Lisa Walker's Blog, page 2

March 18, 2020

Location, location, location – why Byron Bay is a perfect crime setting

Setting is important in crime novels. Where would Sherlock Holmes be, without the fog-bound London streets? And wouldn’t Scandi-noir be way too cheerful without those long, cold snowy nights?









Byron Bay might not be quite so noir, but it is still a fascinating location. In my new young adult comedy/crime novel, the beauty and the weirdness of the bay become almost another character in the book.





My protagonist, Olivia Grace, is a Gold Coast girl – They could have scrawled ‘here be dragons’ on the map south of Coolangatta as far as I was concerned.





The first time she went to Byron, she thought it was paradise:





Byron Bay, I soon discovered, was a place to conjure dreams. The sweep of the bay to the base of the mountains; the dolphins leaping from water so clear it was barely there. For us, it was nirvana.





But nirvana had a dark side and things didn’t turn out so well back then. Now, Olivia is back. A freshly hatched Private Investigator, she is hot on the trail of a yoga guru who’s a bit of a creep.





Here’s a whistle-stop tour of the mean streets of Byron as trodden by Olivia in ‘The Girl with the Gold Bikini.’





A Byron Bay Yoga Studio





I read recently that Byron has the highest percentage of yoga instructors outside India. Even if that’s not true, it’s believable. Things heat up for Olivia when she heads out to a fictional yoga studio, Lighthouse Bliss:





I park among the bangalow palms and make my way past the flowering lily pond to reception. The usual South American panpipes are playing and lavender wafts from an aromatherapy burner.





Despite this auspicious welcome, Oliva soon discovers that Byron Bay yoga is not for the fainthearted:





Ajay’s Bikini Beach Body Boot Camp Speed Yoga is powerful stuff. Each two-hour class covers all the moves other yoga teachers would take two weeks to fit in. He learnt this form of yoga from an Indian guru, who granted him sole worldwide rights. I guess gurus aren’t what they used to be.





Unfortunately for Olivia, things only go downhill from here…





Ah, Wategos…





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Olivia trails the creepy yoga instructor to a large house with an infinity pool, overlooking Wategos Beach.





As I wind past the cabbage tree palms to Wategos, Abbey’s voice is in my head. ‘How good is this place, Ol? Surf and rainforest. It’s paradise.’ Byron Bay is still paradise. Seems like the whole world thinks so too, though.





Despite the crowds, I still think Wategos is possibly the most beautiful beach in the world. Surfing beneath the lighthouse as the sun sets over the mountains is one of life’s magical moments. Which brings me to…





Surf’s up…





One thing you can almost guarantee about Byron is… crowded surf breaks. Olivia used to surf, but she gave it up after a bad experience. Now she’s trying to get back into it again.





I’d forgotten how cutthroat it is out here. One of the men in the line-up is a kind of man-fish thing. His hands are the size of flippers and he gets onto the waves with about two strokes.





The pack takes my measure quickly. Every time I paddle for a wave someone else comes in from in front or behind or materialises out of nowhere.





Hot tip, Olivia – if you want to avoid the crowds, you need to surf in the dark. Which, in due course, she does. And after a surf, where would you head, but…





The Pass Café





For a post surf snack, this has to be the best spot in town.





A bush turkey roams around underfoot while the magpie cocks its greedy eye at a muffin. In Byron, the rainforest, with all its wildlife, comes right to the beach. Jacq and I claim a table with a view of that show-off, the sea.





Mm, and after a coffee, it’s time to move on to…





Jonson Street





At the risk of sounding like our Prime Minister, how good is Jonson Street? You could watch the world go by all day and never get bored.





The pavement is teeming with the usual frenzied mix: hippies down from the hills, European backpackers, spiky-haired Japanese surfers and gold-sandalled blondes in white linen beach wear.





And when you’re ready for some entertainment, there’s always…





Byron RSL





Several years ago, I did Mandy Nolan’s stand-up comedy course, culminating in a performance at the Byron RSL. The experience was so nerve-wracking, I had to get Olivia to re-live it for me…





Sipping a beer, I perch at a table down the back where I can take photos without being noticed. It’s open mike comedy night and she’s just taken the stage. The crowd is a mixture –young hip surfies mingled with your typical middle-aged RSL drinkers.





