Liz Fenwick's Blog, page 11
April 17, 2013
London Book Fair 2013...an author's point of view

The Emirates Airline Literary Festival Team
This morning I am relaxing, just a little. The past two days I have been enjoying the madness that is London Book Fair. On Monday I was there just to soak up the atmosphere...but of course I immediately bumped into friends.

Immogen Howsen and Lynne Connolly at the Samhain stand
I wandered around bumping into friends and I was lucky enough to catch Patrick Brown of Goodreads talking in the AuthorLounge his presentation is here. There is so much to learn. While in the author lounge I bumped into Sue Fortin and Linn B Halton.

Carole Blake ready for the second day of London Book Fair to begin
Day two had a plan. I was meeting spending the morning meeting my editors from Germany, Holland, Portugal and Norway. I was given a table just behind my agent Carole Blake to share with Peter James (yes, esteemed company except that Pater ending up holding his meeting in the The Ivy Club!)

Pater James and Carole Blake
It was fabulous to met my editors and find out how the sales are going and if there was anything I could do to help sales. It's very frustrating to not be able to help...However the good news was that The Cornish House aka Sterne Uber Cornwall, A Casa Dos Sonhos, Sterren Boven Cornwall and Stjerner over Cornwall is doing very well!
Meetings over I set out into the fair and bumped into two agents...Jane Judd and Broo Doherty then caught up with Julia Williams and her twin sister Virginia and a relaxed lunch before braving the fair again.
Saying farewell to them I found the Choc Lit stand and shared a chocolate with Sue Moorcroft and Pia Christina Courtenay. Then the amazing Victoria Lamb appeared...she had left her coat in The Ivy Club so while collecting it with her we had a glass of champagne...

While exploring the Orion stand I bumped into Kate Mosse and the Emirates Airlines Literary Festival Team plus Rose Prince...just love name dropping...then fortunately I saw Annabel Kantaria from Dubai who won the Montegrappa First Fiction competition at the Emirates Airlines Literary Festival. I tagged along and found myself in The Ivy Club again...

Isobel Abulhoul, Luigi Bonomi, Annabel Kantaria and Yvette Judge
And who did we find in The Ivy Club...

Luigi Bonomi, Peter James, Isobel Abulhoul and Liz Fenwick
After catching up it was a mad dash to attend the launch of the campaign to save bookstores BOOKS ARE MY BAG. Lord Saatchi opened the launch...

Lord Saatchi

The simplicity of the campaign was explained...Everyone can carry the poster BOOKS ARE MY BAG...the campaign officially begins on September 14th but the bags were the most coveted item of the London Book Fair...
I have mine but I also have a spare...so leave a comment here by May 2nd and I'll send you the BOOKS ARE MY BAG bag and a signed copy of The Cornish House to go into it.... Do any of my writer friends want to add there book to the bag for the winner?
Finally here's the link to my radio chat about books on Sunday the 15th of April with Geordie Bird on Dubai 92 here. The book discussion begins about four minutes in...I discuss the charts and what in my to be read pile...

Published on April 17, 2013 23:36
April 8, 2013
A Big Week...I Reach a Certain Age and The Cornish House Comes Out In Paperback
This is a big week for me...I turn fifty and on Thursday The Cornish House comes out in paperback. In many ways I feel they are connected...Two years ago today marks the two book deal with Orion and that was a major event. It was the realisation of dream.
The paperback of The Cornish House available here
Now with The Cornish House coming out in paperback I hope to spy copies in more shops and maybe even see someone other than friends and family reading it...although I had a big thrill this weekend when my eldest spent the weekend with his nose stuck into it. I was delighted to see his expression change as a grin would appear or a frown. I knew The Cornish House wouldn't normally his choice of book but he said he loved it and I know he meant it because he's a terrible liar! Of course DD read it and loved it before him...
The other lovely thing about the paperback is what included...so many readers told me they had fallen in love with the house, Trevenen. So for the extra material at the back of the paperback there is the history of Trevenen including floor plans.
In honour of this major milestone week I'm giving away three signed copies of the paperback of The Cornish House. Just leave a comment...

