Wednesday, 31 August 2022

A Slice of Cake With... Pernille Hughes

This week I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Pernille Hughes. 

Before she moved to writing full-time, Pernille studied Film & Literature at university. After she graduated she went on to market Natural History films before working in Children’s television, which meant living in actual Teletubbyland for a while! From 2011–2015, she was a regular contributor for The Sunday Times column ‘Confessions of a Tourist’. She's had two novels published to date - Punch-Drunk Love and Probably the Best Kiss in the World - and her new book Ten Years is released today.

Pernille lives in Buckinghamshire, England and while the kids are at school she scoffs cake and writes stories in order to maintain a shred of sanity. 

What kind of books do you write?

I write funny kissing books, with modern, capable women who have lost their way or not caught a break. I believe love and laughter go hand in hand, so that’s what I write.

Can you describe your writing why?

Since I was a small child I’ve always made up conversations in my head. And they need to come out! I had four children in a short space of time, and I took an online writing course while they slept in order to keep my brain from shrinking. Once I’d worked out that women’s fiction was where my writing voice lay, I finally had a place for all that mental dialogue to spill out. My stories are very much based on people conversing, sparring and reconciling. 

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

My second book Probably the Best Kiss in the World, was a dream to write. It was inspired by a trip to Copenhagen with my husband where we spent a day visiting all the micro-breweries in the city and walking along the houseboat-lined canals. It struck me that I’d like to write a book about a heroine who wants to be a brewster and a love-interest who lives in a houseboat. And hey-presto!

Surveying the little GoBoat in front of them, Jen wasn’t convinced. It was like a blue plastic bath toy, except grown-up sized, with a solar-cell motor and a picnic table bang in the middle. She’d seen groups pootling along the canals in these, all having a cheery time with their food and drinks in the sunshine. Seeing other people in them was one thing, actually venturing out in one herself was another thing entirely. 

Thankfully, Max was up for driving it. She’d once spent a school trip on a narrow-boat and could at least steer the thing. Meanwhile, Alice and Lydia gleefully unloaded the bags, and suddenly their table was adorned with snacks and beers. Trying a bottle of Mikkeller, Jen was touched they’d sought out local indie beers. They knew her so well, and all of a sudden she realised the joy of a hen-do. It was time away with the women most precious to you, who knew you best and who had your happiness at heart. She swallowed the lump in her throat and whacked her sunglasses over her eyes so the others would be none the wiser. 

Their boat was launched from the jetty by a baby-faced attendant and they commenced their route into the canals. Begrudgingly, Jen conceded this was a fine way to see the city, puttering along between the old buildings with beers in hand, hooting and faking echoes as they passed under low bridges. Crossing the harbour got a bit choppy, but they’d necked a couple of bottles by then, so nobody panicked. Instead they cheerily waved at the tourists in the glass-topped tour boats, at the cyclists on the bike bridge and at the commuters on the yellow water buses. And there was singing. Any song they could remember with a water theme was mauled by their astonishing lack of musical talent. 

Following the map, Max steered them into the calmer waters of the Christianshavn canal where tall colourfully-painted houses lined the streets on either side and boats of all kinds, from small yachts to hydrangea-laden houseboats, were moored. 

“They modelled this part of the city on Amsterdam, you know,” Jen said, dreamily. The warmth of the day and the beer had sloughed the efficiency off Jen’s sightseeing needs. She was feeling quite idle now and more surprisingly, she was rather enjoying it. 

“Who’s they?” asked Alice, who was leaning into Max, face to the sun. 

“The King. Christian, I think, or Frederik.” She’d seen this on a BBC4 documentary. All Danish kings were alternately called one or the other since the 1500’s, which had struck her as rather tidy. “Duh,” she slapped herself on the forehead, “must have been a Christian, he named it after himself.” But annoyingly she couldn’t remember which one had established this gorgeous part of the city and in her tipsiness, it suddenly seemed imperative to know. She dug out her phone and started swiping to locate her Copenhagen app. 

“Put the phone away, Jen,” Lydia murmured, “we can look it up when we get home. Just enjoy it.” She was laid back along the side of the boat, sun bathing. She seemed in a state of bliss. 

