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Lucy Powrie

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Interview with Marie-Louise Jensen

Today I’m really lucky to be sharing an interview with Marie-Louise Jensen. Her novels include The Girl in the Mask, Between Two Seas and The Lady in the Tower and she is one of my favourite historical fiction authors.





1. When writing historical fiction, how much time do you spend researching beforehand?

I spend a great deal of time researching. About two months per book. For Daughter of Fire and Ice and Sigrun’s Secret, I spent six weeks camping in Iceland looking at museums, archaeological sites and reconstructions.
Of course it isn’t all as exciting (or as expensive!) as travelling in Iceland. I spend a great deal of time in libraries too. And the research carries on as I write and even afterwards as I keep needing to check things that came up or I didn’t know as I was writing.

2. Your books are set in different eras. Which period was your favourite to write?

I loved all of them! I did really love the Viking era. It was so thrilling to discover and re-imagine. But the Georgian era appeals to me a great deal too. I’ve read a lot written in and set in that era, so it feels very real to me.

3. Aside from writing, what is your favourite thing about being an author?

I love school events. It’s such fun going into to talk to young people about my research and my stories, sharing my excitement about them. I always dress up and take extra costumes, which is fun. In connection with The Girl in the Mask, I’ve been doing events in a highwayman costume – including a replica pistol. And it’s always fun to talk about books in general (not just mine) and meet lots of enthusiastic readers.

4. Do you have any advice to give to people who would like to write historical fiction?

It’s the same advice for anyone who wants to write anything really – READ! Read lots of historical fiction and old books too – both classic and obscure. I developed a real thing for the classics and started with Jane Austen and Dickens and read and read – George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell, the Bronte sisters, Ann Radcliffe and so on. All those fine books really helped form my knowledge of past times. How people behaved and spoke and lived their lives. Without any of that, it would be very hard to slip (in a literary way) into the past or find a historical ‘voice’.

5. If you could be a historical figure for the day, who would it be and why?

Now there’s a tricky question! I wouldn’t want to be anyone famous; I’d rather be an unobtrusive observer. But wouldn’t it be amazing to meet Shakespeare and see him working in the theatre? Or to walk through a city in the past to see all the sights, hear the noises and smell the smells? I often wished when I was writing The Girl in the Mask, that I could have just a few hours to wander around early Georgian Bath to see what it was REALLY like.

6. If you could bring one of your book characters to life, who would it be?

Another impossible choice! It would be amazing to meet Thora from Daughter of Fire and Ice with her ability to read auras. Sophia from The Girl in the Mask would be lots of fun and would enjoy our century too, I can imagine.

It’s not a crime to steal a heart


Smugglers are cut-throat rascals. At least that’s what Isabelle’s always been told. But when she’s rescued from drowning at sea by the crew of a notorious smuggling ship, her principles are thrown into confusion. Outwitting the king’s men fills her with excitement, especially when she’s with one mysterious smuggler in particular . 

Smuggler’s Kiss is published on March 7th and you can order it here
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DISCUSSION: Books Written from a Male Perspective

The majority of YA novels are written from a female point of view, so which of my favourite books are written from a male perspective?

Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl: I didn’t know that this was written from Ethan’s point of view until I started reading it and I was pleasantly surprised. It was good to learn about Gatlin from a native and the book really wouldn’t have been the same if it was written from Lena’s POV.

The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky: This book is written from Charlie’s perspective which was really interesting to read and it was actually written in a way that made the reader feel as if Charlie was actually writing it, which is something that is often left out in many novels.

Jessie Hearts NYC by Keris Stainton: Yay for Finn! This book was super funny and I loved seeing events unfold from both Jessie and Finn.

The Wolves of Mercy Falls trilogy by Maggie Stiefvater: Maggie Stiefvater never fails to amaze me. This was one of the first books that I read that contained a male POV and I was really surprised at how much it added to the books.

Noughts and Crosses by Malorie Blackman: This is such a sad book and the addition of Callum’s perspective really added a huge depth of emotion to it. It was good to see things from his Nought view point.

What are your favourite books written from a male perspective?

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REVIEW: The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E. Smith

Summary from Goodreads:

Who would have guessed that four minutes could change everything?

Imagine if she hadn’t forgotten the book. Or if there hadn’t been traffic on the expressway. Or if she hadn’t fumbled the coins for the toll. What if she’d run just that little bit faster and caught the flight she was supposed to be on. Would it have been something else – the weather over the Atlantic or a fault with the plane?

