High Heels & Beetle Crushers by Jackie Skingley @skingleyj #PublicationDay #BookPromo @rararesources

High Hells & Beetle Crushers banner

High Heels & Beetle Crushers

High Hells & Beetle Crushers cover

A compelling memoir of post-war Britain. Jackie Skingley grew up with limited career choices but joining the Women’s Royal Army Corps offered her a different life, living and working in a military world, against the backdrop of the Cold War. Packed full of stories reflecting the changing sexual attitudes prior to the arrival of the pill and the sexual revolution of the mid 60s, Skingley’s memoir denotes a shift in the political and social fabric of the era. Follow her relationships with the men in her life from finding her first true love, which through a cruel act of fate was denied her, to embarking on a path of recovery.


Purchase Links

UK – https://www.amazon.co.uk/High-Heels-Beetle-Crushers-Officer/dp/1789042909/#
US – https://www.amazon.com/High-Heels-Beetle-Crushers-Officer/dp/1789042909/#


Author Bio –

High Hells & Beetle Crushers author

For Jackie Skingley, adventure has been her quest since childhood. Life with the British army allowed Jackie to live all over the world and gain huge appreciation for different cultures and customs. Since 1999, Jackie and her husband have lived in the Charente region of South West France where Reiki, jewellery making, painting and mosaics, as well as writing keep her fully occupied. Member of the Charente Creative Writing Group, mother and grandmother.


Social Media Links –

https://twitter.com/skingleyj 
https://www.facebook.com/skingleyj


Giveaway

Win 2 x Paperback copies of High Heels & Beetle Crushers (Open UK / US Only)


*Terms and Conditions – UK & USA entries welcome.  Please enter using the Rafflecopter box below.  The winner will be selected at random via Rafflecopter from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then Rachel’s Random Resources reserves the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over.  Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time Rachel’s Random Resources will delete the data.  I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Good luck!

happy reading 🙂

 

#FlashbackFriday December 2019 with Claire Douglas @Dougieclaire , Lynda Renham @Lyndarenham , Jan Ruth @JanRuthAuthor , Mick Williams & Keith Bullock #BookReviews

Flashback Friday

Hi and welcome to my Flashback Friday feature! 🙂

On the first Friday of each month I like to have a little look back at what I was reading during the same month in previous years, since starting my blog. 

Please do join in, I’d love to see your posts! Share your link in the comments if you do. 

Check out https://superfluousreading.wordpress.com/2019/12/06/flashbackfriday-december-2018/

Here are my reviews from December 2018 + a link to previous FBFs…..

#ShortReviews for #ShortStories by #PaulFinch #JeffreyArcher #ZaraStoneley #HelenRolfe #KairaRouda & #ThaliaNewland

 

The Text: A short story by Claire Douglas @Dougieclaire #BookReview

The Text cover

 

A Christmas Romance: A heart-warming Christmas story (The Little Perran Romances Book 1) by Lynda Renham @Lyndarenham #BookReview

A Christmas Romance cover

 

Home for Christmas by Jan Ruth @JanRuthAuthor #BookReview

Home For Christmas

 

A Reason To Grieve by Mick Williams #BookReview

A Reason To Grieve

 

Twelve Christmas Crackers and a Boxing Day Treat by Keith Bullock #BookReview #Christmas #ShortStories

Twelve Christmas Crackers

 

#FlashbackFriday with @AnitaCassidy76 @LJRoss_author @AuthorDThompson @BKDuncanwriter & @danklefstad #december #bookreviews

 

Have you read any of the above?

A #GuestPost by Colette McCormick @colettemcauthor #Author of #AnUncomplicatedMan

An Uncomplicated Man cover

The importance of a good editor

by Colette McCormick

 

Anyone who has ever written a book will tell you that you don’t just get the words down on the page and send it off to your editor, prospective publisher or wherever it’s going. By the time that I sent my first book Beyond the Light to Accent Press in 2015, I had re-written parts of it at least twice and I had edited the whole of it four times. I thought it was perfect.
What a fool I was.
When the line edits came back the page was awash with red and blue showing the things that had been changed or needed changing. I remember thinking I must have written a really bad book. Also, accompanying the manuscript was an email suggesting the name be changed to Things I Should Have Said and Done because my title sounded a bit ‘ecclesiastical.’ I’m not going to lie I was a bit put out by that because I’d thought that my title was clever. Anyway, I saw the point that the editor was making so I agreed and set my mind to the line edits and to be fair they weren’t as bad as I had thought, mainly a missing comma or a re-arranging of words. However, it was while I was reading through and correcting things that I had the ‘eureka moment’ and realised that Things I Should Have Said and Done was the perfect title after all. I immediately sent an email to the editor and thanked her for suggesting it. I now appreciated the value of a good editor.
I had a different editor for my second book and third books and then a different one again for my fourth but I think that they all did a good job. The editor of book two and three saved my bacon more than once by keeping the time line right and my last editor used to leave messages of encouragement in the margins when they liked something. An award-winning author told me early on that an editor is only as good as the last book that they edited and that helped me to not take their changes personally. We both had the same goal.
Like my first book, this one also started out with a different title. However, a few months ago the publisher decided that the title wasn’t as strong as the titles of my previous books and it was the editor that had to tell me. And so, it became An Uncomplicated Man. It took me a while to get used to it but I have now. I also have a ready-made title for the sequel.

