Sunday 25 September 2011

Six Sentence Sunday - First Meeting


Another excerpt from my recently released 'His Leading Lady' with the first meeting between Jess and Kyle. This is a continuation from last week when the last thing Kyle said was: "So how many points did you give me?"

“I beg your pardon?”

“How many points?” he repeated. “When you were inspecting me from the back of the shop?”  Amusement flashed in his eyes. “You must have stood there for a good two minutes watching me.  I could see your reflection in the shop window.”

More next week!

'His Leading Lady' available as e-book and paperback from www.whiskeycreekpress.com or from Amazon http://amzn.to/opp1ky

Check out the other 'Six Sentences' here

Sunday 18 September 2011

Six Sentence Sunday - First Meeting


Another excerpt from my recently released 'His Leading Lady'. For those who've read my excerpts about Jess and Kyle's first kiss, I'm now showing you their very first meeting. This is a continuation from last week when the last thing Jess said was: "I don't like being inspected, Mr. Drummond."

“Why not?  You’re a beautiful woman.  Why not be proud of that?  Your sister certainly is.”

“Lora and I are two very different people,” Jess said coolly, “and I don’t take kindly to a complete stranger assessing me on some ten point scale.”

“So how many points did you give me?”

More next week!
'His Leading Lady' available as e-book and paperback from www.whiskeycreekpress.com or from Amazon http://amzn.to/opp1ky

Check out the other 'Six Sentences' here

Also I'm chatting with Katheryn Lane about 'His Leading Lady' if you'd like to visit  http://bit.ly/rtILMe

Thursday 15 September 2011

One Year Ago

'One Year Ago' is the topic of the week for the Group Blogging Experience on Facebook (GBE2).

So, one year ago, what was I doing? 

Revising/editing my novel 'Fragrance of Violets' which is set mainly in England's Lake District before moving to London and Paris.  I think, by September 2010, I had decided on the title, which comes from a quotation by Mark Twain:  Forgiveness is the fragrance the violet sheds on the heel that has crushed it.

The story is about two people who need to forgive each other and also deal with other issues in their lives:

Abbey Seton distrusts men, especially Jack Tremayne who destroyed their friendship when they were teenagers.  Ten years later, they meet again.  Can they put the past behind them?
Abbey has to forgive not only Jack, but also her father who deserted his family when she was young.  Jack holds himself responsible for his fiancĂ©e’s death.  He’s also hiding another secret which threatens the fragile resumption of his relationship with Abbey.
Will Abbey ever forgive him when she finds out the truth?

('Fragrance of Violets' was accepted by Whiskey Creek Press and will be published next February.)

While I was revising it, I ws already thinking about another novel which was written but which still needed a lot of work.  What I didn't know (a year ago) was that the following month I would get an idea for a completely new novel.  I went to Egypt, did a Nile Cruise from Luxor to Aswan and visited some amazing places that I never thought I would ever see.  I KNEW I had to set a novel there, and now, almost a year later, I'm in the process of revising and editing that story.  It took a very different course from the very vague outline I had in my mind while I relaxed on the sundeck of the Nile cruise ship.  The characters took over, leaving me with some headaches at times as I tried to sort out the intrigue which crept in!

But here's my current problem - I need a title!  I abandonned my original title of 'Romance on the Nile' (too reminsicent of Agatha Christie and Poirot!) so it's had the working title of 'A Nile Romance'.  Now I want something less bland.  There's an archaeologist exploring a tunnel leading from one of the Pharaoh's tombs in the Valley of the Kings, and there's also a long-standing feud between his ex-fiancee's father (who withdrew his funding of the excavation) and the current fund-provider.  That enmity drives a wedge between the hero and heroine.  

So - any ideas for a title?   

Sunday 11 September 2011

Six Sentence Sunday - First Meeting


Another excerpt from my recently released 'His Leading Lady'. For those who've read my excerpts about Jess and Kyle's first kiss, I'm now showing you their very first meeting. This is a continuation from last week.

“You thought I was Lora.”

The man’s gaze slowly travelled the full length of her body and Jess glanced down at her short peach skirt and her silky cream top.  Suddenly she wished it wasn’t quite so low-cut and didn’t reveal so much of her cleavage. 

“Yes, you’re definitely twins, but you’re slimmer than Lora, and your hair’s longer,” he said candidly. 

Her natural cordiality cooled at his blatant appraisal of her figure.  “I don’t like being inspected, Mr Drummond.”

More next week!

'His Leading Lady' available as e-book and paperback from www.whiskeycreekpress.com or from Amazon http://amzn.to/opp1ky

Check out the other 'Six Sentences' here

Tuesday 6 September 2011

A Childhood Experience

When I was nearly two, I was admitted to hospital. 

Evidently, I limped badly when I started to walk.  The local hospital diagnosed this as weak ankles and my mother had to do massage exercises on my ankles.

A chance meeting in a local park changed all that.  The woman who sat near my mother was a nurse at an orthopaedic hospital.  She watched me walking and said, ‘That child has a dislocated hip.  Take her to see …”

The upshot was that I was taken to the specialist she had suggested, and the diagnosis was confirmed.  I had been born with a congenitally dislocated hip.  This was in the 1940’s, long before any post-natal checks were carried out for the ‘clicking’ sound of a dislocated hip which can now be easily resolved..

The specialist who saw me was experimenting with a new method of correcting this kind of dislocation.  Prior to WW2, the method had been to cut open and manually put the joint into place.  The new experiment involved manipulation by putting the joint into plaster to ‘force’ it back into place.

