Thursday, 29 September 2022

A Slice of Cake With... Lynn Johnson

Today I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Lynn Johnson. 

Lynn was born and raised in The Potteries. She went to school in Burslem, the setting for her novels, and left with no qualifications. Like Ginnie, she had ambitions. In her own time she obtained a BA Hons in Humanities with Literature from the Open University, and a Diploma in Management Studies from Staffordshire Polytechnic and became a Human Resources Manager with a large County Council.

She began to research her family tree and it inspired her to write short stories, one of which became the basis for her debut novel, The Girl from the Workhouse, the first of The Potteries Girls series. The second book in the series, Wartime with the Tram Girls was published in March 2021. Lynn is a member of the Romantic Novelists Association and the Society of Authors.

Although Lynn still has a close affinity to The Potteries, she now lives in Orkney with her husband and six beautiful cats. 

What kind of books do you write?

I write about family relationships during the 20th Century, concentrating on the period of World War 1. Rather than looking at the people who have gone to war, I concentrate on the lives of those left behind, the men and women on the Home Front and how their lives were changed by the events that happened. They carried on with their lives as best they could but with the dread of war never too far away. 

Can you describe your writing why?

My first book, The Girl from the Workhouse, was inspired by my grandma’s story. She was the same age as Ginnie and spent time in the local workhouse. I got into writing in 2005 and one of the first short stories I wrote became the prologue to the book. I started writing the novel just after I had finished working on our family tree. As I wrote, the characters became real to me and I discovered I had so much more to say about them. Wartime with the Tram Girls followed twelve months later. I’m proud to say that Book 3 The Potteries Girls on the Home Front was published 11 August 2022 – so it’s hot off the press as we speak. I can’t believe that I have three books under my belt already. It’s amazing!

I write because I like to see the stories unfolding in front of me. They grow organically. I write an outline but, as the story grows, the outline changes. For me, it is the characters who are in charge. I love to edit too. It’s a great feeling to see the improvements the edits are making. I find it all so fascinating.

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

I chose this paragraph because. Connie’s life changes considerably during the course of the novel and becoming a suffragette plays a big part in to. 

Wartime with the Tram Girls: Constance as a suffragette is imprisoned for throwing a brick through a window.

Now she knew Alice was safe, Constance’s only thought was to get out of prison and take the girl home. She owed it to her. She’d heard whispers about women being force-fed. They would last four days of abstinence and the sound of the trolley could be heard wheeling its way insidiously along the corridor. The sounds that followed were terrible and frightening: women’s voices getting louder, a man’s voice cursing because a wardress wasn’t holding a prisoner tight enough to avoid her flailing arms. She heard screams and the sounds of choking until she had to cover her ears to blot out their anguish from the pain of having a tube forced through their captive mouths or noses. It didn’t always go in the first time and was forced repeatedly until the woman had no strength left. The women told her, out in the yard – and every time she heard the sound, she gagged until she was sick.


Tell us about your latest project

I am currently working on Book 4 of my Potteries Girls sagas – all set in Stoke-on-Trent where I was raised. The series takes place before and during the Great War and can be read as a standalone. However, if the reader is thinking of reading all the books it is best to read them in order. They are about a group of strong women who meet and become friends through the situations in which they are placed and who have their lives changed by the war. Book 4, the last in the series will be published in August 2023 and all are available in ebook, paperback and audio. They will also be published in large print next year.

What is your favourite cake?

My favourite cake is anything that ends in the word cake – chocolate cake, carrot cake, Christmas cake!


You can connect with Lynn on Twitter: @lynnjohnsonjots, on Facebook: lynnjohnsonauthor and at her website www.LynnJohnsonAuthor.com

Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Wendy Noble. 

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 on Kofi with a small donation towards 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, 21 September 2022

A Slice of Cake With... Myra Duffy

Today I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Myra Duffy.

As a child, Myra lived opposite the local library, a perfect location for someone who loved to read. Soon she was inspired to write her own novels. One still survives, though at 900 words might prove too short for today’s market.

At thirteen she won a writing competition organised by a national newspaper. The prize was a puppy – something that wouldn’t be allowed nowadays!

After some time teaching in Madrid and in London, Myra returned to Scotland and a career in educational management.

During this time she continued to write and be published, mostly in non-fiction. But success with short stories encouraged her to return to her first love – fiction. The House at Ettrick Bay is the first in her cosy crime series of eight novels and four novellas set on the Isle of Bute, just off the west coast of Scotland.