The paperback of The Cornish House available here
Now with The Cornish House coming out in paperback I hope to spy copies in more shops and maybe even see someone other than friends and family reading it...although I had a big thrill this weekend when my eldest spent the weekend with his nose stuck into it. I was delighted to see his expression change as a grin would appear or a frown. I knew The Cornish House wouldn't normally his choice of book but he said he loved it and I know he meant it because he's a terrible liar! Of course DD read it and loved it before him...

The other lovely thing about the paperback is what included...so many readers told me they had fallen in love with the house, Trevenen. So for the extra material at the back of the paperback there is the history of Trevenen including floor plans.

In honour of this major milestone week I'm giving away three signed copies of the paperback of The Cornish House. Just leave a comment...

Published on April 08, 2013 02:57
April 5, 2013
In The Mind's Eye
Sorry for the absence....I've been traveling and now have the kids here for Easter holidays...
But this morning while I was working on book three I was aware of what people frequently ask me about...how do I write about Cornwall when I'm not there...
This morning I was writing looking out at this view... (we are away in the desert on a special long weekend)
But I was writing about Frenchman's Creek...
Both stunning but so different...
I see a scene like a movie in front me no mater how beautiful and distracting the actual view...maybe someday when i don't live in the desert i will write about its beauty...
But this morning while I was working on book three I was aware of what people frequently ask me about...how do I write about Cornwall when I'm not there...
This morning I was writing looking out at this view... (we are away in the desert on a special long weekend)

But I was writing about Frenchman's Creek...

Both stunning but so different...
I see a scene like a movie in front me no mater how beautiful and distracting the actual view...maybe someday when i don't live in the desert i will write about its beauty...

Published on April 05, 2013 23:41
March 10, 2013
Wow What A Festival...but it's over
I am suffering from withdrawal symptoms from the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature and facing the overflowing inbox and piles of laundry....
But I will hold onto the magic of the festival for a long time or at least until next next year...and I made the front page of the Gulf News...well I'm pictured there with HH Sheikh Mohammed. The evening of poetry under the stars was magic enough, but then to have HH arrive well, that made it sparkle a bit more. I have been close royalty before. I have tread in divots at Smith's Lawn with HH Queen Elizabeth II but somehow listening to poetry in the desert with a sheikh is far more interesting...here's the link to the picture here.
So of course the best thing to help with my withdrawal symptoms is...another festival...Chipping Norton Festival Literary Festival is in April. I'll be able to listen to many great author tell their stories and share their skills and I'll be able to share what I've learned this week.
Throughout the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature, I chatted to so many authors and one thing became clear...many are either scared of or don't see the point in Social Media....My session with Dubai Abulhoul on Thursday evening was about how Social Media is vital in today's book publishing world.
Liz Fenwick and Dubai Abulhoul at the book signing at Emirates Festival of Literature
So many interesting things came out of that session...one of the most important was how different regions use Social Media. I'll be sharing these insights and plenty more that I have learned on my journey from unpublished writer to published one at the Chipping Norton Literary Festival on Saturday the 20th of April 2013....for more details go here.
So I need to bide my time, begin another book and plan my workshop until I can live in a literary world again...
But I will hold onto the magic of the festival for a long time or at least until next next year...and I made the front page of the Gulf News...well I'm pictured there with HH Sheikh Mohammed. The evening of poetry under the stars was magic enough, but then to have HH arrive well, that made it sparkle a bit more. I have been close royalty before. I have tread in divots at Smith's Lawn with HH Queen Elizabeth II but somehow listening to poetry in the desert with a sheikh is far more interesting...here's the link to the picture here.
So of course the best thing to help with my withdrawal symptoms is...another festival...Chipping Norton Festival Literary Festival is in April. I'll be able to listen to many great author tell their stories and share their skills and I'll be able to share what I've learned this week.
Throughout the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature, I chatted to so many authors and one thing became clear...many are either scared of or don't see the point in Social Media....My session with Dubai Abulhoul on Thursday evening was about how Social Media is vital in today's book publishing world.

