12/11/2010

WAITING FOR TODAY'S RA FRIDAY - WINNER OF PHILLIPA ASHLEY'S GIVEAWAY


Last week my RA Friday event hosted Phillipa Ashley 's guest blog post about how crucial BBC North and South was for her life and , especially, for  her starting a writing career. Lots of  interesting comments, ladies! Thank you so much, Phillipa. And thanks to all of you who contributed to the discussion. It's time to announce the name of the winner of DATING MR DECEMBER! Are you ready? Random.org has chosen ...
The winner is ... I know you'd rather be given the prize by the man in person but , sorry, he's very busy at present...


The winner is ... Phylly3!!!
Congratulations!!!

Stay tuned! My new RA FRIDAY is coming soon!

10/11/2010

AUTHOR INTERVIEW + GIVEAWAY : SHERRI RABINOWITZ

Sherri Rabinowitz has been writing since she was a small child and was inspired by Ray Bradbury and Agatha Christie. She had always loved writing, but has had to make a living in a varied number of ways: she has worked as an actress, a travel agent and in several forms of customer service. Her passion, though, has always been writing. She loves and enjoys both reading and writing fan fiction. Fantasy Time Inc. is her second work of original fiction. You can follow her on her blog Ri The Bard. 

I’m glad to welcome Sherri on Fly High! and to introduce her to all of you. First of all Sherri, thanks a lot for being here today. Why don’t you tell us something more about yourself?
 Hi, it's great to be here and I am very excited to share with your readers. I started writing for fun and because I was kind of lonely. It was intoxicating that I could do anything and create any kind of person I wanted to. I enjoyed trying to write in different styles and different type of stories. I started to write fan fiction when I was in college it was different then. I was into the original Star Trek. There were clubs and fanzines. You sold them via magazines and fan letters. I was very active in both fanzines and writing stuff for newsletters. I remember sitting in the lounge in the library at my college I was suppose to writing a midterm but I was writing a Star Trek story for a zine. I was always doing that. I was majoring in Anthropology one of the requirements I take a philosophy class. I wrote my paper on the relationship between Kirk, Spock, McCoy as Peacemaker, Parent and Child, it was a 10 page paper and I got an A. I ran into my Professor 10 years later and he remembered the paper. So when the internet came along and I discovered fan fiction on the net I latched onto it with enthusiasm. In fact my pen name came from character I created for a Star Trek story.

Reading novels and watching movies and period dramas are among my favourite pastimes. What about you? 

I get into passions for different books or movies. When I get started I have to read and watch everything. When I read Jane Austen, I was inspired by the Colin Firth mini-series. I read all the novels, watched every movie or TV movie I could. I not only did that I read all the biographies and even bought a book telling about Jane Austen’s England. It’s not only classic fiction because I did that with Harry Potter too. I just love to get involved with other worlds, whether it is the past or another dimension.

What kind of reader are you? Where and when do you love to read?
I am a devoted reader, like I said I enjoy reading an author’s whole works. Right now I am re-reading all of the Lord Peter Wimsey books. I’m also restless. I will read two books at once. One I keep in my purse, one by my bedside. I usually read when I wake up at home in my bedroom or the bathroom. When I am out I read when I’m waiting at the doctor or the hair dresser.

I love reading classics, especially Jane Austen and Victorian authors like Gaskell, Dickens, the Brontes or Eliot. What is your relationship with classic literature?
My Dad was great reader and always encouraged me. I think the first one was Charles Dickens and Mark Twain. Then I got into Louisa May Alcott I think that is when I started to read everything. I needed to find out what happened to Jo after she married the professor. I do admit I bounce all over the place, I love the classics but I read Mysteries, Fantasy and Science Fiction too. I love it all. Really, I love a good story that captures me.

Is there a book that has been a turning point in your life?
Little Women, because I could really relate to Jo, I understood her.

What about writing, instead ? Have you got a special routine? Where is your favourite place to write?
I have written since I was child. I was always writing stories because even then I would want to know what happens after I finished the book. I write in long hand, I curl up on my bed or couch and just start to scribble. After I am done I have to put it into the computer because my writing is not legible to anyone but me.

How do you create your characters? Are you more inspired by real life acquaintances or previous reads?
They really come to me. I have them come out as I write a story or I come up with an idea while I am driving or shopping. My previous reads are an influence but I think its more my warped imagination. One of my best series of short stories came out from a dream.
I think dialog comes from people and composites of characters but not directly.
The two books I have written are completely different. One is Murder Mystery with a Mob boss who wants out set in a modern setting and the other is a Time Travel story set in the future with three romances. Right now I am working a young person’s story. It’s a complete fantasy story that is based on something from my childhood.

Try to present your latest publication, Fantasy Time Inc. with a twitter-sized message.
Most people dream of the future and the past, because no one romanticizes about their own time.