Myra Duffy divides her time between Glasgow and the Isle of Bute where her novels are set. She has family connections to the island stretching back several generations.

What kind of books do you write?

Most of my novels are set on the Isle of Bute, just off the West coast of Scotland and feature Alison Cameron, an ordinary woman with a nose for trouble who can’t resist becoming involved in a mystery.

Though small, with around 6,000 residents, the island has a rich historical and geographical diversity which I use as the background to my plots and indeed I incorporate many of these elements in my plots.

Although this is a series, each novel can be read as a standalone.

Can you describe your writing why?

I’ve always written since I was a small child and won a national writing competition when I was thirteen. Most of my adult writing was non-fiction (12 books published) before I returned to my first love – writing fiction.

My first book, When Old Ghosts Meet, is only partly set on Bute and was highly placed in the Crime novel competition at the Scottish Association of Writers Conference several years ago. This was hugely encouraging. The next book, The House at Ettrick Bay, sold well and I decided continuing with a series set on Bute would be a good opportunity to concentrate on a niche market.

But the truth is that I enjoy writing. Usually a first line pops into my head and that takes me on a journey with the characters – I’m never sure where they will end up.

 As well as the Bute books, I’ve written a Romance and a Contemporary novel set in Glasgow. And to date I’ve one Children’s mystery also set on Bute.  I’ve several unfinished novels (non-Bute) and I hope to find time to complete those one day!

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

This extract is from the Prologue to Last Dance at the Rothesay Pavilion. The Pavilion is being closed for renovation and a gala dance is held to mark the temporary closure of the building. Jacky is the compere for the evening.

As the dancers slowly left the hall, laughing and gossiping, the lights dimmed little by little until the hall was in complete darkness.

Jacky tugged at his collar. He would miss this place, not only because of the loss of income. Nowhere else he worked gave him the same feeling of excitement as this Art Deco building that was the Rothesay Pavilion. But there was much to look forward to: once the renovation was finished, the building would be restored to its former glory. In no time at all he’d be back here once again, hosting the grand opening.

But that was before they found the skeleton.

Tell us about your latest project

I’ve just launched the latest in the Bute series - Foul Play at the High Kirk. A theatre company arrives on Bute with their production of Sleeping Beauty but  is soon in difficulty as the first death occurs. And Alison Cameron finds herself once more involved in a troubling mystery.

Having now written ten books and four novellas in the Isle of Bute series, I’ve started on a new series, featuring a journalist , set in Glasgow in the 1990s. I’ve finished the latest draft and am now working with my editor to finalise it. The first in the series is called The Lost of Paradise and the action is sparked when Sarah Norsting, the journalist, catches a glimpse of someone from her past on a station platform.

What is your favourite cake?

My favourite cake is Christmas Cake, or fruit cake of any kind!

You can connect with Myra on her website myraduffywriter.com, on Twitter @duffy_myra or find her on Facebook as Myra Duffy or Myra Duffy Writer.

Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Lynn Johnson. 

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 on Kofi with a small donation towards tea and 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, 14 September 2022

A Slice of Cake With... Karen Osman

This week I am delighted to have a slice of cake with Karen Osman. 

Karen Osman is a best-selling novelist and writing coach. Following her win at the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature Montegrappa Novel Writing Award 2016 with her crime-thriller novel, The Good Mother, renowned literary agent, Luigi Bonomi of LBA Books, secured a three-book deal with UK-based publishing house Head of Zeus.
 
Since then, The Good Mother, which was published in October 2017 and her second novel, The Home (September 2018), were both number one bestsellers. Her third book, The Perfect Lie, was published in August 2019 and she is currently working on her fourth novel. 

In July 2020, Karen launched her signature online writing course, Kick Start Your Book With Karen, designed for budding authors to help write their books.  She also offers a six-month one-to-one coaching programme. 
 
In January 2019, Karen launched Karen’s Book Club, a free online book club where she shares reading recommendations, giveaways, and a behind-the-scenes look into her author life. 


What kind of books do you write?

Hello! I’m a novelist and I write stories about ordinary people who never thought they would have the capacity to kill someone. I’ve written three novels and each one has strong themes of motherhood, revenge, and deception. The books are standalone and set in the United Kingdom where I’m from. My readers tend to be people who love page-turning, psychological thrillers. 

Can you describe your writing why?

