Posted on 20 Comments

#WriteRoundOz w/ Annie Seaton and Kakadu Sunset

Kakadu SunsetAnnie Seaton has penned a winner.

I don’t have to say much—this book will sell itself.

Kakadu Sunset is one of those stories — a stand out cover with a real crowd-pleaser plot, set in the most well-known and intriguing places in Australia.

This is a very contemporary story that sees corruption in politics collide with the environment, which I’m guessing Annie had fun researching. From the helicopter scenes to the vivid descriptions of Kakadu, the authenticity within these pages took me back to my own time spent working in Kakadu, some years ago. (And I have to say… I cheered after reading the croc scene.)

A prolific author in the romance genre, with multiple ebooks online, Kakadu Sunset sees Annie Seaton in bricks and mortar bookshops for the first time, right alongside other great Aussie fiction. (Okay, so her and I are not side by side – yet. But if you manage to do a little shelf-elfing and get a picture of Annie’s books and one of mine (see below), do share.

GIVEAWAY NOW CLOSED

Or see Read Round Oz’s Q&A about Annie’s camping/research trip to Kakadu:

There’s nothing better than good Aussie fiction.

Thanks for coming home to the country… To five-star Aussie fiction.

Jenn J
book-House-194x300  book-Simmering-194x300book-Season-194x300CLICK HERE for more books…

Or find more great Aussie fiction at:

The Australian Rural Romance Readers’ Portal

Posted on 3 Comments

Bar Yarns w/ Katherine Howell

Katherine HowellIt’s hard to pin a good woman down (especially the busy author kind) but I’ve managed to persuade Katherine Howell into the bar for a yarn!

Here’s a beer coaster, KH. How about you scribble down the blurb for your new release.

My latest book is the seventh in my crime series about Sydney homicide detective Ella Marconi, and it was released on 1st Feb.

Two female paramedics murdered in a month. Is it coincidence, or are they victims of a serial killer? Detective Ella Marconi isn’t sure, but goes hard after her key suspects, including police officer John Morris. But each turn of the case throws up more questions and entanglements, and Ella and her partner, Detective Murray Shakespeare, struggle to find the truth among the lies. Ella also attempts to balance work and her relationship with Dr Callum McLennan, which is both growing both stronger and more difficult as they face Callum’s mother’s disapproval and the anniversary of his cousin’s murder. Meanwhile, Carly Martens – paramedic and close friend of the second victim – conducts her own investigation. She’s certain that her fellow paramedic Tessa Kimball is hiding something, and her refusal to let it go puts her, Tessa, and even Ella into more danger than Carly could ever imagine.Deserving Death

Well done, now grab a pew. What can I get you to go with your beer nuts? (Shandy? Wine Spritzer? Pink Lemonade?)

A:   I’m on the hard stuff – Coke please  🙂

Hey, did you hear the one about … 

A:   There’s only one joke I can ever remember.

What’s brown and sticky?

A stick.

Classic, no?

I’m a beer nut nut! What bar snack would you be and why?

A:  Salt and vinegar chips. Flavour like a punch in the mouth. Just like me  🙂

(Now I want some.)

Ahh, that beer hit the spot. Let me slip a drink coaster under your glass while you tell us—on a scale of 1 to 10—as a writer are you a messy desker or tidy desker?Katherine Howell's desk

A:   Well, I’d like to claim a six but it’s probably more like eight. But I know where everything is!

(Awww, pup-pieeeeeeee – and a cat!)

Okay, KH, The publican offers you free drinks all night if you will:

  • Dance to Gangnam Style
  • Sing John Denver’s ‘Take me Home Country Roads’ on the Karaoke machine
  • Spend an hour washing dishes

Which do you choose?

A:   dishes, dishes!!

(Chicken! Chicken!)

Time to liven the place up. Got a buck? We can crank up the old jukebox in the corner. You get to pick three songs.

  1.  Africa by Toto.
  2.  Stand Back by Stevie Nicks.
  3.  What a fool believes by the Doobie Bros.

Speaking of chickens… An author, an agent and a chicken walk into the bar… how do you know which one crossed the road?

A:  They all crossed it together. As the old saying goes, wherever there’s an agent there’s an author, and wherever there’s an author there’s a chicken.

There’s a stapler on the bar. Tell me what it’s doing there.

A:  For making coaster art during conversational lulls.

(I hope you don’t mean ours! No lull in ours – ever!)

The pub is the heart of a small town and most locals would be lost without one. What are three things you’d be lost without?

  1.  My partner
  2.  My cat and dog – one of them is standing right now on my desk staring at me – yes, the dog! When the cats’s on the desk staring at me she prefers to sit.
  3.  My family and in-laws.

There are a few good prizes up for grabs in the bar jackpot. Do you have a lucky number? Your lucky number is:

3.  Just on a whim.

Last drinks, my friend! It’s been great. But before we go, tell us how we can find out more about you and your writing/books.