“Won’t take a second,” Jen insisted.

“Seriously, Jen. It’ll keep.” Without opening her eyes, Lydia tried to swat the phone aside but misjudged both her aim and velocity. The phone flew from Jen’s hand into the canal. Heads from the surrounding homes and boats turned towards the ensuing squawking. Jen was instantly hanging over the side trying to reach the phone which currently floated on the surface but was beginning to take in water and start its descent into the murky depths. Jen saw her whole life descending before her. 

“Nooooooooooo.” 

Max thankfully cut the engine, but they were drifting nonetheless, necessitating Jen to stretch further than was comfortable as she willed her fingertips longer. This could not be happening. 

Suddenly a small net appeared in her field of vision, deftly scooping the phone up. Thank god. Jen’s eyes followed the attached stick up to the deck of a long black barge moored to the quayside. On the deck, her eyes met with a pair of bare feet, travelled up the blond-haired legs to baggy navy cargo shorts, via the bare torso, to, wow, back to the torso because ripped, and then reluctantly further on to the face. 

“Well, hello,” Jen heard Lydia say in a salacious tone entirely inappropriate to the urgency of the moment. “Hottie alert.”

Tell us about your latest project

My new book is called Ten Years. It’s an Enemies to Lovers story, spanning (you guessed it,) ten years, roaming from London to Snowdonia, Brighton to Cannes. It’s out on August 31st and available in ebook, audio and paperback.

The blurb looks like this;

They’re perfect for each other.
They just don’t know it yet.

Becca and Charlie have known each other for years – ever since they met at university.

And for every one of those years, they've bickered, argued, offended, mocked and generally rubbed each other up the wrong way.

Until now. Until Ally’s bucket list. The death of their loved one should mean Becca and Charlie can go their separate ways and not look back. But completing the list is something neither Charlie nor Becca can walk away from.

And sometimes, those who bring out the worst in you, also bring out the very best…

Over the course of ten years, Becca and Charlie’s paths collide as they deal with grief, love and life after Ally. 

What is your favourite cake?

Ach noooooo, this is THE hardest question ever as I am such a fan of cake. Picking just one is nigh on impossible. My instant thought is to say anything with cinnamon (Denmark, where my parents are from, is very big on cinnamon cakes. If you’ve tried the Cinnamon Social from Ole & Steen’s bakeries, you’ll understand, but otherwise any cinnamon swirl will do). BUT I’m also a sucker for chocolate, so a Gateau Marcel, an Opera Cake, or a Sacher Torte would be a special treat. Oh and then there is buttercream, something with thick layers of buttercream, maybe a coffee walnut cake, mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm…

You can connect with Pernille on her website www.pernillehughes.com and you can find her on Twitter @pernillehughes, on Instagram @Pernillehughes or on Facebook at her Pernille Hughes Author page. She is on Tiktok @pernillehughes but is too old to work it.

Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Tony Logan. 

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 on Kofi - 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. Never miss out on future posts by following me.

Friday, 26 August 2022

A Slice of Cake With Angela Petch

Today I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Angela Petch.

Published by Bookouture, Angela Petch is an award-winning writer of fiction – and the occasional poem. Every summer she moves to Tuscany for six months where she and her husband own a renovated watermill which they let out. When not exploring their unspoilt corner of the Apennines, she disappears to her writing desk at the top of a converted stable. In her Italian handbag or hiking rucksack she always makes sure to store notebook and pen to jot down ideas. The winter months are spent in Sussex where most of her family live. When Angela’s not helping out with grandchildren, she catches up with writer friends. Angela’s gripping, WWII, Tuscan novels are published by Bookouture. while her novel, Mavis and Dot, was self-published and tells of the frolics and foibles of two best-friends who live by the seaside. Angela also writes short stories published in Prima and People’s Friend.


What kind of books do you write?

Italy is part of my soul, having lived there on and off throughout my (long) life. My mother-in-law is Italian and was a teenager during the war. Her true stories ignited me and led me to write several novels (strongly laced with fact) about this period. Originally self-published, I am now with the fabulous Bookouture publishing family.

