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Author Harvest ‘bales’ up Louise Reynolds

Start by telling me if it’s scones and tea or some other homemade delight you have whipped up for me today.

I’m not much of a dessert or cake cook, Jenn, so I’ve brought along some lovely, slightly stinky Milawa cheese, a crusty sourdough baguette and a bottle of wine. OK?

(Oh, gosh, okay. If I have to. Sound very much like what an Italian aristocrat might enjoy!)

At home…

My mum says garden gnomes make a house a home! Are you loud and proud in your love of garden gnomes at home, a closet gnomer or with a strict ‘no gnomes’ policy at your place?

Sorry but I’ve never liked the idea of men (real or otherwise) sitting in my front garden taking note of what time I get home and more importantly, what state I’m in.

(OMG! Now you have freaked me out. I never looked at gnomes that way before. But now you mention it…)

What vegetable (or fruit) have you always wanted to grow at home?

Broad beans. You can never buy them small enough to do some of the great recipes I see in cookbooks.

(Hmm, as a child I threw up when mum forced broadbeans in my mouth. Enjoy yours!)

If I came to your home and looked in the refrigerator, what would I find?

We shop daily for fresh food so the fridge just holds the basics: 2 or 3 cheeses, milk, wine, soda water, coke zero, pickles (several), maple syrup, eggs, olives, butter, marg, cream, various Asian sauces, chocolate.

If you sorted your wardrobe by colour, what colour would stand out? (Ahh, do you sort your wardrobe by colour?!)

No need for sorting. My wardrobe is a dark cavern of black.

(Well you must get more red because it looks stunning on you.)

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

Old jeans, long sleeve t-shirt, polar fleece top and granny shoes. Glam.

(What are granny shoes? They sound wonderfully comfy.)

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

I’d love to housesit ‘Charleston’, the gorgeous house in East Sussex lived in by the Bloomsbury set in the 20’s, 30’s and 40’s. It’s an intimate farmhouse full of colour, art, life and history. The art created, conversations held and love affairs pursued within those walls make it truly unique.

Country curiosities…

We love a sunburnt country (slip, slop, slap and all that). What’s your ideal hat? Or are you a boots person?

Definitely a hat person. I’ve got lots of knit caps and berets for Melbourne winters. My partner and I share a trilby found in a second hand store and I have an Akubra for trips to the outback.

If you were a tree (or animal) what kind of tree (animal) would you be?

A river red gum, my favourite tree.

(See! That’s because red looks good on you.)

Now for the big question… Why did the chicken cross the road?

There was a woman with a rotisserie spindle hot on her heels.

(LOL! Ouch!)

About you…

Your turning point: when was that point in your life that you realized that being an author was no longer going to be just a dream but a reality and a career?

I don’t know that there was a particular point in time. It was more a matter of knuckling down and doing something about a long-held dream.

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Starting every day. I’ve made procrastination into an art form.

If someone was to write your biography, what do you think the title should be?

‘Hic’

(Hey, that title has already been allocated to moi!)

Fun stuff…

If you could trade places with any other person for a week, famous or not famous, living or dead, real or fictional, with whom would it be?

Alisha Keys or a singer of that ilk. Someone with a superlative voice who makes us mere mortals just drop our jaws when she sings. You can see I have a very active imagination.

If I said to you, “Just entertain me for five minutes, I’m not going to talk,” what would you do?

I’d invite you to play charades and say ‘You go first.’

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

Gorgeous artisan baked loaves that you could cut in huge hunks.

Name 5 uses for a stapler that has not staple pins.

  1. Useful implement to bang in tent pegs (but possibly only in sand)
  2. Executive stress reliever (pulling that little slide thing back and forward, back and forward, back and forward…)
  3. Fun object to scare little nieces and nephews with (‘Hey, let me pierce your ears’)
  4. Vital and much-hyped component in art installation sold to national gallery
  5. Paint matt black and place in a quirky arrangement of similarly black-painted, useless objects on a white shelf. Watch your friends admire your creativity. Then send a picture to an online design blog

How weird are you? Rate yourself on a scale of 1 (not) to 10 (very).

