Wednesday, 27 May 2020

A Slice of Cake With... Tessa Buckley

This week I am delighted to be having a slice of cake with author Tessa Buckley.

Tessa was an inveterate scribbler as a child, and spent much of her time writing and illustrating stories. After studying Interior Design, she spent fifteen years working for architects and designers. She took up writing again after her young daughter complained that she couldn’t find enough adventure stories to read. This led, in 2016, to the publication of Eye Spy, the first in a series of detective stories for 9-12-year-olds, designed to encourage reluctant readers. The second book in the series, Haunted, was a finalist in the Wishing Shelf Book Awards 2017.  

Tessa lives with her husband and a large white cat called Pippa. in a town on the Thames estuary, which inspired the seaside setting for the novels. She also writes about health and nutrition, and family history, which has been her passion for many years.

What kind of stories do you write?

My Eye Spy series is about two teenagers in a seaside town who set up their own detective service: Eye Spy Investigations. The books are fast-paced and action-packed to encourage reluctant readers. And because boys seem to be particularly prone to abandoning books at about age 10 or 11, the series is written from the point of view of a male protagonist, Alex.

It goes without saying that there is always a mystery to solve, but I also try and include all the elements that children enjoy, such as humour, school scenes, descriptions of food. Oh, and at least one animal plays an important part in each story!

I also write books about nutritional therapy for people on special diets, which include lots of simple, economical and delicious recipes.

Can you describe your writing why?

I’ve been making up stories and writing them down ever since I was six years old. As a child, I wrote Enid Blyton-style mystery stories, and my father, who was the author of a best-selling non-fiction book, sent one of these early efforts off to his publisher, Constable. Eventually, I received a very kind reply, suggesting that I wasn’t yet quite ready for publication, but encouraging me to continue writing. However, it wasn’t until many years later that I became a full-time writer, and found out just how addictive it could be. The ideas just keep coming, and there aren’t enough hours in the day to write them all down!

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

In this scene Alex watches as the unscrupulous Mr Mortimer tries to bully an old man into selling him his home. Then Alex’s friend Jake steps in…

Out of the darkness behind Mr Mortimer came Jake’s voice: “Is this man bothering you, Mr Pascoe?”
At the sound of the voice, Mortimer swung round. Emerging out of the darkness outside the circle of candlelight was a disembodied snake’s head. Queenie’s head poked forward, and her tongue darted gently back and forth, as she stared curiously at the visitor. To anyone who didn’t know that Jake was standing in the shadows, supporting her, the snake’s head would appear like an apparition.
After a few tense seconds, Jake moved forward into the light. Mortimer stepped back hurriedly. For an instant, before he pulled himself together, he looked terrified. “What the hell is that?” he said.

(From Lady in Red)


Tell us about your latest project

I had great fun writing Lady in Red, the third book in the Eye Spy series, which was partly inspired by my love of the Victorian Pre-Raphaelite artists, and partly by the house I lived in as a child.

I first discovered the Pre-Raphaelites when I was a teenager, and loved the women models with their ruby red lips, glorious auburn hair and vividly coloured clothes. Later in life, I had to study the paintings in detail as part of an Open University course, and it was soon after finishing the degree that I wrote the first draft for what later became Lady in Red.

The setting for this story – a large Victorian villa, next door to a derelict house with a huge overgrown garden – was based on the home I lived in as a child. Like the children in the story, I used to creep through a gap in the fence to explore the garden of the house next door, and I have never forgotten the thrill of excitement I felt as I escaped from adult eyes into my own ‘secret garden’. The fact that the empty house was later revealed to hold a cache of stolen goods inspired yet another element of the story.

What is your favourite cake?

As |I am on a special diet, I have had to develop my own recipes. My favourite sweet treat is my gluten-free and dairy-free carob and pear brownies, and they are dead easy to make!


They sound delicious! You can connect with Tessa on her websites tessabuckleyauthor.com and msandfood.org

Join me next week when I'm joined by Christian Freed. 

