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Archive for September, 2013

My guest today is Dominica Malcolm, born in Australia, living in Malaya and incredibly well travelled. She describes herself as a ‘creative explorer’ having performed stand up comedy, written plays and screen plays, short stories, a novel and non-fiction, been a travel photographer and she cherishes an ambition to perform a one-person show. She is here today to talk abut her first novel, Adrift, a super combination of time travel and lady pirates which is released TODAY.

Welcome, Dominica.

Elin : Can you tell me a little about yourself? For instance, do you have to have a day job as well as being a writer?

Dominica : When filling out immigration forms, I always write “Housewife” – I’m a stay-at-home mother, which has been my primary role for the last 6 or so years. But in the past I’ve been paid as a stand-up comedian, web developer, and videographer/editor, amongst other things.

Elin : When you aren’t writing, is there any other creative activity you enjoy? Have you ever written about it?

Dominica : It varies depending on mood. I’ve delved into a number of creative pursuits. At the moment, though, as I’ve just recently attended a “comedy bootcamp”, the plan is to try and get back into performing stand-up comedy, as well as finish off editing a music video that I filmed in Hawaii in February 2012. I’d love to do more film stuff and improvisational comedy, but it’s harder for me to organise creative activities that involve other people.

Elin : Can you name any author/authors, past or present, who have been a great influence on your work?

Dominica :I think that I’ve been more influenced by friends who are writers, rather than well known authors. People can look up the two I dedicated Adrift to – Jeremiah Murphy and Sally Bell. I love their work.

Elin : What are you reading? Something to be clutched to the bosom or tossed aside with force? Fiction or non-fiction?

Dominica : I’m in the middle of a few different books, but I’ll just list three.
1. The Fantastical Life of Serenity by Serenity Valle, which is a collection of short fiction.
2. I Too Had a Love Story by Ravinder Singh, which I believe is non-fiction/memoir, even though the back of the book labels it as fiction.
3. The Boy in the Dress by David Walliams, which I’ve been reading to my eldest son when he’s actually wanted me to.

Elin : Are you a plotter or a pantser?

Dominica : It depends what I’m writing. I tend to be a panther when it comes to short fiction, but I’ve never been able to finish anything particularly long that way. Adrift started out with me writing bits and pieces all over the place, but I eventually realised I had to come up with the overall plot before I wrote too much, or else I wouldn’t finish it, or at the very least probably wouldn’t have the kind of story I wanted. I have another novel that I plotted out not long after I plotted Adrift, which started out similarly. It’s nice to know I have a structure there waiting for me when I have time to go back to it.

Elin : Do your characters arrive fully fledged and ready to fly or do they develop as you work with them?

Dominica : They tend to develop as I work with them. I enjoy seeing how they respond to certain situations that I throw at them, because I don’t always know how that’s going to go. It makes writing more fun for me.

Elin : Do you have a crisp mental picture of your characters or are they more a thought and a feeling than an image?

Dominica : I think by the time I’ve finished writing them, I have a fairly clear picture of them, even if I don’t go into too much detail about what they look like for my readers.

Elin : Do you find there to be a lot of structural differences between a relationship driven story and one where the romance is a sub plot?

Dominica : Structure implies rules, and I don’t really believe in rules when it comes to writing. If people want to write something different from expectations – what others believe the structure should be – they should be free to do so.

Elin : Put together your ideal team of men – drawing from all and any walks of life, fictional or non-fictional – who you would want to come to your rescue if menaced by muggers/alligators/fundamentalists?

Dominica : Ah, let’s see. Wolverine from the X-Men. Steve McGarratt from Hawaii Five-O (new series). The Doctor (preferably Five or Ten) from Doctor Who. Do they have to be men? Buffy and Faith from Buffy the Vampire Slayer. River from Firefly.

I want her on my team

Elin : Villains – incredibly important in fiction since they challenge the main protagonists and give them something to contend with beyond the tension of a developing relationship. What sort of villains do you prize? A moustache-twirling nightmare or … ?

