Sunday, 2 April 2017

#AuthorInterview @LeighRussell #BestsellingAuthor

Killer Plan by  Leigh Russell Road Closed by  Leigh Russell Death Bed by  Leigh Russell


I am delighted to welcome Leigh Russell to my blog once again! This time she has some very exciting news - Leigh has sold over 1 million copies of her detective fiction books! Whooo Hooo!! Now that is worth celebrating - and what better way than with a Q&A on my blog!!!

So, I'm handing straight over to Leigh to hear all about this fantastic achievement!

Congratulations on selling 1 million books!! After momentous historical moments, people always ask "where were you and what were you doing when you found out about......" So where were you, what were you doing and how did you find out you had sold such a phenomenal total?!

I was at home, writing, when I saw the banner my publisher had put on my website: OVER A MILLION BOOKS SOLD! It was a lovely surprise. We had been close the million milestone but I didn't know we had passed it.

What have you done to celebrate this incredible success?

Nothing yet, because my next book was due to be sent off for editing when the news arrived, so I was busy working on that. But I will celebrate when I get round to it - probably with a bottle of bubbly!

Which celebrity or famous person would you have liked to have bought the book which made your 1 millionth sale?

That's a tricky question but Andrew Scott, the brilliant Moriarty in Sherlock, would be a front runner for me. But I'd prefer it to have been one of my loyal fans as that would be more meaningful. Of course we'll never know.

How will having sold 1 million copies affect you as an author now in the world of publishing? Does it change things?

To be honest I've no idea how this will change things, if at all, as it's a new experience for me. I've never sold a million books before, and never considered myself 'a success' until now. The news of the million sales is taking a while to sink in. Hopefully my fans will carry on enjoying my books, and the second million will be at least as easy to achieve as the first, but you never know.

And on a personal level, or in terms of when you sit down to write, how will having sold 1 million books affect you?

Any success helps my confidence as a writer, so with any luck I'll feel less nervous about sending my next manuscript off to my editor. But every book is a new challenge and I always worry about whether readers will like what I've written. Just because a million of my books have been sold is no guarantee that my next book will be well received and in some ways success increases the pressure as there are a lot of readers' expectations to satisfy. I'm not complaining about my success though, and I wouldn't change a thing!

You have written over 16 crime novels - I think! Are there any that have sold noticeably more than other titles? Does there seem to be a favourite?

I think it's now 16, of which 14 are published. The Wrong Suspect is out in June 2017 and the 10th Geraldine Steel in December 2017, so there will be 16 published by the end of the year. I've also written a different trilogy which my agent is pitching at the moment, so that makes it 19 books written. With different series, it does get complicated and I forget how many books there are, and have to stop and work it out!
First published in 2009, my debut, Cut Short, still often makes bestseller lists. Other than that, my most recent title, Deadly Alibi, has been doing well as it's still fairly new out. But all the Geraldine Steel novels seem to be consistently popular.
In terms of my other series, the Ian Peterson books have a very loyal following, and my Lucy Hall mysteries is beginning to gain momentum. That series only started last year, so Lucy Hall is still fairly new on the scene.

Geraldine Steel is the main protagonist in the series for which you have currently written ten books. How do you think she might celebrate the news of her success?!

That's easy. She would curl up on her sofa with a bottle of Montepulciano, which is her favourite wine, and try not to think about her current murder investigation. She is always working on a case!

Have you plans to continue the Geraldine Steel series to generate your next million book sales or will you celebrate with a new character and a new series?

I'm contracted to write at least another three books in the series, so Geraldine will be around for a while. The series may run to 20 books, but we'll have to see how it goes. How long we continue depends on whether people carry on reading them. But right now I can't think further than the plot for the next book.

How do you think you have changed either as a person or as a writer between selling your first book to selling your millionth book?

On a personal note, life experience has changed me more than writing. Obviously I'm older than when I started writing 8 years ago, I've been fortunate enough to be able to give up my day job to write full time, last year I became a grandmother for the first time, and this year we lost my mother.
In terms of my writing, I hope my style has developed and become more confident. I like to think I'm improving, anyway.
As for the industry as a whole, the competition has become far fiercer over the period I've been writing. As long ago as 2014 it was widely reported that 20 books were being published every hour in the UK, and that figure excluded self published books. At the same time, it was estimated that the average person read between I and 5 books a year. Sadly not everyone is a bibliomaniac! Since then, the rate at which books are being published has increased massively, so the landscape of publishing has changed and it is up increasingly hard for new and unknown writers to gain any sort of recognition.

If you could buy a book and make the millionth sale for that author, which book would it be? Are there any novels or authors who you think have written a 'hidden gem' and you'd like to see them gain more attention?

