Wednesday, 30 December 2020

A Slice of Cake With... 2020

Despite everything, 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 of all these wonderful authors, this post takes a look back at books and cake, no finer combination!

The most popular interview was with author Lee Garratt who chose Lemon Meringue Pie as his favourite cake while the most popular cake chosen was predictably, chocolate closely followed by black forest cake.

This year I have interviewed 52 authors this year and had 29 different cakes - yum!

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 2020:

  • White Sheet Cake
  • Pound Cake
  • Carrot Cake
  • Rainbow Cookie Cake
  • Chocolate Cake
  • Apple Pie
  • Victoria Sponge
  • Christmas Cake
  • Black Forest Cake
  • Boston Cream Pie
  • Red Velvet Cake
  • All the cake (LOL)
  • Cupcakes
  • Chocolate Cheesecake
  • Malteaser Christmas Cake
  • Carob and Pear Brownies
  • Cheesecake
  • Lemon Meringue Pie
  • Chocolate Brownie
  • Yellow Cake
  • Ice Cream Cake
  • Jam Doughnuts
  • Bakewell Tart
  • No cake (GASP)
  • Tres Leches
  • Walnut Cake
  • Coffee and Walnut Cake
  • Strawberry Shortcake
  • Smores Dump Cake
  • Battenburg 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 out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Tuesday, 29 December 2020

Tuesday Poem - January Is Calling

January is calling and it wants its money back
But it's too late, we spent it all in Santa's sack
The grim dark beginning to the year now looms
At a time when we're all running on fumes
2020 has kicked our butts so bad
And we've spent so long feeling sad
It's time to look ahead and see what's coming
Get our funky music on and start humming
Positive mind, positive thoughts, positive smile
Best foot forward, stepping mile after mile
Time to dream your biggest dream
Plan your year on a whole new theme
Decide what fills you with joy
Share that far and wide, don't be coy
Tell your friends you love them lots
Be first in line to buy the shots
Plan a date night with your beau
Restaurant, pub, cinema or show
Take your kids out for some exciting fun
Don't forget to bring snacks for everyone
Take a moment, take a breath, be kind to you
Cherish the old and discover the new
Waiting for you is an exciting new year
Face it full on with a bucket load of cheer


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Monday, 28 December 2020

Author Plans for 2021

The plans for 2020 didn't really go to plan, did they? So as I brush the remains of that year under the mat, I look afresh to what I might be able to achieve in 2021.

New Books

It is my intention to publish The Silk Thief and The Bone Thief, the next two Roshaven books in my humorous urban fantasy series, featuring Ned and Jenni of course.

The Silk Thief has been written and been through my crit group so first-round edits need doing. The cover artwork has been created but not yet revealed so that's something to look forward to next year! Here's a teaser:

The Bone Thief is about 5k so far with a loose plot devised. It's already gone off at an unusual tangent so there should be lots to look forward to. No cover artwork has revealed itself to me yet but when it does, my cover designer Ian Bristow is ready to go.

I'm hoping to release them fairly close together next year but I don't have any dates yet. Stay tuned.

Audio Books

After the debacle of ordering the wrong mic, I now have the right one! Then it wouldn't work with my laptop - disaster. But it appears to quite like hubby's laptop so that's the next problem solved. I am just about to buy a home studio microphone reflection filter. It's very exciting.

I am planning to record The Interspecies Poker Tournament first, then The Rose Thief. I want these two audiobooks uploaded and out there before I record and release The Silk Thief but I admit, I am very nervous. 2021 needs to be the year I bite the bullet and just go for it.

And that's the plan. Written down, it may not look like much but if I actually manage to achieve all these goals that will be 6 new releases which will be fantastic.

Training For Me

I've got Nick Stephenson's Your First 10,000 Readers Course and a 'How-To' course from Derek Doepker for creating and uploading audiobooks. The other thing I really want to do is learn how to utilise BookBub fully and maybe even get that elusive BookBub ad - you never know!