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, 26 May 2020

Tuesday Poem - DIY Blues

I'm gonna get the DIY Blues
It was the Bank Holiday, after all
I sanded and undercoated
Painted ceilings and walls
Twice
Did my best to make it look good
Worked hard
Muscles ache and my body
It's crying
There's dust and broken nails
Paint speckles and splotches on the carpet
But it's old
So it doesn't matter
It's been cathartic
To paint over the old and make new
But now it's nearly over
And the paint tubs are empty
The room looks great
And the hard work has been worth it
But I know
Come tomorrow
I'll have the DIY Blues


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, 25 May 2020

Half-Term Lockdown

Week 10. Week 10 of lockdown. Ten weeks of being inside with my small people. Ten weeks of homeschooling. Ten weeks. It certainly feels like a milestone, doesn't it?

In the beginning, we sort of muddled along for a couple of weeks sticking to school start time and length because the schools would be opening again after the Easter holidays, wouldn't they? We had our Easter break, didn't go and visit the grandparents but did manage an Easter egg hunt and it was alright. The kids spent way too much time on screens but it was the holidays.

Then we went back to homeschool and this time there was a lot more direction from the school website. They'd gotten serious. So we stuck to our routine, mixed it up a bit, added some extra breaks and finished a bit earlier because... you know what? Being indoors, all the time, with your kids, all the time, and having to interact with them, all the time, despite any plans you might have to do anything for yourself, they want you all the time! Screen time continues to be a big feature.

I have a day job. Yes, I might be a stay at home mum but I work as well and my work can easily fill an entire day, with no breaks from the moment I get up to the moment I go to bed, late. I am not pushed for things to do. So usually half-term for me would be the resignation of knowing that I'm not going to get anything done for a week because I'll be entertaining the smalls, taking them out, visiting people, going places and having fun.

That feeling of resignation has been my constant companion since lockdown began. Together with parental guilt, varying stages of panic and worry plus a general sense of what the hell???

I have absolutely no idea what we will be doing this half-term apart from not a lot. I need a break from key-stage one maths and English. I don't want to colour-in. I don't think I could watch an animated cartoon/film if you paid me a million dollars and I cannot play another game of snakes and ladders.

But hey, it's not all doom and gloom. We've got another 7 weeks of school and then... the summer holidays!!

See you on the other side. Maybe.


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, 20 May 2020

A Slice of Cake With... Lynne Stringer

This week I am delighted to be having a Slice of Cake with author Lynne Stringer.

Lynne has been passionate about writing all my life. She was the editor of a small newspaper (later magazine) for seven years and currently works as a professional editor and proofreader.

Lynne wrote her YA sci-fi romance novel, The Heir, in 2010. The Heir is the first book in the Verindon trilogy and has now been joined by The Crown and The Reign. In October 2016 they were joined by Once Confronted, her YA contemporary drama.

What kind of stories do you write?

I write books set in another world I’ve created, mainly on the planet Verindon. It’s part of the Seven Systems and has two humanoid species—the Vendel and the Verindal. 


At the time I set my first series, The Verindon Trilogy, both races (they’re more commonly referred to as different races because they’re so similar) are at peace and are mostly working together. However, my latest book, The Verindon Alliance, takes place several hundred years earlier, at a time when war was a common thing on Verindon and both races fought constantly.

Can you describe your writing why?

I have a lot of stories in my head. Every so often, their voices get so loud I have to let them out. They knock on the inside of my mind until they’re released. I love exploring these stories and I’m delighted that other people seem to enjoy them too.

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

This would be one of my favourites from The Verindon Alliance. It’s where Vashta, a Vendel princess, sees the heir to the Verindal throne for the first time:

The heir glanced between the two women before standing. Vashta reminded herself, while looking him over, that no Verindal could ever be considered handsome. They were a dangerous, conniving race and couldn’t be trusted. 

But if he’d been a Vendel, she would have given him a second glance. Probably a third and fourth as well. He was tall and broad-shouldered with an intelligent expression that showed no sign of fear despite being in enemy territory. She had no doubt she could take him down if they were ever in a fight but felt she would almost regret his defeat. 