   

In this book you imagine future worlds and future lives. Two of my favourite books ever are Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451 and Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, though science fiction is not my favourite genre. Are you anyway indebted to that tradition?
Yes, Ray Bradbury is a great influence and a wonderful person. I have met him several times. Isaac Asimov who was my Dad’s favorite and wrote many wonderful books. I think the greatest though was Gene Roddenberry, the creator of Star Trek, he was a great influence on me from an episode called The City on the Edge of Forever. It is set in the thirties and Kirk falls in love with a woman he knows must die or history will change forever. It broke my heart. I am romantic and the time travel stories that got me were the romantic ones. The Time Machine, the move version because the love in that was very strong and wasn’t in the book. And my all time favorite Somewhere In Time. I cry every time I see that one. So Fantasy Time Inc comes from that tradition really.

What is your relationship with new technologies and the Net? Do you think they can help your writing and the world of books in general? Or are they more a distraction for you and a menace for the printed books?
That’s a very hard question. I think that like everything else its both good and bad. I love to read and I have to admit I read a lot of fan fiction. I came from fan fiction, though when I started to write it was in magazines and through what was called fanzines. It was so much better to go on line to write your story. Submit it to a website and gain readers. People that may have never seen it any other way, read your stuff. It is a good training ground for those of us who love to write but have no money. You can make mistakes but still write. So I like that. On the other hand I don’t like this idea that a printed book is out dated. I love books. I prefer them. It is easier on the eyes to read a book then screens whether they are big or small, they really damage your eyes. I love the smell of a book, I love the feel of book. They are special and I will be very sad if they would disappear because of these devices. The problem is kids don’t read, they play games or text but don’t know anything about books. So as I said I am very conflicted.

Now, before ending our nice chat about reading and writing books, tell us Sherri if you are writing a new novel and what are your future plans as for writing.
Yes, I still write fan fiction and I have two stories going for the romantics out there one of them is a Remington Steele story based on the last show. I am the type of writer who needs to have a few things going and then decide on one of them. I am writing a young person’s fantasy novel, A historical novel and murder mystery. Three of my favorite type of genre’s. The two that are the most likely to be next are the fantasy novel and a historical novel. I have to see which I finish first.


That's all Sherri! Thank you so much for being so kind and answering all my questions. I wish you great success with your writing. 

Now, great GIVEAWAY!!! Three copies of Fantasy Time Inc. offered by Sherri Rabinowitz, 2 copies for US and Canada, one copy for the rest of the world! So, it's your turn: leave comments or questions for Sherri and  ... good luck! As usual, don't forget to add your e-mail address, please! The giveaway ends on November 16th.

08/11/2010

WHAT I'VE BEEN WATCHING - SHERLOCK (BBC ONE 2010)

Benedict Cumberbatch plays new Sherlock Holmes
What if Sherlock Holmes lived in present-day London and had the chance to support his brilliant, sharp deductive mind with technology and the Net? You can find the answer to that watching the 3 episodes of the new Sherlock BBC ONE broadcast not long ago, Masterpiece PBS  has just shown and which is already available on DVD.

Sherlock Holmes is played by Benedict Cumberbatch, John Watson by Martin Freeman ( who is going to be Bilbo Baggins in The Hobbit movies and was in Love Actually) , Mrs Hudson by Una Stubbs (Eastenders), Inspector Lestrade by Rupert Graves (Maurice, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall) , Molly Hooper by Louise Brealey (Casualty, Bleak House), Sargeant Sally Donovan by Vinette Robinson (Between the Sheets) and Sarah, Watson's love interest,  by  Zoe Telford (The Golden Hour). Lots of familiar faces, aren't there?

Episode 1 - A Study in pink
Episode 2 -The Blind Banker
Episode 3 - The Great Game

Martin Freeman is John Watson

The world's favourite detective has emerged from the fog. With sparkling scripts and unforgettable performances from the two leads, this is Sherlock for a new generation.
Sherlock has a unique analytical mind, earning his living and staving off boredom by solving crimes. The weirder and more baffling the better ...

Across three thrilling, scary, action-packed and hugely entertaining episodes, Sherlock and John navigate a maze of cryptic clues and lethal killers to get at the truth.
Sherlock Holmes was always a modern man – it's the world that got old.
Now he's back as he should be – edgy, contemporary, difficult – and dangerous!
John Watson – Doctor, soldier, war hero. Fresh from military service in Afghanistan, a chance encounter brings him into the world of Sherlock Holmes – loner, detective, genius. The two men couldn't be more different, but Sherlock's inspired leaps of intellect coupled with John's pragmatism soon forge an unbreakable alliance.

 Mind you ... it is clear there will be a series 2! The third episode ends in a dramatic cliffhanger ...they can't leave us like that! We want to know what happens between Moriarty and Sherlock! That gun will stay aimed and still until Sherlock 0201!
Have you seen this series? Did you like it? I think this is actually a brilliant intelligent TV production. Waiting for more!



 BTW, have you heard?



 (most pictures and news were taken from BBC Official site  and BBC Press Pack for Sherlock)

05/11/2010

RA FRIDAY WITH GIVEAWAY - PHILLIPA ASHLEY, NORTH AND SOUTH , AN AMERICAN RELEASE AND A FILM.


