Six Word Saturday
NEWSFLASH: I won and read Thaw!
Win Fiona Robyn's THAW!

Every day this month Fiona Robyn is blogging her new novel,
Thaw
, for all to read. Want to own the paperback? Well, you have the chance to win a signed copy right here!
(For entry details, see below)
Book Summary: The novel follows 32 year old Ruth’s diary over three months as she decides whether or not to carry on living.
What's BlogSplash? To help spread the word Fiona organised a Blogsplash, where bloggers everywhere published the first page of Ruth’s diary simultaneously on 1st March 2010 in an effort to get 1000 blogs involved. Visit Fiona's blog and find out more information
here!
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Interview and Giveaway with
Fiona Robyn our Author in the Spotlight!
Conducted by Sassy Brit
SB:
Hello and welcome to AR, Fiona! I'm delighted to have you here as our
featured author for the month, and it's my pleasure to interview you. I
have so many questions, having read two of your books, so I'll try to
keep them down to a sensible size and get started straight away! Since
the latest book I have read is Thaw, and you are doing a big BlogSplash Promo for this, can you please give our readers a brief summary of what Thaw is all about?
FR: I’m
delighted to be here, Sassy! Thaw follows 32 year old Ruth as she
decides whether or not to carry on living. The novel is her diary over
three months, and at the end of the book she makes her decision…
SB:
I found Ruth to be a delightful, down-to-earth character with so many
worries, yet so much to live for. If you found out someone was cutting
themselves, what would you do or say to try to help them?
FR: That’s a difficult
question. In my experience as a therapist, sometimes the most important
thing is allowing someone to be heard – warts and all – without being
judged. But there is no quick fix… I’d encourage them to speak to
someone, and also to get some professional help, but I’d also let them
know that they certainly weren’t alone.
SB: Good advice. Thank you. What made you write a story about someone battling with the idea of committing suicide?
FR: I
don’t really ‘choose’ my subjects, they choose me. Ruth turned up in my
head, and this was her story. But another way of answering your
question is that I’ve always been interested in how we make our lives
meaningful – how we live well. For Ruth, this question is more urgent
than it is for most of us.
SB: What research did you need to do when it came to delving into Ruth's mind?
FR: I
read about self-harm, and looked online at what is available to someone
who’s considering suicide. I hope I checked out my facts, but the
important thing is whether the character ‘rings true’ or not, so it’s
also important to imagine myself inside Ruth as thoroughly as I can.
SB: In Thaw you write Ruth as a keen photographer, and in The Blue Handbag, Leonard is a green fingered gardener. Are you interested in these hobbies yourself, and if so, in what way?
FR: I didn’t know anything about gardening before I wrote The Blue Handbag,
but since writing the book I was hooked! Leonard provided me with an
opportunity to find a new passion, and I’m grateful to him for that. I
have always been interested in photographs, but I don’t use them in the
same way that Ruth uses them. She takes looking at photos to a whole
new level!
SB: For those that may have missed it, here is my review of the first book of yours I read - The Blue Handbag.
When it comes to portraying a man's point of view, you seem to know
exactly what to do and say. Even if poor Leonard gets things wrong from
time-to-time! How did you manage to get Leonard's perspective so right?
FR:
I’m glad you thought so, Sassy. I rely on what I suppose all novelists
rely on – a ‘gut sense’ of how their characters might behave. It’s as
if I grow a mini-personality inside myself when I’m writing a novel.
Maybe I use information about all the men I’ve ever known, but they
fuse together into something completely new. It happens very
subconsciously.
SB: That's a great image - growing a mini-personality inside yourself as you write a novel! Okay, here's a hypothetical question for you. Say you were married and
your husband recently passed away and you found in your husband's wallet
a) a letter from a kid saying "I love you Daddy" (and you didn't have children) or
b)
a photo signed from Chantelle the Bikini Wearing Trapeze Artist (and
neither of you had ever visited a circus) would you be tempted to track
down further clues to solve the mystery, just like Leonard did with
something he found in Rose's blue handbag? Or ignore it, and hope that
nagging feeling goes away?