Hadley isn’t sure if she believes in destiny or fate but, on what is potentially the worst day of each of their lives, it’s the quirks of timing and chance events that mean Hadley meets Oliver…

Set over a 24-hour-period, Hadley and Oliver’s story will make you believe that true love finds you when you’re least expecting it.




This is a book that I have wanted to read for a while. It sounded like a good contemporary and so I decided to pick it up.
The novel starts in an airport where we meet Hadley, who is on her way to London. She meets Oliver, a boy who is also travelling to London and they immediately have a connection. Set over a 24 hour period, this novel is all about teenage love, woes and adventures.
I wasn’t too keen on the style of writing in which this book was written. It mean that I couldn’t get close to the main character, Hadley, and I felt very detached. It wasn’t a style that it commonly used and so it took a lot of getting used to. 
I liked Hadley, but I just didn’t get to know her well enough. Her character was poorly written and I would have liked to have seen more scenes that really revealed her personality. I found that she could act quite selfish, as well.
Oliver was a much more likable character but his behaviour was a little erratic. He wasn’t very solid and I really don’t understand why he would just choose to approach Hadley in a busy airport.
My main problem with this novel was that it was so short. There weren’t enough pages to get to know the characters well enough and I think that if it were to be made a little longer then I would enjoy it more.
Before people start thinking I’m a horrible person, I must add that I loved the romantic side of this novel. It was played out just right and was very sweet.
I really wanted to enjoy this novel but it really didn’t do much for me. I would like to read another book by the author to see how it compares, though.
RATING: 3.5/5
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DISCUSSION: Supporting Bookshops

At the start of January, I put a request out on Twitter asking for people to write a short paragraph for me on a certain subject. That subject was supporting bookshops and I knew that I just couldn’t write this post on my own. I would just like to thank all the people who volunteered, even if they couldn’t or didn’t write something. Your support means so much to me.
My thoughts: 
I have always felt at home in bookshops. Even when I was younger, I spent a lot of time browsing the shelves and so I feel very strongly about supporting bookshops. 
It’s not often that I buy online anymore. I prefer to go into my local Waterstones branch where I know I’ll get good service and be able to keep one of my favourite shops in business. 
To help, I will now be adding links to the Waterstones website to my reviews, instead of Amazon, as most people choose to link to. 
I have recently started going to my local book club, run by Waterstones, which enables avid readers like myself to have fun at the same time as buying books from a shop that really needs supporting customers. 
When I walk into a bookshop and see other people there, I feel a great joy in seeing that other people do care about reading and, when seeing younger children, I feel even better. It’s nice to know that children will be brought up reading and enjoying it because I know how it has helped me. 
Rebecca from Rebecca-Books:
Source

Being a bookseller at the English bookshop chain, Waterstones, I may have a slight bias view on this discussion. However, I do remember the appeal of finding the book I desperately wanted at the cheapest price possible, normally going straight to Amazon for my books. Without sounding preachy, working in a bookshop has, I guess, opened my eyes to the world of publishing and bookselling that is fighting so much against the likes of Amazon, supermarkets and WH Smiths. The thing about your local bookshop is that is relies solely on the community, especially one run independently. Amazon has a worldwide platform when a bookshop in your local town does not. Sure, you could say companies such as Waterstones in the UK and Barnes and Noble in America are nationwide, but they still rely on the English/American community to enter their bookshops, buy their books and help them keep providing these same great books directly to you. I’m pretty sure people will miss a bookshop on the high street if they do go. For those in the UK, the sole DVD and CD seller on the high street, HMV has recently gone into administration (essentially, gone out of business) and the shocking reality is that only three years ago, Waterstones – a shop in nearly every town and city throughout the UK that has been around for so many years – was owned by HMV. Can you remember a time when online retailers were the only ways to buy THAT book you desperate want? No, neither can I. Books have been around for such a long, long time, let bookshops be too.


Alice from Crazy Red Pen

Many people make the case for shopping at independent bookstores, which is a way to support the local economy, and I like to include myself in this group. Personally, I like independent bookstores over Barnes and Noble (American chain bookstore) since independent bookstores are less formal and there’s a more “human” feel to it. In general though, it’s good to go to a bookstore (any type is fine) to support your local economy and get to know others.
For people who like Amazon/online shopping, it’s great if you could supplement your Amazon shopping with bookstore shopping. At times, bookstores can have better sales. Plus, bookstores always have cool author events!