Thanks for joining me on my blog again, Colette 🙂

An Uncomplicated Man

An emotional, uplifting story about one man split between two lives… Perfect for fans of Amanda Prowse.

What if the man in your life isn’t who he says he is?

Daniel Laither is a mild-mannered and uncomplicated bank manager, but when his boss asks him for a favour, things begin to get tangled. Introduced to businessman Arthur Braithwaite, Daniel reluctantly agrees to a financial arrangement that will create an unbreakable link between them.

When Daniel meets Lucy, Braithwaite’s daughter, he becomes a man obsessed. From the steamy afternoons spent together in hotel rooms, to evenings out with Lucy in fancy restaurants, Daniel’s life moves a million miles from the one he’d had.

He finds himself lying to his friends, his colleagues and, most importantly, his wife. He borrows money from a loan shark to afford this double life, but when the debt demands to be paid, he contemplates stealing from the bank. When Lucy falls pregnant and Braithwaite insists upon a marriage, Daniel has to choose between his two lives…

Readers love Colette McCormick…

‘Quite simply a brilliant read’ Amazon reader review

Extremely compelling’ Amazon reader review

‘As comforting as chicken broth on a cold afternoon’ Amazon reader review

 

Colette McCormick – Bio

Colette McCormick

Originally a city girl, Colette has made her home in a one of the many former mining villages in County Durham. When not working as a retail manager for a large children’s charity she will more than likely be writing, even if it’s only a shopping list. She also enjoys cooking, gardening and taking the dog on long walks in the countryside near her home. She has been married for almost forty years and has two grown up sons.

 

ICYMI

 

Ribbons In Her Hair by Colette McCormick @colettemcauthor #BlogTour #AuthorInterview

Not My Brother’s Keeper by Colette McCormick @colettemcauthor @AccentPress #BlogTour #BookReview

 

happy reading 🙂

 

 

Candy Canes and Buckets of Blood by @HeideGoody & @IainMGrant #BlogTour #BookPromo #LoveBooksTours

Welcome to my stop on Heide Goody’s and Iain Grant’s Candy Canes and Buckets of Blood blog tour, with Love Books Tours!

Candy Cane tour

Blurb

Christmas is a time for families to come together.

Guin Roberts can’t think of anything worse than visiting a Christmas market with her new family. Guin is perfectly happy with own company and doesn’t want that disrupted by her wisecracking stepbrother and his earnest mum.

Their Christmas celebrations are invaded by a sleigh full of murderous elves. And it doesn’t matter if they’ve been naughty or nice — these elves are out for blood.

Can the family band together to survive the night? Or will Santa’s little helpers make mincemeat of them all?

Candy Cane cover.jpg

Buy Link 

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Candy-Canes-Buckets-Sprite-Brigade-ebook/dp/B07X9DTWG6/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=Candy+Canes+and+Buckets+of+Blood&qid=1571339686&sr=8-1  

About the authors

Candy Cane authors Iain and Heide by Pete C b+w

Heide lives in North Warwickshire with her husband and a fluctuating mix of offspring and animals.

Iain lives in South Birmingham with his wife and a fluctuating mix of offspring and animals.

They aren’t sure how many novels they’ve written together since 2011 but it’s a surprisingly large number.

happy reading 🙂

 

Fighting Back (Battle Ground #4) by Rachel Churcher @Rachel_Churcher #BlogTour #BookPromo @rararesources

Fighting Back banner

Fighting Back (Battle Ground #4)

Fighting Back cover

Bex Ellman and her friends are in hiding, sheltered by the resistance. With her family threatened and her friendships challenged, she’s looking for a way to fight back. Ketty Smith is in London, supporting a government she no longer trusts. With her support network crumbling, Ketty must decide who she is fighting for – and what she is willing risk to uncover the truth.

The Battle Ground series is set in a dystopian near-future UK, after Brexit and Scottish independence. 