This is always a difficult question for me as I don’t have a specific motivation; it’s just something I’ve always done, like brushing my teeth in the morning! Saying that, I believe books have a powerful influence on society and as a writer, nothing gives me greater joy than hearing a reader was able to relax and escape daily life with a good book. 

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

This is an extract from my second novel, The Home

Prologue
Thursday 30 November 1989
It was the smell that got me. They never tell you about that in training: how it gets under your skin. The lads at the station told me I was lucky to get such a case on my first day in CID. Once I’d finished vomiting in the nearby bushes, I didn’t feel very lucky, I can tell you. After seeing the Jane Doe – or what was left of her, at any rate – I would have given anything to be back in uniform, working the traffic. The body must have been there since Bonfire Night, the people lighting the fire unaware of what lay beneath. I can only hope that she was dead before she was dumped. The body was so burnt there would be no chance of identification. You could almost imagine she wasn’t human if not for the long strands of brown hair that lay as dead as their owner. But one thing survived the fire: a silver bracelet on the right wrist, its single chain home to a tiny hummingbird charm. I bagged it up, knowing even then that my first investigation was destined for the cold case pile. 



Tell us about your latest project

My latest novel is called The Perfect Lie. It’s a story about Claire, who leads a charmed life with her two beautiful sons and successful husband. Even when she was in school, Claire had it all. She was clever, likable, and after passing the initiation tests, she was welcomed into the society of popular girls – The Queen Bees. So, when a scandal threatened to ruin Claire's reputation, the Queen Bees closed rank to protect her, no matter who else got hurt. Claire may have moved on from her school days, but for one person who she hurt irreparably, those memories are as fresh as blood. And all it takes to reap their revenge, is one perfect lie. 



What is your favourite cake?

More of a pudding than a cake, but I love sticky toffee pudding and custard! 


You can connect with Karen here:


Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Myra Duffy. 

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.

Tuesday, 13 September 2022

Tuesday Poem - My Queen

Not long now
The message I received
Incomprehensible
What do you mean?
Checking the news with near religious fervour
To discover
It's your time
But that's not right
You've always been there
Smiling, glowing, leading
With hope and kindness
A steadfastness of light
And then, I saw
The flag at half mast
My stomach dropped
That was the end
Of your reign
All my life, you've been 
My Queen
All my life, you've been
Part of my family
All my life
How did the years fly by so quickly?
How did I suddenly lose you when you've been leaving for a while?
How?
Why am I so sad? So very, very sad
Go softly into the night, dear Queen
Go gently into the black, dear Queen
Go join your beloved husband once more
Go with grace, your Majesty


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.

Monday, 12 September 2022

Spare Any Change?

It's a tough world out there right now. Rising prices across the board - energy, fuel, food - it's all adding up to more than we'd like. Absolutely every penny is important.

I see a lot of posts from authors asking people to support them by buying a book - it's the same as a cup of coffee they say, surely you can afford a cup of coffee? The thing is a cup of coffee is more or less a fiver these days and my coffee buying days are very quickly receeding behind me. If I can't afford to buy a cup of coffee, how can I expect others to buy mine? A book, not a coffee. This metaphor is getting confusing but hopefully, you're still with me. 

Spare any change is also sadly a common call out on the streets. I recently had a lady crying to me asking for a quid. Now I was on my way home with the children, it was getting late and I didn't have any cash on me at all, otherwise I would've probably helped. 

The fact that I said probably makes me squirm inside but the sad fact is that asking for change isn't always what you think it is. My hubby, who works in law enforcement, tells me tales of people begging who don't need to beg and the scams they pull. It makes for a very untrustworthy world. 

Can I believe that they really are asking for spare change because they're trying to get home - or get a room for the night - or is it just for alcohol and drugs? 

I feel bad for not helping. But I think the best way that I can help is to support the homeless charities in my town. After all, they are - hopefully - the experts and know how to get the right kind of help to those truly asking. 

It's a very give and take world out there. As an author, I am asking you to give. To give your time and your money, your effort and your thoughts to a piece of work that, to be fair, I did labour upon. My only promise to you is that I tried my best to create a book worthy of you and when I join the bandwagon asking you to spare the cost of a cup of coffee, I really hope you will trust me. 

Your coffee money will go to good use, I promise. More words written, more books created and possibly a small cake here and there. 


PS... all my books are on Amazon ;)

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, 7 September 2022

A Slice of Cake With... Tony Logan

Today I am delighted to have a slice of cake with author Tony Logan. 