Phillipa Ashley: How my passion for N&S led to a new career in romantic fiction
Picture the scene.
November 2004.Nine pm on a dark Sunday evening three people lolling about on sofas about to watch a new BBC drama series called North & South.
Half an hour in, that was it.
Reader, I hated it.



I especially hated him: that awful Thornton character.  After the scene where JT kicks the millworker I threw up my hands in disgust.
He’s a total thug,” I cried. “He’s horrible. I’m not bothering with the rest of this.”
Meanwhile my husband and daughter continued to watch while I leafed through the Sunday Times, with half an eye on the screen. At no point did I find JT attractive.
The family, however, really enjoyed the episode. My husband, an engineer, even went so far as to say he found the industrial setting a refreshing change (I presume from tea tables and haberdashery shops, bless him.)
Despite my indifference, we tuned in the following week something incomprehensible happened.
Many times since I’ve tried to pinpoint the exact moment when loathing turned to something entirely different. Unlike Elizabeth Bennet’s softening towards Darcy, my conversion hadn’t been coming on gradually; it just hit me like a rock from an angry millworker!


By the end of episode two, I was enthralled by the series and fighting an alarming and huge crush on a TDHCMO and unknown to me, my life had changed forever.
Cutting a very long story short, I took my passion to the BBC drama messageboard to find a growing band of likeminded fans. There I met and shared my obsession – sometimes into the night – with other Deranged Gentlewomen.
I also joined the Yahoo Richard Armitage group and decided to write a modern N&S fanfic. Another inexplicable first for me!

Although I’ve been a journalist and copywriter for 20 years, I’d never written any fiction. I had no idea how to construct a plot, develop character or any of the thousand other aspects of fiction writing craft.
It didn’t matter because all I really wanted was to share my characters’ story with other people. That, I’ve since discovered, is the fundamental reason why a writer... writes. I’d stumbled across the irresistible desire to escape into another world and share that world with a reader, hopefully lots of them!
I’m so grateful to the members of the BBC, C19 and Yahoo sites who were kind enough to engage with my story. Without them – perhaps without N&S – I might never have started writing at all.
I finished my N&S fanfic around March 2005 and immediate started an original romantic novel. I also joined the Romantic Novelists Association New Writers Scheme and set about seriously learning ‘the craft’.
After many revisions, I finished the novel – Decent Exposure - in March 2006. With the encouragement of other writers, notably Rosy Thornton, I sent it to a London literary agent and she sold it to Headline.

I was totally gobsmacked but more was to follow. Decent Exposure won the RNA New Writers Award 2007 and was picked up by a US TV producer from Fox. They made into a US TV movie which aired on Lifetime in 2009 and is out on DVD this month.
The novel has just been published in the USA as Dating Mr December – almost exactly five years to the day I tuned on the TV and watched the first episode of N&S.
Dating Mr December is not based on N&S, nor is the hero, Will, based on Thornton at all. In fact, I deliberately set out to make him different to my fanfic ' JT' as I needed to see if I could write my own original characters.
However, another of my novels, It Should Have Been Me is literally inspired by a pic of Richard in the Sunday Times. My US publisher, Sourcebooks, is publishing it in fall 2011.
The editorial design team always ask for detailed description of the hero and heroine and I gleefully sent off a photo to which they replied:
“Phillipa, you just made our day here. We love Richard Armitage.”
What more can I say?

Thank you, Maria, for letting me talk about my passion for N&S.
 Now, I’d love to know if anyone has any theories why N&S was the catalyst for so many fans’ creativity?

Thank you Phillipa! It's been so nice to have you here in my RA Friday.
It's your turn, now. GIVEAWAY!  Answer Phillipa's question or  leave your comment about North and South or Richard and your e-mail address. You have the chance to win a copy of DATING MR DECEMBER!!! The giveaway  is open INTERNATIONALLY and ends next Friday, 12th November. Please, I need an e-mail address to contact the winner. Remember to add it. If you don't want to give it publicly, e-mail me at learnonline.mgs@gmail.com or Phillipa Ashley at phillipa.ashley@googlemail.com.

And remember, her first novel won the Romantic Novelists Association New Writers Award. and it’s now been made into a Lifetime TV movie called 12 Men of Christmas starring Kristin Chenoweth and Josh Hopkins. Read more about it here.
You'll find Phillipa Ashley at www.phillipa-ashley.com/


See you next week to cry on ..ehm...discuss about Spooks 9 final episode. What about Strike Back? Have you heard the rumors? A new John Porter? No Strike Back for me, thanks. And what about the discussion about RA's casting for The Hobbit as a heartthrob? Have these people ever seen him in action? Grrrrr!!! Better I'll stop here. Have a great weekend and ... I'll wait for all of you here next week for a new RA Friday (12th November) and ... the name of the lucky winner of DATING MR DECEMBER!

04/11/2010

SPOOKS 9 - GETTING READY FOR ... ANYTHING!