Purchase Link –

http://tallerbooks.com/battleground/


Author Bio –

Fighting Back author.png

Rachel Churcher was born between the last manned moon landing, and the first orbital Space Shuttle mission. She remembers watching the launch of STS-1, and falling in love with space flight, at the age of five. She fell in love with science fiction shortly after that, and in her teens she discovered dystopian fiction. In an effort to find out what she wanted to do with her life, she collected degrees and other qualifications in Geography, Science Fiction Studies, Architectural Technology, Childminding, and Writing for Radio.
She has worked as an editor on national and in-house magazines; as an IT trainer; and as a freelance writer and artist. She has renovated several properties, and has plenty of horror stories to tell about dangerous electrics and nightmare plumbers. She enjoys reading, travelling, stargazing, and eating good food with good friends – but nothing makes her as happy as writing fiction.
Her first published short story appeared in an anthology in 2014, and the Battle Ground series is her first long-form work. Rachel lives in East Anglia, in a house with a large library and a conservatory full of house plants. She would love to live on Mars, but only if she’s allowed to bring her books.


Social Media Links – 


Twitter: https://twitter.com/Rachel_Churcher 
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rachelchurcherwriting/
GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/RachelChurcherWriting
Blog: https://blog.tallerbooks.com

Follow, like and share the book love with these awesome book bloggers…..

Fighting Back tour

happy reading 🙂

 

#MarcieIsBack :-) #TheSomerleySeries by Marcie Steele @marcie_steele #AvailableNow

The Somerley Series Marcie Steele

I am SO excited to help spread the word about the re-launch of these three awesome books by the fabulous Marcie Steele! 🙂

If you haven’t read these already then you don’t know what you missed out on! Add them to your reading lists now and enjoy!

Stirred with Love: A feel good novel of friendship, love … and taking chances (The Somerley Series Book 1)

Stirred With Love cover

‘Wonderfully warm with characters every woman can relate to. A fantastic read about overcoming life’s obstacles with friendship and love.’ Leah Mercer

Meet Kate – after the break-up of her marriage, she’s trying hard to mend her broken heart.

Meet Chloe – a young woman with the world at her feet, she’s struggling to know what to do with her life.

Meet Lily – still grieving after the loss of her beloved husband, she’s determined to do something with the time she has left.

As Lily embarks on a new venture in the market town of Somerley, the three women come together to open The Coffee Stop, the most charming café for miles around. But opening a coffee shop is never as simple as it seems, especially when you add loneliness, secrets and heartbreak to the mix.

When tragedy strikes, can the three women pull together to make the new business fly, or will Lily’s last chance disappear down the drain along with yesterday’s coffee grinds?

If you love an uplifting, moving story, then Stirred with Love is the perfect read. Fans of Hannah Ellis, Debbie Johnson and Emily Harvale will love this book.

Please note – this book has been re-published, so do check to see if you have already downloaded it.

Books in The Somerley Series
Stirred with Love, book 1
Secrets, Lies & Love, book 2
Second Chances at Love, book 3

 

Secrets, Lies & Love: A feel good novel of love, secrets and friendship (The Somerley Series Book 2)

Secrets, Lies & Love cover

Secrets have a habit of getting out…

Meet Sophie – she loves running her market stall with her friend Beth by her side. They’re right at the heart of the community – and always one step ahead on local gossip. But Sophie’s marriage is in a bit of a rut, and handsome stranger Damien has her wondering if the grass might be greener …

Meet Beth – she’s the life and soul of every party, but she’s hiding a broken heart, and worries about her beautiful but secretive daughter Charley. All she wants is someone to love – but could Mr Right be nearer than she thinks?

Just when Sarah and Beth need each other most, they suddenly have reason to wonder whether they ever really knew each other at all. Can the two best friends put the past behind them, and help each other find love and happiness again?

Please note – this book was previously published as The Little Market Stall of Hope and Heartbreak, so do check to see if you have already downloaded it.

While this is the second book in The Somerley Series it can also be enjoyed as a standalone novel.
Books in The Somerley Series
Stirred with Love, book 1
Secrets, Lies & Love, book 2
Second Chances at Love, book 3

An emotional and uplifting tale of love, secrets and the importance of having a best friend. Fans of Hannah Ellis, Debbie Johnson and Emily Harvale will love this book.

 

Second Chances at Love: A heart-warming novel of love, loss and new beginnings (The Somerley Series Book 3)

Second Chance at Love cover

A delightfully romantic tale of love, friendship and putting your best foot forward.

Meet Riley – all she wants is to meet someone who makes her happy. But attracting the right kind of man is not easy, and with her heart still hurting from her last break-up, she believes she’ll never find love again.

Meet Sadie – nearly a year ago, her whole world was shattered when her husband died. She has struggled to keep herself together for the sake of their young daughter, but with the anniversary of his death approaching, Sadie finds herself overwhelmed by grief.