Training For You

I deliver  'Buss Surgeries' for Pen to Print, and these are currently online so available for everyone who books a slot. There are usually four surgeries a year and I cover things like creating an author platform, using social media for authors, writing blurbs and how to create ads for your books. As soon as I have the dates for these, I will share them on my author website and Facebook page

Wishing you and your family a healthy, happy and prosperous 2021.

Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.



Wednesday, 23 December 2020

A Slice of Cake With... Sonnet O'Dell

This week I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Sonnet O'Dell.

Sonnet was born at the John Radcliffe in Oxford and spent many years living in different spots all over the UK.

Sonnet now live in Worcester, Worcestershire, home of Lea & Perrins and the site of the last battler of the Civil War. Sonnet enjoys nothing more than reading or writing a good book. She is fascinated with worlds created by words and has a passion for mythology that can be seen in some of her works.

She has a BA Hons Degree in Creative Writing & Writing for Performance and a writing companion in the form of a large black tom cat called Salem.

When not busy writing, her favourite thing to do is to curl up with Salem on her lap and read a good book. Her favourite is Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.

What kind of stories do you write?

I write books that blend many things together, monsters, myths, romance, adventure, magic, crime, science fiction. I love to fit fantasy into the everyday, to imagine that magic hasn’t been lost, its just evolved to look a little different to survive alongside mobile phone and computers.


Can you describe your writing why?

I’m not sure I could stop if I wanted to. I’ve always has stories that I’ve wanted to tell, they grow inside me until the force their way out.


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

This is a tough one. Not sure I have a whole paragraph. I have one liners that I quite like or cheesy jokes that manage to make their way into my stuff. I suppose one of my favourites was:

“I have to ask, do you know you’re crazy?”

“Not sure. Hum a few bars and I’ll join in.”

Tell us about your latest project

I’ve just recently moved into audiobooks. I currently have the entire Cera Raine Series available on audio narrated by the wonderful Claire Nicholls. I’ve just finished Triton Rising on audio and it should be out later this year, and just starting to get Mistakenly Mated recorded which will probably hit sales platforms beginning of next year.


All are available on Kindle in the meantime ;)

What is your favourite cake?

Black Forrest Gateau. Hands down. Love it.


A very popular choice on this blog! You can connect with Sonnet at the following places:


Join me next week when I take a look back at the cake of 2020. My first slice of cake for 2021 will be with Sydney Scrogham.

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 out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Tuesday, 22 December 2020

Tuesday poem - Tier Four Christmas

Have you heard the news?
We've all got Christmas blues
Locked down in tier four
No-one knocking on your door
Can't see any family or friends
All spoilt perhaps but it depends
Let's look at it again shall we
Home is where we can just be
No driving, no family drama
No traffic, no Christmas Llama's
(It's a thing, I promise you
As are toy dogs that poo)
Wear a Christmas jumper or not
Walk round in your pants if hot
Eat mince pies for breakfast with cream
Or lie in and have wonderful dreams
Open your presents or keep them for later
Rustle up dinner your way, with taters!
Watch silly old movies, listen to tunes
Gather round the phone for a family zoom
Toast yourself and those who are nearest
Say I Love You to your very dearest
Yes it's different, yes it's odd
Yes you might be on your todd
But you are still you and I'm still me
One day we will have that cup of tea
I'd rather you were safe and keeping well
Then risking health in covid hell
Imagine the chats and the laughter
That we'll have when we're in the after
Tier 4 won't last forever I promise
And I'm never wrong, honest
Sending you all my festive cheer
Wishing you well into next year

Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.


Monday, 21 December 2020

My Books of 2020

Books read in December 2020

A Dark Horizon by T.W.M Ashford - 4 stars

Recap: Jack must stop Everett Reeves from building a black hole and destroying billions of lives.

Review: Realising that things weren't going to resolve in this book was at first worrying as I got towards the end then with relief as we learn there will be another book - yay! I really like Jack's relationship with the robots and his semi-mentor like status with Klik, she is a cool character so I look forward to more from her. Jack's goodbye to Earth was very sad so the twist at the end of the book was a great moment, nothing like a good cliffhanger. This being book three, it felt very much like settling back in with old friends which is what you want with a series. This space opera is a smooth read with solid worldbuilding, good pace and a dollop of humour.



