine Jones and said hello to Kate Lace. I have to say it came as a bit of a shock to the editor of LBD to discover that Catherine Jones and Kate Lace were one and the same, as we’d met quite a few times at various Romantic Novelists’ Association events. But she didn’t know that until after they’d accepted The Chalet Girl. So that’s twice I’ve made it off the slush pile, which just shows it can be done!

Q: Your latest LBD book was just released, Moonlighting. Where did the inspiration for the book come from?

My middle daughter has a friend who works as one, but she’s also a hairdresser because she knows that pole dancing is a bit like being an athlete – it’s not a job for life, only while you’re young and fit. I just really liked her down-to-earth attitude and so I built a story around a character who is in the job purely for the money. I then decided to spice it up by giving her a real conflict of interest – in that she’s a Special Constable in her free time. Once I’d got those elements in place the rest of the story sort of fell into place.

Q: How do you like to spend your free time?

When I’m not writing I love to cook, which is also quite creative, and I adore doing quizzes. In fact I love doing them so much I managed to persuade some of my fellow Romantic Novelists to form a team with me for University Challenge -the Professionals. We got to the finals which was fantastic fun! And if you’re not a politician or a student I can definitely say Jeremy Paxman is very charming.

Q: What would be your advice for aspiring writers?

To keep going, to keep writing, to get impartial advice (not from your mum or bessie-mate but from a writer’s group or critique partner), to read everything you can lay your hands on of the genre you want to write and to take any advice you might get offered by a professional and really think about it. Agents and editors don’t offer advice or suggest changes unless they really think your m/s has lots of potential. (If they don’t think that you’ll get the ‘our list is full’ standard rejection letter.) But I know loads of aspiring writers who have ignored such advice not realising how rare it is for it to be given and have shoved the rejected m/s in a drawer and started a new one. What they should have done is take the advice, re-write and try again. The chances are they might well have had a really good shot at being published but they let it slip away.

Q: Where would be your dream vacation?

Blimey – that’s a toughie… I love going off the beaten track and I love critters and so I think the idea of a walking safari in Africa is fairly high up my list but it wouldn’t be very restful, in fact it would be pretty energetic and I do like to re-charge my batteries on holiday. So for restful, I think I’d like to go to a palm-fringed island with a case of books and a snorkel. But I wouldn’t turn either down if offered.

Aspiring Writers Looking for an Agent MUST Read This

Author Allison Winn Scott is offering such a fabulous offer, it’s just too good to be true for aspiring writers. For me personally, I have just finished putting the final touches on the novel I wrote, and am working on my query letter for agents. Thanks to Allison, I now have a sure way that a great agent will actually read my query letter AND the first chapter of my manuscript. How can that be? Allison’s agent, Elisabeth Weed, has offered to read each and every query letter and first chapter for writers that purchase a copy of The One That I Want between now and June 5th. Just send a copy of your receipt to the email address stephanie@weedliterary.com., along with your query letter and first chapter, and have the chance of securing an agent. Even if you aren’t quite ready to turn your manuscript in, you can still purchase the book and let Elisabeth know you need a little more time, and that is no problem. I have yet to hear of an opportunity like this, and even though I already have a copy of The One That I Want, well I’m sure going to purchase another! I have provided the Amazon link below- and please note that all submissions need to be fiction or a memoir- do not submit genre fiction. Good luck to all!

Interview with Catherine McKenzie

Q: Why do you love writing?

To be a little poetical – I love the feel of words in symbiosis under my pen. Translation: it’s just kind of cool to be able to write about experiences or make characters in my head come alive. When someone tells me that they have a crush on Henry (the romantic lead in Spin) it makes me smile – that means I made him real enough to evoke feelings in other people – how awesome is that?

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> Q: What do you want readers to take away from your books?

Mostly I want them to laugh, enjoy, just get engrossed in the story. In Spin I was also trying to poke fun a little at our obsession with celebrities and their life styles. There’s also a lot of music in the book and it’s nice when readers tell me they discovered a new song or band because of it.

> Q: What was the hardest part about finding an agent?

Just the amount of time and the lack of general response. I sent out 8-10 query letters a day for months and didn’t hear anything from most of them (not even a no-thank you). You have to grow a thick skin pretty fast, because, hey, more rejection is coming!

