Tuesday 31 December 2019

Tuesday Poem - End of the Year

With the last day of the year rolling in
Minds turn to reflecting
Wondering what will be coming
Pondering on what went before
Sometimes it can feel like you're stuck
Never moving
In a rut
But if you take a moment
To see how far you've come
You'll soon see that a lot happened
Things changed
Goalposts moved
You grew
There may have been bad times
There may have been sad times
You would've laughed
You would've cried
You probably ate way too much chocolate
But you made it
Here's to the next one


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop

Monday 30 December 2019

My Books of 2019

Book read in December 2019

Recap: Nicky discovers she's not the last Callahan.

Review: Book 4 races along - we've got a lover's tiff and a new threat but everything was also dealt with very quickly. The new threat was viciously quashed, I thought they were supposed to be the good guys! Less coffee, less Grandma and a lot more Nicky which isn't a bad thing, we're getting to know her better. I did feel sad when she went to her parents' other house. I still feel like her best friend is going to betray her lol. I was a little disappointed that her developing magic was dealt with in one sentence, it would have been cool to see her try different spells. And now it seems they must go on a killing spree so... eep!

Recap: AJ is struggling to keep a job and pay rent until she gets an unusual offer. Cue being kidnapped by vampires, rescued by people with magic, learning she has elemental power and discovering shifters!

Review: Loved it! Engaging YA with a likeable main character, some great plot twists that actually make your heart hurt. Well-paced with a good cast, some standard villainy, some superb treachery and heart-fluttering romance. I loved the personification of the elementals and I absolutely have to read book two.



The Twelve Strange Days of Christmas by Syd Moore - 3 stars

Recap: A collection of short stories

Review: As with all short story collections there are some you really like and some you don't. I had a little difficulty placing some of the characters but that just my atrocious memory lol. The first story worried me as whilst I enjoyed the tale, I didn't like the stylistic dialogue very much and it was a slow ponderous intro but there were other gems and I particularly liked the spring-heeled Jack Christmas story.



The Wolf in the Whale by Jordanna Max Brodsky - 5 stars
Recap: Omat, the Innuit, struggles to find their place in society as a man's spirit trapped in a woman's body whilst dealing with Viking raiders and battling gods.

Review: Superb. Excellent story weaving and characterisation. I was gripped from the first page and loved the blend of cultures. There were some awful moments but such joy at the end. Recommended read.





A Shaper's Birthright by Karen MacRae - 5 stars

Recap: Anna and the Kings Guard must travel to find black and white peristones as well as two important books about shaper power but the Black Shaper Nystrieth's spies are after the same thing.

Review: I adored book one and was not disappointed with book two. There were shocks, surprises and twists and some truly poignant scenes. It's a middle book so it'll never have the speed of book one but I felt it flowed nicely, the characters continued to grow and the stakes continued to rise. I really enjoyed Anna's inner turmoil and how she overcomes things. The love story was unexpected and I have thoughts about what will happen in book three. A very enjoyable fantasy series.


Books Read in 2019

This past year I've read 77 books which is 15 more than last year but not quite my 100 books target. I review everything I read on Goodreads and have an enormous to-be-read list so I should happily find lots to read in 2020. 

Here are the books that got 5 stars from me in 2019:


  • Half the World by Joe Abercrombie
  • Leaps of Faith by A.M. Leibowitz
  • Death at the Priory by James Ruddick
  • Educated by Tara Westover
  • The Lost Plot by Genevieve Cogman
  • Akrad's Children by Jeanette O'Hagan
  • Jade by Rose Montague
  • The Harvest by Alannah Andrews
  • The Path of Swords by Martin Swinford
  • Star Mage Exile by J.J. Green
  • Bird Box by Josh Malerman
  • Snap by Belinda Bauer
  • The Clockmaker's Daughter by Kate Morton
  • The Lost War by Justin Lee Anderson
  • The Scattered and the Dead by Tim McBain
  • Gerald Oddman by T.W.M Ashford
  • Magister's Bane by Yvette Bostic
  • The Wolf in the Whale by Jordanna Max Brodsky
  • A Shaper's Birthright by Karen Macrae

You can read all my reviews and see the other 58 books I've read in 2019 on my Goodreads profile. You'll also be able to find all my books listed and maybe something will tickle your fancy to read in 2020.

