Liz Fenwick's Blog, page 14

June 4, 2012

A Local Celebration - The Cornish House

On Saturday night in the South Cafe (featured in The Cornish House) I had a small celebration with a few people from the village...because of the weather we were inside and kept the number small but that didn't keep the conversation down or the fun a bay...































And now time to enjoy the Jubilee celebrations in the village and to get ready for the library talk in St Ives tomorrow evening...



What are you doing for the Jubilee weekend?
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Published on June 04, 2012 02:11

May 31, 2012

A Sunny Day in Cornwall


The clouds lifted as we set across Cornwall leaving the Lizard and heading north almost to Devon to join the festivities of the Charles Causley Festival. My signing was for noon and to be honest I really didn't expect anyone to turn up for an event by a début novelist at lunch-time on the Thursday before a bank holiday weekend. But they did!





The Bookshop is located in the heart of the town opposite the most lovely church.The owner greeted me warmly with the news he'd already sold 5 books! And sure enough a steady stream of people came into chat - this is Cornwall after all and many bought the book including a lovely librarian from Australia here on holiday.... Then there was a group of German tourists outside and writing down the title of the book...so I hoped outside and told them it was coming out in Germany in November...



I met a local author and was able to find some more research books...a  brilliant day. Tomorrow I'm in Falmouth Booksellers at 2PM if you fabcy a chat and a piece of fudge...



But while driving across Cornwall I've been elsewhere...



I've also been interviewed by Eleanor Fitzsimmons on writing.ie about how location plays an essential part in The Cornish House.



The lovely Claire Marriot reviews The Cornish House on her blog here.



I'm chatting to the fab Emma Lee Potter 


An interview with Trashonista here.
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Published on May 31, 2012 08:45

First Book Signing - Charles Causely Festival


Picture from the Charles Causley Festival site

I set off for Launceston in north Cornwall in a few minutes for my first book signing at The Bookshop in Launceston as part of the Charles Causley Festival...



Will report tomorrow....fingers crossed...
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Published on May 31, 2012 01:32

May 29, 2012

One Thing I've Learnt...to say THANKS


I can't believe May is almost over. It has certainly been a month I'll never forget. I'm now a published writer and The Cornish House is well on its way...still scary but a relief too. It's wonderful to be able to talk to people about it.



In the next week I will be adding a page to the blog with pictures and description of places and things in the book...for the curious. I'm just waiting for the sun to shine for the photos...



I don't know about you but I have loved all the guest posts by friends telling 'One Thing I've Learnt'. They have shared a wealth of emotional and practical intelligence. All of them in some way have been a part of my journey...so to complete the month here is mine...



I could say that the one thing I have learnt as I have moved around the world is to leave one box packed until ready to move again (a superstition from our days travelling with Schlumberger). But I have learnt something far more simple and some times harder to do- the importance of saying thank you.



After my first visit to Cornwall in June of 1989, I wrote a card thanking Mrs Fenwick (I'd only known DH about a month when he took to Cornwall to stay with his parents) for having me to stay. I thought nothing more of it. Fast forward to 2005 and my mother-in-law has passed away. I was tasked with sorting the papers in her desk. What did I find? My thank you note from my first visit kept with a dried flower... Now whether she had known on that visit that I was to become the One for her only son or if she had kept notes from all his previous girl friends (and later disposed of them or maybe they had never written any) I'll never know....But the card and the words in them had mattered to her.



Over the years I have tried to instil in my kids the importance of saying thank you and hopefully writing it down. I'm not sure it's worked and in today's word of electronic communication the next generation will not have the pleasure of finding hand written words of appreciation....



So as May ends I want to say thanks to all who have shared their wisdom on the blog this month...



Debs Carr

Liz Harris

Sue Moorcroft

Julia Williams

Nell Dixon

Victoria Connelly

Kate Lord Brown

Eileen Ramsay

Christine Moriarty

Penelope Overton


Helen Redfern

Susie Vereker

Kate Harrison

Janet Gover

Kate Hardy

Emma Lee-Potter

Helen Hunt

Jenny Beattie

Anita Burgh

April Hardy

Julie Cohen

Carole Blake

Jenny Haddon

Fanny Blake

Kate Mills



I hope you have enjoyed their posts as much as I have!
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Published on May 29, 2012 23:56

May 28, 2012

Kate Mills - One Thing I've Learnt




One
thing I've learnt is that you can't judge a man by his washing-line. 

It was my sister who first said that a fireman had bought
the derelict house that backed on to our garden.  Newly engaged herself, she had that urge to marry
everyone else off too.  