FR: What
would you do?! I think I’d be driven to pursue the truth, but it is a
difficult question, and one that Leonard wrestles with.
SB: Ha! Thank you! Yes, I would. :) Which is exactly why Leonard's story is so compelling!
From your experience, how long does it take to write a novel?
FR: It takes a year or two, depending on what else is going on in my life, and how disciplined I’m being.
SB: What do you really enjoy about writing?
FR: I
love reading back my final drafts and occasionally thinking ‘that’s a
good sentence’ or ‘that feels moving’. I enjoy getting to know my
characters. But the best bit of all is when a reader really connects
with one of my characters, and grows to love them just as I do.
SB: What's your typical working day as a writer like?
FR:
It varies hugely. When I’m writing my first draft, I can only manage an
hour at most – and I spend the rest of my day doing marketing and my
‘day job’. When I write later drafts I can spend more time writing.
Between novels, I don’t do much writing at all. There is always plenty
to be done – tax returns, maintaining my blogs, Facebook, doing
interviews!
SB: Well, we like to keep you on your toes! Any good advice to share for an aspiring writer of fiction?
FR: Read, read, read. And then write, write, write. And don’t give up.
SB: Can you please share your philosophy on life?
FR: Pay attention.
SB:
Do you have a Banoffee Pie recipe you can share with our readers? I
hear it's your favourite and it sounds just my sort of thing!
FR: Here’s a simple recipe: http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/8183/banoffee-pie Personally I prefer digestives for the base. Warning – you need a very sweet tooth to love banoffee pie as much as I do!
SB: Oh, I have. Don't worry about that! Thank you for sharing.
Have you lost your mind? What made you give away your book for free? And where can everyone sign up? :)
FR: :
) Maybe… I have two reasons for giving Thaw away. The first is that as
writer, I want as many people as possible to have the opportunity to
read my books. The second is that I hope it might help me to pay my
rent in the long run – maybe people will want to know the ending and so
buy Thaw before the three months is up, or maybe they’ll look up my
previous novels. We’ll see!
SB:
Good luck! I really do think it's a wonderful idea! Finally, where can
we find out more about you and your other work, apart from your Author in the Spotlight page (which can be found here) on AR? :)
FR: My main site is at www.fionarobyn.com. You’ll most often find me at www.plantingwords.com, and it’d be lovely to see you at my Facebook page, at http://www.facebook.com/pages/Fiona-Robyn/152623876910
SB: Again, it's been wonderful chatting with you. Good luck with Thaw and
any future sales you have. I hope you enjoy your stay here with us on
AR. I'm looking forward to featuring you more, and have a few more
tricks up my sleeve to come!
FR: Thank you Sassy, it’s been a pleasure. You do fantastic work here. Ooh, more tricks eh - intriguing!
SB: *Snickers* No, no, thank YOU! :)
QUESTION: What are you most grateful for in life?
Giveaway Details!
Open to ALL entrants. Closes SATURDAY 10th APRIL 2010 - Winner announced MONDAY 12th APRIL 2010
- To enter - please follow the AR blog (publicly) Thank you!
- Leave a comment for the author here.
- Make sure you also leave your email address, too.
That's it. Good luck! As usual you may comment on the review, Tweet (@Sassy_Brit), Digg , add this comp to your blog, sign the AR Guest book! use the "Share This" button, etc, just come back here to let me know you have - for extra entries. Now you can even follow us on google Buzz and Buzz an entry over to us! It's even quicker than tweeting if you have gmail. Thank you! Howver you spread the word, just come back and let me know.
Each separate comment (with email address) = 1 extra entry!
If you don't add your email address, I can't be sure you want to be entered into the competition or if you are just commenting.
CURRENT GIVEAWAYS:
Shelley Munro's - A book of your choice from her back list - ends 30th March 2010Fiona Robyn's - THAW -- You're reading the blog, now OWN the signed paperback! Ends 10th April 2010
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