> Q: Was there anything that really surprised you about the writing industry or being an author?

I think it’s that there are so many resources out there for the first part of the writing process – how to write a novel, how to find an agent etc. But there is almost nothing, nothing I’ve found anyway, about how to negotiate your way through the process once you’ve got a book deal. There’s a big learning curve. You go from being a writer to a marketer overnight – not the easiest transition.

> Q: Have you ever suffered from writers block? Any tips on how to work through it?

I don’t think I’ve ever been totally blocked. I think I’ve more had periods where I’m gestating or thinking about where to go next. I think the trick is to find time to write every day and write even if you are not feeling inspired. Also find thing to inspire you – good music or going for a run or whatever makes you feel creative.

> Q: How did you celebrate your first publishing deal?

After I finished my happy dance, I called everyone I knew and then went for a nice dinner with my husband.

> Q: How do you think social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook help support authors?

I still haven’t totally figured that out yet. I think Facebook is a great place for fans to go and leave messages for authors of support – the feedback I’ve gotten there has been so nice and encouraging. Twitter is harder to pin down. It can be a big time suck (as people say), but I know it also provides support for those that feel alone while they are writing. I’m also hoping Facebook and Twitter can be a place to bring some attention to some authors who deserve it (check out my I bet we can make these books bestsellers group on Facebook and Goodreads). I have also connected with some authors and readers on Twitter – and sold a few books that way too – hard to say how many.

> Q: How do you enjoy any down-time?

I run, I read, I watch TV, hang with my friends. I think it’s important to stay connected with the world so the characters in your books stay realistic.

> Q: What is your advice to aspiring writers?

Keep at it if it brings you joy. Be reader to have a lot of rejection. Don’t give up on traditional publication too early – I don’t think self-publishing is a satisfying experience for most people.

> Q: Where would be your dream vacation?

A cottage on the ocean.

Interview with Diane Chamberlain

Q: What gave you the inspiration and drive to start writing?
A. My Dad was a school principal who brought home books for us every week. I read so much that I began narrating my own life in my head. “Diane reluctantly got out of bed, dragged herself to the bathroom and brushed her teeth.” I had an unstoppable imagination and began writing my own little books when I was twelve and I haven’t stopped since.

Q: What part of writing would you say is the most difficult?
A. For me, the hardest part is fitting the pieces of the plot puzzle together. My stories are always so complex that I often write myself into a corner. That first draft, as I figure out how to make what happens engrossing and believable yet at the same time surprising, is my biggest challenge.

Q: You used to run a private psychotherapy clinic. What did you most enjoy about going to work every day there?
A. I worked primarily with teenagers and they were a joy. As a teen myself, I spent a few years in therapy and I felt a kinship with my clients. I loved knowing that I was able to help them the way I’d been helped.

Q: How do your degrees in social work tie in with your novels?
A. Being a social worker gave me insight into what makes people tick. More than anything, though, as a social worker I was a witness to how strong and resilient people can be in the face of crisis and trauma. I borrow those characteristics to use in my novels. I like my characters to ultimately triumph over their problems, but that’s only possible if they have something tough to overcome.

Q: Your first book, Private Relations, won a RITA award for Best Single Title Contemporary Novel. How did you celebrate that achievement?
A. That was such a high for me! Private Relations was not a typical book to win the RITA and I was shocked and thrilled. While sitting at the table waiting for the winners to be announced, I’d taken off my shoes and I was so surprised when my name was called that I forgot to put them back on. I went up on stage and received the RITA from Jude Devereau in bare feet. (There’s a picture on the Gallery page of my website). The RWA conference was held in San Francisco, so my then-husband and I celebrated with a trip down the coast to Big Sur, one of my favorite places.

Q: What do you hope readers take away from your books?
A. More than anything, I hope they will be entertained. I love hearing that someone stayed up all night to finish one of my books. If they feel inspired and touched by my characters, that’s a bonus.