We spent the summer trying to catch sight of him. The
curtains were drawn at odd times. He cut down a tree but we missed him.
Occasionally we heard banging from the house.  Once we heard him talking on the phone in his
garden, but - having scrambled through a cotoneaster to peer through a hole in
the fence - we could only see his broad back and shoulders.

Ever ingenious, my sister found that if she balanced on
the upstairs bathroom windowsill she could just see his washing-line. And there
was the problem: the row of tatty, grey long-johns fluttering in the breeze.

I was appalled. Fire protection, she suggested hopefully.
Steptoe, I replied.

A few weeks later, we met him in a shop.  He looked nice, I thought, but oh, the pants.
The pants.  My sister introduced us in a way that
would have made Mrs Bennett proud. He offered us a lift home; she made an
excuse for herself, adding slyly: ‘You can take my sister, though.'

As we drove back (passing my sister and her triumphant
grin), he invited me in to see the work he’d done on the house.  Ultimately, we drifted outside to the garden. I
hoped, for his sake, that he’d put his washing away.

I scanned the lawn. 
Luckily, no washing.  In fact, no
washing-line at all.  But, if I stood on
tiptoe, I could just see a washing-line next door, complete with fraying long-johns.
‘Nice old boy,’ the fireman said.  

I married the fireman ten years ago. Every once in a
while, on the odd occasion when my sister and I do something daft, he has been
known to roll his eyes and mutter ‘Fire-proof pants…’   






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Published on May 28, 2012 22:30

May 27, 2012

Fanny Blake - One Thing I've Learnt




ONE
THING I’VE LEARNED

Over
the last fifteen years I’ve made the transition from being a publisher to being
a full-time writer and journalist. I was an editor for many years, working with
both novelists and non-fiction writers, advising, editing, publishing. It was a
peach of a job, but not one that I miss in any way now.




As
gamekeeper turned poacher, the one thing I’ve learned is what a huge difference
there is between editing and writing. I’ve lost count of the number
of times I’ve gaily advised authors to sharpen that character, lose that scene or
even, in two cases, to rewrite the whole book. But now when my editor gives me
similar advice (she hasn’t yet been moved to do the last, thank God), I think:
How do I do that? What exactly do you mean? When I was an editor myself, I
don’t think I realised how much thought is sometimes required to make those
changes. I think back to ‘my’ authors and wish I had been more understanding of
the process. Writing is much more demanding than I realised then.




People assume that I must find it easy to edit
my own work. Far from it. By the time I’ve finished a novel I’m so close to it
that I can’t see the most obvious of errors. Being an editor requires a degree
of objectivity that gets lost in the creative process. In order to do both, I
would have to put the book away for months before I could distance myself
sufficiently.




The difference between a writer and their
editor is best reflected in the distinction between the expression of a story,
characters and ideas, and the clear communication of those to the reader. That
is where the editor comes in. 






Writer and editor are united in their desire to
create a story, characters and ideas and to communicate them to the reader. But
their roles are different. One produces the material. The other rubs off its
rough corners with (if you’re fortunate) a combination of delicate psychology,
tact and syntactical skill.  It seems to
me that writing and publishing a book is a process that demands the successful
collaboration of both.






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Published on May 27, 2012 22:30

May 26, 2012

Jenny Haddon - One Thing I've Learnt




One thing I’ve learned
. . . .




In Laurence Durrell’s
blissful tales of diplomatic life, Sauve
Qui Peut
he tells of The Balkan Times, the English language daily newspaper
run by the Misses Grope, two sisters whose father used to be the Embassy
Chaplin. It always carries the date of the previous day because once, many
years before, it didn’t come out. The sisters operate on the principle that one
day they will print two and catch up.








Bessie and Enid Grope
and I are sisters under the skin. Whether because of temperament, upbringing or
sheer writer’s cussedness, I’ve always been bad at writing off missed targets, rolling
up yesterday’s unfinished business into today’s To Do List.




And what I’ve learned
is: DON’T.




One week of failing to
achieve desired wordage left me with 22,500 words to write on a Saturday when I
also had to foodshop, get car MOT’d and take godchild to The Little Vampire.  (Memorable
vampire cows, by the way, I recommend it.)  Impossible, right? You know it. I know it.




Well, I know it now.
On the day in question I got up at 3.00am and actually, bloody tried.




So now I Don’t Carry
Over. Well, not except for stuff like gas bills. Basically things have to be
pretty damned important to move from yesterday’s list to today’s.