Second to the library, bookshops are like paradise. They have a unique feel to them where you can fangirl and gush about how awesome this one book is (except there’s always more than one) face to face with someone who won’t judge you. It’s like the comic book shop for Marvel fans…without the costumes…
Building a friendship with the bookshop owner is so special because as they get to know the books you pick out, they can suggest others that you might never have picked up! If we don’t support our local bookshops we’ll lose out on future favourites and a vital part of our bookish community. Bookshop owners are literally living their dream and getting paid to do it by us, the humble customer and unlike Amazon or TBD, they genuinely appreciate every single visit, whether we buy or not.


Thank you Rebecca, Alice and Rebekah!
What are your opinions on this subject?
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REVIEW: Under the Never Sky by Veronica Rossi

Summary from Goodreads:

WORLDS KEPT THEM APART.
DESTINY BROUGHT THEM TOGETHER.
Aria has lived her whole life in the protected dome of Reverie. Her entire world confined to its spaces, she’s never thought to dream of what lies beyond its doors. So when her mother goes missing, Aria knows her chances of surviving in the outer wasteland long enough to find her are slim.
Then Aria meets an outsider named Perry. He’s searching for someone too. He’s also wild – a savage – but might be her best hope at staying alive.
If they can survive, they are each other’s best hope for finding answers.


I tried to read this novel a few months ago but never got past the first page so when I saw it in a charity shop, I knew that I would have to try again.
Aria has lived in Reverie all of her life- a dome where people can flick between imaginary worlds just by thinking about it.
Perry is an Outsider. Living in the Tides, he is a hunter, born to look after his tribe.
So when, after a turn of fate, the two meet, an arduous journey of identity and faith begins. 
The thing that draws the reader- and drew me- in right is the world building. I was asking questions in all of the right places, which were in turn answered. The only problem I had was that I wish we knew more about the Unity, the time when Reverie and the pod was built. There were mentions of it but we never really learned about how the Unity came to happen.
The novel had very strong characterisation. The main female protagonist, Aria, is very different to the usual YA females that we are used to seeing. I could really get into her head and anticipate her next moves. A big part of the novel is based around her transformation. It was something that I enjoyed reading about and found very interesting.
Perry, our male protagonist, is brave and tough. In the novel we see him open up and change. Really, this is a novel all about discovery. At the start of the novel we see a Perry that is very different from the one that is shown at the end. Perry is definitely one of my favourite male protagonists.

I must mention the style in which this novel is written. It is written in third person, which would normally bother me because the majority of books that I read are in first person. I was surprised at how much I liked it and am definitely going to try and read more novels written in the third person.

This novel is a unique dystopian. I loved the idea of the Realms which are really just computer games that you can jump in to and control. It was also nice to read a novel where the plot was completely original because most of the novels in the YA genre are the same now.

I thoroughly enjoyed Under the Never Sky and can’t wait to get started on Through the Ever Night. Rossi has created a thrilling and compelling novel that will keep readers captivated throughout.

RATING: 5/5
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Embracing my Inner Geek (2)

I can’t believe this is my second post! I really enjoyed last weeks post and would like to thank you all for the lovely feedback. This feature is something that I might consider making into a meme in the future, but I’m happy just posting like this at the moment. 
Because I am so lazy and decided to leave writing this post until closer to the time of posting, I have decided to scrap my original plans for today and talk about something that is a lot easier to talk about: the blogging world and how amazing it is.

This is a post that I’ve been meaning to write for a while now, but the moment has never felt right. I’d love to know all about your blogging experiences and responses in the comments box below and I’m going to be making a bigger effort to reply to them now, too.

When I first started blogging, I had no idea what sort of an impact it could have. One of the first book blogs that I visited was Booked Up! run by the amazing Jessica. Without her, I probably wouldn’t be writing this blog post right now! After checking out a few other blogs, I decided to create my own. And then Read, Write, Sleep was born. I bet you’re thinking that I’ve got wrong name. Well, I first created a blog on WordPress (you can find it here) and then quickly changed to Blogger after that. WordPress and I didn’t get along.

I never thought that through blogging I would get to talk to such amazing people. This is where the geekery comes in. These amazing bloggers who I now consider my friends have accepted me for who I am. I don’t need to hide who I really am and pretend because, actually, I have more in common with them than some people that I know in real life. If someone that I know is reading this now then please don’t get offended. I just don’t like you that much…
I’m kidding! Honestly! I love everyone (just some people a little more than others :P)

I would just like to mention some people that make the blogging world a very amazing, awesome, geekish, and great place to be.

