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#WriteRoundOz w/ Posie Graeme-Evans, Novelist & Producer (+ giveaway)

posie officeOkay McLeod’s Daughters fans.

Look where I am!

We can thank Posie Graeme-Evan’s for the McLeod’s Daughters series and, as I consider myself the lost McLeod Daughter, I’m happier than a butcher’s dog to be dropping in (fictionally-speaking) on Posie at her home in the picturesque Huon Valley, Tasmania. As well as her many TV successes, this multi-talented Australian treasure is also a brilliant novelist. (I had a wee fan girl moment a couple of years back. Here I am about to eat Posie, I think. But she was delightful… Short of stature, but delightful. 😉Posie S&S 2012

 

Posie, Posie, Posie, thank you for letting my park my rig outside your …

Dairy-come-chook-house.

Yes, really; when I first saw the farm, the old ex dairy, now my office, had 200 chooks in residence. Last year, Andrew (my very clever husband) took that smelly little shed and turned into the nicest office I’ve ever had. And when this photo (left) was taken, I’d just barrowed all that gravel to make that path, too!

posie paintingBy the way, this painting (left) was my Christmas present last year – “Heartland” by my dear friend, painter Stephanie Tabram.; just to remind me of the original inhabitants

 

And what’s that I see written on your ‘welcome mat’, Posie?

The cow is not in. (just for those very bad writing days)

 

I miss my HUGE refrigerator. If I looked in your refrigerator right now, what would I find?

When I’m writing? Not enough of anything (especially if Andrew’s busy on the farm, too.) We find ourselves making omelettes very late at night.

(All those chooks obviously come in handy!)

 

Downsizing my life into a 24 ft caravan meant leaving lots of things behind in boxes. What (or who!!) would you have trouble leaving behind if you took off in a caravan?

Cats x 2.

Whose home would you like to visit in your van and why?Posie author pic

Taking a liberty here… Quite like to park on site when Edward 1 was building Caernarfon Castle (we stayed in one of the Bath Tower there last January). Would have liked to be invisible and sit in on one of the site meetings. The place is huge! And built so fast!

Do you REALLY have room at your house to park a fifth wheeler caravan and do you mind visitors? Oh, sorry, you don’t have to answer that one!!

Jenn…. You’re welcome anytime : )

(Just need to get brave enough to get Barcoola onboard and cross that might sea that separates us, Poise. But we will do it. We will!)

 

Country curiosities…

My latest novel, Season of Shadow and Light, has a strong horse theme. (I love what horses can teach us). If you were an animal what would you be?

When I was a kid I had an imaginary animal friend; a black puma. Splendid! However, now I’d quite like to be a Shire Horse. So dignified and patient and loveable (I’ve never done these three very well, but I continue to aspire!)

 

You’re cooking and your food is going up against the best cooks from the CWA (Country Women’s Association). What would be your winning dish?

My mother’s Cheaters Cheese Souffle (it’s based on a scaffolding of stale bread and never falls down!)

 

About you…

What is the hardest part of writing for you?

Hard! Goodness gracious, why would you ever think writing is hard! (Gaaaar! What is that sound, what does it mean??) Sigh. When you just have to keep going and there’s no escape and it takes over every single thing that you do, waking and sleeping. Then there are the bad days…

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

“She Ground Her Teeth.”

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

“Goodness, you’re tall. Does that bother you?”

Answer: Not at all (yeah, yeah I know; but next life I’m coming back very tall, and very willowy)

 

Favourite Fun 

Favourite four: kinds of clouds; thunderheads, mares’ tails, snow, stormPosie Ridgeline party

Favourite place in Australia: the ridgeline where I live in Tasmania’s South. Sunny afternoon, mates and kids. All good : )

Favourite holiday destination (anywhere): The North of the world, faaar North

Favourite quote: “Never trust a sword to a man who can’t dance” (Thankyou Dad.)

 

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

I’d sing. Or make scones.

(Or put the McLeod’s Daughter’s series one in the DVD and stop singing! 🙂 wild-wood-9781925030341_hr

WIN – Wild Wood

WIN a signed copy of Wild Wood. Just leave a comment below. If you have a favourite McLeod’s Daughter character, do share. My fave is Claire.

 

You can find Wild Wood  buy links HERE or go straight to Amazon

Posie’s Wild Wood  novel is every bit as wonderful as The Island House.

About Wild Wood

“Of time and fate only one is real. In 1981, in London just before Charles’ & Di’s wedding, Jesse Marley will find that out.”

Jesse Marley calls herself a realist; she’s all about the here and now. But in the month before Prince Charles and Lady Diana’s wedding in 1981, all her certainties are blown aside by events she cannot control. First she finds out she’s adopted. Then she’s run down by a motorbike.

In a London hospital, temporarily unable to speak, she uses her left hand to write. But Jesse’s right-handed. And as if her fingers have a will of their own, she begins to draw places she’s never seen, people from another time—a castle, a man in medieval armour. And a woman’s face.

Rory Brandon, Jesse’s neurologist, is intrigued. Maybe his patient’s head trauma has brought out latent abilities. But wait. He knows the castle. He’s been there.

So begins an extraordinary journey across borders and beyond time, one that takes Jesse to Hundredfield, a stronghold built a thousand years ago by a brutal Norman warlord and passed down to the noble Dieudonné family, a clan honored and burdened with the task of protecting England’s dangerous northern border in the fourteenth century. Jesse holds the key to the castle’s many secrets and its connection to the mystical legend of the Lady of the Forest.

Somehow Hundredfield, with its history of darkness and light, of bloody battles won and lost, will help Jesse find her true lineage. In a world where the tales of old are just a heartbeat away, there are no accidents. There is only fate.

Posie’s website is just gorgeous (can you tell I really am a fan?) and you might be surprised to know what other fabulousness Posie once brought into our lives. (I’ll Hi 5 you if you can guess! Hint! hint!)

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