Q: You have been diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis, which can make typing extremely difficult. I’ve read you sometimes rely on voice recognition to get your writing onto paper. How amazing is it to be able to use this technology?
A. I’m very fortunate that I rarely have to use voice recognition now. The medications for RA have improved to the extent that I can usually type all day long without a problem. I’m glad, though, to know that technology still exists and of course I have it installed on my computer. I did write two books using voice recognition entirely. It’s both wonderful and annoying, because it makes a lot of mistakes as it tries to make sense of what you say. One of my favorite voice recognition mistakes is this: I said “The feeling was quick and unbidden, but welcome nonetheless,” and the voice recognition program typed “Panasonic’s business decisions upset its chicken’s contraceptives.” You can see the problem!

Q: I just received your latest book, The Lies We Told. Just from the synopsis I am already hooked. Where did the plot idea revolving around the two sisters lives come from?
A. I usually start with a situation in mind, and that was the case with The Lies We Told. The situation was that a woman is presumed dead and while her husband and sister grieve for her, they develop a very close relationship, ultimately falling in love, not knowing that their sister and wife is still alive. With that basic idea in mind, I then came up with the storyline that would create those circumstances. In this case, I made all three characters doctors working with a relief agency after a hurricane.

Q: How do you enjoy your ‘me-time?’
A. We have an oceanfront condominium on the North Carolina coast. Although we rent it out during the summer, we enjoy it off and on the rest of the year. I feel rejuvenated when I go there. I love spending time on the beach with my dogs. Just being near the water lifts me up.

Q: What would be your best advice for aspiring writers?
A. Don’t give up, but make sure your writing is the very best it can be before you try to get an agent or a publisher. I think too many writers these days rush their work to publication before it’s ready and then wonder why it’s rejected. I write five drafts of my book before my editor sees it, and another draft after she and I discuss revisions. Get feedback from trusted, honest readers to help you hone your story and polish your work.

Q: What would be your dream vacation?
A. A month in a villa in Tuscany with a group of friends, all of whom love to cook! I’d have my work-in-progress with me, of course. I’m happiest when I have a project, even on vacation.

Interview with Jackie Pilossoph

Q: When did you first know you wanted to be a writer?
About nine years ago, I had a great idea for a romantic comedy. I used to go jogging on the lake front in Chicago and write the story in my head. Shortly after, I began writing my ideas down on my computer. One story lead to another, and another, and another, and nine years later, I’ve finished seven screenplays and four novels.
Q: In addition to novels, you have also written screenplays. How different and or/alike are writing novels and screenplays?
VERY different. Novels are a lot more fun for me to write, because I get to live inside the minds of my characters, and I get to tell readers what my characters are thinking and feeling. I enjoy creating funny and lovable people, or if someone’s a villain, it’s fun to make him or her really unlikeable. When it comes to movies, the actors and director both have so much more control over character personalities.
Writing novels and screenplays are similar in regards to dialogue. In both, I truly enjoy delivering great dialogue to make my characters’ conversations witty and funny and hip and dramatic. Then again, in movies, an actor can be flexible with his or her lines.

Q: Your fist novel, Hook, Line, and Sink Him! Is based on some of your dating experiences. What is the worst first date you have been on?
I actually have a name for my worst first date, worst date ever, in fact. Let’s call him, “Root Canal Rick.”
Several years ago, I met this guy at a diner while visiting friends in Boston. He lived in Minnesota, I lived in Chicago. After no more than a twelve minute conversation, we decided to exchange numbers. Neither of us knew if we’d ever see each other again, but we’d really hit it off, so we figured it was the right thing to do.
As fate would have it, about a year later, I got a TV reporting job in none other than Minnesota. So, one of the first things I did when I moved there was call the guy, who was pretty much a stranger to me, but who I’d thought about so many times during the past year. Maybe this was fate! It was really exciting!
We ended up going out to a bar/restaurant where we had dinner and where he consumed at least seven beers. ‘Maybe he’s just really nervous’ I rationalized to myself, as I watched him chug and chug and chug.
After dinner, we decided to play a couple games of pool in the next room. A very nice guy (who was also kind of cute) said “Nice shot,” to me, after I sank the 7 ball into the side pocket.
Staggering up to the guy, my date said, “Hey, what do you think you’re doing, jerk?”
“What?” asked the other guy.
“Is something wrong?” I asked my heavily buzzed date, who had just ordered another beer.
“Yes!” he practically shouted, “I just bought you dinner and you’re hitting on another guy!”
I was dumbfounded. “I’m not hitting on anyone,” I defended.
He then called me a few names that I’d rather not mention in this interview. All I can say is THANK GOD I drove separately that night. I put my pool stick down on a nearby rack, and then told my date I was leaving and that he should consider calling a cab versus driving home.
As I exited the place, I could hear him shouting obscenities. I was practically running out of there, which is why it shouldn’t have surprised me when I bumped into some guy on the way out, and his beer spilled and splashed all over me.
Driving home, drenched, cold, disappointed and hurt, I actually felt really happy, too. The guy I thought could be my soul mate had turned out to be a drunken, abusive idiot. It was sad, but I no longer had to wonder. Plus, I NEVER had to see the guy, EVER again!
If someone gave me a choice between experiencing this date and having a root canal, I’d choose the root canal, hands down!