Breaking rules is extremely exciting for a  dutiful "black self" like me! However, as things are these days, breaking rules is a necessity. What's up? Nothing so terrible. What about a bit of RA & Spooks tonight instead of Friday night?
Don't worry. You'll have your RA Friday as usual, but ... with a surprise. For now, here's my mad ramblings over watching Spooks 0907. And they are mad! With some SPOILERS.


This is what I wrote on facebook soon after watching the latest episode of Spooks.  
“Just finished watching episode 7... we are close to the end of this incredible season. Ready for ... what is ahead for us and ... John Bateman? I really can't see any hope. Can you? My friends told me I was too pessimistic when I started fearing the worst before series 9 started but this is exactly what I expected. What about being realistic now? Last but not least ... Richard was immensely convincing tonight. Awesome, brilliant, moving. WE WANT A BAFTA FOR HIM THIS TIME!”
It was  2.09 a.m. on Tuesday. And , after all that,  I could not easily fall asleep. Too excited. I went on thinking.

I felt I had been too hard at criticizing the script writers. I had to be honest: they were doing a great job this time.  Apart from the Lucas/John journey in Spooks 9,  so intense and intriguing,  so many other things in this series were better than what we saw in the previous one. There are flaws here and there this time too, but the good things overshadow the tiny holes. Poor script writers! We are often too demanding and harsh to them. We should be grateful,  instead! They’ve provided RA with extraordinary occasions to prove his talent. And he did it. He took the chance and performed an awesome troubled spook. I can’t say I’m happy for what has happened so far, nor for what I fear I’ll have to see next time, but I’m totally hooked by this series.  I’ve already pre-booked the DVD at Amazon UK. I want to have it, whatever happens to Lucas at the end. These moments will be unforgettable. Nicola Walker and Peter Firth are giving brilliant performances too. The new ones, Beth and Dimitri,  are fairly good,  though I can’t get into them. I’m completely absorbed by what is happening to Lucas.


My favourite scenes this time were the very beginning and Harry’s interrogation of his man under suspicion. Richard was incredibly good - and Peter Firth as well -  in both scenes. In the first one,  John’s astonishment and anxiety ,  being trapped between Harry and Vaughn,  was actually depicted on RA’s pale face. He was on the brink of a cliff and going to fall down but he couldn’t even scream. 


Then Lucas/John goes totally nuts in a park among cheerful children playing all around. I had one hand on my mouth all the time and startled when he aimed his gun at Beth as if it was at me. I had to cover my eyes at his cruelty to cruel Vaughn.  Silly me! When watching action movies,  I’m dangerously carried away … dangerously. BTW, was Lucas/John so angry because of those pictures Vaughn had shown him? At last we had glimpses of what it could have been but wasn’t.  It can still be, you know? …  I’ve booked my copy of Spooks 9 DVD+ extras , I told you , so … still in hope!


Things rolled down one after the other till the heart of the episode: Harry and Lucas 's confrontation. Stuff of legend! An attempt to my nails, actually, to the bits of them left from previous episodes! What can I say on that interrogation scene? I’ve already seen it a few times. Those layers peeled one after the other down to the dark  soul of our man. But we are shown an even darker shade later on in the episode.  I studied RA’s voice and facial expressions accurately but, don’t worry, it was for my personal pleasure  only, I’m not going to bother you with a detailed analysis nor to spoil your own pleasure of watching it. Because,  there can be pleasure even in this suffering. And, mind you, I am not a masochist,  I was so angry till two episodes ago! I didn’t want to face all this.  Then I started rationalizing the situation and trying to simply enjoy the dreadful but  thrilling emotions I was experiencing. This excitement reminds  me of similar sensations : it was  during series 1, waiting to know what would be of Tom Quinn’s partner and her little daughter trapped inside that house going to burst. 
 Maya. I had liked her more in the first episodes. Dramatic scenes are not Layla's best achievements, it seems.  Let’s see how Maya sides with John now, if she can support him in these terrible, tragic moments. Doubtful smirk.
Have you read  Ian Wylie's blog about the final episodes? “Be Ready for Anything”  I know, I know… spoilers! You want to avoid spoilers. In fact, there are some , but nothing unexpected and , as I said so many times now, I don’t mind them.  I was only literally panicking at Wylie's closing sentence:
“Spooks being Spooks, there is a postscript.
Giving us something to think about on the long wait until series 10 next year”.

Does this mean we will only actually know the truth in a year? I bet they’ve planned something like that. I.just.can’t bear it! This is sadism! Have you  seen the promo clip for final episode? Are you ready for … Anything?
Meanwhile, see you on Friday.* Hugs * MG
(Finished writing on Wednesday night, November 3rd)

Thanks to Alicat at www.richardarmitagenet.com for the beautiful screencaps !

02/11/2010

THE LOST MEMOIRS OF JANE AUSTEN BY SYRIE JAMES - MY REVIEW


My latest review, my latest Austenesque read: Syrie James, The Lost Memoirs of Jane Austen. A really beautiful one! Click HERE to read my post on My Jane Austen Book Club. Never was a gift more appreciated! Thanks to my mates of the reading club.


