As a book reviewer I have made contact with authors from all across the globe and feel immensely privileged to be able to share some amazing work. However, there is always something rather special when a book comes to my attention which has been written by an author in my part of the North of England. So with this in mind I have great pleasure in featuring some of those authors who are literally close to my home. Over the next few Saturdays, and hopefully beyond, I will be sharing the work of a very talented bunch of Northern authors and discovering just what being a Northerner means to them both in terms of inspiration and also in their writing.
Please welcome Northern Writer
June Taylor
Hi and welcome to Jaffareadstoo, June. Tell us a little bit about
yourself and what got you started as an author?
As a child I was always
frustrated that I couldn’t draw. My head
was so full of stories and I just couldn’t get them out. But as soon as I realised that words make
pictures too, I discovered the magic of language and the power of storytelling. I’ve been writing ever since. And there is no better place than your own
imagination.
I’ve written short plays and had a full-length
play produced. In 2011, I was runner-up
in the Times/Chicken House Children’s Fiction Competition with a YA novel. But I finally found my niche writing adult
psychological thrillers. Losing Juliet
is my debut, published by HarperCollins Killer Reads.
Losing Juliet is based in
Manchester - so why not Leeds?
I’m extremely proud of my Yorkshire
heritage, but for this book my home town just felt too familiar. I’ve used several locations in Losing Juliet and
I had to move around them efficiently when writing. I’ve seen Leeds go from ‘Yorkshire Ripper town’
to the thriving cultural metropolis it is now, so Leeds would almost have become
another character in the book as there are two time frames weaving throughout the narrative.
I just couldn’t afford to get sentimental or nostalgic.
So Manchester is another Northern
town I love. I’ve worked there and know
it well enough to write about it. The
next book is set in Leeds!
As a writer based in Yorkshire,
does this present any problems in terms of marketing and promoting your books,
and if so, how do you overcome them?
I remember years back when I
first started trying to get an agent and a publisher, the rejection letters
would often hint at me getting a London address and maybe I should think about setting
my book in London instead so it would sell internationally. Even today there’s still something of a London
bias, but we are much better now at being Northern and proud. My last agent was Shelley Instone who set up
a literary agency with the sole purpose of championing Northern writers because
she saw first-hand how we are still being overlooked in the industry.
In terms of promoting and
marketing books, however, I think it’s pretty much the same for everyone no
matter where you live. We can all connect
to the wider reading/writing/blogging communities via the internet, and tap
into our local readership via local radio, press, personal contacts and
networks. The trick is finding ways to
do this without being too much in people’s faces.
Support can come from unexpected
places sometimes too. Count Arthur
Strong randomly tweeted me to say that he’d bought the book and said it was
“Brilliant!”
Watch it here on You Tube
If you were pitching Yorkshire as
an ideal place to live, work and write - how would you sell it and what makes
it so special?
As other ‘Close to Home’ writers
have suggested on here, it’s probably better to keep that as our little secret.
So let’s just say it’s bleak on them there
Moors, we drink far too much tea, the beer’s warm, we talk a bit funny and it’s
at least twenty-five degrees colder up here. You wouldn’t like it in Yorkshire at all!
In your research for books, do
you visit any of the places you write about and which have made a lasting
impression?
A sense of place is really
important in a novel so I always like to recce or draw on places I already
know. I’ve worked as a freelancer for
many years so have moved about the country a fair bit, and also been lucky
enough to travel the world. In Losing
Juliet the narrative shifts from Manchester, Bristol, London, over to the South
of France, Rome and Tuscany, so there are quite a few scene changes. I love all the places I write about. I think you have to; even if it’s gritty and
dark you have to find something you love about it.
Writing is a solitary business -
how do you interact with others?
Social media is amazing for
linking up writers, readers and bloggers from all over the world, but there’s
no substitute for face-to-face interaction.
Making real-life connections is so important, and joining a writing
group is the best thing a writer can do I think. I’m heavily involved in the local scene and
help promote and support Yorkshire writing generally. I’m on the Board of Script Yorkshire, a
volunteer-led Organisation. We’re a
community of scriptwriters mainly, but we also have novelists and poets in
amongst, and we put on workshops, page-to-stage events and have socials. We have a very impressive list of patrons too,
from Alan Bennett through to Sally Wainwright.
Another Organisation I help out
with is Leeds Big Bookend, which calls itself the city’s ‘rock festival for
words’. I’ve done a Meet the Agent event
with Bookend and we did my book launch together at the Leeds Library, one of
Leeds’ secret gems.
There’s a lot going on in Leeds
and Yorkshire now. It’s really not
difficult to find a writing group where you feel you can belong.
How supportive are local
communities to your writing, and are there ever any opportunities for
bookshops, local reading groups, or libraries to be involved in promoting your
work?
I’ve found local support really
brilliant actually. But you have to give
a little to get something back. I really
do believe that. Some writers expect too
much. As a debut author it can be a slow
build, word-of-mouth. I’ve been invited
to book groups and to appear at local festivals and events. I’m really not a ‘me, me, me’ sort of person
but I do enjoy doing these things. So
feel free to approach if I haven’t approached you.
I’ve found my local press and BBC
Radio Leeds to be very supportive too.
Where can people buy Losing
Juliet?
Losing Juliet is available on Amazon both as an eBook and paperback.
Killer Reads 2016 |
A HarperCollins Killer Reads... a twisty psychological suspense
about a friendship gone bad.
You can’t escape the past…
Juliet and Chrissy were best
friends until one fateful summer forced them apart. Now, nearly twenty years
later, Juliet wants to be back in Chrissy’s life.
But Chrissy doesn’t want Juliet
anywhere near her, or her teenage daughter Eloise. After all, Juliet is the
only person who knows what happened that night – and her return threatens to
destroy the life that Chrissy has so carefully built.
Because when the past is
reawakened, it can prove difficult to bury. And soon all three of them will
realize how dangerous it can get once the truth is out there…
Watch the Book Trailer here.
Huge thanks to June for giving us such a splendid introduction to her writing.
I hope that you have enjoyed this week's Close To Home Feature
Coming next week : Nicci Rae
~***~
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