Q: Are you currently working on a book # 2?
Yes, and it’s awesome! Just wait! I am so excited to share it!

Q: If you hadn’t started writing, what do you think would be your career?
I’ve had a bunch of different careers in my life. I’ve been a sales representative for a few different companies, I’ve been a financial advisor, I’ve been in sales management, I’ve been a TV news reporter, I’ve been a college professor, and now, I’m an author. I can’t imagine being anything else anymore. But one job I think would be really, really fun would be a barista at Starbucks. Stress free, talking to people all day, and free coffee! What could be better than that?!
Q: What is your biggest personal accomplishment?
Becoming a mother to my two beautiful, wonderful children and raising them.
Q: Who are some of your favorite authors?
Jonathan Tropper, Emily Giffen, Jennifer Weiner, Sophie Kinsella, Terry McMillan
Q: What is the perfect ‘girl’s night out’ for you?
I LOVE girl’s nights! It’s so much fun to get together with a bunch of chicks, all who dress up for each other. We wear our favorite designer jeans, cute little tops, big hoop earrings, heels, little hand bags and lots of lip gloss. I think it’s really sweet that girls dress to the hilt for other girls.
I enjoy drinking wine or sangria or martinis, and eating sushi or sharing a bunch of appetizers, while all the girls tell and listen to stories, and laugh and joke around. It’s entertaining and relaxing, but there are emotional moments, as well. One minute someone’s telling you her eye shadow’s Bobbi Brown, the next, someone starts crying about her impending divorce.
The nights almost always include funny encounters with strange men sitting at the bar, or someone running into a random acquaintance, such as the cousin of a friend of her ex-boyfriend from college. Funny memories are always created when girls get together!
At the end of the night, two things are guaranteed; girls hug like they’re never going to see each other again, and everyone vows to do it again real soon.
Q: What is your best advice for aspiring writers?
DON’T GIVE UP! It would be impossible for me to count the hundreds of rejections I received when submitting my work to agents and publishers. If you keep sending out your writing, people will give you advice and tips and they’ll help you become a better writer. And then, one day, someone will give you a contract! But remember, that’s only if you DON’T GIVE UP!
Q: What would be your dream vacation?
I’ve always wanted to go to the Amalfi Coast in Italy. It looks amazing! I would go there with my entire family, my kids, my parents, my brothers and sisters, and their families. We all love each other very much, but we drive each other crazy. That’s why I’d make sure we got separate villas!

Author Fiona Cassidy Bio

Fiona Cassidy is better known as Fionnuala McGoldrick (her first name is pronounced fin-ooh-la and is Irish for fair shouldered!) She is from Galbally, Co. Tyrone in Northern Ireland. She lives with her partner Philip and between them they have five children (and a very messy house!) Fiona has always been an avid reader but five years ago decided that she would like to become a writer as well and in April 2009 all her dreams came true when she was finally offered a three book publishing deal by Poolbeg Press in Dublin. Her first romantic comedy novel Anyone for Seconds? was launched in November 2009 and reached no. 6 in the Irish paperback fiction charts. She has just completed her second novel, Anyone for Me? which is due for publication in August 2010.

