Posted on 15 Comments

I’m The Next Big Thing apparently!

TNBTBanana
Okay, I know this Next Big Thing thing is BIG, and even though I’m fond of my town emblem, the banana is probably NQR. (Oh, anyone familiar with edits will know those letters stand for ‘Not Quite Right’. And I should know as I am mid-edits for the very first time. NQR is now tattooed on my brain!)
So what is Next Big Thing?
It’s a kind of online chain letter (and who am I to break the chain, given we are two days out from the next Apocalypse).
Sara Foster (who took part in my Author Harvest blog – delightful woman) tagged me as part of The Next Big Thing. I get to tell you about my current book (see Q&A below) and then I drag tag four unsuspecting, gullible, naive, lovely, supportive, generous writer friends: Allison Tait, Cate Ellink, Kerrie Paterson and Lily Malone to do the same. Then we promote each other to billy-o. (That’s okay as I am particularly keen for you to get to know these ladies. All three have debut novels due out next year, like me. 🙂
So, without further excuses (or desperate measures to avoid this “Amway of the author network”) here goes…
1) What is the working title of your current/next book?
House for all Seasons – my debut novel – will be available March 1, 2013. The Simmering Season will follow 12 months later. (Both perfectly timed for Mother’s Day).
2) Where did the idea come from?
See inspiration answer – Q9
3) What genre does your book fall under?
Contemporary Australian fiction (and I love the tag line on my gorgeous cover “Small towns can keep big secrets”)
4) What actors would you choose to play the part of your characters in a movie rendition?
Oooh, what an exciting thought! Four strong females. Too easy…
Cute as a button Abbey Cornish (Sara), Tall, lanky kick-arse Cate Blanchett (Poppy), fiery, feminine and fabulous Nicole Kidman (Amber), all-around good egg, Toni Collette (Caitlin).
5) What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?
Four women, four unravelled lives. The truth will bind them forever. (Okay, so that’s two sentences. (Yes, I am author. I recognise that! But it’s my blog.)
6) Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?
The delightful Clare Foster (Curtis brown Literary Agency) sold my two books to the amazing Larissa Edwards, who heads up publishing at Simon & Schuster, Australia.
7) How long did it take you to write the first draft?
The first draft (50,000) words was courtesy of NaNoWriMo 2010.
8) What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?
I am influenced and encouraged by different books for the authors specific styles/strengths: Lisa Heidke’s witty dialogue; Posie Graeme-Evans’ stunning scene-setting, Sara Foster’s wicked weaving of plots and characters; Monica McInerney’s eclectic cast and clever characterisation; the mischievous Marian Keyes for the giggle factor, and Jodi Picoult’s tackling of real-life issues.
9) Who or what inspired you to write this book?
I remember it was early spring. I was sitting outside relishing the warmth on my face after a cold, cold winter and appreciating the different seasons we get to experience here in Australia.

The changing seasons inspire me. I love the contrast – and contrast makes for great characters and conflict. So I wanted to create four female characters as different as the seasons.

10) What else about the book might pique the reader’s interest?
Why, the blurb – of course!

Bequeathed a century-old house, four estranged friends return to their New South Wales hometown, Calingarry Crossing, where each must stay a season at the Dandelion House to fulfil the wishes of their benefactor, Gypsy.

But coming home to the country stirs shameful memories of the past, including the tragic end-of-school muck up day accident twenty years earlier.

Poppy, a tough, ambitions journo still craving her father’s approval;

Sara, a breast cancer survivor afraid to fall in love;

Amber, a spoilt socialite addicted to painkillers and cosmetic procedures;

Caitlin, a third generation doctor frustrated by a controlling family and her flat-lining life.

At the Dandelion House, the women will discover something about themselves and a secret that ties all four to each other and to the house – forever.

So here we are. The Next Big Thing is done and dusted. Quite painless (although maybe I haven’t got it quite right as I think I’ve been double tagged with Pamela Cook in the new year. But that’s okay. Looking forward to it.)
Over to you fellow DIGRITS: Lily, Kerrie and Cate.

15 thoughts on “I’m The Next Big Thing apparently!

  1. Can’t wait to read your book Jenn! I reckon it’ll be right up my alley! And I LOVE that tagline too 🙂

    1. Thank you Rachael, you are so wonderfully supportive and encouraging (which is great right now as I am mid-edits. Yes, I know, I am also blogging, but a girl has to do what a girl has to do….)

  2. Rachael has it spot on Jenn, ‘small towns have big secrets’ is brilliant. I’m so stoked for you looking at 2013 and all it will bring. Thank you for inviting me to be part of TNBT and double-thank you for telling me what NQR means. Now I shall feel in the know when I see it all over my file.

    1. I am bursting with … well right now too much red wine after too long editing 🙂 But thx Lily, I am sooooooo excited and I cannot wait to share the cover with you. Funny how we put out entire lives into a story but it’s the cover (which we have nothing to do with) that gets us crazy with excitement. I think it’s because it shows someone has ‘got it.’ They’ve got the story.

  3. Big congrats, Jenn. You’ve worked hard and well. Can’t wait to read it.

  4. That is a great tag line, Jenn, story sounds even better. Can’t wait to read it!

  5. Hurry up March 1st!

  6. […] called The Next Big Thing. I’ve read some great Q&As, one of which you’ll find right now at Come Home To The Country. It’s like an online literary chain letter. I don’t know where it started and I don’t know […]

  7. Thanks Jenn for decoding NQR… I was looking at the banana thinking, yeah, always thought that banana should be in Qld, and decided NQR was for North Queensland…hmm… what’s the “r” for? LOL

    But in my defence, I just had my mind in the sewer with Lily’s bogs!

    Thanks for the post and the tag. I’d better get cracking, huh?

    Cate xo

  8. Lovely post, Jenn. Big Pineapples, Big Bananas and Big Prawns are all part of the NSW/QLD landscape 🙂 And they are all NQR…

    Can’t wait to read ‘House for All Seasons’ 🙂

  9. Well, I hope you’re a fortune teller and my debut novel *is* due out next year!! Will have to think of the answers for my Next Big Thing interview.. After Xmas 🙂

    1. Aen;t you a Destiny girl? (Or an Escapeee!!!!!) Well, you had better get cracking because I’ve always said “good things happen to good people” and karma is always on the side of good people. In twelve months from now please let me know I was right. I am always right!!!!!!!

      1. Nope – does that mean I don’t need to do the interview??! 🙂

        1. Nice try. NO! Now get writing.

  10. […] in my The Next Bog Thing and her BOG answers were as good as her BIG ones). You can read Jenn’s here too. And keep an eye on Alison Tait and Kerrie Paterson for their […]

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