I think I look about a 4. I’m probably more like a 7.

About… Her Italian Aristocrat, Louise Reynolds.

On a mission to buy a prestigious shoe company, Australian career girl, Gemma Parkinson, arrives in Italy determined to succeed. But when she falls ill, effortlessly handsome local aristocrat, Luca Andretti, is on hand. Suspicious about Gemma’s presence in his town, he offers to let her recuperate in his amazing palazzo. Surrounded by the lavish trappings of the rich – servants, designer clothes, fine food and wine – Gemma is completely out of her depth.

Intent on saving the town’s local industry, Brunelli Shoes, from foreign take-over, Luca throws every obstacle he can in Gemma’s path. Headstrong, savvy and equally determined to successfully wrestle the company away from him, Gemma fights Luca all the way.

But Luca’s life of privilege masks a private world of pain and Gemma has demons of her own. As they come to understand one another, their growing attraction starts getting in the way.

This moving love story involving two people from very different backgrounds is a delightful, contemporary romance in a gorgeous Italian setting.

Buy the book or find out more about the lovely Louise on her website. www.louisereynolds.com.au

 

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Author Harvest ‘bales’ up: Kylie Ladd

Kylie Ladd’s novels are real keepers. Lucky for readers she has a new one coming in April 2013 (Allen and Unwin). And another fabulous title too: Into My Arms. (Maybe now is a great time to catch up her last two novels: Last Summer and After the Fall.)

I caught up with this fellow wine-lover today and we talked boots, roots, and beavers.

Kylie, start by telling me if it’s scones and tea or some other homemade delight you have whipped up for me today.

Sadly, I don’t do homemade, unless homemade means made by the nice people who live at Coles. I’ll pour you a big glass of wine though, and after a while you’ll have forgotten about the scones.

(Scones? What scones? I’ll just grab some glasses.) 

At home…

My mum says garden gnomes make a house a home! Are you loud and proud in your love of garden gnomes at home, a closet gnomer or with a strict ‘no gnomes’ policy at your place?

Gnome be gone. We do, however, have two quite mad chickens in our backyard that provide at least as much colour and far more entertainment. Their names are Agnes and Rooney (blame my children for that) and they are Barnevelders- absolutely beautiful looking birds, but dumber than a box of hammers.

What vegetable (or fruit) have you always wanted to grow at home?

None! That’s what Coles is for! (Oh dear. Despite the chickens, I seem to be failing this whole country-vibe already.)

If I came to your home and looked in the refrigerator, what would I find?

Stuff from Coles. (NB. This is not a sponsored post. But it could be, Mr Coles. Hint.)

(I knew you looked familiar! *snigger*)

If you sorted your wardrobe by colour, what colour would stand out? (Ahh, do you sort your wardrobe by colour?!)

I sort *everything*. Of course I sort my wardrobe by colour… also style, function, season and shade. Blue.

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

An old Roots windcheater that I bought when we lived in Montreal for two years and is very comfy for writing in. Roots is a sportingwear company (the Canadian Nike, basically), whose logo is a beaver. Their marketing person clearly isn’t from Australia.

(So no puns about you beavering away on edits then, eh?)

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

Martha Stewart’s. I bet she sorts everything by style, function, season and shade too.

(Ah yes, she makes up EVERYTHING herself and is very creative in many way, but we won’t go there!)

Country curiosities…

We love a sunburnt country (slip, slop, slap and all that). What’s your ideal hat? Or are you a boots person?

Boots. I have a pair of Blundstones that I got when I was about 18, which was last century. I wear them all the time and they are the most comfortable things ever (right up there with the Roots windcheater). When I took them to London a few years ago I had people stop me on the street and ask if they could buy them. (True!)

(Boots? Roots? Beavers?  Only here on Harvest, folks!)

If you were a tree (or animal) what kind of tree (animal) would you be?