And of course, a novel set in Byron Bay wouldn’t be complete without a trip to…





The Lighthouse





A northerly wind whips at our hair and flattens the surf to whitecaps. Panting, we look over the cliff edge and see two dolphins, a mother and a calf, below us. I imagine them as the slackers of the dolphin world. ‘I can’t be bothered catching fish. Let’s get takeaways tonight.’ If I was a dolphin, that would be me.





Now that I’ve scoped the town, I can confirm that Byron Bay is the perfect setting for a fictional crime. Particularly if you’re into that of the yoga and surfing variety.





‘The Girl with the Gold Bikini’ is available from your friendly local bookshop, or: Readings, Booktopia, Amazon Australia, US, UK





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Published on March 18, 2020 17:39

March 6, 2020

Four of my fictional female detective crushes

In honour of International Women’s Day tomorrow, I’d like to give a shout-out to the fictional female detectives who inspired my own teen PI, Olivia Grace.





Olivia’s PI crushes …





Nancy Drew – The first Nancy Drew book was published in 1930. Since then, there have been over 500 books, five films, three television shows and a number of computer games. It’s safe to say that Nancy is a bit of an institution.





[image error]My Nancy Drew collection



Nancy Drew is one of Olivia’s role models.  Her grandmother gave her her first Nancy Drew book when she was ten and followed up with more volumes at every birthday and Christmas thereafter. As Olivia says:





‘Ever since, I’ve imagined myself roaming the streets, helping out the good guys, bringing down the bad guys. Wiggling out of scary moments with some girl-power ingenuity. Nancy Drew has style and chutzpah, not to mention a snazzy sports car. I have none of these, but what the hell. There’s nothing to stop me trying.’





Veronica Mars – Veronica Mars is an American teenage mystery drama, which first aired on television in 2004. Veronica is a sassy smart-mouthed heroine, who has also taught Olivia a lot. Despite watching the complete series of Veronica Mars, however, Olivia isn’t quite sure if she’s going to cut it as a real PI…  





‘Rosco can’t expect a super sleuth on my salary, but a girl who’s learned all she knows from Nancy Drew and Veronica Mars might not be what he had in mind either.’





[image error]Veronica Mars



My own PI crushes





I have always liked a gutsy, fast-talking PI heroine who gets herself into and out of messes with panache. Here are two more of my favourites.





Corinna Chapman – Nimbin-born baker and reluctant PI, Corinna lives life with gusto. She is featured in the seven Earthly Delights books created by Kerry Greenwood. Kerry is also the author of the Phryne Fisher mystery series, now immortalised in the movie Miss Fisher and the Crypt of Tears.





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Stephanie Plum –  Stephanie Plum is a character created by American author Janet Evanovich. She is a bounty hunter, described as a combination of Dirty Harry and Nancy Drew. The author has said she is “incredibly average and yet heroic if necessary.” There are 24 Stephanie Plum novels, plus a movie.





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There is no shortage of fabulous female detectives in fiction and drama today. My own PI, Olivia Grace, might not have a magnifying glass like Nancy Drew or a long-lens camera like Veronica Mars, but she’s still ready to do whatever it takes to solve her case. She’ll even disguise herself as a meter maid in a gold bikini if she really has to.





Who are your favourite female detectives in fiction?





‘The Girl with the Gold Bikini’ is now available from your favourite bookshop and online locations including Booktopia, Readings and Amazon (Aus) (US) (UK). Read reviews on Goodreads here.





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Published on March 06, 2020 16:11

January 31, 2020

Ah, those Gold Coast days…

Well, this book has been a loo-ong time coming (what’s fifteen years or so, between friends?). It’s been so long, in fact, that I’ve published five other books, while I’ve been working on it. Some books take longer than others to find their perfect form.





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So here it is – release day! It’s been worth the wait. Thanks so much to Wakefield Press for steering this book to publication and to my son, Tim Eddy, for the little video.