Sadie and Riley work at Chandler’s Shoes in the market town of Somerley. But when the shop is threatened with closure, the friends are confronted with the loss of not only their jobs, but also their support network – the glue that binds them when they are close to breaking.

As they put together a plan to save their beloved shop, Sadie realises that she might be learning to live again. Could it be that new beginnings are just round the corner? The campaign also finds Riley unexpectedly crossing paths with charming photographer, Ethan. Maybe her second chance at love is right under her feet …

Please note – this book was first published as The Second Chance Shoe Shop, so do check to see if you have already downloaded it.

While this is the third book in The Somerley Series it can also be enjoyed as a standalone novel.

Books in The Somerley Series
Stirred with Love, book 1
Secrets, Lies & Love, book 2
Second Chances at Love, book 3

If you love an uplifting story, then Second Chances at Love is the perfect read. Fans of Hannah Ellis, Debbie Johnson and Emily Harvale will love this book.

 

About the author

Marcie Steele

Hi, I’m Marcie Steele – I also write crime thrillers as Mel Sherratt.

I’ve written three novels in The Somerley Series and I have a new series starting on Jan 1 2020, with The Man Across the Street, on preorder now.

Coffee, cake and friendship are three of my favourite things. You’ll always find me writing in a cafe, people watching.

I have already had the pleasure of reading The Man Across the Street and absolutely LOVED it! You are in for a treat in the new year!

Watch this space for my review!

happy reading 🙂

 

King of Hearts by Mark Stibbe @markstibbe #BlogTour #Interview @malcolmdown @LoveBooksGroup

Welcome to my stop on Mark Stibbe’s King Of Hearts blog tour, with Love Books Tours!

King Of Hearts tour

Many thanks to Kelly @ Love Books Tours for arranging the following interview with Mark Stibbe…..

 

For those who don’t know already, could you tell us about yourself and your book(s) please?

 

I’ve been a published author since I was 16. After that, I was a Vicar until 2009, and therefore most of my 50+ books have been religious nonfiction. In 2011, I began the transition to fiction. Since then I have been writing gritty stories with spiritual heart, such as The Fate of Kings, the story of a Vicar who becomes a spy in the French Revolution. King of Hearts, my latest, is in that vein.

 

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

 

The idea for King of Hearts came from a question I asked in 2011. If the Parable of the Prodigal Son were to be retold today, how might it be different? Answer? The father, not the son, would be the one who runs away from home. I was leading a charity that I founded at the time, dedicated to addressing fatherlessness. That answer pulled the rest of the story in after it.

 

Are any of your characters based (however loosely) on anyone you know?

 

I guess it’s true that you write what you know. There are some similarities between Jake (the protagonist) and me, and between Sandra (the prostitute who befriends Jake) and a girl who was murdered in Glasgow, whose funeral was taken by a friend of mine. The symbolism of the feathers in her portrayal comes directly from this true and tragic story.

 

How do you pick your characters’ names?

 

Names always come to me very quickly. In this case, some of them have symbolic or metaphorical resonances in the story world I’ve created. So, for example, Pete Marley’s surname is indebted to A Christmas Carol. I have structured the entire story of King of Hearts in the same way that Dickens designed A Christmas Carol. I could say more about the other names, but you’ll have to discover the significance of those for yourselves!

 

Can you share your writing process with us, in a nutshell?

 

Briefly, it starts with inspiration (the germ of an original idea or question), then incubation, then investigation, and finally incarnation. I could spend all day talking about this (and frequently do in writing workshops and conferences), but I’ll leave it at that!

 

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

 

I am writing within a tradition of fiction writers whose faith impacts their storytelling in a subtle rather than a simplistic way: Flannery O’Connor, Graham Greene, CS Lewis (my adoptive father’s friend and teacher), Maurice West, John Irving, Cormac McCarthy etc. These would be go-to authors for me. I return to their work frequently, but I also love authors who expose the hypocrisy and abusiveness of some forms of organized religion, so Philip Pullman, Margaret Attwood etc. And I love the way Stephen King creates Christ figures in stories like The Green Mile, and pretty well everything he writes, for that matter.

 

If you could meet any author, who would it be and what would you ask them?

 

Tolkien, my adoptive father’s English Professor at Merton College, Oxford. I would ask him how, in his own experience, the idea of being a “sub-creator” played itself out in the writing of The Lord of the Rings. I have a raft of other questions too! “What was Dad like in his 20s!?”

 

Were you a big reader as a child?

 

Yes. I started with Conan Doyle. I remember also reading Agatha Christie on a bus touring the Holy Land. I hope I don’t get struck down for saying this, but I was more impacted with the story than the landscape! My twin sister was on the same coach with her head in Watership Down, written by an author to whom our dad taught English. She’s a fulltime novelist today in the USA (Claire Stibbe). Look her up on Amazon. She’s amazing!

