Alison grew up in North Yorkshire, and now lives in Worcester. She worked as a waitress, a shop assistant, a learning adviser, an Advice Centre manager, a freelance trainer, and now a maker-upper of stories. She won the RNA's Elizabeth Goudge trophy in 2012, and her winning story will be published in the RNA/Harlequin anthology Truly, Madly, Deeply in 2014.
She writes contemporary romantic comedies.
Alison's debut novel Much Ado About Sweet Nothing is published by Chocl Lit Lite
Alison's debut novel Much Ado About Sweet Nothing is published by Chocl Lit Lite
What (or who :) ) would you most like to find in
your Christmas stocking?
What I really want for Christmas is a new computer. The
one I’m writing on now is antique. It has a little man who has to shovel coal
into its boiler to make the steam to make it go And the little man is tired, so
very very tired. It’s probably time he retired to the countryside and
concentrated on growing the perfect begonia. So, for the sake of the little
man, a shiny new laptop please!
Who is your favourite
hero? Your own, or another - or maybe both.
This is tricky. I’ve never
really been a fan of the traditional tall, dark, handsome brooding hero with an
air of arrogance and a certain cruelty in his gaze. That doesn’t mean I’m
rejecting all the classic romantic heroes. I retain a sneaking fondness for
Captain Wentworth, but generally I prefer a clever, possibly slightly nerdy,
man. David Tennant or Matt Smith as The Doctor or, of course, Ben Messina, the
mathematician hero in Much Ado About Sweet Nothing, would all do very
nicely indeed.
What did you love most
about your childhood?
I actually had a very nice and uneventful childhood with much
to love about it. The thing I miss most, as an adult, is living by the sea. I
grew up in Scarborough on the North Yorkshire coast, a town right on the edge
of the cliff. Indeed some bits that were on top of the cliff when I was a
child, have now fallen off the edge. I miss the unending open space of the sea
being right on my doorstep, especially on slightly grey days when the sea and
the sky would merge together into a massive great expanse of vastness.
Fictional characters
have flaws. Do you have a flaw you'd like to be rid of?
No! I’m completely perfect in all my thoughts and deeds.
So maybe, arrogance?
Do you have any
phobias or superstitions?
I’m not superstitious. In fact I walk under ladders,
invite black cats across my path, put shoes on tables etc. specifically to wind
up superstitious friends. I do have on phobia though, and it’s a really awkward
one that interferes with life. I’m terrified of driving. I passed my driving
test about five years ago, but even now the idea of getting in a car on my own
and driving, properly freaks me out. It’s something I very firmly intend to get
over, and that is going to be my main New Year’s Resolution for 2014, just like
is was in 2013, and 2012…
If aliens landed,
which book would you recommend they read first. (Again, one of yours, and maybe
one of your own).
Is something always better than nothing?
Ben Messina is
a maths genius and romance sceptic. He met Trix at university and
they have been quarrelling and quibbling ever since, not least because of Ben’s
decision to abandon their relationship in favour of … more maths. Can Trix
forget past hurt, or is their long history in danger of ending in nothing?
This
is a fresh, funny, modern-day retelling of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About
Nothing.
Thanks for taking the time to talk to us, Alison. We wish you every success with Much Ado about Sweet Nothing, and with all your future books.
Interviews on the RNA Blog are currently carried out by Freda, Henri, and Liv. They are for RNA members, although we do occasionally take guests. If you are interested in an interview, please contact: freda@fredalightfoot.co.uk