Four decades ago a black egg hatched and out sprang Tony Logan. Obsessed with horror stories and films, he devoured them all and eventually wanted to create his own. Now he twists and manipulates words intended to terrify. His hellhound Achilles and hellcat Stoker always at his side.

What kind of books do you write?

I am a huge horror fan. Books, movies, games, anything. I have mostly written short horror stories but I am polishing a novel that leans more toward supernatural thriller. Also, I have a scifi story and a fantasy story, so I will eventually write and try out all kinds of story types, but for now—Horror is my jam.


Can you describe your writing why?

I think it mostly started with a much younger version of my friends and I leaving a less than satisfying movie and rewriting it in conversation to improve it. From there friends showed my roleplaying games. I became fascinated with those and before too long was running my own games and have been since the early 90s. There is a great satisfaction in people reading your work and being excited about it. That spark excites me and pushes me to write.


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

Steady raindrops pounded on the roof while the wipers flipped back and forth. He threw the car into drive and headed toward the Havern Traumatic Brain Injury Recovery Home. Most Thursdays he did this after this debate with himself. As he shifted gears, a small pang ached deep inside of him. One he tried to ignore but infected his idle thoughts. Tim’s gaze shifted from the road to the car’s armrest. He knew without checking, deep inside, under phone charger cords and old, random paperwork, sat six precious Vicodin pills. Six little white tickets to happiness. For emergencies, he lied to himself. His opioid hunger grew strongest whenever he visited Marc Kullen. It remained to be seen whether it was a psychosomatic effect of their relationship or a subconscious result of rejecting his rehab meeting.


Tell us about your latest project

While I still have a lot of clean up to do, I am currently working on my first book. It is about an eccentric billionaire that offers a long all expenses paid vacation to terminal patients with the agreement that afterwards, he gets to keep the deceased person’s body. (blood) It is a vampire-adjacent story. Is that a thing? Haha.

What is your favourite cake?

I really enjoy a Red Velvet cake. But honestly, I probably don’t turn down many types of cake. 


You can connect with Tony on Facebook: facebook.com/Tony-Logan-2301442073203851 and all his short stories are available on Amazon: amazon.com/-/e/B088VS385R.

Join me next week when I will be having a slice of cake with Karen Osman. 

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.

Tuesday, 6 September 2022

Tuesday Poem - Me & The World

Me and you, together for now
You've been here a long while
I am a shiny new object
So to speak
I breathe your air
I walk on your ground
I eat your bounty
But what do I do for you?
Not much
I am so small
I try to be mindful
I try to teach my children
How to look after you
For although you'll last much longer than me
You will not last forever
I will be long gone when you falter
But I hope I gave you some joy
When it was just you and me


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.

Monday, 5 September 2022

How's the writing going?

"How's the writing going?" I have been asked this question a lot lately and my response has been pure teenager. In short, a shrug. 

Because it hasn't been going. Not for a long time. And I can't really put my finger on the why but I do feel ashamed everytime I get asked the question. I am a writer who hasn't been writing much this year and if I'm not writing then how am I a writer? And how can I answer that question with "It's not" and look them in the eye without feeling embarrassed?

For me, writing in the pandemic wasn't a problem - even with homeschool and the headache that was. It was the afterwards, the 'new normal', the bit where we all went back to how things were - more or less - and that's when the bottom fell out of my writing world.

It's quite normal for me, and a lot of other writers I'm sure, to doubt the validity of my writing. This usually happens two thirds of the way through my book, around a month or two before I decide the book is ready to be read by others. I moaned to my hubby last night about my current book and he made this observation which, whilst amusing, it's factually incorrect this time. I am definitely not two-thirds of the way through. In some ways, I feel like I haven't even started writing it. 

Today my kids go back to school. It is the start of their new year and hence the start of mine. At least that's what I have decided. I bought a desk - very exciting. I factory reset an old laptop - very scary (not sure why lol) so that I can work on two screens. Oh yes, I'm a two screen writer now. And as it's the beginning of the month, I can start with scheduling my social media for the month. 

This is something I've more or less stayed on top of. I share motivational quotes and giveaways as well as promo images of various books. I look at this as more of a "Hey, still here!" gesture rather than active marketing. It's been good because it's kept my social media presence alive, but it's also been a bit of a crutch, as I'm not being as active or engaged as I should be. 

Here I am, at my desk, Monday to Friday, 9-2. At least that's the plan. Baring disasters. Haha. 

Let's get this writing going! And then maybe I'll have something to say about 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. Never miss out on future posts by following me.