Bells and Spells by Lana Melyan - 4 stars 


Recap: Four witches are trying to get to a festive ball but the Knock Knock Santa has other ideas.

Review: A quick supernatural festive read with a little heat at the end. I liked the friends dynamic and the fact they had to reveal their secrets. The relationship part was so bittersweet, I hope this is the first of more novellas so that will be explored further.



Dead Until Dark by Charlaine Harris - 3 stars

Re-read because I just re-watched the TV series and had nostalgia. I read most of the series last time except for the last few books so figured this was the perfect time to begin again and then finish all the books.

I enjoyed the scenes that matched the TV series because I had clear images in my mind but I'd forgotten how much sex HBO added lol.






Living Dead in Dallas by Charlaine Harris - 3 stars 

Enjoyed the re-read, having just re-watched the TV show it's interesting to see what the scriptwriters decided to change, expand and leave out. 









Books read in 2020

This past year I've read 80 books so once again I am short of my 100 book target. Even a pandemic didn't give me more time to read! 

Here's what got a 5-star rating from me this year:


  • Thief of Stars by T.W.M Ashford
  • The Little Christmas Shop on Nutcracker Lane by Jaimie Admans
  • The Last Secret by Lana Melyan
  • The Vidents by J McClean
  • A Shaper's Farewell by Karen MacRae
  • Sweethearts of Ilford Lane by Farzana Hakim
  • The Silence Of The Girls by Pat Barker
  • Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata
  • The Watchmaker's Daughter by CJ Archer
  • Esio Trot by Roald Dahl
  • Blameless by Gail Carriger
  • The Little Paris Bookshop by Nina George
  • Soulless by Gail Carriger
  • The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde

You can read all my reviews and see the other 66 books I've read in 2020 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 2021.

It's time for the big question now. What will be my reading goal in 2021? I've tried three years in a row now to reach the elusive 100 I hit in 2017, it can't have been a fluke. Let's do it!


Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Wednesday, 16 December 2020

A Slice of Cake With... Renee Hollands

This week I am delighted to be having a slice of cake with Renee Hollands.


Renee is an Australian author who recently completed her debut novel. She likes pineapple on pizza, afternoon naps, and delving into history.

What kind of stories do you write?

I like twists, preferably something that punches the reader in the gut. My personal favourite twist was from a short story called Call Me Chloe, about the daughter of a serial killer who has carried on the tradition by murdering Tinder dates with deathcap mushroom pizzas.

Can you describe your writing why?

I write better than I speak. Writing is a way to express myself in ways speech can’t. Whenever I have something really important to say, I’ll write a letter instead of having a conversation.

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

As I am a debut author, I’m going to choose my new novel, The Magpie’s Call.

Instead of a passage, my favourite scene is a dinner setting where the Mistress of the House is dining with two families after a tragedy at their workplace. Lots of historical research was incorporated into the scene, and every time I edited it, the tension was increased a notch or two.


Tell us about your latest project

The Magpie’s Call started as a love letter to my ancestors, who were brought out from England to work at the Macarthur dairy farms in New South Wales, Australia. The area of Camden is known as the Birthplace of Australian Agriculture. Turns out my ancestors are only interesting to my family, so I created a fictional family and did horrible things to them. This novel has been in production for the past two years; I started when my daughter was 3, now she’s 5 and at school.

What is your favourite cake?

Black Forest cake, with fresh cream and real cherries. It’s indulgent and a little bit naughty. OK, a lot naughty.


You can connect with Renee at the following places: 

www.facebook.com/ReneeHollandsAuthor
Twitter.com/Coal_Front
Www.reneehollands.com
And her book is available here - https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08CTG5D8P

Join me next week when I look back at all the cake eaten in 2020 - what will be the most popular slice?

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 out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Tuesday, 15 December 2020

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 out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Monday, 14 December 2020

To Review Or Not Review

Like most writers, I adore reading and I love getting books as presents. I love it when people recommend books to me and I belong to three book clubs, which means I always have a huge TBR (to be read) pile and I’m never short of something to read.