My one remaining self-published book is “something completely different”. Mavis and Dot is set by the Sussex seaside and describes the antics of two retired ladies: unlikely friends who get up to all sorts. All proceeds go towards research into cancer and the book is very dear to me. I wrote it in memory of my best friend who died far too early from ovarian cancer. I am working on a sequel when I have time.

Can you describe your writing why?

I think it is important to honour the courage of ordinary people who experienced so much (too much) during World War Two. Sadly, many unsung heroes and heroines are disappearing from our lives before they can tell us what they did. For us.  When I receive e mails from readers – many of them second generation Italian immigrants – who thank me for depicting what life was like for their relatives, then I am happy. We know a lot about the French campaign, but not about what went on in Italy during this period. As I live in Italy for six months each year and am fluent in Italian, I’m able to research by talking to my elderly Italian friends, as well as studying original documents. We need to know about our past in order to understand our future and not repeat the same mistakes.

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

The Tuscan Girl was the second book commissioned by Bookouture and close to my heart. I met an elderly Italian gentleman on one of my walks in the Apennines. He died last year at the wonderful age of one hundred. I started talking to him in Italian and, to my utter surprise, he responded in English. He’d been a POW in Nottingham throughout the war. And he inspired me to write this book. RIP, Bruno xx

From the Prologue to The Tuscan Girl Tuscany, 1945

Birdsong and the lazy buzzing of a bee filtered into her hiding place like a normal start to the day. From far away she heard a cockerel crow. Normally it would be the signal to roll out of bed, pull on her clothes and start her morning chores. But nothing in her life was routine anymore. Tears spilled down her cheeks, splashing onto her brother’s coat. She put her head in her hands, the stubbly growth on her scalp bringing back more awful memories. It would have been better if she’d burned in the house fire. She sobbed, rocking back and forth, not caring now if her crying gave her away. There was no point to life.
    
And then, she felt a fluttering in her belly, like a butterfly grazing its wings against her insides. She placed her hands beneath her clothing and, spreading her fingers over her abdomen as if to protect the butterfly from escaping, she waited. Until she felt it again, and then she stopped crying.


Tell us about your latest project

I had an uncle whom I was never able to meet. He was a rear gunner in the RAF and died when his Liberator was shot down during the war over what was known at that time as Yugoslavia. He had flown out of an airfield based in southern Italy.  I have a photo of this handsome nineteen-year-old, my mother’s only brother. How I wish he had survived.

In my latest book, I have explored what might happen if a young man did survive such an event. And lose his memory. How would his life pan out if he was rescued by an Italian family? Would he want to return? Would his past catch up with him? 

My most recent book is The Postcard From Italy. 


Italy, 1945. ‘Where am I?’ The young man wakes, bewildered. He sees olive trees against a bright blue sky. A soft voice soothes him. ‘We saw you fall from your plane. The parachute saved you.’ He remembers nothing of his life, or the war that has torn the world apart… but where does he belong?

England, present day. Antique-shop-owner Susannah wipes away a tear as she tidies her grandmother’s belongings. Elsie’s memories are fading, and every day Susannah feels further away from her only remaining family. But everything changes when she stumbles across a yellowed postcard of a beautiful Italian stone farmhouse, tucked away in Elsie’s dressing table. A message dated from World War 2 speaks of a secret love. Could her grandmother, who never talked about the past, have fallen for someone in Italy all those years ago?

With Elsie unable to answer her questions, Susannah becomes determined to track down the house and find a distraction from her grief. Arriving at what is now a crumbling hotel by the sparkling Italian sea, she feels strangely at home. And after an unexpected encounter with handsome wine waiter Giacomo, she can’t tell if it’s his dark eyes or his offer to help solve her mystery that makes her heart race.

Together they find a dusty chest tucked in a forgotten corner of the building. The white silk of a World War 2 parachute spills out. And the Royal Air Force identity tag nestled in the folds bears a familiar name…

With Giacomo by her side, and before it’s too late for her grandmother, can Susannah discover the truth behind a shocking wartime secret at the heart of her family? Or will it tear her apart?

What is your favourite cake?