It's time for the big question now. What will be my reading goal in 2020? I think I have to go for it again. I made it in 2017. I need to know it wasn't a fluke. That's right, people. I'm going for 100. Again. 


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop

Wednesday 25 December 2019

A Slice of Cake With... 2019

It's been another cake-filled year of interviews. I've loved chatting with so many amazing authors plus finding out what their favourite cake is.

In celebration, this post takes a look back at books and cake, no finer combination!

The most popular interview was with author Lynette Burrows who chose German Chocolate cake as her favourite cake while the most popular cake chosen was predictably, chocolate closely followed by cheesecake!

I've interviewed 52 authors this year and had 31 different cakes.
 It's been so much fun chatting to so many different authors, finding out what motivates them to write and of course discover their upcoming projects. My To-Be-Read list keeps growing and growing and growing! You can check it out on Goodreads.

I know you want to know so here is the list of yummy cakes we shared in 2019:


  • German Chocolate Cake
  • Tiramisu
  • Chocolate Espresso Fudge Cake
  • Irish Apple Cake
  • Spice Cake
  • Fruit Cake
  • Chocolate Cake
  • 7 Layer Cake with Mocha Cream
  • Angel Food Cake
  • Black Forest Cake
  • Coffee & Walnut Cake
  • Chocolate Cheesecake
  • Chocolate Fudge Cake
  • Pineapple Upside Down Cake
  • Bumbleberry Pie
  • Double Chocolate Whisky Cake
  • Chocolate Cake Shake
  • Victoria Sponge
  • Vanilla Sour Cream Coffee Cake
  • Cheesecake
  • Pecan Pie
  • Banana & Walnut Cake
  • Chocolate Brownie
  • Yellow Cake
  • French Fancies
  • Red Velvet Cake
  • Italian Cream Cake
  • Carrot Cake
  • Strawberry Cake
  • Sans Rival Cake
If you'd like to have a slice of cake with me next year just fill out the online form and I'll be in touch with the interview questions. I look forward to seeing all the delicious cakes!


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop



Tuesday 24 December 2019

Tuesday poem - Christmas Eve

'Twas the night before Christmas...

And all the presents have been wrapped
Even that one shoved right at the back
Tags have been written and smudged
Price labels removed, nothing to judge
Topped with ribbon and a pretty bow
Altogether they make a wondrous show
There's a carrot for Rudolph and a plate
With a mince pie plus sherry set out late
For our festive visitor who brings with him
Some extra magic, a bit of zip and zim
Parents slump in a heap, it's been a busy week
Hoping the kids aren't too excited to sleep
There's stockings to fill and a last-minute panic
Double-checking and feeling a bit manic
Christmas is primed, Christmas is ready
All the seasonal rubbish lined up on the telly
Sprouts in the fridge that no-one will eat
Cupboards groaning with a merry feast
A tipple or three ready to pour
As we remember our days of yore
Wrapping paper ripped all to shreds
Squeals of excitement ringing in heads
Stuffed full of way too much dinner
Not our year for getting thinner


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. 

Monday 23 December 2019

Festive Giveaways

Click on the image below to visit the giveaway and fill up your e-reader with a great selection of sci-fi & fantasy ebooks.












Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. 

Wednesday 18 December 2019

A Slice of Cake With... Sophie Kearing

This week I am delighted to be having a slice of cake with author Sophie Kearing.

Sophie Kearing is a caffeine-obsessed fiction writer who loves drinking espresso out of teacups, smelling new paperbacks, and using Oxford commas. Her short stories have been featured by Mojave Heart Review, Ellipsis Zine, Left Hand Publishers, Moonchild Magazine, Jolly Horror Press, New Pop Lit, Elephants Never, Spelk Fiction, Paper Angel Press, and other publications. Sophie is the lucky recipient of a 2019 Pushcart Prize nomination, and her edgy mystery An All-Nighter is forthcoming in Me First Magazine. She loves Twitter’s #WritingCommunity and tweets @SophieKearing.

What kind of stories do you write?

My fiction tends to be dark and written from the shameless first-person perspectives of morally ambiguous characters.

Can you describe your writing why?

I write to connect with others. Out in the world, I keep to myself and avoid social interaction at all costs, LOL! But when I’m at home writing, I’m deeply aware that everything I spill onto the page is an exploration of the human experience, and these explorations connect me with whoever’s reading—whether that person be antisocial or social, living in a big city or a small town, a writer or someone who’d rather get a root canal than write…. We’re all human, and I believe that readers can share in the humor, the pain, the confusion, and the healing that I convey through the characters and stories I write.