I also love the Goodreads website, because I have a terrible memory. So, every time someone suggests a book for me to read, I add it to one of my virtual shelves. I have lots. Come be my friend and check them out.

I have read lots of articles on how to maximise Goodreads as both a writer and a reader and I think I do a fairly good job. I’m not as active as I’d like in groups because I have so little time these days, time I try to spend reading.

One of the suggestions I came across a few years ago was to set up a ‘dnf’ or did-not-finish shelf, so that the book is not counted in your read shelf because you couldn’t finish it and also so you don’t have to write a negative review. Like a good little shelfer I created it. And over the years I added a couple of books and I didn’t think anything of it, until recently.

The other day, I started reading an indie-author book and, unfortunately, it was, for me, unreadable. I chucked it on my ‘dnf’ shelf. But then I thought, hang on a minute, I’m an indie-author. And I check my Goodreads stats regularly. How would I feel if someone put my book on a ‘dnf’ shelf? Not great, that’s for sure.

So I have axed my ‘dnf’ shelf. I will still give books 50 pages to snag me because there are too many books and not enough time to read them all but if I don’t get on with the book I shall just remove it from my shelves and pick up the next story. I will not write a negative review.

There will always be a book one person loves and another person cannot read – that’s just life – but we can be kind about it and put that book back for someone else to try.

This whole experience brings me round to the initial quandary of reviewing a book I didn’t enjoy. We can look at it from a couple of different perspectives. If I’m 100% honest on what I think about everything I read then I get points for being truthful, right? Hmmm, I’m not so sure. As a creative myself, I know how much blood, sweat and tears go into my books and if I’m honest, I’m not sure I want to know how much a reader disliked my book baby. So why would I do that to someone else?

From a logistics point of view, one bad review can have a huge impact on your review ranking, bringing a very respectable 4.5 down to a 3 and a lot of readers do look at reviews when deciding what to read next. I know I do.

Let’s consider a fan of my books checking out my ‘books read’ shelf and reading my reviews to get a sense of what I like to read. What would they think if there were lots of negative reviews? I feel that negativity would reflect badly on me as a person and my book fan might decide not to rush and buy my next release.

I’m certainly not advocating false reviews, I’m just wondering whether reviewing a book you thought was awful is a particularly good idea; especially if it has good reviews from other readers. It brings us back to how we want to be perceived as an author and a reader.

On the flip side, apart from buying the book in the first place, the absolute best thing you can do, for any aspiring writer, is to write a review of their book.  Obviously, you need to read the book as well – that goes without saying – but you would be surprised. Should you write a review regardless, or whether you liked it or not?

I often get told by readers that they don’t feel confident enough to write a review. I think it might bring back memories of having to write book reports in school. This is not what anyone is expecting; trust me. A few lines to say what you liked, and why, is all you need to do. These days, it’s possible to rank a book with a star rating without even saying anything. It takes seconds and means so much to the author.

If however, you are worried about upsetting the author if you say you didn’t like parts of the book then let’s just think about that for a moment. If my friend tried a dress on that looked horrendous and asked me what I thought, I would say I didn’t think it was quite her and could we maybe try a different colour? Translate that to book review writing and consider whether you want to deliberately hurt someone’s feelings or not.

As I mentioned previously, the book gets 50 pages to hook me (100 if I feel like I really ought to read it) and if I’m not invested by then I move on. The book is removed from my Goodreads shelf with a minimum of fuss and usually returned to the library. If I enjoyed the book, then these are the ratings I use:

5 stars means it was the best thing you’ve ever read, you couldn’t put it down, you were desperate to know what happened next, you really enjoyed it and you’d definitely read that author’s next book.

4 stars means you enjoyed reading it but there were just one or two things that niggled at you. You could put it down but you also really wanted to know what happened and you would read the next one.

3 stars means it was all right.  You finished it, so it wasn’t awful but you took your time, so it wasn’t great, either.  Maybe there was a character you didn’t like very much or you felt the author spent too long drumming a particular point home.  Basically, there was some degree of disappointment.