Interview with Danielle Ganek

Q: Where do you think your passion for writing comes from? I think it is something one is just born with, or maybe it’s afflicted with!…I’ve thought of myself as a writer since about the age of 9, but it took me a lot longer to actually complete a novel and then let anyone see it. I simply have to write, and I like to do it every day, although I don’t. I get a bit cranky when I go too long without writing.
Q: How did you get the idea for Lulu Meets God and Doubts Him? I’d always been interested in female characters who wrestle with their creative ambitions. The novel really came together when I placed Mia, this wry aspiring artist behind the desk in a gallery, commenting on what she witnessed.
Q: Your second novel, The Summer We Read Gatsby comes out in May. Where was the inspiration for these characters? Like Cassie, the narrator, I’m American but I grew up in Brazil and Switzerland, always a foreigner, both there and here. I had this idea that she would study novels like Gatsby almost as textbooks, to better understand the country she loved from afar. I was inspired by the legacy of artists and writers in the Hamptons and I imagined my characters would be too.
Q: How were you able to break into the writing industry? I was very lucky to meet my agent, whom I absolutely adore, through a mutual friend. I had been reluctant to show many people my work but once she had the manuscript for Lulu it all happened very quickly and Viking bought it in a pre-empt deal. But I’d been working on that novel for quite some time so it was pretty evolved once I showed it to anyone.
Q: Have you ever had an idea for a novel/character at an odd time or place? I’m always finding little bits of ideas or characters or situations, it’s putting them together to create a novel that doesn’t seem to deliver itself as a whole.
Q: You’ve lived in New York City for many years. I have visited there once and was completely overwhelmed by all there is to do. What are your top 3 picks for a tourist to do/see when visiting NYC? That’s a hard question, because, as you said, there is so much and the most fun thing to do in New York is just walk the streets and take it all in, the people, the smells, the buildings! But also I think a visit to Central Park is key, just to walk around. Definitely a museum or two, the Met, the Guggenheim (even just to see the building) and for galleries, 24th street in Chelsea. And there is so much great food, I would recommend checking Zagat’s for the top choices in the category you might be interested in.
Q: What would you say is your biggest personal success? I probably shouldn’t say this because I don’t want to jinx anything but my husband and my children. And I’m very happy to be able to keep writing and finding an audience.
Q: What are some of your bad habits? I have many. I’m a terrible procrastinator.
Q: What is your advice for aspiring writers? I know this gets said a lot but it really is the best advice: just write. People say they want to write but don’t have the time — you make time for what you need to do in life. Writing is re-writing. Novels don’t just happen, they have to be crafted over many many drafts, so you have to put in the time. And that’s often the hardest part, time management.
Q: I read that you have traveled to places such as Brazil and Switzerland. Is there more places you would like to travel too? Yes, I want to go everywhere! I’ve never been to Asia and am dying to go. I hope to get to India very soon as well.