Liz Fenwick and Dubai Abulhoul at the book signing at Emirates Festival of Literature
So many interesting things came out of that session...one of the most important was how different regions use Social Media. I'll be sharing these insights and plenty more that I have learned on my journey from unpublished writer to published one at the Chipping Norton Literary Festival on Saturday the 20th of April 2013....for more details go here.
So I need to bide my time, begin another book and plan my workshop until I can live in a literary world again...

Published on March 10, 2013 03:51
March 7, 2013
Day Three at the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature
Yesterday was amazing and because today is so full on I don't have time to say much but I'll post a few pictures....
Liz Fenwick and Dubai Abulhoul
My session with the most amazing sixteen year old I have ever met, Dubai Abulhoul was fabulous...and not because of me...it was the electric atmosphere in the room filled with Dubai's friends. The room was packed and our moderator Hisham Wyne was superb as always. I can't recall ever having quite so much fun while being in the spot light. A huge thank you to all who bought The Cornish House and came for a chat after the session!
Sitting next to me at the signing table was the delicious (for there is no other word except maybe wonderful) for Antonio Carluccio...and we chatted about how glorious Cornwall is...the picture below is me with him in a total fan girl moment!
Antonio Carluccio and Liz Fenwick
There are more pictures on Facebook here

Liz Fenwick and Dubai Abulhoul
My session with the most amazing sixteen year old I have ever met, Dubai Abulhoul was fabulous...and not because of me...it was the electric atmosphere in the room filled with Dubai's friends. The room was packed and our moderator Hisham Wyne was superb as always. I can't recall ever having quite so much fun while being in the spot light. A huge thank you to all who bought The Cornish House and came for a chat after the session!
Sitting next to me at the signing table was the delicious (for there is no other word except maybe wonderful) for Antonio Carluccio...and we chatted about how glorious Cornwall is...the picture below is me with him in a total fan girl moment!

Antonio Carluccio and Liz Fenwick
There are more pictures on Facebook here

Published on March 07, 2013 21:34
March 6, 2013
A Desert Evening Filled with Poetry and camels...Emirates Airline Festival of Literature Day Two
Last night was simply amazing...listening to poetry from around the world under the stars in the desert....and a bit of camel riding before hand while we watched the sun set. We also hand a royal visitor too...
Sharing a camel with Philip Ardagh is something I'll never forget!
Luigi Bonomi and me
Mark Billingham, Philip Ardagh, John Connolly and Ian Rankin
Philip Ardagh with the welcome committee
Giles Andreae, Anthony Horowitz, Philip Ardagh and mark Billingham
Wasn't sure with the height difference that Philip and I would appear in the photo!
Poets before they left for the desert- Richard Armitage, Jeet Thayil, me, Roger McGough and Sjon
leading camel has Clare and Mark Billingham, the next hold Kate Mosse, and final Anthony Beevor and Atemis Cooper
Gregg Mosse, Anthony Horowitz and Ian Rankin
There are more pictures up on my Facebook page here

Sharing a camel with Philip Ardagh is something I'll never forget!

Luigi Bonomi and me

Mark Billingham, Philip Ardagh, John Connolly and Ian Rankin

Philip Ardagh with the welcome committee

Giles Andreae, Anthony Horowitz, Philip Ardagh and mark Billingham

Wasn't sure with the height difference that Philip and I would appear in the photo!