I never review below 3 stars and if I’m reading a book for a requested review (maybe I got an early release copy) and I just can’t read it, then I get in touch with the organiser/publisher and politely explain the book is not for me and I’d rather not leave a negative review.

By remaining consistent with your reviews you begin to be seen as a trusted figure, someone whose opinion other readers can rely on.

If you went to a supermarket and bought something from their new range of desserts and it was so delicious, you’d tell all your friends, wouldn’t you? This is the same thing. Indie authors can’t grow beyond their circle of friends and family without reviews and even if you just write Loved it, you could find yourself honoured as a character in the next book. We’re very grateful. 

Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.


Wednesday, 9 December 2020

A Slice of Cake With... Sydnie Beaupré

This week I am delighted to be having a slice of cake with Sydnie Beaupré. 


Sydnie is more than just a girl: they're an openly LQBTQ2IA author that lives in their own imagination: a post-apocalyptic, zombie-inhabited world, where magical creatures and supernatural occurrences are simply the mundane.

Outside of that, Sydnie can often be found in Montreal, Quebec where they were born and raised - and also where they chose to set their second novel, Such Exquisite Calamity. When they're not struggling to write at least one paragraph a day, you can find them reading the same six books they've been reading for the last two years out of obsession, playing their three-stringed violin, or singing very off-key despite being a great singer. And reliably, you can always find Sydnie spending time with their amazing friends and crazy family over a good cup of coffee or tea.

What kind of stories do you write?

I write the books I want to read; magic, curses, mental illness, you name it, if I want to read about it, I write about it. 




Can you describe your writing why?

The idea of people reading my stories is what keeps me motivated to write. I am a storyteller, and my biggest pleasure is sharing my stories with people willing to read them.

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

“Instinct takes over, as I flip her underneath me, holding both of her wrists above our heads, pinning them to the bed. “Glad we’re on the same page,” I say in her ear, before breaking free of my bones with a growl, reduced to an exalted, breathless, quivering spirit. I have never felt better. I have never felt so loved.” 

Such Exquisite Calamity


Tell us about your latest project

Meltingpot is an anthology written by neurodivergent/on behalf or about neurodivergent people. There is no theme, except that most of our contributors have some sort of neurodivergence or a family member who is neurodivergent. All proceeds go towards The Douglas Foundation.

What is your favourite cake?

My favourite cake is strawberry cheesecake!


You can connect with Sydnie on her website: https://sydniebeaupre.wixsite.com/sydniebeaupre

Join me next week when I have a slice of cake with Renee Hollands.

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 out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Monday, 7 December 2020

The Guilty Writer

Hello, my name is Claire and I’m a guilty writer. Don’t get me wrong, I love writing and I still can’t get over the fact that other people enjoy reading my books. But the process of writing itself is not always a smooth path. Let me explain.

Getting Up Early To Write

If I set my alarm early to get up and join the five am writers club, I feel guilty if I wake hubby and the kids. I also feel guilty that I’m sat with a cup of tea writing and not working out, ironing or doing one of my other million jobs.

Writing During The Day

Carving out time to myself when I’m officially a stay-at-home mum is tough. I should be being ‘Wonder Mum’ all the time and deciding to put my headphones on so I can switch off Peppa Pig is so hard. I often feel incredibly guilty, because I feel as though I’m letting my children down, not stimulating them sufficiently and most definitely not being ‘Fun Mum’!

Evening Writing

Once the kids have been put to bed, I can lift the laptop lid and get to writing. Or I can spend some time with my husband and watch a TV show. Work or relationship? Guilt both ways.

Writing In The Café

Obviously, this would have been pre-COVID, but occasionally I would guiltily leave my youngest at home with hubby, take my oldest to school and then sit in a coffee shop and write, buying overpriced coffee with a guilty twinge.

Staying Up Late To Write

The time hits ten pm and everyone has gone to bed so, of course, it’s the perfect time to write. Only I’m tired and have to get up early in the morning, so I either feel guilty for staying up late, or guilty for not staying up late!