Interview with Fiona Cassidy

Interview With Fiona Cassidy
Q: Why did you want to start writing?
I’ve always been a passionate reader so for me it was a natural progression to want to write my own novel. My parents were both primary school teachers and fostered a love of literature in me from an early age. I had ambitions to become a newspaper journalist and had actually been offered a place to complete a journalism degree at one of the most prestigious universities in Edinburgh, Scotland but unfortunately wasn’t in a position to accept it as I got pregnant with my son Colm when I was eighteen. The ambition never went away, however, and continued to bubble under the surface whilst I raised my family and held down a full-time job. I think the catalyst for me was when I read a book about adoption several years ago. It annoyed me as to my mind the author had no idea about what they were talking about regarding the feelings and emotions experienced when embarking on a search for birth roots as I had done myself so I decided to write my own fictional story about it (with no research required) and it’s now being published in August!
Q: You received a three book publishing deal in April 2009. How did you celebrate the fabulous news?
I celebrated with friends and family but to be honest was so completely shell shocked at the beginning that I could hardly absorb it fully! Getting a publishing deal for me was a dream come true and although we all have dreams and aspirations we never really expect them to come to fruition! I am in the very privileged position of having an extremely supportive partner, Philip, who always shared the dream with me and continues to do so in whatever I do! He took me away for a lovely (child free) weekend to Dublin several weeks after I secured my deal and it was pure bliss!
Q: Your first novel, Anyone for Seconds? is all about broken families. What can we expect from your second novel, Anyone For Me?
Anyone for Seconds? is a humorous look at modern family life and explores the trials and tribulations of single parenthood and step-families. As a step-mother to Philip’s children I am able to write confidently about the subject although I do have to stress that the horrendous teenage step-daughter in the storyline wasn’t based on any of our daughters!! Anyone for Me? is the story of Ruby Ross (who is one of the main characters in Anyone for Seconds?) and how she goes on an adventure when she embarks upon a mission to trace her birth mother. The book is of a comedic nature but deals with some serious topics. I like books that make me laugh out loud but provide solid storylines about every day issues which is what I try to achieve with my writing! As with Anyone for Seconds? (which reached no. 6 in the Irish Fiction book chart) readers can expect more laughs and appearances from characters they got to know in the first book along with lots of thrills and suspense!
Q: You’ve said you write want you know, and you’ve lived the life as a single parent. What do you think was the hardest part for you in being a single mom?
I think it’s hard to watch your children growing up and feeling somehow different from others who’ve come from the typical ‘nuclear’ family where both parents are together and involved in their children’s lives. In my own personal circumstances my husband and I separated when I was four months pregnant with my daughter Úna and I found the experience of going to ante-natal appointments and scans alone and having no doting father in the labour ward very difficult to deal with. It’s also very hard to admit that you’ve obviously made a mistake. I was very young when I got pregnant and married and had to return to my parent’s house after I gave birth which I found very hard after living away from home for several years. Thankfully, however, I wasn’t on my own for very long. My partner Philip and I have been together now for ten years and he has been the best father my children could ever have wished for! We’ve since had a daughter of our own, Áine, and it’s wonderful to be bringing her up together in a stable and happy environment and knowing that she won’t have to deal with issues that the older children have had to deal with.
Q: What do you think you would be doing if you weren’t writing?
As I love working with the public and am very outgoing and sociable I suspect I would be doing something within marketing or public relations. I already have a scant working background in this area but recently gave up my job as I want to concentrate more on my books! I couldn’t picture myself doing anything else other than writing, however, and would love to make a full-time career out of it. Whether that happens or not remains to be seen!
Q: What character would you say you are most like from Sex in the City?
I don’t think I can pigeon hole myself into being one particular character. I can see myself being a combination of Carrie with her creative writing side and witty observations on life whilst displaying similar traits to feisty Miranda with her constant juggling between work and life as a single mother. As for Philip he’d probably like me to be more like Samantha!
Q: Any guilty pleasures you can share with us?
I don’t have much time to indulge in many pleasures but I have to say I love getting away with Philip on our own. He has taken me several times to a spa hotel in Westport, Co. Mayo who provide reflexology and Indian head massage as part of their weekend package! Obviously this doesn’t happen very often as we have commitments to our children and also as finances simply wouldn’t allow it but it is something I really enjoy and think that every couple need! As for me on my own I just adore eating chocolate, having bubble baths and reading when I can! In fact I’ve been known to do all three at once!
Q: If you could trade lives with one other person- anyone!- for one day, who would it be and why?
I’d love to be in government for a day! I’d relax taxing laws, give better benefits to single parents and couples with young children and put a large dent in third world debt! I’d also make myself chief executive of a worldwide publishing conglomerate and give a new author from Northern Ireland called Fiona Cassidy the opportunity to make all nationalities laugh!
Q: What is your best advice for aspiring writers?
I would advise anyone who is interested in writing to go along to creative writing classes and surround themselves with people who have similar ambitions as you can learn from each other and pick up writing tips! There are also plenty of online forums and websites that would provide support and advice in this area! I would advocate reading as much as possible and ask them to familiarize themselves with publisher’s guidelines if they wish to submit manuscripts for consideration! It’s also useful to have an agent but not essential as I got my publishing deal first and had to choose an agent afterwards as I had three offering to represent me at one stage! An agent is a Godsend when it comes to negotiating contracts and understanding what way the market works. They also give invaluable editorial support! Above all I would advise people not to give up on their dreams. If writing is something you really want to do I would continue. It’s all too easy to get disillusioned as I myself was on many occasions but it’s about picking yourself up, dusting yourself off and tackling every rejection with a steely determination to succeed the next time!
Q: Where would be your dream vacation?
I’d love to take the whole family away on a holiday perhaps to Disneyland or to Australia as we have relatives there who we haven’t seen in a number of years! However any holiday with the family where everyone is happy and relaxed would be a dream for me!