A massive thank you to-

Kyra– For all of your help. My blog wouldn’t be where it is today without you. And we do have some really great conversations sometimes!

Jessica– I’ve already mentioned you, I know, but that must mean you’re extra special, right?! I really have to say thank you because I owe this whole blog down to you. Queen of Contemporary wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for Booked Up! and so I really am grateful.

Zoe– Hello, my evil geek friend. We have so much in common and your blog is still one of the ones that inspires me. I love reading your posts and you really are so nice and kind.

Eileen– Where do I start?! Eileen, you really are bonkers. But I wouldn’t be without you and you run such an amazing blog. And I’m also running off with your tablecloth to the Nevernever. Wish me luck!

Rebecca– Rebecca owns one of my favourite blogs that I crazily comment on all the time. She is seriously one of the friendliest people that I have ever spoken to and I think that every person who reads this should, if they’re not already, go follow her now. Or face my anger. You have a choice.

Rebekah– Without Rebekah’s amazing writing tips, I would probably be banging my head on a table right now. Rebekah was one of the first people to read my WIP and I love her blog so much.

Emma– Reader, I know you have been admiring my gorgeous header. Emma is the genius behind the header and her help with my blog design was invaluable. Emma really is a great bloggy friend who I love talking to and I wouldn’t be without her.

I would also like to thank Iffath, Fiona, Clover, Amber, Nina and Bella. And of course, anyone that I have been too stupid to miss.

(If I didn’t write something, then it is because it’s getting late and I really need to sign this post off. I’m also trying not to make this post too long because I can be boring sometimes!)

Thank you to everyone who visits my blog and comments regularly. I just wanted to make this post so that people can feel appreciated. I was at a point this week when I felt really fed up and just wanted to give up blogging, but then I received such an amazing link to a post where I was mentioned and it changed everything. You are all so special, and I hope you realise it.
(Here is that post)

Don’t forget to wear your geekery like a badge!

Lucy ♥

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Stacking the Shelves (11)


Guidelines:

Create your own Stacking The Shelves post. You can use my official graphic or your own, but please link back toTynga’s Reviews so more people can join the fun!

You can set your post any way you want, simple book list, covers, pictures, vlog, sky is the limit!
I am posting Stacking The Shelves on Saturdays, but feel free to post yours any day that fits you.
Visit Tynga’s Reviews on Saturday and add your link so others can visit you!
Visit other participants link to find out what they added to their shelves!
I have had a great week this week and picked up some amazing books. 
Book Shop Haul:
Through the Ever Night by Veronica Rossi- This is a book that I was very eager to buy. After reading Under the Never Sky a few days ago I knew I had to buy it straight away.
An Abundance of Katherines by John Green- You may know about my addiction to anything written by John Green. This was one of those books that I picked up and hugged straight away.
Perfect Scoundrels by Ally Carter- I’ve been waiting for this book since reading Uncommon Criminals and am in love with the cover. 
Looking for Alaska by John Green- Another John Green book! I’ve been meaning to read this since I read The Fault in Our Stars and am so glad that I finally picked it up.
The Queen at War by K.A.S Quinn- Let me tell you how long I have waited for this novel. Two whole years. I scoured the Internet, looking for a trace of it, but nothing came up. So I was so surprised and really pleased that I finally found it. I still can’t believe it!
Charity Shop Haul:
Stolen by Lucy Christopher- I’m going to be going to one of the Chicken House talks at my local library in March and Lucy Christopher is going to be there, so when I saw this book I thought it would be really nice to read something by her first.
The Iron Queen by Julie Kagawa- Eileen, if you are reading this, then please don’t start screaming. When I saw this book, I knew I had to pick it up and I’m really looking forward to starting it.
To-Review:
Diary of a Mall Girl by Luisa Plaja- I’ve been excited ever since I heard that I would be receiving this. The cover is amazing and I can’t wait to read it.
Don’t forget to link back to your own posts and follow, and I’ll return the favour. Thanks for stopping by! 
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Interview with Clover from Fluttering Butterflies


Today I’m really lucky to bring an interview with Clover from Fluttering Butterflies to you. Fluttering Butterflies is one of my favourite blogs and I suggest that if you haven’t visited it before, then please do now! 