It’s certainly a conundrum. Trying to figure out when or where to write and doing my best not to feel bad about it. But what is guilt anyway? It’s a feeling we put on ourselves for not doing something we’re supposed to be doing, or conversely, doing something we know we shouldn’t be. So really, when we think about it, we are the architects of our own guilt. How, then, can we lessen our guilt?

Is It Appropriate To Feel Guilty For Writing/Not Writing?

If your job is full-time writer, and you have no other demands on your day other than sitting at a desk from nine to five Monday to Friday, and writing, then you should be getting on with it. Stop procrastinating. If you are a part-time writer due to other commitments, then you owe it to yourself to find blocks of time where you are ‘allowed’ to write. That might mean playing six games of snakes and ladders first, or sitting down and watching an episode of Cobra Kai with your hubby before donning headphones and writing for an hour. An hour a day might not sound like much, but if it’s concentrated, dedicated time on your book, it’s an hour you didn’t have yesterday.

Make The Change

If you are feeling guilty for writing, then it’s clear your subconscious is trying to tell you something. It could be that the time you set aside for writing, and told everyone you were going to sit and do some writing, ended up being a mammoth scrolling session on social media while watching an episode of TV on your laptop and answering your emails. You are never going to write successfully like that! Close all your tabs, mute your phone. Find your creative centre and give yourself permission to write. Procrastination is a state of mind, not of being. If you sit in that chair and begin that sentence, the words will eventually flow. Writing is a ‘practice’, not a ‘perfect’, like so many other creative endeavours, and requires patience, learning and commitment.

Accept The Guilt

Time is precious and, inevitably, you will have to miss out on one thing to do another. It’s your choice to decide what the balance should be; always remember that. If you come to realise the balance you chose isn’t making you happy, then it’s within your power to shift that balance. I have a timer on my phone, set to remind me to sit and do something with my little girl. The timer goes off every day. Now, that might seem mental to some people but to me it’s a wonderful nudge, pushing me to spend quality time with my kids and to not sit frozen in front of a guilty blank page.

At other times, you just have to suck it up and be guilty. If your husband works shift patterns and you have to write in the evening on one of his days off, instead of spending quality time with him, then so be it. Writing is your passion, your career, your dream and, as we all know, dreams require bucketloads of blood, sweat and tears to be realised. The key is to not let that guilt overwhelm you. Acknowledge it, do the best writing you can do at that moment, then enjoy your family time the next day.

Learn

If feeling incredibly guilty about writing is paralysing your creativity and encouraging your procrastination, you have got to learn to ‘let it go’! You are your own worst critic and you own your guilt. You can forgive yourself. You can change things.

No One Is Perfect

As much as social media would have us believe otherwise, nobody is perfect. Nobody gets it right the first time, every single time, and nobody is winning all the time. Everyone makes mistakes, chooses the wrong thing and picks the wrong option. Just like everyone is capable of realising the mistake and deciding not to do it again. There is no point in beating yourself up for the day, week or month. It certainly won’t help your creativity.

I think what I’m trying to say is, is your guilt trying to tell you something is wrong, or is it just an emotional response to a situation? Think about that next time you’re feeling guilty for writing and then be kind to yourself.

It’s not the end of the world if you feel guilty for writing, or if you feel guilty for not writing! Look after your mind, body and soul. Laugh, love and smile. At the end of the day, as a creative, you are driven to create. Be that writing, art, music, or whatever creative channel you direct your energies into.

Every day, you will feel the urge to express yourself and, even though life often gets in the way, there is no need to feel guilty for doing what you love. All you have to do is find a balance that works for you. Channelling a positive mindset will power you through any mental roadblocks in place. It will also forgive you for any guilt that you put on yourself.

As a guilty writer, I know why I put myself in this position every single day. I know why I sacrifice things for writing time. I can’t imagine doing anything else. It’s in my DNA as a writer to write and I know, after speaking to my writer friends, that they feel the same way. Some of us are able to let the guilt go more easily than others, but all of us will sit down to write sooner or later.