Dominica : I like villains who are well developed – shades of grey, so they may have features audiences can identify with in a way. Characters that aren’t just caricatures, stereotypes, or seen as pure evil.

Elin : What are you working on at the moment? Can you discuss it or do you prefer to keep it a secret until it’s finished.

Dominica : I suppose the biggest projects would be a collection of mermaid short stories, which is a spin-off from Adrift, called Losing Prudence. Some of the stories I’ve already written have been published elsewhere, such as “Siren” which appears in Fae Fatales: A Fantasy Noir Anthology.

I’m also putting together an anthology of speculative fiction set in the Asia-Pacific region over at Solarwyrm Press (http://solarwyrm.com). Submissions close November 30, and I love seeing new submissions!

Elin : Could we please have an excerpt of something?

Dominica : An excerpt from Adrift:

“What year is this?”

“Two-thousand and eleven,” Dick says automatically, before realising the absurdity of the question.

Jaclyn bolts upright and runs out the door into the open hallway to look down at the street. Thinking this might be the best opportunity to lock her out of the room, Dick quickly follows her.

Unfortunately he doesn’t reach the door in time, and Jaclyn barges past him again, asking herself, “Three hundred and fifty years?”

Jaclyn is back at the window before Dick can say, “Eh?”

There’s a long silence before Jaclyn looks at Dick again. “When I awoke this morning, it was sixteen sixty-one.”

“Wait a minute,” Dick says, observing her with a skeptical eye, “let me get this straight… you’re saying you’re a time-traveller?”

“I am not sure what you mean by that,” Jaclyn says. “All I know is what I was doing in Bridgetown this morning, before finding myself here.”

“Are you having me on?” Dick asks. “Like, are you some actor who is out here for some fan convention and you’re… what’s the word? Method acting?”

“Preposterous! I have never heard of women actors. That is absurd.”

“And travelling through time isn’t?” Dick asks.

“Yes, I concede you may have a point there. Well, you could simply decide that I am insane… but what if I am not?”

###

Adrift

Blurb:
It’s the 21st century, and Jaclyn Rousseau is not where she should be. 1661 disappeared before her eyes, and there’s no way home. That matters not to Jaclyn—she lost her lover, and everything else that meant anything to her, in the West Indies.

In an adventure that crosses time and the Atlantic, a murderous pirate must find a place for herself in this new world.

Can she escape her past, or will it catch up with her?

Adrift (paperback) on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Adrift-Dominica-Malcolm/dp/0980508428/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1378974245&sr=1-2

Details for where else to get it: http://dominica.malcolm.id.au/writing/adrift

Fae Fatales: A Fantast Noir Anthology on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Fae-Fatales-Fantasy-Anthology-Colour/dp/0473243172/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1378974245&sr=1-1

Blog/web site: http://dominica.malcolm.id.au

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/DominicaMalcolm

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/dommalcolm

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Books and Museums

Two subjects very close to my heart. Who doesn’t get a little hot under the collar at the thought of incunabulae, grimoires and morocco bound folios?

Surely it’s not only me?

*sigh*

Some people like to dwell on photographs of young men wearing a hat and little else in order to show off a musculature as defined as an anatomical drawing , but a closed book offers far more in the way of mental stimulation, as far as I’m concerned. Also the dust jacket can be ripped and the inside filled with scrawly notations but that just makes the thing more interesting. AND you don’t have to worry about hurting its feelings or it hurting yours. Books don’t judge. Best companions ever whether hand written on vellum or $0.99 on Smashwords.

And I love museums too so was very happy to spot not one but 2 cracking book based exhibitions reviewed in the Museum’s Journal this month.

“This is what we do for the dying …” by Johnny Kelly

Memory Palace, at the V&A, is a temporary art exhibition based on a novel specially written for the event by Hari Kunzru. Memory Palace describes a dystopian future where all forms of learning and the recording of information have been banned. 20 artists were each given a different excerpt of the novel and asked to interpret it in their own way. Here is a video describing the process of putting the exhibition together.