Tell us about your latest project

Princess Vashta is the youngest of five Vendel princesses and has worked hard at honing her skills at fighting and flying, hoping that she will join their combat forces and distinguish herself in battle against their enemy, the Verindal.

However, when she meets Brandonin, the heir to the Verindal throne, it’s clear that he, like Vashta’s father, desires peace, not war. He tells them about a new threat that seems to come from somewhere else, but no one believes it. Even when the Vendel themselves are attacked by these creatures, they still believe it must be part of a Verindal plot.

But Vashta isn’t sure. She wants to overcome this new enemy, but the only way she can do that is by working with Brandonin against the governments of both their races, to see if they can thwart this unknown deadly threat.

What is your favourite cake?

I have a new favourite that I made for Christmas lunch. It’s called a Malteser Christmas Cake—it’s chocolate cake coated in chocolate ganache and covered with Maltesers. Delicious!


Thanks, Lynne - sounds amazeballs! You can keep in touch with Lynne on your favourite social media, she's everywhere:


Join me next week when I'm joined by Tessa Buckley. 

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

Wednesday, 13 May 2020

A Slice of Cake With... Nicholas Woode-Smith

This week I am delighted to be having a slice of cake with Nicholas Woode-Smith.

Nicholas is an urban fantasy and science fiction author from Cape Town, South Africa. He has been writing since he was 13 years old, filling the internet with books, articles and essays on a variety of topics. In his free time, he likes to conquer the world in computer games or craft even more stories as a Dungeon Master in Dungeons & Dragons.

What kind of stories do you write?

Oh, the worlds in my books are completely normal. Nothing unusual. Except the magic. And the monsters. And the rewriting of human history. Okay, perhaps they aren’t normal. But I enjoy writing alternative realities that feel real. World-building is my favourite pass-time and readers have expressed how believable my worlds are.

In particular, I write two different types of books. The first delves into complex questions in a futuristic setting, with the backdrop of intergalactic warfare. The second is on Earth but following a student who hunts monsters to pay the bills. I have unique worlds for both and while they are different types of books, they share a commonality in the way of soul searching, philosophy and snark.

Can you describe your writing why?

My primary reason that I started writing was because I loved world-building. I had a whole catalogue of worlds and no real way to express them. So, I started writing.

I still love world-building, but the more I wrote, the more I have used it as an outlet to explore character development and emotion. Writing can be highly cathartic and by allowing my characters to explore their emotions, I can explore my own.

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

“I’m with you, Brett,” I said, and sent an internal message to Treth. The message was also meant for him. “There’s light beyond the darkness. And we’ll find it together.”

Tell us about your latest project

I am currently working on Silver Brotherhood, book 8 of the Kat Drummond Series, an action-packed urban fantasy series about a student who hunts monsters to pay the bills. Book 8 is scheduled for release in March. If you love badass main characters faced with a world of magic and monsters, you should definitely check out Kat Drummond on Amazon.

What is your favourite cake?

Definitely cheesecake! In particular, Chocolate Cheesecake. Yum!


Find out more about Nicholas on his website and connect with him on Facebook and Instagram.

Join me next week when I'm joined by Lynne Stringer. 

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, 12 May 2020

Tuesday Poem - Early Morning

She cries in her bed
Fake tears that clamour for attention
There's nothing wrong
It's 5.30 and she's woke us
Because she doesn't want to be alone
So I give in, no one else has
And I tell her
Get up if you want to 
So she does
But I don't, I go back to bed
There's another twenty-five minutes
Before the alarm blares
It's quiet
Then I hear a snuffle
A cry
More plaintive than last time
And guilt squirls in my stomach
I should've got up
I stare at the minutes counting up
She gets back into her bed
But now it's my turn to rise
And I see her and she calls for me
She's sad and deflated
I'm riddled and defensive
What a wonderful start to the day


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, 11 May 2020

The Reluctant Teacher

There are a few teachers in my family and it's often been said that I should've been a teacher. Apparently, I have qualities. Indeed, in my previous life, I did, in fact, teach adults - IT and employability skills as well as NVQ assessing in Admin and IT. Even now I run Buss's Book Surgeries for Pen to Print to share what I've learnt so far on my author journey.