I thought I’d post a short extract here to whet your appetite. There is so much of my teenage self in this book – ah, those Gold Coast days…





***











‘The Girl with the Gold Bikini’





Chapter One:





Whenever I see a girl in a gold bikini, I think of Princess Leia. Here on the Gold Coast, gold bikinis are common, so I think of Princess Leia a lot.





Princess Leia doesn’t stand for any nonsense. When the giant slug made her wear that ridiculous bikini, she whipped out her chain and gave it a thrashing. Then she changed quick smart into something more sensible.





Dance with the hottest crowd in town, our stunning waitresses will ensure …





Punching the radio ‘off’ button, I squeeze my car into a metered spot near Cavill Avenue and glance at my watch. Late again. The good thing about working in Surfers Paradise is that the meter maids will be along soon to stick money in the meter. That’s if they don’t recognise my parents’ bombed-out Daihatsu, in which case they’ll know I’m no tourist, but a shameless leech on the system.





I jog up the street, jumping sideways to avoid getting wiped out by a guy with a nine-foot surfboard on his head. A tout calls out from a doorway, gesturing towards his shop. Get your stuffed koalas, didgeridoos and Akubra hats here, folks. Or that’s what I imagine he’s saying. As I don’t speak Japanese it’s hard to be sure.





I nod at the tout. He nods back. Seiji’s All Australian Souvenir Shop and Outback Bar is my regular lunchtime haunt. I don’t buy much but it’s always quiet in there, compared to the hustle bustle of the street. Seiji is nice. He never seems to mind if my ice-cream drips. He’s a good salesman, too.





As I push through the door of Gold Star Investigations I pause to savour the thrill it gives me. Here I am. Straight out of school and already a private investigator in training. It’s funny, though, how when dreams come true they’re never quite what you expect.





I hadn’t thought it would be so hard to work with Rosco. He and I are no strangers. We grew up on the same street in Southport. He was one year ahead of me in school, but we hung out together after hours. Rosco was Luke Skywalker and Han Solo to my Leia. We took turns to play Yoda, and very accomplished in Yoda-speak we were. The force was with us. I misheard this phrase the first time he said it, before I watched the movies, and the horse is with you became our little in-joke.





***





‘The Girl with the Gold Bikini’ is available in all good bookshops and online at retailers such as Booktopia and Readings.





You can read more about the book here.





I’m doing a few events around the place to celebrate the book’s release. You can check them out here. I’ll post more as they come up.





YAY!

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Published on January 31, 2020 16:23

January 20, 2020

2020 Events

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February 13: Book Launch for ‘The Girl with the Gold Bikini’





When: 6pm, Thursday 13th of February





Where: The Bookroom at Lennox, 2/60 Ballina St, Lennox Head





RSVP: lennox@thebookroomcollective.com





February 29: Sisters in Crime, Brisbane





When: 12pm





Where: Brisbane Square Library





More information: Here.













March 12: Romancing the Stars





When: 6-9.30pm





Where: Iona College Library, 85 North Rd, Lindum QLD





Bookings: Here.





More events to come…

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Published on January 20, 2020 21:31

May 17, 2019

This tenting life – birds, books and bush

I’ve spent five of the last six weeks sleeping in a tent.
And while I did love staying in a house in Margaret River – thank you Margaret
River Readers and Writers Festival! – I was keen to get back in the tent.
Living out of a tent is a very immersive experience. There is almost nothing
between you and the environment. You hear every bird call, every shower of rain
and every wind gust. It seeps into you, this richness. In the house, I enjoyed
the soft bed, the hot water and cooking in a proper kitchen. But I missed the
birds.





[image error]Camping in the middle of Wilpena Pound, Flinders Ranges



I’ve never been a birdwatcher, but I’m trying. I’ve got
binoculars and a bird book and when I see a little brown bird I attempt to
identify it. It’s been enjoyable trying to put a name to all those flitting
friends.





The other thing about camping is that there is often no phone reception in the places – mainly national parks – where we like to camp. The result of this is that I’ve read a lot of books. I’ve found some treasures here and there, given to me by other travellers or picked up at a roadside stop. I also read on my kindle and listen to audio books in the car. I’ve posted a list of all the books I’ve read and the birds I’ve seen below and chosen a favourite of each.