This is an impossible question because there are so many talented writers who deserve more success than they can possibly achieve in the current overcrowded market. I recently read an advance copy of The Lighterman by Simon Michael, an author who I think deserves more attention. Simon Brett is a brilliant author who seems to have dwindled in popularity. As chair of the Debut Dagger judges for the Crime Writers Association I was thrilled when last year's winner, Mark Brandi, gained a publishing deal with Hachette, so his debut novel is another one that I'd love to see reaching a million sales.

If you had been able to giveaway the millionth copy of your book in a competition, what would the question have been?

What do you like about Geraldine Steel?

What now for Leigh Russell?!

I need to think of a title for Geraldine Steel number 10, and write Geraldine Steel number 11. I'm also hoping to come and share some of my tips for successful writing with your book group in Harpenden very soon!

Ah, thanks Leigh, I'm really looking forward to hearing your tips and getting a chance to spend an evening doing some writing with you! It will be such a privilege! If anyone else is interested in coming along then please click on this link to buy a ticket: 
Eventbrite: Write Away! or to find out more about the event click here

And obviously, I can't wait to read the next adventure with Geraldine Steel! Good luck thinking of a title! 

To read my review of Deadly Alibi click  here and my review of Murder Ring click here

Leigh Russell published by Harpenden Publisher No Exit Press (www.noexit.co.uk) and Deadly Alibi will be published on May 25th 2017. Murder Ring was published in 2016. 

LEIGH RUSSELL



You can find links to all of Leigh's books, as well as my facebook and twitter accounts on 
http://leighrussell.co.uk and can contact her directly there if you have any questions.

www.leighrussell.co.uk
@LeighRussell

For more recommendations, reviews and author interviews you can follow me on Twitter @KatherineSunde3 or check out my website www.bibliomaniacuk.co.uk





#HolidayReads #April #2017 #Bargains

Image result for images spring and reading



Holiday Reading! 
Who's looking for some cheap books to load up with and enjoy over the break? 
Here's a few suggestions with links to my reviews. Hope you find something to grab you! 

Looking for a bit of a "lie" in?! Currently 99p on kindle.

LiesSometimes I LieThe Marriage LieThose Who Lie

Looking for something to take you back to a different time? All for 99p on kindle.

The Witchfinder's SisterThe SecretThe Roanoke GirlsA Proposal to Die For (Lady Alkmene #1)












bibliomaniacuk review: the witch finder's sister
bibliomaniacuk review: the secret kathryn hughes
bibliomaniacuk review: the roanoke girls
bibliomaniacuk review: a proposal to die for

Looking for a bit of a cheap thrill? All at 99p!

Too CloseBefore I Let You InPerfect Remains (D.I. Callanach, #1)Her Husband's LoverThe Gift

bibliomaniacuk review: too-close-by-gayle-curtis
bibliomaniacuk review: perfect-remains-helen-fields
bibliomaniacuk review: her-husbands-lover-julia-crouch

Splash out-  £1.99 or a few pennies more but well worth the "investment"!!

The BreakdownMy Husband's SonSaving SophieThe EscapeGone Without a Trace

bibliomaniacuk review: the-breakdown-by-ba-paris
bibliomaniacs-book-club-my-husbands-son
bibliomaniacuk review: my-husbands-son-deborah-oconnor
bibliomaniacuk review: saving-sophie-sam-carrington
bibliomaniacuk review: the-escape-by-c-l-taylor
bibliomaniacuk review: gone-without-trace-by-mary-torjussen

And if you fancy a real treat then these are worth every penny......

Everything but the TruthSix StoriesSealskinBehind Her Eyes

bibliomaniacuk review: sixstories-mattwesolowski
bibliomaniacuk review: sealskin-by-su-bristow
bibliomaniacuk review: behind-her-eyes-by-sarah-pinborough
bibliomaniacuk review: everything but the truth

And my holiday reads for Easter will be:

The Other Half of Happiness (Sofia Khan, #2)My Cousin RachelMy SisterReservoir 13A Dangerous Crossing

Let me know what you're reading over the Easter Weekend!

Happy Easter! Happy Reading!

Image result for images spring and reading

Keep up with my reading, recommendations and reviews @KatherineSunde3 (bibliomaniacuk) and via my website www.bibliomaniacuk.co.uk

Saturday, 1 April 2017

#BibliomaniacsBookClub #April #Paperlight #TheMuse #JessieBurton

April's Bibliomania is for 
Jessie Burton's The Muse


Published by Picador (2016)


The Muse

What is it about?

On a hot July day in 1967, Odelle Bastien climbs the stone steps of the Skelton gallery in London, knowing that her life is about to change forever. Having struggled to find her place in the city since she arrived from Trinidad five years ago, she has been offered a job as a typist under the tutelage of the glamorous and enigmatic Marjorie Quick. But though Quick takes Odelle into her confidence, and unlocks a potential she didn't know she had, she remains a mystery - no more so than when a lost masterpiece with a secret history is delivered to the gallery.