31/10/2010

THE WEDDING SHROUD - GIVEAWAY WINNERS!!!

 Hello, everybody! Happy Halloween Sunday! Here I am to announce the names of the two lucky winners who will get a free copy of this awesome historical novel, THE WEDDING SHROUD by Australian author Elisabeth Storrs. Have you read my interview?

Here's briefly the plot of the novel:

In 406 BC, to seal a tenuous truce, the young Roman Caecilia is wedded to Vel Mastarna, an Etruscan nobleman from the city of Veii. The fledgling Republic lies only twelve miles across the Tiber from its neighbour, but the cities are from opposing worlds so different are their customs and beliefs. Leaving behind a righteous society, Caecilia is determined to remain true to Roman virtues while living among the sinful Etruscans. Instead she finds herself tempted by a mystical, hedonistic culture which offers pleasure and independence to women as well as a chance to persuade the Gods to delay her destiny. Yet Mastarna and his people also hold dark secrets and, as war looms, Caecilia discovers that Fate is not so easy to control and that she must finally choose where her allegiance lies. Exploring themes of destiny versus self-determination and tolerance versus prejudice, The Wedding Shroud is a novel that vividly captures a historical time and place while shining a light on the lives of women of the ancient world.

Here we go now with the names you are waiting for... the first copy goes to a whole family...

 carol ann, emily elisaBeth and rebecca catherine olivia

and the second one to ...

 Teddy Rose 

CONGRATULATIONS to the winners!!! And thanks a lot to Elisabeth Storrs for her kindness and generous giveaway.

29/10/2010

RA FRIDAY - TOO GOOD, PARANOID OR ... JUST DESPERATE?


I'd give him a Bafta! What about you?
I saw this week’s episode at my friend’s house on Tuesday evening. It was a special occasion but I was so anxious that I missed a lot  of what was said. I  had to re-watch it for a second time at home, on  my computer and with headphones on not to miss one word and I realized I really had missed much! Richard Armitage was impeccable in each frame.  Well done,  Richard! I bit all my nails but it was worth it. This is not what I wanted for Lucas but … such a gripping episode! After seeing it for the second time I wrote down some of my thoughts. I’m not back  home yet and didn’t have the possibility  to read other comments  or reviews so, maybe, you’ve already read similar things somewhere else. Anyway, I warn you. These are just my impressions in no special order , not on every detail in the episode and, mind you, there are several spoilers!!! So if you want to avoid them, just avoid reading.

That is a spiteful look! He's ready to kill him ...
“Either he is too good or he is paranoid”, American Mr Beecher says of Lucas .  "Maybe both" , Harry . None of them, actually. He is just and simply desperate. “He is in trouble”, Ruth says. And Ruth,  as usual, is right. Lucas /John is definitely  in trouble.
In the first scene his look is a mixture of desperation and sorrow (see the first picture above) His voice, whispered and broken, is perfect to convey helplessness. This is how Richard opens this episode . An unforgettable,  touching opening scene. As we are carried away into the whirlpool of emotions,  Lucas becomes more and more crossed: Vaughn has been using his love for Maya to hit him, to blackmail him.
“This was between you and me. Why are you doing this to me?”
“You can’t blackmail someone whose life has no value”, he answers.
This is something terrible to say, but it must be terribly true: Lucas/John would have risked his own life to oppose Vaughn . It would have been useless to blackmail him. But now it’s different, he is totally in Vaughn’s  power because of Maya. He wants nothing to happen to Maya. He will do anything, ANYTHING, to protect her.
Surprise, surprise! Look who's back!
 Richard’s expressions , his use of every single facial feature and of his incredible voice, are awesome, excellent, brilliant. 

Music? Sometimes you just stop hearing it ...


As you can see, I’m first of all trying to convince myself that what is going to happen to “our” Lucas doesn’t matter. My attempt is to rationalize my anxiety  and disappointment. I’m honest I won’t be calm and relaxed while watching the next two episodes for what I’ve seen and heard  I’m sure I’ll be sitting on the edge of the chair and nail biting all the time. Just as it happened while watching this episode However,  I decided that from now on I’ll let the story, the plot, to carry me completely away. I want to fully enjoy the emotions the whole cast,, but especially Richard, are going to give us .They are all at their best and this season has been  terrific so far!
With a blond girl, in a wood but ... nothing romantic

Back to this week's adventures. Danielle Ortiz. I pitied her, poor girl. Her chit chat was amusing, she is smart and sensitive and immediately feels something is wrong with the James Bond who should protect her. She doesn’t trust him at all. And she’s right.  But the sequence of scenes with Lucas and Danielle together are important to have a glimpse at John fragile humanity. He is not a cold killer, this is what we can perceive. Once he is given the order to kill an unarmed civilian he does whatever is in his power to disobey the order.
But when he understands that girl alive and what she has discovered about him will be too dangerous to him , he calls for an ambulance  after turning off the mobile and wait for her to die, whispering sweet consoling words in her ear and taking her in his arms. OMG, what a thrilling scene!