In a couple of weeks, on May 31st, I’ll be talking at Katherine Susannah Prichard Writers Centre in Perth and then from June 13 to 16, I’ll be at Geraldton Big Sky Writers Festival. I’ll make an effort to spruce myself up a bit before then, so I don’t look like I just crawled out of a tent!





[image error]Emus at Flinders Ranges



Books read over the
last six weeks.





‘The Story of a Marriage’ by Andrew Sean Greer





‘Catching Teller Crow’ by Ambelin and Ezekial Kwaymullina





‘The Third Wheel’ by Michael J. Richie





‘Imaginary Friends’ by Alison Lurie





‘A Widow for One Year’ by John Irving





‘The World Made Straight’ by Ron Rash





‘Dead Parrot’ by John Huxley





‘Women in Black’ by Madeleine St John





‘Longbourne’ by Jo Baker





‘Coming Rain’ by Stephen Daisley





‘The End of all our Exploring’ by Catherine Anderson





‘The Passenger’ Lisa Lutz





‘The Impossible Lives of Greta Wells’ Andrew Sean Greer





‘The Big Twitch’ Sean Dooley





‘Life List’ Olivia Gentile





‘The Lessons’ Naomi Alderton





Favourite book:
‘Catching Teller Crow’ by Ambelin and Ezekial Kwaymullina





Birds sighted (and identified)
over the last six weeks.





Pardalote





Hooded plover





Flame robin





Yellow-tailed black cockatoo





Wedge-tailed eagle





Magpie





Sulphur-crested cockatoo





Galah





White-browed scrub wren





Richard’s pipit





Eastern rosella





Crimson rosella





Rainbow lorikeet





Raven





Spur-winged plover





Currawong





Black-headed cuckoo-shrike





Little hawk





Swallow





Major Mitchell Cockatoo





Purple-crowned lorikeet





Superb blue wren





Port Lincoln parrot





Grey shrike-thrush





Hooded robin





Red-eared firetail





Chestnut-breasted shelduck





White-tailed black cockatoo





Kookaburra





Peregrine falcon





Red-capped parrot





Rufous treecreeper





Rock parrot





Red-capped dotterel





Sooty oystercatcher





Pied oystercatcher





Crested tern





Samphire thornbill





Emu





Red wattle bird





Australian bustard





Golden whistler





Silvereye





White-eared honeyeater





Willy wagtail





Brush bronzewing pigeon





Sanderling





Pacific Gull





Silver Gull





Brown falcon





Dusky wood swallow





Mulga parrot





White-browed babbler





Mallee ring-necked parrot





Pelican





Black swan





Butcher bird





Budgerigar





Wood duck





Caspian tern





Elegant parrot





Ibis





Corella





Favourite bird: Major Mitchell Cockatoo

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Published on May 17, 2019 00:46

March 31, 2019

Heading West





Well, it’s not long now until we pack up the car and start the big drive across the Nullarbor to Western Australia. I think it might be around, oh, fifty hours’ drive from here to there. Luckily, we have a few weeks and plenty of amazing places to see on the way.





I’ve lined up a few writerly events while I’m over there and
look forward to meeting lots of new readers and writers.





First up is Margaret River Readers and Writers Festival, from the 3-5 May. I’m doing four events on at the festival, including a workshop on flash fiction, which should be fun. After that, I’ll be sticking around for the Young Readers and Writers Festival. Not to mention doing some surfing.





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Next, I’ll head up to Perth, where I’ll be talking at the Katherine Susannah Prichard Writers Centre on ‘Spinning Boring Thread into Comedic Gold’ on May 31st. It’s part of the Sundowner Series and I gather there’s wine involved, which is always nice.





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Lastly, I’ll head further north to Geraldton for the Big Sky Readers and Writers Festival from June 13-16. I’ll talk about my novel ‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’, and do a reading at a high tea with cake and scones – big yay for that one! Also hope to do some snorkelling on the beautiful Coral Coast while I’m up there.





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Never having seen much of WA, I’m beyond excited. If you’re in West Australia, or you’re headed that way, I hope to see you there!