I also have a superstition that if I write about something that scares me, that thing won’t come to me IRL, but that’s a conversation for another day.

Share with us your favourite passage from a book you enjoyed reading

Here’s a passage that I adore. It’s from The Paying Guests by Sarah Waters:

“She loved these walks through London. She seemed, as she made them, to become porous, to soak in detail after detail; or else, like a battery to become charged. Yes, that was it, she thought, as she turned a corner: it wasn't a liquid creeping, it was a tingle, something electric, something produced as if by the friction of her shoes against the streets. She was at her truest, it seemed to her, in these tingling moments.”  

Tell us about your latest project

The first “short” story I ever wrote—Attachment, which is actually about 8,000 words—was published by Jolly Horror Press in their Accursed anthology. This is my second time publishing with Jolly Horror; I love working with Jon Lambert and Lori Titus!

Also, one of my darkest stories, The Rolodex, can be found in Corporate Catharsis, an anthology by Paper Angel Press. This is my first time working with Steven Radecki and it’s been a fantastic experience!



What is your favourite cake?

Ooh, this is a tough one. I love red velvet and tres leches and German chocolate…. 

(I know this is a question about cake, but please note that I also enjoy crème brûlée, fruit tarts, and undercooked chocolate chip cookies, LOL!) 

Anyway, my favorite cake would have to be super moist angel food cake with a strawberry filling and cream cheese frosting. Is that the most specific answer you’ve ever gotten? I sure hope so. ;) 


Thanks Sophie, it sounds delicious. You can connect with Sophie on Twitter

Join me next week when I will be doing my 2019 Roundup of cakes and authors! 

If you would like to take part in A Slice of Cake With... please fill in the form found here. I'd be delighted to have you.

You can also support my writing endeavours and buy me tea & cake - it's what makes the world go round!


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. 

Tuesday 17 December 2019

Tuesday poem - O Christmas Tree

O Christmas Tree
O Christmas Tree
You stand there in my lounge
All proud and upright
No worries bend your boughs.

No fears of extra-wide hips
Stop you from being fierce
Draped in multi-coloured lights
You stand out with pride
Not looking for corners or shadows to hide.

More tinsel, more tinsel you seem to rustle
Too much isn't enough
You clamour to be noticed
With angel on high
You shout, look at me!

With ornaments dangling on every branch
Big, small, bright, shiny, old and new
It doesn't matter, you wear them all
Fashions come and fashions go but you
You keep your favourites year after year

No matter if you're real or fake
If you're tall or squat
For the few weeks you are here
You don't hesitate to shine so bright
And pull all the family together.


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.


Monday 16 December 2019

The Enigma of Success

First published in Write On! magazine, December 2019


This is how the conversation goes:
"So, what do you do, Claire?"
"Oh, I'm a writer."
"Really? Anything I'd have seen?"
"Well… all my books are on Amazon so…"
"Who's your publisher?"
"Actually, I'm self-published."
"Oh, right. So when are you going back to work?"

Because of course, having a publishing deal with a well-known publisher like Penguin Random House or Harper Collins is the definition of success for a writer – isn't it?

What if it's not? What if, I am successful for typing in 'The End' at the close of a 60,000-word manuscript. Google tells me that 97% of writers fail to finish their book therefore if I fall into that top 3% of finishers, surely, I am now a success.

The traditional publishing route dictates that first, you must secure yourself an agent as many publishing houses will not touch unsolicited manuscripts. And so, us happy individuals in the elite 3% must begin touting our stories to agents who receive thousands of submissions a year and are only really interested in current market trends. If you are a BAME author writing about diversity, disability or LGBTQ issues then congratulations, you're a hot bet. You are the lucky 1 in 1000 who will land an agent.

However, these things are never quite that straightforward. I know of two superb Pen to Print authors who have successfully landed an agent, congratulations again, but have yet to receive a publishing deal. So maybe snagging a literary agent is not the full measure of writer success. In an article about the odds of getting a publishing deal that I read recently on Jericho Writers, an editor at one of the big-5 publishing houses in the UK buys less than 1% of the work offered to him. 1%. That's not great odds.

