Saturday, 10 October 2020

New Book Release Spotlight & Author Guest Post: Limelight by Graham Hurley



Selling Your Babies

The full-time writer is beset by a number of challenges. In the first place you have to find a voice, and then a story, and then a cast of characters to make the thing work on the page. None of this stuff is easy but the tricky business of getting 100,000 words in roughly the right order is simplicity itself compared to what follows. Your baby is in rude health. You’re still friends with your editor. You’re delighted with the cover. All you have to do next is sell the bloody thing.

Publicity and publishing have never been natural friends. No writer I’ve ever met is ever happy with his share of a publicity budget that seems to be constantly shrinking, and Covid has made that situation worse. The spread and reach of social media has certainly handed the published writer new cost-free opportunities, but not every scribe takes naturally to the soapy bath that is Facebook and Twitter, least of all – alas – me. And so – in the absence of top billing on Arena – there has to be another way.

I’ve always been OK on my feet, and I enjoy making people laugh. This has led to invitations to all kinds of audiences, from an entire year of primary school kids (ninety ten-year-olds) to a sizeable hall packed with book lovers from the University of the Third Age. These events offer multiple benefits. In the first place, readers can put a face to the name on the cover. Likewise, especially afterwards when we get into conversation, I can begin to understand what works on the page with certain people and what doesn’t. That kind of more intimate rapport is invaluable, as are the book sales that go with it, and it’s very rare to leave events like this without feeling just a little bit wiser.

More recently, thanks to word of mouth, I’ve been invited to audition for the Women’s Institute speaker list. You get exactly fifteen minutes to make an impact – not a second more, not a second less – but if you make it through, then you’re guaranteed regular invitations. Devon, where we live, has numberless branches, and so far – after a couple of years driving to the far corners of God’s county – I’ve enjoyed them all.

Mention of WI audiences raises eyebrows with certain scribes, but I suspect they’re missing a trick. Over seventy percent of books in this country are borrowed, or shop-lifted, or even bought by women, and that single stat is represented in all the many audiences I’ve had the pleasure of addressing. Like it or not (and I do), few writers could make a living without female readers, and the WI offer a rich cross-section from retired professional folk to village stalwarts.

Which makes the post-speech questions from the audience all the more important. Just before lockdown, in a village hall on the edge of Dartmoor, I got a corker from a woman three rows from the front whom I’d noticed from the start. She looked a little like I remember my gran – ancient cardigan, wild hair – and she was knitting. After I was done with speaking, she was one of the hands that went up when the Chair asked for questions. She’d read a couple of the Enora Andressen books, all of them narrated in the first person, and she wanted to know what gave me the right to pretend I was a woman.

To be honest, I’ve faced questions like this before. The proper answer, I suspect, is to point out that all works of fiction are acts of trespass. That it is the business of the writer to get into the hearts and minds of other people, male or female, and try and figure out what life must be like for them. In my experience, this demands a degree of empathy, or perhaps nosiness, that isn’t to everyone’s taste, but the fact remains that the credibility of any book can only be sustained if the writer has taken a long hard look at the folk who cross his (or her) path.

I sensed at once that none of this stuff washed with the lady who looked like my gran.

But you’re a man,’ she pointed out. ‘How can you possibly know what it’s like to be one of us?’ Her gesture took in the entire hall, probably seventy women. Heads began to nod. Not a good sign. I was in trouble, and I suspect they knew it, and so – foolish boy – I went for the nuclear option.

‘OK,’ I said. ‘Let’s pretend for a moment that I write science fiction, and I’ve just published a book about Martians. To tell you the truth, I’ve never met a Martian in my life, but why shouldn’t I have the right to invent one?’

My tormentor nodded. She had a lovely smile, all the sweeter because she recognised at once the hole that I’d just dug for myself.

‘You think we’re creatures from outer space, young man?’ She picked up her knitting again. ‘I rest my case.’

The hall erupted. She even won a round of applause. But the WI breeds a kindliness I’d never suspected, and the queue for my books once I’d answered the rest of the questions was longer than ever and included the woman with the knitting. She bought the latest Enora, and said yes to a personal dedication.

‘To Nina,’ I wrote, ‘who spared me a trip to Mars.’

Limelight by Graham Hurley


Life is dangerous. No one survives it. Enora Andressen makes a series of mind-blowing discoveries when her friend disappears.

Actress Enora Andressen is catching up with her ex-neighbour, Evelyn Warlock, who's recently retired to the comely East Devon seaside town of Budleigh Salterton. The peace, the friendship of strangers and the town’s prestigious literary festival . . . Evelyn loves them all.

