Showing posts with label Tirgearr Publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tirgearr Publishing. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Cathy Mansell - In Dublin's Fair City

It’s a joy to welcome Cathy Mansell back to the blog to tell us about her recent book launch:

Cathy
with
Sharon Black on her right and Mary Bradford
Since my last visit in January 2015, good things have been happening. Galway Girl and Where the Shamrocks Grow have come out in paperback with Tirgearr Publishing and Magna large print. All four books out in audio by the end of 2015. Tirgearr has contracted my fifth book, Dublin's Fair City, and Magna have said they want that too. I couldn't be happier.

My recent book launch in Dublin to promote the Cathy Mansell Brand and my most recently published book, Where the Shamrock's Grow, was a great success but not without a few eye-openers along the way. The event took place in the lecture room of Blanchardstown Library.

Hard work went into arranging the venue. It took weeks to have the details confirmed. This particular library, I can't speak for other Irish libraries, don't do commercial. However, everyone I spoke to at the library was courteous and helpful. Yet it took many emails/phone calls before it was finally agreed by the powers that be that I could do a talk and sell my books at the same time.

Deciding to launch in another country is expensive, not to mention time-consuming where advertising the event is concerned. I approached websites, sent out flyers to libraries, newspapers and to people who were kind enough to advertise the event for me. Because the event took place in Ireland, I didn't have the opportunity of speaking with the organizers face to face, so, had to rely on things being ok when I got there.

Each book launch I've done has been a learning curve. For example; last year my Dublin book launch took place at my nephew’s. Over forty people turned up. It was a typical Irish get-together with family and friends, where I met my publisher for the first time. It was a great experience, and I sold lots of books. 

It never occurred to me that Irish library policies would be different to those of the UK. For instance; you can do a talk but are not allowed to sell books. No drinks or nibbles allowed. It would have been nice to have offered refreshments, as one lady travelled fifty miles from Cork.

I also discovered that, no matter how well prepared you are, you always need a plan 'B'.  My original plan to cover a two hour event gave sufficient time to each speaker with enough time at the end to sell books. As it happened, my publisher, Tirgearr, was unable to attend. I had advance warning that this might happen and totally understood the situation. I still had my guest speaker as a backup. However, I was totally thrown when he didn't show. Due to heavy Saturday traffic, people arrived late, and the event started half an hour later than planned. Still my guest hadn't arrived. I found myself in the position of having to improvise by lengthening my talk. I spoke about the inspiration behind each book. With the extra time, it enabled me to read a teaser from my newly contracted book Dublin's Fair City.

My husband had prepared a fun quiz on an excerpt I read from Where the Shamrock's Grow. It went down a treat. People were laughing and appeared to be having fun. The winner received a copy of the book. My granddaughter handed out a ticket to each person as they arrived for a free draw later.

The warmth and friendliness of the twenty-five people who turned up to support me was wonderful. I sold twenty-three books. It was certainly worth doing and in spite of the set-backs I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of it.

Thank you for having me on the RNA Blog today.

About Cathy:
Cathy Mansell is an experienced writer of romantic fiction. Her early work was stories and articles published in national magazines. She edited an anthology of works funded by Arts Council England and appeared on the TV show Food Glorious Food 2012. Nowadays, she writes novels set in 19s Ireland, depicting the lifestyle and hardships of families in those days. Some of her characters become wound up in intricate criminal plots. She lives in rural Leicestershire with her husband, where she writes daily in her ‘Loft Study’

Links:

Sounds like you had a wonderful experience, Cathy. Thank you for sharing.

The RNA blog is brought to you by 

Elaine Everest & Natalie Kleinman

If you would like to write for the RNA blog please contact us on elaineeverest@aol.com







Friday, May 1, 2015

Jennifer Young: What’s Love Got to do With It?

Welcome to Jennifer who writes about… romance!

What’s love got to do with it? You may think this is self-explanatory. I’m a romantic novelist and so I write about romance (sorry if this sounds obvious) and romance is all about love. That’s what love has to do with it.

But there are many different sorts of love, and my latest novel (my third) is about more than one of them. Several for them in fact. Yes, it’s a romance and its two main female protagonists, Flora and Suzanne, are both, in different circumstances, in pursuit of their own happy endings with a man they love. But there are different types of love and sometimes they conflict.

There’s the love that never dies even when your partner does. How do you follow that, attempting to replace the irreplaceable? Flora’s friendship with a colleague grows into love but can it overcome his deep love for his long-dead wife? And will the shadow of needy, unhinged Ally stop Suzanne overcoming her biggest challenge, starting life anew as the widowed mother of a murdered child?