As an independent or indie author, I have now published 14 titles, 2 audiobooks and had short stories published in 4 anthologies. Am I successful simply because of the number of books I published in the last three years? Am I successful because my work was deemed worthy of inclusion in other people's anthologies? Perhaps that is not enough. I am also multi-award winning and can list accolades on my website for which I am very proud but are they a stamp of success? I didn't win the Booker Prize. Yet.
I have not yet managed to earn a significant wage as an author in order to contribute significantly financially to my family yet, am I successful simply because I do earn money from my writing – no matter the amount? According to research carried out by CREATe, the average author take-home wage in 2018 was in the region of £10,000 per annum so even if I were financially successful, we are not talking multi-million-pound deals.

The Oxford English Dictionary states that success is the accomplishment of an aim or purpose.

For a writer who views their authorship as a business and is committed to achieving goals and self-imposed deadlines with the help of quarterly plans and a vast array of spreadsheets, it seems that I have met my success. For me, it is always about what's next. I am constantly aiming to grow and develop as a writer, improve my craft and continue to write and release books that readers want to read.

I firmly believe that if I can just get my novels in front of as many people as possible, I will start to see growth in sales and readers. How can I achieve that goal? Well, that is indeed the magic question and once I figure it out, I'll be sure to let you know.

It's not enough to be successful as a writer, you also need to be successful as a human being. And a parent. And a representative of your ethnic tick box. Perhaps if we just focus on our best in all that we do, success will decode itself. For that in itself is another measure of success. Passing on what you've learnt along your journey and sharing your pitfalls with others, so they don't make the same mistakes. Join online writing groups and share your experiences, ask questions so you can learn from others and pass on the tips you have picked up. If something works for you, tell your writing community and make sure others know they can come to you for help and support. It's a lonely job being a writer but it's a wonderful community being an author.


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop

Wednesday 11 December 2019

A Slice of Cake With... Stephanie Barr

This week I am delighted to be having a slice of cake with Stephanie Barr.

Stephanie is a slave to three children and a slew of cats, she actually leads a double life as a part-time novelist and full-time rocket scientist.

People everywhere have learned to watch out for fear of becoming part of her stories. Beware! You might be next!



What kind of books do you write?

I write books about people and the interactions of people because I love that subject. It might include romantic or other forms of love. It might include societal concerns and issues, environmental ones, bigotry, misogyny, etc. Because my focus on is on the problems, issues, and communications of people, I often manipulate my settings so I can highlight what I want to focus on, with magic, perhaps, or talking cats, with smart computers or space catastrophes. There's really no telling. I love making problems and making my characters solve them, using their brains without compromising their "humanity"—though they might not technically be human. The fact that cats and dragons are almost always a part of my books, well, that's a personal quirk.

Can you describe your writing why?

I love to tell stories. I think it's a great way to explain complex points and demonstrate points of view that many people my struggle to grasp. I love coming up with characters and letting them amuse the heck out of me. I love to make people think about things they might not have thought about on their own. There are many things in this world that disturb me that I cannot correct on my own, but I can vicariously address them in the worlds I create. And that gives me solace. 

Share with us your favourite passage from the book you enjoyed writing the most

My favorite is generally the one I'm writing now (Catalyst):

"Go ahead and cry, honey. You're overdue for a good purge," Lucy murmured, stroking her hair. "It's not your fault."
"Yes, it is," Chloe muttered in muffled tones to Lucy's blouse.
"No, baby, of course it isn't." Lucy looked right at Raven and smiled. "It's Raven's fault."
"Me?" Raven sputtered. "How in the world could it be my fault?" Chloe had pulled back looking just as baffled. "I wasn't even there."
Lucy looked at him with completely innocent eyes of celestial blue. "Raven, weren't you just telling us how your only purpose for the past untold centuries has been to look out for and train the chosen one if she showed up on this side? I mean, isn't that the whole reason you've been trapped in a cycle of dull humdrum lives, to be here to help the key when she arrived? You completely dropped the ball."



Tell us about your latest project

Cats find their way into all my books and many of my stories, so I decided to write an anthology of cat stories (released 7/30/2019. I like cats (I own ten of them). I like how beautiful and graceful they are, how soft and fluffy and affectionate they are (and purring is so wonderful), how intelligent and independent they are, and how, with all that and the fact you can leave them around small children, they are also deadly killers. I mean, how cool is that. So, I wrote twenty stories celebrating the many aspects of cats, their interactions with people. I have angel cats and adventure kitties, soldier cats, cats that save the world or just a couple of people, ghost cats, dragon-cats, vampire cats, and even zombie kitties. Cat lover should be in cat heaven. It's called Pussycats Galore and you can find it everywhere, most likely, ebooks are sold.