Poets before they left for the desert- Richard Armitage, Jeet Thayil, me, Roger McGough and Sjon


leading camel has Clare and Mark Billingham, the next hold Kate Mosse, and final Anthony Beevor and Atemis Cooper

Gregg Mosse, Anthony Horowitz and Ian Rankin
There are more pictures up on my Facebook page here

Published on March 06, 2013 19:52
Some Photos from Last Night at the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature
Just before the opening ceremony of the festival we have the pleasure and privilege to watch these beautiful girl dance for us...my photos don't do them justice.
And now for something completely different...this morning I spoke at the Old Library. They were a wonderful group of women with brilliant questions....
Then I raced back to the Intercontinental Hotel for the author photos...
Rosie Goldsmith chatting with Ian Rankin
Tonight we are off to the desert to hear poetry under the stars...but before that I'll be spending the afternoon driving through the dunes and might meet a camel or two....







And now for something completely different...this morning I spoke at the Old Library. They were a wonderful group of women with brilliant questions....


Then I raced back to the Intercontinental Hotel for the author photos...

Rosie Goldsmith chatting with Ian Rankin

Tonight we are off to the desert to hear poetry under the stars...but before that I'll be spending the afternoon driving through the dunes and might meet a camel or two....

Published on March 06, 2013 02:27
March 5, 2013
It's Here...The Emirates Airline Festival of Literature
I can't believe this is the festival's fifth year and I have been lucky enough to be at everyone of them and as an attendee, a volunteer and as an author!
Back at the first festival I took in so much information I nearly popped. I fed my soul with words and advice.
The second year I was on hand to help out with Education Day and saw the important work of bringing the joy of reading to children of the area.
The third year I manned the Green Room and met authors I never dreamt I would ever come in contact with....
The fourth year and I was suddenly on the stage as an author...what a thrill.
The fifth year ... again I will be on the stage as an author and in the audience listening and learning. The whole time making sure I relish every moment of this fabulous event.
Today the Irish cookery writer, Rachel Allen, asked for my advice on what to see and do...and I said be daring and go to a session that your not sure about for that is when the magic happens....a whole new world opens up.
The other big joy of today was that I held in my hand for the first time the mass market (small) paperback of The Cornish House. It will be on sale here at the festival a full month before it is officially released!
Finally my pictures from today are here

Back at the first festival I took in so much information I nearly popped. I fed my soul with words and advice.
The second year I was on hand to help out with Education Day and saw the important work of bringing the joy of reading to children of the area.
The third year I manned the Green Room and met authors I never dreamt I would ever come in contact with....
The fourth year and I was suddenly on the stage as an author...what a thrill.
The fifth year ... again I will be on the stage as an author and in the audience listening and learning. The whole time making sure I relish every moment of this fabulous event.
Today the Irish cookery writer, Rachel Allen, asked for my advice on what to see and do...and I said be daring and go to a session that your not sure about for that is when the magic happens....a whole new world opens up.
The other big joy of today was that I held in my hand for the first time the mass market (small) paperback of The Cornish House. It will be on sale here at the festival a full month before it is officially released!

Finally my pictures from today are here

Published on March 05, 2013 05:58
February 28, 2013
Alison Morton Shares Her Thoughts On Reading To Explore

