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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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Author Harvest ‘bales up’ Dianne Blacklock w/ giveaway

Author HarvestFan girl moment!

Please join me in welcoming the incomparable Dianne Blacklock (who is also apparently known as ‘the platter queen’!).

Di has not only whipped up “Jenn’s #1 fave platter treat” (dips, cheese, crackers, olives and whatnot, with a glass of wine, of course) she’s also giving away a copy of her new book … WOOT! (no, it’s not called woot – that’s just me being excited.

The new release is called The Best Man (and with four gorgeous grownup sons I reckon Di has lots of research material at hand).

To be in the draw for a copy of The Best Man, read on…  
Dianne Blacklock

At home… 

My mum used to say garden gnomes make a house a home! Are you loud and proud in your love of garden gnomes at home – or a closet gnomer?

I have a casual relationship with gnomes, we’re just friends. That’s all I’m prepared to say at this time.

(Oh, is that a gnome I can see in the garden behind you?)

(LOL – tricked ya!)

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

I’d love to have a lemon tree. I have a slice of lemon in my tea every morning, I use lemon in a lot of dishes, I even like a wedge of lemon in the odd beer! I’d love to be able to go out back and pick a lemon off my very own tree.

(Hmm, I believe I have a Corona rolling around in the bottom of the fridge somewhere – AND a lemon tree. Back in a jiffy!)

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

Fresh fruit and vegies, yoghurt, eggs, juice, the aforementioned dips and cheeses, soda water, wine of course … Not very interesting, but you have helped me write my shopping list for tomorrow!

🙂 🙂 🙂

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

I don’t need to sort it, it’s almost entirely black! My sons laugh when I come home from shopping – ‘Oh, you bought a black top just like all your other black tops.’ I have been trying to be more adventurous lately, and I’ve gone a little crazy with green accessories. I even bought a green dress last summer. Unheard of.

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

Black trackies, black long-sleeved top, black socks … (told you). As the day has grown colder, I’ve added an oversized beige cardie, and I’m wearing the comfy but crazy striped booties my niece brought me back from Guatemala. I’m all class.

(Beige?! You crazy girl!)

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?Dianne Blacklock The Best Man

George Clooney’s villa in Como. As long as he was in it. Which is not really housesitting, but hey, that’s my answer and I’m sticking with it.

(George Clooney has a villa in Como? He just got even better!)

Country curiosities…

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

I have a big head, so hats always sit too high. My ideal hat is adjustable.

(Okay everyone, admit it. You all scrolled up to check out a big head on Dianne’s author pic just then, didn’t you?)

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

Gosh … I’m a Pisces, so I guess I’d be a fish. Lucky I like the water.

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

I look forward to a time when chickens will be free to cross roads without having their motives called into question.

(Jennifer Scoullar will agree with that. She’s a chook rescuer!)

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?

Probably not until I was able to quit my real job, around the time my third novel came out. After that I had no choice but to put ‘author’ under occupation!

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

There’s a quote I relate to from Thomas Manne – ‘Writers are people for whom writing is harder.’ It’s hard work to do it well, and you never feel satisfied, always thinking it could have been better.  The constant self-doubt is tough, but it’s par for the course.

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

I’ve always wanted to be asked how I feel about garden gnomes. You’ve made my dreams come true, Jenn!

(The least I could do given your inspiration and support regarding my own dreams – not to mention the number of times I boldly compared myself to you in my submissions to publishers! There … I’ve confessed!)

Fun stuff …

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

I hope she thanks me for bringing her to life, perhaps wishing that I hadn’t put her through the ringer quite so much. But no, she doesn’t want me to hang around with her, she wants me to leave her alone so she can get it on with [insert love interest here].

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?

Most of the people I admire, I’d like to hang out with them, not be them! Though I wouldn’t mind changing places with Gina Rinehart, and give away as much of her money as I could manage in 7 days!

(Maybe take Loretta Hill with you. She knows her mining!)

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

Oh, it’s a bad idea to give me the floor without interruption – all you’d get from me is a stream of babble, and I’m not too sure that would be entertaining. I can’t sing or play an instrument, but I can talk. Under water.

(Under water – That’s the pisces thing again, I guess!)

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

I have no idea … just how old do you think I am?

(Shall I scroll up to that author pic again and have a stab? Probably not!)

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

Noel Coward said ‘Very few people are completely normal really, deep down in their private lives.’ So I reckon I’m as weird as the next person – we’re all fives.

Wonderful! Thank you Di – for being so supportive and for your lovely comment about my House for all Seasons.

Check out all Dianne’s novels here (oh, and do yourself a favour while you’re there. Sign up for her newsletter – it’s a Lane Moriaty, Ber Carroll and Di Blacklock newsletter. Fabulous reading.)

Now to WIN the Best Man … Leave a comment below. You have two weeks from the post date. Winner chosen at random and announced here.

And the winner is …. (chosen by the random number generator) Peta!

Check out the full list of Author Harvest posts.

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A Guessing Game, A Book To Win, A Blog To Hop

While many, many people have inspired me in some weird and wonderful ways over the years, there is a group of Australian authors who have definitely influenced my writing.

Call it cocky, quirky or crazy, I used to amuse my ‘unpublished’ self by writing an author into each novel, never imagining:

a) I would be published and

b) the author – with title – would escape an editors red pen.

Guess what? I AM published (soon) and the author’s name DID stay in the final version of House for all Seasons, out March 1. (Pre-order here).

But which author gets a mention?

HINT: It can’t be Lisa Heidke and Bronwyn Parry as I have already included them in novels yet to be published — like this.

From The Simmering Season (coming 2014)

Maggie refused to get up before she’d read at least three chapters of her latest Lisa Heidke novel. The author had a knack of portraying motherhood and the every day, showing real woman struggling to balance work, family and dreams, just like Maggie. Only in fiction there was a guarantee of happy ever after.

Bronwyn Parry features in one of my favourite (and earliest) works – which means it may never see the light of day!)

From MOSAIC…

Throwing open the flap on her knapsack, Gina took a quick inventory: denim shorts; a black, cheesecloth top; beach towel; the super, scrunch-it-up-all-you-like jacket she’d owned for years; her new digital camera and the latest Bronwyn Parry novel.

So… are you a smartie? Can you correctly guess which author made it into House For All Seasons?

Any one who leaves a correct guess on this post today (Thursday 24-01-13) will automatically get one extra entry in my Australia Day Blog Hop Book Giveaway -starting Friday 25 at 12 noon (AESD) – on this blog. So leave your guess now and pop back on the weekend, read the Australia Day Blog Hop post, and you can double your chance of winning.

If you want another hint, you will find the author’s name on this list (my ‘most read’ Goodreads data).