 

When did you start to write?

 

When I thought my Teddy was lost forever. I was probably around eight or nine. I wrote a ten-page story (handwritten in ink pen) called The Epic Adventures of Edward Bear. I found it recently in the garage in a box of things my mother had kept for me, and which were handed onto me after she died in 2015. One day, I’ll publish it!

 

If you could re-write the ending to any book what would it be and what would you change?
Is there a book you wish you had written?

 

Not the ending of a book, no. But I would rewrite the whole of series 8 of Game of Thrones which was a grave disappointment. I hope George R.R. Martin does a much better job! As for the Q, Is there a book I wish I’d written? The answer is no. I have always taken very seriously Toni Morrison’s statement that if there’s not a book written on something that you feel passionate about, then you should write it. Writing a book is revealing part of your soul. It is intensely personal. To want to have written another person’s book is an impossible thought for me; it implies that I want to be someone other than myself, which I don’t. I’m happy in my own skin.

 

If you wrote an autobiography, what would your title be?

 

An Orphan No More. I have started writing it in my head.

 

If you could invite any fictional character for coffee who would it be and where would you take them?

 

Sherlock Holmes, or Aslan.

 

What are you working on right now?

 

A fairy tale. And a psychological thriller about an abused Norwegian woman with a Viking spirit.

 

Tell us about your last release?

 

Home at Last… a nonfiction book about my own experiences being abandoned and abused at boarding school, with some keys from my own experience for getting free from boarding school pain. I’m humbled by all the letters and emails I receive from people who have found reading it very therapeutic and even life changing.

 

Do you have a new release due?

 

Yes, my American publisher is releasing a beautiful, hardback gift book of mine called The 100 Verse Bible on December 17th. Next year, I’m publishing the first in a series of Sci Fi MGF titles about an autistic boy on a faraway planet in a fantastical universe.

 

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?

 

A quiet meal with my beautiful Irish wife Cherith, and a snuggle in front of a favourite film with her and our Black Labrador Bella. I’m not a big one for celebrations to be honest.

 

How can readers keep in touch with you?

 

I’m on Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/mark.stibbe.54

I post my most personal memories on Insta

@markstibbeauthor

LinkedIn

https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-mark-stibbe-89247563/

And then there’s my websites

http://www.advice4authors.com (my blog site, for free advice for authors)

http://www.markstibbebooks.com (with all my most recent products, including my writing for The Times, my interviews with BBC, etc)

http://www.thebooklab.co.uk (dedicated to coaching emerging writers)

I do use Twitter occasionally but only when I absolutely have to

@markstibbe

 

Is there anything else you would like us to know?

 

King of Hearts is out now. It will make a GREAT Christmas gift for your friends and family. If you order one from my website, I’ll sign it for you.

 

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Mark 🙂

 

It’s a pleasure. Thank you for supporting those of us who are trying to make a living from writing. It’s a huge challenge. We appreciate it.

Mark Stibbe

King Of Hearts cover

Blurb

King of Hearts tells the gripping story of Jake Graystone, a struggling teacher, husband, and father, who looks for easy money playing poker. When his wife Sally exposes his secret addiction on Christmas Eve, he walks out and heads north for Casino City, leaving his family for a dark world of gambling, prostitution and murder.
How will the cards fall for Jake in this brutal, urban wasteland? And, as the stakes get higher and higher, will this modern Desperado ever come to his senses?

King of Hearts is a winter, festive story to sit alongside It’s a Wonderful Life and A Christmas Carol. Raw yet redemptive, it is a Christmas tale you’ll not be able to put down.

At the end of each chapter, you will want to twist, not fold.

Buy Link 

https://amzn.to/340M7qO

 

happy reading 🙂

 

The Devil’s Apprentice by Kenneth B. Andersen @K_B_Andersen #BlogTour #Interview @Love Books Group

Welcome to my stop on Kenneth B. Andersen’s The Devil’s Apprentice Blog tour, with Love Books Tours.

The Devil’s Apprentice tour

Many thanks to Kelly @ Love Books Tours for arranging the following interview with Kenneth B. Andersen…..

The Devil’s Apprentice author

For those who don’t know already, could you tell us about yourself and your book(s) please?
I’m 43 years old and used to be a school teacher, now a full time writer. I was born in Denmark and I live in Copenhagen with my wife, two sons and a dog. I began writing in high school and published my first book when I was 22. Since then I’ve published more than 40 books in genres ranging from fantasy to horror and science fiction. My books have been translated into more than 15 languages and my series about the superhero Antboy has been turned into three movies.