Until the September evening when her French neighbour, Christianne Beaucarne, disappears. Enora has met this woman. The two of them have bonded. But what Enora discovers over the anguished months to come will put sleepy Budleigh Salterton on the front page of every newspaper in the land

http://severnhouse.com/book/Limelight/9121

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Limelight-Andressen-thriller-Graham-Hurley/dp/072788980X

https://www.amazon.com/Limelight-Andressen-thriller-Graham-Hurley/dp/072788980X

Graham Hurley is an award-winning TV documentary maker who now writes full time. His Faraday and Winter series won two Theakstons shortlist nominations and was successfully adapted for French TV. He has since written a quartet of novels featuring D/S Jimmy Suttle, and three WW2 novels, the first of which – Finisterre – was shortlisted for the Wilbur Smith Adventure Writing Prize. The first three titles in the Enora Andressen series, Curtain Call, Sight Unseen and Off Script, are also available from Severn House. After thirty years in Portsmouth, Graham now lives in East Devon with his wife, Lin.

https://www.grahamhurley.co.uk/

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/135794.Graham_Hurley

https://twitter.com/Seasidepicture

https://www.facebook.com/grahamhurleyauthor/

Friday, 9 October 2020

New Book Release Spotlight and Author Guest Post: Boomerville at Ballymegille by Caroline James



Ellesea, huge thanks for hosting me on your lovely blog as I launch my new novel, Boomerville at Ballymegille.

When I launch a new book, I sit down and ask myself if anything in my life has crept into the pages. As Boomerville at Ballymegille makes its debut into the world here are a few things that you may find the guests at Boomerville Manor have on their course itinerary…

Wild water swimming. I’ve long had the urge to swim in open water and last year began with a New Year’s Day swim in the Irish Sea which was bracing but exhilarating. Grab your swim suit and join me in a tarn or lake whenever the pandemic conditions are lifted, or you can read Boomerville at Ballymegille and fictionally join in with the Boomerville Babes – an amusing aquatic team who love to swim and perform in the lake at the manor.


Trekking. I enjoy getting out in the hills and dales and even trekking up the odd mountain or two. I’ve trekked in places such as Peru and China and love the Scottish Highlands, including the daunting Ben Nevis. In 2018 I broke my foot which still causes problems and has curtailed more adventurous walks. In Boomerville at Ballymegille the gorgeous Irish countryside surrounds the manor and Jo, the owner often finds herself trekking over the Old Head of Kindale, a glorious walk on wild and rugged headlands.

Northern Soul Music. As a young girl growing up in Northern England where Northern Soul was a cult, I collected singles and went to all-nighters to dance the night away to the heavy beat and fast tempo. I had a vast collection of singles, some by small regional American labels such as Ric-Tic that would have strong commercial value today. Today, I have only to hear the pulsating beat of the opening bars of any of my favourite artists and I’m immediately on my feet bopping around the kitchen to memories of the days when spins, flips and backdrops were the dance style that grew out of the underground rhythm and soul scene of that period. Join Jo and Hattie as they party the night away with their guests, in Boomerville at Ballymegille.

Mindful Meditation. Sometime ago, I attended a class to learn a little about Mindful Meditation. Within minutes of practicing, I was calm, relaxed and during the class, fell asleep. Mindfulness is the ability to be fully present and aware of where we are and what we are doing and not over reactive or overwhelmed by what’s going on around us. The guests at Boomerville attend session with the resident Shaman and practice mindful meditation, amongst other practices – in fact they often get more than they bargained for but you’ll need to read the book to find out…

Huge thanks again, Ellesea.

Happy reading everyone

With love

Caroline xx


Boomerville at Ballymegille by Caroline James

Boomerville is back!

Join Hattie and Jo as they head to Southern Ireland to open Boomerville Manor, a holiday retreat for guests of ‘a certain age’. There’s Irish craic and shenanigans aplenty for the colourful cast of characters as everyone gathers for the grand opening.

Meet Melissa, an ex-cabaret singer running from her abusive husband, and Bill, a bachelor bullied from beyond the grave by the ghostly voice of his mother. Along with local bobby Harry the Helmet, ageing aquatic team the Boomerville Babes, eccentric artist Lucinda Gray, and heartthrob Finbar Murphy, they gather in Ireland and the fun begins. But murder is in the air and there’s mischief afoot. Will the residents get more than they bargained for at Boomerville?

Set in the beautiful Irish countryside, ‘Boomerville at Ballymegille’ is a heart-warming story of friendship, fears and new beginnings.

Amazon UK                Amazon US 

Best-selling author of women’s fiction, Caroline James has owned and run businesses encompassing all aspects of the hospitality industry, a subject that often features in her novels. She is based in the UK but has a great fondness for travel and escapes whenever she can.

A public speaker, which includes talks and lectures on cruise ships world-wide, Caroline is also a consultant and food writer. She is a member of the Romantic Novelist’s Association, the Society of Women’s Writer’s & Journalists and the Society of Authors and writes articles and short stories, contributing to many publications. Caroline also runs writing workshops.

In her spare time, Caroline can be found walking up a mountain with her two Westie dogs, sipping raspberry gin or relaxing with her head in a book and hand in a box of chocolates.




Books by Caroline James:

Hattie Goes to Hollywood

The Best Boomerville Hotel

Coffee Tea the Gypsy & Me

Coffee Tea the Chef & Me

Coffee Tea the Caribbean & Me

Jungle Rock


www.carolinejamesauthor.co.uk

Twitter: @CarolineJames12

Facebook: Caroline James Author

Amazon Author Page