If you’re in London before the 20th October why not take a look.

The other exhibition is open until the 27th October at the Bodleian Library in Oxford and has the delightful title “Magical Books: From the Middle Ages to Middle Earth”.

In it, parallels are drawn between the work of British fantasy writers and ancient texts from the library collection.

Fragment of the Book of Mazarbul made by J RR Tolkein in the 1940s

The Ashburnham Fragment is paired off with Tolkein’s own facsimile of the Book of Mazarbul, while C S Lewis’s description of Narnia echoes elements of the Ripley Scroll.

This 20 feet by 2 feet scroll describes in glorious illustrated detail the steps required to make the Philosopher’s Stone! Other modern authors are Alan Garner [The Weirdstone of Brisingamen], Susan Cooper [The Dark is Rising story cycle – please ignore the film, it was rubbish] and Philip Pullman [His Dark Materials]. You can also see the First Folio Macbeth, in the witchcraft section, and that’s not something you’ll see anywhere else.

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Hump Day Hook

 I lost the plot a bit last week and it was Wednesday morning before I remembered that I should have done HDH. Silly me. This week I’ve done it in plenty of time and plan to be a bit more efficient about getting round to register my presence. I read all the entries last week – lots of cool stuff – but was too dopey to comment.

Anyhow! This week I’m using the usual ancient bit of fiction, for which I don’t have a proper title, but if I did it would probably have been something like “The Rake and the Bluestocking” just so people knew what they were getting. Blame Mills and Boon. I read a couple and thought “Pffft, I could do that” so I tried  – and failed because I was far more interested in breeches than bodices. And THIS week that’s what you’re getting – the hero.

We left Aubrey and Cicely hatching plot to make Mad Pat uncomfortable. This is what Pat is doing:

Just as Aubrey was seating himself at Cicely’s desk, her betrothed was groaning his way to consciousness while his valet attempted to repair the wreck of his room.

“I can’t understand it myself,” the man was saying. “I just can’t see where the attraction lies in going out and getting puking drunk three nights out of four. Mark my words, lad, you’ll end up like your cousin Kevin – screaming your nights away in a madhouse. The first time you wake me up to tell me your feet have been eaten off by funny green things out of the wall, that’s it, I’m off home to Sligo.”

“Shut up, Phelim,” muttered a hummock amongst the tangled debris of a four-poster bed. “Faith, I need a drink.”

“No you don’t,” Phelim snapped. “You need to get up and clean and dressed. A pint of coffee, a cut of beef and a canter in the Park’s what you need.”

“If you don’t shut up you’ll be needing a doctor.”

“And another thing! How can you expect any decent woman to live in this Bedlam? Half your servants speak Gaelic, the other half speak Pushtu and the cook’s Chinese. Honest to God, it’s like the Tower of Babel in the servant’s hall.”

The hummock erupted with a roar. “Phelim, do you want my boots down your throat? My God, I’ve still got them on! Couldn’t you at least have undressed me, you lazy bastard?”

“Undressed you? The state you were in nobody wanted to touch you. We paid the crossing sweeper who brought you home to carry you up the stairs – well, more drag really, he was only a little feller.”

Ah full of sweetness and light. Tune in next week to learn more about our gracious hero.

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Doodle Tuesday

For the past few weeks I have been contributing to the #DoodleTuesday group on Facebook. This group has been set up in support of the You Will Rise Project which aims to provide a means by which people who have been bullied, either as children or as adults, can express their experiences in any artistic means they choose. The project was started by Linda Regula and Paul Richmond, both of whom were bullied as children, and they have been joined by artist Aaron Anderson, videographer Maria Fanning and Brooke Albrecht, the Doodle Queen.