A horse. I love them. In fact, I thought I was a horse for about three years between the ages of 9 and 12- a bay called Tammy, after my first riding school horse. My ten year old daughter seems to have inherited the gene, and confided to me recently that she is a chestnut filly named Cinnamon. I am feeding her carrots and hoping it lasts right through high school.

(You will stop with the carrots if she starts turning orange though, won’t you?)

Now for the big question… Why did the chicken cross the road?

Our chickens are so very stupid I have no idea why they do anything. Yesterday a dragonfly buzzed near them while they were sitting together on the lawn. They jumped up in a panic and ran straight into each other. Crossing an entire road would be well beyond them.  

About you…

Your turning point: when was that point in your life that you realized that being an author was no longer going to be just a dream but a reality and a career?

When Mrs Whitla read out my first major work, “Peppy and Pip go to Boarding School” to an enraptured 3W when I was 8. Ok, possibly they weren’t enraptured, but I was. I’d written a whole NOVEL (10 pages at the back of my maths exercise book) and someone liked it!

(So you failed maths I take it?)

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

All of it. Starting, finishing, the bits in between, editing, re-writing, plotting, re-reading, doing promotion, reading reviews… it’s all unrelentingly difficult, interspersed with moments of abject gloom and self-loathing. But if it wasn’t such a challenge I don’t think I’d be drawn to it.

(Funny, my fave saying when someone asks me about the writing/publishing business is… Ignorance was bliss!)

If someone was to write your biography, what do you think the title should be?

Don’t die wondering. Or with a messy house.

What question have you always wanted to be asked in an interview? How would you answer that question?

What is your personal best for the 50m freestyle? (27.86. I’m still proud of that, but it never comes up.)

Fun stuff…

What does your protagonist think about you? Would he or she want to hang out with you, the author, his/her creator.

Hmm… I had four protagonists in my first novel, ten in my second (except one was dead), and six in my third. I suspect my protagonists wish I would just make up my mind.

If I said to you, “Just entertain me for five minutes, I’m not going to talk,” what would you do?

I’d bring out Agnes and Rooney, then pop a balloon behind them. Mayhem!

(ROFL, you crack me up – which makes me think about the eggs Angnes and Rooney would jettison after your balloon prank!)

What food would you be?

Belgian chocolate. Smooth. Seductive. Not too rich (hey, I’m an author).

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

You’d have to ask Coles.

Name 5 uses for a stapler that has not staple pins.

Just one: Excellent reason for my kids to nag me into taking them to Smiggle.

(We just got ourselves a Smiggle here. Woo hoo!)

How weird are you? Rate yourself on a scale of 1 (not) to 10 (very).

2 – Not at all weird. It’s the ones you least suspect who can get away with stuff.

You can find more about Kylie and her books on www.kylieladd.com.au  and do what I do… Follow her on Twitter: @kylie_ladd

Links to Booktopia:

http://www.booktopia.com.au/last-summer-kylie-ladd/prod9781742375014.html

 http://www.booktopia.com.au/after-the-fall-kylie-ladd/prod9781742372303.html

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Author Harvest Bonus Post: Dancing with Darcas – the sequined sequel!

We met Christine Darcas a few days ago when she joined  my Author Harvest.

I knew then that there had to be sequins in Christine’s closet!

Of course I was right and here she is — the all-dancing, multi-talented author of Dancing Backwards in High Heels and Spinning Out (and if you haven’t read these contemporary fiction novels you are missing out. The very first chapter of Spinning Out has one of the best characterisations of a pointy-nose old ballet teacher ever. So newbie writers in particular, check it out. (Dancing Backwards in Hight Heels: Amazon and iTunes and Spinning out:  Amazon and iTunes.)

Christine says, “the one in the ballgown is from the 2011 Crown ProAm championships where I competed with my instructor of six years. The second is from the 2007 Australian Championships when I was seriously competing with a peer.”

Apparently she still has the ballgown but doesn’t get to wear it much these days. (Although she says she’s tempted to wear it while vacuuming … just for a little excitement!)
Thanks for sharing Christine. Not just a dance sport champion, but an all-round good sport when blogging.