Such a difficult question. I can eat all sorts… but I’m choosing Panforte: an Italian cake – more like a thick biscuit – densely packed with fruits, nuts and spices. Traditionally it is eaten over the Christmas and New Year in Italy, but if I can get hold of it, I can eat it all year round.


You can get in touch with Angela here:


Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Pernille Hughes. 

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. Never miss out on future posts by following me.

Wednesday, 10 August 2022

A Slice of Cake With... Leanne Lovegrove

Today I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Leanne Lovegrove.

Leanne is a lawyer, wife and mother and a lover of romance and reading. Her law career created an addiction to coffee but provides countless story ideas.  She is the author of four romance novels, and two novellas. Leanne likes writing sweeping love stories with happily-ever-afters with strong female heroines and set in the beautiful landscape of Australia. She lives in Brisbane, Australia with her husband and three children.  

What kind of books do you write?

I write sweeping love stories with happily-ever-afters featuring strong female heroines set in the beautiful landscape of Australia.

Can you describe your writing why?

I can’t not write. My happy place is transporting myself away to the destinations I write about and living vicariously through the wonderful characters I create. There is no better feeling.

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

Prologue from A Good Life

Shadows dance on the window and I blink. Time zeros back in. When I sat down it was daylight, the birds chirping, the grass wet with dew, the sun not yet radiating any warmth. I hear the clock ticking; it sounds loud to me.

Too loud.

My last cigarette has burned out in the tray, ashes only left. The odour lingers, on my fingers, in the air. A smoky pallor fills the room.

The pervading darkness of the twilight creeps into the room. Where have the hours gone? I look at the easel standing in front of me, the brush in my hand, paint still clumped in the bristles. The cheeks of the cherub staring back at me are full and flushed pink.

Were they ever warm? A whisper of blonde hair across the head, short, fluffy. I long to brush my hand over the wisps and feel its softness. That longing causes an ache to shoot through my chest. My arms are empty.

The eyes are shut but I imagine they are blue. Like the ocean. The lashes fair like the sand on the beach. I move my foot to brush the dog; the fur is bristly. She knows; offers me comfort. But it’s too late. I’m exhausted. The pain of each stroke has kept me going, like an exorcism, releasing the agony and transporting it to the painting. It’s hard to capture likeness, my memory tricks me, time so short, images fading.

It’s done.

Tell us about your latest project

A Good Life is a story about living your best life and what that might look like. Obviously it is different for each person, but I was trying to explore how we often get trapped into what we think is our best life, only to discover that it may not be. In my story, those questions don’t arise for my character Greta until her world falls apart and then she is forced to question everything. It is only by escaping to the seclusion of her crazy old aunt’s house that she can begin to find the answers she needs. Set in both hinterland and the beach, it is a beautiful location and it includes a fabulous older character with not only a male character to adore but he’s inspiring also.

What is your favourite cake?

Well, this can be a variable thing, but I have made a lot of strawberry cakes lately and they are delicious. I have found a recipe that uses sour cream and the cake is incredibly moist! Yum.

You can connect with Leanne at the following places:

Web: Leanne Lovegrove Author
Facebook: facebook.com/leannelovegroveauthor
Instagram: instagram.com/leannelovegroveauthor

Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Angela Petch. 

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 on Kofi - 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. Never miss out on future posts by following me.

Sunday, 7 August 2022

24 Hours

There are 24 hours in a day, right? More than enough time to fit everything in. So why do I never seem to either a) get everything done and b) actually achieve anything?

The older I've gotten, the more difficult I've found it has become to get up early and also, the slower I've grown. I'm not saying that I'm old - I'm really not but this is not a good sign for me future. Anyway, my point is I absolutely cannot get up any earlier. To write, to work out, to do housework. It takes me a while to get going in the morning as it is. Plus my kids get up at sparrows fart and trying to do productive things with them around is an artform I have yet to master.

I've gotten slow. Slow in body and slow in mind. And slow in enthusiasm. 

There's a corner in my front room that's full of stuff. Stuff I need to sort and file and tidy and shred and put in frames and hang and just do for goodness sake. I kinda like having this stuff around. It's like a physical comfort blanket. But, on the other hand, it's bloody annoying. It's a continual reminder that I suck. 