My doodles are nothing special but some of the drawings and photo manips are fantastic and well worth sharing. So see what people posted last week and if you would like to join in you can link to your drawing from Twitter, via Instagram [not sure what that is], the Doodle Tuesday and You Will Rise Facebook groups and I should imagine Tumblr as well. Just add #doodletuesday to your post to show your support of this project.

 

 

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Anything Could Happen

Blurb: Moving to Kansas City could be the best thing Austin Shelbourne has ever done. For a start, he can stop living a lie and finally come out of the closet. And there’s a chance, though slim, that he might be able to locate the love of his life, Todd Burton. It had seemed like a good idea when he seduced his friend, but Todd freaked out and vanished. Austin hopes to find Todd, make things right between them, and win his love. But when he meets actor Guy Campbell, things get even more confusing.

The moment Guy sets eyes on Austin, he knows Austin is The One. But Austin makes it clear he feels a responsibility to Todd, and Guy has some dark secrets of his own. He’s found redemption in acting and directing, but worries that if Austin learns the truth, he might not be able bear it. And what if Todd accepts Austin’s apology and the love Austin offers? Guy wants Austin desperately, but he also wants him to be happy. In the play of life, with the happiness of good men in the balance, anything could happen.

Buy from Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Anything-Could-Happen-ebook/dp/B00F27BEV0/ref=zg_bs_14044691_5

Buy from Dreamspinner Press: http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/advanced_search_result.php?keywords=Anything+Could+Happen&osCsid=c7tgdokg6qh341j67rembsaf25&x=22

Excerpt:  (more…)

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comfy chair

My guest today is Patricia Marie Budd, Canadian born and bred, educator and author, who is here today to celebrate her latest release, Hadrian’s Lover, a powerful novel about a dystopian future where sexual orientation is legislated and people who don’t conform are persecuted.

Welcome, Patricia.

###

Can you tell me a little about yourself? For instance, do you have to have a day job as well as being a writer?

I live and work in northern Alberta Canada where I am teach high school English and run a writer’s guild after school for teenagers who love to write. 

When you aren’t writing, is there any other creative activity you enjoy? Have you ever written about it?

I love to read. I deem that act very creative as my mind merges with the writer’s characters and I become the people I read about. My first protagonist, John Connolley from A New Dawn Rising was a big reader. I also studied mime when I was younger and my students still get me to act like a Gorilla for them. I have performed this silly Gorilla routine (stolen from – and nowhere near as good as – Shields and Yarnell) every year seven times a year for over twenty-one years. When I wrote Hell Hounds of the High School I made the English teacher in that book a mime turned educator like myself and wrote her doing the Gorilla as a gift to my students. I love to cook so Katherine from A New Dawn Rising is an exceptional cook. I played basketball when I was younger (but I was never any good at it) so Todd Middleton (and his father) played basketball.

What are you reading? Fiction or non-fiction? Can you recommend something that you wished you’d written yourself?

Currently I am re-reading Anna Karina by Leo Tolstoy. He is an amazing writer. I’ve read War and Peace Twice, as well. I love Charles Dickens’ work, Jane Austen, Wilke Collins, George Elliot and William Shakespeare. Ken Follett is one of my more modern favourites, especially his Pillars of the Earth! I love Robert Jordan’s Wheel of Time Series, and his historical fiction. I am a huge fan of James Clavell and love teaching his novel King Rat. If I could recommend but one of these works – yikes, that is a tough call – but, since it is also the one I wish I had written then that book would be Romola by George Elliot! I was completely daunted by the opening chapters of this novel. I remember having to reread the first ten chapters before I could fully understand the logic of her writing and begin to make headway in understanding plot and character flow. This was such a reading challenge for me that when I finally got the sense of what was happening and to whom I was so thrilled that the novel has become one of the loves of my life! There is nothing better than overcoming what at first seemed like an insurmountable obstacle.

In that crucial inspiration stage of a new story which comes first? Plot, situation or character?