1. Welcome to Queen of Contemporary! For those people who don’t already know your blog (they’re missing out!), can you tell us about yourself and your blog?

It is an honour to be on your blog! Thank you so much, Lucy, for having me here today! My name is Clover and I write the YA blog, Fluttering Butterflies. I’m also a mother of two beautiful little boys who are 4 and 7. They’re gorgeous and mischievious and sweet little boys who are currently Harry Potter obsessed and they make everyday of my life different and interesting. Recently they’ve both started full-time in primary school, which gives me quite a few hours in the day to myself. In that time, aside from reading and blogging, I’m also studying for a degree in Psychology with the Open University. I’m an American expat who has lived in the UK for nearly 13 years. I’m married to an amazing man I met over the Internet who I’m still madly in love with. I love jelly beans, and butterflies and collecting Eeyores.

I’ve written Fluttering Butterflies for a full 7 years (which still seems crazy), and it’s a mixture of YA reviews, bookish posts and more personal posts. I try my very best to constantly change things about and create new features and to write blog posts and reviews that I hope my readers will find interesting. I really hope that that comes across if you ever visit my blog!

2. You have various features on your blog celebrating UK bloggers and authors, why is this important to you?
Oh, that’s a really good question. It’s not something that I think I’ve ever consciously thought about before, I don’t think. I’m going to try to answer your question as best as I can, but first – do you have any older brothers or sisters? I have an older brother, David, who is 2 years older than me. I don’t know how much this stuff comes across online, but I am quite a shy and awkward type of person. I always have been. And my older brother is like, my complete opposite. He’s very sociable and outgoing. He was very popular and athletic growing up, and because of this, there were a great number of people who only ever referred to me as ‘David’s little sister.’ Which was great, I love my brother and I really wasn’t jealous of him at all because he excelled in areas that just felt alien to me.
But, and here’s where I’m going to try to link this back to your question, I felt like the things that I was good at, even though they might have been on a smaller, quieter and less noticeable scale, weren’t always given the same sort of spotlight as David’s achievements. And in a similar way (and don’t try to read too much into this crappy metaphor) I feel like British authors are given a bit of a backseat to their American counterparts who are writing YA. This was something that Becky from The Bookette noticed a few years ago which is why (I believe?) she started up the brilliant British Books Challenge which has since been passed on to Kirsty from The Overflowing Library last year and is now being hosted by Sarah from Feeling Fictional. I’d never really been aware until then of how predominantly American my YA reading had become. Having adopted the UK as my home, I felt like I should be doing my part to celebrate and highlight the amazing talent that the UK has to offer! And it’s also my duty to do this as a younger sibling who has been lost somewhat in the shadow of a brother with a bigger personality 🙂

As for my Celebrating British Bloggers feature, that idea came about mostly as a way of forcing myself to branch out and meet other cool bloggers. I felt like for the longest time that I was only reading the blogs of people I knew already and in doing so, I was really missing out. I think the blogging community in the UK especially is very friendly and welcoming and I hope that my feature helps to introduce us around to everyone else.

3. You have your own family to look after, so how do you fit reading and blogging in to your schedule?

I’ll be the first to admit, it hasn’t always been easy. When I first started blogging, my eldest was only a few months old and he was still in that stage where he slept for 3/4 of the day and I had loads of time on my hands. Even as he got older, there’d still be plenty of naps in which I could alternate between reading and blogging. But as the naps started disappearing and with the birth of my younger son, it did begin to be a bit of a struggle to get everything done during daylight hours. So, along with my university studies, a lot of work was then done once the boys had been asleep for the night. And they’re still little, so they’re both usually in bed by 8, giving me a good few hours to myself before passing out from exhaustion. Then E went off to nursery and then to primary school and I’d slowly get more hours in the day. Now they’re both out of the house between the hours of 9 and 3:30 and I have heaps of time that I don’t know what to do with! I still don’t blog every day. I find that things work out a lot better for me if I spend a lot of time planning blog posts or reviews away from the computer and then when I finally do sit in front of a computer screen I focus a lot better and actually get loads done. But that only works if I avoid Twitter entirely.