 

Where did/do you get your ideas from?
I often get inspired by reading books and watching movies. A good example of this is ”The Devil’s Apprentice”. Years ago I was reading a Danish novel called “Little Lucifer”, where the main character misbehaves and someone yells at him, that he’s the Devil’s apprentice. The moment I read those two words I thought that would be awesome: To write a story about a boy who literally ends up as the Devil’s apprentice in Hell where he is to be trained in evil by the Devil himself. Although my Hell differs a lot from Dante’s, it is very much inspired by The Divine Comedy.

 

Are any of your characters based (however loosely) on anyone you know?
No. It’s the idea the creates the characters. That being said – since I’ve created all the characters – a little part of me (for better or for worse) is in most of my characters.

How do you pick your characters’ names?
Sometimes I just go with a feeling, and sometimes I choose a name because of it’s meaning. In “The Devil’s Apprentice” I wanted Philip’s last name to be Engel, which means ‘angel’. I thought it was fun – an angel ending up in Hell 😊

 

Can you share your writing process with us, in a nutshell?
I begin with outlining the story very loosely – and think about how I want it to end so that I have a goal to steer towards. A sort of X on a map. A map that might change as the story takes shape. Then I try to get to know my main characters by answering five pages containing all sorts of questions about him/her. Then I find out what’s going to happen in the first five chapters. When I’ve written them, I find out what’s going to happen in the next five chapters and so on. I write four hours a day. I have an office in my basement and I write from 8 am – 10 am and then again from 1 pm – 3 pm. I don’t aim for a certain amount of words or pages. Sometimes I write half a page in two hours if things go slow, sometimes three pages. It depends.

 

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?
It’s always difficult to a list like this, because there are so many I want to include. But these are some of the writers that have influenced me the most: Stephen King, Astrid Lindgren (Swedish writer), Ray Bradbury, Bjarne Reuter (Danish writer) and Philip Pullmann.

 

If you could meet any author, who would it be and what would you ask them?
If I can also choose from those who are no longer here: Ray Bradbury. Brilliant mind, brilliant writer. I would ask him about his view on the world today – ups and downs – and on the future.

 

Were you a big reader as a child?
Yes. ”Narnia” and ”The Never-Ending Story” were favourites of mine, but mostly I was into horror when I was a kid. Still am, but now I’m more selective. I’m always excited when a new King-novel comes out. I’m also a big fan of his son Joe Hill. His graphic novel ”Locke & Key” is awesome. I try to read all different kind of genres, but I like things with a twist. I recently discovered the author Christina Henry. She’s very good. I like it when the world we know is turned upside down, but I value credibility above all else. Not in the sense of story, but the way the story is told. Credibility and language.

 

When did you start to write?
I began writing when I was 15 years old and I was terrible at it. But I kept on trying and trying and trying. It took me seven years and fifteen turned-down manuscripts before I finally got my fist book published. But I was never close to giving up – on the contrary. It became an obsession for me to write something that was good enough to get published. Which finally happened in 2000 when I was 22. Since then I’ve published more than 40 books.

 

If you could re-write the ending to any book what would it be and what would you change?
Oh, I don’t want to be judge, juror and executioner of other books. There are good books and there are bad books, and my focus is writing the best books that I can write. But a fun fact: When I wrote book 4 in The Great Devil War it was actually meant as the final book in the series. But I wasn’t quite satisfied with the ending and I discovered that I wasn’t done with the story, so I wrote two more books – and a new ending to the story. The right ending.

 

Is there a book you wish you had written?
The Road by Cormac McCarthy. A simple, but very powerful idea written in a simple, but very powerful way. Man, how I cried, when I turned the last page.

 

If you wrote an autobiography, what would your title be?
I think my autobiography would be boring as hell so I would never write that. But maybe that would be the title: Welcome to Hell 😊

 

If you could invite any fictional character for coffee who would it be and where would you take them?
Oh, man, that’s a tough one. Or maybe not. Coffee in The Prancing Pony with Gandalf.

 

What are you working on right now?
I’ve written six books about the superhero Antboy. A story about an ordinary boy who gets bullied at school. One day he gets bitten by a very special ant and develop the most amazing powers: He becomes very strong, he can climb walls, his body is like a suit of armor – and he pees acid. The books have been turned into three movies (you can catch them on Netflix, they’re low budget, but high on charm). It’s been seven years since I published the last Antboy-book, but now my little superhero finally returns. There is going to be three more Antboy-books, which comes out next year – it’ll be the grand finale 😊

 

Tell us about your last release?
The Angel of Evil, which is book 4 in The Great Devil War series, has just come out. The series begins with “The Devil’s Apprentice”, in which Philip – a good boy – accidentally gets sent to Hell to become the Devil’s heir. The story of Philip’s adventures in Hell continues in book 2 and 3 – “The Die of Death” and “The Wrongful Death” and the reader also gets to visit Death’s domain, Paradise, Hades, and other underworlds. In book 4 – “The Angel of Evil” – the Great Devil War breaks out. This is where all hell breaks loose …

 

Do you have a new release due?
A few months ago I published a book called GRIMM, co-written with Danish writer Benni Bodker. The book consists of ten of the Grimm brothers best and most gruesome stories, which we have rewritten in a way that’s faithful to the stories but told with our words and our imagination. A very beautiful book, illustrated by one of Denmark’s best illustrators John Kenn Mortensen (check him out on Instagram, he’s awesome!) Me and Benni have re-written ten more fairy tales and GRIMM II is my next release in Denmark. Hopefully the books will be out in English some day.