And if that guilt is preventing you from writing because you are scared of failing? Well, that, my friend, is a whole other conversation we’ll be having in the near future. What I can say now, is that you should take a moment to remember how brilliant you are, how much you’ve already achieved and remind yourself that you love to create. Maybe step away from the project causing you the most grief and start something new. Re-read the book that inspired you in the first place. Re-visit your joy. Happy writing! 

Claire Buss is a multi-genre author and poet, completely addicted to cake. Find out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.

Thursday, 3 December 2020

Books Read in November 2020


The Little Christmas Shop on Nutcracker Lane by Jaimie Admans - 5 stars

Recap: Nia makes a wish to the magical nutcracker on Nutcracker Lane for her very own Prince Charming.

Review: Lovely. Absolutely lovely story. I twigged who James was very early on but that just made it even better. A wonderful love story at Christmas, it had me tearing up, grinning goofily, fuming with anger and going all soppy. I think I may have to read this every year.





The Just City by Jo Walton - 4 stars

Recap: Apollo & Athene create Plato's Just City.

Review: I haven't read Plato but I don't feel like that was a disadvantage per se, the philosophy was explained well enough. I enjoyed the story and read it with rising horror at how things were set up and followed through. I liked the different character chapters and felt for poor Simmea after she gave birth and descended into postpartum depression. The ending was a little unfinished but I see this is book 1 so hopefully book 2 will explore the fallout. 



Three Women by Lisa Taddeo - 3 stars

Recap: the book follows the sex lives of three women in the US.

Review: at times interesting, at times shocking. Three women in a sea of women are singled out to tell their sexual history. I feel the men in two of the stories got a bit of a rough deal whilst in Maggie's story he should've paid. How much truth, how much fiction - not sure, but don't assume all women have these kinds of sexual stories to tell! Life is both more boring and more bizarre. 

Wednesday, 2 December 2020

A Slice of Cake With... Laura Hunter

This week I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Laura Hunter.

L.L. Hunter is the author of over 20 published works, including The Legend of the Archangel Series and The Eden Chronicles. She has studied everything from veterinary nursing, forensic science, and dramatic arts, but has always known her true calling was to be an author. 
She has been writing since her teens - everything from fan fiction to song lyrics, to plays and musicals. When not working on her next paranormal romance, she can be found at home in Australia, reading somewhere comfortable with one or both of her “fur babies.”

What kind of stories do you write?

I write intriguing, addictive stories with a splash of romance and adventure, set in fantasy, paranormal and contemporary worlds.

Can you describe your writing why?

I write mostly for myself, as a creative outlet. And because I love writing. But it seems people love what I create, so I write for them now too.

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

I can’t pick a favourite, so I’ll just share something from my next release, Crown of Lies. This is book 2 in my Midnight Ball series.

“My life has always been shrouded in secrets, a crown of lies hovering above my head. All I know is I am supposed to discover what those secrets are. I think it’s my destiny.”

Tell us about your latest project

Crown of Lies is the second instalment in my Midnight Ball series, a YA fantasy series inspired by Greek mythology. It has witches, gods and goddesses, magic, betrayal, and secrets aplenty. It follows Grace, my main character, after a heartbreaking betrayal and the death of her parents, as she deals with the aftermath of both. I had a great reception to book 1, Reign of Secrets, so I hope readers are going to like Crown of Lies just as much.

What is your favourite cake?

Red Velvet Cake.

You can connect with L.L. Hunter here:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/LL-Hunter/110104129132865
Twitter: https://twitter.com/LLHunterbooks
Instagram: @llhunter
Amazon: http://amzn.to/1So75bF
Blog: http://llhunter.blogspot.com.au
Authorgraph: http://www.authorgraph.com/authors/LLHunterbooks
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/llhunter
Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/l-l-hunter
Newsletter: http://eepurl.com/by8k0r

Join me next week when I have a slice of cake with Sydnie Beaupre.

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 out more about her books on her website clairebuss.co.uk. Join the discussion in her Facebook group Buss's Book Stop.