There’s the love of a mother for her children. In Looking for Charlotte, set in Edinburgh and the Highlands of Scotland, divorced Flora is struggling with her children, paying the price for mistakes she made in bringing them up as a single mother. As they grow up they drift away and she fights to keep them.

Suzanne’s loss, on the other hand, is permanent and more terrible. Her estranged and suicidal husband, determined to end his own life, took their three year old daughter, Charlotte, with him into death and carried the secret of her whereabouts to his grave. Grief and guilt turn Suzanne’s life into a desert of regret from which she struggles to escape.

But there’s a wider, deeper love and that’s the love that ties humankind and binds one stranger to another. Flora’s response to the loss of her relationship with her children is to seek redemption through helping another — by deciding to find Charlotte and bring her body home to give her mother closure. Along their journeys, both women find themselves in positions where they can help, and be helped by, other people.

If you choose to be elastic with your definitions, you can fit Looking For Charlotte into more than one genre — romance, romantic suspense and contemporary woman’s fiction for a start. But for me it’s primarily a romance. It’s about two lost women looking for love, and whether that love can triumph over Suzanne’s guilt and Flora’s increasingly obsessive search for little lost Charlotte.

I changed the ending several times and you’ll have to read it to find out what it is. But I will tell you one thing — that love, in at least one of its many forms, emerges triumphant.
 
 

About Jennifer:
Jennifer Young is an Edinburgh-based author of romantic and romantic suspense fiction. A graduate of the RNAs New Writers Scheme she saw her first book, Thank You For The Music, published by Tirgearr Publishing in February 2014, followed by No Time Like Now later the same year. Like all of Jennifer’s writing, Looking For Charlotte (set in her beloved Scottish Highlands) is strongly influenced by her love of travel and landscape. She’s currently working on a romantic suspense trilogy set in northern Italy.







Links:
Twitter: @JYnovelist
Novel Points of View (shared blog):

Thank you, Jennifer and good luck with Looking for Love.

The RNA blog is brought to you by

Elaine Everest & Natalie Kleinman


If you would like to write an article or a feature about a writing event please contact us on elaineeverest@aol.com

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Joan Fleming: Joan Hessayon award contender 2015


Today we welcome Joan Fleming to the blog. Joan is another of our contenders for this year’s Joan Hessayon award.

Congratulations on graduating the RNA New Writers’ Scheme. Can you tell us when you first decided that you wished to become a romantic novelist? 
When I started scribbling as a youngster, my stories were always full of romance: princesses being rescued by handsome heroes before falling in love. Moving from those childhood dreams to becoming a romantic novelist has been a long process. Joining a writing group affiliated to the Scottish Association of Writers helped to formalise my ideas. I began by writing short stories, but when I was told in several critiques that my story was more like the first chapter of a novel, I decided to give it a try. I joined the RNA New Writers’ Scheme – and here I am.
How many years were you a member of the NWS scheme and did you submit a different book each year? Which year’s book did you graduate with?
I submitted my first book in 2008. Altogether, I’ve sent four different novels, one twice. I was unable, through illness, to send one in 2011. I graduated with my 2012 entry.
One of my novels was full length, the others shorter. After the first one, I had in mind potential publishers, and my submissions were the appropriate length. With every entry, I received positive comments and advice which encouraged me to keep on writing novels.
How did you find your publisher?
One of the recommendations of my NWS reader (thank you once again), was that I submit to an e-publisher. A well-published friend (also a member of the RNA) suggested I try Tirgearr Publishing – who accepted it. I’ve been delighted with my experience with this lovely publishing house.
Promotion is a big part of an author’s working life. How did you promote your novel?
This has been a whole new learning curve for me. I’m on Facebook and Twitter and also several Yahoo groups. I’ve set up a website and a blog. In the early stages, the technology was really time-consuming, but I’m learning! I follow the advice of my publisher. I’ve had promotional cards printed, which I take to every writing-related event I attend (including the RNA conference). I also carry a few in my handbag!
What has happened to you as an author since that first sale?
I’ve met many new writing friends, both face to face and on-line. In finding my way around social media, I’ve linked up and shared experiences with other writers. Acceptance by a publisher has given me confidence to write another novel, which is almost ready for submission. The change of status from unpublished to published author has opened doors: full membership of the RNA and the Society of Authors.
How did you celebrate your first book sale?
The first sale came at midnight when the sites went live. We opened the champagne which was already in the fridge. Morning brought a lovely day with flowers and cards arriving by the minute – and more champagne. Later, I was taken out to lunch by close writing friends.
About Joan:
I was born and educated in Edinburgh, Scotland. After university there, I became a teacher of French and German for a short period in the London area, then in the West of Scotland.
Since leaving education, I now concentrate on creative writing. I’ve had short stories and articles published in magazines in both the UK and America. I’ve also had some success in writing competitions.
In addition to the Romantic Novelists’ Association, I’m a member of Erskine Writers, the Scottish Association of Writers, and the Society of Authors.
My interests include: reading, walking, travel, islands (anywhere!) and the life and work of Robert Burns. I now live in a flat on the outskirts of Glasgow overlooking the West Highland Way.
Links:
Thank you Joan and good luck with your writing career