 

What do you generally do to celebrate on publication day?
Take my family out to dinner. Drink a beer. Feeling proud.

 

How can readers keep in touch with you?
You can sign up for my newsletter on my website http://www.kennethbandersen.com (and don’t worry, I won’t be spamming you). I also post a lot on Facebook (@WriterKennethBAndersen) where I sometimes do giveaways. The Great Devil War also has its own FB-page – @TheGreatDevilWar. I love hearing from readers and do my best to answer every single one.

 

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Kenneth! 🙂

The Devil’s Apprentice cover

Blurb

Multi-award winning series, published in more than 10 countries, movie rights optioned!

Welcome to a world like no other!

Philip is a good boy, a really good boy, who accidentally gets sent to Hell to become the Devil’s heir. The Devil, Lucifer, is dying and desperately in need of a successor, but there’s been a mistake and Philip is the wrong boy.

Lucifer has no other choice than to begin the difficult task of training Philip in the ways of evil. Philip is terrible at being bad, but when he falls in love with the she-devil Satina and experiences the powerful forces of love and jealousy, the task becomes much easier.

Philip finds both friends and enemies in this odd, gloomy underworld–but who can he trust, when he discovers an evil-minded plot against the dark throne?

The Great Devil War is a gripping and humorous tale about good and evil seen from a different perspective, making the reader laugh and think. It’s filled with biblical and historical characters and set in a world beyond your wildest dreams. Or nightmares …

Buy Link 

https://amzn.to/2pcbFlT

 

happy reading 🙂

 

Run by Jackie McLean @JackieJamxx #BlogTour #Interview #LoveBooksTours

Welcome to my stop on Jackie McLean’s Run blog tour, with Love Books Tours!

Run tour

Many thanks to Kelly @ Love Books Tours for arranging the following interview with Jackie McLean…..

Run author

For those who don’t know already, could you tell us about yourself and your book(s) please?

 

I live in Glasgow and as well as writing, I work full-time. My career background is pretty varied (I’ve been a government economist, a political lobbyist, and I’ve run a pet shop). It’s a bit like my writing habits – I like to jump from one thing to another, to try new things. I keep actively involved in all sorts of crime fiction events, and have spoken at Bloody Scotland, Newcastle Noir, Noir at the Bar Edinburgh, Crime at the Castle and Literally @ Newbattle. My third book (Run) has recently been published. Along with my first two (Toxic and Shadows), it forms a series featuring DI Donna Davenport.

 

Where did/do you get your ideas from?

 

Ideas for books come from everywhere – even from dreams! Sometimes a news story will catch my attention and spark off an idea, or something might happen that makes me wonder ‘what if…?’

 

I wrote Toxic because I wanted to base a story in my home town (Arbroath), and the idea behind Shadows came about when a friend asked me to write about some worrying things she was seeing at work. But, of course, the best source of story ideas come from eerywigging on other people’s conversations. Yes, you should never trust a crime writer!

 

Are any of your characters based (however loosely) on anyone you know?

 

Haha, good question! I generally don’t base my characters on people I know, except for one: the character Graeme Hunter in Toxic is a composite of two people I really didn’t like. I’d better not say any more…

 

How do you pick your charactersnames?

 

That’s an interesting one – sometimes it’s fairly easy. I might spot an interesting name on the credits at the end of a TV programme, or I might run through the alphabet for ideas. But sometimes in my books I’m looking to name characters whose ethnic origins are in parts of the world I’m not that familiar with, and so more research is needed to be accurate and properly sensitive to cultural norms. For instance, I might want to name a character who’s a thirty year old male from Ghana. I’ll do some reading on naming conventions, popular names for the time period, and whether names reflect different religions or other divisions. Then, when I pick what seems to be a suitable name, I’ll do some Google searching to check that people really do exist with that name, and that it’s not so unusual as to be unrealistic.

 

Can you share your writing process with us, in a nutshell?

 

I work full-time, so getting time to write is difficult. With various family commitments, a set writing routine is out of the question, too. What I tend to do now, and I’ve found this works quite well for me, is to set myself a weekly word count target, and I write as and when I can to try and meet it.

