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Thirty Years Ago Today

May 1, 1984 …

This was life – on the road, on the adventure of a lifetime, working our way around the country in a truck and a tent, no thought as to when we might stop or return to our Sydney suburb homes.

With $400 in the bank my family thought I was crazy. (What was a hairdresser/makeup artist going to do without a hairdryer and mirror for two or more years?)

The trip lasted almost three years, only coming to a close due to family illness.

Here I am thirty years later and the adventure has never ended. The things I’ve been able to do and accomplish have been a wild ride. (I’ve dined with queens, protected princes, and escorted stars – big and small. I’ve swum with crocs, jailed crooks, and hunted down ghosts. I’ve raised money for kids, made a difference where I can and right now I’m trying to be the best author I know how to be. (And if you’ve read the dedication in my latest book, Simmering Season, you’ll know who has helped me find my way through life.)

I am a great believer in sliding doors (in fact Sliding Doors is a favourite movie). Had I not done this, that or the other I would not be where I am now…

And where am I now?

Starting all over again, only with a little more luxury this time. (More on that later.) The house is on the market (wanna buy a house?) and my shiny new Southern Cross caravan is being collected later this month.

Soon, hopefully, it will be time to discover more small towns to inspire new stories.

Stay tuned. Life will start to get very interesting – a writer living in and under the southern cross! I may even make it to a town near you.

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Jenn’s not-so-perfect cover!

You’ve all seen the fabulous cover for my April 1 release – Simmering Season. Not even the lovely Roberta and Larissa (Simon & Schuster) — responsible for the real thing — know about this ‘other’ cover.

When Dianne Blacklock and I were ‘talking’ on her blog recently about our planning/plotting process, I explained that part of my creative process includes making up titles and tag lines to get me into a story. In the early days I would go so far as to design a visual to stick on the wall. (I dug this pretend cover from the archives the other day and had a giggle.)

It seems Maggie/Magpie was always going to find her way into a story and she finally has – in Simmering Season.

Maggie’s story (a vague resemblance) began close to a decade ago. At the time I was toying with a book series using bird titles: magpie – the protector, bower bird – the collector, koel – the home wrecker, kookaburra – sadness behind the smile. Get the idea? (Hmm, you can see why that bird brain concept didn’t get me anywhere with a publisher!!!)

But I was stuck on the magpie idea. I love the birds and I knew there was some merit in a magpie storyline: territorial, maternal, desirous of human interaction, the magpie’s courtship tends to be devoid of all the drama that accompanies so many matings (dance, song, quirks). In fact, the female magpie will generally build her nest alone and often in the most exposed parts of the tree with full exposure to the sun and sky – a kind of bold strategy to prevent ambush. Mother magpies do it all.

Enter Simmering Season’s lead character – nicknamed Magpie – bold and protective:  a devoted mother, daughter and wife grappling with her responsibilities as well as being the reluctant town publican and community event organiser for the town’s centenary and school reunion.

Lucky for me (and Maggie) my lovely publishers have a better idea about book covers which means I can now leave the visual creative stuff to them so I can focus entirely on the story telling (while finding new ways to procrastinate – namely Facebook and Twitter).

But I thought you might like to know a little about my Maggie.

As in House for all Seasons, my female leads don’t necessarily fit the fiction heroine mould. Maggie, in particular, is not strong or brave. She is not rescuing anyone or saving the day; Maggie Lindeman is lucky to save herself. She’s far from perfect, desperate, but proud, the kind of everyday woman I hope resonates with readers, much like Poppy, Sara, Amber and Caitlin in House for all Seasons.

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I’m #5 – Top 10 Best Selling Debut Novels 2013

Well, well, well…

Blow me down! I am #5 best selling author on the official Nielsen Bookscan list 2013. (The folk at Nielsen collect all bookshop sales info – printed books – to rank and report on sales across Australia.)

And a pretty impressive list it is too …

 

 

Not hard to guess numbers 1 and 2, but to see so many friends and acquaintances sharing the top 10 with me is mind blowing. (Let me bold and highlight that, in case you miss it!)

1. Burial Rites – Hannah Kent
2. The Rosie Project – Graeme Simsion
3. Thornwood House – Anna Romer
4. Redstone Station – Therese Creed
5. House for all Seasons – Jenn J McLeod
6. Ryders Ridge – Charlotte Nash
7. Be Careful What You Wish For – Gemma Crisp
8. Walking on Trampolines – Frances Whiting
9. Fractured – Dawn Barker
10. The Russian Tapestry – Banafsheh Serov

I will try and feature all these authors on my blog sometime during the year. Maybe I can get them over for a bar yarn and beer nuts in the Calingarry Crossing hotel!

Right now I am going to get a sharp object and burst the bubble (and the big head – before it gets bigger) and get back to my writing. Book four in my Seasons Collection is on the plotting board and I am very happy about that.

To my lovely readers – thank you for embracing House for all Seasons. I hope you enjoy Simmering Season just as much – maybe more. I am, as yet, undecided which book I love the most. I think… maybe… it’s the one I’m writing right now! 🙂