Website:  www.katherinehowell.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Katherine-Howell-Author/145144028865590

Twitter: KHowell_author

[Tweet “@KHowell_author is at the bar having a yarn about her latest, Deserving Death.  @PanMacmillanAus”]

In the meantime, watch out … It’s on the way …

This storm season, in Calingarry Crossing, a perfect storm is heading Maggie Lindeman’s way.  

Find out more, right hereSimmering Season: April 1, 2014

For emergency alerts and warnings for Simmering Season, subscribe to Jenn J McLeod’s blog before you go, or LIKE her Facebook Page.

Posted on 30 Comments

Author Harvest ‘bales up’ Deborah Burrows

Author HarvestI must say, the setting alone is wonderful in this author’s novels: wartime Australia – Perth WA. The stories are great and just look at the gorgeous covers.

The best news is, we have a copy of Taking A Chance to giveaway this week. See below for details.

Deborah BurrowsWelcome to the Harvest, Deborah.

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

It’s – ta da – a Thermomix orange cake. I adore my Thermomix.

(What the heck is a Thermomix? Sounds like we are back in the 1940’s again!)

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?

No gnomes, but a cement duck and two tin brolgas that are delightfully rusty and fall over in any strong wind. And because we live in Perth, the Fremantle Doctor does for them most afternoons in summer.

(Okay, you’d best explain The Fremantle Doctor in a comment!)

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

Avocados! We have a huge avocado tree that grows a fabulous crop of tiny little avos every year . . . and every year whatever fruit the Fremantle Doctor doesn’t blow away, the birds manage to knock off. Grrr.

(Damn this Doctor – whoever he is!)

If I came to your home and looked in the refrigerator, what would I find? Taking a ChanceA Stranger in my Street full cover SI.indd

Lots of left over soup, oodles of vegetables (because we have a weekly delivery of organic veges that we never seem to get through). And too much wine.

(And I assume the Fremantle Doctor character is a bit of a freeloader as well? Oh, and there is NEVER too much wine!)

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

Bluey green – to match my eyes. I adore that deep blue-green colour. And yes, sadly, I sort by colour twice a year and then watch as it all gets mixed up over the months in between.

(Woot! We have our first official sorter! Well, the first one to actually admit to sorting, think! Good on you, Deb . And may I say, that photo of you in red is just lovely.)

What are you wearing now? (Be honest!)

Comfy pyjamas in a sort of snowflake motif, red dressing gown and brown ugg boots – you had to ask!!

(Nothing lovelier than a lady in red!)

Whose home would you like to housesit and why?

Rivendell. Love those elves …

Country curiosities…

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

One that’s not too dressy and has a wide brim and can be scrunched up and thrown into a handbag or a suitcase. Our Perth sunshine can be a killer.

(Perhaps you need to see a doctor about that!)

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

A silver birch, because they’re so beautiful and remind me of Finland. And they grow in Bridgetown where we have a holiday cottage.

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

The plot demanded it.

(I’m disappointed, Deb. I was sure he was off to see that Fremantle Doctor!)

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 I had a phone call from my agent on my birthday two years ago, and she told me that Pan Macmillan had made an offer for my manuscript of A Stranger in my Street.

(Wow! I had a call from MY agent the day before my 50th. No wonder we clicked online.)

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Having to stop to eat, or sleep or go to the day job and not being able to just WRITE.

(Oh yeah!)

Fun stuff …

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

My family say that Meg (from A Stranger in my Street) is a lot like me so I suppose she’d like to spend time with me.

Nell (from Taking a Chance) is the sort of woman I’d like to be – taller and slimmer and braver and better looking, with much better fashion sense . . . Hmmm, Nell’s a kind person and she likes older women, so I think we’d get on, especially if I could help her out on one of her journalistic crusades.

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?

Elizabeth Bennett – I fell in love with Pemberley and Mr Darcy when I was sixteen. I’m sure I’d cope with them both for a week.

(I was kinda in love with Mr Darcy too–until he appeared as a 12 foot statue. Now he’s just creepy!)

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

Tell you all about Perth in World War 2 – I love to share my research, and most of it doesn’t get into the novels.

(I would LOVE that! I may break into my very own rendition of The Andrew Sister’s Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy!)

What food would you be?

Did I mention how good my orange cake is?

(No, but I am happy to try it!)

What was the best thing before sliced bread?

Porridge – hey, I’m part Scottish?

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

  1. Weapon
  2. Doorstop
  3. Something to amuse Jacob and Olive (the step-grandchildren)
  4. Paperweight
  5. Piece of contemporary art

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

I’m a lawyer who writes romantic murder mysteries set in World War 2 – my legal eagle friends think it’s 9.9. I think I’m about a 5.

How wonderful. Great Q&A, Deb. I loved Stranger in my Street. (Readers: see my Goodreads review.) All the very best with Taking A Chance.

Oh, what’s that? You are giving a copy away? Woo hoo!

Okay, readers (Aust) here is your chance. So take it!

Leave a comment and tell us which character you would want to see as a statue and in what situation. Deborah will pick a winner in 7 days from now.

Check it out here.

Find out more about Deborah and her stories www.deborahburrows.com.au