Fellow expat Alison Morton whose debut novel, Inceptio, is out now shares her thoughts on why we read.....
Wandering into
strange territory
Why do we read? Often the answer is to experience how others
acknowledge, deal with and recover from a challenge in their personal and
professional lives. We want to share and perhaps learn from their dreams and
struggles. More than anything we want to share their passion, their excitement,
perhaps their fear, as they discover the kernel of their own humanity. But aren’t
there only seven basic stories? Why then do we read an eighth, ninth or tenth one?
For me, the reason is to explore something different,
whether it’s setting, theme, viewpoint, genre or language. Something may jolt
me, arouse my curiosity, make me smile or even laugh aloud, or push me into
changing a view I thought fixed. Every reader has been handed a book by a
friend, glanced at the back cover and thought ‘This is not for me’ but smiled
politely at the friend and thanked her. And one day, you pick it up and open
it, thinking you’ll read a few pages just to see what motivated your normally sane
friend into buying it. Several hours later, you put it down, numbed, entranced,
exhausted, uplifted, the different world having invaded your head.
So it is with writing. Reaching into the past means not only
researching a period in meticulous detail, but getting inside the heads of the
characters, imagining what they see in their everyday world, what they smell,
eat and touch. If you set your story in a different country, you apply the same
process, but at least you can visit the places the characters would live in,
smell the sea, touch the plants, walk under the hot blue sky, or freeze in a
biting wind.
But if you invent that country, then your task is doubled.
You have to get the geography right. Were you asleep in class when Mrs Turner
did rainfall in Africa or the mountains that stretch across Europe? Now is the
time to catch up on the history of the region around your imagined country. Next, there’s the social, economic and
political development; this sounds dry, but every living person is a product of
their local conditions. Their experience of living in a place and struggle to
make sense of it is expressed through their culture. It’s an easy comparison,
but J K Rowling is said to have filled notebooks with details of Harry Potter’s
world, only a small proportion of which appeared in print.
The key is plausibility. Take a character working in law
enforcement. Readers can accept cops being gentle or tough, enthusiastic,
intellectual or world-weary. Law enforcers come from all genders, classes,
races and ages and stand in different places along the personal morality ruler.
But whether corrupt or clean, they must act like a recognisable form of cop.
They catch criminals, arrest and charge them and operate within a judicial system.
Legal practicalities can differ significantly from those we know, but they must
be consistent with that society while remaining plausible for the reader. But a
flashing blue light, or an oscillating siren on a police car, is a universal
symbol that instantly connects readers back to their own world.
Almost every story hinges upon implausibility – a set-up or
a problem the writer has purposefully created. Readers will engage with it and
follow as long as the writer keeps their trust. One way to do this is to
infuse, but not flood, the story with corroborative detail so that it verifies
and reinforces the original setting the writer has introduced. Even though my book is an alternate history
thriller set in the 21st century, the Roman characters still say things like 'I wouldn't be in your sandals when he finds out.' And there are
honey-coated biscuits (honey was important for the ancient Romans) not
chocolate digestives in the squad room.
Another way to connect to readers when writing from an
unfamiliar setting is to ensure the characters display normal behaviour. Human
beings of all ages and cultures have similar emotional needs, hurts and joys.
Of course, they're expressed differently, sometimes in an alienating or (to us)
peculiar way. But a romantic relationship, whether as painful as in The Remains of the Day or as instant as
Colonel Brandon when he sees Marianne in Sense
and Sensibility or the careful but intense relationship of Eve
Dallas and Roarke in J D Robb’s Death
series set in 2057 New York, binds us into their stories.
My protagonist, Karen, is born and raised in the US
(although not quite the same US we know) and arrives in the imagined European country
of Roma Nova, founded sixteen hundred years before by Roman exiles.
Experiencing culture shock and adaptation through her eyes adds another layer
of exploring difference for the reader. Karen stumbles along an all too-familiar
rocky path in her relationships, but her chief concern is to stay alive when a US
government enforcer is hunting her – a classic plot familiar to hundreds of
thousands of thriller readers.
Blending the recognisable with the unusual, whether an
imaginary setting, an alternative version of reality, or crossing from one culture
to another, or even all three, allows us to expand our choices beyond our usual
ones and perhaps find new pleasures.
Buy links:-
UK
US

For more information about Alison and her books...
http://alison-morton.com
http://www.facebook.com/AlisonMortonAuthor

Published on February 28, 2013 22:00
February 26, 2013
The RNA RoNA Awards and Richard and Judy
What a fabulous night...the stars of romantic fiction were out in force. Richard and Judy attended the glittering evening and handed out the awards...
Liz Fenwick and Richard Madeley
Liz Fenwick and Richard Madeley
Liz Fenwick discussing Cornish book with Judy Finnegan
The books...
The flowers...
the balloons...
the handbags and shoes...

Liz Fenwick and Richard Madeley

Liz Fenwick and Richard Madeley

Liz Fenwick discussing Cornish book with Judy Finnegan

The books...

The flowers...

the balloons...

the handbags and shoes...

Published on February 26, 2013 23:18