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

Oh I Do Like to be Beside the Seaside!


Today we are delighted to welcome Celia J Anderson

Celia spends most of her spare time writing in as many different genres as possible, including children’s fiction. She also loves teaching drama and literature (now comfortingly called English again but still the best subject in the world.)

With two grown up daughters who have defected to the seaside, Celia’s future plan is to scoop up husband and cats and join them there. Her aim is a writing room with a sea view.

Have you always been or wanted to be a writer?
I’ve always written for fun, but a fantastic creative writing module in 1996 - part of my training to be a teacher - sowed the seeds of something more, and my first novel began to take shape. That one never made it (fortunately for the book world) but it’s actually the prequel to the new one, Little Boxes so the ten year writing process wasn’t wasted!

You graduated from the NWS last year with Sweet Proposal. We’d love to hear about the lead up to, and your involvement in the Joan Hessayan Award Ceremony.
The first time I went to an RNA summer party the Joan Hessayon award was being presented, and it became my dream to be in that line up. The invitation to be there, via email, was a proud moment, especially as two of my best writing buddies/fellow Romaniacs, Laura E James and Sue Fortin were going to be up there too. There were lots of blog interviews beforehand and an article in the local press - it was a fabulous occasion with fizz provided by Joan’s lovely husband and a wonderfully uncompetitive feeling for an event of this sort!

Can you tell us something about your working life before?
It’s more of a now than a before - my last year’s plan was to scale down my teaching workload to give extra writing time but then circumstances changed and I was given the job of assistant head, which is great fun but extremely full-on. It’s a bit of a juggling act to find time to write. Luckily, I wake up early. Strong coffee helps a lot

You’re a member of the Romaniacs Blogging team. How did you all get together?
Meeting the Romaniacs has been the single most significant moment in my writing life so far. Most of us got together at the first Festival of Romance in 2011 - we knew from the start that our friendship was something very special and when the other two joined us shortly afterwards, the die was cast and we very soon began blogging together. These ladies are my writing mainstay, brilliant critique partners, honest sounding boards, but most of all a source of support and ridiculous humour at any time of the day or night. We find it hard to all be in one place at once due to families, work etc. but when we do manage it, the wine and cake intake is legendary.

How do relax when not working?
I cook, eat and drink too much, go for long walks, (in the Derbyshire countryside, by the sea or on the Quantocks whenever possible) and socialise with my family and friends. Oh, and have lovely long naps. And read and read and read and read.

‘Little Boxes’ is released today. What can you tell us about it?
It’s a story of Molly’s quest to confront the secrets of her past and to begin to move on. The clues for her journey arrive at random times through the post in little boxes, each one designed to make Molly dig deeper into life before her husband’s death. In the process she meets the desirable and charismatic artist Tom, who has secrets and problems of his own.

What has been your experience regarding the publishing process?
My first novel, Sweet Proposal, was published digitally in August 2013 by Piatkus Entice, following a competition win at the 2012 Festival of Romance. The whole process was fascinating, especially the editing - I learned a lot, particularly from Caroline Kirkpatrick. This time I’m published by Tirgearr and it’s been equally interesting. They are so easy to work with - cooperative, friendly and approachable. I’m looking forward to more of the same in the future, fingers crossed.

As no writer rests on her (or his) laurels, what is next for Celia J Anderson?
In the adult writing field, my next project is something more off-the-wall - still romance but with a twist. It’s called Living the Dream and involves mind travel. I also write for children, and my middle grade book Teacher Torture is with a publisher for consideration as we speak. Even more finger crossing.

Blogs:

Twitter: @CeliaAnderson1
Facebook Author Page: Celia J Anderson


Our fingers are crossed for you too. Thank you for joining us today, Celia

The RNA blog is brought to you by

Elaine Everest & Natalie Kleinman

If you would like to write an article or be featured on the blog please contact us on elaineeverest@aol.com