Thrilling and touching
 In the sequence Lucas/Danielle, there’s also a quotation of the Hobbit. Danielle says to Lucas: “So what’s your big secret, James (she goes on calling him James – Bond - till things turn very badly for her, then she calls him Lucas) . Or shall I just tell your bosses about our pit-stop here at Hobbit country?”

Better to start thinking about future gratifications: The Hobbit will be a great occasion to enjoy of Richard's huge talent. Meanwhile, the next two episodes of Spooks will be both suffering and excitement for all of us. Little space for hope but we can bet on a cliffhanger.
Have you seen the trailer of 0907? I can’t stop thinking about Harry’s words  and Lucas/John's desperation in those few minutes: “Betrayal is a cancer. Let it eat your soul, not mine”. Are you sure Harry?

Have a great weekend, friends! Monday is not far... ready for whatever  is expecting us and,  especially, Lucas / John? Cheers! MG

27/10/2010

LA BAMBINAIA FRANCESE (THE FRENCH NURSEMAID) by BIANCA PITZORNO (2004)




If you,  like me,  have always loved Mr Rochester, maybe you won't love this book. But , to be honest, I  must say this is such a well written novel that its author must be forgiven. In "La Bambinaia Francese", Bianca Pitzorno has turned Rochester, my Mr Rochester , into a horrible, wicked,  unbearable character. Better to tell you the whole truth: in this story he is a racist, a class system supporter,  a misogynist as well as a grumpy, violent man with no hope for redemption.
But, though suffering for my Mr Rochester, I must also add that being very good, very well written,   this novel should be translated into English so that the many fans of Charlotte Bronte's  "Jane Eyre" might have the possibility to evaluate this original outlook on their favourite hero and heroine. 
The Plot
The story takes place in Paris in 1832 On a winter evening Sophie, 9 years old, knocks at Céline Verens’s dooor. Céline is the étoile at Paris opera house. The little girl wants to deliver the shirts her mother sewed in the humble attic they lived in at Montmartre. It’s the beginning of a close friendship between the dancer and the poor orphan . Through the years Sophie becomes the favourite pupil of an old enlighted noble man who survived the French Revolution and the following disillusionment  of the Empire and the Restoration.
In the school run by this man, who is curiously called Citizen Marquis Sophie the most extravagant and miscellaneous group of pupils, but her favourite one is Haitian Toussaint, a little black slave given to her benefactress  Céline by her lover , an English  gentleman , Eduard  Rochester.
 Together, Toussaint (Tussì)  and  Sophie grow up  and learn the importance of education, knowledge, reading and writing as well as  the respect for the others , all of them, whatever is their origin, race and class. Together they face every kind of dangerous adventure, first in France then in England, to save their  protector from their persecutors and  and little Adéle, her daughter, from the disquieting mysteries of Thornfield Hall. 

The latest Jane Eyre: Mia Wasikowska

 
A book full of books



Bianca Pitzorno wrote that this novel was the result of her personal reflections of Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte (1847) that she read and loved when she was 15. She said she wished to re-write it from a different point of view since she noticed some incongruences, though she considered it a real masterpiece : the proud, obstinate, independent little girl Jane, after fighting to survive at Lowood School , becomes a cold, detached governess to little Adèle. Then she didn't like theprotrait of little Adéle as  frivolous and shallow .

But this is a book full of ... books.  To prepare to the task of writing her "La bambinaia francese",  she read and researched a lot. Her main sources were all Charlotte Bronte's works, especially Jane Eyre and Villette. But also The Great Sargasso Sea.
In this novel you'll also find a bit of Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey, Mary Wollstonecraft's ideals on women's rights and , her dauther's (Mary Shelley) original Gothic novel, Frankenstein. Ms Pitzorno also declares she freely  borrowed characters from Dickens's Hard Times and A Tale of Two Cities. 
And then , many essays from Rousseau and about slavery, on children's educaton in 19th century. 
I'm afraid many of you won't be able to read this book.  We'd need a publisher interested in a good translation! It has only been published in Italian! 

24/10/2010

ELISABETH STORRS - AUTHOR'S INTERVIEW AND GIVEAWAY


Elisabeth Storrs has long had a passion for the history, myths and legends of the ancient world.
She graduated from the University of Sydney in Arts Law, majoring in English and having studied Classics. She lives with her husband and two sons in Sydney and over the years has worked as a solicitor, corporate lawyer, senior manager and company secretary. At present she runs a consultancy business advising companies on corporate governance.
Elisabeth's first novel, The Wedding Shroud, is set in early Rome and Etruria, and was researched and written over a period of ten years.It was released last September by Murdock Books in Australia and New Zealand She is currently writing the sequel which will be released by Pier 9 / Murdoch Books in 2012. 

DOUBLE GIVEAWAY !!!
Read my interview with Elisabeth Storrs and leave your comment and e-mail address. Two of you will have the chance to win this beautiful historical novel. The giveaway is open worldwide and will end next Sunday 30th October.