But teaching children for me was always a no-no. I have absolutely no desire to spend all day in a classroom with 30-odd kids no matter whether they are teeny's or teenagers. To be honest, I'm not sure which is worse.

Then lockdown happened.

And now I'm a teacher. Thankfully only for one and a half children. My little girl is only two so she does some things with us but she's not quite up for writing short stories using differential nouns and bossy verbs.

A class of one should be an easy task then.

Only it's not. My son is on the spectrum as well as having some fine motor control issues and I knew he was having difficulty with some aspects of school but I didn't have the first-hand experience of a) watching him struggle and b) trying to teach him. It's so hard.

I think it's actually soul-destroyingly hard for both of us. It's been suggested that I just don't bother but I'm not sure that's the best plan. Having a routine helps my boy know where he is and what he should be doing. Not being at school with his teachers or friends is strange although the longer lockdown continues the more used to it he becomes. That worries me for what going back to school will be like but that's a problem for another day.

The other thing that is hard is picking through the set work from school, the helpful links sent by friends and traversing the million and one online resources that are available. I am swimming in 'stuff' that we could do but trying to tailor it to my son's thought pattern is tough. He just doesn't think like I do.

I'm getting there though. We've worked out a reasonably satisfactory scenario - I feel like he's doing something, he hates every minute of it and every day a couple of sums are beaten into submission and at least one sentence is written from start to finish with semi-legible letters.

We will continue to battle our way through daily Maths and English. Every time I tell him we have to write something it's like he has a small breakdown and it's all I can do to keep his bum on the very uncomfortable kitchen chair.

Plus I have to try to not get cross. I have some patience but screaming children, a very small flat, no garden, a dairy intolerance (no chocolate!!) and the constant parent guilt of not getting it right means I get more cross than not.

If I stop trying to homeschool him then I worry he will fall further behind and the leap for him into KS2 from September onwards will be an even bigger chasm to cross. So each school day I set my alarm, try to get up with a smile and begin again. That's really all any of us can do.


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, 6 May 2020

A Slice of Cake With... Justin Lee Anderson

This week I am delighted to be having a slice of cake with Justin Lee Anderson.

Justin spent 15 years as a professional writer and editor before his debut novel, Carpet Diem, was published in 2015. It became a best-seller and won a 2018 Audie award. Since 2018 he has been writing full time, alongside working on scripts with his wife, Juliet, who he met through a BBC scriptwriting contest.

They live just outside his hometown of Edinburgh with their Brady Bunch family of five kids.

He misses Firefly. No Wash jokes. Still too soon.

What kind of stories do you write?

I have always hated nothing more in fiction (books, TV or films) than predictability. If I know what’s going to happen, I’m usually out. So while my books are fantasy (comedy urban and epic mystery) what they share is plots that twist and turn in unusual and hopefully unexpected directions. I try to make sure that readers are engaged without feeling lost, and keeping the plot believable but unpredictable. I love a good twist, but it has to be done right. If it is, readers won’t see it coming, but will also feel that it makes perfect sense, and that the clues were there, if they’d known where to look for them.

Can you describe your writing why?

I love stories. I once responded to a similar question, saying that writing feels like coming up for air after being stuck underwater for a long time, and I still like that analogy. It’s liberating and exciting and fulfilling. When that experience is combined with feedback from readers who enjoy your work, there’s not a lot to beat that feeling.

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

Tricky. There are a few, but it’s hard to pick one without spoilers because - well, it’s that kind of book. Actually, here’s one section I like from quite early in the book. I can really picture this scene in my head and I had it as a ‘moment’ before I had even written the setup.

“Soldier!” an unfamiliar voice bellowed. “Shield!”

Aranok turned to see who was sprinting towards them. 

Thank God.

Glorbad dropped to one knee and braced his shield at an angle. The newcomer ran straight at him, put one foot on the shield and Glorbad groaned with the effort of pushing upwards, collapsing backwards as he did. 

The figure leapt high, white armour gleaming in the firelight like a burning angel.