Character. Everything begins and ends with character for me. I write about people not events. Events occur because people act. Action is critical because someone is committing the act. Setting serves the character; plot occurs because the character wants or needs something and must act to obtain it. All my work is character driven.

Do your characters arrive fully fledged and ready to fly or do they develop as you work with them?

My characters begin as individuals I have only just met. He (or she) is striking, fascinating and I want to get to know him (or her). In that sense they are fully fleshed out I just don’t know it yet as I have yet to build a relationship. The writing process is that relationship growth.

Do you have a crisp mental picture of them or are they more a thought and a feeling than an image?

Tough question. Yes and no. I can usually describe a character’s physical appearance early on in the writing process but that may change after I get to know the indicidual better. My characters are feelings they way someone I love is a feeling but as concrete in my mind as the people in my life are concrete in the flesh.

Is there any genre you would love to write, ditto one you would avoid like a rattlesnake?

I love writing historical fiction. My novel writing career began with A New Dawn Rising, set in 1809 near Savannah Georgia. I loved the challenge of creating characters of a different era, a world I have never lived in and can only know through imagination and education. The research was fascinating. Ironically, this is also what I loved about writing Hadrian’s Lover a work set in the future. Again, I will never live in the time my novel is set but I enjoyed creating this potential future and doing the research necessary to help me postulate and create a future setting on this planet. 

 I honestly don’t know what genre I’d avoid. I see all of my books as having a romance edge as writing about people means writing about feelings and love often comes into the picture. But I don’t think I’d ever write a full out romance. Still, never say never as life is a constant flux. I may change my mind down the road.

What inspired you to write a story with such a strong theme as Hadrian’s Lover?

Hadrian’s Lover came to me in a nightmare. I remember waking up in a sweat, utterly terrified. I had dreamt that I was living in a society that hated heterosexuals and was hiding my true identify just to fit in. When I awoke I immediately expressed my relief over it having just been a dream and that everything was normal and okay. That was when I realized that everything wasn’t normal and okay, leastwise not for my LGBT* students.

Since my second year of teaching students have been coming out to me. I am seen as a safe zone, someone they can talk to about who they are without judgment. I love all my students and just knowing that so many teens suffer, actually live their day-to-day lives in the horror that I experienced from one short dream, inspired me to write this book. I choose to write about straight men living in a gay world as my observations show that gay men suffer from extreme abuses. I do not wish to underscore the suffering of lesbians but my observations have shown men to be very hard upon gay men. From my perspective I have observed that coming out and living an open gay life in the high school is slightly easier for lesbians than it is for gay men.

 I have turned the table on our cultural and religious attitudes towards the LGBT community making heterosexuality abhorrent. It is my hope that Hadrian’s Lover will provide my readers a vicarious understanding of the abuses we heap on our LGBT mothers and fathers, brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles.

Villains are incredibly important in fiction since they challenge the main protagonists and give them something to contend with beyond the tension of a developing relationship. The cruel sea. The serial killer. The bigoted society. What sort of villains do you prize?

I prize the villain who is human, the man (or woman) who acts because he or she truly believes what he is doing is right, just, necessary. These characters are complex, very real and terrifying. They frighten me because it is an axiom in our society that one should act on their beliefs regardless of what others think – and yet, what if those actions are harmful? What if what I truly believe is right is actually wrong? What if my views say gay men are disgusting, horrid creatures that deserve to die. What if my views are that all Jewish people are the cause of all our woes and should be exterminated? What if my views are that all Tutsis are cockroaches and be chopped to death with machetes? You see, these people act fully aware of their crimes but do not view them as crimes. Ironically, they see wanton murder as a benefit to mankind. They also frighten me because the very opposite side of that coin is to act knowing you are right regardless of public opinion even if it means fighting a war to stop men like Hitler and war means death – the death of soldiers and the death of innocents. It is the human paradox – the human conundrum where the villain is the hero and the hero the villain.

Could we please have an excerpt of something?

 How long of an excerpt would you like? Something risky? 