What is your favourite cake?

I like several kinds of cake but my current weakness is yellow cake with raspberry filling. Cream cheese icing is my favorite.


A yummy looking cake indeed! You can keep up to date with Stephanie and her books at her website.

Join me next week when I'll be having a slice of cake with Sophie Kearing.

If you would like to take part in A Slice of Cake With... please fill in the form found here. I'd be delighted to have you.

You can also support my writing endeavours and buy me tea & cake - it's what makes the world go round!


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. 


Tuesday 10 December 2019

Tuesday poem - Wrapping

I sit and stare at the tubes littering the floor
They hold reds and golds and greens
They glisten
Calling, begging me to unfurl their banners
But...
Each day I say tonight will be the night
Tonight I shall place the gift within the paper
Find the end of the sellotape
Loose the end of the sellotape
Cut ribbon and stick bows
Write illegible labels and hope they go on correctly
When did it become such a chore
It used to be a joy to curl ribbon
Choose the perfect paper for the perfect person
Write cheeky labels with hidden clues
Now it's to and from, no more, no less
Wrapping
All my evenings are now filled with wrapping
Large things, small things
Things I forgot I'd even bought
Wrap, wrap, wrap, wrap, wrap, wrap
Chant the rolls from the floor

I need more tea


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. 

Monday 9 December 2019

12 Days of Indie Christmas

There's a wonderful event happening on Facebook this December, the 12 Days of Indie Christmas, hosted by indie-author, Rose Montague.



The idea is that readers join the event and post about the type of books they'd like to read and then the authors involved woo them.

There are no sales pitches, no 'buy my book' posts and no badgering. The readers are completely in charge.

As a reader, there is no obligation to buy whatsoever. You might just find some new titles to add to your wishlist. Ideally, readers will buy 12 books, starting on the 13th December and finished on Christmas Eve.



I've taken part in this event twice before, this is my third year as both an author and a reader. I've bought some wonderful books and found some great authors so I highly recommend this event.

After all, it's Christmas and you deserve to fill your book stocking up!


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop

Wednesday 4 December 2019

A Slice of Cake With... Eithne Cullen

This week I am delighted to be having a slice of cake with author Eithne Cullen.

Eithne is an author, poet and Pen to Print alumni with several books now published and is currently Poet in Residence for Hysteria writing competition.

What kind of books do you write?

My two books have been very different, The Ogress of Reading was a blend of fact and fiction based on a real character, a terrible woman who was a baby murderer, Never Not in my Thoughts is a novel about obsessive love, it’s contemporary and purely out of my imagination. 

The next one is going to be fictionalised account of a woman (a real one again) who was a prolific poisoner; it’ll be called Arsenic Sally.

I sound a bit morbid, but I’m not. I just like a good story. 

Can you describe your writing why?

I wake up in the morning with a head full of stories and have to find homes for them: sometimes as stories sometimes as poems and I’ve been lucky to have stories to fill novels, too. 

I grew up with songs and stories in the house and a love of books which my parents really encouraged.



Share with us your favourite passage from the book you enjoyed writing the most

For a few minutes, Holly’s frame filled the doorway. She looked at the children, taking in every detail of their bath-time fun. She seemed to drink in every sound. He thought he saw her breathe in deeply, as if to catch the scent and savour the smell of them. She was wearing a loose cotton shirt, over faded jeans, casual but lovely, she was always lovely in his memory.  He caught her eye, she smiled and moved away. 

Tell us about your latest project

I’m writing about a woman who killed some of her own children and her husband using arsenic. She’s based on a famous Essex woman who was hanged for her crimes. She did it for the insurance money and her crimes set off a spate of poisonings in Essex villages. It was at a time when arsenic was unregulated and easy to get hold of. I’m telling it as a story, narrated by her friend so it’s not really a true crime novel, more about the way relationships developed in the small community they lived in. 

What is your favourite cake?

I love a good Victoria sandwich with buttercream and raspberry jam.  When I’m out I often go for a millionaire’s shortbread as it’s one I don’t make myself. 


Delicious! Follow Eithne on Twitter and Facebook and check out her website for more details on her books.

Join me next week when I'll be having a slice of cake with Stephanie Barr.