Tell us about your latest project

The Lost War is a twisted fantasy road trip that combines elements of Edinburgh’s history and mythology with a classic role-playing fantasy vibe. In the aftermath of a great war, the story follows Aranok, the first magic-using draoidh to be made king’s envoy, as he leads a group of strangers across country on a mission to restore an exiled foreign queen. But on the way they find things in the country are not as they believed, and a greater mystery slowly unravels into a conspiracy that could bring down the whole kingdom. If you’re into epic fantasy with a mystery at its core and plenty of twists along the way, you might enjoy it.

What is your favourite cake?

My wife, Juliet, makes the most incredible cupcakes. It’s hard to pick a favourite, but I can narrow it down to either the blueberry cheesecake ones, or apple pie and custard. Don’t make me pick one!


You can connect with Justin via his website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and all his books are on Amazon

Join me next week when I'm joined by Nicholas Woode-Smith. 

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, 5 May 2020

Tuesday Poem - I Don't Want To

I don't want to go outside
I don't want to stay indoors
I don't want to go on a diet
I don't want to eat junk food
I don't want to drink more water
I don't want to have a cup of tea
I don't want to...

I want to sleep in
I want to eat cake
I want to while away hours reading
I want to finish my puzzle
I want to pick up my WIP
I want to finish the painting
I want to...

I have to get up in the morning
I have to 'be mum' all day long
I have to homeschool
I have to do my work and my chores
I have to check-in
I have to wear a plastic smile
I have to...

I don't have to shower
I don't have to talk
I don't have to cook
I don't have to go for a walk
I don't have to be nice
I don't have to call you back
I don't have to...

I wish I could see you


Monday, 4 May 2020

May is Short Story Month

Last month was poetry month so in the spirit of lockdown, I recorded myself reading one of my poems every day and uploaded them to YouTube. Then I shared them everywhere so maybe you saw one? If not, here's the link to go take a look.

I have been reliably informed that May is short story month which is great because I have some of those! And it gives me something else to record this month. I hope to upload me reading some of my short stories - it won't be daily but fingers crossed it will be weekly - stay tuned!

On to the short stories!


Tales from Suburbia

A collection of short stories, plays and blog posts that intermingle my own personal experiences as a mum, the peccadillos of suburbia and the perils of social media! The subject matter varies from social observation to the humorous reflection of toddler life. Burying my Baby is heart-breaking. One Two, Cha Cha Cha is hilarious. This collection is full of human foibles and folly and is both amusing and empathetic. "A wonderful, eclectic collection of stories." "This book is a box of chocolate in book form." "A varied collection of funny and touching stories and essay."



Tales from the Seaside


A humorous collection of short stories reflecting on life by the seaside, attempts to successfully wrangle two small children and the result of being inspired by the sun, the sand and the sea. The perfect beach read, it will have you chuckling in your deckchair.


Both of these books are also available as audiobooks AND I have free codes for Audible. If you'd like a code - just get in touch and I'll hook you up. There's always a hiccup though and I apologise but I only have US Audible codes for Tales from Suburbia and UK Audible codes for Tales from the Seaside.


Join Ned Spinks, Chief Thief-Catcher, and his sidekick Jenni the sprite in this short story about an unwanted magick shoppe. This is a free download everywhere (except Amazon - go figure!)



A collection of flash fiction, or very short short-stories, from sci-fi, fantasy & contemporary author Claire Buss. Delve into her imagination and be delighted, amused and intrigued.



No time to read? Looking for some short tales to tickle your imagination while on the commute to work? Then look no further!

This collection of flash fiction has been specially crafted to ignite your love of stories and encourage you to take five minutes for yourself. Add a cup of tea and a slice of cake and you have the perfect relaxation activity.

Award-winning author Claire Buss brings you twenty eclectic flash fiction stories, tales with no more than 1000 words maximum. Delve into her imagination as she explores the everyday rooms in your house, alien auctions and what happens when you meet your fandom in real life.


I hope you find some time to enjoy a few short stories this month and if you do happen to read one of mine, I'd really appreciate it if you take the time to write a review.


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