I live in a small flat. There's not much space for sprawling piles of stuff that one of these days is going to take on a life of its own and quite possibly has already got the beginnings of a black hole somewhere deep in the centre. I need to sort it out and yet at the end of every day, as I slump on the sofa, too tired to even look straight, I have not the desire nor the oomph to do anything about it.

Hence my questioning on the the hours in a day. How come I never seem to have any spare ones to sort out my sucking black hole? 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. Never miss out on future posts by following me.

Wednesday, 3 August 2022

A Slice of Cake With... Ella Cook

Today I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Ella Cook.

Ella’s been obsessed with books since she was a toddler. She decided to become a writer as soon as she realised that stringing letters together in the right order could actually be a career.

She grew up in the outskirts of London, where fairies lived at the bottom of her Grandma’s garden, so it isn’t surprising that she still looks for magic in everyday life – and often finds it.

When she’s not living in a fantasy world of her own creation, she writes bids and develops programmes for children’s services. She lives in rural Warwickshire (where there are probably more fairies) with her husband who is ever loving and understanding, and makes her gallons of tea in magical cups that can keep drinks warm for whole chapters.

What kind of books do you write?

I write stories with happy endings: ones that are about healing, and hope, and finding the light in the dark. And love – with a sprinkle of fairy dust. 

The world we live in can be a truly amazing place – but it can also be filled with sadness and seemingly insurmountable obstacles. But I believe, somewhere, there’s always light. Hope. The potential for better. And that’s what I write.

Can you describe your writing why?

I don’t know how not to write. It’s my passion, my career, and my peace of mind: it calms the crazy and helps keep me sane. Well, as sane as I ever get! 

I think writing is an incredibly powerful thing. We need stories in our lives: they can make us feel things, or help us escape (sunny beaches away from viruses and lockdowns anyone?). But they can also teach us, and give us opportunities to gain understanding of different situations and topics – and develop empathy. It’s a kind of magic, really. 

Writing has carried me through some of the worst parts of my life – and it’s given me focus, and joy, and hope. And it’s introduced me to some truly wonderful people. How can I stop now?

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

Oh, that’s really tricky… It changes with every book I work on. But I loved the ones from Summer’s Christmas about keeping the spirit of the season in your heart all year round. Here’s what my leading man, Jake, had to say on it:

‘Do you believe that joy, and hope, and love should be held in your heart all year long? And not just a single day in December? Do you believe there’s a place for the magic of Christmas every single day? Do you believe in the miracle of human kindness all year round?’


Tell us about your latest project

Summer’s Christmas is a Christmas/Summer crossover and mash-up where a village must come together to not only raise a child – but maybe save a little girl’s life. Here’s the blurb:

Summer by name and summer by nature – that’s how people describe Evelyn’s happy, outgoing daughter. Even if her favourite time of year is actually Christmas!

But Summer has gone through more than any eight-year-old ever should, and that’s part of the reason Evelyn is leaving everything behind to return to her childhood home in the village of Broclington; just her, Summer and Summer’s best friend – a Shiba Inu dog called Tilly. Unsurprisingly, Evelyn is hesitant to let anyone else in, although local vet Jake Macpearson seems intent on winning her trust.
When Evelyn receives the news that every mother dreads, it’s Jake who comes to the rescue. With the help of the Broclington community, could he be the man to bring festive magic to August, and make all of Evelyn and Summer’s Christmases come at once?

I’m working on the follow up stories at the moment, which take us back into the village of Broclington, and reunites us with some of the cast of Summer’s Christmas… with a sprinkle of magic, of course!

What is your favourite cake?

Well, I did invent a cake for Summer’s Christmas: it’s called a Brockle Cake (brockle being old English for badger). It’s a rich, dense, chocolate and vanilla sponge, striped together (hence the badger) with a cherry jam filling – and yes, I’ve made it, and yes it’s as good as it sounds!

But if it’s cake I can buy in a regular store – probably red velvet.


You can connect with Ella on Twitter: twitter.com/EllaCookWrites

Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Leanne Lovegrove. 

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 on Kofi - 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. Never miss out on future posts by following me