If you would like to take part in A Slice of Cake With... please fill in the form found here. I'd be delighted to have you.

You can also support my writing endeavours and buy me tea & cake - it's what makes the world go round!


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. 

Tuesday 3 December 2019

Tuesday Poem - 'tis the season!

'tis the season to run ragged
Fa la la la la, la la la la

Deck the halls at quarter past midnight
Fa la la la la, la la la la

Wrapping presents half asleep
Fa la la, la la la, la la la

Eating only mince pies
Fa la la la la, la la la la

***

O Christmas Tree, O Christmas Tree
Why fore art tho so troublesome?
Your pine needles keep shedding
And ornaments keep falling off

O Christmas Tree, O Christmas Tree
Why didn't I get a fake one?
The pine smell is over strong
And I'm still hoovering up needles

You may look nice all covered in snow
But you don't have the same indoor glow
O Christmas Tree, O Christmas Tree
I think I might be allergic

***

We wish you a Merry Christmas
We hope you don't come visit
We don't have enough turkey
And we'll see you next year

***

Silent night, holy night
All is calm, til the baby cries
Then we're all up at 2 in the morn
Tired and cold and all forlorn
Sleep is a distant memory
And a lie in a miracle unknown


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop. 

Monday 2 December 2019

How to Gift a Kindle Book This Christmas

The dilemma - you want to support indie authors by buying their books this Christmas but the problem is, not only have you already read their amazing book BUT the paperback version is usually a little more than you want to pay for a gift and you'd rather pay the eBook price. However, once you've bought the eBook for yourself you can't then buy it again to gift it to someone else. Can you?

Of course you can!

Here's what you do if you use Amazon.com:

  • Head over to Amazon.com
  • Find the eBook you want to send as a gift e.g. The Rose Thief
  • Click on the 'Buy for Others' button
  • Enter the personal email address of your recipient
  • Enter a delivery date and an optional personal message
  • Click Place Your Order

It works exactly the same way on Amazon.co.uk but the important thing to note is that if you are a UK person buying a gift for an overseas person using your UK account, it will not work. The Buy for Others button is country-specific.

I do have a solution! You can create an amazon account for that country - so for me, I would create an Amazon.com account - and then you can buy a gift voucher for the amount of the book you want to buy them.

  • Head over to that Amazon site
  • Buy a gift card for the cost of the eBook
  • Print it out or make a note of the gift card code
  • Personalise a Christmas card with the details of your gift i.e. the name of the book, why you think they should read it and of course, the gift card information

Now, of course, you have no control over what someone does with a gift card you give them, it's only a suggestion but maybe because you've gone to the extra trouble they just might take your advice and buy the book.

So now when you finish reading a fantastic indie book and you think Oh, my brother would like that you can get a warm and fuzzy feeling on the inside because you can gift that eBook. Some indie author books are also less than a fiver - perfect for a stocking filler or Secret Santa!


So let's not forget, books make superb Christmas presents because:

  • You are introducing someone to a whole new world
  • They're easy to wrap (especially if it's an eBook!)
  • It wasn't too expensive
  • You can introduce friends and family to something new
  • Books are ultimate re-gifts! Paperbacks get passed around and eBooks get recommended
  • You can personalise it by buying signed copies from the indie author, by buying the paperback yourself and writing a message or by personalising the Christmas card with the Amazon e-gift voucher inside
  • There is a book out there for each and every one of us
  • Reading makes you a better human #fact
  • You don't need to buy any accessories
  • Books last and good ones are always remembered

If you'd like to support my writing endeavours over the Christmas period feel free to buy me tea and cake or maybe even check out my books on Amazon - 'tis the season!


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. 
Find all her books on AmazonJoin the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Wednesday 27 November 2019

A Slice of Cake With... Matilda Scotney

This week I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Matilda Scotney.

Matilda is a former professional classical singer, musical director and actor. She wasted part of her youth as a stand-up comic and folk singer trolling the London Underground stations with her guitar and singing Irish folk songs. When she finished her music studies with the Royal College of Music, she took up acting. Matilda knew she was getting too old to continue in the theatre when she started getting cast in parts such as Granny in the stage version of The Addams Family. Instead, she took up scriptwriting for local amateur theatres and also offered her services as a voice coach and director which was huge fun. Now Matilda is a happily retired Star Wars nerd who lives life with very little seriousness in a house ruled by a five-inch high chihuahua. Her home is in the mid-west of Western Australia. And she likes to write.