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Published on March 31, 2019 22:12

December 19, 2018

Loving the Apocalypse: Why I wrote a romantic comedy about climate change

2018 has been a big year. In April, my first young adult novel ‘Paris Syndrome’ came out and hot on its heels was my climate change comedy, ‘Melt’. I’ve been having fun doing the rounds, to talk about both books.





[image error]With Philip McLaren and Tim Tomlinson at Federal Writers Festival (image by Jessie Cole)



Most recently, I was at the Quantum Words Science Writing Festival in Sydney and the first ever Federal Writers Festival, near Byron Bay. At both of these events, I spoke about why I wrote a romantic comedy about climate change. I thought I’d share a little of that here.





Six years ago or so, I read an article which said that climate change is the most boring subject humanity has ever confronted. To me that was a red rag to a bull. I decided to roll my sleeves up and write a comedy about climate change. And not just a comedy, a romantic comedy.





[image error]With climate scientist Lesley Hughes and authors James Bradley and Hannah Donnelly at Quantum Words (image: Writing NSW)



People sometimes look at me like I’m a terrible person when I say I’ve written a romantic comedy about climate change. ‘You think climate change is funny?’ they say. Anything can be funny if you put your mind to it. Humour is a good way of approaching topics that we find hard to contemplate. I’ve read my fair share of dystopian fiction, but I find that there are only so many scorched wastelands I can take. There’s also room for funny climate change love stories.





Climate change is vast,
overwhelming and depressing. We’re all to blame and there isn’t an easy
solution. That makes it a difficult problem for fiction writers. It isn’t easy
to turn it into a story which is small, hopeful and funny. But I’ve done my
best.





It’s important to have stories about climate change out there. The more, the better. My book isn’t going to save the world, but it adds to the conversation. I’ve been careful not to harangue the reader. I think novels should be about people who have issues, rather than the other way around.





I’ve always enjoyed writing fish-out-of-water comedies. It’s so much fun placing a protagonist in a situation that they don’t have the skills to handle. ‘Melt’ is the story of Summer. She’s a TV production assistant who, in an unlikely turn of events, ends up impersonating a science superstar in Antarctica. Summer knows nothing about glaciology, penguins or krill and her boss forbids her to talk about climate change.





I put a lot of thought into how to introduce the science. I have a science background, so it would have been easy to overload the book with carbon dioxide and rising sea levels.





Instead I adopted the ‘strip club approach’. In movies, when they have to do an information dump, they always do it somewhere exciting, like a strip club. So, in ‘Melt’, whenever I introduce some science about climate change, I make sure that Summer is sliding backwards on her skis towards a crevasse. Or having a wardrobe failure.





I think comedy can be an effective way to tackle difficult issues. Authors need to woo their audience, not knock them over the head with a message. Climate change is scary, but it’s important to leave the reader with a subtle feeling of hope. Change is possible.





Best wishes for the holiday season and here’s to a fulfilling and positive 2019.  

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Published on December 19, 2018 22:03

June 12, 2018

Sex, Lies and Bonsai – writing the outsider

[image error]My writing desk has a view of the sea. From here, at any time of day, I can see surfers skimming across the waves.  What would it be like, I thought, to live in this town and be scared of the water? To have skin that burns instantly in the sun? To have a rich and imaginative inner life but be so shy that no-one ever gets to know that part of you?


Darling Head, where ‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’ is set, is a serious surf town – one where the wetsuit is the look on the street and the clothes shops stock only surf wear. The town even has its own lingo – been gettin’ any? is the usual greeting. It is, in fact, very much like my own home town. While I am a keen surfer myself, my kids are not really into it. In a town with such a strong surfing culture, whether you do or don’t surf becomes an important part of who you are.


Into this town I threw Edie – a shy redhead whose father is a former surf champion, a girl who hasn’t been in the water since she was twelve. Edie’s father is the town celebrity, but Edie has spent her whole life feeling like she doesn’t belong. While she escaped to the city for a few years, a failed relationship finds her washed back up in her childhood home.