Salve!

Masturbation Rules

HNN—Melissa Eagleton Reporting

Earlier this week, we had quite the heated debate over the topic for tonight’s Salve! In all honesty, I was at first uncomfortable about discussing such an issue so openly on air. I suggested this topic be best left to the education system to deal with. Hadrian’s Sex Education Curriculum is one of the finest worldwide. However, my producer pointed out, quite correctly, that this topic is not something meant only for our children. Parents, too, need some coaching—not in terms of “how to”; most of us can figure that out quite nicely on our own—but rather in terms of how to talk to our children about this issue. So today’s topic is masturbation and what to do if you accidentally walk in on your child—doing—ahem—pleasuring him—or herself privately.

Often when a parent accidently walks in on his or her child masturbating, the moment becomes one filled with consternation and embarrassment for both parties. What is really important in this situation is not to allow our initial emotional reaction to take precedence. Allowing discomfiture and disquiet to dictate the now critical discussion, or worse yet, to allow these emotions to avoid the issue all together, is not instrumental in helping your child develop a healthy attitude toward his or her body and the act of masturbation. Clearly this is an act everyone has committed once or twice, perhaps many times over. The old religious myth fanatics used to scare their sons’ hands away from their penises. “You’ll go blind” is, as my producer succinctly put it, “hooey.” Therefore, the question begging to be asked is: Why do some parents still react badly upon the discovery of their child’s masturbatory acts? When we respond unfavorably to such a natural instinct, we are perpetuating the folly that masturbating is sinful. Again, to quote my producer, “That very notion is absurd.” As the parents of Hadrian’s children, we need to remind ourselves that masturbation does not hurt anyone! On the other hand, it is actually beneficial to both body and spirit. Masturbation is a great stress reliever, and the release of sexual tension is something every single human body demands.

In fact, masturbation is a great sexual alternative for our youth. The startling rate at which our teens become sexually active suggests the need for proactive measures. What better pro-active measure than masturbation? It allows your son or daughter to release built-up sexual tension without sexual bonding and forming of intense relationships prior to being emotionally ready. For, as we all know, the body is often ready for sexual release long before the average person is emotionally ready for a serious relationship.

Still, it is important that your child understand how masturbation, colloquially referred to as “petting the kitty” or “lengthening the leather,” is a very private act and not one to be shared with others—and no doubt, many a parent has been embarrassed by the accidental discovery of his or her child’s private affairs. But it is critical you step past these uncomfortable feelings—wait out enough time to allow the embarrassment to abate, and then discuss the issue with your teen. This is critical. Children of Hadrian should never feel wrong for committing such a natural, useful act. Murad Nasser, Hadrian’s top medical practitioner, recommends that we orgasm at least once a day, even if one does not have a sexual partner. Masturbation, he says, is a necessary act, possibly even vital to maintaining good physical and emotional health.

In fact, parents, don’t wait for that accidental moment; be pro-active. Sit your son or daughter down today and hold a frank discussion about this matter. Let your child know that it is okay to masturbate—just remember, it is a very private act that should never be expressed in public. As well as ensuring your child understands and accepts masturbation as a natural act, make sure he or she knows masturbation is something best done alone.

Vale!

###

Author Bio:

Patricia Marie Budd was born and raised in Saskatchewan, Canada. She lived in Japan where Patricia taught English as a Foreign Language for two years. In her early twenties she studied mime in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and then later in life renewed her interest in physical theatre by studying with Phillip Gaulier in London, England in 96/97. Her current residence is in Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada where she has been teaching High School English since 1991. Her extra-curricular involvement includes running a writer’s guild for young adults.

 For Patricia writing is a passion. She has been writing since early childhood when, in grade five, she wrote a short play and performed it for her peers. The controversial quality of her writing was evident even then as her teacher shut the show down. Much of Patricia’s writing has been theatrical in nature, having a one act play produced in The Rhubarb Festival’s Special Event in 1984. She has also participated in a number of playwriting labs under the tutelage of Sharon Pollock. In 1998 she was a part of the Alberta Playwriting Committee. In 2003 Patricia’s play The Aging Philosopher received honorable mention at the Alberta Playwright’s Network Playwriting competition.