The truth about the painting lies in 1936 and a large house in rural Spain, where Olive Schloss, the daughter of a renowned art dealer, is harbouring ambitions of her own. Into this fragile paradise come artist and revolutionary Isaac Robles and his half-sister Teresa, who immediately insinuate themselves into the Schloss family, with explosive and devastating consequences . . .

To read my review click here:
bibliomaniacuk review-the muse

The Muse Book Club Questions:

The front cover for this novel is very ornate and beautiful. Did you like it? What do you think the publishers and the author were trying to convey through this cover? 

What do you think of the title for this book? Who is the Muse? Is there more than one? Could the book have had another title?

What ideas about women and creativity is Burton exploring in this book? What other themes are in the book?

There are several significant relationships in the novel; family relationships, marriages, physical relationships, friendships and that of a mentor and an apprentice. Which relationship did you enjoy the most or do you think is most central to the plot? 

What is the significance of Odelle's Trinidadian heritage? 

The book moves between different countries and different decades. How well has Burton evoked the social and historical context as well as the physical descriptions of location? How convincing is her sense of place?

This story has a dual narrative and a dual timeline that are interlinked.  Did you find it easy to read and easy to keep track of the different characters and events? Did you have a storyline you enjoyed more? Do you think this structure works for this novel? 

Do you think the novel could have been enhanced if images of the paintings had been included or do you think this would spoil the reader's interpretation and imaginative response?

Which was your favourite character and why? 

Who would you cast as Odelle and Quick if you were adapting The Muse to the big screen?

Is there a painting you have always wanted to know where the real inspiration behind it came from? 

If you could ask one artist, musician or writer about their muse or inspiration, who would it be and why? 

Where could you hold your book group for The Muse:

  • Art Gallery 
  • Spain or Trinidad 
  • A London cafe - in the rain 
What could you serve?

  • Tea in china cups 
  • Spanish Red wine 

What props could you use to start a conversation about The Muse?

  • Type writer 
  • paints and brushes
  • olives (edible)
  • notebooks  (expensive leather bound)
  • postcards of London (the more touristy the better) 
  • postcards of paintings 
  • Spanish Civil War history book
Quotes to start a conversation with:

"I'd like to write a novel one day. I'm still waiting for a good story." "Don't wait too long." 

Kate Atkinson said, "I think all novels are not only fiction but they are about fiction too."

"Art is not useful"




If you liked this book and want to read similar novels try:


The Essex SerpentThe Museum of YouThis Must Be the PlaceThe Trouble with Goats and Sheep

For more about The Muse you can find articles, podcasts and interviews by clicking on the following link:

Richard & Judy (WHSmith) Book Club: The Muse

Don't forget to check out Bibliomaniac's Book Club Paperweight choice for April here:
bibliomaniacsbookclub-april Paperweight

Follow me on Twitter @katherinesunde3 (bibliomaniacuk) for more recommendations, reviews, book club questions and author events.

#BibliomaniacsBookClub #April #TheHomeMaker #PaperweightChoice

APRIL'S BIBLIOMANIA IS FOR 
DOROTHY CANFIELD FISHER 
"THE HOME MAKER" 




The Home Maker by Dorothy Canfield Fisher is published by persephonebooks.co.uk and was first published in 1924. 




What is about? 
The novel is set in a small town in New England in the 1920s. Evangeline (Eva) is an obsessively house proud stay at home mother (a home-maker) but she and her three children are miserable. Eva's controlling behaviour as she seeks perfection and order in her home is making everyone unhappy and she herself is frustrated and bored. 
Lester, her husband, is also unhappy as he is not fulfilled by his job and misses the time he could be spending with his family. Tragedy strikes one day when Lester falls from the roof; suddenly he is bound to a wheelchair and the home. Eva has to go out to work and everything then changes. 
The children blossom and the family become happy. Each find their purpose, role and what makes them feel valued. There is an incredible transformation. But then it appears that Lester may make a recovery and the peace and new found happiness is under threat. 