Welcome and thank you, Elisabeth. My first question is influenced by my  living very near  the  area of Italy you’ve chosen as your setting, ... how comes that an Australian authoress writes a novel set in Ancient  Etruria in the 5th century BC?
First of all I want to thank you for asking me to be a guest on your blog considering I don’t write historical fiction set in Regency or Victorian times (although I enjoy reading it very much.) As for being an Australian writer with a book set in early Italy, I think ancient Rome captures the imagination of so many people all over the world. I studied classics at school and university and fell in love with classical literature and ancient history. Over ten years ago I discovered the world of Etruria and became an immediate Etruscophile. 

Did you study a lot or did you travel a lot to prepare yourself to write the historical background of your story?
I would love to say that I spent years travelling through Tuscany and Lazio to research Etruscan history. Instead I spent over ten years studying Etruria and early Rome through ancient and modern sources. The great thing was that when I finally was able to travel to Italy I found that the beautiful landscape around the site of the ancient Etruscan city of Veii (where part of the book is set) was exactly as I’d imagined. It was a moment of deep happiness for me.

 The ancient war between Rome and Veii is ancient history very little known to many Italians too. What was there in that decadent Etruscan world that fascinated you?
The Wedding Shroud is set in the late C5th BC when Athens was a leading light for its democracy, philosophy, literature and art, and where the nascent Republican Rome was still scrapping with its Latin neighbours for supremacy in Italy. In that time women were possessions of men. In Athens they were cloistered into women’s quarters, and in Rome they were second class citizens restricted to household duties. Roman women rarely dined with their men and could be killed with impunity by the husbands and fathers for adultery or for drinking wine. When they died, they were placed in a man’s tomb, and were not commemorated.
And with that in mind, I discovered a photograph of a C6thBC sarcophagus of a life size man and woman reclining on their bed in a tender embrace. I was blown away! I had to know who these people were and what kind of society would depict both a man and a woman in such a sensuous pose.
The answer led me to the Etruscans, a race that had lived in Italy from before archaic times and were situated in the area we now know as Tuscany, Lazio and Umbria but whose influence spread from the Po Valley in the north and down to Campania in the south. It also had trading interests that extended across the Mediterranean from France to northern Africa.
The Etruscans were as enlightened as the Athenians but there was one major difference – they afforded independence, education and sexual freedom to women, and as a result, were considered wicked and corrupt by the rest of the ancient world.
I wanted to write about these amazing people who had long been the enemy of Rome. And that’s when I discovered the little known story of the war between Rome and Etruscan Veii. These cities were located only twelve miles apart across the Tiber, and it intrigued me that just by crossing a strip of water you could move from what was the equivalent of the Dark Ages into something similar to the Renaissance. So I created Caecilia, a young Roman girl who is married to an Etruscan man from Veii to seal a truce. And she travels to Veii and is tempted by all the freedoms I’ve mentioned while also discovering a mystical religion that gives her the chance to delay her destiny.

Caecilia, the protagonist of your book, shares the destiny of many a woman in ancient times. She’s married to a man she doesn’t love, well, she doesn’t even know. Even worse , a man from an opposing world, completely different from hers.  What kind of heroine is she? How does she cope with her difficult married life?
Caecilia travels from an austere, intolerant and self righteous culture into a hedonistic society that slowly seduces her with pleasure and independence while forcing her to grapple with conflicting moralities, especially when she discovers there are darker aspects to her husband and his people.  At first Caecilia is very resistant to change and keeps comparing the Etruscans unfavorably to Romans, but as she discovers the freedoms that are offered her, she slowly comes to the realization that life isn’t as black and white as she thought and that Roman religion may not be the only way to worship the gods. She is a very strong character who has to overcome the constant fear of being held a hostage to war. In doing she learns there is a difference between merely enduring and adapting in order to survive – and even to thrive.

 Is your novel just an adventurous tale in an ancient exotic setting or do you analyze any theme in particular?
The Wedding Shroud explores themes of sexuality in the ancient world, tolerance vs prejudice, destiny vs self determination and also examines the different lives of women who lived in ancient Greece, Rome and Etruria. 


  You are a solicitor, a lawyer. At present you run  a consultancy business advising companies on corporate governance. How did you cope with writing being so fully engaged with another demanding profession?
I started writing twenty years ago when I first had my two sons. I wrote another novel that didn’t get published, and then started writing The Wedding Shroud. It took me four years to write the first version, and then, after numerous rejections I set about rewriting it with a different voice, style and altered plot. Six years later it was accepted for publication after many, many edits. I knew I had to be disciplined if I wanted to finish the book. The way I achieved this was by always setting a time, date and place in my diary to write. I started off writing 2 - 4 hours a week by hiring young local kids to babysit my kids. As my boys grew older, I was able to fit more time to write into my week. Juggling a career, family (and a neurotic dog) is always a challenge but writing is my passion. It is my way of escaping the stresses of the everyday world and so I always make sure I keep the appointment in my diary. I guess it’s a case of ‘from little things big things grow.’