 Patricia’s first novel A New Dawn Rising is set near Savannah, Georgia in the early 1800’s. John Connolly, a white man born into slavery, struggles to purchase his freedom. Hell Hounds of High School, released in 2011, is set in northern Alberta, Canada where veteran teachers battle with new millennium students. Her soon to be released third novel, Hadrian’s Lover is set in a future dystopia where heterosexuality is illegal.

 For more information about Patricia Marie Budd’s work please refer to her web site: www.patriciamariebudd.com.

https://www.facebook.com/HadriansLover

https://twitter.com/pmbudd

http://hellhoundsofhighschool.authorsxpress.com/

 

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Sweet Saturday, how I love thee. It’s so nice to wake up with the knowledge that I don’t actually HAVE to get out of bed other than for purposes of comfort ALL DAY if I don’t want to. In fact I would jolly well stay in my pit and read until lunchtime only the other half tends to get testy. Anyhow – I have been reading. What have I been reading? Something very good!

My rec is a bit of a different format this week because not only am I recommending a book but I’m offering a copy of it to a commenter as well. Just don’t comment HERE. Please follow this link and comment on that post for a chance to win a lovely copy of Junk by one of my favourite authors,  Jo Myles.

Junk tells the story of Jasper, a university librarian with a compulsion to love and take care of old and unwanted books. He cherishes them and the information they contain, placing them reverendly in the proper places in his house. He is a bibiophile in the purest sense of the word but, hoo boy has it taken over his life. When a book avalanche blocks his living room and he is reduced to living in his bathroom, kitchen, bedroom and the teensy corridors between tottering piles of books he decides to get help.

Enter Lewis, professional declutterer, upon whom Jasper had his very first school boy crush, Lewis’s spikey sister, Carole and a cast of memorable secondary characters.

The book is warm, funny and hopeful, with a message that the first step to recovery from a BIG problem is to admit that you have one.

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Fall Into Romance Blog Hop

“Oh season of mellow mists and fruitfulness!” as the poet said.

Or, as we say more frequently round here, “Oh, bollocks, it’s raining again!”.

Autumn is here – Fall, if you live across the pond – and I think it’s a good time to count the summer blessings before girding our loins for the winter blight. The “Fall Into Romance” blog hop from TRR is a grand way to do this because it allows me to pay tribute to one of the excellent books that have made this somewhat difficult summer bearable.

Here’s my choice:

Junk by Josephine Myles

Letting go is the first step to healing…or bringing it all crashing down.

The Bristol Collection, Book 1

When an avalanche of books cuts off access to his living room, university librarian Jasper Richardson can no longer ignore the truth. His ever-growing piles of books, magazines and newspapers can no longer be classified as a “collection”. It’s a hoard, and he needs professional help.

Professional clutter clearer and counselor Lewis Miller thinks he’s seen it all, but even he has to admit he’s shocked. Not so much by the state of Jasper’s house, but by the level of attraction he still feels for the sexy bookworm he remembers from school.

What a shame that Lewis’s ethical code forbids relationships with clients. As Jasper makes slow but steady progress, though, the magnetic pull between them is so strong even Lewis is having trouble convincing himself it’s a temporary emotional attachment arising from the therapeutic process.

Jasper longs to prove to Lewis that this is the real deal. But first he’ll have to lay bare the root of his hoarding problem…and reveal the dark secret hidden behind his walls of books.