What kind of books do you write?

I love the idea of Time Travel and a utopian future. My first two books were on those themes. My second series was more interdimensional, multiverse, galactic empire but I love all my characters to be on some sort of mission of self-discovery. I always add in a touch of the metaphysical as well. And I like to write.



Can you describe your writing why?

It started with Star Wars in 1977! I wanted to build worlds too! And now I do. Simply being able to imagine worlds and universes and bringing people to life in my stories is my motivation. I also draw on events in the news, from history and people I see in my everyday routines. Changing the context of a life, an event, a location in my imagination; it’s very compelling.

Share with us your favourite passage from the book you enjoyed writing the most

Oh crumbs. This is a really hard question. I love all of my first two books, The Afterlife of Alice Watkins Books One and Two. But I think the prologue for The Soul Monger Book One is nicely chilling, particularly as it is a tale of intergalactic slavery. I hope it’s not too long.

PROLOGUE

Scotland Yard: Missing Persons Files (Cold Cases–Overseas Agencies) Summary research only.

Christmas Eve, 2008: A family of five headed home after a pre-Christmas get-together with friends. Travelling along the M25 motorway near Junction 20 at Hemel Hempstead, their car collided with a speeding drunk driver who’d strayed into their lane. The force of the impact lifted the family’s car into the air before it plunged to the ground and rolled several times before landing on its roof. Horrified witnesses rushed to help, but the car was already a fireball, and flames beat back any would-be rescuers. Emergency services recovered four bodies from the burnt-out wreck of the family’s car. Anxious friends later told police a teenaged girl accompanied her parents and two

brothers on the journey; a fact corroborated by a service station attendant who spoke to the family less than ten minutes before the accident. Witnesses testified no-one could have walked away from such carnage. The girl was never found.

This and other strange, unsolved cases of missing persons are listed on several government databases. The files date back more than a century and make extraordinary reading although the very early accounts are poorly documented, often recording the attending police officer’s mistrust in the witness’s descriptions and making personal observations about intoxication and “seeking notoriety”. Later incidents, those which occurred within living memory, are profiled more efficiently and without bias; such as the 1964 disappearance of a young man from a locked, virtually windowless cell in a South African prison; or the nurse who left a Chicago hospital very early one January morning in 2018, and was witnessed by a cab driver vanishing into “thin air”. (The cabbie’s blood alcohol reading accompanied the report).

An intriguing entry, from 2017, reported the disappearance of an Australian woman in Bali. Her departure was reported to police by a Balinese masseuse who described her missing client as, “Gone! Poof! Just like that!”

Equally compelling is the 2012 account of a German woman, witnessed by several of her colleagues getting into her car in an underground car park when she was due at an important meeting. Three of the witnesses went to speak to her, but the car was empty, the keys in the ignition and the woman’s shoes kicked off in the driver’s seat well.

But perhaps the most bizarre? In a small Sicilian town in the spring of 1991, a woman and her child went to chat with their elderly neighbour, whom they’d known for years. As they approached, the man, “walked into the scenery, out of sight”. Why was this more bizarre than the others? According to the report, the man stepped purposefully, and as he vanished, he looked at the mother and child, and waved.

Police enquiries found homes left as if the occupant planned to return; food in the fridge, open bank accounts (which went untouched), and in the case of the Sicilian man, the washing machine in mid-cycle. Mystified workmates and employers were unable to shed light on their colleague’s disappearance and in every event, no doctors’ records documented any psychiatric disorders.

In time, these and the mystery of the teenaged girl were packaged together and marked as cold cases. A scribbled memo sticky-taped to the lid of the archive box lends a poignant epitaph:

“Bill, (Archivist) These are the foreign ones. I put the English kid in as well. Scan ‘em and shove the physical files in the archives. Don’t waste resources. They’re gone.”

Tell us about your latest project

I’m currently writing the third and final book in The Soul Monger series. The series starts with an intergalactic war and deals with slavery, war and intrigue and focuses on the main character’s quest to find the origins of humankind. It has a strong metaphysical and visionary theme throughout and as in my other books, deals with the ordinary human finding themselves facing the extraordinary.



What is your favourite cake?

Chocolate cake.


Keep up to date with Matilda by visiting her website and checking out her Facebook.

Join me next week when I'll be having a slice of cake with Eithne Cullen.

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Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find all her books on Amazon. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.