I was a ‘guinea-pig’ in this experiment. I went into hospital in July, a month before my second birthday and came out 15 months later.  For 12 of those months, I was in plaster (in a frog-type position) to correct my hip problem.

This, remember, was the 1940’s.  At that time, parents were considered a nuisance.  Their visits caused the children to get upset when they left. 

My mother was allowed to visit for one hour once a month (yes, really!).  On each visit, she had to take 4 stamped addressed postcards, and each week the nurse in charge of the ward where I was wrote a brief summary of my progress.

My mother saved all those postcards.  I still have them.  Very brief and mainly meaningless.   ‘She has had her operation and is doing well’ – ‘She continues to do well’ (several times).

The best one was ‘She has been very naughty this week.’ How on earth could I be naughty when I was in plaster from waist to ankle and confined to bed?  Hah!

I have absolutely no recollection of this time in hospital. Maybe I’ve blanked it out.  I was 3 years and 2 months when I came out of hospital in October and my first memory comes from the first Christmas back at home. 

But some of those postcards make me weep. ‘She is chattering away to everyone and anyone’ – ‘She is very curious and asks lots of questions.’  Yeah, well, I still do that!

It was only when I had my own children that I realised just what my mother and I had missed during the third year of my life.  The year between a child’s 2nd and 3rd birthdays are probably the most formative years.  The child learns to talk, the mother starts to see the real personality of her child.

I honestly don’t know how my mother managed to cope with that.  If anyone had taken my kids away from me at that age, I would have been totally distraught.

But she thought she was doing the right thing – and in that era, she probably was.

I know now that separation from my mother during my third year resulted in a lack of real bonding with my mother.  My father was away in the army until I was nearly four, so there was no bonding with him either.

I often wonder what long-term effects that separation from my parents has had on me as a person.  I’ll never really know, will I?

Just as a postscript, I was hailed as one of the specialist’s ‘successes’ for his new method and when I was about eight, I remember being paraded in front of several American doctors as proof of his success.  Over sixty years later, having been plagued by arthritis in my hip for over 30 years, I have to wonder about that ‘success’!  

This post is in participation with the Group Blogging Experience, and this week’s prompt is children and/or parent(s). If you want to blog with us, go to the GBE2 Facebook page and request to join the group. Everyone is welcome. 

Sunday 4 September 2011

Six Sentence Sunday - First Meeting


Another excerpt from my recently released 'His Leading Lady'. For those who've read my excerpts about Jess and Kyle's first kiss, I thought I'd go back to show you their very first meeting.  This is a continuation from last week.


Realising that she didn’t usually stop to survey men’s bodies, she moved forward through the racks of clothes.  “Mr. Drummond?”

He turned towards her and Jess’s breath caught in her throat.  Broad forehead, high cheekbones, wide mouth and strong jaw all combined to make him the most devastatingly attractive man she had ever seen.  She saw that her own astonishment was reflected in the dark eyes that met hers.

“Good lord,” he said.  “For a moment I thought you were—”

More next week!




'His Leading Lady' (#4 in Whiskey Creek Press bestseller list) now available as e-book and paperback from www.whiskeycreekpress.com or from Amazon http://amzn.to/opp1ky

Check out the other 'Six Sentences' here


Friday 2 September 2011

10 Fun Questions (and my answers)

Many thanks to Sylvia Ney at Writing in Wonderland for awarding me a Blog on Fire award, for which I have to answer some interesting questions!

 1.  Are you a rutabaga?
Here in the UK we call them swedes.  So the short answer is, no, I’m not a Swede.  Never even been to Sweden!


2.  Who is your current crush?
Colin Firth comes high on my list at the moment, but my long-time favourite is Martin Sheen, especially as Jed Bartlet in ‘The West Wing.’



3. Upload a heart-warming picture that makes you smile.

This is one of my daughters with her new kitten.


4.When was the last time you ate vine-ripened tomatoes?
Erm – I have absolutely no idea! 


5. Name one habit that causes people to plot your demise.
Not exactly a habit, but I do devise quizzes which drive people crazy, they blame me when they become addicted to working out the answers, so I guess that’s when they’d love to kill me!  

6. What’s the weirdest, most disgusting job you’ve ever had to do?
About 30 years ago we had a caravan (trailer) on a site in the English Lake District.  Actually it was just one of five caravans in a field, which had no modern facilities.  So we had to have a chemical toilet, and had to empty the contents into a manhole in the field.  I leave it to your imagination the smell from the manhole when we lifted the lid.  It was the job we always dreaded at the end of any visit to the caravan!

7. Where da muffin top at?
Not sure what this actually means!  But enough to say I don’t really like any kind of muffins!  Weird, aren’t I?  But I don’t have a sweet tooth at all. 


8. Which author introduced you to your genre?
I think maybe it was Charlotte Bronte, since I’ve always loved ‘Jane Eyre’.  I’ve read lots of other (modern) romances, of course, but I don’t have any special favourites. 


9. Describe yourself using obscure Latin words.
Eheu, fugaces labuntur anni  - Alas, the fleeting years slip away
(And the older you get, the faster they go – but I can’t translate that into Latin!)


10. Who else deserves this award?
Do I really have to choose?  I know so many bloggers whose posts I enjoy.
So anyone who leaves a comment for me is entitled to this coveted award (and do let me know when you’ve posted your answers!)