 Is your The Wedding Shroud going to be translated ? An Italian version would be interesting.
I’d love my novel to be translated into Italian! I would need to find an Italian publisher though. I think it would be amazing to have my story read by the people who live in a place I’ve imagined for such a long time.

 What kind of reader are you? What kind of books do you like reading?
I am quite ecletic in my reading, but of course I love historical fiction about any era such as those written currently by Tracy Chevalier, Sarah Dunant and Phillipa Gregory. I particularly liked Hilary Mantel’s Wolf Hall and Ursula Le Guin’s Lavinia (that’s why I was so excited when she agreed to endorse my book!) I also think Margaret Atwood is fantastic. Another favourite novelist of mine is DH Lawrence. (He was a mad Etruscophile too.) My all time idol, though, is Mary Renault who wrote novels set in Classical Greece. Her book, Fire from Heaven, was one of the ‘lost’ 1970 Mann Booker Prize novels.

 Are you working on another novel at the moment?
Yes, I’m very excited that my publisher, Murdoch Books, has asked me to write the sequel to The Wedding Shroud. I’m already onto chapter 5. I have to increase my work rate though. The book is planned to be released in early 2012 - so I don’t have ten years to write this one!

 If you could time travel, what historical period and where would you like to live? Would you set your next novel in that era?
That’s an interesting question. I’d like to return to classical times (C5th – C4th BC) but whenever I think of whether I’d like to go back to that period I’m always conscious that it would be hard to live as a woman there because of the lack of equality.  So I guess I’d be happy to be a ‘time tourist’ but not actually live in ancient times. Of course Etruria, Rome and Troy would be the first places on my itinerary – and will also be the settings for any other books I write. As for living in Tuscany or Lazio now – well let me just check if my passport is up to date…. 

We understand that you are fond of history and ancient times, but what’s your relationship with the Net, technology, the mass –media? Do you think the Internet , especially, can help a writer or more distract him/her from her activity?
I’ve always found the internet incredibly useful as a research tool provided I remember that I need to double check most of the information I read. I’ve only just discovered Facebook and Twitter and can’t believe how the world opens up to you by using them. I find it incredible that you contacted me in Australia all the way from Italy just because of a mutual love of historical fiction. I already have a website  and hope to start up my own blog soon. I was also very excited to create a book trailer about the novel which is on youtube and vimeo. One of my friends even composed special ‘Etruscan’ flute music to accompany it. All this social media can be a bit distracting though. It’s very ‘more-ish’!
  
If you’ve had a look at my blog/s before accepting being interviewed by me, you must have noticed what my main interests  are. Let’s see we share any of them...
1.                
                        Classic Literature?
Jane Eyre has to be one of my all time favourite novels, and of course I love Jane Austen (that’s why I followed you in the first place.) Funnily enough I’m also a fan of CS Forester and the ‘Hornblower’ series – it depicts Napoleonic times so vividly (although it is a little light on romance!)

Period Drama?
In Australia, period dramas are called ‘bonnet’ dramas by the less enlightened among us. A lot of these series are screened on Sunday nights here and the three males in my house know that this time is sacrosanct! Little Dorrit was aired recently. And Lost in Austen. Loved them!

2.       Art  ?
I am particularly fond of Japanese wood block prints as well as paintings by Vermeer and Renoir. The series Desperate Romantics also piqued my interest in the Pre Raphaelites. Of course, and sorry to be boring, my great love is Etruscan art which shows the fantastic world of these people in flamboyant murals depicting lovers, dancers, flutists, banquets, Dionysian revels as well as terrible scenes of demons, monsters and bloodshed. Their art shows their love of legends, beauty and mysticism and is a rich vein of inspiration for me. My book trailer shows examples of it  view it on utube or on my website.
 Richard Armitage ?
 Having read your blog, I have to admit that I was one of those middle aged women who fell for Richard Armitage when I first saw him in North and South. And as for Spooks, I might sound callous but Adam Carter’s startling exit was forgotten as soon as I saw Lucas North. 

 Now, thanking you for being my kind  guest , I invite you to convince our readers to buy / read your novel, The Wedding Shroud, with  less than 50 words.
The Wedding Shroud will take you on a journey to a mystical, decadent world of pleasures and dark secrets as you read how the young Caecilia is tempted to forsake Rome by her husband and the Etruscan people while two enemy cities stand poised on the brink of war.


You live in Australia. What is the best way for people living elsewhere to buy your book?
You can buy The Wedding Shroud online at retailers such as www.booktopia.com.au, www.dymocks.com.au, www.fishpond.com.auwww.qbd.com.au or any other Australian online booksellers you can google up. 

Thanks a lot, Elisabeth. I wish you and your novel great success!
Now, readers and friends,  it's your turn. Leave your comments or questions  and don't forget to add your e-mail address. Two of you will win a copy of THE WEDDING SHROUD! The giveaway is open worldwide and will end next Sunday October 31st.