~
This is a delicious read on many levels. For a start I could very much identify with Jasper’s plight. I come from a family that finds it very hard to throw anything useful away, especially books, so our level of clutter is what most people would find completely unacceptable. [However, it’s noticeable that those folks with the lovely tidy minimalistic houses are often on my doorstep asking for help with school projects or the right type of fuse wire or a corset bone or two and some fossils or a book about the battle of Blenheim or ‘have you got any chain mail’.] Poor Jasper can’t say no when an unloved book says “Take me home” and has reached the point where he has rooms he can no longer enter due to book avalanches. He needs help and lovely Lewis, with the assistance of his in yer face sister, Carole, is just the guy to provide it.
Lewis has his own problems, not least one of the funniest families I’ve ever enjoyed reading. Lewis’s Mum and Dad are brilliant and his family life is one to make me curl up in embarrassment while hooting with laughter.
There are moments of pure comedy, potential danger – did you know people regularly get buried alive by their hoards? – fabulous secondary characters, genuine pathos and Big Secrets.

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Suicide Prevention Week

We are all familiar with bog hops. Normally they are in celebration of something fun – a holiday season, or a type of fiction, or a type of character. But this week – Sunday 8th September to Saturday 14th September is Suicide Prevention Week and I am taking part in a bog hop to inform, educate and raise awareness of the risk faced by young people and, sadly, in particular young LGBT people.

 Some figures – these are for the UK but they are just as scary everywhere else:

In the United Kingdom 12 young men kill themselves each week.

57% of gay/bisexual boys have seriously contemplated taking their own lives.

16% of gay/bisexual boys have attempted to take their own lives [3 times the percentage of straight kids].

20% of lesbians have attempted to take their own lives [4 times the percentage of straight kids].

Bullying at school and at home leading to depression, loss of friends and support groups, substance abuse as a substitute for affection, fear of being rejected by family, fears of rejection justified, homelessness,  all these contribute to these horrifying statistics.

There are places one can go for help, The Samaritans, for instance, but it is reported that 60% of suicidal young men state they would not seek help and 67% say they feel there is nowhere that can offer them the emotional support they need.

That so many people are driven to despair simply because of who they are is tragic. Despite legislation that has improved equality and given some redress against harassment or discrimination, our LGBT citizens have to face it everyday in small unkindnesses that build up and up to an unmanageable burden.

What can we do – we ordinary people without medical qualifications or psychological degrees? What can we do if we don’t know anyone we suspect of being in such a state that they need real hands on help to get them through a bad patch?

Small things are good too.

We can think before we speak and if we hear someone else speaking out of turn – “Eww that’s so gay” – we can say “please don’t say that”. If we hear or witness a homophobic phrase or act, we can tell the perpetrator that they are out of order. If we see something we suspect to be bullying going on, we can step in as a witness. Anyone can do this. You don’t need to be a martial artist. You don’t need to be fit. You don’t need to be young. Just be aware that it happens and ready to step in if you see it. And remember, just because someone looks serene as a swan on the surface, it doesn’t mean they aren’t paddling frantically against the undertow.

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Saturday Recs

Saturday again so time for my recommendation. This is part of the SSnS blog hop – click on the graphic to go the list of other participating authors and their exciting snippets.

Last week’s recommendation was for Finders Keepers, a contemporary romance with some archaeology, action and adventure from Chris Quinton – yummy! This week I’m heading way back into history when the things we dig up and cherish now were made and casually used as every day items.

Brothers of the Wild North Sea by Harper Fox

Set in the 8th century on the North Sea between Northumbria and Denmark it tells the tale of conflict between Saxons and the Danish vikingr, represented by Caius, son of a Romano-British warlord and a warrior in his own right but now a monk in the community of Fara on an island off the coast of Northumberland, and Fenris, son of Sigurd, leader of a viking clan desperate to discover a great treasure.

There is a delicious detail and lyricism in Harper Fox’s prose that brought the time and the landscape alive. That alone would have entertained me, but there’s also comedy – Caius has a lovely dry wit – a superb depiction of the difference in mind sets between the more reflective Caius and the death or glory Fenris, various alarms and excursions, very real danger, grief and passion. As usual, highly recommended.

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