We are
delighted to welcome, Jenny Harper to the blog today. Well known to RNA members,
Jenny tells us about her latest publication.
A year after her brother’s
fatal accident, Lexie’s life seems to have reached a dead end. She is back home
in small-town Hailesbank with her shell-shocked parents, treading softly around
their fragile emotions. As the family business drifts into decline, Lexie’s
passion for painting and for her one-time mentor Patrick have been buried as
deep as her unexpressed grief, until the day her lunch is interrupted by a
strange visitor in a bobble hat, dressing gown and bedroom slippers, who climbs
through the window. Elderly Edith’s batty appearance conceals a secret and
starts Lexie on a journey that gives her an inspirational artistic idea and
rekindles her appetite for life. With friends in support and ex-lover Cameron
seemingly ready to settle down, do love and laughter beckon after all?
Artist
Lexie Gordon, funky heroine of People We
Love, has put her career on hold to support her parents following the death
of her brother in a car crash. While the story revolves round the mystery of
why he was driving while drunk, the family begin their journey out of grief
through the unexpected appearance of old Edith Lawrence.
Edith’s
character emerged from an incident recounted by my parents. An elderly woman
with dementia walked twelve miles from her care home in her nightie, and
climbed in a window of the house where she used to live. I was intrigued. What
powerful instinct had led her there? The story was irresistible and I stored it
away.
The
second layer in the story was triggered by a haunting piece of photo journalism
I spotted in one of the Sunday supplements – a series of photos of shoes worn
by women fleeing from South Sudan. They were battered, flimsy and totally
unsuitable for hard walking. Some were even just flip flops. I found the images
of those shoes deeply moving, and I realised that shoes can tell stories
– which is exactly what Lexie comes to understand.
But just a minute – a women’s novel
revolving round shoes? Surely a cliché? Overdone, stereotypical – boring, even.
Well … maybe. But although People We Love
features shoes, it’s about other themes entirely. As the invitation to Lexie’s
art exhibition at the opening of the book says, ‘Shoes tell stories. Stories of tiny, much-loved babies who can’t even walk,
of the tottering steps of little children towards adulthood, of special events
in our lives, of dances, and marriages and mountain climbs and escapes.’
So yes, my new novel does feature shoes.
In fact, there’s a catalogue entry at the start of each chapter that features
just about every kind of shoe imaginable, from baby’s bootees to the
serviceable old Clark’s shoes Lexie’s father wears as he soldiers on through
life. It even features a pair of vintage Manolo Blahniks. But it’s not about shoes.
If you want to discover why the Manolos
are important… sorry, you’ll have to read the book for yourself!
People We Love is the fourth in
my Heartlands series. Maximum Exposure
is about a local newspaper under threat of closure. I decided it would be
easier to set it in a fictional town – and so Hailesbank was born. When I
started writing Loving Susie, which
is about a politician in Edinburgh, my location had become ‘real’ in my head –
so I decided Susie Wallace could live in (and represent) Hailesbank. And when Face the Wind and Fly started life, a
small conservation village close to Hailesbank sprang, ready formed, into my
head.
So
far, my characters haven’t overlapped much, but they will in future books. The
next in the series, Mistakes We Make,
develops the back story of a minor but key character in People We Love, and I’ve written a novella, Sand In Your Shoes, based on Nicola Arnott, the head teacher in
Summerfield Primary (in Face the Wind and
Fly), which will be published in June.
Two
of my readers have told me they’d like to live in Hailesbank. I think I would
too –but then, part of me already does!
People We Love, out as an ebook,
with paperback publication in August.
‘Thoroughly entertaining’ Katie
Fforde
For readers of Jojo Moyes,
Jodi Picoult, David Nicholls - you'll love Jenny Harper's People We Love.
LINKS:
My
publisher has produced a great trailer for People
We Love. Do take a look!
If
you fancy a sip of People We Love with your morning cuppa… http://bit.ly/1OZ9cx2
Twitter @harper_jenny
Shared blog (Novel Points
of View)
Jenny Harper lives in Edinburgh. An active RNA
member, she redesigned Romance Matters as
a colour magazine and produced it for seven years. As a committee member under
Katie Fforde, she was responsible for the rebranding of the RNA, the RONA
awards and the RNA website (with Janet Gover), and she commissioned the
beautiful glass bowl that is now the Romantic Novelist of the Year prize. Jenny
is the author of four books about Scotland and Scottish culture, a history of
childbirth, and The Sleeping Train
for young readers. When she isn't writing, she enjoys walking in the Scottish
countryside or anywhere warm, and travel to Europe, America and India.
Thank you for visiting the
blog, Jenny. People We Love is now on
our ‘to read’ list.
The RNA blog is brought to you by,
Elaine Everest & Natalie
Kleinman
If you would like to write for the blog please
contact us on elaineeverest@aol.com
7 comments:
Jenny, thank you for your contribution to the blog x
Oh, I love the idea of shoes telling life stories. Brilliant. It sounds like a beautiful story, Jenny. Thanks for sharing, Elaine & Natalie. I think this is one for me. :) x
This sounds really intriguing, Jenny. One of the things I enjoy about writing is how we can squirrel away a random event, chance remark, and use it to weave a story. I look forward to reading your book.
This one is on my tbr list, Jenny. I love it when we learn from a writer how a story took shape. Looking forward to reading it!
Elaine, thank you so much for organising this! To others, thank you for your comments, and I really hope you enjoy the book. :-)
Thank you, Jenny. Lovely piece. Fascinating
Really enjoyed reading this, what lovely inspiration for your story. Look forward to reading it! Thank you.
Julie Vince (write as Julia Wild)
Post a Comment