And, guess what? Now I’m not beating myself up with impossible targets, I
actually achieve more.




http://jennyhaddon.com/

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Published on May 26, 2012 23:00

May 25, 2012

Carole Blake - One Thing I've Learnt




Is that I have to live alone.

I moved straight from my parents house to my first 13 year
marriage. I left my first husband for my second: another 13 year marriage.  The first few years of each were happy: the
last many of each were definitely not.

Ending that second marriage was terrifying. For the first 24
hours, every minute was panic-filled with the phrase in my head: ‘I’ve never
done this before, I can’t manage alone.’ 
On the 2nd morning I awoke smiling: for a moment I thought it
was my birthday, or Christmas. Then I remembered: now I live alone.

That was 16 years ago and the joy has not diminished, but
increased.

I’ve not gone off men: far from it.  I’m in a relationship where the extreme
happiness has lasted longer than the happy years of my 2 marriages put
together. The secret?  He visits, but we
don’t live together. He wants to: I won’t.

Perhaps my job is so social that I need time alone.  I have friends to stay, I give parties. But
I’ve never been happier than in the years I’ve lived alone.  And I’m going to keep it that way.




www.twitter.com/caroleagent









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Published on May 25, 2012 22:35

The Cornish House - London Launch

Wow! Didn't think anything could match the Dubai launch but the London launch was great party...



Here's video clip here.



A huge thank you to the wonderful staff at Waterstones High Street Kensington who helped to make it such a wonderful evening!



Now for the pictures...first thanks to the photographers - Carole Blake, Brigid Coady, DD and DS2



The venue...



Waterstones High Street Kensington

The preparations...











The help...









We're ready...

















The guests...



Brigid Coady























Judy Astley, Liz Fenwick and Adele Parks









































Judy Astley and Brigid Coady





Marika Cobbold









Kate Harrison and Liz Fenwick





Brigid Coady, Liz Fenwick, Julie Cohen and Christina Courtenay



The reading...



















The signing...













The evidence...







The fabulous Gear farm Organic Pasties...just before they all disappeared



It was a brilliant evening...now to rest up for the Cornish signings coming up this week...



31st May Charles Causley Festival Launceston - noon

1st June Falmouth Booksellers 2PM

2nd June Waterstones Truro 11AM



And also a lovely library talk at the St Ives Library at 7PM on the 5th of June...



Back to the 'One Thing I've Learnt' tomorrow...
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Published on May 25, 2012 07:40

May 24, 2012

The Cornish House - Publication Day!


Gosh, what a journey! And that's in more ways that one...but today I have officially become a published writer. I'm sitting here staring at the final book just to remind myself that this is all real and not just some fabulous dream....



Today will be hectic...I have pasties to cook and no I didn't make them from scratch, but bought them from the wonderful organic Gear Farm which is a stones throw from my own Cornish house and has the best pasties....really. If you can't make the launch, you will have to trust me on this unless you make it to Cornwall or buy them from Whole Foods...



I have wine and fizz to chill...tricky at the moment when the fridge is filled with pasties! Ice to buy. Children to round up from various parts of the country...DH will be flying in from, um, I think Norway. My parents are here with me...



I have to remember to stop and smell the roses...or in this case enjoy this longed for moment. For someone who works with words everyday and uses those words to evoke and explain emotion I struggle when expressing my own. Right now I am walking on tightrope high above and dancing at the same time.



I have dreamt this dream a thousand times, but it has never taken this wonderful shape before...the one where I'm right now - supported by my whole family and friends old and new...real life and on-line. It is magic and I am blessed. For this day I can forget the hard work and the crows of doubt and just enjoy this magic moment!



So enough of my waffling...while you have been enjoying the wisdom of 'One Thing I've Learnt' either The Cornish House or moi have been appearing all over the place. So here are the links...



The first is for those that can't join in the launch in London tonight. the fabulous Heroine Addicts are throwing a launch party...this should really come with a warning judging by others I have attended there...But do drop by and join in the mayhem at The Cornish House Launch Party.



I'm on the Virgin Megastore ME blog talking about the The Cornish House here.



I'm answering some excellent question about me and The Cornish House at Female First here.



There is a wonderful review on Bookersatz here



The wonderful Mel Sherrett has written the most lovely blog post about friendship in this crazy on-line world we live in and it made me teary...here



Tomorrow will the be the picture round of the launch tonight (cameras working that is...) and then back to more 'One Thing I've Learnt' posts....
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Published on May 24, 2012 00:49