 

When it comes to writing books, I tend to plan one-third of the storyline at a time. Planning out the full book can waste time, as I find when I get around a third of the way in, new characters and events have come into the story that change how the next part should go.

 

A crime fiction novel is generally around 80 – 90,000 words long. I write a first rough draft of about 50,000 words, and take some time to consider whether all the pieces of the story are in the right place – like a gigantic jigsaw puzzle. I’ll then re-work the draft to about 70-80,000 words, which I give to my partner to read. She’s an avid reader, and is very good at spotting what works and what doesn’t. I’ll then do a further re-draft based on her thoughts, and once that’s polished up, it’ll be about 85,000 words and ready for sending out. In theory the process could be done in a year, but life often gets in the way…

 

Who are your top 5 favourite authors?

 

  • Fannie Flagg (she’s a fantastic storyteller, and her books ooze Southern comfort);
  • Barbara Kingsolver (such talented writing);
  • Sarah Waters (her amazing attention to detail transports you into the historical settings she writes about);
  • Denise Mina (just superb);
  • Kathy Reichs (a real life forensic anthropologist writing crime fiction, wow!).

 

If you could meet any author, who would it be and what would you ask them?

 

I did meet Kathy Reichs a couple of years ago at Bloody Scotland. I was armed with a whole set of questions (such as, ‘how on earth do you find the time?’), but when it came to the moment, I clammed up and wasn’t able to utter a sound!

 

Were you a big reader as a child?

 

A huge reader, and still am. Very early on, I had read every book in the school library… except for the Ladybird Book of the Human Ear, and eventually I caved in and read that, too. I was a frequent visitor to the town library, where I devoured pretty much everything I could lay my hands on, from the Mrs Pepperpot books to Solzhenitsyn.

 

When did you start to write?

 

I can’t really remember – I’ve always written as a hobby. When I was 14 I finished writing a novel that was a satire set in the aftermath of a third world war. The storyline was that the leaders of a few countries decide to hold a conference to figure out the way ahead, but one by one something happens to them and they send a substitute. Each of the substitutes thinks they’re the only ‘fraud’ and when the real leaders are ready to join the conference, they have to decide whether to ‘fess up. The manuscript is long lost, and I think about it often. Maybe I’ll re-visit the idea one day…

 

If you could re-write the ending to any book what would it be and what would you change?

 

Oh, I hate a sad ending, so I’d change all the sad endings into happy ones.

 

Is there a book you wish you had written?

 

If I could pick just one, it would be Sophie’s World by Jostein Gaarder. I was amazed by it, and it’s a book that’s stayed with me about 20 years on from reading it. An accessible course in philosophy, written as a novel – just wow! It should be compulsory reading, and I so wish I could write something even a fraction as clever.

 

If you wrote an autobiography, what would your title be?  

 

It would be something along the lines of, Oops…

 

What are you working on right now?

 

I’m giving DI Donna Davenport a wee break, and I’ve started writing a brand new series. It features disgraced journalist Suzy Sangster, and she has a difficult relationship with her sister who’s a police officer (but might also be psychic), which gets her embroiled in things she shouldn’t get involved in.

 

Tell us about your last release?

 

Run is the finale to a trilogy featuring DI Donna Davenport. The first book, Toxic, tells the story of a desperate race against the clock to locate the illegal storage of MIC (the toxin responsible for the Bhopal disaster in 1984), and the escalating conflict between Donna and her colleague DI Jonas Evanton. In Shadows, Donna is drawn into the the murky world of people smuggling and organ harvesting, while waiting for Evanton to unleash his revenge. He does this in Run, by orchestrating a series of incidents that bring the police force to its knees. If there’s to be any hope of avoiding further bloodshed, Donna has to decide whether to accept his terms.

 

How can readers keep in touch with you?

 

On Twitter it’s @JackieJamxx

I have an author page on FaceBook at https://www.facebook.com/WriterJackie/

And there’s my website (with the odd blog and free short stories) on https://jackiemcleanauthor.com

I do love to chat!

 

Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions, Jackie 🙂

Run cover

Blurb

RUN THE GAUNTLET
DI Donna Davenport and her team are under pressure.

With the hunt on for the country’s most notorious cop killer and an ongoing complex international investigation, the murder of a local thug during a football match is the last thing the police need.

But as more incidents overload the police, and fear brings vigilante mobs onto the streets, suspicion grows that the mayhem is being orchestrated.

CUT AND RUN
One man can make it stop. With the city heading towards chaos and disaster, Donna prepares to abandon caution and the rules, even if it means she is ostracised by her own team.

Buy Link 

https://amzn.to/33E1w00

 

happy reading 🙂