4. If you had the chance to be a fictional character for the day, who would you be?

Hmm. That is one tough question. I’ve got to admit, when I first read this question I spent a good 45 minutes trying to decide on a female character that has the highest likelihood of making out with a favourite fictional hottie. And I wasted a good chunk of time trying to figure how to narrow THAT list down? Four? Dimitri? Adrian? Alex? John After? Jonah Griggs? How am I going to choose just ONE?
And then I came to my senses and realised that this is a huge opportunity, why am I basing this decision on who I want to make out with? When I could be like a kick-ass witch like Hermione Granger or at least have some cool special powers or be someone that is awesome in ways that are completely different to me. And that got me thinking about my favourite female characters from fantasy, dystopian and paranormal books, which was a lot of fun. But, with further thought, a lot of the characters that I was thinking of are in some sketchy worlds or are dealing with heavy things. And I don’t want to spend my once-in-a-lifetime day dealing with evil people or corrupt governments.
So I tried to think of a character that could do cool things and who lived in a world that doesn’t pose any great danger. And you know, I could think about this question FOREVER and answer it in a million different satisfying ways. But I think I’m going to go with Bennett from Time Between Us by Tamara Ireland Stone. With some minor restrictions, he is able to picture anywhere in the world he’d like to be and just be there. In Time Between Us, he takes Anna to this cute little village in Italy and also goes back in time to see epic gigs by musicians that were popular when he was a baby and I love the sound of both of those. There’s such possibility there and I could definitely work within that premise!

5. Of all the books you have read, which setting is your favourite?

…I don’t know how to answer this! There are so many different settings that I love. Fantasy settings that take me to a world entirely different to the one I know! Or real-life places like Paris and Japan, that I’d love to visit but I’ve only ever known through films and TV or on the page. How do I choose just one? Especially as there too many to choose from, ahh!
Okay. I’m just going to do it and pick the one that springs to mind first that I can back up with an actual answer that’s more than just ‘because OMG, love!’ And that is road trip novels. I flippin’ love road trip novels like Amy and Roger’s Epic Detour by Morgan Matson and Saving June by Hannah Harrington and Going Bovine by Libba Bray and so many more. They don’t have to be American road trip novels to make my list of favourites, and it really doesn’t have to include a car, necessarily. Any kind of travel-based story makes me happy but particularly road trip novels.
Growing up, my dad never flew anywhere. He was afraid of flying after the traumatic experiences of being shot down from his helicopter multiple times when he was in Vietnam. But he’s also a very restless person. So the two of those combined meant that our family went on some really epic road trips when I was little – the road trip that happened most often would be between Alaska and northern California driving down the beautiful Pacific coast. Some of my happiest memories as a child happened in the backseat of our car on a road trip. There’d be break-downs and weird things to stop and see. There’d be snacks aplenty and singing along to the radio and playing endless games of car bingo and other pointless games and it’d be my whole family in one place together, kind of forced into interacting with each other. We may not have always been a perfect or ideal family unit, but during those road trips, we always bonded and I loved that about them. So reading great stories of road trips brings back those happy memories as well as creating more as I read about other amazing adventures…

6. What one book would you recommend to someone who doesn’t read?

Lucy! Why the difficult questions?! How am I ever going to answer that? I want to know more. How old is this mythical person who doesn’t read? What things do they like? What are they looking for in a book? What put them off reading for so long? Ahhh! Impossible question.

But I can’t just not answer the question either, so I’ll tell you about the last time I gave such a blind recommendation. My dad had come to stay. And while I remember him reading a lot when I was younger, I hadn’t seen him with a book in his hands in *decades* at this point. It was coming close to the end of our visit and we’d pretty much talked ourselves out. There was nothing else we really wanted to say to each other anymore, so he was sitting in my living room and we were both a little bored of each other’s company and he just randomly says, pointing to my ridiculously packed bookshelves, ‘which one of these books would I like?’
And I was at a complete loss for words. I didn’t know what to pick for my dad who has completely different tastes in music and film and activities to me. And I couldn’t actually picture my dad sitting down to read any of my books. But my eye caught onto my copy of Northern Lights by Philip Pullman and I thought maybe this could work. It’s an interesting and exciting story, one that I thought would appeal to either gender, and across the age divide. I was slightly worried about the fantasy element of it, but I thought the strong characters and intelligent writing would balance that out.
And you know what? It was a hit. Before my dad left back to America, he finished all three books in the His Dark Materials trilogy. (And left me with three battered books with heavily creased spines, I might add *grumble, grumble*) But I was quite happy to have gotten that one so right.

Again, thank you for being awesome and for having me here on your lovely blog today!

Thank you!