In search of more money, Edie takes up erotic writing. And of course, there is something much worse than being the water-shy daughter of a surf champion – being outed as an erotic writer in a small town. I’m sure we all know the terror that comes with exposing an intimate part of ourselves to the cruel light of day…


While ‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’ is a comedy, it is a tender one. It’s about the joy of finding someone who makes you feel like it’s okay to be the crazy mixed up person that you are.  Edie has spent most of her life trying to hide what she sees as her peculiarities. I wanted to see what would happen if she was brave enough to let them all come out.


‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’ has become the little book that could. It’s now out with HarperCollins in the UK and HarperCollins in the US . Go little book. This book trailer for ‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’, set in my home town, sets the scene.


Some links to buy…


‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’ in the US: 


HarperCollins


Barnes and Noble


‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’ in the UK :


Foyles


Amazon


‘Sex, Lies and Bonsai’ in Australia:


Booktopia


Angus and Robertson 


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Published on June 12, 2018 06:38

June 5, 2018

Releasing Wild Books on the Camino

“A book is not only a friend, it makes friends for you. When you have possessed a book with mind and spirit, you are enriched. But when you pass it on you are enriched threefold.”

— Henry Miller

The Books In My Life (1969)


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I first walked the Camino about two years ago with my husband and two sons. It was an intense experience. We averaged twenty-five kilometres a day for thirty days – no rest days. There were blisters, bed bugs and tears. It wasn’t the most enjoyable walk of my life, but it was memorable. In a large part, the pleasure was about meeting people and the shared experience of doing a walk with such a long history.


This week, I’m going back. We’ll start walking on Sunday. The main reason I’m returning is that I’m writing a novel set on the Camino and I want to refresh my memory, get some new colour and smells for the book.  I’m not doing the whole Camino again, just the section from Leon to Sarria. And I plan to take it a bit easier than last time.


Last week I did a radio interview about my two new books, ‘Paris Syndrome’ and ‘Melt’. The interviewer pointed out that in both books, a book is left behind for someone else to read. She asked me if I had ever done that and, well, I have.


I like the idea of leaving books around for others to pick up as they wish. I helped to set up a street library in my home town, which is a similar principle. It’s interesting to see how often the shelves turn over and what books people leave behind.


This week I came across Book Crossings. It is a community of almost two million people who have released over twelve million books into the wild. Each book is given a special identification number and its journey across the world can then be tracked. I love the image of wild books crisscrossing the globe, making friends wherever they go.


I thought to myself, what better place to release books than on the Camino? You have a multi-national tribe of people, who hopefully have time to read, going past every day. I’ve decided to take some of my books and set them free along on the path. They say that the Camino gives you what you need, so I hope they will find their perfect readers.


  You can follow my Camino book releases on Facebook  Instagram or Twitter.


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Published on June 05, 2018 17:49

May 14, 2018

Launching…




 


For those who live in my local area, I would love to see you at one of my events in Lismore or Byron Bay.


On Thursday May 17 (this Thursday) I will be discussing both my recent novels ‘Paris Syndrome’ and ‘Melt‘ at the Lismore Book Warehouse. There is a charge of $5 to cover drinks and snacks.


On Thursday May 31, Author Sarah Armstong will be launching ‘Melt’ in Byron Bay, with a Welcome to Country by Delta Kay. This is a free event (with drinks and snacks! )


RSVPs to both these events are appreciated to help with catering.


*****


Reveiws, reviews, reviews…


‘Melt’ and ‘Paris Syndrome’ have both been getting some lovely reviews, which warms the cockles of my heart on these cool autumn mornings.


Melt


It’s a lovely romp of a RomCom, involving Climate Change, Mistaken Identities and Antarctica! 


Karl Kruszelnicki (Dr Karl) (on Twitter)


I wish I could find more books just like this one!


Bree, One Girl Too Many Books 


Paris Syndrome


YA novelist Lisa Walker has woven a multi-layered story of love and loss… Highly recommended.


Alison Paterson in Magpies Magazine


This is a quirky affectionate read that will have teens laughing one minute and tearing up the next.


Riverbend Books


There are more reviews of both books on my website. 


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Published on May 14, 2018 18:31