The Home Maker: Book Club Questions:


  • This book is written nearly 100 years ago. Did you have any preconceptions about the novel's style or content before you started reading? Did that change while you were reading?
  • The book is set in the 1920s but is essentially about the life of a family and the roles of the husband and wife in the family. How relevant is this novel for today's society? Was there anything in the novel that particularly resonated with you? 
  • How many house husbands do you know?
  • One of the themes in this novel is perception versus reality. Can you find some examples of this in the story? 
  • Which character did you feel the most sympathy for and why? Which character did you feel the least sympathy for and why?
  • What points do you think The Home Maker is raising about society's expectations and personal fulfilment? What do you think Fisher's message for both men and women is? 
  • What other themes are explored in the book?
  • This is a book which can make you laugh, cry, scream and twitch. Which passage or scene did you find most powerful or emotive and why? 
  • How did you find the ending of the novel? Was it believable? Satisfying? The only possible ending? Was it confined by the time in which it was written and published?
  • Fisher was interested in Feminism, Psychoanalysis and the Montessori method of education. How do Fisher's personal interests affect or intrude upon the characters and the plot?
  • Critics say Fisher was a woman ahead of her time and this is a book ahead of its time. Critics also call this a brave and remarkable read. Do you agree?
  • To what extent would you agree with Dorothy Canfield Fisher when she said that The Home-Maker is a book not about women’s rights but about children’s rights?
  • The Home-Maker has been one of the most successful Persephone Books titles for discussion in book groups. Why do you think this is? 
  • Would you read another title from Persephone? 


Where could you hold your book group meeting for The Home Maker? 
  •  around the kitchen table
  •  the shop floor of any Department store

What drinks or snacks could you serve?

Image result for images for posters housewives 1924 america cookingImage result for images for posters housewives 1924 america cookingImage result for images for coca cola 1924 america

What props could you use to start a conversation about title?
  • egg whisk
  • newspaper
  • a ladder
  • children's paints and brushes 
  • nappies
  • dishcloth and cleaning equipment

Quotes to start a conversation about The Home Maker:

"But she had been like a gifted mathematician set to paint a picture"

"When Mother was scrubbing a floor was always a good time for Stephen. She forgot all about you for a while. Oh, what a weight fell off from your shoulders when Mother forgot about you for a while! How perfectly lovely it was just to walk around in the bedroom and know she wouldn’t come to the door any minute and look at you and say, ‘What are you doing Stephen? and add, ‘How did you get your rompers so dirty?’"

"it seemed to her that she had such strangechildren, not like other people’s, easy to understand and manage, strong, normal children"

"How she loathed housework!......How she hated childishness!"

In ‘Why Women Fail’ (1931), Lorine Pruette remarked sardonically that upon marrying, ‘men appear to lose a large part of their capacity as adults; they can no longer feed themselves, house themselves, look after their health, or attend to their social  responsibilities… most of them upon marriage lose the capacity even of writing to their own mother.’ Discuss........!


If you liked this book and want to read similar novels try:

These are all titles from Persephone Books (order online at persephonebooks.co.uk)
  • Hostages to Fortune by Elizabeth Cambridge 
  • Fidelity by Susan Glaspell 
  • Heat Lightning by Helen Hull 


Hostages to FortuneFidelityHeat Lightning


  • Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day by Winifred Watson 
  • Cheerful Weather for the Wedding by Julia Strachey 
  • Madame Solario by Gladys Huntington 
  • Any and all of Dorothy Whipple's books! 


The Persephone Box Set


Persephone Books reprints neglected fiction and non fiction by mid-twentieth century women. Each book is produced with a silver cover and with stunning endpapers. Here is the endpaper for The Home Maker: 

The Home-Maker



The design of this Warner silk, velvet and terry material, exported to the USA during the early 1920s, was derived from a French fabric based on medieval tapestries: two birds are facing each other and away from each other - as in marriage, they are both coupled and confrontational.
More on Persephone Books: 

Persephone Books reprints neglected fiction and non-fiction by mid-twentieth century (mostly) women writers. All of their 117 books are intelligent, thought-provoking and beautifully written and are chosen to appeal to busy people wanting titles that are neither too literary nor too commercial. They publish novels, short stories, diaries, memoirs and cookery books; each has an elegant grey jacket, a ‘fabric’ endpaper with matching bookmark, and a preface by writers such as Jilly Cooper, David Kynaston and Elaine Showalter.


www.persephonebooks.co.uk


More about Dorothy Canfield Fisher 

Click here: Dorothy_Canfield_Fisher



Dorothy Canfield Fisher (February 17, 1879 – November 9, 1958) was an educational reformer, social activist, and best-selling American author in the early decades of the twentieth century. She strongly supported women's rights, racial equality, and lifelong education. Eleanor Roosevelt named her one of the ten most influential women in the United States. In addition to bringing the Montessori method of child-rearing to the U.S., she presided over the country's first adult education program and shaped literary tastes by serving as a member of the Book of the Month Club selection committee from 1925 to 1951.

Don't forget to check out Bibliomaniac's PaperLight choice for April here: 
bibliomaniacsbookclub-april-paperlight

Follow me on Twitter to keep up to date with more book club recommendations and all my book reviews and author events @katherinesunde3 (bibliomaniacuk).